summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes4
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/68875-0.txt8751
-rw-r--r--old/68875-0.zipbin185037 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/68875-h.zipbin1862859 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/68875-h/68875-h.htm11776
-rw-r--r--old/68875-h/images/cover.jpgbin1033902 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/68875-h/images/coversmall.jpgbin259849 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/68875-h/images/i_016fp.jpgbin78557 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/68875-h/images/i_066fp.jpgbin77341 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/68875-h/images/i_136fp.jpgbin80446 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/68875-h/images/i_211fp.jpgbin93236 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/68875-h/images/i_368fp.jpgbin84938 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/68875-h/images/i_frontis.jpgbin79750 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/68875-h/images/i_title.jpgbin42303 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/old/68875-0.txt8749
-rw-r--r--old/old/68875-h/68875-h.htm11775
-rw-r--r--old/old/68875-h/images/cover.jpgbin1033902 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/old/68875-h/images/coversmall.jpgbin259849 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/old/68875-h/images/i_016fp.jpgbin78557 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/old/68875-h/images/i_066fp.jpgbin77341 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/old/68875-h/images/i_136fp.jpgbin80446 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/old/68875-h/images/i_211fp.jpgbin93236 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/old/68875-h/images/i_368fp.jpgbin84938 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/old/68875-h/images/i_frontis.jpgbin79750 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/old/68875-h/images/i_title.jpgbin42303 -> 0 bytes
27 files changed, 17 insertions, 41051 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7b82bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+*.txt text eol=lf
+*.htm text eol=lf
+*.html text eol=lf
+*.md text eol=lf
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+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
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..fe01cef
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #68875 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68875)
diff --git a/old/68875-0.txt b/old/68875-0.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 5e22bbb..0000000
--- a/old/68875-0.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,8751 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The lion's share, by Octave Thanet
-
-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: The lion's share
-
-Author: Octave Thanet
-
-Illustrator: Edmund Marion (E. M.) Ashe
-
-Release Date: August 30, 2022 [eBook #68875]
-
-Most recently updated: January 28, 2023
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: 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 THE LION'S SHARE ***
-
-
-
-
-
-THE LION’S SHARE
-
-[Illustration: “Yes,” he said quietly, “you are right, it is blood.”
-Page 99]
-
-
-
-
- THE LION’S SHARE
-
- _By_
- OCTAVE THANET
-
- Author of
- The Man of the Hour, Stories of a Western Town
- The Missionary Sheriff
- A Book of True Lovers, etc.
-
- With Illustrations by
- E. M. ASHE
-
- INDIANAPOLIS
- THE BOBBS-MERRILL COMPANY
- PUBLISHERS
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT 1907
- THE BOBBS-MERRILL COMPANY
-
- OCTOBER
-
- ROBERT DRUMMOND COMPANY, PRINTERS, NEW YORK
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- I THE MAN WITH THE MOLES 1
-
- II AUNT REBECCA 25
-
- III THE TRAIN ROBBERS 46
-
- IV THE VANISHING OF ARCHIE 70
-
- V BLIND CLUES 83
-
- VI THE VOICE IN THE TELEPHONE 100
-
- VII THE HAUNTED HOUSE 118
-
- VIII FACE TO FACE 138
-
- IX THE AGENT OF THE FIRELESS STOVE 152
-
- X THE SMOLDERING EMBERS 171
-
- XI THE CHARM OF JADE 195
-
- XII A BLOW 212
-
- XIII WHOSE FEET WERE SHOD WITH SILENCE 245
-
- XIV FROM MRS. MELVILLE’S POINT OF VIEW 254
-
- XV “THE LIGHT THAT NEVER WAS” 265
-
- XVI THE REAL EDWIN KEATCHAM 290
-
- XVII IN WHICH THE PUZZLE FALLS INTO PLACE 321
-
- XVIII CASA FUERTE 343
-
- XIX EXTRACT FROM A LETTER 371
-
-
-
-
- _Serene, indifferent to fate,
- Thou sittest by the Western gate,
- Thou seest the white seas fold their tents,
- Oh, warder of two continents.
- Thou drawest all things small and great
- To thee beside the Western gate._
-
-
-
-
-THE LION’S SHARE
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-THE MAN WITH THE MOLES
-
-
-The first time that Colonel Rupert Winter saw Cary Mercer was under
-circumstances calculated to fix the incident firmly in his memory. In
-the year 1903, home from the Philippines on furlough, and preparing to
-return to a task big enough to attract him in spite of its exile and
-hardships, he had visited the son of a friend at Harvard. They were
-walking through the corridors of one of the private dormitories where
-the boy roomed. Rather grimly the soldier’s eyes were noting marble
-wainscoting and tiled floors, and contrasting this academic environment
-with his own at West Point. A caustic comment rose to his lips, but it
-was not uttered, for he heard the sharp bark of a pistol, followed by a
-thud, and a crackle as of breaking glass.
-
-“Do you fellows amuse yourselves shooting up the dormitory?” said he.
-The boy halted; he had gone white.
-
-“It came from Mercer’s room!” he cried, and ran across the corridor to
-a door with the usual labeling of two visiting cards. The door was not
-locked. Entering, they passed into a vestibule, thence through another
-door which stood open. For many a day after the colonel could see just
-how the slender young figure looked, the shoulders in a huddle on the
-study table, one arm swinging nerveless; beside him, on the floor,
-a revolver and a broken glass bottle. The latter must have made the
-crackling sound. Some dark red liquid, soaking the open sheets of a
-newspaper, filled the room with the pungent odor of alcohol. Only the
-top of the lad’s head showed--a curly, silky, dark brown head; but even
-before the colonel lifted it he had seen a few thick drops matting the
-brown curls. He laid the head back gently and his hand slipped to the
-boy’s wrist.
-
-“No use, Ralph,” he said in the subdued tones that the voice takes
-unconsciously in the presence of death.
-
-“And Endy was going to help him,” almost sobbed Ralph. “He told me he
-would. Oh, _why_ couldn’t he have trusted his friends!”
-
-The colonel was looking at the newspaper--“Was it money?” said he;
-for a glance at the dabbled sheet had brought him the headings of the
-stock quotations: “Another Sharp Break in Stocks. New Low Records.”
-It _had_ been money. Later, after what needed to be done was over,
-after doctors and officers of the law were gone, Colonel Winter heard
-the wretched story. A young, reckless, fatally attractive Southerner,
-rich friends, college societies, joyous times; nothing really wicked
-or vicious, only a surrender to youth and friendship and pleasure, and
-then the day of reckoning--duns, college warnings, the menace of black
-disgrace. The young fellow was an orphan, with no near kindred save
-one brother much older than he. The brother was reputed to be rich,
-according to Southern standards, and young Mercer, who had just come
-into a modest patrimony of his own, invested in his brother’s ventures.
-As to the character of these ventures, whether flimsy or substantial,
-the colonel’s informants were absolutely ignorant. All they knew of the
-elder Mercer was that he was often in New York and had “a lot to do
-with Wall Street.” He wasn’t a broker; no, he was trying to raise money
-to hang on to some big properties that he had; and the stocks seemed
-to be going at remarkable rates just now, the bottom dropping out of
-the market. If a certain stock of the Mercers’--they didn’t know the
-name--could be kept above twenty-seven he would pull through. Colonel
-Winter made no comment, but he remembered that when he had studied
-the morning’s stock-market pages for himself, he had noted “bad slump
-in the Southern steels,” and “Tidewater on the toboggan slide; off
-three to four points, declining from twenty-seven and a fraction to
-twenty-three.”
-
-“Another victim of the Wall Street pirates,” was the colonel’s silent
-judgment on the tragedy. “Lucky for her his mother’s dead.”
-
-The next morning he had returned and had gone to his young friend’s
-rooms.
-
-The boy was still full of the horror of the day before. Mercer’s
-brother was in Cambridge, he said--arrived that morning from New York.
-“Endy is going to fetch him round to get him out of the reporters’
-way sometime this evening; maybe there’s something I can do”--this
-in explanation of his declining to dine with the colonel. As the two
-entered the rooms, Winter was a little in advance, and caught the first
-glimpse of a man sitting in a big mission arm-chair, his head sunk on
-his breast. So absorbed was this man in his own distempered musings
-that the new-comers’ approach did not arouse him. He sat with knitted
-brows and clenched hands, staring into vacancy; his rigid and pallid
-features set in a ghastly intensity of thought. There was suffering in
-the look; but there was more: the colonel, who had been living among
-the serpent passions of the Orient, knew deadly anger when he saw it;
-it was branded on the face before him. Involuntarily he fell back; he
-felt as if he had blundered in on a naked soul. Noiselessly he slipped
-out of the range of vision. He spoke loudly, halting to ask some
-question about the rooms; this made a moment’s pause.
-
-It was sufficient; in the study they found a quiet, calm, although
-rather haggard-looking man, who greeted Winter’s companion courteously,
-with a Southern accent, and a very good manner. He was presented to the
-colonel as Mr. Mercer. He would have excused himself, professing that
-he was just going, but the colonel took the words out of his mouth:
-“Ralph, here, has a cigar for me--that is all I came for; see you at
-the Touraine, Ralph, to-morrow for luncheon, then.” He did not see
-the man again; neither did he see Ralph, although he made good, so far
-as in him lay, his fiction of an engagement at the Touraine. But Ralph
-could not come; and Winter had lunched, instead, with an old friend
-at his club, and had watched, through a stately Georgian window, the
-shifting greenery of the Common in an east wind.
-
-All through the luncheon the soldier’s mind kept swerving from the talk
-in hand to Cary Mercer’s face. Yet he never expected to see it again.
-Three years later he did see it; and this second encounter, of which,
-by the way, Mercer was unconscious, was the beginning of an absorbing
-chapter in his life. A short space of time that chapter occupied; yet
-into it crowded mystery, peril, a wonderful and awful spectacle, the
-keenest happiness and the cruelest anxiety. Let his days be ever so
-many, the series of events which followed Mercer’s reappearance will
-not be blurred by succeeding experiences; their vivid and haunting
-pictures will burn through commoner and later happenings as an electric
-torch flares through layers of mist.
-
-Nothing, however, could promise adventure less than the dull and chilly
-late March evening when the chapter began. Nor could any one be less
-on the lookout for adventure, or even interest, than was Rupert Winter.
-In truth, he was listless and depressed.
-
-When he alighted from his cab in the great court of the Rock Island
-Station he found Haley, his old orderly, with a hand on the door-hasp.
-Haley’s military stoicism of demeanor could not quite conceal a certain
-agitation--at least not from the colonel’s shrewd eye, used to catch
-the moods of his soldiers. He strangled a kind of sigh. “Doesn’t like
-it much more than I,” thought Rupert Winter. “This is mighty kind of
-you, Haley,” he said.
-
-“Yes, sor,” answered Haley, saluting. The colonel grinned feebly.
-Haley, busy repelling a youthful porter, did not notice the grin; he
-strode ahead with the colonel’s world-scarred hand-luggage, found an
-empty settee beside one of the square-tiled columns of the waiting-room
-and disposed his burden on the iron-railed seat next the corner one,
-which he reserved for the colonel.
-
-“The train ain’t in yet, Colonel,” said he. “I’ll be telling you--”
-
-“No, Haley,” interrupted the colonel, whose lip twitched a little; and
-he looked aside; “best say good-by now; don’t wait. The fact is, I’m
-thinking of too many things you and I have gone through together.” He
-held out his hand; Haley, with a stony expression, gazed past it and
-saluted, while he repeated: “Yes, sor; I’ll be back to take the bags
-whin the train’s made up.” Whereupon he wheeled and made off with speed.
-
-“Just the same damned obstinate way he’s always had,” chuckled the
-colonel to himself. Nevertheless, something ached in his throat as he
-frowned and winked.
-
-“Oh, get a brace on you, you played-out old sport!” he muttered. “The
-game’s on the last four cards and you haven’t established your suit;
-you’ll have to sit back and watch the other fellows play!” But his
-dreary thoughts persisted. Rupert was a colonel in the regular army
-of the United States. He had been brevetted a brigadier-general after
-the Spanish War, and had commanded, not only a brigade, but a division
-at one critical time in the Philippines; but for reasons probably
-known to the little knot of politicians who “hung it up,” although
-incomprehensible to most Americans, Congress had failed to pass the
-bill giving the wearers of brevet titles the right to keep their
-hard-won and empty honors; wherefore General Winter had declined to
-Colonel Winter.
-
-He had more substantial troubles, including a wound which would
-probably make him limp through life and possibly retire him from
-service at fifty. It had given him a six months’ sick leave (which he
-had not wanted), and after spending a month on the Atlantic coast,
-he was going for the spring to the Pacific. Haley, whose own term of
-service had expired, had not reënlisted, but had followed him, Mrs.
-Haley and the baby uncomplainingly bringing up the rear. It was not
-fair to Haley nor to Mrs. Haley, the colonel felt. He had told Haley
-so; he had found a good situation for the man, and he had added the
-deed for a little house in the suburbs of Chicago.
-
-If Haley wouldn’t reënlist--there never was a better soldier since he
-had downed a foolish young hankering for wild times and whisky--if he
-wouldn’t go back to the army, where he belonged, let him settle down,
-take up the honest carpenter’s trade that he had abandoned, be a good
-citizen and marry little Nora to some classmate in the high school,
-who might make a fortune and build her a Colonial mansion, should the
-Colonial still obtain in the twentieth century.
-
-The colonel had spread a grand prospect before Haley, who listened
-unresponsively, a dumb pain in his wide blue Irish eyes. The colonel
-hated it; but, somehow, he hated worse the limp look of Haley’s back as
-he watched it dwindle down Michigan Avenue.
-
-However, Mrs. Haley had been more satisfactory, if none the less
-bewildering. She seemed very grateful over the house and the three
-hundred dollars for its furnishing. A birthday present, he had termed
-it, with a flicker of humor because the day was his own birthday. His
-fiftieth birthday it happened to be, and it occurred to him that a
-man ought to do something a little notable on such an anniversary.
-This rounding of the half-century had attributes apart; it was no mere
-annual birthday; it marked the last vanishing flutter of the gilded
-draperies of youth; the withering of the garlands; the fading tinkle
-of the light music of hope. It should mark a man’s solid achievements.
-Once, not so long ago, Winter had believed that his fiftieth birthday
-would see wide and beneficent and far-reaching results in the province
-where he ruled. That dream was shattered. He was generous of nature,
-and he could have been content to behold another reap the fields which
-he had sown and tilled; it was the harvest, whether his or another’s,
-for which he worked; but his had been the bitter office to have to
-stand aside, with no right to protest, and see his work go to waste
-because his successor had a feeble brain and a pusillanimous caution in
-place of his own dogged will. For all these reasons, as well as others,
-the colonel found no zest in his fiftieth birthday; and his reverie
-drifted dismally from one somber reflection to another until it brought
-up at the latest wound to his heart--his favorite brother’s death.
-
-There had been three Winter brothers--Rupert, Melville and Thomas.
-During the past year both Thomas Winter and his wife had died, leaving
-one child, a boy of fourteen, named Archibald after his father’s uncle.
-Rupert Winter and the boy’s great-aunt, the widow of the great-uncle
-for whom he had been named, were appointed joint guardians of the young
-Archie. To-night, in his jaded mood, he was assailed by reproaches
-because he had not seen more of his ward. Why, he hadn’t so much as
-looked the little chap up when he passed through Fairport--merely had
-sent him a letter and some truck from the Philippines; nice guardian
-_he_ was! By a natural enough transition, his thoughts swerved to his
-own brief and not altogether happy married life. He thought of the
-graves in Arizona where he had left his wife and his two children,
-and his heart felt heavy. To escape musings which grew drearier every
-second, he cast his eyes about the motley crowd shuffling over the
-tiled floors or resting in the massive dark oaken seats. And it was
-then that he saw Cary Mercer. At first he did not recognize the face.
-He only gazed indifferently at two well-dressed men who sat some paces
-away from him in the shadow of a great tiled column similar to his own.
-There was this difference, it happened: the mission lantern with its
-electric bulbs above the two men was flashing brightly, and by some
-accident that above the colonel was dark. He could see the men, himself
-in the shadow.
-
-The men were rather striking in appearance; they were evidently
-gentlemen; the taller one was young, well set-up, clean-shaven and
-quietly but most correctly dressed. His light brown hair showed a
-slight curl in its closely clipped locks; his gray-blue eyes had long
-lashes of brown darker than his hair; his teeth were very white, and
-there was a dimple in his cheek, plain when he smiled. Had his nose
-been straight he would have been as handsome as a Greek god, but
-the nose was only an ordinary American nose, rather too broad at the
-base; moreover, his jaw was a little too square for classic lines.
-Nevertheless, he was good to look upon, as well as strong and clean
-and wholesome, and when his gray-blue eyes strayed about the room the
-dimple dented his cheek and his white teeth gleamed in a kind of merry
-good-nature pleasant to see. But it was the other man who held the
-colonel’s eye. This man was double the young man’s age, or near that;
-he was shorter, although still of fair stature, and slim of build. His
-face was oval in contour and delicate of feature. Although he wore no
-glasses, his brow had the far pucker of a near-sighted man. There was
-a mole on his cheek-bone and another just below his ear. Both were
-small, rather than large, and in no sense disfiguring; but the colonel
-noted them absently, being in the habit of photographing a man in a
-glance. The face had beauty, distinction even, yet about it hung some
-association, sinister as a poison label.
-
-“Now, where,” said the colonel to himself, “_where_ have I seen that
-man?” Almost instantly the clue came to him. “By Jove, it’s the
-brother!” he exclaimed. Three years ago, and he had almost forgotten;
-but here was Cary Mercer--the name came to him after a little
-groping--here he was again; but who was the pleasant youngster with
-him? And what were they discussing with so little apparent and so much
-real earnestness?
-
-One of the colonel’s physical gifts was an extraordinary acuteness of
-hearing. It passed the mark of a faculty and became a marvel. Part
-of this uncanny power was really due, not to hearing alone, but to
-an alliance with another sense, because Winter had learned the lip
-language in his youth; he heard with his eyes as well as his ears. This
-combination had made an unintentional and embarrassed eavesdropper out
-of an honest gentleman a number of times. To set off such evil tricks
-it had saved his life once on the plains and had rescued his whole
-command another time in the Philippines. While he studied the two faces
-a sentence from the younger man gripped his attention. It was: “I don’t
-mind the risk, but I hate taking such an old woman’s money.”
-
-“She has a heap,” answered the other man carelessly; “besides--” He
-added something with averted head and in too low a voice to reach the
-listener unassisted. But it was convincing, evidently, since the young
-man’s face grew both grave and stern. He nodded, muttering: “Oh, I
-understand; I wasn’t backing water; I know we have lost the right to
-be squeamish. But I say, old chap, how long since Mrs. Winter has seen
-you? Would she recognize you?”
-
-The colonel, who had been about to abandon his espionage as unbecoming
-a soldier and a gentleman, stowed away all his scruples at the mention
-of the name. He pricked up his ears and sharpened his eyes, but was
-careful lest they should catch his glance. The next sentence, owing to
-the speaker’s position, was inaudible and invisible; but he clearly
-caught the young man’s response:
-
-“You’re sure they’ll be on this train?”
-
-And he saw the interlocutor’s head nod.
-
-“The boy’s with them?”
-
-An inaudible reply, but another nod.
-
-“And you’re sure of Miss Smith?”
-
-This time the other’s profile was toward the listener, who heard the
-reply, “Plumb sure. I wish I were as sure of some other things. Have we
-settled everything? It is better not to be seen together.”
-
-“Yes, I think you’ve put me wise on the main points. By the way, what
-_is_ the penalty for kidnapping?”
-
-Again an averted head and hiatus, followed by the younger man’s
-sparkling smile and exclamation: “Wow! Riskier than foot-ball--and even
-more fun!” Something further he added, but his arms hid his mouth as he
-thrust them into his greatcoat, preparing to move away. He went alone;
-and the other, after a moment’s gloomy meditation, gathered up coat and
-bag and followed. During that moment of arrested decision, however, his
-features had dropped into sinister lines which the colonel remembered.
-
-“Dangerous customer, or I miss my guess,” mused the soldier, who knew
-the passions of men. “I wonder--they couldn’t mean my Aunt Rebecca?
-She’s old; she has millions of money--but she’s not on this train.
-And there’s no Miss Smith in our deck. I’m so used to plotting I go
-off on fake hikes! Probably I’m getting old and dotty. Mercer, poor
-fellow, may have his brain turned and be an anarchist or a bomb-thrower
-or a dirty kidnapper for revenge; but that boy’s a decent chap; I’ve
-licked too many second lieutenants into shape not to know something of
-youngsters.”
-
-[Illustration: “By the way what _is_ the penalty for kidnapping?” Page
-16]
-
-He pushed the idea away; or, rather, his own problems pushed it out of
-his mind, which went back to his ward and his single living brother.
-Melville had no children, only his wife’s daughters, who were both
-married--Melville having married a widow with a family, an estate and
-a mind of her own. Melville was a professor in a state university, a
-mild, learned man whom nature intended for science but whom his wife
-was determined to make into the president of the university.
-
-“Even money which will win,” chuckled Rupert Winter to himself.
-“Millicent hasn’t much tact; but she has the perseverance of the
-saints. _She_ married Mel; he doesn’t know, but she surely did. And she
-bosses him now. Well, I suppose Mel likes to be bossed; he never had
-any strenuous opinions except about the canals of Mars--_Valgame dios_!”
-
-With a gasp the colonel sprang to his feet. There before him, in the
-flesh, was his sister-in-law. Her stately figure, her Roman profile,
-her gracefully gesticulating hand, which indicated the colonel’s
-position to her heavily laden attendant, a lad in blue--these he knew
-by heart just as he knew that her toilet for the journey would be in
-the latest mode, and that she would have the latest fashion of gait and
-mien. Millicent studied such things.
-
-She waved her luggage into place--an excellent place--in the same
-breath dismissing the porter and instructing him when he must return.
-Then, but not until then, did she turn graciously to her brother-in-law.
-
-“I hoped that I should find you, Bertie,” she said in a voice of such
-creamy richness that it was hard to credit the speaker with only three
-short trips to England. “Melville said you were to take this train;
-and I was _so_ delighted, _so_ relieved! I am in a most harassing
-predicament, my dear Bertie.”
-
-“That’s bad,” murmured the colonel with sympathetic solicitude: “what’s
-the trouble? Couldn’t you get a section?”
-
-“I have my reservations, but I don’t know whether I shall go to-night.”
-
-“Maybe I’m stupid, Millicent, but I confess I don’t know what you mean.”
-
-“Really, there’s no reason why you should, Bertie. That’s why I was so
-anxious to see you--in time, so that I might explain to you--might put
-you on your guard.”
-
-“Yes?” the colonel submitted; he never hurried a woman.
-
-“I’m going to visit dear Amy--you remember she was married two years
-ago and lives in Pasadena; she has a dear little baby and the loveliest
-home! It’s charming. And she was so delighted with your wedding gift,
-it was _so_ original. Amy never did care for costly things; these
-simple, unique gifts always pleased her. Of course, my main object
-is to see the dear child, but I shall not go to-night _unless_ Aunt
-Rebecca Winter is on the train. If for any reason she waits over until
-to-morrow I shall wait also.”
-
-“Ah,” sighed the colonel very softly, not stirring a muscle of his
-politely attentive face; “and does Aunt Rebecca expect to go on the
-train?”
-
-“They told me at the Pullman office that she had the drawing-room, the
-state-room and two sections. Of course, she has her maid with her and
-Archie--”
-
-“Does _he_ go, too?” the colonel asked, his eyes narrowing a little.
-
-“Yes, she’s taking him to California; he doesn’t seem well enough, she
-thinks, to go to school, so he is to have a tutor out there. I’m a
-little afraid Aunt Rebecca mollycoddles the boy.”
-
-“Aunt Rebecca never struck me as a molly-coddler. I always considered
-her a tolerably cynical old Spartan. But do you mean there is any doubt
-of their going? Awfully good of you to wait to see if they don’t go,
-but I’m sure Aunt Rebecca wouldn’t want you to sacrifice your section--”
-
-Mrs. Melville lifted a shapely hand in a Delsartian gesture of arrest;
-her smiling words were the last the colonel had expected. “Hush, dear
-Bertie; Aunt Rebecca doesn’t _know_ I am going. I don’t want her to
-know until we are on the train.”
-
-“Oh, I see, a surprise?” But he did _not_ see; and, with a quiet
-intentness, he watched the color raddle Mrs. Melville’s smooth cheeks.
-
-“Hardly,” returned the lady. “The truth is, Bertie, Melville and I
-are worried about Aunt Rebecca. She, we fear, has fallen under the
-influence of a most plausible adventuress; I suppose you have heard of
-her companion, Miss Smith?”
-
-“Can’t say I have exactly,” said the colonel placidly, but his eyes
-narrowed again. “Who is the lady?”
-
-“I thought--I am _sure_ Melville must have written you. But-- Oh,
-yes, he wrote yesterday to Boston. Well, Bertie, Miss Smith is a
-Southerner; she says she is a South Carolinian, but Aunt Rebecca picked
-her up in Washington, where she was with a kind of cousin of ours who
-was half crazy. Miss Smith took care of her and she died”--she fixed a
-darkling eye on the soldier--“she _died_ and she left Miss Smith money.”
-
-“Much?”
-
-“A few thousands. That is how Aunt Rebecca met her, and she pulled the
-wool over auntie’s eyes, and they came back together. She’s awfully
-clever.”
-
-“Young? Pretty?”
-
-“Oh, dear, no. And she’s nearer forty than thirty. Just the designing
-age for a woman when she’s still wanting to marry some one but
-beginning to be afraid that she can’t. Then such creatures always try
-to get _money_. If they can’t marry it, and there’s no man to set
-their caps for, they try to wheedle it out of some poor fool woman!”
-Millicent was in earnest, there was no doubt of that; the sure sign was
-her unconscious return to the direct expressions of her early life in
-the Middle West.
-
-“And you think Miss Smith is trying to influence Aunt Rebecca?”
-
-“Of course she is; and Aunt Rebecca is eighty, Rupert. And often while
-people of her age show no other sign of weakening intellect, they are
-not well regulated in their affections; they take fancies to people
-and get doting and clinging. She is getting to depend on Miss Smith.
-Really, that woman has more influence with her than all the rest of
-us together. She won’t hear a word against her. Why! when I tried to
-suggest how little we knew about Miss Smith and that it would be better
-not to trust her _too_ entirely, she positively _resented_ it. Of
-course I used tact, too. I was so hurt, so surprised!” Mrs. Millicent
-was plainly aggrieved.
-
-The colonel, who had his own opinion of the tact of his brother’s wife,
-was not so surprised; but he made an inarticulate sound which might
-pass for sympathy.
-
-“We’ve been worried a good deal,” pursued Mrs. Melville, “about the way
-Aunt Rebecca has acted. She wouldn’t stay in Fairport, where we could
-have some influence over her. She was always going south or going to
-the sea-shore or going _somewhere_. Sometimes I suspect Miss Smith made
-her, to keep her away from _us_, you know.”
-
-“Well, as long as I have known Aunt Rebecca--anyhow, ever since Uncle
-Archibald died--she has been restless and flying about.”
-
-“Not as she is now. And then she only had her maid--”
-
-“Oh, yes, Randall; she’s faithful as they make ’em. What does _she_ say
-about Miss Smith?”
-
-“Bertie, she’s won over Randall. Randall swears by her. Oh, she’s
-_deep_!”
-
-“Seems to be. But--excuse me--what’s your game, Millicent? How do you
-mean to protect our aged kinswoman and, incidentally, of course, the
-Winter fortune?”
-
-“I shall watch, Bertie; I shall be on my guard every waking hour. That
-deluded old woman is in more danger, perhaps, than you dream.”
-
-“As how?”
-
-“Miss Smith”--her voice sank portentously--“_was a trained nurse_.”
-
-“What harm does that do--unless you think she would know too much about
-poisons?” The colonel laughed.
-
-“It’s no laughing matter, Bertie. Rebecca is so rich and this other
-woman is so poor, and, in my estimation, so ambitious. I make no
-insinuations, I only say she needs watching.”
-
-“You may be right about that,” said the colonel thoughtfully. “There
-is Haley and the boy for your bags!”
-
-The boy picked up the big dress-suit case, the smaller dress-suit
-case and the hat case, he grabbed the bundle of cloaks, the case of
-umbrellas, and the lizard-skin bag. Dubiously he eyed the colonel’s
-luggage, as he tried to disengage a finger.
-
-“Niver moind, young feller,” called Haley, peremptorily whisking away
-the nearest piece, “I’ll help you a bit with yours, instead; you’ve a
-load, sure!”
-
-Mrs. Melville explained in an undertone: “I take all the hand-luggage I
-possibly can; the over-weight charges are wicked!”
-
-“Haley, they won’t let you inside without a ticket,” objected the
-colonel. But Haley, unheeding, strode on ahead of the staggering youth.
-
-“I have an English bath-tub, locked, of course, and packed with things,
-but he has put _that_ in the car,” said Mrs. Melville.
-
-“Certainly,” said the colonel absently; he was thinking: Mrs. Winter,
-the boy, Miss Smith--how ridiculously complete! Decidedly _something_
-will bear watching.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-AUNT REBECCA
-
-
-No sooner was Mrs. Melville ushered into her section than the colonel
-went through the train. He was not so suspicious as he told himself
-he might have been, with such a dovetailing of circumstances into his
-accidentally captured information; he couldn’t yet read villainy on
-that college lad’s frank face. But no reason, therefore, to neglect
-precautions. “Hope the best of men and prepare for the worst,” was the
-old campaigner’s motto.
-
-A walk through the cars showed him no signs of the two men. It was a
-tolerably complete inspection, too. There was only one drawing-room or
-state-room of which he did not manage to get a glimpse--the closed room
-being the property of a very great financial magnate, whose private car
-was waiting for him in Denver. His door was fast, and the click of the
-type-writer announced the tireless industry of our rulers.
-
-But if he did not find the college boy or the man with the moles he
-did get a surprise for his walk; namely, the sight of the family of
-Haley, and Haley himself beside their trig, battered luggage, in a
-section of the car next his own. Mrs. Haley turned a guilty red, while
-Haley essayed a stolid demeanor.
-
-“What does this mean?” demanded the colonel.
-
-“Haley felt he would _have_ to go with you, Colonel,” replied Mrs.
-Haley, who had timid, wide, blue eyes and the voice of a bird, but a
-courage under her panic, as birds have, too, when their nests are in
-peril. “We’ve rinted the house to a good man with grown-up children,
-and Haley can get a job if you won’t want him.”
-
-“Yis, sor,” mumbled Haley. He was standing at attention, as was his
-wife, the toddling Nora being held in the posture of respect on the
-plush seat.
-
-“And I suppose you took the furniture money to buy tickets?”
-
-“Yis, sor.”
-
-“And you’re bound to go with me?”
-
-“Yis, sor,” said Haley.
-
-“You ought to be ashamed of yourself, Sergeant,” said the colonel; but
-he was glad at the heart of him for this mutinous loyalty.
-
-“Yis, sor,” said Haley.
-
-“Well, since you are here, I engage you from to-day, you understand.”
-
-“Yis, sor,” said Haley. Mrs. Haley whimpered a blessing; but the only
-change in the soldier was that his military stolidity became natural
-and real instead of forced.
-
-“Sit down on this seat over here with me and I’ll tell you what I want.
-You fraud, letting me say good-by to you--”
-
-“I didn’t want to take the liberty, sor, but you _made_ me shake hands.
-I was afraid you’d catch on, sor. ’Tis a weight off me moind, sor.”
-
-“I dare say. You always have your way with me, you old mule. Now
-listen; I want you to be on the watch for two men”--thereupon the
-colonel described his men, laying special stress on the moles on the
-face of one, and the other’s dimple.
-
-Having set Haley his tasks, he went back to his car in better spirits.
-
-By this time the train was moving. He had seen his kinswoman and her
-party enter; and he found the object of Mrs. Melville’s darksome
-warnings sitting with a slender lad in the main body of the car. Aunt
-Rebecca was in the drawing-room, her maid with her. Mrs. Melville, who
-had already revealed her presence, sat across the aisle. She presented
-the colonel at once.
-
-Miss Smith did not look formidable; she looked “nice,” thought
-the colonel. She was of medium height; she was obviously plump,
-although well proportioned; her presence had an effect of radiant
-cleanliness, her eyes were so luminous and her teeth so fine and her
-white shirt-waist so immaculate. There was about her a certain soft
-illumination of cheerfulness, and at the same time a restful repose;
-she moved in a leisurely fashion and she sat perfectly still. “I never
-saw any one who looked less of an adventuress,” Winter was thinking, as
-he bowed. Then swiftly his glance went to the lad, a pale young fellow
-with hazel eyes and a long slim hand which felt cold.
-
-The boy made a little inarticulate sound in his throat and blushed
-when Colonel Winter addressed him. But he looked the brighter for the
-blush. It was not a plain face; rather an interesting one in spite of
-its listlessness and its sickly pallor; its oval was purely cut, the
-delicate mouth was closed firmly enough, and the hazel eyes with their
-long lashes would be beautiful were they not so veiled.
-
-“He has the Winter mouth, at least,” noted the colonel. He felt a
-novel throb at his heart. Had his own boy lived, the baby that died
-when it was born, he would be only a year older than Archie. At least,
-this boy was of his own blood. Without father or mother, but _not_
-alone in the world; and, if any danger menaced, not without defenders.
-The depression which had enveloped him lifted as mist before the sun,
-burned away by the mere thought of possible difficulties. “We will
-see if any one swindles you out of your share,” said Rupert Winter,
-compressing the Winter mouth more firmly, “or if those gentlemanly
-kidnappers mean you.”
-
-His ebbing suspicion of the boy’s companion revived; he would be on his
-guard, all right.
-
-“Aunt Rebecca wants to see you,” Mrs. Melville suggested. “She is in
-the drawing-room with her solitaire.”
-
-“Still playing Penelope’s Web?”
-
-“Oh, she always comes back to it. But she plays bridge, too; Rupert, I
-hear your game is a wonder. Archie’s been learning, so he could play
-with you.”
-
-“Good for Archie!”--he shot a glance and a smile at the lad’s reddening
-face--“we’ll have a game.”
-
-“Lord, I wish he didn’t look quite so ladylike,” he was grumbling
-within, as he dutifully made his way to his aunt’s presence.
-
-The electric lights flooded the flimsy railway table on which were
-spread rows of small-sized cards. An elderly lady of quality was musing
-over the pasteboard rows. A lady of quality--that was distinctly the
-phrase to catch one’s fancy at the first glimpse of Mrs. Winter. Not
-an aged lady, either, for even at eighty that elegantly moulded,
-slim figure, that abundance of silvery hair--parted in the middle
-and growing thickly on each side in nature’s own fashion, which art
-can not counterfeit, as well as softly puffed and massed above--that
-exquisitely colored and textured skin, strangely smooth for her years,
-with tiny wrinkles of humor, to be sure, about the eyes, but with
-cheeks and skin unmarred; that fine, firmly carved profile, those black
-eyebrows and lashes and still brilliant dark eyes; most of all that
-erect, alert, dainty carriage, gave no impression of age; but they all,
-and their accessories of toilet and manner, and a little prim touch of
-an older, more reticent day in both dress and bearing, recalled the
-last century phrase.
-
-A soft gray bunch of chinchilla fur lay where she had slipped it on
-her soft gray skirts; one hand rested in the fur--her left hand--and on
-the third finger were the only rings which she wore, a band of gold,
-worn by sixty years, and a wonderful ruby, wherein (at least such was
-Rupert’s phantasy) a writhing flame was held captive by its guard of
-diamond icicles. The same rings admired by her nephew ever since he was
-a cadet--just the same smiling, inscrutable, high-bred, unchanging old
-dame!
-
-“Good evening, Aunt Rebecca; not a day older!” said the colonel.
-
-“Good evening, Bertie,” returned the lady, extending a hand over the
-cards; “excuse my not rising to greet you; I might joggle the cards. Of
-course I’m not a day older; I don’t dare to grow older at my age! Sit
-down. I’m extremely glad to see you; I’ve a heap to talk to you about.
-Do you mind if I run this game through first?”
-
-The colonel didn’t mind. He raised the proffered hand to his lips; such
-homage seemed quite the most natural act in the world with Mrs. Winter.
-And he unobtrusively edged his own lean and wiry person into the vacant
-seat opposite her.
-
-“How far are you going?” said she, after a few moves of the cards.
-
-“My ticket says Los Angeles; but it had to say something, so I chose
-Los Angeles for luck; I’m an irresponsible tramp now, you know; and I
-may drop off almost anywhere. You are for southern California, aren’t
-you?”
-
-“Eventually; but we shall stop at San Francisco for two or three weeks.”
-
-“Do you mind if I stop off with you? I want to get acquainted with my
-ward,” said the colonel.
-
-“That’s a good idea, Bertie.”
-
-“He seems rather out of sorts; you aren’t worried about--well,
-tuberculosis or that sort of thing?”
-
-“I am worried about just that sort of thing; although the doctor says
-nothing organic at all is the matter with him; but he is too melancholy
-for a boy; he needs rousing; losing his father and mother in one year,
-you know, and he was devoted to them. I can’t quite make him out,
-Bertie; he hasn’t the Winter temperament. I suppose he has a legal
-right to his mother’s nature; but it is very annoying. It makes him so
-much harder to understand--not that she wasn’t a good woman who made
-Tom happy; but she wasn’t a Winter. However, Janet has brightened him
-up considerably--you’ve seen Janet--Miss Smith? What do you think of
-her?”
-
-Winter said honestly that she was very nice-looking and that she looked
-right capable; he fell into the idiom of his youth sometimes when with
-a Southerner.
-
-“She is,” said Aunt Rebecca.
-
-“Where did you find her?” asked the colonel carelessly, inspecting the
-cards.
-
-Aunt Rebecca smiled. “I thought Millicent would have given you all
-the particulars. She was nurse, secretary, companion and diet cook to
-Cousin Angela Nelson; when _she_ died I got her. Lucky for me.”
-
-“So I should judge,” commented the colonel politely.
-
-“I presume Millicent has told you that she is an adventuress and after
-my money and a heap more stuff. If she hasn’t she will. Get a notion
-once in Millicent’s head and a surgical operation is necessary to
-dislodge it! Janet is the only mortal person who could live with poor
-Cousin Angela, who had enough real diseases to kill her and enough
-imaginary ones to kill anybody who lived with her! Janet made her
-comfortable, would not stand everything on earth from her--though she
-did stand a heap--and really cared for her. When she died Cousin Angela
-left her some money; not very much, but a few thousands. She would
-have left her more, but Janet wouldn’t let her. She left some to some
-old servants, who surely deserved it for living with _her_, some to
-charities and the rest to her sisters, who hadn’t put a foot inside the
-house for fifteen years, but naturally resented her not giving them
-everything. I reckon they filled Millicent up with their notions.” She
-pushed the outspread cards together.
-
-“You had several moves left,” said the colonel.
-
-“Four. But then, I was finished. Bertie, you play bridge, of course;
-and I used to hear of your whist triumphs; how did you happen to take
-to whist?”
-
-“To fill up the time, I reckon. I began it years ago. Now a soldier’s
-life is a great deal more varied, because a man will be shifted around
-and get a show of the different kinds of service. And there are the
-exams, and the Philippines--oh, plenty of diversions. But in the old
-days a man in the line was billed for an awfully stupid time. I didn’t
-care to take to drink; and I couldn’t read as you do if I’d had books,
-which I hadn’t, so I took to playing cards. I played skat and poker
-and whist, and of late years I’ve played bridge. Millicent plays?”
-
-“Millicent is a celebrated player. She was a great duplicate-whist
-player, you know. To see Millicent in her glory, one should play
-duplicate with her. I’m only a chump player; my sole object is to win
-tricks.”
-
-“What else should it be?”
-
-Aunt Rebecca smiled upon him. “To give information to your partner.
-The main object of the celebrated American-leads system is signaling
-information to your partner. Incidentally, one tells the adversaries,
-as well as one’s partner, which, however, doesn’t count really as much
-as you might think; for most people don’t notice what their partners
-play _very_ much, and don’t notice what their adversaries play at
-all. Millicent is always so busy indicating things to her partner and
-watching for his signals and his indications that you can run a cross
-ruff in on her without her suspecting. She asked me once if she didn’t
-play an intelligible game, and I told her she did; a babe in arms could
-understand it. She didn’t seem quite pleased.”
-
-“How about Archie? Can he play a good game?”
-
-“Very fair for a boy of fourteen; he was fond of whist until his
-troubles came,” said Mrs. Winter, with a faint clouding of her keen
-gaze. “Since then he hasn’t taken much interest in anything. Janet has
-brightened him up more than any one; and when he heard you were coming
-that did rouse him. You are one of his heroes. He’s that sort of a
-boy,” she added, with a tinge of impatience in her soft Southern voice.
-As if to divert her thoughts, she began deftly moving the cards before
-her. Her hands showed the blue veins more prominently than they show in
-young hands. This was their only surrender to time; they were shapely
-and white, and the slim fingers were as straight as when the beaux of
-Fairfax County would have ridden all day for a chance to kiss them.
-
-The colonel watched the great ruby wink and glow. The ruby was a part
-of his memories of his aunt; she had always worn it. He remembered
-it, when she used to come and visit him at the hotel at West Point,
-dazzling impartially officers, professors, cadets and hotel waiters.
-Was that almost forty years ago? Well, thirty-four, anyhow! She had
-been very good, very generous to all the young Winters, then. Indeed,
-although she never quite forgave him for not marrying the wife of
-her selecting, she had always been kind and generous to Rupert; yet,
-somehow, while he had admired and found a humorous joy in his Aunt
-Rebecca, he wondered if he had ever loved her. She was both beautiful
-and brilliant when she was young, a Southern belle, a Northern society
-leader; her life was full of conquests; her footsteps, which had
-wandered over the world, had left a phosphorescent wake of admiration.
-She had always been a personage. She was a power in Washington after
-the war; they had found her uniquely delightful in royal courts long
-before Americans were the fashion; she had been of importance in New
-York, and they had loved her epigrams in Boston; now, in her old age,
-she held a veritable little court of her own in the provincial Western
-city which had been her husband’s home. He went to Congress from
-Fairport; he had made a fortune there, and when he died, many years
-ago, in Egypt, back to his Western home, with dogged determination and
-lavish expenditures of both money and wit, his widow had brought him to
-rest. The most intense and solemn experience of a woman she had missed,
-for no children had come to them, but her husband had been her lover
-so long as he lived, and she had loved him. She had known great men;
-she had lived through wonderful events; and often her hand had been on
-those secret levers which move vast forces. She had been in tragedies,
-if an inviolable coolness of head, perhaps of heart, had shielded
-her from being of them. The husband of her youth, the nearest of her
-blood, the friends of her middle life--all had gone into the dark; yet
-here she sat, with her smooth skin and her still lustrous eyes and her
-fragrant hands, keenly smiling over her solitaire. The colonel wondered
-if he could ever reconcile himself with such philosophy to his own
-narrowed and emptied life; she was older than he, yet she could still
-find a zest in existence. All the great passions gone; all the big
-interests; and still her clever mind was working, happy, possibly, in
-its mere exercise, disdaining the stake, she who had had every success.
-What a vitality! He looked at her, puzzling. Her complexity bewildered
-him, he not being of a complex nature himself. As he looked, suddenly
-he found himself questioning why her face, in its revival of youthful
-smoothness and tint, recalled some other face, recently studied by
-him--a face that had worn an absolutely different expression; having
-the same delicate aquiline nose, the same oval contour, the same wide
-brows--who? who? queried the colonel. Then he nodded. Of course; it was
-the man with the moles, the brother. He looked enough like Mrs. Winter
-to be her kinsman. At once he put his guess to the test. “Aunt Becky,”
-said he, “have you any kin I don’t know about?”
-
-“I reckon not. I’m an awfully kinless old party,” said she serenely. “I
-was a Winter, born as well as married, and so you and Mel and Archie
-are double kin to me. I was an only child, so I haven’t anything closer
-than third or fourth cousins, down in Virginia and Boston.”
-
-“Have you, by chance, any cousin, near or far, named Mercer?”
-
-Resting her finger-tips on the cards, Aunt Rebecca seemed to let her
-mind search amid Virginian and Massachusetts genealogical tables. “Why,
-certainly,” she answered after a pause, “there was General Philemon
-Mercer--Confederate army, you know--and his son, Sam Nelson; Phil was
-my own cousin and Sam Nelson my second, and Sam Nelson’s sons would be
-my third, wouldn’t they? Phil and Sam are both dead, and Winnie Lee,
-the daughter, is dead, and poor Phil--the grandson, you know--poor
-boy, _he_ shot himself while at Harvard; but his brother Cary is alive.”
-
-“Do you know him?”
-
-“Never saw him but once or twice. He has very good manners.”
-
-“Is he rich?”
-
-“He was, but after he had spent his youth working with incredible
-industry and a great deal of ability to build up a steel business and
-had put it into a little combination--not a big trust, just a genuine
-corporation--some of the financial princes wanted it for a club--to
-knock down bigger game, I reckon--and proceeded to cheapen the stock
-in order to control it. Cary held on desperately, bought more than he
-could hold, mortgaged everything else; but they were too big for him
-to fight. It was in 1903, you know, when they had an alleged financial
-panic, and scared the banks. Cary went to the wall, and Phil with him,
-and poor Phil killed himself. Afterward Cary’s wife died; he surely did
-have a mean time. And, to tell you the truth, Bertie, I think there has
-been a little kink in Cary’s mind ever since.”
-
-“Did you hold any of Cary’s stock?” He was piecing his puzzle together.
-
-“Yes, but my stock was all paid for, and I held on to it; now it is
-over par and paying dividends. Oh, the property was all right, had it
-been kept in honest hands and run for itself. The trouble with Cary
-was that in order to keep control of the property he bought a lot of
-shares on margins, and when they began to run downhill, he was obliged
-to borrow money on his actual holdings to protect his fictitious ones.
-The stock went so low that he was wiped out. He wouldn’t take my advice
-earlier in the game; and I knew that it would only be losing money to
-lend it to him, later--still, sometimes I have been rather sorry I
-didn’t. Would I better try the spade, Bertie, or the diamond?”
-
-The colonel advised the spade. He wondered whether he should repeat
-to his aunt the few sentences which he had overheard from Mercer and
-his companion; but a belief that old age worries easily, added to his
-natural man’s disinclination to attack the feminine nerves, tipped the
-scales against frankness. So, instead, he began to talk about Archie;
-what was he like? was he fond of athletics? or was he a bookish lad?
-Aunt Rebecca reported that he had liked riding and golf; but he was not
-very rugged, and since his father’s death he had seemed listless to
-a degree. “But he is better now,” she added with a trace of eagerness
-quite foreign to her usual manner. “Janet Smith has roused him up; and
-what do you suppose she has done? But really, you are the cause.”
-
-“I?” queried the colonel.
-
-“Just you. Archie, Janet argued, is the kind of nature that must have
-some one to be devoted to.”
-
-“And has he taken a fancy to her? Or to you?”
-
-Aunt Rebecca’s eyes dulled a little and her delicate lips were twisted
-by a smile which had more wistfulness than humor in it. “I’m not a
-lovable person; anyhow, he does not love easily. We are on terms of
-the highest respect, even admiration, but we haven’t got so far as
-friendship, far less comradeship. Janet is different. But I don’t mean
-Janet; she has grown absurdly fond of him; and I think he’s fond of
-her; but what she did was to make him fond of you. You, General Rupert
-Winter; why, that boy could pass an examination on your exploits and
-not miss a question. Janet and he have a scrap-book with every printed
-word about you, I do believe. And she has been amazingly shrewd. We
-didn’t know how to get the youngster back to his sports while he was
-out of school; and, in fact, an old woman like me is rather bewildered
-by such a young creature, anyhow; but Janet rode with him; _you_ are a
-remarkable rider; I helped there, because I remembered some anecdotes
-about you at West Point--”
-
-“But, my dear Aunt--”
-
-“Don’t interrupt, Bertie, it’s a distinctly American habit. And
-we read in the papers that you had learned that Japanese trick
-fighting--jiu-jitsu--and were a wonder--”
-
-“I’m not, I assure you; that beast of a newspaper man--”
-
-“Never mind, if you are not a wonder, you’ll have to be; you can take
-lessons in Los Angeles; there are quantities of Japs there. Why, even
-in Chicago, Janet picked up one, and we imported him, and Archie took
-lessons, and practises every day. There’s a book in my bag, in the
-rack there, a very interesting book; Janet and I have both read it so
-we could talk to Archie. You would better skim it over a little if you
-really aren’t an expert, enough so you can _talk_ jiu-jitsu, anyhow; we
-can’t be destroying Archie’s ideals until he gets a better appetite.”
-
-“Well, upon my word!” breathed the colonel. “Do you expect me to be
-a fake hero? I never took more than two lessons in my life. That
-reporter interviewed my teacher, who was killed in the Japanese War,
-by the way; he went to the army after my second lesson. He didn’t know
-any English beyond ‘yes’ and ‘if you please’; and he used them both on
-the reporter, who let his own fancy go up like a balloon. Well, where
-is the book?”
-
-He found it easily; and with a couple of volumes of another kidney,
-over which he grinned.
-
-“_The Hound of the Baskervilles_ and _The Leavenworth Case_! I’ve read
-them, too,” he said; “they’re great! And do you still like detective
-stories? You would have made a grand sleuth yourself, Aunt Becky.”
-Again he had half a mind to speak of the occurrence at the station;
-again he checked the impulse. “I remember,” he added, “that you used to
-hold strenuous opinions.”
-
-“You mean my thinking that the reason crimes escape discovery is not
-that criminals are so bright, but that detectives in general are so
-particularly stupid? Oh, yes, I think that still. So does Sir Conan
-Doyle. And I have often wished I could measure my own wits, once, with
-a really _fine_ criminal intellect. It would be worth the risk.”
-
-“God forbid!” said the colonel hastily.
-
-There came a tap on the door.
-
-“Millicent!” groaned Aunt Rebecca. “I know the creaking of her stays.
-No, don’t stay, Bertie; go and get Janet and a rescue bridge party as
-quick as you can!”
-
-“The original and only Aunt Rebecca,” thought the colonel at the door,
-smiling. But, somehow, the handsome old dame never had seemed so nearly
-human to him before.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-THE TRAIN ROBBERS
-
-
-When the colonel awoke next morning the train was running smoothly
-over the Iowa prairies, while low hills and brick factory chimneys
-announced Council Bluffs. The landscape was wide and monotonous; a
-sweep of illimitable cornfields in their winter disarray, or bleakly
-fresh from the plow, all painted with a palette holding only drabs and
-browns; here and there a dab of red in a barn or of white in windmill
-or house; but these livelier tints so scattered that they were no more
-than pin spots on the picture. The very sky was as dimly colored as the
-earth, lighter, yet of no brighter hue than the fog which smoked up
-from the ground. Later in the spring this same landscape would be of
-a delicate and charming beauty; in summer or autumn it would make the
-beholder’s pulses throb with its glorious fertility; but on a blurred
-March morning it was as dreary as the reveries of an aging man who has
-failed.
-
-Nevertheless, Rupert Winter’s first conscious sensation was not
-depression, only a little tingle of interest and excitement, such as
-stings pleasantly one who rises to a prospect of conflict in which
-he has the confidence of his own strength. “By Jove!” he wondered,
-“whatever makes me feel so kiddish?”
-
-His first impulse was to peep through his curtains into the car. It
-wore its early morning aspect of muffled berths and stuffy curtains,
-among which Miss Smith’s trig, carefully finished presence in a fresh
-white shirt-waist, attended by the pleasant whiffs of cologne water,
-gave the beholder a certain refreshing surprise. One hand (white and
-firm and beautifully cared for) held a wicker bottle, source of the
-pleasant whiffs; her sleek back braids were coiled about her comely
-head, and the hair grew very prettily in a blunted point on the
-creamy nape of her neck. It was really dark brown hair, but it looked
-black against the whiteness of her skin. She had very capable-looking
-shoulders, the colonel noted, and a flat back; perhaps she wasn’t
-pretty, but in a long while he had not seen a more attractive-looking
-woman. She made him think of a Bonne Celine rose, somehow. He could
-hear her talking to some one behind the berth’s curtains. Could those
-doleful moans emerge from Archie? Could a Winter boy be whimpering
-about the jar of the train in that fashion? Immediately he was aware
-that the sufferer was Randall, for Miss Smith spoke: “Drink the tea,
-and lie down again, I’ll attend to Mrs. Winter. Don’t you worry!”
-
-“Getting solid with Randall,” commented the colonel. “Which is
-she--kind-hearted, or an accomplished villainess? Well, it’s
-interesting, anyhow.”
-
-By the time he had made his toilet the train was slacking speed ready
-to halt in Council Bluffs, and all his suspicions rushed on deck again
-at the sight of Miss Smith and Archie walking outside.
-
-He joined them, and he had to admit that Miss Smith looked as pleased
-as Archie at his appearance. Nor did she send a single furtive glance,
-slanting or backward, while they walked in the crisp, clean air.
-Once the train had started and Miss Smith was in the drawing-room,
-breakfasting with Mrs. Winter and Archie, he politely attended Mrs.
-Millicent through the morning meal in the dining-car. It was so good
-a meal that he naturally, although illogically, thought better of
-Miss Smith’s prospects of innocence; and cheerily he sought Haley.
-He found him in the smoking compartment of the observation-car,
-having for companions no less personages than the magnate and a
-distinguished-looking New Englander, who, Rupert Winter made no doubt,
-was a Harvard professor of rank and renown among his learned kind. He
-knew the earmarks of the species. The New Englander’s pencil was flying
-over a little improvised pad of telegraph blanks, while he listened
-with absorbed interest to Haley’s rich Irish tones. There was a little
-sidewise lunge of Haley’s mouth, a faint twinkle of Haley’s frank and
-simple eyes which the colonel appraised at very nearly their real
-value. He knew that it isn’t in Irish-American nature to perceive a
-wide-open ear and not put something worth hearing into it. Besides, his
-sharp ears had brought him a key to the discourse, a sorrowful remark
-of the sergeant’s as he entered: “Yes, sor, thim wather torchures is
-_terrible_!”
-
-He glanced suspiciously from one of Haley’s audience to the other. The
-newspaper cartoonist had pictured on all kinds of bodies of preying
-creatures, whether of the earth or air, the high brows, the round head,
-the delicate features, the thin cheeks, the straight line of the
-mouth, and the mild, inexpressive eyes of the man before him. He had
-been extolled as a far-sighted benefactor of the world, and execrated
-picturesquely as the king of pirates who would scuttle the business of
-his country without a qualm.
-
-Winter, amid his own questionings and problems, could not help a
-scrutiny of a man whose power was greater than that of medieval kings.
-He sat consuming a cigarette, more between his fingers than his lips;
-and glancing under drooping eyelids from questioner to narrator. At the
-colonel’s entrance he looked up, as did Haley, who rose to his feet
-with an unconscious salute. “I’d be glad to spake wid youse a minnit,
-if I might, General,” said Haley, “about where I put your dress-shute
-case, sor.”
-
-The colonel, of course, did not expect any remarks about a suit case
-when he got Haley by himself at the observation end of the car; but
-what he did get was of sufficient import to drive out of his mind a
-curt lecture about blackening the reputation of the army with lies
-about the Philippines. Haley had told him that he had seen the man with
-the two moles on his face jump out of his own car at Council Bluffs.
-He had simply stood on the platform, looking to right and left for a
-moment; then he had swung himself back on the car. Haley had watched
-him walk down the aisle and enter the drawing-room. He did not come
-out; Haley had found out that the drawing-room belonged to Edwin S.
-Keatcham, “the big railroad man, sor.”
-
-“It doesn’t seem likely that _he_ would be an accomplice of a
-kidnapper,” mused the colonel. “The man might have gone in there while
-he was out.”
-
-“Sure, he might, sor; ’twas mesilf thinking that same; and I wint
-beyant to the observation-car, and there the ould gintleman was
-smoking.”
-
-“And you stopped to tell yarns to that other gentleman instead of
-getting back and following--”
-
-“No, sor, I beg your pardon, sor; I was kaping me eyes open and on him;
-for himsilf was in the observation-car where you are now, sor, until we
-come in, and thin he walked back, careless like, to his own car. Will I
-be afther following him?”
-
-“Yes; don’t lose him.”
-
-They did not lose him; they both saw him enter the drawing-room and
-almost immediately come out and sit down in one of the open sections.
-
-“See if you can’t find out from the conductor where he is going,” the
-colonel proposed to Haley; and he frowned over his thoughts for a bad
-quarter of an hour at the window. The precipitate of all this mental
-ferment was a determination to stick close to the boy, saying nothing.
-He hoped that when they stopped over night at Salt Lake City, according
-to Aunt Rebecca’s plan, they might shake off the “brother’s” company.
-The day passed uneventfully. He played bridge with Mrs. Millicent and
-Miss Smith and Archie, while Aunt Rebecca kept up her French with one
-of Bentzon’s novels.
-
-Afterward she said grimly to him: “I think you must have been converted
-out in the Philippines; you never so much as winced, that last hand;
-no, you sat there smiling over your ruin as sweetly as if you enjoyed
-it.”
-
-The colonel smiled again. “Ah, but, you see, I did enjoy it; didn’t you
-notice the hand? No? Well, it was worth watching. It was the rubber
-game; they were twenty-four and we were twenty-six and we were on the
-seventh round; Miss Smith had made it hearts. She sat on my left, dummy
-on my right. Millicent had the lead. She had four little spades, a
-little club, the queen of hearts and a trey; dummy had the queen, the
-ten and the nine of spades, it had the king of hearts and three clubs
-with the jack at the top. I had a lovely diamond suit which I hadn’t
-had a chance to touch, top sequence, ace, king, queen; I had the jack
-of trumps and the jack of spades; and the queen and a little club. I
-hadn’t a lead, you understand; Millicent had taken five tricks and
-they had taken one; they needed six to win the game, we needed two;
-see? Well, Millicent hadn’t any diamonds to lead me, and unhappily she
-didn’t think to lead trumps through dummy, which would have made a
-world of difference. She led a club; dummy put on the jack. I knew Miss
-Smith had the ace and one low heart; no clubs, a lot of low diamonds,
-and she might or might not have a spade. I figured that she had the
-ace and a little one; if she would trump in with the little one, as
-ninety-nine out of a hundred women would have done, her ace and her
-partner’s king would fall together; or, at worst, he would have to
-trump her diamond lead, after she had led out her king of spades, and
-lead spades, which I could trump and bring in all my diamonds. Do you
-take in the situation?”
-
-“You mean that Janet had the king of spades alone, the ace and the
-little trump and four worthless diamonds? I see. It is a chance for the
-grand _coup_; I reckon she played it.”
-
-“She _did_!” cried the colonel with unction. “She slapped that ace on
-the trick, she modestly led her king of spades, gathered in my jack,
-then ‘she stole, she stole my child away,’ my little jack of trumps;
-it fell on dummy’s king, and dummy led out his spades and I had to see
-that whole diamond suit slaughtered. They made their six tricks, the
-game and the rubber; and I wanted to clap my hands over the neatness of
-it.”
-
-“She is a good player,” agreed Aunt Rebecca, “and a very pleasant
-person. You remember the epitaph, don’t you, Bertie? ‘She was so
-pleasant.’ Yet Janet has had a heap of trouble; but, after all,
-happiness is not a condition but a temperament; I suppose Janet has the
-temperament. She’s a good loser, too; and she never takes advantage of
-the rules.”
-
-“She certainly loves a straight game,” reflected the colonel. “I
-confess I don’t like the kind of woman that is always grabbing a trick
-if some one plays out of the wrong hand.”
-
-He said something of the kind to Millicent, obtaining but scant
-sympathy in that quarter.
-
-“She’s deep, Bertie; I told you that,” was the only reply, “but I’m
-watching. I have reason for my feeling.”
-
-“Maybe you have been misinformed,” ventured her brother-in-law with
-proper meekness.
-
-“Not at all,” retorted she sharply. “I happen to know that she worked
-against me with the Daughters.”
-
-“Daughters,” the colonel repeated inanely, “your daughters?”
-
-“Certainly not! The Daughters of the Revolution.”
-
-“It’s a mighty fine society, that; did a lot during the Spanish War.
-And you are the state president, aren’t you?”
-
-“No, Rupert,” returned Mrs. Melville with dignity, “I am no longer
-state regent. By methods that would shame the most hardened men
-politicians I was defeated; why! didn’t you read about it?”
-
-“You know I only came back from the Philippines in February.”
-
-“It was in all the Chicago papers. I was interviewed myself. I assure
-you the other candidates (there were two) tried the very _lowest_
-political methods. Melville said it was scandalous. There were at
-least three luncheons given against me. It wasn’t the congress, it was
-the lobby defeated me. And their methods! I would not believe that
-gentlewoman could stoop to such infamy of misrepresentation.” The
-colonel chewed his mustache; he felt for that reporter of the Chicago
-paper; he was evidently getting a phonographic record now; he made an
-inarticulate rumble of sympathy in his throat which was as the clucking
-of the driver to the mettled horse. Mrs. Melville gesticulated with
-Delsartian grace, as she poured forth her woes.
-
-“They accused me of a domineering spirit; they said I was trying to
-set up a machine. _I!_ I worked for them, many a time, half the night,
-at my desk; never was a letter unanswered; I did half the work of the
-corresponding secretary; yet at the crucial moment _she betrayed me_!
-I learned more in those two days of the petty jealousy, the pitiless
-malevolence of _some_ women than I had known all my life before; but at
-the same time, to the faithful band of friends”--the colonel had the
-sensation of listening to the record again--“whose fidelity was proof
-against ridicule and cruel misrepresentation, I return a gratitude
-that will never wane. Rupert”--she turned herself in the seat and
-waved the open palm of her hand in a graceful and dramatic gesture,
-“--those women not only stooped to malignant falsehoods, they not only
-trampled parliamentary law underfoot, but they circulated through the
-hall a cartoon called the _Making of the Slate_. Of course, we had
-our quarters at a hotel, and after the evening meeting, after I had
-retired, in fact, a bell-boy brought me a message; it was necessary
-to have a meeting at once, to decide for the secretaryship, as we had
-found out Mrs. Ellennere was false. The ladies in the adjoining rooms
-and the others of us on the board who were loyal came into my chamber.
-Rupert, will you believe it, those women, had a grotesque picture of
-_us_, with faces cut out of the newspapers--of course, all our pictures
-were in the papers--and they had the audacity and the meanness to
-picture me in--in the garments of night!”
-
-“That was pretty tough. But where does Miss Smith come in?”
-
-“She was at the convention. She is a Daughter. I’ve always said we are
-too lax in our admissions.”
-
-“Who drew the picture?”
-
-“It may not be Miss Smith, but--she does draw. I’m _sure_ that she
-worked against me; she covered up her footprints so that I have no
-proof; but I suspect her. She’s deep, Bertie, she’s deep. But she can’t
-hoodwink _me_. I’ll find her out.”
-
-The colonel experienced the embarrassment that is the portion of a rash
-man trying to defend one woman against another; he retreated because he
-perceived defense was in vain; but he did not feel his growing opinion
-of Miss Smith’s innocence menaced by Mrs. Melville’s convictions.
-
-She played too square a game for a kidnapper--and Smith was the
-commonest of names. No, there must be some explanation; Rupert Winter
-had lived too long not to distrust the plausible surface clue. “It is
-the improbable that always happens, and the impossible most of the
-time,” Aunt Rebecca had said once. He quite agreed with her whimsical
-phrase.
-
-Nothing happened to arouse his suspicions that day. Haley reported
-that Cary Mercer was going on to San Francisco. The conductor did not
-know his name; he seemed to know Mr. Keatcham and was with him in his
-drawing-room most of the time. Had the great man a secretary with him?
-Yes, he seemed to have, a little fellow who had not much to say for
-himself, and jumped whenever his boss spoke to him. There was also a
-valet, an Englishman, who did not respond properly to conversational
-overtures. They were all going to get off at Denver.
-
-Haley was not misinformed, as the colonel perceived with his own
-eyes--and he saw Cary Mercer bow in parting to the great man, who
-requited the low salute with a gruff nod. Here was an opportunity for a
-nearer glimpse of Mercer, possibly for that explanation in which Winter
-still had a lurking hope. He caught Mercer just in the car doorway, and
-politely greeted him: “Mr. Mercer, I think? You may not remember me,
-Colonel Winter. I met you in Cambridge, three years ago--”
-
-It seemed a brutal thing to do, to recall a meeting under such
-circumstances; but if Mercer could give the explanation he would
-excuse him; it was better than suspecting an innocent man. But there
-was no opportunity for explanation. Mercer turned a blank and coldly
-suspicious face toward him. “I beg pahdon,” he said in his Southern
-way, “I think you have made a mistake in the person.”
-
-“And are you _not_ Mr. Cary Mercer?” The colonel felt the disagreeable
-resemblance of his own speeches to those made in newspaper stories by
-the gentleman who wishes his old friend to change a fifty-dollar bill
-or to engage in an amusing game with a thimble. Mercer saw it as well
-as he. “Try some one from the country,” he remarked with an unpleasant
-smile, brushing past, while the color mounted to the colonel’s tanned
-cheek. “The _next_ time you meet me,” Rupert Winter vowed, “you’ll know
-me.”
-
-A new porter had come on at Denver; a light brown, chubby, bald man
-with a face that radiated friendliness. He was filled with the desire
-for conversation, and he had worked on the road for eight years, hence
-could supplement _Over the Range_ and the other guide-books with
-personal gossip. He showed marked deference to the colonel, which
-that unassuming and direct man could not quite fathom, until Archie
-enlightened him. Archie smiled, a queer, chewed-up smile which the
-colonel hailed with:
-
-“Why are you making fun of me, young man?”
-
-“It’s Lewis, the porter; he follows you round and listens to you in
-such an awestruck way.”
-
-“But why?”
-
-“Why, Sergeant Haley told him about you; and I told him a _little_,
-and he says he wishes you’d been on the train when they had the
-hold-ups. This is an awful road for hold-ups, he says. He’s been at
-five hold-ups.”
-
-“And what does he advise?”
-
-“Oh, he says, hold up your hands and they won’t hurt you.”
-
-“Well, I reckon his advice is sound,” laughed the colonel. “See you
-follow it, Archie.”
-
-“Shall _you_ hold up your hands, Uncle Bertie?” asked Archie.
-
-“Much the wisest course; these fellows shoot.”
-
-Archie looked disappointed. “I suppose so,” he sighed. “I’m afraid I’d
-want to, if they were pointing pistols at me. Lewis was on the train
-once when a man showed fight. He wouldn’t put up his hands, and the
-bandit plugged him, like a flash; he fell crosswise over the seat and
-the blood spurted across Lewis’ wrist; he said it was like a hot jet of
-water.”
-
-The homely and bizarre horror of the picture had evidently struck home
-to Archie; he half shivered.
-
-“Too much imagination,” grumbled the colonel to himself. “A Winter
-ought to take to fighting like a duck to water!” He betook himself to
-Miss Smith; and he was uneasily conscious that he was going to her for
-consoling. But he felt better after a little talk about Archie with
-her. Plainly she thought Archie had plenty of spirit; although, of
-course, he hadn’t told her about the bandits. The negro was “kidding”
-the passengers; and women shouldn’t be disturbed by such nonsense.
-The colonel had old-fashioned views of guarding his womankind from
-the harsh ways of the world. Curious, he reflected, what sense Miss
-Smith seemed to have; and how she understood things. He felt better
-acquainted with her than a year’s garrison intercourse would have made
-him with any other woman he knew.
-
-That afternoon, they two sat watching the fantastic cliffs which took
-grotesque semblance of ruined castles crowning their barren hillsides;
-or of deserted amphitheaters left by some vanished race to crumble.
-They had talked of many things. She had told him of the sleepy old
-South Carolinian town where she was born, and the plantation and the
-distant cousin who was like her mother, and the hospital where she
-had been taught, and the married sister who had died. Such a narrow,
-laborious, innocent existence as she described! How cheerfully, too,
-she had shouldered her burdens! They talked of the South and of the
-Philippines; a little they talked of Archie and his sorrow and of the
-eternal problems that have troubled the soul of man since first death
-entered the world. As they talked, the colonel’s suspicions faded into
-grotesque shadows. “Millicent is ridiculous,” quoth he. Then he fell to
-wondering whether there had been a romance in Miss Smith’s past life.
-“Such a handsome woman would look high,” he sighed. Only twenty-four
-hours ago he had called Miss Smith “nice-looking,” with careless
-criticism. He was quite unconscious of his change of view. That night
-he felt lonely, of a sudden; the old wound in his heart ached; his
-future looked as bleak as the mountain-walled plains through which
-he was speeding. After a long time the train stopped with a jar and
-rattle, ending in a sudden shock. He raised the curtain to catch the
-flash of the electric lights at Glenwood. Out of the deep defile they
-glittered like diamonds in a pool of water. Why should he think of Miss
-Smith’s eyes? With an impatient sigh, he pulled down the curtain and
-turned over to sleep.
-
-His thoughts drifted, floated, were submerged in a wavering procession
-of pictures; he was back in the Philippines; they had surprised the
-fort; how could that be when he was on guard? But they were there--
-He sat up in his berth. Instinctively he slipped the revolver out of
-his bag and held it in one hand, as he peeped through the crevice
-of the curtains. There was no motion, no sound of moving; but heads
-were emerging between the curtains in every direction; and Archie was
-standing, his hands shaking above his tumbled brown head and pale face.
-A man in a soft hat held two revolvers while another man was pounding
-on the drawing-room door, gruffly commanding those inside to come
-out. “No, we shall not come out,” responded Aunt Rebecca’s composed,
-well-bred accents, her neat enunciation not disturbed by a quiver. “If
-you want to kill an old woman, you will have to break down the door.”
-
-“Let them alone, Shay, it takes too long; let’s finish here, first,”
-called the man with the revolver; “they’ll come soon enough when we
-want them. Here, young feller, fish out! Nobody’ll get hurt if you keep
-quiet; if you don’t you’ll get a dose like the man in number six, two
-years ago. Hustle, young feller!”
-
-The colonel was eying every motion, every shifting from one foot to
-the other. Let them once get by Archie--
-
-The boy handed over his pocket-book.
-
-“Now your watch,” commanded the brigand; “take it, Shay!”
-
-“Won’t you please let me keep that watch?” faltered Archie; “that was
-papa’s watch.”
-
-The childish name from the tall lad made the robber laugh. “And mama’s
-little pet wants to keep it, does he? Well, he can’t. Get a move on
-you!”
-
-The colonel had the sensation of an electric shock; as the second
-robber grabbed at the fob in the boy’s belt, Archie struck him with the
-edge of his open hand so swiftly and so fiercely under the jaw that
-he reeled back against his companion. The colonel’s surprise did not
-disturb the automatic aim of an old fighter of the plains; his revolver
-barked; and he sprang out, on the man he shot. “Get back in the berths,
-all of you,” he shouted; “give me a chance to shoot!”
-
-The voice of the porter, whose hands had been turning up the lights not
-quite steadily, now pealed out with camp-meeting power, “Dat’s it; give
-de colonel a chance to do some killing!”
-
-Both bandits were sprawling on the floor of the aisle, one limp and
-moaning; but the other got one hand up to shoot; only to have Archie
-kick the revolver out of it, while at the same instant an umbrella
-handle fell with a wicked whack on the man’s shoulder. The New England
-professor was out of his berth. He had been a baseball man in his own
-college days; his bat was a frail one, but he hit with a will; and
-a groan told of his success. Nevertheless, the fellow scrambled to
-his feet. Mrs. Melville was also out of her berth, thanks to which
-circumstance he was able to escape; as the colonel (who had grappled
-with the other man and prevented his rising) must needs have shot
-through his sister-in-law to hit the fleeing form.
-
-[Illustration: Miss Smith was sitting beside Archie, holding the watch.
-Page 67]
-
-“What’s the matter?” demanded Mrs. Melville, while the New Englander
-used an expression which, no doubt, as a good church-member, he
-regretted, later, and the colonel thundered: “All the women back into
-their berths. Don’t anybody shoot! You, professor, look after that
-fellow on the floor.” He was obeyed; instinctively, the master of the
-hour is obeyed. The porter came forward and helped the New Englander
-bind the prostrate outlaw, with two silk handkerchiefs and a pair of
-pajamas, guard mount being supplied by three men in very startling
-costumes; and a kind of seraglio audience behind the curtains of the
-berth being enacted by all the women in the car, only excepting Aunt
-Rebecca and Miss Smith. Aunt Rebecca, in her admirable traveling
-costume of a soft gray silk wrapper, looked as undisturbed as if
-midnight alarms were an every-night feature of journeys. Miss Smith’s
-black hair was loosely knotted; and her face looked pale, while her
-dark eyes shone. They all heard the colonel’s revolver; they all saw
-the two men who had met him at the car door spring off the platform
-into the dark. The robbers had horses waiting. The colonel got one
-shot; he saw the man fall over his horse’s neck; but the horse galloped
-on; and the night, beyond the little splash of light, swallowed them
-completely.
-
-After the conductor and the engineer had both consulted him, and the
-express messenger had appeared, armed to the teeth, a little too late
-for the fray, but not too late for lucid argument, Winter made his
-way back to the car. Miss Smith was sitting beside Archie; she was
-holding the watch, which had played so important a part in the battle,
-up under the electric light to examine an inscription. The loose black
-sleeves of her blouse fell back, revealing her arms; they were white
-and softly rounded. She looked up; and the soldier felt the sudden rush
-of an emotion that he had not known for years; it caught at his throat
-almost like an invisible hand.
-
-“Well, Archie,” he said foolishly, “good for jiu-jitsu!”
-
-Archie flushed up to his eyes.
-
-“Why didn’t you obey orders, young man, and hold up your hands?” said
-Colonel Rupert Winter. “You’re as bad as poor Haley, who is nearly
-weeping that he had no chance, but only broke away from Mrs. Haley in
-time to see the robbers make off.”
-
-“I--I did at first; but I got so mad I forgot,” stammered Archie
-happily. “Afterward you were my superior officer and I had to do what
-you said.”
-
-All the while he chaffed the boy, he was watching for that beautiful
-look in Janet Smith’s eyes; and wondering when he could get her off by
-herself to brag to her of the boy’s courage. When his chance at a few
-words did come he chuckled: “Regular fool Winter! I knew he would act
-in just that absurd, reckless way.” Then he caught the look he wanted;
-it surely was a lovely, womanly look; and it meant--what in thunder
-_did_ it mean? As he puzzled, his pulses gave the same unaccountable,
-smothering leap; and he felt as the boy of twenty had felt, coming back
-from his first battle to his first love.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-THE VANISHING OF ARCHIE
-
-
-“In my opinion,” said Aunt Rebecca, critically eying her new
-drawing-room on the train to San Francisco; “the object of our legal
-methods seems to be to defend the criminal. And a very efficient means
-to this end is to make it so uncomfortable and costly and inconvenient
-for any witness of a crime that he runs away rather than endure it.
-Here we have had to stay over so long in Salt Lake we nearly lost our
-drawing-room. But never mind, you got your man committed. Did you find
-out anything about his gang?”
-
-The colonel shook his head. “No, he’s a tough country boy; he has
-the rural distrust of lawyers and of sweat-boxes. He does absolutely
-nothing but groan and swear, pretending his wound hurts him. But I’ve a
-notion there are bigger people back of him. It’s most awfully good of
-you, Aunt Rebecca, to stick to me this way.”
-
-“Of course, I stick to you; I’m too old to be fickle. Did you ever
-know a Winter who wouldn’t stand by his friends? I belong to the old
-régime, Bertie; we had our faults--glaring ones, I dare say--but if
-we condoned sin too readily, we never condoned meanness; such a trick
-as that upstart Keatcham is doing would have been impossible to my
-contemporaries. You saw the morning papers; you know he means to eat up
-the Midland?”
-
-“Yes, I know,” mused the colonel; “and turn Tracy, the president,
-down--the one who gave him his start on his bucaneering career. Tracy
-declines to be his tool, being, I understand, a very decent sort of
-man, who has always run his road for his stock-holders and not for the
-stock-market. A capital crime, that, in these days. So Keatcham has,
-somehow, by one trick or another, got enough directors since Baneleigh
-died to give him the control; though he couldn’t get enough of the
-stock; and now he means to grab the road to use for himself. Poor
-Tracy, who loves the road as a child, they say, will have to stand by
-and see it turned into a Wall Street foot-ball; and the equipment run
-down as fast as its reputation. I think I’m sorry for Tracy. Besides,
-it’s a bad lookout, the power of such fellows; men who are not captains
-of industry, not a little bit; only inspired gamblers. Yet they are
-running the country. I wonder where is the class that will save us.”
-
-“I don’t know. I don’t admire the present century, Bertie. We had
-people of quality in my day; we have only people of culture in this. I
-confess I prefer the quality. They had robuster nerves and really asked
-less of people, although they may have appeared to ask more. _We_ used
-to be contented with respect from our inferiors and courtesy from our
-equals--”
-
-“And what from your betters, Aunt Rebecca?” drawled the colonel.
-
-“We had no betters, Rupert; we were the best. I think partly it was our
-assurance of our position, which nobody else doubted any more than we,
-that kept us so mannerly. Nowadays, nobody has a real position. He may
-have wealth and a servile following, who expect to make something out
-of him, but he hasn’t position. The newspapers can make fun of him.
-The common people watch him drive by and never think of removing their
-caps. Nobody takes him seriously except his toadies and himself. And
-as for the sentiments of reverence and loyalty, very useful sentiments
-in running a world, they seem to have clean disappeared, except”--she
-smiled a half-reluctant smile--“except with youngsters like Archie,
-who would find it agreeable to be chopped into bits for _you_, and the
-women who have not lived in the world, like Janet, who makes a heroine
-out of _me_--upon my word, Bertie, _je t’ai fait rougir_!”
-
-“Not at all,” said the colonel; “an illusion of the sunset; but what do
-you mean when you say people of quality required less than people of
-culture?”
-
-“Oh, simply this; all _we_ demanded was deference; but your cultivated
-gang wants admiration and submission, and will not let us possess our
-secret souls, even, in peace. And, then, the quality despised no one,
-but the cultivated despise every one. Ah, well--
-
- ‘Those good old times are past and gone,
- I sigh for them in vain,--’
-
-Janet, I wish Archie would fish his mandolin out and you would sing to
-me; I like to hear the songs of my youth. Not rag-time, or coon-songs,
-but dear old Foster’s melodies; _Old Kentucky Home_, and _Massa’s in
-the Col’, Col’ Ground_, and _Nellie Was a Lady_--what makes that so
-sad, I wonder?--‘Nellie was a lady, las’ night she died;’ it’s all
-in that single line; I think it is because it represents the pathetic
-idealization of love; Nellie was that black lover’s ideal of all that
-was lovely, and she was dead. Is the orchestra ready--and the choir?
-Yes, shut the door; we are for art’s sake only, not for the applause of
-the cold world in the car.”
-
-Afterward, when he was angry over his own folly, his own blind,
-dogged, trustfulness against all the odds of evidence, Rupert Winter
-laid his weakness to that hour; to a woman’s sweet, untrained, tender
-voice singing the simple melodies of his youth. They sang one song
-after another while the sun sank lower and stained the western sky.
-Through the snow-sheds they could catch glimpses of a wild and strange
-nature; austere, yet not repelling; vistas of foot-hills bathed in
-the evening glow; rank on rank of firs, tall, straight, beautiful,
-not wind-tortured and maimed, like the woeful dwarfs of Colorado; and
-wonderful snow-capped mountain peaks, with violet shadows and glinting
-streaks of silver. Snow everywhere: on the hillsides; on the close
-thatch of the firs; on the ice-locked rivers; snow freshly fallen,
-softly tinted, infinitely, awesomely pure.
-
-Presently they came out into a lumber country where the mills huddled
-in the hollows, over the streams. Huge fires were blazing on the
-river-banks. Their tawny red glare dyed the snow for a long distance,
-making entrancing tints of rose and yellow; and the dark green of the
-pines, against this background, looked strangely fresh. And then,
-without warning, they plunged into the dimness of another long wooden
-tunnel and emerged into lovely spring. The trees were in leaf, and not
-alone the trees; the undulating swells of pasture land and roadside
-by the mountains were covered with a tender verdure; and there were
-innumerable vines and low glossy shrubs with faintly colored flowers.
-
-“This is like the South,” said Miss Smith.
-
-Archie was devouring the scene. “Doesn’t it just somehow make you feel
-as if you couldn’t breathe, Miss Janet?” said he.
-
-“Are you troubled with the high altitude?” asked Millicent anxiously;
-“I have prepared a little vial of spirits of ammonia; I’ll fetch it for
-you.”
-
-The colonel had some ado to rescue Archie; but he was aided by the
-porter, who was now passing through the car proclaiming: “You all have
-seen Dutch Flat Mr. Bret Hahte wrote ’bout; nex’ station is Shady Run;
-and eve’ybody look and see the greates’ scenic ’traction of dis or any
-odder railroad, Cape Hohn!”
-
-Instantly, Mrs. Melville fished her guide-book and began to read:
-
-“‘There are few mountain passes more famous than that known to the
-world as Cape Horn. The approach to it is picturesque, the north fork
-of the American River raging and foaming in its rocky bed, fifteen
-hundred feet below and parallel with the track--’”
-
-“Do you mind, Millicent, if we look instead of listen?” Aunt Rebecca
-interrupted, and Mrs. Melville lapsed into an injured muteness.
-
-Truly, Cape Horn has a poignant grandeur that strikes speech from the
-lips. One can not look down that sheer height to the luminous ghost
-of a river below, without a thrill. If to pass along the cliff is a
-shivering experience, what must the actual execution of that stupendous
-bit of engineering have been to the workmen who hewed the road out of
-the rock, suspended over the abyss! Their dangling black figures seem
-to sway still as one swings around the curve.
-
-Our travelers sat in silence, until the “Cape” was passed and again
-they could see their road-bed on the side. Then Mrs. Melville made a
-polite excuse for departure; she had promised a “Daughter” whom she
-had met at various “biennials” that she would have a little talk with
-her. Thus she escaped. They did not miss her. Hardly speaking, the
-four sat in the dimly lighted, tiny room, while mountains and fields
-and star-sown skies drifted by. Unconsciously, Archie drew closer to
-his uncle, and the older man threw an arm about the young shoulders.
-He looked up to meet Janet’s eyes shining and sweet, in the flash of a
-passing station light. Mrs. Winter smiled, her wise old smile.
-
-With the next morning came another shift of scene; they were in the
-fertile valleys of California. At every turn the landscape became more
-softly tinted, more gracious. Aunt Rebecca was in the best of humor
-and announced herself as having the journey of her life. The golden
-green of the grain fields, the towering palms, the pepper-trees with
-their fascinating grace, the round tops of the live-oaks, the gloss
-of the orange groves, the calla-lily hedges and the heliotrope and
-geranium trees which climbed to the second story of the stucco houses,
-filled her with the enthusiasm of a child. She drank in the cries
-of the enterprising young liar who cried “Fresh figs,” months out of
-season, and she ate fruit, withered in cold storage, with a trustful
-zest. No less than three books about the flora of California came out
-of her bag. A certain vine called the Bougainvillea, she was trying
-to find, if only the cars would not go so fast; as for poinsettias,
-she certainly should raise her own for Christmas. She was learned in
-gardens and she discoursed with Miss Smith on the different kinds of
-trumpet-vine, and whether the white jasmine trailing among the gaudy
-clusters was of the same family as that jasmine which they knew in the
-pine forests. But she disparaged the roses; they looked shop-worn. The
-colonel watched her in amazement.
-
-“Bertie, I make you think of that little dwarf of Dickens’, don’t
-I?” she cried. “Miss Muffins, Muggins? what _was_ her name? You are
-expecting me to exclaim, ‘Ain’t I volatile?’ Thank Heaven, I am. I
-could always take an interest in trifles. It has been my salvation to
-cultivate an interest in trifles, Bertie; there are a great many more
-trifles than crises in life. Where has Janet gone? Oh, to give the
-porter the collodion for his cut thumb. People with troubles, big or
-little, are always making straight for Janet. Bertie, have you made
-your mind up about her?”
-
-“Only that she is charming,” replied the colonel. He did not change
-color, but he was uneasily conscious that he winced, and that the
-shrewd old critic of life and manners perceived it. But she was
-mercifully blind to all appearance; she went on with the little frown
-of the solver of a psychological enigma. “Yes, Janet is charming; and
-why? She is the stillest creature. Have you noticed? Yet you never have
-the sense that she hasn’t answered you. She’s the best listener in the
-world; and there’s one thing about her unusual in most listeners--her
-eyes never grow vacant.”
-
-Rupert had noticed; he called himself a doddering old donkey silently,
-because he had assumed that there was anything personal in the interest
-of those eyes when he had spoken. Of course not; it was her way with
-every one, even Millicent, no doubt. His aunt’s next words were lost,
-but a sentence caught his ear directly: “For all she’s so gentle, she
-has plenty of spirit. Bertie, did I ever tell you about the time our
-precious cousin threw our great-great-grandfather’s gold snuff-box at
-her? No? It was funny. She flew into one of her towering rages, and
-shrieking, ‘Take _that_!’ hurled the snuff-box at Janet. Janet wasn’t
-used to having things thrown at her. She caught the box, then she rang
-the bell. ‘Thank you very much,’ says Janet; and when old Aunt Phrosie
-came, she handed the snuff-box to her, saying it had just been given to
-her as a present. But she sent it that same day to one of the sisters.
-There was never anything else thrown at her, I can tell you.”
-
-They found a wonderful sunset on the bay when San Francisco was
-reached. Still in her golden humor, as they rattled over the
-cobblestones of the picturesque streets to the Palace Hotel, Mrs.
-Winter told anecdotes of Robert Louis Stevenson, obtained from a
-friend who had known his mother. Mrs. Winter had chosen the Palace in
-preference to the St. Francis, to Mrs. Melville’s high disgust.
-
-“She thinks it more typical,” sneered Millicent; “myself, I prefer
-cleanliness and comfort to types.”
-
-Their rooms were waiting for them and two bell-boys ushered Mrs.
-Winter into her suite. Randall was lodged on the same floor, and Mrs.
-Melville, who was to spend a few days with her aunt on the latter’s
-invitation, was on a lower floor. The colonel had begged to have Archie
-next to him; and he examined the quarters with approbation. His own
-room was the last of the suite; to the right hand, between his room and
-Archie’s, was their bath; then the parlor of Mrs. Winter’s suite next
-her room and bath, and last, to the right, Miss Smith’s room.
-
-Archie was sitting by the window looking out on the street; only the
-oval of his soft boyish cheek showed. The colonel went by him to the
-parlor beyond, where he encountered his aunt, her hands full of gay
-postal cards.
-
-“_Souvenirs de voyage_,” she answered his glance; “I am going to post
-them.”
-
-“Can’t I take them for you?”
-
-“No, thanks, I want the exercise.”
-
-“May I go with you?”
-
-“Indeed, no. My dear Bertie, I’m only aged, I’m not infirm.”
-
-“You will _never_ be aged,” responded the colonel gallantly. He turned
-away and walked along the arcade which looked down into the great court
-of the hotel. Millicent was approaching him; Millicent in something of
-a temper. Her room was hideously draughty and she could not get any
-one, although she had rung and telephoned to the office and tried
-every device which was effectual in a well-conducted hotel; but this,
-she concluded bitterly, was not well-conducted; it was only typical.
-
-“There’s a lovely fire in Aunt Rebecca’s parlor,” soothed the colonel;
-“come in there.”
-
-Afterward it seemed to him that this whole interview with Millicent
-could not have occupied more than four minutes; that it was not more
-than seven minutes since he had seen Archie’s shapely curly head
-against the curtain fall of the window.
-
-But when he opened the door, Miss Smith came toward them. “Is Archie
-with Aunt Rebecca?” said she.
-
-The colonel answered that he had left him in the parlor; perhaps he had
-stepped into his own room.
-
-But neither in Archie’s nor the colonel’s nor in any room of the party
-could they find the boy.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-BLIND CLUES
-
-
-“But this is preposterous,” cried Mrs. Melville, “you _must_ have seen
-him had he come out of the room; you were directly in front of the
-doors all the time.”
-
-“I was,” admitted the colonel; “can--can the boy be hiding to scare
-us?” He spoke to Miss Smith. She had grown pale; he did not know that
-his own color had turned. Millicent stared from one to the other.
-
-“How ridiculous!” she exclaimed; “of course not; but he must be
-somewhere; let _me_ look!”
-
-Look as they might through all the staring, empty rooms, there was no
-vestige of the boy. He was as clean vanished as if he had fallen out of
-the closed and locked windows. The colonel examined them all; had there
-been one open, he would have peered outside, frightened as he had never
-been when death was at his elbow. But it certainly wasn’t possible to
-jump through a window, and not only shut, but lock it after one.
-
-Under every bed, in every closet, he prowled; he was searching still
-when Mrs. Winter returned. By this time Mrs. Melville was agitated,
-and, naturally, irritated as well. “I think it is unpardonable in
-Archie to sneak out in this fashion,” she complained.
-
-“I suppose the boy wanted to see the town a bit,” observed Aunt Rebecca
-placidly. “Rupert, come in and sit down; he will be back in a moment;
-smoke a cigar, if your nerves need calming.”
-
-Rupert felt as if he were a boy of ten, called back to common sense out
-of imaginary horrors of the dark.
-
-“But, if he wanted to go out, why did he leave his hat and coat behind
-him?” asked Miss Smith.
-
-“He may be only exploring the hotel,” said Mrs. Winter. “Don’t be so
-restless, Bertie; sit down.”
-
-The colonel’s eye was furtively photographing every article of
-furniture in the room; it lingered longest on Mrs. Winter’s
-wardrobe-trunk, which was standing in her room. Randall had been
-despatched for a hot-water bottle in lieu of one which had sprung a
-leak on the train; so the trunk stood, its door ajar.
-
-“Maybe he is doing the Genevra stunt in there--is that what you are
-thinking?” she jeered. “Well, go and look.”
-
-Light as her tone was, she was not unaffected by the contagion of
-anxiety about her; after a moment, while Rupert was looking at the
-wardrobe-trunk, and even profanely exploring the swathed gowns held in
-rigid safety by bands of rubber, she moved about the rooms herself.
-
-“There isn’t room for a mouse in that box,” growled the colonel.
-
-“Of course not,” said his aunt languidly, sinking into the easiest
-chair; “but your mind is easier. Archie will come back for dinner;
-don’t worry.”
-
-“How could he get by _me_?” retorted the colonel.
-
-“Perhaps he went into one of the neighboring rooms,” Miss Smith
-suggested. “Shall I go out and rap on the door of the next room on the
-left?” On the right the last room of the party was a corner room.
-
-“Why, you _might_,” acquiesced Aunt Rebecca; but Mrs. Melville cut the
-ends of her words.
-
-“Pray let me go, Aunt Rebecca,” she begged, suiting the action to the
-words, and was out of the door almost ahead of her sentence.
-
-The others waited; they were silent; little flecks of color raddled
-Mrs. Winter’s cheeks. They could hear Millicent’s knock reverberating.
-There was no answer. “Telephone to the adjacent rooms,” proposed the
-colonel.
-
-“I’ll telephone,” said Mrs. Winter, and rang up the number of the next
-room. There was no response; but when she called the number of the
-room adjoining, she seemed to get an answer, for she announced her
-name. “Have you seen a young lad?” she continued, after an apology for
-disturbing them. “He belongs to our party; has he by chance got into
-your room? and is he there?” In a second she put down the receiver with
-a heightened color, saying, “They might be a little civiler in their
-answers, if it _is_ Mr. Keatcham’s suite.”
-
-“What did the beggar say?” bristled the colonel.
-
-“Only that it was Mr. Keatcham’s suite--Mr. E. S. Keatcham--as if
-_that_ put getting into it quite out of the question. Some underling, I
-presume.”
-
-“There is the unoccupied room between. That is not accounted for.
-But it shall be. I will find out who is in there.” Rupert rose as he
-spoke, pricked by the craving for action of a man accustomed to quick
-decision. He heard his aunt brusquely repelling Millicent’s proposal of
-the police, as he left the room. Indeed, she called him back to exact a
-promise that he would not make Archie’s disappearance public. “We want
-to find him,” was her grim addendum; “and we can’t have the police and
-the newspapers hindering us.”
-
-In the office, he found external courtesy and a rather perfunctory
-sympathy, based on a suppressed, but perfectly visible conviction that
-the boy had stolen out for a glimpse of the city, and would be back
-shortly.
-
-The manager had no objection to telling Colonel Winter, whom he knew
-slightly, that the occupant of the next room was a New England lady
-of the highest respectability, Mrs. Winthrop Wigglesworth. If the
-young fellow didn’t turn up for dinner, he should be glad to ask
-Mrs. Wigglesworth to let Mrs. Winter examine her room; but he rather
-thought they would be seeing young Winter before then--oh, his hat?
-They usually carried caps in their pockets; and as to coats--boys never
-thought of their coats.
-
-The manager’s cheeriness did not especially uplift the colonel. He
-warmed it over dutifully, however, for his womankind’s benefit. Miss
-Smith had gone out; why, he was not told, and did not venture to ask.
-Mrs. Melville kept making cautious signals to him behind his aunt’s
-back; otherwise she was preserving the mien of sympathetic solemnity
-which she was used to show at funerals and first visits of condolence
-and congratulation to divorced friends. Mrs. Winter, as usual, wore an
-inscrutable composure. She was still firmly opposed to calling in the
-aid of the police.
-
-Did she object to his making a few inquiries among the hotel bell-boys,
-the elevator boy and the people in the restaurant or in the office?
-
-Not at all, if he would be cautious.
-
-So he sallied out, and, in the midst of his fruitless inquisition,
-Millicent appeared.
-
-Forcing a civil smile, he awaited her pleasure. “Go on, don’t mind me,”
-said she mournfully; “you will feel better to have done everything in
-your power.”
-
-“But I shall not discover anything?”
-
-“I fear not. Has it not occurred to you that he has been kidnapped?”
-
-“Hmn!” said the colonel.
-
-“And did you notice how perturbed Miss Smith seemed? She was quite
-pale; her agitation was quite noticeable.”
-
-“She is tremendously fond of Archie.”
-
-“Or--she knows more than she will say.”
-
-“Oh, what rot!” sputtered the colonel; then he begged her pardon.
-
-“Wait,” he counseled, and his man’s resistance to appearances had
-its effect, as masculine immobility always has, on the feminine
-effervescence before him. “Wait,” was his word, “at least until we give
-the boy a chance to turn up; if he has slipped by us, he is taking a
-little _pasear_ on his own account; lads do get restless sometimes if
-they are held too steadily in the leash, especially--if you will excuse
-me--by, well, by ladies.”
-
-“If he has frightened us out of our wits--well, I don’t know what
-oughtn’t to be done to him!”
-
-“Oh well, let us wait and hear _his_ story,” repeated the soldier.
-
-But the last streaks of red faded out of the west; a chill fog smoked
-up from the darkening hills, and Archie had not come. At eight, Mrs.
-Winter ordered dinner to be served in their rooms. Miss Smith had
-not returned. The colonel attempted a military cheerfulness, which
-his aunt told him bluntly, later in the evening, reminded her of a
-physician’s manner in critical cases where the patient’s mind must be
-kept absolutely quiet.
-
-But she ate more than he at dinner; although her own record was not a
-very good one. Millicent avowed that she was too worried to eat, but
-she was tempted by the strawberries and carp, and wondered were the
-California fowls really so poor; and gave the sample the benefit of
-impartial and fair examination, in the end making a very fair meal.
-
-It is not to be supposed that Winter had been idle; before dinner he
-had put a guard in the hall and had seen Haley, who reported that his
-wife and child had gone to a kinswoman in Santa Barbara.
-
-“Sure the woman has a fine house intirely, and she’s fair crazy over
-the baby that’s named afther her, for she’s a widdy woman with never a
-child excipt wan that’s in hivin, a little gurrl; and she wudn’t let
-us rist ’til she’d got the cratur’. Nor I wasn’t objictin’, for I’m
-thinking there’ll be something doin’ and the wimin is onconvanient,
-thim times.”
-
-The colonel admitted that he shared Haley’s opinion. He questioned the
-man minutely about Mercer’s conduct on the train. It was absolutely
-commonplace. If he had any connection (as the colonel had suspected)
-with the bandits, he made no sign. He sent no telegrams; he wrote no
-letters; he made no acquaintances, smoking his solitary cigar over a
-newspaper. Indeed, absolutely the only matter of note (if that were
-one) was that he read so many newspapers--buying every different
-journal vended. At San Francisco he got into a cab and Haley heard
-him give the order: “To the St. Francis.” Having his wife and child
-with him, the sergeant couldn’t follow; but he went around to the St.
-Francis later, and inquired for Mr. Mercer, for whom he had a letter
-(as was indeed the case--the colonel having provided him with one),
-but no such name appeared on the register. Invited to leave the letter
-to await the gentleman’s arrival, Haley said that he was instructed
-to give it to the gentleman himself; therefore, he took it away with
-him. He had carried it to all the other hotels or boarding-places in
-San Francisco which he could find, aided greatly thereto by a friend
-of his, formerly in “the old --th,” a sergeant, now stationed at the
-Presidio. Thanks to him, Haley could say definitely that Mercer was not
-at any of the hotels or more prominent boarding-houses in the city, at
-least under his own name.
-
-“And you haven’t seen him since he got into the cab at the station?”
-the colonel summed up.
-
-Haley’s reply was unexpected: “Yes, sor, I seen him this day, in the
-marning, in this same hotel.”
-
-“Where?”
-
-“Drinking coffee at a table in th’ coort. He wint out, havin’ paid
-the man, not a-signin’, an’ he guv the waiter enough to make him say,
-‘Thank ye, sor,’ but not enough to make him smile and stay round to
-pull aff the chair. I follied him to the dure, but he got into an
-autymobile--”
-
-“Get the number?”
-
-“Yis, sor. Number--here ’tis, sor, I wrote it down to make sure.” He
-passed over to the colonel an old envelope on which was written a
-number.
-
-[A]“M. 20139,” read the colonel, carefully noting down the number in
-his own memorandum-book. And he reflected, “That is a Massachusetts
-number--humph!”
-
-Haley’s information ended there. He heard of Archie’s disappearance
-with his usual stolid mien, but his hands slowly clenched. The colonel
-continued:
-
-“You are to find out, if you can, by scraping acquaintance with the
-carriage men, if that auto--you have written a description, I see,
-as well as the number--find out if that auto left this hotel this
-afternoon between six and seven o’clock. Find out who were in it. Find
-out where it is kept and who owns it. Get H. Birdsall, Merchants’
-Exchange Building, to send a man to help you. Wait, I’ve a card ready
-for you to give him from me; he has sent me men before. Report by
-telephone as soon as you know anything. If I’m not here, speak Spanish
-and have them write it down. Be back here to-night by ten, if you can,
-yourself.”
-
-Haley dismissed, and his own appetite for dinner effectually dispelled
-by his report, Winter joined his aunt. Should he tell her his
-suspicions and their ground? Wasn’t he morally obliged, now, to tell
-her? She was co-guardian with him of the boy, who, he had no doubt, had
-been spirited away by Mercer and his accomplice; and hadn’t she a right
-to any information on the matter in his possession?
-
-Reluctantly he admitted that she did have such a right; and, he
-admitted further, being a man who never cheated at solitaire, that his
-object in keeping the talk of the two men from her had not been so much
-the desire to guard her nerves (which he knew perfectly well were of a
-robuster fiber than those of most women twenty or forty years younger
-than she); no, he admitted it grimly, he had not so much spared his
-aunt as Janet Smith; he could not bear to direct suspicion toward her.
-But how could he keep silent longer? Kicking this question about in his
-mind, he spoiled the flavor of his after-dinner cigar, although his
-aunt graciously bade him smoke it in her parlor.
-
-And still Miss Smith had not returned; really, it was only fair to her
-to have her present when he told his story to his aunt; no, he was
-_not_ grabbing at any excuse for delay; if he could watch that girl’s
-face while he told his story he would--well, he would have his mind
-settled one way or another.
-
-Here the telephone bell rang; the manager informed Colonel Winter that
-Mrs. Wigglesworth had returned.
-
-“Wigglesworth? what an extraordinary name!” cried Millicent when the
-colonel shared his information.
-
-“Good old New England name; I know some extremely nice Wigglesworths
-in Boston,” Mrs. Winter amended with a touch of hauteur; and, at this
-moment, there came a knock at the door.
-
-There is all the difference in the world between knocks; a knock
-as often as not conveys a most unintentional hint in regard to the
-character of the one behind the knuckles; and often, also, the mood of
-the knocker is reflected in the sound which he makes. Were there truth
-in this, one would judge that the person who knocked at this moment
-must be a woman, for the knock was not loud, but almost timidly gentle;
-one might even guess that she was agitated, for the tapping was in a
-hurried, uneven measure.
-
-“I believe it is Mrs. Wigglesworth herself,” declared Aunt Rebecca.
-“Bertie, I’m going into the other room; she will talk more freely to
-you. She would want to spare my nerves. That is the nuisance of being
-old. Now open the door.”
-
-She was half-way across the threshold before she finished, and the
-colonel’s fingers on the door-knob waited only for the closing of her
-door to turn to admit the lady in waiting.
-
-A lady she was beyond doubt, and any one who had traveled would have
-been sure that she was a lady from Massachusetts. She wore that little
-close bonnet which certain elderly Boston gentlewomen can neither be
-driven nor allured to abandon; her rich and quiet black silken gown
-might have been made any year within the last five, and her furs
-would have graced a princess. She had beautiful gray hair and a soft
-complexion and wore glasses. Equally evident to the observer was the
-fact of her suppressed agitation.
-
-She waved aside the colonel’s proffered chair, introducing herself in
-a musical, almost tremulous voice with the crisp enunciation of her
-section of the country. “I am Mrs. Wigglesworth; I understand, Colonel
-Winter--you?--y-yes, no, thank you, I will not sit. I--I understood
-Mrs. Winter--ah, your aunt, is an elderly woman.”
-
-“This is my sister-in-law, Mrs. Melville Winter,” explained the
-colonel. “My aunt is elderly in years, but in nothing else.”
-
-Mrs. Wigglesworth smiled a faint smile; the colonel could see a tremble
-of the hand that was unconsciously drawing her fur collar more tightly
-about her throat. “How very nice--yes, to be sure,” she faltered. “But
-you will understand that I did not wish to alarm her. I heard that you
-wanted to speak to me, and that the little boy was lost.”
-
-“Or stolen,” Mrs. Melville said crisply.
-
-The colonel, in a few words, displayed the situation. He had prevailed
-upon his visitor to sit down, and while he spoke he noticed that her
-hands held each other tightly, although she appeared perfectly composed
-and did not interrupt. She answered his questions directly and quietly.
-She had been away taking tea with a friend; she had remained to dine.
-Her maid had gone out earlier to spend the day and night with a sister
-in the city; so the room was empty between six and seven o’clock.
-
-“The chambermaid wasn’t there, then?”
-
-“I don’t think so. She usually does the room and brings the towels
-for the bath in the morning. But I asked her, to make sure, and she
-says that she was not there since morning. She seems a good girl; I
-think she didn’t--but I have found something. At least I am af--I may
-have found something. I thought I might see Mrs. Winter’s niece about
-it”--she glanced toward Millicent, who said, “Certainly,” at a venture;
-and looked frightened.
-
-“And you found--?” said the colonel.
-
-“Only this. I went to my rooms, turned on the light and was taking off
-my gloves before I untied my bonnet. One of my rings fell on the floor.
-It went under a rug, and I at once remarked that it was a different
-place for the rug to the one where it had been before. Before, it
-was in front of the dresser, a very natural place, but now it is on
-the carpet to one side, a place where there seemed no reason for its
-presence. These details seem trivial, but--”
-
-“I can see they are not,” said the colonel. “Pray proceed, Madam. The
-ring had rolled under the rug!”
-
-Mrs. Wigglesworth gave him a grateful nod.
-
-“Yes, it had. And when I removed the rug I saw it; but as I bent to
-pick it up I saw something else. In one place there was a stain, as
-large as the palm of my hand, a little pool of--it looks like blood.”
-
-Mrs. Melville uttered an exclamation of horror.
-
-The colonel’s face stiffened; but there was no change in his polite
-attention.
-
-“May we be permitted to see this--ah, stain?” said he.
-
-The three stepped through the corridor to the outside door, and went
-into the chamber. The rug was flung to one side, and there on the gray
-velvet nap of the carpet was an irregular, sprawling stain about which
-were spattered other stains, some crimson, some almost black.
-
-Millicent recoiled, shuddering. The colonel knelt down and examined the
-stains. “Yes,” he said very quietly, “you are right, it is blood.”
-
-There was a tap on the door, which was opened immediately without
-waiting for a permission. Millicent, rigid with fright, could only
-stare helplessly at the erect figure, the composed, pale face and the
-brilliant, imperious eyes of her aunt.
-
-“What did you say, Bertie?” said Rebecca Winter. “I think I have a
-right to the whole truth.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-THE VOICE IN THE TELEPHONE
-
-
-“Well, Bertie?” Mrs. Winter had gone back to her parlor in the most
-docile manner in the world. Her submission struck Rupert on the heart;
-it was as if she were stunned, he felt.
-
-He was sitting opposite her, his slender, rather short figure looking
-shrunken in the huge, ugly, upholstered easy-chair; he kept an almost
-constrained attitude of military erectness, of which he was conscious,
-himself; and at which he smiled forlornly, recalling the same pose in
-Haley whenever the sergeant was disconcerted.
-
-“But, first,” pursued his aunt, “who was that red-headed bell-boy with
-whom you exchanged signals in the hall?”
-
-The colonel suppressed a whistle. “Aunt Becky, you’re a wonder! Did you
-notice? And he simply shut the palm of his hand! Why, it’s this way: I
-was convinced that Archie must be on the premises; he _couldn’t_ get
-off. So I telephoned a detective that I know here, a private agency,
-_not_ the police, to send me a sure man to watch. He is made up as
-a bell-boy (with the hotel manager’s consent, of course); either I,
-or Millicent, or that boy has kept an eye on the Keatcham doors and
-the next room ever since I found Archie was gone. No one has gone out
-without our seeing him. If any suspicious person goes out, we have it
-arranged to detain him long enough for me to get a good look. I can
-tell you exactly who left the room.”
-
-“It is you who are the wonder, Bertie,” said Aunt Rebecca, a little
-wearily, but smiling. “Who has gone out?”
-
-“At seven Mr. Keatcham’s secretary went down to the office and ordered
-dinner, very carefully. I didn’t see him, but my sleuth did. He had the
-secretary and the valet of the Keatcham party pointed out to him; he
-saw them. They had one visitor, young Arnold, _the_ Arnold’s son--”
-
-“The one who has all the orange groves and railways? Yes, I knew his
-father.”
-
-“That one; he only came a few moments since. Mr. Keatcham and his
-secretary dined together, and Keatcham’s own man waited on them; but
-the waiter for this floor brought up the dishes. At nine the dishes
-were brought out and my man helped Keatcham’s valet to pile them a
-little farther down the corridor in the hall.”
-
-These items the colonel was reading out of his little red book.
-
-“You have put all that down. Do you think it means anything?”
-
-“I have put everything down. One can’t weed until there is a crop of
-information, you know.”
-
-“True,” murmured Aunt Rebecca, nodding her head thoughtfully. “Well,
-did anything else happen?”
-
-“The secretary posted a lot of letters in the shute. They are all
-smoking now. Yes--” he was on his feet and at the door in almost a
-single motion. There had been just the slightest tattoo on the panel.
-When the door was opened the colonel could hear the rattle of the
-elevator. He was too late to catch it, but he could see the inmates.
-Three gentlemen stood in the car. One was Keatcham, the other two had
-their backs to Winter. One seemed to be supporting Keatcham, who looked
-pale. He saw the colonel and darted at him a single glance in which
-was something like a poignant appeal; what, it was too brief for the
-receiver to decide, for in the space of an eye-blink a shoulder of the
-other man intervened, and simultaneously the elevator car began to sink.
-
-There was need to decide instantly who should follow, who stay on
-guard. Rupert bade the boy go down by the stairs, while, with a kind
-of bulldog instinct, he clung to the rooms. The lad was to fetch the
-manager and the keys of the Keatcham suite.
-
-Meanwhile Rupert paced back and forth before the closed doors, whence
-there penetrated the rustle of packing and a murmur of voices.
-Presently Keatcham’s valet opened the farther door. He spoke to some
-one inside. “Yes, sir,” he said, “the porter hought to be ’ere now.”
-
-The porter was there; at least he was coming down the corridor which
-led to the elevator, trundling his truck before him. He entered the
-rooms and busied himself about the luggage.
-
-Doggedly the colonel stuck to his guard until the valet and another
-man, a clean-shaven, fresh-faced young man whom the watcher had never
-seen before, came out of the room. The valet superintended the taking
-of two trunks, accepting tickets and checks from the porter with a
-thoroughly Anglican suspicion and thoroughness of inspection, while
-the young man stood tapping his immaculate trousers-leg with the stick
-of his admirably slender umbrella.
-
-“It’s all right, Colvin,” he broke in impatiently; “three tickets to
-Los Angeles, drawing-room, one lower berth, one section, checks for two
-trunks; come on!”
-
-Very methodically the man called Colvin stowed away his green and red
-slips, first in an envelope, then in his pocket-book, finally buttoning
-an inside pocket over all. He was the image of a rather stupid,
-conscientious English serving creature. Carefully he counted out a
-liberal but not lavish tip for the porter, and watched that functionary
-depart. Last of all, he locked the door.
-
-With extreme courtesy of manner Winter approached the young man.
-
-“Pardon me,” said he. “I am Colonel Winter; my aunt, Mrs. Winter, has
-the rooms near yours, and she finds that she needs another room or two.
-Are you leaving yours?”
-
-“These are Mr. Keatcham’s rooms, not mine,” the young man responded
-politely. “_He_ is leaving them.”
-
-“When you give up your keys, would you mind asking the clerk to send
-them up to me?” pursued the colonel. “Room three twenty-seven.”
-
-“Certainly,” replied the young man, “or would you like to look at them
-a moment now?”
-
-“Why--if it wouldn’t detain you,” hesitated Winter; he was hardly
-prepared for the offer of admittance.
-
-“Get the elevator and hold it a minute, Colvin,” said the young man,
-and he instantly fitted the key to the door, which he flung open.
-
-“Excuse me,” said he, as they stood in the room, “but aren’t you the
-Colonel Winter who held that mountain pass to let the other fellows get
-off, after your ammunition was exhausted?”
-
-“I seem to recall some such episode, only it sounds rather gaudy the
-way you put it.”
-
-“I read about you in the papers; you swam a river with Funston; did all
-kinds of stunts--”
-
-“Or the newspaper reporter did. You don’t happen to know anything about
-the price of these rooms, I suppose?”
-
-The young man did not know, but he showed the colonel through all the
-rooms with vast civility. He seemed quite indifferent to the colonel’s
-interest in closets, baths and wardrobes; he only wanted to talk about
-the Philippines.
-
-The colonel, who always shied like a mettled horse from the flutter of
-his own laurels, grew red with discomfort and rattled the door-knobs.
-
-“There the suite ends,” said the young man.
-
-“Oh, we don’t want it all, only a room or two,” Colonel Winter
-demurred. “Any one of these rooms would do. Well, I will not detain
-you. The elevator boy will be tired, and Mr. Keatcham will grow
-impatient.”
-
-“Not at all; he will have gone. I--I’m so very glad to have met you,
-Colonel--”
-
-In this manner, with mutual civilities, they parted, the young man
-escorting the colonel to his own door, which the latter was forced to
-enter by the sheer demands of the situation.
-
-But hardly had the door closed than he popped out again. The young man
-was swinging round the corner next the elevator.
-
-“Is he an innocent bystander or what?” puzzled the soldier. He resumed
-his march up and down the corridor. The next room to the Keatcham suite
-was evidently held by an agent of the Fireless Cooking Stove, since one
-of his samples had strayed into the hall and was mutely proclaiming its
-own exceeding worth in very black letters on a very white placard.
-
-“If the young man and the valet are straight goods, the key will come
-up reasonably soon from the office,” thought the watcher.
-
-Sure enough, the keys, in the hands of Winter’s own spy, appeared
-before he had waited three minutes. He reported that the old gentleman
-got into a cab with his secretary and the valet, and the other
-gentlemen took another cab. The secretary paid the bill. Had he gone
-sooner than expected? No; he had engaged the rooms until Thursday
-night; this was Thursday night.
-
-The colonel asked about the next room, which was directly on the cross
-corridor leading to the elevator. The detective had been instructed to
-watch it. How long had the Fireless Cooking Stove man had it? There was
-no meat for suspicion in the answer. The stove man had come the day
-before the Keatcham party. He was a perfectly commonplace, good-looking
-young man, representing the Peerless Fireless Cooking Stove with much
-picturesque eloquence; he had sold a lot of stoves to people in the
-hotel, and he tried without much success to tackle “old Keatcham”; he
-had attacked even the sleuth himself. “He gave me a mighty good cigar,
-too,” chuckled the red-headed one.
-
-“Hmn, you got it now?”
-
-“Only the memory,” the boy grinned.
-
-“You ought to have kept it, Birdsall would tell you; you are watching
-every one in these rooms. Did it have a necktie? And did you throw that
-away?”
-
-“No, sir, I kept that; after I got to smoking, I just thought I’d keep
-it.”
-
-When he took the tiny scrap of paper from his pocket-book the colonel
-eyed it grimly. “‘_A de Villar y Villar_,’” he read, with a slight
-ironic inflection. “Decidedly our young Fireless Stove promoter smokes
-good cigars!”
-
-“Maybe Mr. Keatcham gave it to him. He was in there.”
-
-“Was he? Oh, yes, trying to sell his stove--but not succeeding?”
-
-“He said he was trying to get past the valet and the secretary; he
-thought if he could only get at the old man and demonstrate his stove
-he could make the sale. He could cook all right, that feller.”
-
-The colonel made no comment, and presently betook himself to his aunt.
-She was waiting for him in the parlor, playing solitaire. Through the
-open door the white bed that ought to have been Archie’s was gleaming
-faintly. The colonel’s brows met.
-
-“Well, Bertie? Did you find anything?” Mrs. Winter inquired smoothly.
-
-“I’m afraid not; but here is the report.” He gave it to her, even down
-to the cigar wrapper.
-
-“It doesn’t seem likely that Mr. Keatcham has anything to do with it,”
-said she. “He, no doubt, has stolen many a little railway, but a little
-boy is too small game.”
-
-“Oh, I don’t suspect Keatcham; but I wish I had caught the elevator
-to-night. He looked at me in a mighty queer way.”
-
-“Did you recognize his secretary as any one whom you ever saw before?”
-asked Mrs. Winter.
-
-“I can’t say,” was the answer, given with a little hesitation. “I’m not
-sure.”
-
-“I don’t think I quite understand you, Bertie; better make a clean
-breast of all you know. I’m getting a little worried myself.”
-
-The colonel reached across the cards and tapped his aunt’s arm
-affectionately. He felt the warmest impulse toward sympathy for her
-that he had ever known; it glistened in his eyes. Mrs. Winter’s cheeks
-slowly crimsoned; she turned her head, exclaiming, did she hear a
-noise; but the colonel’s keen ears had not been warned. “Poor woman,”
-he thought, “she is worried to death, but she will not admit it.”
-
-“Now, Bertie,” said Mrs. Winter calmly, but her elbow fell on her cards
-and spoiled a very promising game of Penelope’s Web, “now, Bertie,
-_what_ are you keeping back?”
-
-Then, at last, the colonel told her of his experience in Chicago.
-She heard him quite without comment, and he could detect no shift of
-emotion in her demeanor of absorbed but perfectly calm attention,
-unless a certain tension of attitude and feature (as if, he phrased it,
-she were “holding herself in”) might be so considered. And he was not
-sure of this. When he came to the words which stuck in his throat, the
-sentence about Miss Smith, she smiled frankly, almost laughed.
-
-At the end of the recital--and the colonel had not omitted a word or a
-look in his memory--she merely said: “Then you think Cary Mercer has
-kidnapped Archie, and the nice-looking Harvard boy is helping him?”
-
-“Don’t you think it looks that way, yourself?”
-
-She answered that question by another one: “But you don’t think, do
-you, that Janet is the Miss Smith mentioned?”
-
-His reply came after an almost imperceptible hesitation: “No!”
-
-Again she smiled. “That is because you know Janet; if you didn’t know
-her you would think the chances were in favor of their meaning her?
-Naturally! Well, I know Cary a little. I knew his father _well_. I
-don’t believe he would harm a hair of Archie’s head. He isn’t a cruel
-fellow--at least not toward women and children. I’ve a notion that what
-he calls his wrongs have upset his wits a bit, and he might turn the
-screws on the Wall Street crowd that ruined him. That is, if he had a
-chance; but he is poor; he would need millions to get even a chance for
-a blow at them. But a child, a lad who looks like his brother--no, you
-may be sure he wouldn’t hurt Archie! He _couldn’t_.”
-
-“But--the name, Winter; it is not such a common name; and the words
-about a lady of--of--” The polite soldier hesitated.
-
-“An old woman, do you mean?” said Aunt Rebecca, with a little curving
-of her still unwrinkled upper lip.
-
-“It sounds so complete,” submitted her nephew.
-
-“Therefore distrust it,” she argued dryly. “Gaboriau’s great detective
-and Conan Doyle’s both have that same maxim--not to pick out easy
-answers.”
-
-Winter smiled in his own turn. “Still, sometimes the easy answers are
-right. Now, here is the situation: I hear this conversation at the
-depot. I find one of the men on the same train with me. He, presumably,
-if he _is_ Cary Mercer, and I don’t think I can be mistaken in his
-identity--”
-
-“Unless another man is making up as Cary!”
-
-“It may seem conceited, but I don’t think I could be fooled. This man
-had every expression of the other’s, and I was too struck by the--I may
-almost call it malignant--look he had, not to recognize him. No, it
-_was_ Mercer; he would certainly recognize you, and he would know who
-I am; he would not be called upon to snub me as a possible confidence
-man.”
-
-“That rankles yet, Bertie?”
-
-He made a grimace and nodded.
-
-“But,” he insisted, “isn’t it so? If he is up to some mischief, any
-mischief--doesn’t care to have his kin meet him--that is the way he
-would act, don’t you think?”
-
-“He might be up to mischief, yet have no designs on his kin.”
-
-“He might,” said the colonel musingly. A thought which he did not
-confide to the shrewd old woman had just flipped his mind. But he went
-on with his plea.
-
-“He avoids you; he avoids me. He is seen going into Keatcham’s
-drawing-room; that means some sort of an acquaintance with Keatcham,
-enough to talk to him, anyway. How much, I can’t say. Then comes the
-attack by the robbers; he is in another car, so there is no call for
-him to do anything; there is no light whatever on whether he had
-anything to do with the robbery.
-
-“Then we come here. Keatcham has the room next but one. Archie goes
-into his own room; we see him go; I am outside, directly outside; it
-is simply impossible for him to go out into the hall without my seeing
-him; besides, I found the doors outside all locked except the one to
-the right where we entered your suite; then we may assume that he could
-not go out. He could not climb out of locked windows on the third floor
-down a sheer descent of some forty or fifty feet. Your last room to
-the right, Miss Smith’s bedroom, is a corner room; besides, she was
-in it; that excludes every exit except that to the left. We find Mrs.
-Wigglesworth was absent, and there were evidences of--an--an attack
-of some kind carefully hidden, afterward. But there is no sign of
-the boy. I watch the rooms. If he is hidden somewhere in Keatcham’s
-rooms, the chances are, after Keatcham goes, they will try to take him
-off. I don’t think it probable that Keatcham knows anything about the
-kidnapping; in fact, it is wildly _im_probable. Well, Keatcham goes;
-immediately I get into the room. The valet and the young man visiting
-Keatcham, young Arnold, let me in without the slightest demur. Either
-they know nothing of the boy or somehow they have got him away, else
-they would not let me in so easily. Maybe they are ignorant and the boy
-is gone, both. We go to the rooms very soon after; there is not the
-smallest trace of Archie.”
-
-“How did he get out?”
-
-“They must have outwitted me, somehow,” the colonel sighed, “and it
-looks as if he went voluntarily; there was no possible carrying away
-by force. And there was no odor of chloroform about; that is very
-penetrating; it would get into the halls. They must have persuaded him
-to go--but how?”
-
-“If they have kidnapped him,” said Mrs. Winter, “they will send me some
-word, and if they have persuaded him to run away, plainly he must be
-able to walk, and that--mess in Mrs. Wigglesworth’s room doesn’t mean
-anything bad.”
-
-“Of course not,” said the colonel firmly.
-
-Then, in as casual a tone as he could command: “By the way, where is
-Miss Smith? She is back, isn’t she?”
-
-“Oh, a long time ago,” said Mrs. Winter. “I sent her to bed.”
-
-“I’ve been frank with you. You will reciprocate and tell me why, for
-what, you sent her out?”
-
-Mrs. Winter made not the least evasion. She answered frankly: “I
-sent her with a carefully worded advertisement--but you needn’t tell
-Millicent, who has also gone to bed, thank Heaven--I sent her with
-a carefully worded advertisement to all the papers. This is the
-advertisement. It will reach the kidnappers, and it will not reach any
-one else. See.” She handed him a slip of paper from her card-case. He
-read:
-
-“To the holders of Archie W: Communicate with R. S. W., same address
-as before, and you will hear of something to your advantage. Perfectly
-safe.”
-
-The colonel read it thoughtfully, a little puzzled. Before he had time
-to speak, his quick ears caught the sharp ring of his room telephone
-bell. He excused himself to answer it. His room was the last of the
-suite, but he shut the door on his way to the telephone.
-
-He expected Haley; nor was he disappointed. Haley reported--in
-Spanish--that he had traced the automobile; it was the property of
-young Mr. Arnold, son of the rich Mr. Arnold. Young Arnold had been at
-Harvard last year, and he took out a Massachusetts license; he had a
-California one, too. Should he (Haley) look up young Arnold? And should
-he come to report that night?
-
-The colonel thought he could wait till morning, and, a little
-comforted, hung up the receiver. Barely was it out of his hand when the
-bell shrilled again, sharply, vehemently. Winter put the tube to his
-ear.
-
-“Does any one want Colonel Winter, Palace Hotel?” he asked.
-
-A sweet, eager, boyish voice called back: “Uncle Bertie! Uncle Bertie,
-don’t you worry; I’m all right!”
-
-“_Archie!_” cried the colonel. “_Where are you?_”
-
-But there was no answer. He called again, and a second time; he
-told the lad that they were dreadfully anxious about him. He got no
-response from the boy; but another voice, a woman’s voice, said, with
-cold distinctness, as if to some one in the room: “No, don’t let him;
-it is impossible!” Then a dead wall of silence and Central’s impassive
-ignorance. He could get nothing.
-
-Rupert Winter stood a moment, frowning and thinking deeply. Directly,
-with a shrug of the shoulders, he walked out of his own outside door,
-locking it, and went straight to Miss Smith’s.
-
-He knocked, at first very gently, then more vigorously. But there was
-no answer. He went away from the door, but he did not reënter his room.
-He did not bear to his aunt the news which, with all its meagerness
-and irritating incompleteness, had been an enormous relief to him. He
-simply waited in the corridor. Five minutes, ten minutes passed; then
-he heard the elevator whir, and, standing with his hand on the knob of
-his open door, he saw his aunt’s companion, dressed for the street,
-step out and speed down the corridor to her own door.
-
-The other voice--the woman’s voice--had been Janet Smith’s.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-THE HAUNTED HOUSE
-
-
-A mud-splashed automobile runabout containing two men was turning
-off Van Ness Avenue down a narrower and shadier side street in the
-afternoon of the Sunday following the disappearance of Archie Winter.
-One of the occupants seemed to be an invalid whom the brilliant March
-sunshine had not tempted out of his heavy wrappings and cap; the
-other was a short, thick-set, corduroy-jacketed chauffeur. One marked
-the runabout at a glance as a hardly used livery motor-car; but a
-moment’s inspection might have shown that it was running with admirable
-smoothness and quiet. The chauffeur wore goggles, hence his eyes were
-shielded, but he turned a broad smile upon the pallid cheeks and
-sharpened profile beside him.
-
-“Colonel, as a health-seeker who can’t keep warm enough, you’re great!”
-he cried. “Lord, but you look the part!”
-
-“If I can’t shed some of these confounded mufflers soon,” growled
-the pale sufferer addressed, “I’ll get so red with heat it will come
-through my beautiful powder. I hope those fellows won’t see us, for
-they will be on to us, all right.”
-
-“Our own mothers wouldn’t be on to us in these rigs,” the chauffeur
-replied cheerily; he seemed to be in a hopeful mood; “and let us once
-get into the house, and surprise ’em, and there’ll be something drop.
-But I haven’t really had a chance to tell you the latest--having
-to pick you up at a drug store this way. Now, let’s sum things up!
-You think the boy got out through Keatcham’s apartment? Or Mrs.
-Wigglesworth’s?”
-
-“How else?” said the colonel, “he can’t fly, and if he could, he
-couldn’t fly out and then lock the windows from the inside.”
-
-“I see”--the chauffeur appeared thoughtful--“and the Wigglesworth door
-was locked. You think that Keatcham is in it, someway?”
-
-“Not Keatcham,” said the colonel. “There was another man in the
-car--Atkins they called him, though he has disappeared. But Mercer
-remains. His secretary and that valet of his; I think the secretary is
-Cary Mercer. The boy might have slipped out in those few moments we
-were hunting for him inside. Afterward, either Mrs. Melville Winter or
-I was on guard until your man came. He might go to the Fireless Stove
-man, slip out of his rooms, and round the corner to the elevator in a
-couple of seconds. Then, of course, I might see their rooms--”
-
-“Provided, that is, the Fireless Stove drummer is in the plot, too.”
-
-“The Fireless Stove drummer who smokes _Villar y Villar_ cigars? He is
-in it, I think, Birdsall.”
-
-“Well, I’ll assume that. Next thing: you get the telephone call. And
-you say the voice sounded chipper; didn’t look like he was being hurt
-or bothered anyway, did it?”
-
-“Not at all. Besides, you know the letter Miss Smith got this morning?”
-
-“I think I’d like another peek at that; will you drive her a minute,
-while I look at the letter again?” The instant his hands were free
-Birdsall pulled out the envelope from his leather-rimmed pocket.
-
-It was rectangular in shape and smaller than the ordinary business
-envelope. The paper was linen of a common diamond pattern, having
-no engraved heading. The detective ran his eyes down the few lines
-written in an unformed boyish hand. There was neither date nor place;
-only these words:
-
- DEAR MISS JANET--Don’t you or auntie be woried about me because I am
- well and safe and having a good time. I had the nose bleed that is
- why I spoted the carpet. Tell Auntie to please pay for it out of my
- next week’s allowance. Be sure and don’t wory.
-
- Your aff. friend,
- ARCHIBALD PAGE WINTER.
-
-“You’re sure this is the boy’s writing?” was the detective’s comment.
-
-“Sure. And his spelling, too.”
-
-“Now,” said Birdsall, watching the colonel’s keen, aquiline profile
-as he spoke, “now you notice there’s no heading or mark on the paper;
-and the water-mark is only O. K. E., Mass., 1904. And that amounts to
-nothing; those folks sell all over the country. But you notice that
-it is not the ordinary business paper; it looks rather ladylike than
-commercial, doesn’t it?”
-
-The colonel admitted that it did look so.
-
-“Now, assuming that this letter was sent with the connivance of the
-kidnappers, it looks as if our young gentleman wasn’t in any particular
-danger of having a hard time. To me, it looks pretty certain he must
-have skipped himself; tolled along someway, maybe, but not making
-any resistance. Now, is there anybody that you know who has enough
-influence over him for that? How about the lady’s maid?”
-
-“Randall has been a faithful servant for twenty years, a middle-aged,
-serious-minded, decent woman. Out of the question.”
-
-“This Miss Smith, your aunt’s companion, who is she? Do you know?”
-
-“A South Carolinian; good family; she has lived with my aunt as
-secretary and companion for a year; my aunt is very fond of her.”
-
-“That all you know? Well _I_ have found out a little more; she used to
-live with a Mrs. James S. Hastings, a rich Washington woman. The lady’s
-only son fell in love with her; _somehow_ the marriage was broken off.”
-
-“What was his name?”
-
-“Lawrence. They call him Larry. He went to Manila. Maybe you’ve met him
-there.”
-
-“Yes, I knew him; I don’t believe he ever was accepted by her.”
-
-“I don’t know. I have only had two days on her biography. Later, she
-went to Johns Hopkins Hospital. One of the doctors was very attentive
-to her--but it did not come to anything. She didn’t graduate. Don’t
-know why. Then she went to live with Miss Angela Nelson, who died and
-left her money, away from her own family. There was talk of breaking
-the will; but it wasn’t done. Then she came to Mrs. Winter.”
-
-The colonel was silent; there was nothing discreditable in these
-details. He had known before that Janet Smith was poor; that she
-had been thrown on the world early; that she must earn her own
-livelihood; yet, somehow, as Birdsall marshaled the facts, there was
-an insidious, malarious hint of the adventuress, bandied from place
-to place, hawking her attractions about, wheedling, charming for
-hire, entrapping imbecile young cubs--Larry Hastings wasn’t more than
-twenty-two--somehow he felt a revolt against the picture and against
-the man submitting it--and, confound Millicent!
-
-The detective changed the manner of his questions a little. “I suppose
-your aunt is pretty advanced in years, though she is as well preserved
-an old lady as I have ever met, and as shrewd. Say, wouldn’t she be
-likely to leave the boy a lot of money?”
-
-“I dare say.” The colonel was conscious of an intemperate impulse to
-kick Birdsall, who had been such a useful fellow in the Philippines.
-
-“If anything was to happen to him, who would get the money?”
-
-“Well, Mrs. Melville and I are next of kin,” returned the colonel
-dryly. “Do you suspect _us_?”
-
-“I did look up Mrs. Melville,” answered the unabashed detective, “but I
-guess she’s straight goods all right. But say, how about Miss Smith?”
-
-The colonel stared, then he laughed. “Birdsall,” said he, “there’s
-somewhat too much mention of ladies’ names to suit my Virginian taste.
-But if you mean to imply that Miss Smith is going to kill Archie to get
-my aunt’s money, I can tell you you are _’way off!_ Your imagination
-is too active for your profession. You ought to hire out to the yellow
-journals.”
-
-His employer’s satire did not even flick the dust off Birdsall’s
-complacency; he grinned cheerfully. “Oh, I’m not so bad as _that_; I
-don’t suppose she did kill the boy; I think he’s alive, all right.
-But say, Colonel, I’ll give it to you straight; I do think the señora
-coaxed the boy off. You admit, don’t you, he went off. Well, then he
-was coaxed, somehow. Now, who’s got influence enough to coax him? You
-cross out the maid; so do I. You cross out Mrs. Melville Winter; so do
-I. I guess we both cross out the old lady. Well, there’s you and the
-señora left. I don’t suspect _you_, General.”
-
-“Really? I don’t see why. I stand to make more than anybody else, if
-you are digging up motives. And how about the chambermaid?”
-
-Birdsall flashed a glance of reproach on his companion. “Now, Colonel,
-do you think I ain’t looked _her_ up? First thing. Nothing in it.
-Decent Vermont girl, three years in the hotel. Came for her lungs. She
-ain’t in it. But let’s get back to Miss Smith. Did you know she is Cary
-Mercer’s sister-in-law?”
-
-He delivered his shot in a casual way, and the colonel took it stonily;
-nevertheless, it went to the mark. Birdsall continued. “Now, question
-is, _was_ Mercer the secretary? You didn’t see the man in the elevator,
-except his back. Had he two moles?”
-
-“I couldn’t see. He had different clothes; but still there was
-something like Mercer about the shoulders.”
-
-“Burney didn’t get a chance to take a snapshot, but he did snap the
-stove man. Here it is. Pull that book out of my pocket.”
-
-Obeying, the colonel lifted a couple of small prints which he
-scrutinized intently, at the end, admitting, “Yes, it is he all right.
-Now do you know what _I_ think?”
-
-Birdsall couldn’t form an idea.
-
-“I think the Keatcham party is in it; and I think they are after
-bigger game than Archie. Maybe the train robbers were a part of the
-scheme--although I’m not so sure of that.”
-
-“Oh, the robbers were in it all right. But now come to Miss Smith;
-where does she come in? Or are you as sure of her as Mercer was in
-Chicago?”
-
-If he had expected to get a spark out of the Winter tinder by this
-scraping stroke, he was mistaken; the soldier did not even move his
-brooding gaze fixed on the hills beyond the house roofs; and he
-answered in a level tone: “Did you get _that_ story from my aunt, or
-was it Mrs. Melville? I’m pretty certain you got your biography from
-that quarter. My aunt might have told her.”
-
-“That would be betraying a lady’s confidence. I’m only a detective,
-whose business is to pry, but I never go back on the ladies. And I
-think, same’s you, that the lady in question is a real nice, high-toned
-lady; but I can’t disregard the evidence. I never give out my system,
-but I’ve got one, all the same. Look here, see this paper?”--he had
-replaced the envelope in his pocket; he pulled it out again; or rather,
-so the colonel fancied, until Birdsall turned the envelope over,
-revealing it to be blank. “There’s a sheet of paper inside; take it
-out. Look at the water-mark, look at the pattern; then compare it with
-this letter”--handing the colonel the original envelope. “Same exactly,
-ain’t they?”
-
-The colonel, who had studied the two sheets of paper silently, nodded
-as silently; and he had a premonition of Birdsall’s next sentence
-before it came. “Well, Mrs. Melville Winter, this morning, took me to
-Miss Smith’s desk, where we found this and a lot more like it.”
-
-“You seem to be right in thinking the paper widely distributed,”
-observed the colonel.
-
-“And you don’t think that suspicious?”
-
-“I should think it more suspicious if the paper were not out on her
-desk. If she is such a deep one as you seem to think, she would hide
-such an incriminating bit of evidence.”
-
-“She didn’t know we suspected her. Of course, you haven’t shadowed her
-a little bit?”
-
-“There is a limit to detective duty in the case of a gentleman,”
-returned the colonel haughtily. “I have not.”
-
-Little Birdsall sighed; then in a propitiatory tone: “Well, of course,
-we both think there are other people in the job; I don’t know exactly
-what you mean by bigger game, but I can make a stagger at it. Now, say,
-did you get any answer when you wrote to Keatcham himself?”
-
-“Yes,” said the colonel grimly, “I heard. You know the sort of letter
-I wrote; telling him of our dreadful anxiety and about the lad’s being
-an orphan; don’t you think it was the sort of letter a decent man would
-answer, no matter how busy he might be?”
-
-“Sure. Didn’t you get an answer?”
-
-“I did.” The colonel extricated himself from his wrappings enough to
-find a pale blue envelope, which he handed to Birdsall, at the same
-time taking the motor handle. “You see; type-written, very polite,
-chilly sort of letter, kind to make a man hot under the collar and
-swear at Keatcham’s heartlessness. Mr. Keatcham unable to answer,
-having been ill since he left San Francisco. Did not see anything of
-any boy. Probably boy ran away. Has no information of any kind to
-afford. And the writer is very sincerely mine. The minute I read it I
-was sure Mercer wrote it; and he wrote it to make me so disgusted with
-Keatcham I wouldn’t pursue the subject with him. Just the same way he
-snubbed my aunt; and, for that matter, just the way he tried to snub
-me on the train. But he missed his mark; I wired every hotel in Santa
-Barbara and every one in Los Angeles; and Keatcham isn’t there and
-hasn’t been there. He has a big bunch of mail at Santa Barbara waiting
-for him, forwarded from Los Angeles, but he hasn’t shown himself.”
-
-Birdsall shot a glance of cordial admiration at the colonel. “You’re
-all there, General,” he cried with unquenchable familiarity. “I’ve been
-trying to call up the Keatcham outfit, and _I_ couldn’t get a line,
-either. They haven’t used the tickets they bought--their reservations
-went empty to Los Angeles. Now, what do you make out of that?”
-
-“I make out that Archie is only part of their game,” replied the
-soldier. “Now see, Birdsall, you are not going to get a couple of rich
-young college fellows to do just plain kidnapping and scaring women out
-of their money--”
-
-“Lord, General,” interrupted Birdsall, “those college guys don’t turn a
-hair at kidnapping; they regularly steal the president of the freshman
-class, and the things they do at their hazing bees and initiations
-would make an Apache Indian sit up and take notice. I tell you,
-General, they’re the limit for deviltry.”
-
-“Some kinds. Not that kind; it’s too dirty. Arnold was one of the
-cleanest foot-ball players at Harvard. And I don’t know anything about
-human nature if that other youngster isn’t decent. But Mercer--_es
-un loco_; you can look out for anything from him. Now, see the
-combination. Arnold was at Harvard! I have traced the motor-car they
-used to him; and then, if you add that his father is away safe in
-Europe and he has an empty house, off to one side, with a quantity of
-space around it and the reputation of being haunted, why--”
-
-“It looks good to me. And I understand my men have got around it on the
-quiet all right. How’s your man Haley got on, hiring out to the Jap in
-charge?”
-
-“Well enough; the Jap took him on to mow, but either Mr. Caretaker
-doesn’t know anything or he won’t tell. He’s bubbling over with
-conversation about the flowers and the country and the Philippines,
-where he used to be; but he only knows that the honorable family are
-all away and he is to shun the house. Aren’t we almost there?”
-
-“Just around the corner. I guess when you see it you’ll think it’s just
-the _patio_ a spook of taste would freeze to.”
-
-“_Why_ is it haunted?”
-
-“Now you have me. I ain’t on to such dream stuff. Gimme five cards.
-Mrs. Arnold died off in Europe, so ’tain’t her; and the house has
-only been built two years; but the neighbors have seen lights and
-heard groans and a pick chopping at the stones. Some folks say the
-land belonged to an old miner and he died before he could tell where
-he’d buried his _mazuma_; so he is taking a little _buscar_ after it.
-There’s the house, General.”
-
-The street climbed a gentle hill, and on its crest a large house, in
-mission style, looked over a pleasant land. Its position on a corner
-and the unusual size of the grounds about it gave the mansion an
-effect of space. Of almost rawly recent erection though it was, the
-kindly climate had so fostered the growth of the pines, acacias and
-live-oaks, the eucalypti and the orange-trees, which made a rich blur
-of color on the hillside, had so lavishly tended the creeping ivies
-and Bougainvilleas which masked the rounded lantern arches of the
-stern gray façade, and so sumptuously blazoned the flower-beds in the
-garden on the one hand, yet, on the other, had so cunningly dulled the
-greenish gray of the cobblestones from California arroyos in chimney
-and foundation, and had so softly streaked the marble of the garden
-statues and the plaster of walls and mansion with tiny filaments of
-lichens or faint green moss, that the beholder might fancy the house
-to be the ancient home of some Spanish hidalgo, handed down with an
-hereditary curse, through generations, to the last of his race. One
-was tempted to such a flutter of fancy because of the impression given
-by the mansion. A sullen reticence hung about the place. The windows,
-for the most part, were heavily shuttered. Not a pane of glass flashed
-back at the sunlight; even those casements not shuttered turned blank
-dark green shades, like bandaged eyes, on the court and the beautiful
-terraces and the lovely sweep of hillsides where the wonderful shadows
-swayed and melted.
-
-The bent figure of a man raking, distorted by the perspective, was
-visible just beyond the high pillars of the gateway. He paid no
-attention to the motions of the motor-car, nor did he answer a hail
-until it was repeated. Then he approached the car. Birdsall was in the
-roadway trying to unlock the gate. The man, whose Japanese features
-were quite distinguishable, bowed; he explained that the honorable
-owners were not at home; his insignificant self was the only keeper of
-the grounds. He spoke sufficiently good English with the accompaniment
-of a deprecatory, amiable smile. Birdsall, in turn, told him that his
-own companion was a very great gentleman from the East who belonged to
-a society of vast power which was investigating spectral appearances,
-and that he had come thousands of miles to see the ghost.
-
-The Japanese extended both hands, while the appeal of his smile
-deepened. “Too bad, velly,” he murmured, “but not leally any g’lost,
-no, nev’.”
-
-“Don’t you believe in the ghost?” asked Colonel Winter.
-
-“No, me Clistian boy, no believe not’ing.”
-
-“All the samee,” said the colonel, laboriously swinging himself from
-his vantage-ground of the motor seat to the flat top of the wall,
-thence dropping to the greensward below, “allee samee, like go in house
-hunt ghost.” He crackled a bank-note in the palm of the slim brown
-hand, smiling and nodding as if to break the force of his brusque
-action. Meanwhile, Birdsall had safely shut off his engine before he
-placed himself beside the others with an agility hardly to be expected
-of his rotund build.
-
-As for the caretaker, whether because he perceived himself outnumbered,
-or because he was really void of suspicion, he accepted the money with
-outward gratitude and proffered his guidance through the garden and
-the orchards. He slipped into the rôle of cicerone with no atom of
-resistance; he was voluble; he was gracious; he was artlessly delighted
-with his señors. In spite of this flood of suavity, however, there
-seemed to be no possibility of persuading him to admit them to the
-house.
-
-Assured of this, the two fell back for a second, time for the merest
-eyeflash from the detective to the soldier, who at once limped briskly
-up to the Jap, saying: “We are very much obliged to you; this is a
-beautiful house, beautiful gardens; but we want to see the ghost; and
-if you can give me young Mr. Arnold’s address I will see him--or write,
-and we can come back.”
-
-The gardener, with many apologies and smiles, did not know Mr. Arnold’s
-honorable address, but he drew out a soiled card, explaining that it
-bore the name of the gentleman in charge of the property. Birdsall,
-peering over the Jap’s shoulders, added that it was the card of a
-well-known legal firm.
-
-“Then,” said the colonel with deliberation, “we will thank you again
-for your courtesy, and--what’s that?”
-
-The Jap turned; they all started at the barking detonation of some
-explosion; while they gazed about them there came another booming
-sound, and they could see smoke pouring from the chimney and leaking
-through the window joints of a room in the rear of the house. Like a
-hare, not breaking his wind by a single cry, the Jap sped toward the
-court. The others were hard on his heels, though the colonel limped and
-showed signs of distress by the time they reached the great iron door.
-
-The Jap pulled out a key; he turned it and swung the door barely wide
-enough to enter, calling on them to stay out; he would tell them if he
-needed them.
-
-“Augustly stay; maybe honolable t’ieves!” he cried.
-
-But the detective had interposed a stalwart leg and shoulder.
-Instantly the door swung open; he acted as if he had lost his wits with
-excitement. “You’re burning up! Lord! you’re burning! _Fire!_ _Fire!_”
-he bawled, and rushed boldly into the room.
-
-Winter followed him, also calling aloud in a strident voice. And it was
-to be observed, being such an unusual preparation for a conflagration,
-that he had drawn a heavy revolver and ran with it in his hand. Before
-he jumped out of the car he had discarded his thick top-coat and all
-his wrappings.
-
-An observer, also (had there been one near), would have taken note of a
-robust Irishman, who had been weeding the flower-beds, and would have
-seen him straighten at the first peal of the explosion, stare wildly at
-the chimneys before any distinct smoke was to be seen, then run swiftly
-and climb up to a low chimney on a wing of the house, watering-pot in
-hand. He would have seen him empty his inadequate fire extinguisher
-and rapidly descend the ladder, while the smoke volleyed forth, as if
-defying his puny efforts; later, he would have seen the watering-pot
-bearer pursue the others into the house, emitting noble yells of
-“Fire!” and “Help!”
-
-[Illustration: The detective had interposed a stalwart leg and
-shoulder. Page 135]
-
-Further, this same observer, had he been an intimate friend of Sergeant
-Dennis Haley, certainly would have recognized that resourceful man of
-war in the amateur fireman.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-FACE TO FACE
-
-
-When the two men got into the house the dim rooms made them stumble
-for a moment after the brilliant sunshine of the outer skies; but in
-a second Birdsall’s groping hand had found an electric push-button
-and the room was flooded with light. They were in a small office
-off the kitchen, apparently. Smoke of a peculiarly pungent odor and
-eye-smarting character blurred all the surroundings; but during the
-moment the Jap halted to explore its cause the others perceived two
-doors and made for them. One was locked, but the other must have been
-free to open, since Haley, with his watering-can, bounded through it
-while they were tugging at the other. Almost immediately, however,
-Haley was back again shouting and pointing down the dark passage.
-
-“The fire’s _there_,” screamed the detective. “I can smell smoke!
-The smoke comes through the keyhole!” But while the Jap fitted a key
-in the lock and swung back the door, and Haley, who had paused to
-replenish his watering-can at a convenient faucet, darted after the
-other two, the colonel stood listening with every auditory nerve
-strained to catch some sound. He yelled “Fire! help!” at the top of his
-voice, but not moving a muscle. “Too far off,” he muttered, then he
-yelled again and threw a heavy chair as if he had stumbled against it.
-Another pause; he got down on his knees to put his ear to the floor.
-Directly he rose; he did not speak, but the words that he said to
-himself were only: “Just possible. Some one down cellar; but not under
-here.” Meanwhile he was hurrying in pursuit of the others as swiftly as
-his stiff knee would allow. He found them in a side hall with tiled or
-brick floor, gathered about a water-soaked heap of charred red paper.
-
-“’Tis terrible!” announced Haley, “a bum for sure! a dinnermite
-bum!”--fishing out something like a tin tomato can from the sodden mass.
-
-“Anyhow, _there_ goes the real thing,” observed the colonel coolly, as
-a formidable explosion jarred the air.
-
-“If you blow us up, I kill you flist!” hissed the Jap, and his knife
-flashed.
-
-“_Chito, Chito!_” soothed the colonel, lifting his revolver almost
-carelessly. Simultaneously two brawny arms pinioned the Jap’s own arms
-at his sides.
-
-“Shure, Mister Samurai, ’tis the ongrateful chap youse is,”
-expostulated Haley. “I hate to reshtrain ye, but if ye thry any
-jehujits on me ’twill be sahanara wid youse mighty quick.”
-
-“No understan’,” murmured the Jap plaintively. “Why you hult me?”
-
-“Come, put out the fire first,” said the colonel; “you know the house,
-you go ahead.”
-
-The Jap darted on ahead so swiftly that they had some ado to follow;
-which seemed necessary, since he might have clashed a bolt on them at
-any turn. The colonel’s stiff leg kept him in the rear, but Haley was
-never a hand’s-breadth behind the runner.
-
-They found smoke in two places, but they easily extinguished the tiny
-flames. In both cases the bombs turned out to be no more dangerous
-than a common kind of fireworks yielding a suffocating smoke in an
-inclosure, but doing no especial damage on safe and fire-proof ground,
-like a hearth. They were quickly extinguished. In their search they
-passed from one luxurious room to another, the Jap leading, until he
-finally halted in a spacious library hung in Spanish leather, with
-ancient, richly carved Spanish tables and entrancing Spanish chairs of
-turned wood and age-mellowed cane, and bookcases sumptuously tempting
-a book-lover. But the colonel cared only for the soul of a book, not
-its body; the richest and clearest of black letter or the daintiest
-of tooling had left him cold; moreover, every fiber in him was strung
-by his quest; and Haley, naturally, was immune; strangely enough, it
-was the cheerful, vulgar little detective who gave a glance, rapid but
-full of admiration, at the shelves and pile of missals on the table,
-incongruously jostled by magazines of the day.
-
-Winter faced the Jap, who was sheathed again in his bland and impassive
-politeness. “Where is Mr. Mercer?” said he.
-
-The Jap waved his hands in an eloquent oriental gesture. He assured the
-honorable questioner that he did not know any Mr. Mercer. There was no
-one in the house.
-
-The colonel had seated himself in a priceless arm-chair in Cordova
-stamped leather; he no longer looked like an invalid. “Show your star,
-please,” he commanded Birdsall, and the latter silently flung back the
-lapel of his coat.
-
-“I ought to tell you,” continued Rupert Winter, “that the game is up.
-It would do no good for you to run that poisoned bit of steel of yours
-into me or into any of us; we have only to stay here a little too long
-and the police of San Francisco will be down on you--oh, I know all
-about what sort they are, but we have money to spend as well as you.
-You take the note I shall write to Mr. Mercer, or whatever you choose
-to call him, and bring his answer. We stay here until he comes.”
-
-Having thus spoken in an even, gentle voice, he scribbled a few words
-on a piece of paper which he took out of his note-book. This he
-proffered to the Jap.
-
-On his part, the latter kept his self-respect; he abated no jot of
-his assurance that they were alone in the house; he insinuated his
-suspicion that they were there for no honest purpose; finally he was
-willing to search the house if they would stay where they were.
-
-“I am not often mistaken in people,” was the colonel’s rather oblique
-answer, “and I think you are a gentleman who might kill me if you had
-a chance, but would not break his word to me. If you will promise to
-play fair with us, do no harm to my nephew, take this letter and bring
-me an answer--if you find any one--on your word of honor as a Japanese
-soldier and gentleman, you may go; we will not signal the police. Is it
-a bargain?”
-
-The Jap gravely assented, still in the language of the East, “saving
-his face” by the declaration of the absence of his principals. And
-he went off as gracefully and courteously as if only the highest
-civilities had passed between them.
-
-“Won’t he try some skin game on us?” the detective questioned; but
-Winter only motioned toward the telephone desk. “Listen at it,” he
-said, “you can tell if the wires are cut; and he knows your men are
-outside hiding, somewhere; he doesn’t know how many. You see, we have
-the advantage of them there; to be safe they don’t dare to let many
-people into their secret. _We_ can have a whole gang. We haven’t many,
-but they may _think_ we have.”
-
-Birdsall, who had lifted the receiver to his ear, laid it down with
-an appeased nod. Immediately he proceeded to satisfy his professional
-conscience by a search in every nook and cranny of the apartment. But
-no result appeared important enough to justify the production of his
-red morocco note-book and his fountain-pen. He had paused in disgust
-when the colonel sat up suddenly, erect in his chair; his keener
-ears had caught some sound which made him dart to all the windows in
-succession. He called Haley (whom he had posted outside to guard the
-door) and despatched him across the hall to reconnoiter. “I am sure it
-was the sound of wheels,” he explained, “but Haley will be too late; we
-are on the wrong side of the house.”
-
-As he spoke the buzz of an electric bell jarred their ears. “Somebody
-is coming in the front door,” hazarded Birdsall.
-
-“Evidently,” returned the colonel dryly. “How can our absent friends
-get in otherwise--at least how can they let us understand they have
-come in? I think we are going to have the pleasure of an interview with
-the elusive Mr. Mercer.”
-
-They waited. The colonel motioned Birdsall to a seat by the table,
-within breathing distance of the telephone. He himself fluttered the
-loose journals and magazines, his ironic smile creasing his cheek.
-“Our Japanese friend reads the newspapers,” he remarked. “Here are
-to-day’s papers; yes, _Examiner_ and _Chronicle_, unfolded and smoked
-over. Cigar, too, not cigarette, for here is a stump--decidedly our
-cherry-blossom friends are getting civilized!”
-
-“Oh, there is somebody _in_ here all right,” grunted Birdsall. “Say,
-Colonel, you are sure Mrs. Winter has had no answer to her ad? No kind
-of notice about sending money?”
-
-“I haven’t seen her for a few hours, but I saw Mrs. Melville Winter;
-she was positive no word had come. She thought my aunt was more worried
-than she would admit, and Miss Smith looked pale, although she seemed
-hopeful.”
-
-“She didn’t really want to give me the letter, I thought,” said the
-detective. The colonel gave him no reply save a black look. A silence
-fell. A footfall outside broke it, a firm, in nowise stealthy footfall.
-Birdsall slipped his hand inside his coat. The colonel rose and bowed
-gravely to Cary Mercer.
-
-On his part, Mercer was not in the least flurried; he looked at the
-two men, not with the arrogant suspicion which had stung Winter on the
-train, but with the melancholy courtesy of his bearing at Cambridge,
-three years before.
-
-“This, I think, is Colonel Winter?” he said, returning the bow, but not
-extending his hand, which hung down, slack and empty at his side.
-
-“I am glad you recognized me this time, Mr. Mercer.”
-
-“I am sorry that I did not recognize you before,” answered Mercer.
-“Will you gentlemen be seated? I am not the owner of the house nor his
-son; I am not even a friend, only a casual acquaintance of the young
-man, but I seem to be rather in the position of host, so will you be
-seated, and may I offer you some Scotch and Shasta--Mr.--ah--”
-
-“Mr. Horatio Birdsall, of the Birdsall and Gwen Detective Agency,”
-interposed Winter. Birdsall bowed. Mercer bowed. “Excuse me if I
-decline for us both; our time is limited--no, thank you, not a cigar,
-either. Now, Mr. Mercer, to come to the point, I want my nephew. I
-understand he is in this house.”
-
-“You are quite mistaken,” Mercer responded with unshaken calm. “He is
-not.”
-
-“Where is he, then?”
-
-“I do not know, Colonel Winter. What I should recommend is for you to
-go back to the Palace, and if you do not find him there--why, come and
-shoot us up again!” His eye strayed for a second to the blackened,
-reeking mass on the great stone hearth.
-
-“Have you sent him home? Is that what you mean to imply?”
-
-“I imply nothing, Colonel; I don’t dare to with such strenuous fighters
-as you gentlemen; only go and see, and if you do find the young
-gentleman has had no ill treatment, no scare--only a little adventure
-such as boys like, I hope you will come out here, or wherever I may be,
-and have that cigar you are refusing.”
-
-The colonel was frankly puzzled. He couldn’t quite focus his wits on
-this bravado which had nothing of the bravo about it, in fact had
-a tinge of wistfulness in its quiet. One would have said the man
-regretted his compulsory attitude of antagonism; that he wanted peace.
-
-Mercer smiled faintly. “You ought to know by this time when a man is
-lying, Colonel,” he continued, “but I will go further. I may have done
-plenty of wrong things in my life, some things, maybe, which the law
-might call a crime; but I have never done anything which would debar
-me from passing my word of honor as a gentleman; nor any one else from
-taking it. I give you my word of honor that I have meant and I do mean
-no slightest harm to Archie Winter; and that, while I do not _know_
-where he is at this speaking, I believe you will find him safe under
-your aunt’s protection when you get back to the Palace.”
-
-“Call up the Palace Hotel, Mr. Birdsall,” was the colonel’s reply. “Mr.
-Mercer, I do not distrust that you are speaking exactly, but you know
-your Shakespeare; and there are promises which keep their word to the
-ear but break it to the sense.”
-
-“I don’t wonder at your mistake; but you are mistaken, suh.”
-
-Birdsall was phlegmatically ringing up Mrs. Winter, having the usual
-experience of the rash person who intrudes his paltry needs on the
-complex workings of a great hotel system.
-
-“No, I don’t know the number, I haven’t the book here, but
-_you_ know, Palace Hotel. Well give me Information, then--Busy?
-Well, give me another Information, then--yes, I want the Palace
-Hotel--P-a-l-a-c-e--yes, yes, Palace Hotel; yes, certainly. Yes? Mrs.
-Archibald Winter. Yes--line busy? Well, hold on until it is disengaged.
-Say, Miss Furber, that you? This is Birdsall and Gwen. Yes. Give me
-Mrs. Winter, will you, 337? This Mrs. Winter? Oh! When will she be
-back? Is Mrs. Melville Winter in? Well, Miss Smith in? She’s gone,
-too? Has Master Archibald got back, yet, to the hotel? Hasn’t? Thank
-you--eh?” in answer to the colonel’s interruption. “What say, Colonel?”
-
-“Tell her to call up this number,”--the colonel read it out of the
-telephone book--“when Master Archie does get back, will you? I am
-afraid, Mr. Mercer, that you will have to allow us to trespass on your
-hospitality for a little longer.”
-
-He suspected that Mercer was annoyed, although he answered lightly
-enough: “As you please, Colonel Winter. I am sure you will hear very
-soon. Now, there is another matter, your machine; I understand you left
-it outside. Will you ring for Kito, Colonel? Under the circumstances
-you may prefer to do your own ringing. I will ask him to attend to the
-car.”
-
-The colonel made proper acknowledgments. He was thinking that had
-Mercer cared to confiscate the motor, he would have done it without
-ringing; on the other hand, did he desire some special intercourse
-with his retainer, wherein, under their very noses, he could issue his
-orders--well, possibly they might get a whiff of the secret themselves
-were he allowed to try. At present the game baffled him. Therefore he
-nodded at Birdsall’s puckered face behind Mercer’s shoulder. And he
-rang the bell.
-
-The Jap answered it with suspicious alacrity.
-
-“Kito,” said Mercer, “will you attend to General Winter’s car? Bring it
-up to the court.”
-
-Absolutely harmless, to all appearances, but Birdsall, from his safe
-position behind master and man, looked shrewd suspicion at the soldier.
-
-“Shall your man in the hall go with him?” asked Mercer.
-
-The colonel shook his head. “No,” he said quietly, “we have other
-men outside if he needs help. Call Skid, please.” But when Birdsall
-attempted to get Central there was no response.
-
-The colonel merely shrugged his shoulders, although Birdsall frowned
-with vexation. “What a pity!” said Winter softly. “Now the fellows will
-come when the time is up; we can’t call them off.”
-
-Mercer smiled faintly. “There are two more telephones in the house,” he
-observed. “You can call off your dogs easily any time you wish. Also
-you can hear from the Palace. Will you come up-stairs with me? I assure
-you I have not the least intention to harm you or the honest sergeant.”
-
-“You take the first trick, Mercer,” said the colonel. “I supposed the
-bell was your signal to have the wires cut. But about going; no, I
-think we will stay here. There is a door out on the court which, if you
-will open--thank you. A charming prospect! Excuse me if I send Haley
-out there; and may I go myself?”
-
-Anticipating the answer, he stepped under the low mission lintel into
-a fairy-like Californian court or _patio_ of pepper-trees and palms
-and a moss-grown fountain. There was the usual colonnade with a stone
-seat running round the wall. Mercer, smiling, motioned to one of them.
-“I wish I could convince you, Colonel, that you are in no need of
-that plaything in your hand, and that you are going to dine with your
-boy--isn’t he a fine fellow?”
-
-The colonel did not note either his admission that he had seen Archie,
-nor a curious warming of his tone; he had stiffened and grown rigid
-like a man who receives a blow which he will not admit. He stole a
-glance at the detective and met an atrocious smirk of complacency.
-They both had caught a glimpse of a figure flitting into a door of the
-court. They both had seen a woman’s profile and a hand holding a little
-steel tool which had ends like an alligator’s nose. And both men had
-recognized Miss Smith.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-THE AGENT OF THE FIRELESS STOVE
-
-
-The time was two hours later. Rupert Winter was sitting on one of
-the stone benches of the colonnade about the _patio_. The court was
-suffused with the golden glow presaging sunset. Warm afternoon shadows
-lay along the flags; wavering silhouettes of leafage or plant; blurred
-reflections from the bold bas-reliefs of Spanish warriors and Spanish
-priests sculptured between the spandrels of the arches. Winter’s dull
-eyes hardly noted them: the exotic luxuriance of foliage, the Spanish
-armor and Spanish cowls were all too common to a denizen of a Spanish
-colony in the tropics, to distract his thoughts from his own ugly
-problem. He had been having it out with himself, as he phrased it. And
-there had been moments during those two hours, when he had ground his
-teeth and clenched his fists because of the futile and furious pain in
-him.
-
-When he recognized Janet Smith, by that same illuminating flash he
-recognized that this woman who had been tricking him was the woman
-that he loved. He believed that he had said his last word to love, but
-love, after seeming to accept the curt dismissal, was lightly riding
-his heart again. “Fooled a second time,” he thought with inexpressible
-bitterness, recalling his unhappy married life and the pretty, weak
-creature who had caused him such humiliation. Yet with her there had
-been no real wrong-doing, only absolute lack of discretion and a
-childish craving for gaiety and adulation. Poor child! what a woeful
-ending for it all! The baby, the little boy who was their only living
-child, to die of a sudden access of an apparently trifling attack of
-croup, while the mother was dancing at a post ball! He was East, taking
-his examination for promotion. The frantic drive home in the chill
-of the dawn had given her a cold which her shock and grief left her
-no strength to resist--she was always a frail little creature, poor
-butterfly!--and she followed her baby inside of a month. Had she lived,
-her husband might have found it hard to forgive her, for already a sore
-heart was turning to the child for comfort; but she was dead, and he
-did not let his thoughts misuse her memory. Now--here was another, so
-different but just as false. Then, he brought himself up with a jerk;
-he would be fair; he would look at things as they were; many a man had
-been fooled by the dummy. He would not jump at conclusions because they
-were cruel, any more than he would because they were kind. There was
-such a thing, he knew well, as credulous suspicion; it did more harm
-than credulous trust. Meanwhile, he had his detail. He was to find
-Archie; therefore, he waited. They were in the house; it were only
-folly to give up their advantage under the stress of any of Mercer’s
-plausible lurings to the outside.
-
-Moreover, by degrees, he became convinced that Mercer, certainly to
-some extent, was sincere in his profession of belief in Archie’s
-absence and safety. This, in spite of hearing several times that Archie
-was not returned. Mercer did all the speaking, but he allowed Birdsall
-to hold the receiver and take the message from Mrs. Winter.
-
-The telephone was in an adjoining room, but by shifting his position
-a number of times the colonel was able to catch a murmur of the
-conversation. He heard Mercer’s voice distinctly. He had turned away
-and was following the detective out of the room. “I don’t understand it
-any more than you do, Mr. Birdsall,” he said; “you won’t believe me,
-suh, but I am right worried.”
-
-“Of course I believe you,” purred the detective so softly that the
-colonel knew he did not believe any more than Mercer suspected. “Of
-course I believe you; but I don’t know what to do. It ain’t on the map.
-I guess it’s up to you to throw a little light. I’ve called the boys
-off twice already and told ’em to wait an hour or a half-hour longer. I
-got to see the colonel.”
-
-“I can trust my intuitions, or I can trust the circumstantial
-evidence,” thought the colonel. He jumped up and began to pace the
-court.
-
-“Seems to be like a game of bridge before one can see the dummy,” he
-complained; and as so often happens in the crises of life, a trivial
-illustration struck a wavering mind with the force of an argument. His
-thoughts reverted whimsically to the card-table; how many times had he
-hesitated over the first lead between evenly balanced suits of four;
-and how often had he regretted or won, depending solely upon whether
-his card instinct had been denied or obeyed! It might be instinct, this
-much-discussed “card instinct,” or it might be a summing up of logical
-deductions so swift that the obscure steps were lost, and the reasoner
-was unconscious of his own logical processes. “Now,” groaned Rupert
-Winter, “I am up against it. She _looks_ like a good woman; she _seems_
-like a good woman; but I have only my impressions and Aunt Rebecca’s
-against the apparent facts in the case. Well, Aunt Rebecca is a shrewd
-one!” He sat down and thought harder. Finally he rose, smiling. He
-had threshed out his problem; and his conclusion, inaudibly but very
-distinctly uttered to himself, was: “Me for my own impressions! If that
-girl is in with this gang, either what they are after isn’t so bad--or
-they have made her believe it isn’t bad.”
-
-He looked idly about him at the arched doorway of the outer court. It
-was carved with a favorite mission design of eight-pointed flowers with
-vase-like fluting below. There was a tiny crack in one of the flowers,
-the tiniest crack in the world. He looked at it without seeing it, or
-seeing it with only the outer half of his senses, but--he could not
-have told how--into his effort to pierce his own tangle there crept
-a sudden interest, a sudden keenness of scrutiny of this minute,
-insignificant crack in the stone. He became aware that the crack was
-singularly regular, preserving the form of the flower and the fluting
-beneath. Kito, the Japanese, who was sitting at the far end of the
-court, conversing in amity with Haley, just here rose and came to this
-particular pillar. The Irishman sat alone, rimmed by the sunset gold,
-little spangles of motes drifting about him; for the merest second
-Winter’s glance lingered on him ere it went to the Jap, who passed him,
-courteously saluting.
-
-After he had passed, the colonel looked again at the column and the
-crack--it was not there.
-
-“_Chito, chito!_” muttered the colonel. Carelessly he approached
-the column and took the same posture as the Jap. Unobtrusively his
-fingers strayed over the stone. He scratched the surface; not stone,
-but cement. He tapped cautiously, keeping his hand well hidden by his
-body; no hollow sound rewarded him; but all at once his groping fingers
-touched a little round object under the bold point of an eight-pointed
-flower. He didn’t dare press on it; instead he resumed his cautious
-tapping. It seemed to him that the sound had changed. He glanced about
-him. Save for Haley he was alone in the _patio_. He pressed on the
-round white knob, and what he had half expected happened: a segment
-of the column swung on inner hinges, disclosing the hollow center
-of the engaged columns on either side. He looked down. Nothing but
-darkness was visible, but while he stood, tensely holding his breath,
-his abnormally sensitive auricular nerve caught distinctly the staccato
-breath of that kind of sigh which is like a groan, and a voice said
-more wearily than angrily: “Oh, damn it all!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Almost simultaneously, he heard the faint footfalls of the men within;
-he must replace his movable flower. The column was intact, and he was
-bending his frowning brows on the stylobate of another when Birdsall
-and Mercer entered together, Mercer, with a shrug of his shoulders at
-the detective’s dogged suspicion, preceding the latter.
-
-“Well,” said the colonel, “did you get my aunt?”
-
-“Yes, suh, I got your aunt herself,” responded Mercer, with his
-Virginian survival of the formal civility of an earlier generation.
-“Yes, suh; but I regret to say Archie is not there.”
-
-“Where is he?” The soldier’s voice was curt.
-
-“Honestly,” declared Mercer, “I wish I knew, suh, I certainly _do_.
-But--” Mercer’s jaw fell; he turned sharply at the soft whir of an
-electric stanhope gently entering the _patio_ through the great arched
-gateway. It stopped abreast of the group, and its only occupant, a
-handsome young man, jumped nimbly out of the vehicle. He greeted them
-with a polite removal of his cap, a bow, and a flashing smile which
-made the circuit of the beholders. Birdsall and the colonel recognized
-the traveling enthusiast of the Fireless Stove.
-
-The colonel took matters into his own hands.
-
-“I think you’re the young gentleman who took my nephew away,” said he.
-“Will you kindly tell us where he is?”
-
-“And don’t get giddy, young gentleman,” Birdsall chimed in, “because
-we know perfectly well that you are _not_ the agent of the Peerless
-Fireless Stove.”
-
-“I’ve got one here on trial, and I’ve come back to see if they like
-it,” explained the young man, in silken accents, but with a dancing
-gleam of the eyes.
-
-“We are going to keep it,” said Mercer. “Kito,” calling the unseen Jap,
-“fetch that Fireless Stove this gentleman left us, and show it to this
-gentleman here.”
-
-“Oh, cut it out!” Birdsall waved him off. “It’s only ten minutes
-before our fellows will come. You can put the police court wise with
-all that. Try it on _them_; it don’t go with us.”
-
-“Where is the boy?” said the colonel.
-
-“Tell him, if you know,” said Mercer. “This gentleman,” he explained,
-“left a stove with us to test. He was here about it this morning, and
-we gave Archie to _him_ to take to the Palace Hotel.”
-
-“And he is there now,” said the young man.
-
-“Did you leave him there?” asked the colonel.
-
-“Yes, _did_ you?” insisted Mercer.
-
-The young man looked from Mercer to the other two men. There was no
-visible appeal to the Southerner, but Winter felt sure of two things:
-one, that the new-comer was Mercer’s confederate whom he was striving
-to shield by pretending to disavow; the other, that for some reason
-Mercer was as anxious for the answer as were they.
-
-“Why-y,” hesitated the stove promoter, “you see, Mr.--ah, gentlemen,
-you see, I was told to take the boy to the Palace Hotel, and I set out
-to do it. We weren’t going at more than an eight-mile-an-hour clip,
-yet some foozler of a cop arrested us for speeding. It was perfectly
-ridiculous, and I tried to shake him, but it was no use. They carried
-us off to a police court and stuck me for ten dollars. Meanwhile my
-machine and my passenger were outside. When I got outside I couldn’t
-find them. I skirmished around, and finally did get the machine. I’d
-taken the precaution to fix it so it couldn’t be run before I left
-it--took the key out, you know--it must have been trundled off by
-hand somewhere!--but I couldn’t find the boy. Naturally, I was a bit
-worried; but after I had looked up the force and the neighborhood, it
-occurred to me to ’phone to the Palace. I did, and I was told he was
-there.”
-
-“Who told you?” The question came simultaneously out of three throats.
-
-“Why, Mrs. Winter--that’s what she called herself.”
-
-“But not three minutes ago Mrs. Winter told me that he wasn’t there,”
-remarked Mercer coldly. “_When_ did you telephone?”
-
-“It was at least fifteen minutes ago,” the young man said dolefully.
-“I say, wouldn’t you better call them up again? There may be some
-explanation. I shouldn’t have come back without the kid if I hadn’t
-been _sure_ he was safe.”
-
-“Was it Mrs. Melville or Mrs. Winter you got?” This came from the
-colonel. “Did she by chance have an English accent, or was it
-Southern?”
-
-“Oh, no, not Southern,” protested the young man. “Yes, I should say it
-was English--or trying to be.”
-
-“It would be exactly like Millicent,” thought the colonel wrathfully,
-“to try to fool the kidnappers, who had apparently lost Archie, by
-pretending he was at the hotel!”
-
-He made no comment aloud, but he nodded assent to Mercer’s proposal to
-telephone; and then he walked up to the stove man.
-
-“The game is up,” he said quietly. “We have a lot of men waiting
-outside. If we signal, they will come any minute; if we don’t signal,
-they will come in ten minutes. Give us a chance to be merciful to you.
-This is no kind of a scrape for your father’s son--or for Arnold’s.”
-
-Shot without range though it was, Winter was sure that it went home
-under all the young fellow’s assumed bewilderment. He continued,
-looking kindly at him:
-
-“You look now, I’ll wager, about as you used to look in the office when
-you called on the dean--by invitation--and were wondering just where
-the inquiry was going to light!”
-
-The dimple showed in the young man’s cheek. “I admit,” he replied,
-“that I didn’t take advantage as I should of my university
-opportunities. Probably that is why I have to earn a strenuous
-livelihood boosting the Only Peerless Fireless Stove. By the way, have
-_you_ ever seen the Fireless in action? Just the thing for the army!
-Fills a long-felt want. I should be very pleased to demonstrate. We
-have a stove here.”
-
-The colonel grinned responsively. “You do it very well,” said he.
-“Can’t you let me into the game?”
-
-There was the slightest waver in the promoter’s glance, although he
-smiled brilliantly as he answered: “I’ll take it into consideration,
-but--will you excuse me? I want to speak to Mr. Mercer about the stove.”
-
-The moment he had removed his affable young presence Birdsall
-approached his employer. It had been a difficult quarter of an hour
-with the detective. Vague instinct warned him not to touch the subject
-of Miss Smith; he felt in no way assured about anything else. The
-result had been that he had fidgeted in silence. But the accumulated
-flood could no longer be held.
-
-“I’ve found out one thing,” exploded Birdsall, puffing in the haste of
-his utterance. “The boy is on the premises.”
-
-“Think so?” was all the colonel’s answer.
-
-“I’m sure of it. Say, I overheard Mercer talking down a speaking-tube.”
-
-“What did he say?”
-
-“Talked French, damn him! But say, what’s _gorge_?”
-
-“Throat.”
-
-“What’s _cupillo gorge_?”
-
-“Sure he wasn’t talking of a carriage, or did he say _je le couperai la
-gorge_?”
-
-“Maybe. I wouldn’t swear to it. I don’t _parlez français_ a little bit.”
-
-“Did you hear any other noises? Where were they?”
-
-Birdsall thought he had heard other noises, and that they were down
-cellar. “And anyhow, Colonel, I’m dead-to-rights sure those guys are
-giving us hot stuff to get us out of the house. I’m for getting our men
-in now and rushing the house. It’s me for the cellar.”
-
-While the colonel was rolling Birdsall’s information around in his
-mind, he heard the echo of steps on the flagging which preceded Mercer
-and the other man.
-
-There was that in the bearing and the look of them that made the
-watcher, used to the signs of decision on men’s faces, instantly sure
-that their whole course of plans and action was changed.
-
-Mercer spoke first and in a low tone to the colonel.
-
-“I have no right,” said he, “to ask so much trust from you, but will
-you trust me enough to step aside with this young man and me for a
-moment only--out of ear-shot? I give you my word of honor I mean no
-slightest harm to you. I want to be frank. I will go alone if you
-desire.”
-
-The colonel eyed him intently for the briefest space. “I’ll trust you,”
-said he. Then: “I think you have the key to this queer mix-up. At your
-service. And let your friend come, too. He is an ingenuous sort, and he
-amuses me.”
-
-Birdsall looked distinctly sullen over the request to wait, intimating
-quite frankly that his employer was walking into a trap. “I won’t stand
-here more than fifteen minutes,” he grumbled. “I’ve given those fellows
-_poco tiente_ long enough.” But the colonel insisted on twenty minutes,
-and reluctantly Birdsall acquiesced.
-
-Mercer conducted the others to the library. When they were seated he
-began in his composed, melancholy fashion:
-
-“I earnestly beg of you to listen to me, and to believe me, for your
-nephew’s sake. I am going to tell you the absolute truth. It is the
-only way now. When you came, we handed him over to this gentleman,
-exactly as we have said. I do not know why he should have been stopped.
-I do not know why he left the machine--”
-
-“Might he not have been _carried_ away?” said Winter.
-
-“He might; but I don’t know what motive--”
-
-“What motive had _you_? You kidnapped him!”
-
-“Not exactly. We had no intention of harming him. He came accidentally
-into the room between Mrs. Winter’s and Mr. Keatcham’s suites. Standing
-in that room, trying to stanch the bleeding of a sudden hemorrhage of
-the nose, he overheard me and my friend--”
-
-“_You?_” asked the colonel laconically of the young Harvard man.
-
-“I,” smilingly confessed the latter. “I am ready to own up. You are a
-decent fellow, and you are shrewd. You ought to be on our side, not
-fighting us. I tell you, you don’t want to have the boy turn up safe
-and sound any more than I do. Mr. Mercer was talking to me, and the
-kid overheard. We heard him and went into the room--”
-
-“How?”
-
-“Knocked on the door and he opened it. And we jumped on him. It was
-life and death for us not to be blown on; so, as we didn’t wish to kill
-the kid, and as we didn’t know the youngster well enough to trust him
-_then_--although we might, for he is game and the whitest chap!--but
-we didn’t know--why, we just told him he would have to stay with us a
-while until our rush was over. That was all we meant; and we let him
-’phone you.”
-
-“How about his great-aunt--the cruel anxiety--”
-
-“Anxiety nothing!” began the other man, but a glance from Mercer cut
-him short.
-
-The Southerner took the word in his slow, gentle voice. “I tried to
-reassure our aunt, Colonel Winter. I think I succeeded. She telephoned
-and I told her it was all right. As for Archie, after we talked with
-him, he was willing enough to go. He stole out with my friend inside
-of five minutes, while you all were searching your rooms. It was _he_
-insisted on calling you up, lest you should be worried. He said you
-were right afraid of kidnappers, and you would be sending the police
-after us. You can call Mrs. Winter up and find out if I am not telling
-you the exact facts.”
-
-“Very well, I _will_,” said Winter. They met the sullen detective at
-the door. Cary Mercer, with his mirthless smile, led the way. Mercer
-rang up the hotel for Winter, himself. To the colonel’s vast relief
-Aunt Rebecca answered the call.
-
-“_Est-ce que c’est vous-même, mon neveu?_” said she dryly.
-
-“_Mais oui, ma tante._ Why are you speaking so formally in foreign
-tongues? Is Millicent on deck?”
-
-“In her room,” came the answer, still in French. “Well, you have got us
-in a pretty mess. Where is my boy?”
-
-“I only wish I knew! Tell me now, though, is Mercer’s story straight?”
-
-“Absolutely. You may trust him.”
-
-“What’s his real game, then? The one he was afraid Archie would expose?”
-
-“Ask him.”
-
-“But _you_ are in it, aren’t you?”
-
-“Enough to ask that you abandon the chase--immediately! Unless you wish
-to ruin me!”
-
-“You’ll have to speak plainer. I’ve been kept in the dark as long as I
-can stand in this matter.”
-
-But before he could finish the sentence. “_Pas ici, pas
-maintenant--c’est trop de péril_,” she cried, and she must have
-gone, for he could get no more from her. When he rang again, Randall
-responded:
-
-“Mrs. Winter says, sir, will you please come up here as quick as you
-can. She’s gone out. She thought she caught sight of Mr. Archie on the
-street.”
-
-To the colonel’s demand, “Where, how did she see him?” he obtained no
-answer, and on his vicious pealing of the bell there came, eventually,
-mellow Anglican accents which asked: “Yes? Whom do you wish to see?” It
-is an evidence of the undisciplined nature of the sex that the soldier
-made a face and--hung up the receiver.
-
-He found himself--although this to a really open mind is no excuse--in
-a muddle of conflicting impulses. He was on edge to get into the
-street for the search after the boy; he was clutched in a vise by his
-conviction that the clue to Archie’s whereabouts lay in Mercer’s hands,
-and that the Southerner meant no harm to the lad. And all the while he
-could feel Birdsall tugging at the leash.
-
-“It’s on the cards,” he grumbled, with a wry face, “quite on the cards
-that he may bolt in spite of me, and do some foolish stunt of his own
-that will make a most awful muddle.”
-
-Not nearly so composed as he looked, therefore, he turned to Mercer.
-However, his ammunition was ready, and to Mercer’s inquiry, was he
-satisfied? he replied calmly: “Well, not entirely. If Archie isn’t in
-the house, _who_ is it whose throat you wish to cut? Who is hidden
-here?”
-
-It could not have been an unexpected question or Mercer hardly had
-answered so readily: “You know who it is,” said he. “It is Mr.
-Keatcham.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-THE SMOLDERING EMBERS
-
-
-If Mercer’s avowal surprised the colonel, there was no trace of such
-emotion in his face or his manner. “I rather thought it might be,” he
-said. “And our young friend who is promoting Fireless Stoves with the
-solemn energy he learned doing Dicky stunts?”
-
-“Mr. Endicott Tracy.” Mercer had the manner of a ceremonious
-introduction. Tracy flavored the customary murmur of pleasure with his
-radiant smile.
-
-“Pleased, I am sure,” said the colonel in turn, bowing. “Your father,
-I suppose, is the president of the Midland; and Mr. Keatcham will, I
-suppose, not be able to prevent his reëlection to-morrow. Is that the
-game?”
-
-Mr. Tracy’s son admitted that it might be.
-
-“Ah, very clever,” said the colonel, “very. Any side-show, for example?”
-
-“I did not go into this for money.” Mercer’s level gaze did not relax,
-and he kept his dreary eyes unflinchingly on Winter’s. A peculiar look
-in the eyes recalled some tragic and alien memory, just what, Rupert
-could not capture; it flitted hazily through his thoughts ere the
-next words drove it off. “Nevertheless, it is true that if we win out
-I shall have enough to pay back to all the people who trusted me the
-money they lost when they were frightened into selling their stock in
-the Tidewater, and your aunt and Mr. Tracy stand to make money.”
-
-“How do you expect to make it?”
-
-“The M. and S. stock is away down because of rumors Keatcham is likely
-to control it. When it is settled it is not to be looted by him, the
-stock will rise--we are sure of the ten points; we may make twenty--”
-
-“And my aunt has financed your scheme, has she?--paid all your
-expenses?”
-
-The Harvard man laughed out. “Our _expenses_? Oh, yes, she has
-grub-staked us, all right; but she has done a good deal more--she has
-furnished more than half a million to us for our gamble.”
-
-The colonel considered; then: “But why did you keep him here so long
-beforehand?” said he.
-
-“It was not long beforehand,” said Mercer. “The meeting was adjourned
-for a day--we don’t know why--we fancy that his partners suspect
-something. It is called for to-morrow, in spite of their efforts to
-have it put off a week. But we want more; we want to induce Keatcham to
-vote his own stock for us, and to call off his dogs himself.”
-
-“And you can’t force him to do it?”
-
-“We shall force him, easily enough,” returned Mercer, “but we don’t
-trust him. We want his private code book to be sure he is playing fair.
-In fact, we have to have it, because nothing gets any attention that
-isn’t, so to speak, properly introduced.”
-
-“And he will not give it to you?”
-
-“Says he has lost it.”
-
-“Perhaps he _has_,” mused the soldier. “But now, all this is not my
-concern, except that I have no right, as a soldier, even passively
-to aid in breaking the laws. It is my duty to rescue and free Mr.
-Keatcham.”
-
-But before he could speak further Mercer lifted a hand in apologetic
-interruption. Would Colonel Winter excuse him, but he must ask Mr.
-Tracy to go back to the _patio_ and have an eye on the detective.
-Endicott only exchanged a single glance before he obeyed. Mercer’s eyes
-followed him. “It was not to be helped,” he said, half to himself, “but
-I have been sorry more than once that I had to take him into this.”
-
-Winter looked at him, more puzzled than he wanted to admit to himself;
-indeed, he was rather glad to have the next word come from Mercer.
-
-“I have a few things I want to say to you; they go easier when we are
-alone--but won’t you sit down?” When the colonel had seated himself he
-went on: “I’d like to explain things a bit.”
-
-“I’d like to have you,” answered the soldier. “I think you have the
-clue to Archie’s whereabouts and don’t recognize it yourself; so put me
-wise, as the slang goes.”
-
-Then, without preface, in brief, nervous sentences, spoken hardly
-with a quiver of a muscle or a wavering cadence of the voice, yet
-nevertheless instinct with a deadly earnestness, Mercer began to talk.
-He told of his struggling youth on the drained plantation, mortgaged
-so that after the interest was paid there was barely enough to get
-the meagerest living for his mother and sister and little brother;
-of his accidental discovery of iron ore on the place; of his working
-as a common laborer in the steel mills; of his being “rooster,”
-“strand-boy,” “rougher,” “heater,” “roller,” during three years while
-he was waiting for his chance; of his heart-draining toil; of his
-solitary studies.
-
-“I never was the kind of fellow to make friends,” he said, in his soft,
-monotonous voice, “so I expect I was the fonder of my own kin. I’d a
-mighty good mother, sir, and sister; and there was Phil--my little
-brother. We were right happy all together on the old place that’s
-been in our family for a hundred years, and it was all we asked to
-stay there; but it had every dollar of mortgage it could stand, and
-the soil all worn-out, needing all kinds of things; and I wish you
-could have seen the makeshifts we had for machines! I was blacksmith
-and carpenter and painter--just sixteen, and not an especially bright
-chap, but mighty willing to work; and my mother and Sis and I--we did
-a heap. When I stumbled on the ore I couldn’t be sure, but I wrote to
-Aunt Rebecca Winter. She sent a man down. He looked up things. It would
-take a heap of money to work the mines, but it might be a big thing.
-She paid off the mortgage and took another. First to last, she’s been
-mighty kind to us. She would have done more had we let her. So I went
-to Pittsburgh and learned my trade, and I made enough to pay interest,
-and the people at home got a fairly good living. When I was twenty-one
-I was back home, and got a company started and put up a mill. You
-know how those things have to creep up. But there was ore, all right,
-and I understood my business and taught the hands. We’d a right sweet
-little mill. Well, I don’t want to take up your time, suh. Those next
-ten or twelve years were right hard work, but they were happy, too.
-We prospered; we helped the whole county prosper. We paid Aunt Becky.
-We were in good shape. We went through ’93 paying our dividends just
-as regular, and making them, too, though we didn’t much more--it was
-close sailing. But we were honest; we made a mighty good article; and
-everybody trusted us. Then came the craze for mergers, and a number
-of us got together. Still we weren’t very big, but we were big enough
-to be listed. I didn’t want it, but some of the men thought it was a
-terrible fine thing to be ‘Iron Kings.’ That was how. Keatcham was
-looking over the country for fish for his net; he somehow heard that
-here was a heap of good ore and new mills. The first intimation we had
-was his secretary coming as a Northern invalid--why, he stayed at our
-house because we were so sorry for him, the hotel being in new hands
-and not right comfortable. He seemed so interested in our mills, and
-bought some stock, and sent presents to Phil and my mother after he
-went.”
-
-“That was Keatcham’s private secretary, you say?”
-
-“Yes, suh, Atkins. You met him on the train--as sleek and deadly a
-little scoundrel as ever got rich quick. Oh, he’s deep. Well, suh,
-you know the usual process. Convinced of the value of the property,
-Keatcham and one or two others set out to buy it. They got little
-blocks of it here and there. Then Atkins wrote me in confidence that
-some men were after the controlling interest and meant to squeeze us
-all out--offered to lend me money to buy--of course, on a margin. And
-I was plumb idiot enough to be tolled into his trap! I, who had never
-speculated with a dollar before, I didn’t borrow _his_ money, but I
-took all I could raise myself, and I bought enough to be sure I could
-control the next election. Then--the slump came, and after the slump
-the long, slow crumbling. I controlled the election all right, of
-course, but before the next one came I was ruined, and Keatcham put
-his own men in. I went desperately to New York. I didn’t know how to
-fight those fellows; it was a new game. I didn’t find Atkins. Maybe
-because that wasn’t his name when I had known him. I was so sure that
-the property was good--as if that mattered! As if anything mattered
-with these gamblers who play with loaded dice and dope the horses they
-bet against! Phil had all his property in the mills; we all had. We
-mortgaged the house; we had to, to protect our stock. You know how
-the fight ended, and what happened at Cambridge. That isn’t all. My
-wife--” He stood a little straighter, and the light went out of his
-eyes. “I told you I don’t make friends easily, and I am not the kind of
-man women take to; all the same, the loveliest girl in the South loved
-me ever since I jumped over the mill-dam to save her rag doll, once,
-when she was visiting her aunt near us. I’d married, when we seemed
-prosperous. Now, understand me, I don’t say it was my ruin and Phil’s
-death that killed her and the baby; she had pneumonia, and it may be
-that seeing that paper by accident didn’t turn the scale; but I do say
-that she had her last hours embittered by it. That’s enough for me.
-When I got home with--with Phil, she was dead.”
-
-“Tough,” said the colonel. He began to revise his impressions of Mercer.
-
-“Wasn’t it?” the other asked, with a simplicity of appeal that affected
-the listener more than anything he had heard. He jumped out of his
-chair and began pacing the room, talking more rapidly. “You’re a _man_;
-you know what I wanted to do.”
-
-“Kill somebody, I suppose. _I_ should.”
-
-“Just that. I ran Atkins to cover after a while through Endicott Tracy.
-That boy is one of the noblest fellows that ever lived; yes, suh. He
-was going to help poor Phil, Phil’s room-mate had told him. All those
-boys--look a-here, Colonel Winter, if ever anybody talks to you about
-Harvard fellows being indifferent--”
-
-“I shall tell him he can’t get under the American surface. A Harvard
-boy will do anything on earth for his friends.”
-
-“They were mighty good to me. It was Endy found out about Atkins, just
-from my description of him. I found out about Keatcham for myself. And
-you are quite right--for a little while I wanted to kill them both.
-Looked like I just naturally _had_ to kill them! But there was my
-mother. There was nobody to take care of her but Sis and me, and a
-trial for murder is terribly expensive. Of course, anybody can get off
-who has got money and can spend it; but it takes such an awful heap
-of money. And we were all ruined together, for what little was left
-was all in the company, and that promptly stopped paying dividends.
-I couldn’t risk it. I had to wait. I had to go to work to support
-my mother, to pay Sis and her back, don’t you see? We came here. I
-got a job, a well-paid one, too, through Endy’s father, reporting on
-the condition of the mills--a kind of examiner. And the job was for
-Keatcham.”
-
-“Why did you take it? I know, though. You did it to familiarize him
-with your appearance, so that he would not be warned when your chance
-came.”
-
-“How did you know that?”
-
-“A man I knew in the Philippines--a Filipino--was wronged by a white
-man, who took his wife and threw her aside when he tired of her. The
-girl killed herself. Her husband watched his chance for a year, found
-it at last--thanks to that very fact that his victim wasn’t on guard
-against him--and sent his knife home. He’d been that fellow’s servant.
-I picked the dead man up. That Filipino looked as you looked a minute
-ago.”
-
-“What became of the Filipino?” inquired his listener.
-
-The colonel had not told the story quite without intention. He argued
-subconsciously, that if Mercer were a good sort under all, he would
-have a movement of sympathy for a more cruelly wronged man than he;
-if not, he would drive ahead to his purpose, whatever that might be.
-His keen eyes looked a little more gentle as he answered: “He poisoned
-himself. The best way out, I reckon. I should hate to have had him
-shot after I knew the story. But there was really no option. But I’m
-interrupting you. You did your work well and won Keatcham’s confidence?”
-
-“He isn’t a very confiding man. I didn’t see him often. My dealings
-were with Atkins. He didn’t know that I had found him out; he thought
-that he had only to explain his two names, and expected gratitude for
-his warning, as he called it. He is slimy; but I was able to repay a
-little of my score with him. I was employed by more than Keatcham, and
-I saw a good many industrial back-yards. Just by chance, I came on a
-clue, and Endy Tracy and I worked it up together. Atkins was selling
-information to Keatcham’s enemies. We did not make out a complete
-case, but enough of one to make Keatcham suspect him, and at the right
-time. But that happened later--you see, I don’t know how to tell a
-story even with so much at stake.” He pulled out his handkerchief, and
-Winter caught the gleam of the beads on his sallow forehead. “It was
-this way,” he went on. “At first I was only looking about for a safe
-chance to kill him, and to kill that snake of an Atkins; but then it
-grew on me; it was all too easy a punishment--just a quick death, when
-his victims had years of misery. I wanted him to wade through the hell
-_I_ had to wade through. I wanted him to know _why_ he was condemned.
-Then it was I began to collect just the cases I knew about--just one
-little section of the horrible swath of agony and humiliation and
-poverty and sin he and his crowd had made--the one I knew every foot
-of, because I’d gone over it every night I wasn’t so dead tired I _had_
-to sleep. God! do you know what it is to have the people who used to
-be running out of their houses just to say howdy to you, curse you for
-a swindler or a fool or turn out of one street and down the other not
-to pass you? Did _you_ ever have a little woman who used to give you
-frosted cake when you were a boy push her crape veil off her gray hair
-and hand you the envelope with her stock, with your handwriting on the
-envelope, and beg you--trying so hard not to cry, ’twas worse than if
-she had--beg you to lend her just half her interest money--_and you
-couldn’t do it_? Did you--never mind. I said I waded through hell. I
-_did!_ Not I alone--that was the worst--all the people that had trusted
-me! And just that some rich men should be richer. Why should _they_
-have the lion’s share? The lion’s share belongs to the lion. _They_ are
-nothing but jackals. They’re meaner than jackals, for the jackals take
-what the lion leaves, and these fellows steal the lion’s meat away from
-him. We made honest money; we paid honest wages; folks had more paint
-on their houses and more meat in their storehouses, and wore better
-clothes Sunday, and there were more school-houses and fewer saloons,
-and the negroes were learning a trade instead of loafing. The whole
-county was the better off for our prosperity, and there isn’t a mill in
-the outfit--and I know what I’m talking about--there isn’t a shop or a
-mine that’s as well run or makes as big an output now as it did when
-the old crowd was in. You find it that way everywhere; and that’s what
-is going to break things down. We saw to all the little affairs; they
-were _our_ affairs, don’t you know? But Keatcham’s new men draw their
-salaries and let things slide. Yet Keatcham is a great manager if he
-would only take the time; only he’s too busy stealing to develop his
-businesses; there’s more money in stealing a railway than in building
-one up. Oh, he isn’t a fool; if I could once get him where he would
-_have_ to listen, I know I could make him understand. He’s pretty
-cold-blooded, and he doesn’t realize. He only sees straight ahead,
-not all round, like all these superhumanly clever thieves; they have
-mighty stupid streaks. Well, I’ve got him now, and it is kill or cure
-for him. He can’t make a riffle. I knew I couldn’t do anything alone;
-I had to wait. I had to have stronger men than I am to help. By and by
-they tried their jackal business on a real lion--on Tracy. They wanted
-to steal _his_ road. I got on to them first. I see a heap of people
-in a heap of different businesses--the little people who talk. They
-notice all right, but they can see only their own little patch. I was
-the fellow riding round and seeing the township. I pieced together the
-plot and I told Endy Tracy. He wouldn’t believe me at first, because
-his father had given Keatcham his first start and done a hundred things
-for him. To be sure, his father has been obliged as an honest man to
-oppose Keatcham lately, but Keatcham couldn’t mean to burn him out that
-way. But he soon found that was precisely what Keatcham did mean. Then
-he was glad enough to help me save his father. The old man doesn’t know
-a thing; we don’t mean he ever shall know. We let him put up the best
-sort of a fight a man can with his hands tied while the other fellow
-is free. _My_ hands are free, too. I don’t respect the damned imbecile
-laws that let me be plundered any more than they do; and since my poor
-mother died last summer I am not afraid of anything; they _are_; that’s
-where I have the choice of weapons. I tell you, suh, _nobody_ is big
-enough to oppress a desperate man! Keatcham had one advantage--he had
-unlimited money. But Aunt Rebecca helped us out there. Colonel, I want
-you to know I didn’t ask her for more than the bare grub-stake; it was
-she herself that planned our stock deal.”
-
-“She is a dead game sport,” the colonel chuckled. “I believe you.”
-
-“And I hope you don’t allow that I was willing to have her mix herself
-in our risks. She would come; she said she wanted to see the fun--”
-
-“I believe you again,” the colonel assured him, and he remembered the
-odd sentence which his aunt had used the first night of their journey,
-when she expressed her hankering to match her wits against those of a
-first-class criminal.
-
-“We didn’t reckon on your turning up, or the complication with Archie.
-I wish to God we’d taken the boy’s own word! But, now you know all
-about it, will you keep your hands off? That’s all we ask.”
-
-“Well,”--the colonel examined his finger-nails, rubbing his hands
-softly, the back of one over the palm of the other--“well, you haven’t
-quite told me all. Don’t, unless you are prepared to have it used
-against you, as the policemen say _before_ the sweat-box. What did you
-do to Keatcham to get him to go with you so like Mary’s little lamb?”
-
-“I learned of a little device that looks like a tiny currycomb and is
-so flat and small you can bind it on a man’s arm just over an artery.
-Just press on the spring and give the least scratch, and the man falls
-down in convulsions. I showed him a rat I had had fetched me, and
-killed it like a flash. He had his choice of walking out quietly with
-me--I had my hand on his arm--or dropping down dead. He went quietly
-enough.”
-
-“That was the meaning of his look at me, was it?” Winter thought. He
-said only: “Did Endicott Tracy know about that?”
-
-“Of course not,” Mercer denied. “Do you reckon I want to mix the boy up
-in this more than I have? And Arnold only knew I was trying some kind
-of bluff game.”
-
-“I will lay odds, though,” the colonel ventured in his gentlest tone,
-“that Mr. Samurai, as Haley calls him, knew more. But when did you get
-rid of Atkins?”
-
-“Mr. Keatcham discharged him at Denver. I met Mr. Keatcham here; it was
-arranged on the train. We had it planned out. If that plan had failed I
-had another.”
-
-“Neat. Very neat. And then you became the secretary?”
-
-Mercer flushed in an unexpected fashion. “Certainly not!” he said with
-emphasis. “Do you think I would take his wages and not do the work
-faithfully? No, suh. I assumed to be his secretary in the office; that
-gave me a chance to arrange everything. But I did it to oblige him. I
-never touched a cent of his money. I paid, in fact, for our board out
-of our own money. It would have burned my fingers, suh!”
-
-“And the valet? Was he in your plot? Don’t answer if you--”
-
-“He was not, suh,” replied Cary Mercer. “He is a right worthy fellow,
-and he thought, after he had seen to the tickets--which he did very
-carefully--and given them to me, he could go off on the little vacation
-which came to him by his master through me.”
-
-“That’s a little bit evasive. However, I haven’t the right to ask you
-to give away your partners, anyhow.” He was peering at Mercer’s face
-behind his glasses, but the pallid, tired features returned him no clue
-to the thoughts in the head above them. “What have you done with Mr.
-Keatcham?” he concluded suddenly.
-
-The question brought no change of expression, and Mercer answered
-readily: “I put him off by himself, where he sees no one and hears
-nothing. I read a good deal about prisons and the most effectual way
-of taming men, and solitary confinement is recommended by all the
-authorities. His meals are handed to him by--by a mechanical device. He
-has electric light some of the time, turned on from the outside. He has
-a comfortable room and his own shower-bath. He has comfortable meals.
-And he is supplied with reading.”
-
-“Reading?” repeated the colonel, his surprise in his voice.
-
-For the first time he saw Mercer smile, but it was hardly a pleasant
-smile. “Yes, suh, reading,” he said. “I have had type-written copies
-made of all the cases which I discovered in regard to his stealing our
-company. I reasoned that when he would get absolutely tired of himself
-and his own thoughts he would just naturally be _obliged_ to read, and
-that would be ready for him. He tore up one copy.”
-
-“Hmn--I can’t say I wonder. What did you do?”
-
-“I sent him another. I expected he would do that way. After a while he
-will go back to it, because it will draw him. He’ll hate it, but he
-will want to know them all. I know his nature, you see.”
-
-“What are you going to do with him?”
-
-“Let him go, after he does what we want and promises never to molest
-any of us.”
-
-“But can you trust him?”
-
-“He never breaks his word,” replied Mercer indifferently, “and besides,
-he knows he will be killed if he should. He isn’t given to being
-scared, but he’s scared of me, all right.”
-
-“What do you want him to do?”
-
-“Promise to be a decenter man and to let Mr. Tracy alone in future;
-meanwhile, to send a wire in his secret code saying he has changed his
-mind. It will not surprise his crowd. He never confides in them, and he
-expects them to obey blindly anything in that code language. I reckon
-other telegrams are just for show, and they don’t notice them much.”
-
-The colonel took a turn around the room to pack away this information
-in an orderly fashion in his mind. Mercer waited patiently; he had said
-truly that he was used to waiting. Perhaps he supposed that Winter was
-trying the case in his own mind; but in reality Rupert was seeking
-only one clue, as little diverted from his purpose as a bloodhound. He
-began to understand the man whose fixed purpose had his own quality,
-but sharpened by wrong and suffering. This man had not harmed Archie;
-as much as his warped and fevered soul could feel softer emotions,
-he was kindly intentioned toward the lad. Who had carried him away,
-then? Or was he off on his own account, really, this time? Or suppose
-Atkins, the missing secretary discharged at Denver, coming back for
-another appeal to his employer, finding Keatcham gone, but, let one
-say, stumbling on some trace of mystery in his departure; suppose him
-to consider the chance of his having his past condoned and a rosy
-future given him if his suspicions should prove true and _he_ should
-release the captive--wouldn’t such a prospect spur on a man who was as
-cunning as he was unprincipled? Mightn’t he have watched all possible
-clues, and mightn’t he have heard about Archie and plotted to capture
-the child, thinking he would be easily pumped? That would presuppose
-that Atkins knew that Archie was at the Arnolds’ or--no, he might only
-have seen the boy on the street; he knew him by sight; the colonel
-remembered that several times Archie had been with him in Keatcham’s
-car. It was worth considering, anyhow. He spoke out of his thoughts:
-“Do you think Keatcham could have told the truth, and that code of
-his be lost or stolen? Why couldn’t Atkins have stolen it? He had the
-chance, and he isn’t hampered by principle, you say.”
-
-Mercer frowned; it was plain the possibility had its argument for him.
-“He might,” he conceded, “but I doubt it. Why hasn’t he done something
-with it? He hasn’t. They wouldn’t have postponed that meeting if he
-had wired his proxy and his directions in the code. He’d have voted
-his employer’s stock. He’s got too much at stake. I happen to know he
-thought it a sure tip to sell short, and he has put almost all he has
-on it. You see, Keatcham was banking on that; he knew it. He thought
-Atkins wouldn’t dare give any of his secrets away or go against him in
-this deal, because they were in the same boat.”
-
-“Still, I reckon I’ll have to see Keatcham.”
-
-Mercer shook his head, gently but with decision. “I hate to refuse you,
-Colonel, but unless you promise not to interfere, it is impossible. But
-I’ll gladly go with you to see if we can find any trace of Archie. I’ll
-risk that much. And if you will promise--”
-
-“Such a promise would be impossible to an officer and a gentleman,” the
-colonel urged lightly, smiling. “Besides, don’t you see I have all the
-cards? I have only to call in my men. I’d hate to do it, but if you
-force me, you would have no chance resisting.”
-
-“We shouldn’t resist, Colonel, no, suh; your force is overwhelming. But
-it would do no good; you couldn’t find him.”
-
-“We could try; and we may be better sleuths than you imagine.”
-
-“Then it would be the worse for him; for if you find him, you will find
-him dead.”
-
-There was something so chilling in his level tones that Winter broke
-out sharply: “Are you fooling with me? Have you been such an incredible
-madman as to kill him already?”
-
-Mercer’s faint smile made the colonel feel boyish and impetuous. “Of
-course not, suh,” he answered. “I told you he was alive, myself. I
-reckoned you knew when a man is lying and when he is telling the solemn
-truth. You _know_ I have told you the truth and treated you on the
-square. But, just the same, if you try to take that man away, you’ll
-only have his dead body. He can’t do any more harm then, and a dead man
-can’t vote.”
-
-The colonel, who had taken out his cigarette case, opened it and
-meditatively fingered the rubber band. “Do you reckon,” he suggested,
-in his most amiable voice, “do you reckon young Arnold and Endicott
-Tracy will stand for such frills in warfare as assassination?”
-
-“I do not, suh,” replied Mercer gravely, and as he spoke he pushed back
-the heavy tapestry hiding a window opposite the colonel’s head, “but
-they can both prove an alibi. Mr. Arnold is in Pasadena, and there goes
-Mr. Tracy now in his machine--to try to find Archie. Do you see?”
-
-The colonel saw. He inclined his head, at the same time proffering his
-case.
-
-“I rather think, Mr. Mercer, that I was wrong. _You_ have the last
-trump.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-THE CHARM OF JADE
-
-
-It was no false lure to distract pursuit, that hurried sentence of
-Randall’s which had met the colonel’s angry appeal for information. The
-woman was not only repeating Mrs. Winter’s message; the message itself
-described a fact. As she stood at her room telephone, Aunt Rebecca had
-happened to glance at Randall, supplementing the perfunctory dusting of
-the hotel maid with her own sanitary, dampened, clean cloth; Randall’s
-eyes suddenly glazed and bulged in such startling transformation that,
-instead of questioning her, Mrs. Winter stepped swiftly to the window
-where she was at work, to seek the cause of her agitation.
-
-“Oh, Lord! Oh, Mrs. Winter!” gasped Randall. “Ain’t _that_ Master
-Archie?”
-
-Mrs. Winter saw for herself; the face at a cab window, the waving of a
-slim hand--Archie’s face, Archie’s hand. Brief as was the Space of his
-passing (for the two horses in the cab were trotting smartly), she was
-sure of both. “Give me my bonnet,” she commanded, “_any_ bonnet, _any_
-gloves! And my bag with some money!”
-
-It was as she flung through the door that she threw her message to the
-colonel back exactly as Randall had submitted it. Miss Smith was coming
-along the loggia. “Don’t stop me!” said Mrs. Winter sternly. “I’ve seen
-Archie; I’m after him.”
-
-“Stop!” cried Miss Smith--but it was to the elevator boy who was
-whizzing below them in his cage, not to her employer; and she boarded
-the elevator with the older woman. “I’ll go with you,” she said. There
-was no vibration in her even tones, although a bright red flickered up
-in her cheek.
-
-But Rebecca Winter caught savagely at her breath, which was coming
-fast. “It is not with the running; you needn’t think it, Janet,”
-she panted sharply, in a second. “It was the sight of his face--so
-suddenly; I never expected _any_ face would make my heart pump like
-that again. All of which shows”--she was speaking quite naturally and
-placidly again--“that women may grow too old for men to make fools of
-them, but never for children. Come; it was a shabby sort of hack he
-was in, drawn by two horses with auburn tails. Here’s the office floor.”
-
-Not a word did Janet Smith say; she was not a woman of words in any
-case. Moreover, the pace which Mrs. Winter struck was too rapid for
-comments or questions; it swept them both past the palm-shaded _patio_
-into the side hall, out on the noisy, dazzling, swaying street. Looking
-before her, Miss Smith could see the dusty body of a hack a block away.
-Mrs. Winter had stepped up to a huge crimson motor-car, in the front
-seat of which lounged the chauffeur, his forehead and eyes hunched
-under his leather visor. The machine was puffing, with the engine
-working, ready to leap forward at a touch of the lever.
-
-“Twenty dollars an hour if you let me get in now!” said Mrs. Winter,
-lightly mounting by his side as she spoke.
-
-“Hey, me? what!” gurgled the chauffeur, plucked out of a half-doze.
-“Oh, say, beg your pardon, lady, but this is hired, it belongs--”
-
-“I don’t care to whom it belongs, I have to have it,” announced
-Mrs. Winter calmly. “Whoever hired it can get another. I’ll make it
-all right. You start on and catch that hack with the auburn-tailed
-horses--”
-
-“_I’ll_ make it right with your fare!” Miss Smith cut in before the
-chauffeur could answer. “It’s a case of kidnapping. You catch that
-cab!” She was standing on the curb, and even as she spoke an elderly
-man and his wife came out of a shop. They stared from her to the
-automobile, and in their gaze was a proprietary irritation. This was
-instantly transfused by a more vivid emotion. The woman looked shocked
-and compassionate. “Oh, pa!” she gasped, “did you hear _that_?”
-
-The man was a country banker from Iowa. He had a very quick, keen eye;
-it flashed. “Case of kidnapping, hey?” snapped he, instantly grasping
-the character of the speakers and jumping at the situation. “Take the
-auto, Madam. Get a move on you, Mr. Chauffeur!”
-
-“Oh, I’m moving, all right,” called the chauffeur, as he skilfully
-dived his lower wheels under the projecting load of a great wagon and
-obliquely bumped over the edge of a street-car fender, pursued by the
-motorman’s curses. “I see ’em, lady; I see the red tails; I’ll catch
-’em!”
-
-His boast most likely had been made good (since for another block they
-bore straight on their course) but for an orange-wagon which had been
-overturned. There was a rush of pursuit of the golden balls from
-the sidewalk; a policeman came to the rescue of traffic and ordered
-everything to halt until the cart was righted. The boys and girls in
-the street chased back to the sidewalk. The episode took barely a
-couple of minutes, but on the edge of the last minute the cab turned
-a corner. The motor-car turned the same corner, but saw no guiding
-oriflamme of waving red horsehair. The cross street next was equally
-bare. They were obliged to explore two adjacent highways before they
-came upon the hack again. This time it was in distant perspective,
-foreshortened to a blur of black and a swish of red. And even as they
-caught sight of it the horses swung round into profile and turned
-another corner. In the turn a man wearing a black derby hat stuck his
-arm and head out of the window in order to give some direction to the
-driver. Then he turned half around. It was almost as if he looked back
-at his pursuers; yet this, Mrs. Winter argued, hardly could be, since
-he had not expected pursuit, and anyhow, the chances were he could not
-know her by sight.
-
-It was a mean street, narrow and noisome, but full of shipping
-traffic and barred by tramways--a heartbreaking street for a chase.
-The chauffeur was a master of his art; he jumped his great craft at
-every vacant arm’s-length; he steered it through incredibly narrow
-lanes; he progressed sometimes by luffs, like a boat under sail when
-the forward passage must be reached in such indirect fashion; but the
-crowd of ungainly vehicles, loaded dizzily above his head, made the
-superior speed of the motor of no avail. In spite of him they could
-see the red tails lessening. Again and yet again, the hack turned;
-again, but each time with a loss, the motor struck its trail. By now
-the street was changed; the dingy two-story buildings lining it were
-brightened by gold-leaf and vermilion; oriental arms and garbs and
-embroidery spangled the windows and oriental faces looked inscrutably
-out of doorways. There rose the blended odors of spice, sandalwood and
-uncleanliness that announce the East, reeking up out of gratings and
-puffing out of shops.
-
-“Ah,” said Mrs. Winter softly to herself, “Chinese quarter, is it?
-Well.” Her eyes changed; they softened in a fashion that would have
-amazed one who only knew the surface of Mrs. Winter, the eccentric
-society potentate. She looked past the squalid, garish scene, past
-the shining sand-hills and the redwood trees, beyond into a stranger
-landscape glowing under a blinder glare of sun. Half mechanically she
-lifted a tiny gold chain that had slipped down her throat under the
-gray gown. Raising the yellow thread and the carven jade ornament
-depending therefrom, she let it lie outside amid the white lace and
-chiffon.
-
-“We’re making good now,” called the chauffeur. “Will I run alongside
-and hail ’em, or what?”
-
-She told him quietly to run alongside. But her lips twitched, and when
-she put up her hand to press them still, she smiled to discover that
-the hand was bare. She had forgotten to pull on her glove. She began to
-pull it on now.
-
-“The road is narrow,” said she. “Run ahead of the hack and block its
-way. You can do it without hitting the horses, can’t you?”
-
-“Well, I guess,” returned the chauffeur, instantly accomplishing the
-manœuver in fine style.
-
-But he missed his deserved commendation; indeed, he forgot it himself;
-because, as he looked back at the horses rearing on the sudden check
-and tossing their auburn manes, then ran his scrutiny behind them to
-the hack, he perceived no life in it; and when his own passenger jumped
-with amazing nimbleness from her seat and flung the crazy door wide
-open, she recoiled, exclaiming: “Where are they? Where did you leave
-them?”
-
-“Leave who?” queried the hackman. “Say, what you stoppin’ me fur?
-Runnin’ into me with your devil-wagon! _Say!_”--then his wrath trailed
-into an inarticulate mutter as he appreciated better the evident
-quality of the gentlewoman before him.
-
-“You may be mixed up in a penitentiary offense, my man,” said she
-placidly. “It is a case of kidnapping. Where did you leave that boy who
-was in the cab? If you give us information that will find him, there’s
-five dollars; if you fool us--well, I have your number. Where did you
-leave the boy?”
-
-“Why, there was a cop with ’im--a cop and a gentleman. Ain’t you got
-hold of the wrong party, lady?”
-
-“A brown-haired boy in a gray suit with a blue cravat--you know he was
-in your cab. And how do you know it was a real policeman?”
-
-“Or he wasn’t helping on the deviltry if it was?” sneered the
-chauffeur, who had now become a full-fledged partizan. “Ain’t you lived
-in this burg long enough to find out how to make a little _mazuma_
-on the side? You’re too good for ’Frisco. Heaven is your home, my
-Christian friend.”
-
-“Cut it out!” retorted the man. “I guess I know how to find my way
-round as well as the next man--”
-
-“Certainly you do,” soothed Mrs. Winter, who was fingering a crisp new
-five-dollar bank-note, “and you are no kidnapper, either; you made no
-bargain with those men--”
-
-“Sure I didn’t,” agreed the hackman, “nor I ain’t standin’ for
-kidnapping, neither. Why, I got kids of my own, and my woman she’d
-broom me outer the house if I was to do them games. Say, I’ll tell you
-all I knows. They got off, them three, at that there corner, and I was
-to drive fast ’s I could three blocks ahead and then git home any old
-way. And that’s God’s truth, I--”
-
-“You didn’t see where they went?” Mrs. Winter was quietly insistent.
-
-“No, I didn’t. I guess I was a dumb fool not ter notice, but they paid
-me well, and I’d a bad thirst, and I was hiking to a place I know for
-beer; and that’s--”
-
-“Did the boy seem willing?”
-
-“He didn’t do no kicking as I seen.”
-
-A few more questions revealed that the man had unpacked his full
-kit of information. He had never seen either of the men before. The
-gentleman--yes, he was sure he was a gentleman; he wasn’t no swell
-confidence guy; he was the regular thing--gentleman engaged him to take
-a party to the Chinese quarter; he’d tell where to stop; didn’t need
-a guide; only wanted to make a few purchases, he said, and he knew
-where the things was; yes, ma’am, that was all; only down there on
-Market Street, or maybe--why, somewhere near by--he stuck his head out
-and told him to turn the corner, and then he kept telling him to turn
-corners, until finally he told him to stop and they got out.
-
-Mrs. Winter gave the man the bank-note, counseling him to keep his eyes
-open for the two men and the boy, and to report to her at the Palace
-Hotel, giving his number, should he see either man or boy. It would be
-very well worth his while.
-
-The chauffeur did not interrupt, but he shook his head over the
-departing hack. “He’d ought to have known it wan’t on the square, but
-these hack drivers ain’t got good sense even when they’re, so to speak,
-sober, which ain’t often,” he soliloquized. “Well, lady, if they’ve
-took to the Chinese quarter, we’d better be looking up a Chink to help
-us, I guess. I know a fairly decent one--”
-
-“I think I know a better,” interrupted Mrs. Winter, with a faint smile.
-She had detected a suppressed pity in the man’s regard. “Motor slowly
-along the street. There is a shop, if I can find it, where there ought
-to be a man--”
-
-“Man you know? Say, lady, I guess I better go in with you, if you don’t
-mind--”
-
-“No; stay in your car. You don’t know how safe I am. Not only my gray
-hair protects me, but I have only to say a few words and any of these
-men will fight for me if necessary. But this is in confidence--just
-between us, you understand. You are not to repeat it, ever.”
-
-She looked at him with a frank smile, and involuntarily his hand went
-up to his cap. “What you say goes, lady. But jest remember I’m right
-here, spark going all the time, ready to throw her wide open when you
-step in; and”--his voice sank--“I ain’t absolutely unprepared for a
-scrap, either.”
-
-“I understand,” said she, looking at him keenly, and a few moments
-later she stepped briskly into the shop before which he halted with
-a little lightening of the heart because of this uncouth knight of
-the lever. The shop itself was like any one of a score on the street,
-crowded with oriental objects, bizarre carvings of ivory and jade,
-daggers and strings of cash, swords, gorgeous embroidered robes of silk
-and gold in a huddle over a counter or swinging and gleaming in the
-dusky background, squat little green and brown gods with puffy eyelids,
-smiling inscrutably amid shoes and fans and Chinese lanterns of glass
-and bronze, glittering with beads--in all these, like the score about
-it; yet the clean windows and a certain order within gave it a touch
-out of the common. A man and a boy served the shop, both in the
-American dress, with their pigtails tucked under visorless caps. Both
-greeted her in the serene oriental fashion, bowing and smiling, their
-obsequious courtesy showing no smallest sign of the surprise which the
-sight of an unattended woman must have given them.
-
-Nevertheless, Mrs. Winter was aware that both, under their lowered
-eyelids, took cognizance of that soft-carven disk of jade among the
-laces on her breast. She asked the man if he had seen a lad and an
-older man, or it might be two older men, one a policeman, come into
-that or any other neighboring shop. She explained that the lad was
-her grand-nephew and was lost (she eschewed the harsher word, for she
-had no desire to set afloat a rumor which might bring the police upon
-her). She named a sum large enough to kindle a sudden gleam in the
-boy’s eyes, as the reward awaiting the lucky man who might put her on
-the right track. But her words struck no responsive spark from the
-Chinaman’s veiled gaze. In perfect English and a very soft voice he
-avowed ignorance and sympathy with the same breath.
-
-And all the while she could feel his glance slant down at the jade
-ornament.
-
-“Send the boy to look in the shop next door,” said she. As she
-spoke she raised the charm between her thumb and first two fingers,
-looking at him directly. Her tone was that of command, not request.
-He frowned very slightly, making an almost imperceptible gesture, to
-which she returned a single Chinese phrase, spoken so low that had he
-not expected the words they had been indistinguishable to his ear.
-Instantly he addressed the boy rapidly in their own language. The
-boy went out. The master of the shop returned to Mrs. Winter. His
-manner had utterly changed; the tradesman’s perfunctory deference was
-displaced by an almost eager humility of bearing. He would have her
-sit--there were a few cane-seated American arm-chairs, in grotesque
-contrast to all their accompaniments--he prostrated himself before her;
-he put himself at her service; still to her trained eye there was a
-corner of his mind where incredulity wrestled with a stronger emotion.
-
-“Do not fear,” she said gently. “It is really my own, and he gave it
-to me himself, almost thirty years ago. He was hardly thirty years old
-himself then. You see, my husband had been so fortunate as to do him a
-kindness. It was he who had it first. When he died it came to me, and
-now for the second time in my life I am using it. I knew you belonged.
-I saw the sign. Will you help me find my boy?”
-
-“Did your ladyship know _he_ is he’e, in San Flancisco?”
-
-If she had not already dissipated any doubt in his mind, her evident
-relief blew the last shred away now. “Haven’t you such a thing as a
-telephone somewhere?” cried Rebecca Winter. “Time is precious. Can’t
-you speak to him--have him come here?”
-
-It appeared that there was a telephone, and in a moment she was put
-into communication by the shopkeeper. He stood in an attitude of deep
-respect while she talked. He heard with unsmiling attention her first
-Chinese words; he listened as she returned to English, speaking very
-quietly, but with a controlled earnestness, explaining that she was
-Archibald Winter’s widow, giving dates and places, in nowise alluding
-to the service which had won the charm about her neck. Yet as he
-listened, insensibly the Chinaman grew certain that she had spoken the
-truth. Presently she turned to him. “He wishes to speak to you,” she
-said, and went back to the shop. She sighed as one sighs from whose
-heart a great burden rolls. “To find him here, and still grateful!” she
-was thinking. “What wonderful good fortune!”
-
-She sat down, and her face grew dreamy. She was no longer thinking
-of Archie. Her vision was on another face, another scene, a time of
-peril, when almost against her reason her instinctive woman’s recoil of
-pity for a fellow-creature in danger of unthinkable torture had been
-so intense that she had more than acquiesced in her husband’s plan
-of risking both their lives to save him; she had impelled him to it;
-she had overcome his terror of the risks on her account. “It is only
-death we have to fear, at worst,” she had argued. “We have the means
-to escape in a second, both of us, from anything else; and if we run
-away and leave this poor wretch, who hasn’t done anything but love his
-country, just as we love ours, and be too civilized for his trifling,
-ornery, pusillanimous country-people to understand, to get slashed to
-pieces by their horrible ling-ling--whatever they call it--Archibald
-Winter, don’t you reckon we shall have nightmares as long as we live?”
-
-Thirty years ago--yet it seemed like yesterday. Distinctly she could
-hear her husband’s voice; it had not come back to her with such reality
-for years; it was more real than the cries of the street outside; and
-her heart was beating faster for his words: “Becky, there never was a
-woman like you! You could make a dead man hop up and fight, bless you!”
-
-“Your ladyship”--it was the shopkeeper back again; he had lived in
-England, and he offered the most respectful western title of his
-knowledge--“your ladyship may be chee’ful. All will be done of the
-best. The young gentleman will be back fo’ to-night. If your ladyship
-will now letu’n to the hotel.”
-
-[Illustration: It took only a moment to transfer a passenger. Page 211]
-
-Mrs. Winter bowed slightly; she was quite her self-possessed self
-again. “I will go certainly,” she said, “but I shall hope to see you,
-also, to-night; and meanwhile, will you accept, as a token from a
-friend who trusts you, _this_?” She took a little gem-encrusted watch
-from her fob and handed it to him. Her manner was that of a queen who
-rewards her general. And she left him bowing low. She entered the
-motor-car. It was no longer a lone motor. Another car steamed and
-snorted near by, in which sat the amiable banker from Iowa, his wife
-and Janet Smith.
-
-It took only a moment to transfer a passenger, to explain that she
-hoped to find the boy who had been lost--no, she would not use such a
-strenuous word as kidnapped--and would they complete their kindness
-by not mentioning the affair to any one? One hated so to get into the
-papers. And would they let her see them again to thank them? Then, as
-she sank back on the cushions, she remarked, as much to the expectant
-chauffeur as to Janet: “Yes, I think it is all right. I think we shall
-see Archie to-night.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-A BLOW
-
-
-There was no one but Mrs. Winter to welcome the colonel when, jaded,
-warm and dusty, he tapped on Aunt Rebecca’s parlor door. Mrs.
-Millicent was bristling with a sense of injury; one couldn’t touch her
-conversationally without risk of a scratch. The colonel put up the
-shield of his unsuitable appearance, his fatigue and his deplorable
-need of a bath, and escaped into his own apartment. But he made his
-toilet with reckless haste. All the time he was questioning his recent
-experience, trying to sort over his theories, which had been plunged
-into confusion by Mercer’s confession. “I suppose,” he reflected, “that
-I had no right to give Mercer that hint at the door.” The hint had been
-given just as they parted. It was in a single sentence:
-
-“By the way, Mercer, if that pillar in the _patio_ is of importance in
-your combination, you would better keep an eye on it; it has a trick of
-cracking.”
-
-“The devil it has!” grunted Mercer. Then he thanked him, with a kind
-of reluctant admiration in his tone.
-
-“You are sure you don’t object to my detective’s staying?” questioned
-the colonel.
-
-“No, suh; prefer to have him. You told him to have his men in and
-overhaul the house?”
-
-“I did. I warned you I should have to. You promise there shall be no
-racket? But I--I think I’ll take Haley.”
-
-“Thank you. That’s right kind of you, suh. Good-by, suh.”
-
-This had been the manner of their parting--assuredly a singular one,
-after the sinister suspicions and the violent promises which the
-soldier had made himself in regard to this very man. After leaving,
-he had motored into town, down to the police courts, to discover no
-records of the arrest and no trace of Archie. Thence, discouraged,
-perplexed and more worried than he liked to admit, he had repaired
-to the hotel. His aunt was gone, Miss Smith was gone, and Randall
-could only relate how Mrs. Winter “had flewed like a bird, sir, into
-a big red motor-car and gone off, and then Miss Smith and a lady and
-gentleman had got into a white car and gone off in the same direction.”
-
-He was meditating on his next step, when Birdsall was announced below.
-The detective looked as warm and as tired as the colonel had felt
-an hour before. Rupert was not eager to see him, but neither was he
-anxious for the tête-à-tête with Millicent which awaited him in the
-parlor. Between the two he chose Birdsall.
-
-“Well,” he greeted him, “did you find any trace of the boy?”
-
-“Of course I did,” growled Birdsall. “They didn’t try to hide ’im.
-They had him lodged in a dandy room with his own bath. Of course, he
-left his tooth-brush. They’d got him some automobile togs, too, and
-he’d left some leggings when he packed, and a letter begun on a pad to
-Miss Smith--‘Dear Miss Janet,’ it begins, ‘I am having a bully time. I
-can steer the machine, only I can’t back’--that’s all. Say, the young
-dog has been having it fat while we were in the frying-pan for fear
-somebody was bothering him.”
-
-“But he is not in the house now?”
-
-“No, nor nothing else.”
-
-“_Nobody_ hidden away? Where did the groans you heard come from?”
-queried the colonel politely.
-
-Birdsall flushed. “I do believe that slick deceiver you call Mercer
-put up a game on us out of meanness--just to git me guessing.”
-
-“That sort of thing looks more like the college boys.”
-
-“Say, it might have been. This thing is giving me nervous prostration.
-Say, why didn’t you see the thing out with me?”
-
-The colonel shamelessly told the truth to deceive. “I was called here.
-I was told that Mrs. Winter, my aunt, had seen Archie in the street.”
-
-“She was just getting out of a machine as I came up. Miss Smith was
-with her, and they had their hands full of candy boxes. They were
-laughing. I made sure the boy had been found.”
-
-“Not to my knowledge,” said the colonel. But in some excitement he
-walked into the parlor. The ladies had arrived; they stood in the
-center of the room while Randall took away the boxes.
-
-“Candy for Archie,” explained Aunt Rebecca, and these were the first
-words to reach Rupert Winter’s ears. “I expect him to dinner.”
-
-“Aunt Rebecca,” proclaimed Millicent, “I never have been one
-to complain, but there _are_ limits to human endurance. I am a
-modern person, a civilized Episcopalian, accustomed to a regular
-and well-ordered life, and for the last few days I seem to have
-been living in a kind of medieval mystery, with kidnappers, and
-blood-stains, and, for anything I know, somebody ready to stick a
-knife into any one of us any time! You people may enjoy this sort of
-thing--_you seem to_--but I don’t. And I tell you frankly that I am
-going to apply to the police, not to any private detective inquiry
-office, as like as not in league with the criminals”--thus ungratefully
-did Mrs. Millicent slur the motives of her only truly interested
-auditor--“but _real_ policemen. I shall apply--”
-
-She did not tell where she should apply, the words being snapped out of
-her mouth by the sharp tinkle of the telephone bell.
-
-Aunt Rebecca responded to the call. “Send him up,” was her answer to
-the inaudible questioner.
-
-She laid down the receiver. Then she put it back. Then she stood up,
-her silver head in the air, her erect little figure held motionless.
-
-Janet Smith’s dark eyes sought hers; her lips parted only to close
-firmly again.
-
-Even the detective perceived the electric intensity of the moment, and
-Rupert shut his fists tight, with a quickened beating of the heart; but
-emotional vibrations did not disturb Mrs. Melville Winter’s poise. She
-continued her plaint.
-
-“This present situation is unbearable, unprecedented and
-un--un--unexpected,” she declaimed, rather groping for a climax which
-escaped her. Aunt Rebecca raised her hand.
-
-“Would you be so very kind, Millicent,” said she, “as to wait a moment?
-I am trying to listen.”
-
-Like a response to her words, the knob of the door was turned, the door
-swung, and Archie entered the room, smiling his odd little chewed-up
-smile.
-
-Janet uttered a faint cry and took a single step, but, as if
-recognizing a superior right, hung back while the boy put his arm about
-his great-aunt’s waist and rather bashfully kissed her cheek.
-
-She received the salute with entire composure, except for a tiny splash
-of red which crept up to each cheek-bone. “Is it really you, Archie?”
-said she. “You are a little late for dinner day before yesterday, but
-quite in time for to-day. Sit down and tell us where you have been.”
-
-“Quite so!” exclaimed Mrs. Millicent. “Good heavens! Do you know how we
-have suffered? _Where_ have you been? _Why_ did you run away?”
-
-But Archie, who had surrendered one-half of him to be hugged by Miss
-Smith and the other to be clapped on the shoulder by his uncle, seemed
-to think a vaguely polite “How-de-do, Aunt Millicent; I’m sorry to have
-worried you!” to be answer enough. Only when the question was repeated
-by Mrs. Winter herself did he reply: “I’m awfully sorry, Aunt Rebecca,
-but I’ve promised not to say anything about it. But, truly, I didn’t
-mean to bother you.”
-
-Millicent exploded in an access of indignation: “And do you mean that
-you expect us to accept such a ridiculous promise--after all we have
-been through?”
-
-“Quite so,” remarked Aunt Rebecca, with a precise echo of her niece’s
-most Anglican utterance--the gift of mimicry had been one of Mrs.
-Winter’s most admired and distrusted social gifts from her youth.
-
-Rupert Winter hastened to distract Millicent’s attention by saying
-decisively: “If the boy has promised, that ends it; he can’t break his
-parole. Anyhow, they don’t seem to have hurt you, old son?”
-
-“Oh, they treated me dandy, those fellows,” said Archie. “Miss Janet, I
-know how to run an electric motor-car, except backing.”
-
-“I’ll bet you do,” muttered the detective.
-
-Here the colonel came to the boy’s relief a second time and drew
-Birdsall aside. “Best let me pump the chap a little. You get
-down-stairs and see how he got here, who brought him. They’ll get clean
-away. It is late for that as it is. You can report to-morrow.”
-
-It was the colonel, also, who eliminated Mrs. Millicent by the masterly
-stratagem of suggesting that she pass the news to Mrs. Wigglesworth. He
-artfully added that it would require tact to let the lady from Boston
-understand that the lad had been found without in any way gratifying
-her natural curiosity in regard to the manner of finding or the cause
-of disappearance. “I’ll have to leave _that_ to you,” he concluded.
-“Maybe you can see a way out; I confess my hands are in the air.”
-
-Millicent thus relegated to the ambassador’s shelf, the colonel
-slipped comfortably into his pet arm-chair facing his nephew on the
-lounge between Aunt Rebecca and Miss Smith. Miss Smith looked frankly,
-charmingly happy. Aunt Rebecca looked rather tired.
-
-“Of course,” remarked he, “I understand, old man, that you have
-promised secrecy to--well, to the Fireless Stove gang, as we’ll call
-them; but the _other_ kidnappers, the crowd that held up your car
-and then switched you off on a side track while young Fireless was
-detained--they haven’t any hold on you?”
-
-“No, sir,” said Archie; “but--you see, that strange gentleman and Aunt
-Millicent--I was scared lest I’d give something away.”
-
-“They’re not here now. All friends here. Suppose you make a clean
-breast of your second kidnapping. It may be important you should.”
-
-Nothing loath, Archie told his story. Left outside while Tracy went
-into the office with a policeman, to whom he gave his assumed name, he
-remained for hardly two minutes before a gentleman and a “cop” came up
-to him, and the latter ordered him to descend from the machine--but not
-until they had found it impossible to move the vehicle. When they did
-discover that the key was out and gone, the man in citizen’s clothes
-hailed a cab and the officer curtly informed Archie that Gardiner
-(Tracy’s traveling name) had been taken to another court and he was to
-follow. He didn’t suspect anything beyond a collision with the speed
-regulations of the city, but had he seen a chance to dive under his
-escort’s arm the boy would have taken it. Such chance was not afforded
-him, and all he was able to do was to lean out suddenly as they passed
-the Palace and to wave at Randall. “I wanted them to stop and let me
-get some one to pay my fine,” said Archie, “but they said I was only
-a witness. They wouldn’t let me stop; they run down the curtain--at
-least so far as it would run. It was like all those hack curtains, you
-know--all out of order.”
-
-“Archie,” the colonel interjected here, “was one of the men a little
-fellow, clean-shaven, with a round black head, blue eyes--one of his
-eyes winks a little faster than the other?”
-
-“Yes, sir. How did you know?”
-
-“I didn’t know; I guessed. Well, get on; they wanted to pump you when
-they got you safely out of sight?”
-
-“Yes,” Archie said, “they put me into the sweat-box, all right.”
-
-“Did you tell them anything?” asked Mrs. Winter.
-
-Archie looked at her reproachfully. Did she think that he had gone to
-boarding-school for nothing? He explained that, being a stranger in
-the town, he could not tell anything about where he’d been. There was
-an agent at the house trying to sell stoves, and they let him take him
-off back to the hotel. The man seemed to know all about who he (Archie)
-was, and about his having gone away. The men asked him an awful lot of
-questions about how he was taken away. He said he didn’t know, and he’d
-promised not to tell. He couldn’t tell. They said he would have to go
-to jail if he didn’t tell, because the men who had him were such bad
-men. But he didn’t tell.
-
-“Did they try to frighten you--to make you tell?” said Mrs. Winter.
-
-“Oh, they bluffed a little,” returned Archie carelessly, yet the
-keen eyes on him--eyes both worldly-wise and shrewd--noted that the
-lad’s color shifted and he winced the least in the world over some
-remembrance.
-
-“But they didn’t hurt you? They didn’t burn you or cut you or twist
-your arms, or try any other of their playful ways?” Mrs. Winter
-demanded; and Janet began feeling the boy’s arms, breathing more
-quickly. The colonel only looked.
-
-“No, they didn’t do a thing. I knew they wouldn’t, too,” Archie assured
-her earnestly. “I told them if they did anything, Uncle Rupert and you
-would make them pay.”
-
-“And you weren’t frightened, away from every one--in that hideous
-quarter?” cried Miss Smith. “Oh, my dear!” She choked.
-
-“Well, maybe I was a little scared. I kept thinking of a rotten yarn
-of Kipling’s; something happened to _him_, down in the underground
-quarter, in just such a hot, nasty-smelling hole, I guess, as I was
-in; you remember, Miss Janet, about the game of cards and the Mexican
-stabbing a Chink for cheating, and how Kipling jumped up and ran for
-his life, never looked around; and don’t you remember that nasty bit,
-how he felt sure they had dealt with the greaser their own way and he’d
-never get up to the light again--”
-
-“I’ve been remembering that story all this afternoon,” answered Miss
-Smith with a shudder.
-
-“Agreeable little tale,” said Aunt Rebecca dryly. “Archie, you must
-have had a right nasty quarter of an hour; what stopped it?”
-
-“Why, a Chink came and called the little man off; and there was a lot
-of talking which I couldn’t hear, and the cop was swearing; I think
-they didn’t like it. But, in a minute the Chinaman--he was an awful
-nice little feller--he came up to me and took me out, led me all sorts
-of ways, not a bit like the way I came in, and got me out to the
-street. The other fellows were very polite; they told me that they were
-my friends and only wanted to find a clue to my kidnappers; and the
-burning holes in me was only a joke to give me an excuse to break my
-word under compulsion--why, _they_ wouldn’t hurt me for the world! I
-pretended to be fooled, and said it was all right, and looked pleasant;
-but--I’d like to scare them the same way, once, all the same.”
-
-The boy caught at his lip which was trembling, and ended with a shaky
-laugh. Miss Smith clenched the fist by her side; but she dropped the
-arm near Archie, and said in a matter-of-fact, sprightly tone: “Archie,
-you really ought to go dress--and wash for dinner; excuse me for
-mentioning it, but you have no idea how grimy you are.”
-
-The commonplace turn of thought did its errand. Archie, who had been
-bracing himself anew against the horror which he remembered, dropped
-back into his familiar habits and jumped up consciously. “It’s the
-dust, motoring,” he offered bashfully. “I ought to have washed before I
-came up. Well, that’s all; we came straight here. Now, may I go take a
-bath?”
-
-Aunt Rebecca was fingering a curious jade locket on her neck. She
-watched the boy run to the open door.
-
-“I wish you’d go into your room, Colonel,” said Miss Smith, “and see
-that nothing happens to him. It’s silly, but I am expecting to see him
-vanish again!”
-
-The sentence affected the colonel unpleasantly; why need she be
-posing before him, as if that first disappearance had had any real
-fright in it? Of course she didn’t know yet (although Aunt Rebecca
-might have told her--she _ought_ to have told her and stopped this
-unnecessary deceit) that he was on to the game; but--he didn’t like it.
-Unconsciously, his inward criticism made his tone drier as he replied
-with a little bow that he imagined Archie was quite safe, now, and he
-would ask to be excused, as he had to attend to something before dinner.
-
-Was it his fancy that her face changed and her eyes looked wistful?
-It must have been. He walked stiffly away. Hardly had he entered his
-room and turned his mind on the changed situation before the telephone
-apprised him that a gentleman, Mr. Gardiner, who represented the
-Fireless Cook Stove, said that he had an appointment with Colonel
-Winter to explain the stove; should he be sent up?
-
-Directly, Endicott Tracy entered, smiling. “Where’s the kid? I know
-he’s back,” were his first words; and he explained that he had been
-hunting the kidnappers to no purpose. “Except that I learned enough to
-know they put up a job with the justice, all right; I got next to that
-game without any Machiavellian exertions. But they got away. Who is it?
-Any of Keatcham’s gang?”
-
-“Atkins,” said the colonel concisely.
-
-Tracy whistled and apologized. “It’s a blow,” he confessed. “That
-little wretch! He has brains to burn and not an ounce of conscience.
-You know he has been mousing round at the hotels after Keatcham’s
-mail--”
-
-“He didn’t get it?”
-
-“No, Cary had covered that point. Cary has thought this all out very
-carefully, but Atkins has got on to the fact that Cary was here in this
-hotel with Keatcham. But he doesn’t know where we come in; whether
-Keatcham’s gang is just lying low for some game of its own, or whether
-_we’ve_ got him. At least, I don’t believe he knows.”
-
-“You ought not to be talking so freely to me; I haven’t promised you
-anything, you know,” warned the colonel.
-
-“But you’ve got your nephew back all right; we have been on the square
-with _you_; why should you butt in? I know you won’t.”
-
-“I don’t seem to have a fair call to,” observed the colonel.
-
-“And I think the old boy is going to give in; he has made signals of
-distress, to my thinking. Wanted his mail; and wanted to write; and
-informed Cary--he saw him for the first time to-day--that he had bigger
-things on deck than the Midland; and wanted to get at them. We’re going
-to win out all right.”
-
-“Unless Atkins gets at him to-night,” the colonel suggested. “You
-oughtn’t to have come here, Gardiner. Don’t go home, now. Wait until
-later, and let me rig you up in another lot of togs and give you my own
-motor-car. Better.”
-
-Tracy was more than impressed by the proposal; he was plainly grateful.
-He entered with enthusiasm into the soldier’s masquerade--Tracy had
-always had a weakness for theatricals and some of his Hasty Pudding
-_Portraits of Unknown People We Know_ had won him fame at Cambridge.
-Ten minutes later, there sat opposite the colonel a florid-faced,
-mustached, western commercial traveler whose plaided tweeds, being an
-ill-advised venture of Haley’s which the colonel had taken off his
-hands and found no subject of charity quite obnoxious enough to deserve
-them, naturally did not fit the present wearer, but suited his inane
-complacence of bearing and might pass for a bad case of ready-made
-purchase.
-
-“Now,” said the adviser, “I’ll notify Haley to have my own hired
-motor ready for you and you can slip out and take it after you’ve had
-something to eat. Here’s the restaurant card. Haley will be there.
-Leave it at the drug store on Van Ness Street--Haley will give you
-the number--and get home as unobtrusively as possible. You can peel
-off these togs in the motor if necessary. You’ve your own underneath
-except your coat. Wrap that in a newspaper and carry it. I don’t know
-that Atkins has any one on guard at the hotel, but I think it more than
-likely he suspects some connection between our party and Keatcham’s.
-But first, tell me about Atkins; what do you know about him? It’s an
-American name.”
-
-“America can take all the glory of him, I fancy,” said Tracy. “He’s
-been Keatcham’s secretary for six years. He seems awfully mild and
-useful and timid. He’s not a bit timid. He’s full of resource;
-he’s sidled suggestions into Keatcham’s ear and has been gradually
-working to make himself absolutely necessary. I think he aimed at a
-partnership; but Keatcham wouldn’t stand for it. I think it was in
-revenge that he sold out some of Keatcham’s secrets. Cary got on to
-that and has a score of his own to settle with him, besides. I don’t
-know how he managed, but he showed him up; and Keatcham gave him the
-sack in his own cold-blooded way. I know him only casually. But my
-cousin, Ralph Schuyler, went to prep. school with him, so I got his
-character straight off the bat. His father was a patent-medicine man
-from Mississippi, who made a fair pile, a couple of hundred thousand
-which looked good to that section, you know. I don’t know anything
-about his people except that his father made the ‘Celebrated Atkins’
-Ague Busters’; and that Atkins was ashamed of his people and shook
-his married sisters who came to see him, in rather a brutal fashion;
-but I know a thing or two about him; he was one of those bounders who
-curry favor with the faculty and the popular boys and never break
-rules apparently, but go off and have sly little bats by themselves.
-He never was popular, yet, somehow, he got into things; he knew where
-to lend money; and he was simply sickeningly clever; in math. he was
-a wonder. Ralph hated him. For one thing, he caught him in a dirty
-lie. Atkins hated him back and contrived to prevent his being elected
-class president, and when he couldn’t prevent Ralph’s making his senior
-society the happy thought struck Atkins to get on the initiation
-committee. They had a cheery little branding game to make the fellows
-quite sure they belonged, you know, and he rammed his cigar stump into
-Ralph’s arm so that Ralph had blood-poisoning and a narrow squeak for
-his life. You see that I’m not prepossessed in the fellow’s favor. He’s
-got too vivid an imagination for me!”
-
-“Seems to have,” acquiesced the colonel.
-
-“I think, you know”--Tracy made an effort to be just--“I think Atkins
-was rather soured. Some of the fellows made fun of the ‘Ague Busters’;
-he had a notion that the reason it was such uphill work for him in
-the school, was his father’s trade. No doubt he did get nasty licks,
-at first; and he’s revengeful. He hasn’t got on in society outside,
-either--this he lays to his not being a university man. You see his
-father lost some of his money and put him to work instead of in
-college. He was willing enough at the time--I think he wanted to get
-married--but afterward, when he was getting a good salary and piling up
-money on his tips, he began to think that he had lost more than he had
-bargained for. Altogether, he’s soured. Now, what he wants is to make a
-thundering big strike and to pull out of Wall Street, buy what he calls
-‘a seat on the James’ and set-up for a Southern gentleman. He’s trying
-to marry a Southern girl, they say, who is kin to the Carters and the
-Byrds and the Lees and the Carys--why, _you_ know her, she’s Mrs.
-Winter’s secretary.”
-
-“Does--does she care for him?” The colonel suddenly felt his mouth
-parched; he was savagely conscious of his mounting color. What a
-fiendish trick of fate! he had never dreamed of this! Well, whether she
-cared for him or not, the man was a brute; he shouldn’t get her. That
-was one certainty in the colonel’s mind.
-
-“Why, Cary vows she doesn’t, that it was only a girlish bit of nonsense
-up in Virginia, that time he was prospecting, you know. But I don’t
-feel so safe. She’s too nice for such a cur. But you know what women
-are; the nicest of them seem to be awfully queer about men. There’s no
-betting on them.”
-
-“I’m afraid not,” remarked the colonel lightly. But he put his fingers
-inside his collar and loosened it, as if he felt choked.
-
-Because he had a dozen questions quarreling for precedence in his head,
-he asked not one. He only inquired regarding the situation; discovering
-that both Mercer and Tracy were equally in the dark with himself as to
-Atkins’ plans, Atkins’ store of information, Atkins’ resources. How he
-could have waylaid Tracy and the boy without knowing whence they came
-was puzzling; it was quite as puzzling, however, assuming that he did
-know their whereabouts, to decide why he was so keen to interrogate the
-boy. In fact, it was, as Tracy said, “too much like Professor Santa
-Anna’s description of a German definition of metaphysics, ‘A blind man
-hunting in a dark room for a black cat that isn’t there.’”
-
-“In any event, you would better keep away from _me_,” was the colonel’s
-summing up of the situation; “I don’t want to be inhospitable, but
-the sooner you are off, and out of the hotel, the safer for your
-speculation.”
-
-“Friends will please accept the intimation,” said Tracy good-humoredly.
-“Very well, it’s twenty-three for me. I’m hoping you’ll see your way
-clear to run over as soon as the old man has surrendered; I’m going to
-invite him to make us a proper visit, then, and see the country. I’m
-always for letting the conquered keep their side-arms.”
-
-He went away smiling his flashing smile, and turned it up at the hotel
-as he walked out; the colonel made no sign of recognition from the
-window whence he observed him. Instead, he drew back quickly, frowning;
-it might be a mere accident that only a hand’s-breadth of space from
-the young Harvard man was a dapper little shape in evening clothes, a
-man still young, with a round black head; if so, it was an accident not
-to the colonel’s liking.
-
-“Damn you!” whispered Rupert Winter very softly. “What is your little
-game?”
-
-At once he descended, having telephoned Haley to meet him at the court.
-When he entered and sent his glance rapidly among the little tables, by
-this time filled with diners, he experienced a disagreeable surprise.
-It did not come from the sight of Sergeant Haley in his Sunday civilian
-clothes, stolidly reading the _Call_; it came from a vision of Atkins
-standing, bowing, animatedly talking with Janet Smith.
-
-Instead of approaching Haley, Winter fell back and scribbled a few
-words on a page of his note-book, while safely shielded by a great
-palm. The note he despatched to Haley, who promptly joined him. While
-they stood, talking on apparently indifferent subjects, Miss Smith
-passed them. Whether because he was become suspicious or because she
-had come upon him suddenly, she colored slightly. But she smiled as she
-saluted him and spoke in her usual tranquil tone. “You are going to
-dine with us, aren’t you, Colonel?” said she. “I think dinner is just
-about to be served.”
-
-The colonel would be with them directly.
-
-Haley’s eyes followed her; he had returned her nod and inquiry for his
-wife and little Nora with a military salute and the assurance that they
-were both wonderfully well and pleased with the country.
-
-“Sure, ain’t it remarkable the way that lady do keep names in her
-mind?” cried he. “An’ don’t she walk foine and straight? Oi’ve been
-always towld thim Southern ladies had the gran’ way wid ’em; Oi see now
-’tis thrue.” The unusual richness of Haley’s brogue was a sure sign of
-feeling. The colonel only looked grim. After he had taken Haley to a
-safe nook for his confidence, a nook where there were neither ears nor
-eyes to be feared, he would have made his way up-stairs; but half-way
-down the office he was hailed by the manager. The manager was glad
-to hear that the young gentleman was safely back. He let the faint
-radiance of an intelligent, respectfully tactful smile illumine his
-words and intimate that his listener would have no awkward questions to
-parry from him. The colonel felt an ungrateful wrath, a reprehensible
-snare of temper which did not show in his confidentially lowered
-voice, as he replied: “Mighty lucky, too, we are; the boy’s all right;
-but San Francisco is no place for an innocent kid even to take the
-safest-looking walk. What sort of a police system have you, anyhow?”
-
-The manager shook his head. “I’m not bragging about it; nor about
-the Chinese quarter, either. I confess I’ve felt particularly
-uncomfortable, myself, the last day. Well--if you’ll excuse the
-advice--least said, you know.”
-
-The colonel nodded. He proffered his cigar-case; the manager
-complimented its contents, as he selected a cigar; and both gentlemen
-bowed. A wandering, homesick Frenchman, who viewed their parting,
-felt refreshed as by a breath from his own land of admirable manners.
-Meanwhile, the colonel was fuming within: “Confound his insinuating
-curiosity! but I reckon I headed him off. And who would have thought,”
-he wondered forlornly, “that I could be going to dine with the boy safe
-and sound and be feeling so like a whipped hound!”
-
-But none of this showed during the dinner at which Millicent was in
-high good humor, having obtained information about most astounding
-bargains in the Chinese quarter from Mrs. Wigglesworth. Her good humor
-extended even to Miss Smith, who received it without enthusiasm, albeit
-courteously; and who readily consented to be her companion for the
-morning sally on the distressed Orientals, whose difficulties with the
-customs had reduced them to the necessity of sales at any cost. Aunt
-Rebecca listened with an absent smile, while Archie laughed at every
-feeblest joke of his uncle in a boyish interest so little like his
-former apathy that often Miss Smith’s eyes brightened and half timidly
-sought the uncle’s, as if calling his attention to the change. Only a
-few hours back, his would have brightened gratefully in answer; now,
-he avoided her glances. Yet somehow, his heart felt heavier when they
-ceased. For his part, he was thankful to have his aunt request his
-company in a little promenade around the “loggia,” as she termed it,
-overlooking the great court.
-
-She took him aside to tell him her afternoon experience, and to ask
-his opinion of the enigmatical appearance of Atkins. He was strongly
-tempted, in return, to question her frankly about Miss Smith, to tell
-her of seeing the latter with Atkins only that evening. He knew that
-it was the sensible thing to do--but he simply could not do it. To
-frame his suspicions past or present of the woman he loved; to discuss
-the chances of her affection for a man loathsomely unworthy of her;
-worse, to balance the possibilities of her turning betrayer in her turn
-and chancing any damage to her benefactress and her kinsman for this
-fellow’s sake--no, it was beyond him. He had intended to discuss his
-aunt’s part in the waylaying of Keatcham, with calmness and with the
-deference due her, but unsparingly; he meant to show her the legal if
-not moral obliquity of her course, to point out to her the pitfalls
-besetting it, to warn her how hideous might be the consequences of a
-misstep. Somehow, however, his miserable new anxiety about Miss Smith
-had disturbed all his calculations and upset his wits; and he could not
-rally any of the poignant phrases which he had prepared. All he was
-able to say was something about the rashness of the business; it was
-like the Filipinos with their bows and arrows fighting machine-guns.
-
-“Or David with his ridiculous little sling going against Goliath,”
-added she. “Very well put, Bertie; only the good advice comes too late;
-the question now is, how to get out with a whole skin. Surprising as it
-may be, I expect to--with your help.”
-
-“Honored, I’m sure,” growled Bertie.
-
-“There is one thing I meant to ask you--I haven’t, but I shall now.
-Instead of making it impossible for me to sleep to-night, as you
-virtuously intended in order to clear your conscience before you tried
-to pull me out of the trap I’ve set for myself, suppose you do me a
-favor, right now.”
-
-“You put it so well, you make me ashamed of my moral sense, Aunt Becky;
-what is it you want?”
-
-“Oh, nothing unbefitting a soldier and a gentleman, dear boy; just
-this: Cary has to have some money. I meant to give it to Stoves, but
-you hustled him off in such a rush that I didn’t get at him. You know
-where he is, don’t you? You haven’t sent him straight back?”
-
-“I can find him, I reckon.”
-
-“Then I’ll give _you_ the money, at once.”
-
-How weak a thing is man! Here was an eminently cool-headed, reasonable
-man of affairs who knew that paws which had escaped from the fire
-unsinged had no excuse to venture back for other people’s chestnuts;
-he had expressed himself clearly to this effect to young Tracy; now,
-behold him as unable to resist the temptation of a conflict and the
-chance to baffle Atkins as if he were a hot-headed boy in plain
-shoulder-straps!
-
-“I’ll do better for you, Aunt Rebecca,” said he. “I’ll not only take
-Fireless the money, I’ll go with him to the house. I can make a sneak
-from here; and Atkins is safely down-stairs at this moment. He may be
-shadowing Fireless; if he is, perhaps I can throw him off the track.”
-
-Thus it befell that not an hour later Rupert Winter was guiding the
-shabby and noisy runabout a second time toward the haunted house.
-
-“Nothing doin’,” said the joyous apprentice to crime; “I called old
-Cary up and got a furious slating for doing it; but he said there
-wasn’t a watch-dog in sight; and the old man had surrendered. He was
-going to let him into the library on parole.”
-
-“You need a guardian,” growled the colonel; “where did you telephone?
-_Not_ in the drug store?”
-
-“Oh, dear, no, not in such a public place; I’ve a shrinking nature that
-never did intrude its private, personal affairs on the curious world.
-I used the ’phone of that nice quiet little restaurant where they gave
-me a lovely meal but were so long preparing it, I used up all the
-literature in sight, which was the _Ladies’ Home Journal_ and a tract
-on the virtues of Knox’s Gelatine. When I couldn’t think of anything
-else to do I routed out Cary--I’d smoked all my cigarettes and all my
-cigars but one which I was keeping for after dinner. And Cary rowed me
-good and plenty. There wasn’t a soul in the room.”
-
-“Has any one followed you?”
-
-“Not a man, woman or child, not even a yellow dog. I kept looking
-round, too.”
-
-“It was a dreadfully risky thing to do; you don’t deserve to escape;
-but perhaps you did. Atkins may have come to the Palace for some other
-purpose and never have noticed you.”
-
-“My own father wouldn’t have got on to me in that dinky rig.”
-
-Winter was not so easy in his mind. But he hoped for the best, since
-there was nothing else for him to do. They were in sight of the house
-now, which loomed against the dim horizon, darker, grimmer than ever.
-Where the upper stories were pierced with semicircular arches, the
-star-sown sky shone through with an extraordinary effect of depth and
-mystery. All the lighter features of the architecture, carving on
-pediment or lintel or archivolt, delicate iron tracery of _rejas_,
-relief of arcature and colonnade--all these the dusk blurred if it
-did not obliterate; the great dark bulk of the house with its massive
-buttresses, its pyramidal copings and receding upper stories, was the
-more boldly silhouetted on the violet sky; yet because of the very
-flatness of the picture, the very lack of shadow and projection, it
-seemed unsubstantial, hardly more of reality than the giant shadow it
-cast upon the hillside. Electric lights wavered and bristled dazzling
-beams on either side of the street; not a gleam, red, white or yellow,
-leaked through the shuttered windows of the house. In its blackness,
-its silence, its determined isolation it renewed, but with a greater
-force, the first sinister thrill which the sight of it had given the
-man who came to rifle it of its secrets.
-
-“Lonesome-looking old shanty, isn’t it?” said the Harvard boy; “seems
-almost indecorous to speak out loud. Here’s where we _cache_ the car
-and make a gentle detour by aid of the shrubbery up the arroyo to the
-north side of the _patio_. See?”
-
-He directed the colonel’s course through an almost imperceptible
-opening in the hedge along sharp turns and oblique and narrow ways into
-a small vacant space where the vines covered an adobe hut. Jumping
-out, Tracy unlocked the door of this tiny building so that the colonel
-could run the car inside; and after Winter had emerged again, he
-re-locked the door. As there was no window, the purpose of the hut was
-effectually concealed.
-
-“Very neat,” the colonel approved; whereat Tracy flashed his smile at
-him in the moonlight and owned with ingenuous pride that he himself was
-the contriver of this reticent garage.
-
-From this point he took the lead. Neither spoke. They toiled up the
-hill, in this part of the grounds less of the nature of a hill than of
-an arroyo or ravine through which rocks had thrust their rugged sides
-and over which spiked semi-tropical cacti had sprawled, and purple
-and white flowered vines had made their own untended tangle. Before
-they reached the level the colonel was breathing hard, every breath
-a stab. Tracy, a famous track man who had won his H in a wonderful
-cross-country run, felt no distress--until he heard his companion gasp.
-
-“Jove! But that hill’s fierce!” he breathed explosively. “Do you mind
-resting a minute?”
-
-“Hardly,”--the colonel was just able to hold his voice steady--“I have
-a Filipino bullet in my leg somewhere which the X-ray has never been
-able to account for; and I’m not exactly a mountain goat!”
-
-“Why, of course, I’m a brute not to let you run up the drive in the
-machine. Not a rat watching us to-night, either; but I wanted you to
-see the place; and you seem so fit--”
-
-“You oughtn’t to give away your secrets to me, an outsider--”
-
-“You’re no outsider; I consider you the treasurer of the band,” laughed
-Tracy. They had somehow come to an unexpressed but perfectly understood
-footing of sympathy. The colonel even let the younger man help him up
-the last stiff clamber of the path. He forgot his first chill, as of
-a witness approaching a tragedy; there was a smile on his lips when
-the two of them passed into the _patio_. It lingered there as he stood
-in the flower-scented gloom. It was there as Tracy stumbled to a
-half-remembered push-button, wondering aloud what had become of Cary
-and Kito that they shouldn’t have answered his whistle; it was there,
-still, when Tracy slipped, and grumbled: “What sticky stuff has Kito
-spilled on this floor?”--and instantly flooded the court with light.
-Then--he saw the black, slimy pool and the long slide of Tracy’s nailed
-sole in it; and just to one side, almost pressing against his own foot,
-he saw a man in a gray suit huddled into the shape of a crooked U, with
-his arms limp at his side and his head of iron-gray fallen back askew.
-The light shone on the broad bald dome of the forehead. He had been
-stabbed between the shoulders, in the back; and one side of the gray
-coat was ugly to see.
-
-“Good God!” whispered Tracy, growing white. “It’s Keatcham! they’ve
-killed him! Oh, why didn’t I come back before!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-WHOSE FEET WERE SHOD WITH SILENCE
-
-
-“Get out your revolver,” ordered the colonel; “look sharp! there may be
-some one here.”
-
-But there was not a sign of life revealed by the search. Meanwhile,
-Winter was examining the body. His first thought was that Keatcham had
-tried to escape and had been struck down in his flight. Kito would not
-scruple at such a deed; nor for that matter, Mercer. But why leave the
-man thus? Why not dispose of the body--unless, indeed, the assassins
-had been interrupted. Anyhow, what a horrid mess this murder would make
-of the affair! and how was he to keep the women out of it! All at once,
-in the examination which he had been making (while a dozen gruesome
-possibilities tumbled over one another in his mind) he stopped; he put
-his ear to the man’s heart.
-
-“Isn’t he dead?” asked Tracy under his breath.
-
-“No, he is not dead, but I’m afraid he’ll never find it out,” returned
-the colonel, shrugging his shoulders. “However, any brandy handy? And
-get me some water.”
-
-“I know where there is some brandy--I’ll get it; there is some water in
-the fountain right--_Cary!_”
-
-“What’s the matter?” demanded Cary Mercer in one of the arcade doorways
-of the _patio_. “What’s happened? The devil! Who did this?” He strode
-up to the kneeling soldier.
-
-“You are in a position to know much better than I,” said the colonel
-dryly. “We came this moment; we found this.”
-
-“Cary, did _you_ do it?”--the young man laid his hand on Cary’s
-shoulder; his face was ashy but his voice rang full and clear. “If you
-did, I am sure you had a reason; but I want to know; we’re partners in
-this thing to the finish.”
-
-“Thank you, boy,” said Cary gently, “that’s good to hear. But I didn’t
-hurt him, Endy. Why should I? We’d got what we wanted.”
-
-“_Who did?_” asked the colonel.
-
-“I didn’t and Kito didn’t. He went away to see his only brother who is
-sick. He hasn’t got back. I don’t know who did it; but whoever stabbed
-him must have done it without warning him; for I didn’t hear a sound.
-I was in the library.”
-
-“He’s breathing a little, I think,” murmured the young man, who was
-sopping the gray mask of a face while Winter trickled brandy drop by
-drop into the sagging mouth, “and--look! somebody has tried to rob him;
-that’s a money belt!”
-
-The waistcoat was open and Winter could see, beneath, a money belt with
-buttoned pockets, which had been torn apart with such haste that one of
-the buttons had been wrenched off.
-
-“They seem to have been after money,” said he; “see! the belt is full
-of bills; there’s only one pocket empty.”
-
-“Perhaps he was interrupted,” explained Mercer. “Push the brandy,
-Colonel, he’s moving his eyelids, suh!”
-
-“We’ve got to do something to that hole in him, first,” said the
-colonel. “Is there any doctor--”
-
-“I daren’t send for one.”
-
-“Tony Arnold might know one we could trust,” suggested Tracy. “I can
-get him over the long distance.”
-
-“We want somebody _now_, this minute,” declared the colonel.
-
-“There’s Janet Smith,” said Mercer, “my sister-in-law; she’s Mrs.
-Winter’s companion; she used to be a trained nurse and a mighty good
-one; _she_ could be trusted.”
-
-Could she? And how the terms of his distrust had changed! He had
-fought against an answer in the affirmative this morning; now his
-heart was begging for it; he was cold with fear lest she wasn’t this
-conspirator’s confederate.
-
-“Send for them both,” said he with no sign of emotion.
-
-“I’ll call up Aunt Rebecca,” said Mercer. “Isn’t he reviving? No? Best
-not move him till we get the wound dressed, don’t you reckon, Colonel?”
-
-But the colonel was already making a rough tourniquet out of his
-handkerchief and a pencil to stanch the bleeding. The others obeyed
-his curt directions; and it was not until the still unconscious man
-was disposed in a more comfortable posture on the cushions which Tracy
-brought, that Winter sent the latter to the telephone; and then he
-addressed Mercer. He took a sealed package from an inner pocket and
-tendered it, saying: “You know who sent it. Whatever happens, you’re a
-Southern gentleman, and I look to you to see that she--they are kept
-out of this nasty mess--absolutely.”
-
-“Of course,” returned Mercer, with a trace of irritation; “what do you
-take me for? Now, hadn’t I better call Janet?”
-
-“But if this were to be discovered--”
-
-“_She_ wouldn’t have done anything; she is only nursing a wounded man
-whom she doesn’t know, at my request.”
-
-“Very well,” acquiesced the colonel, with a long sigh as he turned away.
-
-He sat down, cross-legged, like a Turk, on the flags beside the wounded
-man. Mercer was standing a little way off. It was to be observed that
-he had not touched Keatcham, nor even approached him close enough
-to reach him by an outstretched hand. Winter studied his face, his
-attitude--and suppressed the slightest of starts; Mercer had turned his
-arm to light another electric bulb and the action revealed some crimson
-spots on his cuff and a smear on his light trousers above the knee. The
-lamp was rather high and he was obliged to raise his arm, thus lifting
-the skirts of his coat which had previously hidden the stain. He did
-not seem aware that his action had made any disclosure. He was busy
-with the light. “That’ll be better,” said he; “I’ll go call up Sister
-Janet.”
-
-How had those stains come? Mercer professed just to have entered.
-Vainly Winter’s brain tried to labor through the crazy bewilderment of
-it all; Mercer spoke like an honest man--but look at his cuffs! How
-could any outside assassin enter that locked and guarded house?--yet,
-if Mercer had not lied, some one must have stolen in and struck
-Keatcham. Kito? But the Jap was out of the house--perhaps! And Janet
-Smith, what was she doing talking to Atkins? Had she given that reptile
-any clue? Could he--but it was his opportunity to rescue Keatcham, not
-to murder him--what a confounded maze!
-
-And what business had he, Rupert Winter, who had supposed himself to
-be an honorable man, who had sworn to support the Constitution and the
-laws of the United States, what business had _he_ to help law-breakers
-and murderers escape the just punishment of their deeds? He almost
-ground his teeth. Oh, well, there was one way out, and that was to
-resign his commission. He would do it this very night, he resolved;
-and he swore miserably at himself, at his venerable aunt who must be
-protected at such a sacrifice, at Atkins, at the feebly moaning wretch
-whom he had not ceased all this while to ply carefully with drops of
-brandy. “You everlasting man-eater, if you dare to die, I’ll _kill_
-you!” he snorted.
-
-Thereupon he went at the puzzle again. Before any answer could come to
-the telephone calls, a low, mournful, inhuman cry penetrated the thick
-walls. It was repeated thrice; on the third call, Tracy ran quickly
-through the _patio_ to a side door, barred and locked like all the
-entrances, released and swung it open and let in Kito. A few murmured
-words passed between them. The Jap uttered a startled exclamation. “But
-how can it to be? How? no one can get in! And who shall stab him? For
-_why_?”
-
-He examined the wounded man, after a gravely courteous salute to
-Winter; and frowned and sighed. “What did it?” said he; “did who
-stabbed, take it ’way, he must give _stlong_ pull!”
-
-“Whoever did it,” said the colonel, “must have put a knee on the man’s
-back and pulled a strong pull, as you say.” In speaking the words he
-felt a shiver, for he seemed to see that red smear above Mercer’s knee.
-
-He felt the shiver again when Mercer returned and he glanced at him;
-there was not a stain on his shining white cuffs; he had changed them;
-he had also changed his suit of clothes and his shoes. His eyes met the
-colonel’s; and Winter fancied there was a glint of defiance in them; he
-made no comment, for no doubt a plausible excuse for the fresh clothes
-was ready. Well, he (Winter) wouldn’t ask it. Poor devil! he had had
-provocation.
-
-For the next half-hour they were all busy with Keatcham.
-
-“He is better,” pronounced the Jap; “he will not live, maybe, but he
-will talk, he can say who hult him.”
-
-“If he can only do that!” cried Mercer. “It is _infernal_ to think any
-one can get in here and do such a thing!”
-
-“Rotten,” Tracy moaned.
-
-The colonel said nothing.
-
-They were all still working over Keatcham when a bell pealed. Tracy
-started; but Mercer looked a shade relieved. “They’ve come,” said he.
-
-“_They?_” repeated the colonel. He scrambled to his feet and gasped.
-
-Miss Smith was coming down the colonnade, but not Miss Smith alone.
-Aunt Rebecca walked beside her, serene, erect and bearing a small
-hand-bag. Miss Smith carried a larger bag; and Tracy had possessed
-himself of a dress-suit case.
-
-“Certainly, Bertie,” remarked his aunt in her softest tone, “I came
-with Janet. My generation believed in _les convenances_.”
-
-All the colonel could articulate was a feeble, “And Archie? and
-Millicent?”
-
-“Haley is staying in your room with Archie. Millicent had retired;
-if she asks for us in the morning we shall not be up. She has an
-appointment with Janet, but it isn’t until half-past eleven. Randall
-has her instructions.”
-
-“But--but--how did you get here?”
-
-Aunt Rebecca drew herself up. “I trust now, Bertie, you will admit
-that I am as fit as any of you to rough it. If there is one mode of
-transit I abominate, it is those loathsome, unsanitary, uncivil, joggly
-street-cars; we came as far as the corner in the _street-cars_, then we
-walked. Did we want to give the number to a cab-man, do you suppose?
-Bertie, have you such a thing as a match about you? I think Janet wants
-to heat a teaspoonful of water for a strychnine hypodermic.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-FROM MRS. MELVILLE’S POINT OF VIEW
-
-
- The Palace Hotel,
- San Francisco, March 24, 1906.
-
-My dear Husband:
-
-Although I sent you a postal yesterday, I am writing again to-day to
-try to keep you in touch with our _extraordinary series_ of events.
-Nothing has been heard from Archie except the letter--_if he wrote
-it_--which tells nothing except that his kidnappers use the same kind
-of writing paper as Miss Janet Smith. I grow more suspicious of her all
-the time. You ask (but of course you wrote before the recent mysterious
-and tragical occurrences) you ask do I like Miss Smith any better,
-now that I am thrown with her so closely. No, Melville, _I_ have not
-the _fatal credulity_ of the Winters! I distrust her _more_. She has,
-I admit, an engaging personality; there is a superficial amiability
-that would be dangerous to one not on her guard. But I am never off my
-guard with her. I’m sorry to say, however, that your brother seems
-deceived by her plausible ways. And, of course, our poor aunt is still
-her blind dupe. Aunt Rebecca has failed a good deal this last year;
-she is quite irritable with me, sometimes; and I suppose it is the
-insensibility of age, but she does not appear to realize the full
-horror of this kidnapping. Miss Smith actually seems to suffer more;
-she looks pale and haggard and has no appetite. I do not think it _all
-pretense_, either; I dare say much of it is _remorse_! The situation is
-dreadful. Sometimes I think Aunt Rebecca will not yield to the demands
-of these wretches who have our poor boy, and that he will be mutilated
-or murdered; sometimes I think that they have murdered him already and
-are writing forged letters to throw us off the track. You can imagine
-how my nerves are shaken! I have seen hardly anything of the city; and
-of course have not gone into society at all. Indeed, I have met only
-one pleasant person; that was the secretary of the great financier, Mr.
-Edwin Keatcham, who was here, next to us. The secretary is a pleasing
-person quite _comme il faut_ in appearance. I met him here in the court
-where he nearly knocked me over; and he apologized profusely--and
-really very nicely, using my name. That surprised me, but he explained
-that they had been on the train with us. Then I remembered him. His
-name is Horatio Atkins; and he is very polite. He is on a two weeks’
-vacation and came here to see Mr. Keatcham, not knowing he was gone. He
-was really most agreeable and so sympathetic about poor dear Archie. He
-agreed with me that such a nervous temperament as Archie’s suffers much
-more from unkindness. I could see, in spite of his assumed hopefulness,
-that he shared my fears. He has met quite a number of our friends. He
-may (through Mr. Keatcham) be a _most valuable_ acquaintance. Didn’t
-you tell me, once, that Keatcham was the leading benefactor of the
-university?
-
-He (Mr. Atkins) got his vacation on account of his health; and he is
-going to Southern California. I don’t wonder. I have never suffered
-more than in this land of sunshine! It is not so much the cold of
-the air as the humidity! Do pray be cautious about changing to your
-summer underwear. _Don’t do it!_ I nearly perished, in the bleak wind
-yesterday, when I tried to visit a few shops. Be sure and take the
-cough medicine _on the second shelf of our bath-room medicine closet_;
-don’t mistake _rheumatism liniment_ for it; they are both on the same
-shelf; you would better sort them out. You are _so_ absent-minded,
-Melville, I haven’t a peaceful day when I’m away from you; and do for
-Heaven’s sake try to bow to Mrs. Farrell and call her by her right
-name! You certainly have been to the president’s house often enough
-to know his wife on the street; and I don’t think that it was a good
-excuse which you gave to Professor Dale for calling “Good morning,
-Katy!” to Mrs. Dale (who was born a Schuyler and is _most_ punctilious)
-_that you mistook her for our cook_!
-
-I miss you very much. Give my love to all our friends and be sure to
-wear your galoshes (your _rubbers_, you know) when the campus is wet,
-whether it is raining or not.
-
- Your aff. wife,
- M. WINTER.
-
-
-THE SAME TO THE SAME
-
- The Palace Hotel, March 25, ten P. M.
-
-My dear Husband:
-
-What do you think has happened? I am almost too excited to write.
-_Archie is back!_ Yes, back safe and sound, and absolutely
-indifferent, to all appearances, to all our indescribable sufferings
-on his account! He walked into the parlor about six or a little after,
-grinning like an ape, as if to disappear from the face of the earth and
-come back to it were quite the usual thing. And when we questioned him,
-he professed to be on his word not to tell anything. And Bertie upheld
-him in this ridiculous position! However, I was told by the detective
-whom Bertie employed, rather a decent, vulgar, little man, that they
-(Bertie and he) had cornered the kidnappers and “called their bluff,”
-as he expressed it; but I’m inclined to think they got their ransom
-from our unfortunate, victimized aunt who is too proud to admit it, and
-that they probably managed it through Miss S--. I know they called up
-the room to know if the boy was back; and I puzzled them well, I fancy,
-by saying he _was_. I may have saved our poor aunt some money by that;
-but I can’t tell, of course. Melville, I am almost _sure_ that Miss J.
-S-- is at the bottom of it, whatever the mystery is. I am almost sure
-that, not content with blackmailing and plundering auntie, Miss S-- is
-now _making a dead set_ at poor, blind, simple-hearted Bertie! I have
-reasons which I haven’t time to enumerate. Bertie will hardly bear a
-word of criticism of her patiently; in fact, I have ceased to criticize
-her to him or to Aunt Rebecca--ah, it is a lonely, lonely lot to be
-clear-sighted; but _noblesse oblige_. But often during the last few
-days I have thought that Cassandra wasn’t enough pitied.
-
- Your aff. wife,
- M.
-
-
-THE SAME TO THE SAME
-
- Casa Fuerte, San Francisco, Cal.,
- Wednesday.
-
-Dear Husband:
-
-This heading may surprise you. But we are making a visit to Mr. Anthony
-Arnold (_the_ Arnold’s son) in his beautiful house in the suburbs of
-the city. It was far more convenient for me at the Palace where I
-found Mrs. Wigglesworth most attentive and congenial and found some
-_great bargains_; but you know I can not be false to my _Trust_. To
-watch Aunt Rebecca Winter (without seeming to watch, of course, for
-the aged always resent the care which they need) is my chief object in
-this trip; therefore when Mr. Arnold (whose father she knows, but the
-old gentleman is traveling in Europe with his married daughter and her
-family) when the young Arnold urged us all to come and spend a couple
-of weeks with him, I could not very well refuse. Though a stranger
-to me, he is not to Auntie or Bertie. The house is his own, left him
-by his mother, who died not very long ago. At first, I remained at
-the Palace with Bertie and Archie; Bertie seemed so disturbed at the
-idea of my going and Aunt Rebecca was very liberal, insisting that I
-was just as much her guest as before, it was only she who was running
-away; and the end of it was (she has such a compelling personality,
-you know) that she went with Randall and J. S. to Casa Fuerte (Strong
-House--and you would call it well-named could you see it; it is a
-massive structure!) while we others remained until Sunday. On account
-of what I have hinted in regard to the designs of a certain lady I was
-not sorry to have Bertie under another roof. He has a fortune of his
-own, you know, and a reputation as well. Wealth and position at one
-blow certainly would appeal to her, an obscure dependent probably of no
-family (it is not a romantic name), and Bertie is very well-bred and
-rather handsome with his black eyebrows and gray hair and aquiline
-nose. I have been very, very worried, but I feel relieved as to
-that. Melville, _she is flying at higher game_! In this house is a
-multimillionaire, in fact the fourth richest man in the United States,
-Edwin S. Keatcham. He is ill--probably with appendicitis which seems to
-be the common lot. I asked the doctor--of course, very delicately--and
-he said, “Well, not exactly, but--” and smiled very confidentially; and
-begged me not to mention Mr. Keatcham’s illness or even that he was
-in the house. “You know,” he said, “that when these great financiers
-sneeze, the stock-market shakes; so absolute secrecy, please, my dear
-madam.” Don’t mention it to a soul, will you? Of course I haven’t seen
-the invalid; but I’ve seen his valet, who is very English; and I have
-seen his nurse. Who do you suppose she is? Janet Smith! Yes; you know
-she has been a trained nurse. Was there ever a more artful creature!
-But Mr. K. is none of my affairs; he will have to save himself or be
-lost. Once she is his wife we are safe from that designing woman. I am
-quite willing to admit his danger and her fascination. Now, Melville,
-for once admit that I can be just to a woman whom I dislike.
-
-This house is sumptuous; I’ve a lovely bath-room and a beautiful huge
-closet with a window. It must have cost a mint of money. I have been
-told that Arnold _père_ made a present of it to his wife; he let
-the architect and her draw all the plans of it, but he insisted on
-attending to the construction himself; he said he was not going to
-have any contract work or “scamping,” such as I am reliably informed
-has been common in these towering new buildings in San Francisco; he
-picked out all the materials himself and inspected the inspector. It
-has what they call “reinforced concrete” and all the beams, etc., are
-steel and the lower story is enormously thick as to walls, in the
-genuine Mission style. He said he built for earthquakes. The house
-is all in the Spanish _hidalgo_ fashion. I wish you could see the
-bas-reliefs and the carved furniture with cane seats of the seventeenth
-century, _all genuine_; and the stamped leather and the iron grille
-work--_rejas_ they call it--all copied from famous Spanish models from
-Toledo; you know the ancient Spaniards were renowned for their _rejas_.
-The pictures are fine--all Spanish; I don’t know half the names of the
-artists, but they are all old and imposing and some of them wonderfully
-preserved. The electric lights are all in the shape of lanterns.
-The _patio_, as they call the court around which the house is built,
-reminded me of the court in Mrs. Gardiner’s palace in Boston, only
-it was not so crowded with _objets_ and the pillars are much thicker
-and the tropical plants and vines more luxuriant--on account of the
-climate, I suppose. It is all certainly very beautiful.
-
-There is a great arched gateway for carriages--which reminds me, do be
-sure to send the horses into the country to rest, one at a time; and
-have Erastus clean the stable properly while they are gone. You can
-keep one horse for golf; but don’t use the brougham ever; and why not
-send the surrey to be done over while I am gone? Is the piazza painted
-yet? How does the new cook do? Insist upon her cooking you nourishing
-food. You might have the Bridge Club of an evening--there are only the
-four of you--and she might, with Emily’s help, get you a nice repast of
-lobster à la Newburg, sandwiches and chicken salad; but be sure _you_
-don’t touch the lobster! You know what happened the last time; and I
-shan’t be there to put on mustard-plasters and give you Hunyadi water.
-If Erastus needs any more chamois skins Emily knows where they are,
-but admonish him to be careful with them; I never saw mortal man go
-through chamois skins the way he can; sometimes I think he gives them
-to the horses to eat!
-
- Good-by,
- Your aff. wife,
- M.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-“THE LIGHT THAT NEVER WAS”
-
-
-The changes which Mrs. Melville had accepted so philosophically,
-the metamorphosis of the tragic and lonely house of mystery into
-a luxurious country villa, the flinging open of the shutters, the
-marshaling of servants, the turning, one may say, of the lime-light on
-a rich man’s ordinary life--all this had occurred as swiftly and with
-as little warning as a scene shifts on the stage.
-
-Mrs. Rebecca Winter may have the credit for this _bouleversement_ of
-plans. By an astonishingly early hour, the next morning, she was awake
-and down-stairs, where Kito and Tracy were making coffee, toasting
-bread and admiring the oatmeal which had cooked, while they slept, in
-the Fireless Stove. Tracy had planned a surprise of brown bread, but
-through no fault of the Fireless, owing solely to his omitting what he
-called “the pick-me-up,” commonly known as soda--an accident, as he
-truly said, which might happen to any lady--the bread was “rather too
-adhesive.” The breakfast, notwithstanding, was a cheerful one, because
-Miss Smith reported the patient a shade better. She looked smiling,
-although rather heavy-eyed. Mercer and the colonel had taken turns
-sitting in the adjoining room to bring her ice or hot water or be of
-service outside.
-
-The colonel had suggested calling a doctor, but Aunt Rebecca had
-demurred: “Janet can do everything; it is just a question of his heart;
-and she has digitalis and nitroglycerin and strychnine, the whole
-outfit of whips. She has dressed the wound with antiseptics. To-morrow
-will be soon enough for the medical talent.” It was she, however,
-who, as soon as breakfast was over, took first Mercer and Tracy, then
-the colonel apart, and proposed calling up Keatcham’s confidential
-associates on the long-distance telephone. “Strike, but hear me,
-nephew,” she said languidly, smiling at his bewilderment. “Our only
-chance now is to exhaust trumps. Yesterday the game was won. Keatcham
-had surrendered, he had told his partners in the deal to make no fight
-on Tracy’s election; they could get what they wanted without the
-Midland; he advised them to cover their shorts and get ready for a bull
-market--”
-
-“How did he do all that when he had lost his private code book?”
-
-“How would _you_ do it? You would use the long distance telephone.
-We caught them at Seattle, where his men had gone for the meeting. I
-don’t understand why they needed me to suggest that. There the poor
-man was, as your Harvard stove agent calls it, rubbering about the
-library, trying to find _The Fortunes of Nigel_ in the edition Darley
-had illustrated; of course, it wasn’t there. He had lost it just before
-he came to the Palace, he thought. It seems his old cipher needs a
-particular book, that kind. No doubt in my mind that your theory is
-right and that Atkins stole it and perhaps thought he stole the key,
-but didn’t get it. He took a memorandum of ciphers which looked like
-a key. There Keatcham was, with millions hanging on his wires and his
-modern substitute for the medieval signet-ring that would enforce the
-message quite lost. What to do? Why, there was nothing to do but get
-another cipher! They made up a temporary one, right in that library,
-yesterday afternoon.”
-
-“But how could Mercer be sure Keatcham would not play a trick on him?
-Did he hear the conversation?”
-
-“Certainly not. He took Keatcham’s word. Whatever his faults, Keatcham
-has always kept his word. Mercer was sure he would keep it. He went out
-of the room. He was in the library when Keatcham was stabbed.”
-
-The colonel drew a long, difficult breath. “Then you don’t believe
-Mercer did it?”
-
-“I’m sure he didn’t. He didn’t hurt him. Why should he kill him after
-he had surrendered? He had nothing to gain and considerable to risk, if
-not to lose. We want that bull market.”
-
-“But who did then? Atkins? But he is trying to rescue him.”
-
-“Is he? How do we know? The rescue was only our supposition. I’m only
-certain none of our crowd did it.”
-
-“Kito?”
-
-“No, Kito keeps absolutely within his orders; he knew how things stood
-when he went away. Mercer saw him go. He couldn’t get in, either; he
-had to signal to be let in. They were as careful as that. Now, assuming
-they all are innocent, isn’t it the best plan to telephone to Seattle
-to Keatcham’s next friend there?”
-
-“He hasn’t any family, has he? His wife died and there were no
-children, I think.”
-
-“No, and if he ever had any brothers or sisters they died when
-they were little; his business associates are the only people Cary
-knows about. He is anxious to have word sent at once, because there
-are important things to do in Keatcham’s own interest; he came
-to California and he has employed Cary in a big Portland cement
-investment; Cary has been working all the time on it for him--I beg
-your pardon--” for the colonel had raised his hand with a little gasp.
-
-“Do you mean,” said he, “that Mercer has been acting as Keatcham’s
-agent, working in _his interest_ all the time he was holding him a
-prisoner and ready to kill him rather than let him go?”
-
-“Why not? Cary is a man of honor. This cement deal is a perfectly
-fair one which will give a fair price to the present owners and make
-a great business proposition. There are other schemes, too, very
-large ones, which need the man at the wheel. Now, I have talked with
-Cary and Endicott Tracy and my plan is to call up Warnebold, his next
-friend, who knows Mercer has been employed by Keatcham and knows his
-voice and knows he is a trusty man (for Mercer has done some inquiries
-for him and saved him once from buying a water-logged steel plant) to
-call _him_ up and--tell him the truth. We can say Mr. Keatcham was
-mysteriously stabbed; we can ask what is best to do. By that time we
-can report that we have the best medical assistance--young Arnold will
-get his family physician, who can be trusted. Warnebold will instruct
-Mercer, I reckon, to keep the fact of the assault a secret, not even
-mention that Mr. Keatcham is ill; and very likely he or some one else
-will come straight on here. Meanwhile, young Arnold can open the house,
-hire some servants who won’t talk--I can get them for him; we all say
-nothing of the magnate’s presence. And the bull market will come all
-right.”
-
-After a little reflection the colonel agreed that the bold course would
-be the safest. Thus it came about, with amazing rapidity, that the
-haunted house was opened; that sleek, smiling Chinamen whisked brooms
-and cleaning cloths at open windows; and Haley and Kito frankly told
-any curious inquirers who hailed them over the lawn and the flower-beds
-that young Mr. Arnold was coming home and going to have a house-party
-of friends. The servants had been carefully selected by Mrs. Winter’s
-powerful Chinese friend; they had no dread of white spooks, however
-they might cringe before yellow ones. Mrs. Winter and Randall left
-their hotel, after all the appropriate ceremonies, amid the lavish bows
-and smiles of liberally paid bell-boys and porters. They gave out that
-they were to visit friends; and the colonel, who remained, was to take
-charge of their mail; hence, with no appearance of secrecy, the trail
-took to water and was lost, since the motor-car which carried them was
-supplied by Birdsall and driven by a safe man of his own.
-
-Regarding the detective, Rupert Winter had had what he called “a stiff
-think;” he could not afford even the remote risk of his going with the
-picturesque assortment of information which he had obtained about Casa
-Fuerte and Mercer, into Atkins’ employ; therefore he hired him, still,
-himself. He made a partial but absolutely truthful statement of the
-case; he said frankly: “Birdsall, I’m not going to treat you fair, for
-I’m not going to tell you all I know, because--well, for one thing, I
-don’t feel sure how much I do know myself. But all I’m going to ask of
-you is to watch the house, day and night, without seeming to watch it.
-You will oblige Mr. Keatcham as well as me. There is a big game going
-on, but it isn’t what you thought. Mr. Keatcham’s best helpers are
-right in that house. Mercer and I and young Fireless and Arnold are
-doing our best to guard him, not hurt him. Now, there is big money for
-you if you will watch out for us.”
-
-Birdsall reflected a moment before he answered, but he did answer,
-screwing up his face: “I don’t like these jobs in the dark; but I like
-you, Colonel, and it’s a go.”
-
-Keatcham’s valet was next summoned from his vacation and became, in
-Tracy’s phrase, “a dandy sub-nurse.”
-
-The Tracys’ family physician came twice a day. He was known to be
-visiting one of the guests who had fallen ill. Mercer sent three
-or four telegrams a day to Seattle and to New York, to Keatcham’s
-associates. Several times he held a conversation of importance over
-the telephone with the man who acted as distributer of intelligence.
-Warnebold, himself, came on to San Francisco from Seattle, and was
-received with every courtesy. He questioned Kito, questioned Mercer,
-questioned the colonel. Tracy had effaced himself and was in Pasadena
-for a day or two.
-
-The colonel was the star witness (at least this was young Arnold’s
-verdict). His narrative was to the effect that he had gone out to see
-Mercer, who was a family connection; no, he was not alone, he had a
-young friend with him; confidentially, he would admit that the friend
-was Mr. Tracy’s son; and, while he could not be sure, he had reason
-to suspect that he, “young Tracy,” had been conducting some delicate
-negotiations with Mr. Keatcham. At this point the interlocutor nodded
-slightly; he was making the deductions expected and explaining to
-himself Keatcham’s astonishing communication over the telephone. So,
-he was surmising shrewdly, _that_ was the clue; the old man had been
-making some sort of a deal with Tracy through the son; well, they were
-protected, thanks to Keatcham’s orders. Likely as not they never would
-know all the reasons for this side-stepping.
-
-“I understand, then,” he said, as one who holds a clue but has no
-notion of letting it slip out of his own fingers, “you and young Tracy
-got here and you found Mr. Keatcham? How did you get in? Did Mr. Mercer
-let you in? How did it happen he didn’t discover Mr. Keatcham instead
-of you, or did you come in on the side?”
-
-Mrs. Winter who was in the room had a diversion ready, but it was not
-needed; the colonel answered unhesitatingly, with a frank smile: “No,
-we came in ourselves; young Tracy had a key.”
-
-“Oh, he _had_, had he?” returned Warnebold with a shrug of the
-shoulders.
-
-“He is a great friend of young Arnold’s; they were at Harvard together,
-belonged to the same societies.”
-
-“Yes, I understand; well--”
-
-The rest of the interview was clear sailing. Mrs. Winter’s presence was
-explained in her very own words. “Of course I was put out a good deal
-at first,” added the colonel, “by the women getting mixed up in it; but
-Miss Smith undoubtedly saved Mr. Keatcham’s life. I never saw any one
-who seemed to think of so many things to do. Half a dozen times, that
-first night, he seemed to be fading away; but every time she brought
-him back. I was anxious to have a doctor called in; but Mercer seemed
-opposed to making a stir--”
-
-“He knew his business thoroughly,” interjected Keatcham’s confidant,
-“he undoubtedly had his instructions to keep Keatcham’s presence here a
-secret.”
-
-“He _had_,” said Mrs. Winter; “besides, Miss Smith is his sister-in-law
-and he knew that she could be trusted to do everything possible. And,
-really, it didn’t look as if anything could help him. I hardly believed
-that he could live an hour when I saw him.”
-
-“Nor I,” the colonel corroborated.
-
-Warnebold, plainly impressed by Mrs. Winter’s grand air, assured
-them both that he felt that everything that could be done had been
-done; Miss Smith was quite wonderful; and he would admit (of course,
-confidentially) that Mr. Keatcham did have a heart trouble; Mr. Mercer
-had recalled one or two fainting fits; there was some congestion;
-and the doctor found a sad absence of reaction; he believed that
-there had been a--er--syncope of some sort before the stabbing; Mr.
-Keatcham himself, although he was still too weak to talk much, had no
-recollection of anything except a very great faintness. Mr. Mercer’s
-theory seemed to cover the ground.
-
-“Except as to who did the stabbing,” said the colonel.
-
-“Has Mr. Keatcham any bitter enemies?” asked Aunt Rebecca thoughtfully.
-
-“What man who has made a great fortune hasn’t?” demanded Warnebold with
-a saturnine wrinkle of the lips. “But our enemies don’t stab or shoot
-us, nowadays.”
-
-“They do out West,” said the colonel genially; “we’re crude.”
-
-“Are you in earnest?”
-
-“Entirely. I know a man, a mine superintendent, who got into a row with
-his miners because he discharged a foreman, one of the union lights,
-for stealing ore. In consequence he got a big strike on his hands,
-found a dynamite bomb under his front piazza, and was shot at twice.
-The second time he was too quick for them; he shot back and killed one
-of them. He thought it was time to put a stop to so much excitement, so
-he sent for the second assassin--”
-
-“And had him arrested?”
-
-“Oh, dear, no; he wasn’t in Massachusetts; I told you he wanted the
-thing stopped. No, he sent for him and told him that he had no special
-ill feeling toward _him_, but that the next time anything of the kind
-happened he had made arrangements to have not him, or any other thug
-who was doing the work, but the two men who were at the bottom of the
-whole business, killed within twenty-four hours. They took the hint and
-kind feeling now prevails.”
-
-Warnebold grunted; he declared it to be a beastly creepy situation; he
-said he never wanted to sit down without a wall against his back; and
-he intimated that the president of the United States was to blame for
-more than he realized. “I hope you have some one watching the house,”
-he fumed, “and that he--well, he doesn’t belong to the police force.”
-
-“No, he’s an honest mercenary,” said the colonel; “I’ll introduce him
-to you.”
-
-“And you haven’t found any method of entering the house?” fumed the
-financier.
-
-“No,” said Aunt Rebecca.
-
-“Yes,” said the colonel.
-
-He laughed as they both whirled round on him.
-
-“You speak first, my dear aunt,” he proposed politely; “I’ll explain
-later.”
-
-Mrs. Winter said that a most careful examination had been made not only
-by Mercer and the colonel together, but also by young Arnold. They
-found everything absolutely secure; all the windows were bolted and all
-the cellar gratings firm and impossible to open.
-
-“Now, you?” said Warnebold.
-
-“I only found out to-day,” apologized the colonel, “or I should have
-spoken of it. I got to thinking; and it occurred to me that in a house
-built, as I understood from Arnold, by a very original architect,
-there might be some queer features, such as secret passages. With that
-in my mind, I induced the young gentleman to hunt up the architect,
-as he lives in San Francisco. He not only showed us some very pretty
-secret passages about the house, but one that led into it. Shall I show
-it to you?”
-
-On their instantly expressed desire to see the hidden way, the colonel
-led them to the _patio_. He walked to the engaged column which once
-before had interested him; he pressed a concealed spring under the
-boldly carved eight-pointed flower; instantly, the entire side of the
-columns swung as a door might swing. As they peered into the dusky
-space below, the colonel, who had put down his arm, pressed an electric
-button and the white light flooded the shaft, revealing an ingenious
-ladder of cleats fitted into steel uprights.
-
-“Here,” said the colonel, “is a secret way from the _patio_ to the
-cellar. The cellar extends a little beyond the _patio_ and there is a
-way down from the yard to the cellar--I can quickly show you, if you
-like.”
-
-“No, thank you,” replied Warnebold, who was a man of full habit and
-older than the colonel, “I will take _your_ personal experience
-instead.”
-
-“Then if you will go out into the yard with me I will show you where
-a charming pergola ends in a vine-wreathed sun-dial of stone that you
-may tug at and not move; but press your foot on a certain stone, the
-whole dial swings round on a concealed turn-table such as they have in
-garages, you know. You will have no difficulty in finding the right
-stone, because an inscription runs round the dial: _Más vale tarde que
-nunca_; and the stone is directly opposite _nunca_. When you have moved
-away your dial you will see a gently inclining tunnel, high enough for
-a man to walk in without stooping, wide enough for two, and much better
-ventilated than the New York subway. That tunnel leads to a secret door
-opening directly into the cellar, so skilfully contrived that it looks
-like an air-shaft. This door is only a few feet from the shaft to the
-_patio_. We have found a bolt and put it on this entrance, but there
-wasn’t any before; nor did any one in the house know of the secret
-passage.”
-
-The colonel went on to say that on questioning the architect he averred
-that he had never mentioned the secret passage to his knowledge--except
-that very recently, only a few days before, at a dinner, he had barely
-alluded to it; and one of the gentlemen present, an Easterner, had
-asked him where he got a man to make such a contrivance--it must take
-skill. He had mentioned the name of the workman. The colonel had hunted
-up the artisan mentioned, only to find that he had left town to take a
-job somewhere; no one seemed to know where. Of course he had inquired
-of everybody. The name of the Easterner was Atkins.
-
-“Atkins,” cried Warnebold, at this turn of the narrative, “Keatcham’s
-secretary? Why, he’s the boldest and slyest scoundrel in the United
-States! He started a leak in Keatcham’s office that made him a couple
-of hundred thousands and lost us a million, and might have lost us more
-if Mercer hadn’t got on to him. Keatcham wouldn’t believe he had been
-done to the extent he was at first--you know the old man hates to own
-to any one’s getting the better of him; it’s the one streak of vanity
-I’ve ever been able to discover in him. Otherwise, he’s cold and keen
-as a razor on a frosty morning. He was convinced enough, however, to
-discharge Atkins; the next news I had, he was trying to send him to the
-pen. Gave us instructions how to get the evidence. No allusion to his
-past confidence in the fellow, simply the orders--as if we knew all
-the preliminaries. Wonderful man, Mr. Keatcham, Colonel Winter.”
-
-“Very,” agreed the colonel dryly.
-
-By this time the warrior and the man of finance were on easy terms.
-Warnebold remained three days. Before he left the patient had been
-pronounced out of danger and had revived enough to give some succinct
-business directions. Mercer had been sent to look out for the cement
-deal; and Keatcham appeared a little relieved and brighter when he was
-told that Mercer was on his way.
-
-“He will put it through if it can be put,” he had said weakly to
-Warnebold; “he’s moderately smart and perfectly honest.” Such words,
-Warnebold explained later to Mrs. Winter, coming from Keatcham might
-be regarded almost as extravagant commendation. “Your cousin’s fortune
-is made,” he pronounced solemnly; “he can get Atkins’ place, I make no
-doubt.”
-
-Mrs. Winter thought that Mercer was a very valuable man.
-
-“Only always so melancholy; I’ve been afraid he had something serious
-the matter with his digestion. It’s these abominable quick lunches that
-are ruining the health of all our steady young men. I don’t know but
-they are almost as bad as chorus girls and late suppers. Well, Mrs.
-Winter, I’m afraid we shall not have another chance at bridge until
-I see you in New York. But, anyhow, we stung the colonel once--and
-with Miss Smith playing her greatest game, too. Pity she can’t induce
-Mr. Keatcham to play; but he never touches a card, hardly ever takes
-anything to drink, doesn’t like smoking especially, takes a cigarette
-once in a while only, never plays the races or bets on the run of the
-vessel--positively such icy virtue gives an ordinary sinner the cramps!
-Very great man though, Mrs. Winter, and a man we are all proud to
-follow; he may be overbearing; and he doesn’t praise you too much, but
-somehow you always have the consciousness that he sees every bit of
-good work you do and is marking it up in your favor; and you won’t be
-the loser. There is no question he has a hold on his associates; but he
-certainly is not what I call a genial man.”
-
-Only on the day of his departure did Warnebold, in young Arnold’s
-language, “loosen up” enough to tell Arnold and the colonel a vital
-incident. The night of the attack a telegram was sent to Warnebold in
-Keatcham’s confidential cipher, directing the campaign against Tracy
-to be pushed hard, ordering the dumping of some big blocks of stock
-on the market and arranging for their dummy purchasers. The naming of
-Atkins as the man in charge was plausible enough, presuming there had
-been no knowledge of the break in his relations with Keatcham. The
-message was couched in Keatcham’s characteristic crisp phraseology.
-But for the receiver’s knowledge of the break and but for the previous
-long-distance conversation, it had reached its mark. The associates of
-Keatcham were puzzled. The hands were the hands of Esau but the voice
-was the voice of Jacob. There had been a hurried consultation into
-which the second long-distance telephone from San Francisco broke like
-a thunderclap. It decided the hearers to keep to their instructions and
-disregard the cipher despatch.
-
-“And didn’t you send any answer?” the colonel asked.
-
-“Oh, certainly; we had an address given, The Palace Hotel, Mr. John G.
-Makers. We wired Mr. Makers--in cipher. ‘Despatch received. Will attend
-to it,’ I signed. And I wired to the manager of the hotel to notice the
-man who took the despatch. It wasn’t a man, it was a lady.”
-
-“A lady?”
-
-“Yes, she had an order for Mr. Makers’ telegrams. Mr. Makers gave the
-order. Mr. Makers himself only stopped one night and went away in
-the morning and nobody seemed to remember him particularly; he was a
-nondescript sort of party.”
-
-“But the lady?” The colonel’s mouth felt dry.
-
-“The lady? She was tall, fine figure, well dressed, dark hair, the
-telegraph girl thought, but she didn’t pay any special attention. She
-had a very pleasant, musical voice.”
-
-“That doesn’t seem to be very definite,” remarked the colonel with a
-crooked smile.
-
-It didn’t look like a clue to Warnebold, either; but he was convinced
-of one thing, namely, that it would pay to watch the ex-secretary.
-
-“And,” chuckled he, “there’s a cheerful side to the affair. Atkins is
-loaded to the guards with short contracts; and the Midland is booming;
-if the rise continues, he can’t cover without losing about all he
-has. By the way, we got another wire later in the day demanding what
-we were about, what it all meant that we hadn’t obeyed instructions.
-Same address for answer. This time we thought we had laid a nice trap.
-But you can’t reckon on a hotel; somehow, before we got warning, Mr.
-Makers had telephoned for his despatch and got it.”
-
-“Where did he telephone from?”
-
-“From his room in the Palace.”
-
-“I thought he had given up his room?”
-
-“He had. But--somebody telephoned to the telegraph office from
-somewhere in the hotel and got Mr. Makers’ wire. You can get pretty
-much everything except a moderate bill out of a hotel.”
-
-“I see,” said the colonel and immediately in his heart compared
-himself to the immortal “blind man;” for his wits appeared to him to
-be tramping round futilely in a maze; no nearer the exit than when the
-tramp began.
-
-That night, after Warnebold had departed, leaving most effusive thanks
-and expressions of confidence, Winter was standing at his window
-absently looking at the garden faintly colored by the moonlight, while
-his mind was plying back and forth between half a dozen contradictions.
-
-He went over the night of the attack on Keatcham; he summoned every
-look, every motion of Janet Smith; in one phase of feeling he
-cudgeled himself for a wooden fool who had been absolutely brutal to
-a defenseless woman who trusted him; he hated himself for the way
-he would not see her when she looked toward him; no wonder at last
-she stiffened, and now she absolutely avoided him! But, in a swift
-revulsion against his own softness he was instantly laying on the
-blows as lustily because of his incredible, pig-headed credulity. How
-absolutely simple the thing was! She _cared_ for this scoundrel of an
-Atkins who had first betrayed his employer and then tried to murder
-him. Very likely they had been half engaged down there in Virginia; and
-he had crawled out of his engagement; it would be quite like the cur!
-Later he found that just such a distinguished, charming woman, who had
-family and friends, was what he wanted; it would be easy enough for
-him to warm up his old passion, curse him! Then, he had met her and
-run in a bunch of plausible lies that had convinced her that he had
-been a regular angel in plain clothes; hadn’t done a thing to Cary or
-to her. Atkins was such a smooth devil! Winter could just picture him
-whining to the girl, putting his life in her hands and all that rot;
-and making all kinds of a tool of her--why, the whole hand was on the
-board! So she was ready to throw them all overboard to save Atkins from
-getting his feet wet. That was why she looked so pale and haggard of a
-morning sometimes, in spite of that ready smile of hers; that was why
-her eyes were so wistful; she wasn’t a false woman and she sickened of
-her squalid part. She loved Aunt Rebecca and Archie--all the same, she
-would turn them both down for him; while as to Rupert Winter, late of
-the United States army, a worn-out, lame, elderly idiot who had flung
-away the profession he loved and every chance of a future career in
-order to have his hands free to keep her out of danger--where were
-there words blistering enough for such puppy-dog folly! At this point
-in his jealous imaginings the pain in him goaded him into motion; he
-began furiously pacing the room, although his lame leg, which he had
-been using remorselessly all day, was sending jabs and twists of agony
-through him. But after a little he halted again before the casement
-window.
-
-The wide, darkening view; the great, silent city with its myriad
-lights; the shining mist of the bay; the foot-hills with their
-sheer, straw-colored streaks through the forests and vineyards; the
-illimitable depths of star-sown, violet sky--all these touched his
-fevered mood with a sudden calm. His unrest was quieted, as one whose
-senses are cooled by a running stream.
-
-“You hot-headed Southerner!” he upbraided himself, “don’t get up in the
-air without any real proof!”
-
-Almost in the flitting of the words through his brain he saw her. The
-white gown, which was her constant wear in the sick-room, defined her
-figure clearly against a clump of Japan plum-trees. Their purplish
-red foliage rustled; and an unseen fountain beyond made a delicate
-tinkle of water splashing a marble basin. Her face was hidden; only the
-moonlight gently drew the oval of her cheek. She was standing still,
-except that one foot was groping back and forth as if trying to find
-something. But, as he looked, his face growing tender, she knelt on the
-sod and pulled something out of the ground. This something she seemed
-to dust off with her handkerchief--he could not see the object, but he
-could see the flutter of the handkerchief; and when she rose the white
-linen partly hid the thing in her hand. Only partly, because when she
-passed around the terrace wall the glow from an electric lantern, in an
-arch, fell full upon her and burnished a long, thin blade of steel.
-
-He looked down on her from his unlighted chamber; and suddenly she
-looked up straight at the windows of the room where she thought he was
-sleeping; and smiled a dim, amused, weary, tender smile. Then she sped
-by, erect and light of foot; and the deep shadow of the great gateway
-took her. All he could see was the moonlight on the bluish green lawn;
-and the white electric light on the gleaming rubber-trees and dusty
-palms.
-
-He sat down. He clasped his hands over his knee. He whistled softly a
-little Spanish air. He laughed very gently. “My dear little girl,” said
-he, “I am going to marry you. You may be swindled into helping a dozen
-murderers; but I am going to marry you!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-THE REAL EDWIN KEATCHAM
-
-
-One Sunday after Mrs. Melville Winter and Archie came to Casa
-Fuerte, Mr. Keatcham sent for the colonel. There was nothing
-unusual in such a summons. From the beginning of his illness he had
-shown a curious, inexpressive desire for the soldier’s company.
-He would have him sit in the room, although too weak to talk to
-him, supposing he wished to talk, which was not at all sure. “I
-like-to-see-him-just-sitting-there,” he faltered to his nurse,
-“can’t-he-read-or-play-solitaire-like-the-old-lady?”
-
-Sometimes Winter would be conscious that the feeble creature in the
-bed, with the bluish-white face, was staring at him. Whether the glassy
-eyes beheld his figure or went beyond him to unfinished colossal
-schemes that might change the fate of a continent, or drifted backward
-to the poverty-stricken home, the ferocious toil and the unending
-self-denial of Keatcham’s youth on the Pacific slope, the dim gaze
-gave no clue. All that was apparent was that it was always on Winter,
-as he curled his legs under his chair, wrote or knitted his brow over
-rows of playing-cards.
-
-At the very first, Keatcham’s mind had wandered; he used to shrink
-from imaginary people who were in the room; he would try to talk to
-them, distressing himself painfully, for he was so weak that his nurses
-turned his head on the pillow; he would feebly motion them away.
-In such aberrations he would sometimes appeal, in a changed, thin,
-childish voice, to the obscure, toil-worn pioneer woman who had died
-while he was a lad. “Mother, I _was_ a good boy; I always got up when
-you called me, didn’t I? I helped you iron when the other boys were
-playing--mother, please don’t let that old woman stay and cry here!” Or
-he would plead: “Mother, tell her, say, _you_ tell her I didn’t know
-her son would kill himself--I couldn’t tell--he was a damn coward,
-anyhow--excuse me, mama, I didn’t mean to swear, but they make me so
-awful mad!” There was a girl who came, sometimes, from whose presence
-he shrank; a girl he had never seen; nor, indeed, had he ever known
-in the flesh any of the shapes which haunted him. They had lived; but
-never had his eyes fallen on them. Nevertheless, their presence was
-as real to him as that of the people about him whom he could hear and
-touch and see. It did not take Winter’s imagination long to piece
-out the explanation of these apparitions: they were specters of the
-characters in those dramas of ruthless conquest which Mercer had culled
-out of newspaper “stories” and affidavits and court reports and forced
-upon Keatcham’s attention. Miss Smith helped him to the solution,
-although her own ignorance of Mercer’s method was puzzling. “How did
-he ever know old Mrs. Ferris?” she said. “He called her Ferris and
-he talks about her funny dress--she always did wear a queer little
-basque and full skirt after all the world went into blouses--but how
-did _he_ ever come across her? They had a place on the James that had
-been in the family a hundred years and had to lose it on account of the
-Tidewater; and Nelson Ferris blew his brains out.”
-
-“Don’t you know how?” asked the colonel. “Well, I’ll tell you my guess
-sometime. Who is the girl who seems to make him throw a fit so?”
-
-“I’m not sure; I imagine it is poor Mabel Ray; there were two of them,
-sisters; they made money out of their Tidewater stock and went to New
-York to visit some kin; and they got scared when the stock fell and the
-dividends stopped; and they sold out at a great loss. They never did
-come back; they had persuaded all their kin to invest; and the stopping
-of the dividends made it difficult for some of the poor ones--Mabel
-said she couldn’t face her old aunts. She went on the stage in New
-York. She was very pretty; she wasn’t very strong. Anyway, you can
-imagine the end of the story. I saw her in the park last winter when
-Mrs. Winter was in New York; she turned her face away--poor Mabel!”
-
-Through Janet Smith’s knowledge of her dead sister’s neighbors, Winter
-got a dozen pitiful records of the wreckage of the Tidewater. “Mighty
-interesting reading,” he thought grimly, “but hardly likely to make the
-man responsible for them stuck on himself!” Then he would look at the
-drawn face on the pillow and listen to the babblings of the boy who had
-had no childhood; and the frown would melt off his brow.
-
-He did not always talk to his mother when his mind wandered; several
-times he addressed an invisible presence as “Helen” and “Dear” with an
-accent of tenderness very strange on those inflexible lips. When he
-talked to this phantasm he was never angry or distressed; his turgid
-scowl cleared; the austere lines chiseling his cheeks and brow faded;
-he looked years younger. But for the most part, it was to no unreal
-creature that he turned, but to Colonel Rupert Winter. He would address
-him with punctilious civility, but as one who was under some obligation
-to assist him, saying, for instance, “Colonel Winter, I must beg you
-not to let those persons in the room again. They annoy me. But you
-needn’t let Mercer know that. Please attend to it yourself, and get
-them away. Miss Smith says you will. Explain to them that when I get up
-I will investigate their claims. I’m too sick now!”
-
-Conscious and free from fever, he was barely able to articulate, but
-when delirious fancies possessed him he could talk rapidly, in a good
-voice. Very soon it was clear that he was calmer for the colonel’s
-presence. Hence, the latter got into the habit of sitting in the
-room. He would request imaginary ruined and desperate beings to leave
-Keatcham in peace; he would gravely rise and close the door on their
-departure. He never was surprised nor at a loss; and his dramatic nerve
-never failed. Later, as the visions faded, a moody reserve wrapped the
-sick man. He lay motionless, evidently absorbed by thought. In one way
-he was what doctors call a very good patient. He obeyed all directions;
-he was not restless. But neither was he ever cheerful. Every day he
-asked for his pulse record and his temperature and his respiration.
-After a consultation with the doctor, Miss Smith gave them to him.
-
-“It is against the rules,” grumbled the doctor, “but I suppose each
-patient has to make his own rules.” On the same theory he permitted the
-colonel’s visits.
-
-Therefore, with no surprise, Winter received and obeyed the summons.
-Keatcham greeted him with his usual stiff courtesy.
-
-“The doctor says I can have the--papers--will you pick
-out--the--one--day after I was stabbed.”
-
-Miss Smith indicated a pile on a little table, placed ready at hand. “I
-kept them for him,” she said.
-
-“Read about--the Midland,” commanded the faint, indomitable voice.
-
-“Want the election and the newspaper sentiments?” asked the colonel;
-he gave it all, conscious the while of Janet Smith’s compassionate,
-perplexed, sorrowful eyes.
-
-“Don’t skip!” Keatcham managed to articulate after a pause.
-
-The colonel gave him a keen glance. “Want it straight, without a
-chaser?”
-
-Keatcham closed his eyes and nodded.
-
-The colonel read about the virtually unanimous election of Tracy; the
-astonishment of the outsiders among the supposed anti-Tracy element;
-the composed and impenetrable front of the men closest to Keatcham; the
-reticence and amiability of Tracy himself, in whose mien there could
-be detected no hint either of hostility or of added cordiality toward
-the men who had been expected “to drag his bleeding pride in the dust;”
-finally of the response of the stock-market in a phenomenal rise of
-Midland.
-
-Keatcham listened with his undecipherable mask of attention; there was
-not so much as the flicker of an eyelid or the twitch of a muscle. All
-he said was: “Now, read if there is anything about the endowment of the
-new fellowships in some medical schools for experimental research.”
-
-“Who gives the endowment?”
-
-“Anonymous. In memory of Maria Warren Keatcham and Helen Bradford
-Keatcham. Find anything?”
-
-The colonel found a great deal about it. The paper was full of this
-munificent gift, amounting to many millions of dollars and filling
-(with most carefully and wisely planned details) an almost absolute
-vacuum in the American scheme of education. The dignity and fame of the
-chairs and fellowships endowed were ample to tempt the best ability of
-the profession. The reader grew enthusiastic as he read.
-
-“Why, it’s immense! And we have always needed it!” he exclaimed.
-
-“There are some letters about it, there,”--Keatcham feebly motioned
-to a number of neatly opened, neatly assorted letters on a desk. “The
-doctor said I might have the letters read to me. Miss Smith got him to.
-For fear of exciting you, the doctors usually let you worry your head
-off because you don’t know about things. I’ve got to carry a few things
-through if it kills me. Don’t you see?”
-
-“I see,” said the colonel, “you shall.”
-
-The next time he saw the financier, although only a few days had
-elapsed, he was much stronger; he was able to breathe comfortably, he
-spoke with ease, in his ordinary voice; in fine, he looked his old self
-again, merely thinner and paler. Hardly was the colonel seated before
-he said without preface--Keatcham never made approaches to his subject,
-regarding conversational road-making as waste of brains for a busy man:
-
-“Colonel, Miss Smith hasn’t time to be my nurse and secretary both. I
-won’t have one sent from New York; will you help her out?”
-
-The colonel’s lips twitched; he was thinking that were Miss Smith
-working for Atkins, she couldn’t have a better chance to make a
-killing. “But I’ll bet my life she isn’t,” he added; “she may be trying
-to save his life, but she isn’t playing his game!”
-
-He said aloud: “I will, Mr. Keatcham, if you will let me do it as part
-of the obligation of the situation; and there is no bally rot about
-compensation.”
-
-“Very well,” said Keatcham. He did not hesitate; it was (as the colonel
-had already discovered) the rarest thing in the world for him to
-hesitate; he thought with astonishing rapidity; and he formulated his
-answer while his interlocutor talked; before the speech was over the
-answer was ready. Another trait of his had struck the soldier, namely,
-the laborious correctness of his speech; it was often formal and
-old-fashioned; Aunt Rebecca said that he talked like Daniel Webster’s
-speeches; but it had none of the homely and pungent savor one might
-expect from a man whose boyhood had scrambled through miners’ camps
-into a San Francisco stock office; who had never gone to school in his
-life by daylight; who had been mine superintendent, small speculator
-and small director in California until he became a big speculator and
-big railway controller in New York.
-
-“You might begin on the morning mail,” Keatcham continued. “Let me sort
-them first.” He merely glanced at the inscriptions on the envelopes,
-opening and taking out one which he read rather carelessly, frowning a
-little before he placed it to one side.
-
-A number of the letters concerned the endowments of the experimental
-chairs at the universities. Keatcham’s attention was not lightened by
-any ray of pleasure. Once he said: “That fellow has caught my idea,”
-and once: “That’s right,” but there was no animation in his voice, no
-interest in his pallid face. Stealing a furtive scrutiny of it, now and
-then, Rupert Winter was impressed with its mystical likeness to that of
-Cary Mercer. There was no physical similarity of color or feature; it
-was a likeness of the spirit rather than the flesh. The colonel’s eyes
-flashed.
-
-“I have it!” he exclaimed within, “I have it; they are fanatics, both
-of them; Keatcham’s a fanatic of finance and Mercer is a fanatic of
-another sort; but fanatics they both are, ready to go any length for
-their principles or their ambitions or their revenge! _J’ai trouvé le
-mot d’énigme_, as Aunt Becky would say--I wonder what she’ll say to
-this sudden psychological splurge of mine.”
-
-“The business hour is up,”--it was Miss Smith entering with a bowl on a
-white-covered tray; the sun glinted the lump of ice in the milk and the
-silver spoon was dazzling against the linen--“your biscuit and milk,
-Mr. Keatcham. Didn’t you have it when you were a boy?”
-
-“I did, Miss Janet,”--and Keatcham actually smiled. “I used to think
-crackers and milk the nicest thing in the world.”
-
-“That is because you never tasted corn pone and milk; but you are going
-to.”
-
-“When you make it for me. I’m glad you’re such a good cook. It’s one of
-your ways I like. My mother was a very good cook. She could make better
-dishes out of almost nothing than these mongrel chefs can make with
-the whole world.”
-
-“I reckon she could,” said Miss Smith; she was speaking sincerely.
-
-“When my father didn’t strike pay dirt, my mother would open her bakery
-and make pies for the miners; she could make bread with potato yeast or
-‘salt-emptins’--can you make salt-rising bread?”
-
-“I can--shall I make you some, to-morrow?”
-
-“I’d like it. My mother used to make more money than my father;
-sometimes when we children were low in clothes and dad owed a bigger
-lot of money than usual, we had a laundry at our house as well as a
-bakery. Yet, in spite of all the work, my mother found time to teach
-all of us; and she knew how to teach, too; for she was principal of
-a school when my father married her. She was a New Englander; so was
-he; but they went West. We’re forty-niners. I saw the place where our
-little cloth-and-board shack used to stand. After the big fire, you
-know. It burned us all up; we had saved a good deal and my mother had a
-nice bakery. She worked too hard; it killed her. Work and struggle and
-losing the children.”
-
-“They died?” said Miss Janet.
-
-“Diphtheria. They didn’t know anything about the disease then. We
-all had it; and my little sister and both my brothers died; but I’m
-tough. I lived. My mother fell into what they called a decline. I was
-making a little money then--I was sixteen; but I couldn’t keep her from
-working. Perhaps it made no difference; but it did make a difference
-her not having the--the right kind of food. Nobody knew anything about
-consumption then. I used to go out in the morning and be afraid I’d
-find her dead when I got back. One night I did.” He stopped abruptly,
-crimsoning up to his eyes--“I don’t know why I’m telling you all this.”
-
-“I call that tough,”--as the colonel blurted out the words, he was
-conscious of a sense of repetition. When had he said those very same
-words before, to whom? Of all people in the world, to Cary Mercer.
-“Mighty tough,” murmured he softly.
-
-“Yes,” said Keatcham, “it was.” He did not say anything more. Neither
-did the colonel. Keatcham obediently ate his milk and biscuit; and very
-shortly the colonel took his leave.
-
-The next morning after an uneventful hour of sorting, reading and
-answering letters for Miss Smith to copy on the traveling type-writer,
-Keatcham gave his new secretary a sharp sensation; he ordered in his
-quiet but peremptory fashion: “Now put that trash away; sit down; tell
-me all you know of Cary--real name is Cary Mercer, isn’t it?”
-
-The colonel said it was; he asked him if he wanted everything.
-
-“Everything. Straight. Without a chaser,” snapped Keatcham.
-
-The colonel gave it to him. He began with his own acquaintance; he told
-about Phil Mercer; he did not slur a detail; neither did he underscore
-one; Keatcham got the uncolored facts. He heard them impassively,
-making only one comment: “A great deal of damage would be saved in this
-world if youngsters could be shut up until they had sense enough not
-to fool with firearms.” When Winter came to Mercer’s own exposition of
-his motives and his design if successful in his raid on the kings of
-the market, Keatcham grunted; at the end he breathed a noiseless jet of
-a sigh. “You don’t think Mercer is at all”--he tapped the side of the
-head.
-
-“No more than you are.”
-
-“Or you?”
-
-“Oh, well,” the colonel jested, “we all have a prejudice in favor of
-our own sanity. What I meant was that Mercer is a bit of a fanatic; his
-hard luck has--well, prejudiced him--”
-
-Keatcham’s cold, firm lips straightened into his peculiar smile, which
-was rather of perception than of humor.
-
-One might say of him--Aunt Rebecca Winter did say of him--that he saw
-the incongruous, which makes up for humor, but he never enjoyed it;
-possibly it was only another factor in his contempt of mankind.
-
-“Colonel,” said Keatcham, “do you think Wall Street is a den of
-thieves?”
-
-“I do,” said the colonel promptly. “I should like to take a machine gun
-or two and clean you all out.”
-
-Keatcham did not smile; he blinked his eyes and nodded. “I presume a
-good many people share your opinion of us.”
-
-“Millions,” replied the colonel.
-
-Again Keatcham nodded. “I thought so,” said he. “Of course you are all
-off; Wall Street is as necessary to the commonwealth as the pores to
-your skin; they don’t make the poison in the system any more than the
-pores do; they only let it escape. And I suppose you think that big
-financiers who control the trusts and the railways and--”
-
-“Us,” the colonel struck in, “well?”
-
-“You think we are thieves and liars and murderers and despots?”
-
-“All of that,” said the colonel placidly; “also fools.”
-
-“You certainly don’t mince your words.”
-
-“You don’t want me to. What use would my opinion be in a one-thousandth
-attenuation? You’re no homeopath; and whatever else you may be, you’re
-no coward.”
-
-“Yet, you think I surrendered to Mercer? You think I did it because I
-was afraid he would kill me? I suppose he would have killed me if I
-hadn’t, eh?”
-
-“He can speak for himself about that; he seems--well, an earnest sort
-of man. But I don’t think you gave in because you were afraid, if that
-is what you mean. You are no more afraid than he was! You wanted to
-live, probably; you had big things on hand. The Midland was only a
-trump in the game; you could win the odd trick with something else; you
-let the Midland go.”
-
-“Pretty close,”--Keatcham really smiled--“but there is a good deal
-more of it. I was shut up with the results of my--my work. He did
-it very cleverly. I had nothing to distract me. There were the big
-type-written pages about the foolish people who had lost their money,
-in some cases really through my course, mostly because they got scared
-and let go and were wiped out when, if they had had confidence in me
-and held on, they would be very much better off, now. But they didn’t,
-and they were ruined and they starved and took their boys out of
-college and mortgaged their confounded homes that had been in their
-families ever since Adam; and the old people died of broken hearts
-and the girls went wrong and some of the idiotic quitters killed
-themselves--it was not the kind of crowd you would want shut up with
-you in the dark! I was shut up with them. He had some sort of way of
-switching off the lights from the outside. I never saw a face or heard
-a voice. I would have to sit there in the dark after he thought I had
-read enough to occupy my mind. It--was unpleasant. Perhaps you suppose
-that brought me round to his way of thinking?”
-
-The colonel meditated. “I’ll tell you honestly,” he said after a pause,
-“I was of that opinion, or something of the kind, until I talked your
-case over with my aunt--”
-
-“The old dame is not a fool; what did she say?”
-
-“She said no, he didn’t convert you; but he convinced you how other
-people looked at your methods. You couldn’t get round the fact that a
-majority of your countrymen think your type of financier is worse than
-smallpox, and more contagious.”
-
-“Oh, she put it that way, did she? I wish she would write a prospectus
-for me. Well, you think she was nearer right than you?”
-
-“I think _you_ do; I myself think it was a little of both. You’ve
-got a heart and a conscience originally, though they have got pretty
-well tanned out in the weather; you didn’t want to be sorry for those
-people, but you are. They have bothered you a lot; but it has bothered
-you more to think that instead of going down the ages as a colossal
-benefactor and empire builder, you are hung up on the hook to see
-where you’re at; and where you _will_ be if the people get thoroughly
-aroused. You all are building bigger balloons when it ought to be you
-for the cyclone cellar! But _you_ are different. You can see ahead. I
-give you credit for seeing.”
-
-“Have you ever considered,” said Keatcham slowly, “that in spite
-of the iniquitous greed of the men you are condemning, in spite of
-their oppression of the people, the prosperity of the country is
-unparalleled? How do you explain it?”
-
-“Crops,” said the colonel; “the crops were too big for you.”
-
-“You might give _us_ a little credit--your aunt does. She was here
-to-day; she is a manufacturer and she comprehended that the methods of
-business can not be revolutionized without somebody’s getting hurt.
-Yet, on the whole, the change might be immensely advantageous. Now,
-why, in a nutshell, do you condemn us?”
-
-“You’re after the opinion of the average man, are you?”
-
-“I suppose so, the high average.”
-
-The colonel crossed his legs and uncrossed them again; he looked
-straight into the other’s eyes; his own narrowed with thought.
-
-“I’ll tell you,” said he. “I don’t know much about the Street or
-high finance or industrial development. I’m a plain soldier; I’m
-not a manufacturer and I’m not a speculator. I understand perfectly
-that you can’t have great changes without somebody’s getting hurt in
-the shuffle. It is beyond me to decide whether the new industrial
-arrangements with the stock-jobber on top instead of the manufacturer
-will make for better or for worse--but I know this; it is against the
-fundamental law to do evil that good may come. And you fellows in Wall
-Street, when, to get rich quick, you lie about stocks in order to buy
-cheap and then lie another way to sell dear; when you make a panic out
-of whole cloth, as you did in 1903, because, having made about all you
-can out of things going up, you want to make all you can out of them
-going down; when you play foot-ball with great railway properties and
-insurance properties, because you are as willing to rob the dead as the
-living; when you do all that, and when your imitators, who haven’t so
-much brains or so much decency as you, when _they_ buy up legislatures
-and city councils; and _their_ imitators run the Black Hand business
-and hold people up who have money and are not strong enough, they
-think, to hunt them down--why, not being a philosopher but just a plain
-soldier, I call it bad, _rotten_ bad. What’s more, I can tell you the
-American people won’t stand for it.”
-
-“You think they can help themselves?”
-
-“I know they can. You fellows are big, but you won’t last over night
-if the American people get really aroused. And they are stirring in
-their sleep and kicking off the bed-clothes.”
-
-“Yet you ought to belong to the conservatives.”
-
-“I do. That’s why the situation is dangerous. You as an old San
-Franciscan ought to remember how conservative was that celebrated
-Vigilance Committee. It is when the long-suffering, pusillanimous,
-conservative element gets fighting mad that something is doing.”
-
-“Maybe,” muttered Keatcham thoughtfully. “I believe we can manage for
-you better than you can for yourselves; but when the brakes are broken
-good driving can’t stop the machine; all the chauffeur can do is to
-keep the middle of the road. I like to be beaten as little as any of
-them; but I’m not a fool. Winter, you are used to accomplishing things;
-what is your notion of the secret?”
-
-“Knowing when to stop exhausting trumps, I reckon--but you don’t play
-cards.”
-
-“It is the same old game whatever you play,” said the railway king.
-He did not pursue the discussion; his questions, Winter had found,
-invariably had a purpose, and that purpose was never argument. He lay
-back on the big leather cushions of the lounge, his long, lean fingers
-drumming on the table beside him and an odd smile playing about the
-corners of his mouth; his next speech dived into new waters. He said:
-“Have those men from New York got Atkins, yet?”
-
-“They couldn’t find him,” answered the colonel. “I have been having
-him shadowed, on my own idea--I think he stabbed you, though I have no
-proof of it; I take it you have proof of your matter.”
-
-“Plenty,” said Keatcham. “I was going to send him to the pen in
-self-defense. It isn’t safe for me to have it creep out that my
-secretary made a fortune selling my secrets. Besides, I don’t want to
-be killed. You say they can’t find him?”
-
-“Seems to have gone to Japan--”
-
-“Seems? What do you mean?”
-
-“I am not sure. He was booked for a steamer; and a man under his name,
-of his build and color, did actually sail on the boat,” announced the
-colonel blandly.
-
-“Hmn! He’s right here in San Francisco; read that note.”
-
-Winter read the note, written on Palace Hotel note-paper, in a sharp,
-scrawling, Italian hand. The contents were sufficiently startling.
-
- Dear friend Hoping this find you well. Why do you disregard a true
- Warning? We did write you afore once for say you give that money or
- we shal be unfortunately compel to kill you quick. No? You laff. God
- knows we got have that twenty-five thousan dol. Yes. And now because
- of such great expence it is fifty thousan you shall pay. We did not
- mean kill you dead only show you for sure there is no place so secret
- you can Hide no place so strong can defend you. Be Warn. You come
- with $50000.00 in $100 bills. You go or send Mr. Mercer to the Red
- Hat; ask for Louis. Say to Louis For the Black Hand. Louis will say
- For the Black Hand. You follow him. No harm will come to you. You
- will be forgive all heretobefores. Elseways you must die April 15-20.
- _This is sure_. You have felt our dagger the other is worse.
-
- You well wishing Fren,
- The Black Hand.
-
-“Sounds like Atkins pretending to be a Dago,” said the colonel dryly.
-“I could do better myself.”
-
-“Very likely,” said Keatcham.
-
-“Does he mean business? What’s he after?”
-
-“To get me out of the way. He knows he isn’t safe until I’m dead. Then
-he hasn’t been cleaned out, but he has lost a lot of money in this
-Midland business. The cipher he has is of no use to him, there, or in
-the other things which unluckily he knows about. With me dead and the
-cipher in his hands, he could have made millions; even without the
-cipher, if he knows I’m dead before the rest of the world, he ought to
-make at least a half-million. I think you will find that he has put
-everything he has on the chance. I told you he was slick. And unstable.
-What do you anticipate he will do? Straight, with no chaser, as you
-say.”
-
-“Well, straight with no chaser, I should say a bomb was the meanest
-trick in sight, so, naturally, he will choose a bomb.”
-
-“I agree with you. You say the house is patrolled?”
-
-“The whole place. But we’ll put on a bigger force; I’ll see Birdsall
-at once. Atkins would have to hire his explosive talent, wouldn’t he?”
-questioned the colonel.
-
-“Oh, he knows plenty of the under-world rascals; and besides, for a
-fellow of his habits, there is a big chance for loot. Mrs. Millicent
-Winter tells me that your aunt has valuable jewels with her. If she
-told me, she may have told other people, and Atkins may know. He will
-use other people, but he will come, too, in my opinion.”
-
-“I see,” said the colonel; “to make sure they don’t foozle the bomb.
-But he’ll have his alibi ready all right. Mr. Keatcham, did they send
-you a previous letter?”
-
-“Oh, dear no; that’s only part of the game; makes a better story. So is
-using the hotel paper; if it throws suspicion on anybody it would be
-your party; you see Atkins knew Mercer had a grudge against me as well
-as him. He was counting on that. I rather wonder that he didn’t fix up
-some proof for you to find.”
-
-“By Jove!” cried the colonel; “maybe he did.”
-
-“And you didn’t find it?”
-
-“Well, you see I was too busy with you; the others must have overlooked
-it. Hard on Atkins after he took so much trouble, wasn’t it?”
-
-“I told you he was too subtle. But it is not wise to underrate him, or
-bombs either; we must get the women and those boys out of the house.”
-
-“But how? You are not really acquainted with my aunt, Mrs. Rebecca
-Winter, I take it.”
-
-“You think she wouldn’t go if there was any chance of danger?”
-
-“You couldn’t fire her unless out of a cannon; but she would help get
-Archie away; Mrs. Melville and Miss Smith--”
-
-“Well--ur--Miss Smith, I am afraid, will not be easy to manage; you
-see, she knows--”
-
-“Knows? Did you tell her?” asked Colonel Winter anxiously.
-
-“Well, not exactly. As the children say, it told itself. There has been
-a kind of an attempt, already. A box came, marked from a man I know in
-New York, properly labeled with express company’s labels. Miss Smith
-opened it; I could see her, because she was in the bath-room with the
-door open. There was another box inside, wrapped in white tissue paper.
-Very neatly. She examined that box with singular care and then she drew
-some water in the lavatory basin, half opened the box and put the whole
-thing under water in the basin. Then I thought it was time for me and
-I asked her if it was a bomb. Do you know that girl had sense enough
-not to try to deceive me? She saw that I had seen every move she had
-made. She said merely that it was safe under water. It was an ingenious
-little affair which had an electrical arrangement for touching off a
-spark when the lid of the box would be lifted.”
-
-“Ah, yes. Thoughtful little plan to amuse an invalid by letting him
-open the box, himself, to see the nice surprises from New York. Very
-neat, indeed. What did you do with the box?”
-
-“Nothing, so far. It only came about an hour ago.”
-
-“Do you reckon some of the Black Hands are out on the street, rubbering
-to see if there are any signs of anything doing?”
-
-“Perhaps; you might let Birdsall keep a watch for anything like that.
-But they hear, somehow; there is a leak somewhere in our establishment.
-It is not your aunt; she can hold her tongue as well as use it; the
-boy, Archie, does not know anything to tell--”
-
-“He wouldn’t tell it if he did,” interrupted the colonel; and very
-concisely but with evident pride he gave Archie’s experience in the
-Chinese quarter.
-
-Keatcham’s comment took the listener’s breath away; so far afield was
-it and so unlike his experience of the man; it was: “Winter, a son like
-that would be a good deal of a comfort, wouldn’t he?”
-
-“Poor little chap!” said Winter. “He hasn’t any father to be proud of
-him--father and mother both dead.”
-
-Keatcham eyed Winter thoughtfully a moment, then he said: “You’ve been
-married and lost children, your aunt says. That must be hard. But--did
-you ever read that poem of James Whitcomb Riley’s to his friend whose
-child was dead? It’s true what he says--they were better off than he
-‘who had no child to die.’”
-
-Rupert was looking away from the speaker with the instinctive
-embarrassment of a man who surprises the deeper feelings of another.
-He could see out of the window the lovely April garden and Janet Smith
-amid the almond blossoms. Only her shining black head and her white
-shoulders and bodice rose above the pink clusters. She looked up and
-nodded, seeing him; her face was a little pale, but she was smiling.
-
-“I don’t know,” he said, “it’s hard enough either way for a man.”
-
-“I never lost any children”--Keatcham’s tone was dry, still, but it
-had not quite the former desiccated quality--“but I was married, for a
-little while. If it’s as bad to lose your children as it is to lose the
-hope of having them, it must be hard. You lost your wife, too?”
-
-“Yes,” said Rupert Winter.
-
-At this moment he became conscious that Keatcham was avoiding his gaze
-in the very manner of his avoiding of Keatcham’s a moment ago; and it
-gave him a bewildering sensation.
-
-“I wanted to marry my wife for seven years before we were married,”
-Keatcham continued in that carefully monotonous voice. “She was the
-daughter of the superintendent of the mine where I was working. I
-was only eighteen when I first saw her. I was twenty-five when we
-were married. She used to give me lessons; she was educated and
-accomplished. She did more than is easy telling, for me. Of course, her
-parents were opposed at first because they looked higher for her, but
-she brought them round by her patience and her sweetness and her faith
-in me. Six months after we were married, she had an accident which left
-her a helpless invalid in a wheeled chair, at the best; at the worst,
-suffering--you’ve known what it is to see anybody, whom you care for,
-in horrible pain and trying not to show it when you come near?”
-
-“I have,” said Winter; “merry hell, isn’t it?”
-
-“I have seen that expression,” said Keatcham; “I never recognized
-its peculiar appropriateness before. Yes, it is that. Yet, Winter,
-those two years she lived afterwards were the happiest of my whole
-life. She said, the last night she was with me, that they had been
-the happiest of hers.” The same flush which once before, when he had
-seemed moved, had crept up to his temples, burned his hollow cheeks.
-He was holding the edge of the table with the tips of his fingers and
-the blood settled about the nails with the pressure of his grip. There
-was an intense moment during which Winter vainly struggled to think of
-something to say and looked more of his sympathy than he was aware;
-then: “Cary Mercer needn’t think that he has had all the hard times in
-the world!” said Keatcham in his usual toneless voice, relaxing his
-hold and leaning back on his pillows. The color ebbed away gradually
-from his face.
-
-“I don’t wonder you didn’t marry again,” said Winter.
-
-“You would not wonder if you had known Helen. She always understood.
-Of course, now, at sixty-one, I could buy a pretty, innocent, young
-girl who would do as her parents bade her, and cry her eyes out before
-the wedding, or a handsome and brilliant society woman with plenty of
-matrimonial experience--but I don’t want them. I should have to explain
-myself to them; I don’t know how to explain myself; you see I can’t
-half do it--”
-
-“I reckon I understand a little.”
-
-“I guess you do. You are different, too. Well, let’s get down to
-business, think up some way of getting the women out of the house; and
-get your sleuths after Atkins. It is ‘we get him, or he gets us!’”
-
-The amateur secretary assented and prepared to go, for the valet was
-at the door, ready to relieve him; but opposite Keatcham, he paused a
-second, made a pretense of hunting for his hat, picked it up in his
-left hand and held out the right hand, saying, “Well, take care of
-yourself.”
-
-Keatcham nodded; he shook the hand with a good firm pressure. “Much
-obliged, Winter,” said he.
-
-“Well,” meditated the soldier as he went his way, “I never did think to
-take that financial bucaneer by the hand; but--it wasn’t the bucaneer,
-it was the real Edwin Keatcham.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-IN WHICH THE PUZZLE FALLS INTO PLACE
-
-
-While the colonel was trying to decipher his tragical puzzle, while
-Edwin Keatcham was busied with plans that affected empires and
-incidentally were to save and to extinguish some human lives, while
-Janet Smith had her own troubles, while Mrs. Rebecca Winter enjoyed
-a game more exciting and deadly than Penelope’s Web, Mrs. Millicent
-Winter and the younger people found the days full of joyous business.
-The household had fallen into normal ways of living. Although the
-secret patrol watched every rod of approach to the house, the espial
-was so unobtrusive that guests came and went, tradesmen rattled
-over the driveways; the policemen, themselves, slumbered by day and
-loitered majestically by night without the Casa Fuerte portals, never
-suspecting. Little Birdsall had his admirable points; they were now in
-evidence. To all outward seeming, a pleasant house-party was enjoying
-the lavish Californian hospitality of Casa Fuerte; and Black Care was
-bundled off to the closet with the family skeleton, according to the
-traditions of mannerly people. Arnold had opened his garage and his
-stables. There was bridge of an evening; and the billiard-balls clinked
-on the pool-table. Archie could now back the electric motor into almost
-any predicament. The new Chinese chef was a wonder and Tracy was
-initiating him into the possibilities of the Fireless, despite a modest
-shrinking on the part of the oriental artist who considered it to be a
-new kind of bomb.
-
-Millicent, encouraged by Arnold, had had Mrs. Wigglesworth and two
-errant Daughters, whose husbands were state regents for Melville’s
-university, to luncheon and to dinner; the versatile Kito donning a
-chauffeur’s livery and motoring them back to the city in the Limousine,
-on both occasions; all of which redounded to Millicent’s own proper
-glory and state.
-
-Indeed, about this time, Millicent was in high good humor with her
-world. Even Janet Smith was no longer politely obliterated as “the
-nurse,” but became “our dear Miss Janet”; and was presented with
-two of Mrs. Melville’s last year’s Christmas gifts which she could
-not contrive to use; therefore carried about for general decorative
-generosity. One was a sage-green linen handkerchief case, quite fresh,
-on which was etched, in brown silk, the humorous inscription: “WIPE
-ME BUT DO NOT SWIPE ME!” The other was a white celluloid brush-broom
-holder bedecked with azure forget-me-nots enframing a complicated
-monogram which might just as well stand for J. B. B. S. (Janet Byrd
-Brandon Smith) as for M. S. W. (Millicent Sears Winter) or any other
-alphabetical herd. These unpretending but (considering their source)
-distinguished gifts she bestowed in the kindest manner. Janet was no
-doubt grateful; she embroidered half a dozen luncheon napkins with Mrs.
-Melville’s monogram and crest, in sign thereof; and very prettily,
-she being a skilful needle-woman. On her part, Mrs. Mellville was so
-pleased that she remarked to her brother-in-law, shortly after, that
-she believed Cousin Angela’s sisters hadn’t been just to Miss Smith;
-she was a nice girl; and if she married (which is quite possible,
-insinuated Mrs. Melville archly), she meant to give a tea in her honor.
-
-“Now, that’s right decent of you, Millie,” cried the colonel; and he
-smiled gratefully after Mrs. Melville’s beautifully fitted back. Yet a
-scant five minutes before he had been pursuing that same charming back
-through the garden terraces, in a most unbrotherly frame, resolved to
-give his sister-in-law a “warning with a fog-horn.” The cause of said
-warning was his discovery of her acquaintance with Atkins. For days
-a bit of information had been blistering his mind. It came from the
-girl at the telegraph office at the Palace, not in a bee-line, but
-indirectly, through her chum, the girl who booked the theater tickets.
-It could not be analyzed properly because the telegraph girl was gone
-to Southern California. But before she went she told the theater girl
-that the lady who received Mr. Makers’ wires was one of Mrs. Winter’s
-party! This bit of information was like a live coal underfoot in the
-colonel’s mind; whenever he trod on it in his mental excursions he
-jumped.
-
-“Who else but Janet?” he demanded. But by degrees he became first
-doubtful, then daring. He had Birdsall fetch the telegraph girl back
-to San Francisco. A ten minutes’ interview assured him that it was his
-brother’s wife who had called for Mr. Makers’ messages, armed with Mr.
-Makers’ order.
-
-Aunt Rebecca was not nearly so vehement as he when he told her. She
-listened to his angry criticism with a lurking smile and a little shrug
-of her shoulders.
-
-“Of course she has butted in, as you tersely express it, in the
-language of this mannerless generation; Millicent always butts in. How
-did she get acquainted with this unpleasant, assassinating, poor white
-trash? My dear child, _she_ didn’t probably; he made an acquaintance
-with her. He pumped her and lied to her. We know he wanted to find
-out Mr. Keatcham’s abode; he may have got his clue from her; she knew
-young Arnold had been to see him. There’s no telling. I only know
-that in the interest of keeping a roof over our heads and having our
-heads whole instead of in pieces from explosives, I butted in a few
-days ago when somebody wanted Mrs. Melville Winter on the telephone.
-I answered it. The person asked if I was Mrs. Melville Winter; it
-was a strange man’s voice. I don’t believe in Christian Science or
-theosophy or psychics, but I do believe I felt in my bones that here
-was an occasion to be canny rather than conscientious. You know I
-can talk like Millicent--or anybody else; so I intoned through the
-telephone in her silken Anglican accents, ‘Do you want Mrs. Melville
-Winter or Aunt Rebecca, _Madam_ Winter?’ I hate to be called Madam
-Winter, and she knows it, but Millicent is catty, you know, and she
-always calls me Madam Winter behind my back. The fellow fell into the
-trap at once--recognized the voice, I dare say, and announced that
-it was Mr. Makers; Mr. Atkins, who had left for Japan, had not been
-able to pay his respects and say good-by; but he had left with him an
-embroidered Chinese kimono for Professor Winter, whom he had admired
-so much; and if it wouldn’t be too much trouble for her to pay a visit
-to her friend--one of those women she had to luncheon, who’s at the
-St. Francis--he would like to show her several left by Mr. Atkins, for
-her to select one. Then in the most casual way, he asked after Mr.
-Keatcham’s health. I believed he was improving; had had a very good
-night. I fancy it didn’t please him, but he made a good pretense. Then
-he went off into remarks about its being such a pity Mr. Atkins had
-left Mr. Keatcham; but he was so conscientious, a Southern gentleman
-I knew; yet he really thought a great deal still of Mr. Keatcham,
-who had many fine qualities; only on account of the unfortunate
-differences--Atkins was so proud and sensitive; he was anxious to hear,
-but not for the world would he have any one know that he had inquired;
-so would I be very careful not to let any one know he had asked. Of
-course I would be; I promised effusively; and said I quite understood.
-I think I _do_, too.”
-
-“They are keeping tab on us through Millicent,” fumed the colonel. “I
-dare say she gave it away that Arnold was visiting Keatcham at the
-hotel; and it wouldn’t take Atkins long to piece out a good deal more,
-especially if his spy overheard Tracy’s ’phone. Well, I shall warn
-Millicent--with a fog-horn!”
-
-The way he warned Millicent has been related. But from Millicent he
-deflected to another subject--the impulse of confession being strong
-upon him. He freed his mind about the stains on Cary Mercer’s cuffs;
-and, when at last he sought Millicent he was in his soul praising
-his aunt for a wise old woman. After justice was disarmed by his
-miscomprehension of Millicent’s words, he took out his cigarette case
-and began pacing the garden walks, smoking and humming a little
-Spanish love song, far older than the statehood of California.
-
- _La noche está serena, tranquilo el aquilon;
- Tu dulce centinella te guarda el corazon.
- Y en al as de los céfiros, que vagan par doquier,
- Volando van mis suplicas, á ti, bella mujer!
- Volando van mis suplicas, á ti, bella mujer!_
-
- _De un corazon que te ama, recibe el tierno amor;
- No aumentes mas la llama, piedad, á an trobador.
- Y si te mueve á lastima eterno padecer,
- Como te amo, amama, bellissima mujer!
- Como te amo, amama, bellissima mujer!_[B]
-
-The words belonged to the air which he had whistled a weary week ago.
-Young Tracy came along, and caught up the air, although he was innocent
-of Spanish; he had his mandolin on his arm; he proffered it to the
-colonel.
-
-“Miss Janet has been singing coon-songs to his nibs, who is really
-getting almost human,” he observed affably; “well, a little patience
-and interest will reveal new possibilities of the Fireless Stove! In
-man or metal. Shall we get under his nibs’ window and give him the
-_Bedouin Love Song_ and _I Picked Me a Lemon in the Garden of Love_ and
-the Sextette from _Lucia_ and other choice selections? He seemed to be
-sitting up and taking notice; let’s lift him above the sordid thoughts
-of Wall Street and his plans for busting other financiers.”
-
-The soldier gave this persiflage no answer; his own thoughts were far
-from gay. He stood drinking in the beauty of the April night. The air
-was wonderfully hushed and clear; and the play of the moonlight on
-the great heliotrope bushes and the rose-trees, which dangled their
-clusters of yellow and white over the stone parapets of the balconies,
-tinted the leafage and flickered delicately over the tracery of shadow
-on the gray walls. Not a cloud flecked the vast aërial landscape--only
-stars beyond stars, through unfathomable depths of dim violet, and
-beneath the stars a pale moon swimming low in the heavens; one could
-see it between the spandrels of the arches spanning the colonnade.
-
-“Looks like a prize night-scene on the stage, doesn’t it?” said Tracy.
-“Jolly good shadows--and aren’t these walls bulging out at the bottom
-bully? I used to know the right name for such architectural stunts
-when I was taking Fine Arts Four--dreadful to neglect your educational
-advantages and then forget all the little you didn’t neglect, ain’t it?
-I say, get on to those balconies--that isn’t the right word for the
-mission style, I guess; but never mind; aren’t they stunning? Do you
-see the ladies up there? Is that Archie sniggering? What do you think
-of the haunted house, _now_, Colonel?”
-
-Tracy’s gay eyes sought the other’s gaze to find it turn somber.
-Winter couldn’t have told why; but a sudden realization of the hideous
-peril dogging the warm, lighted, tenanted house, submerged him and
-suffocated him like a foul gas. Let their guards be vigilant as fear,
-let their wonderful new search-light flood rock and slope and dusky
-Chaparral bush; and peer as it might through the forest aisles beyond;
-yet--yet--who could tell!
-
-But he forced an equal smile in a second for the college boy; and
-chatted easily enough as they climbed up the stepped arches to the
-balcony and the little group looking seaward.
-
-Aunt Rebecca in black lace and jewels was tilting with the world in
-general and Millicent Winter in particular; she displayed her most
-cynical mood. She had demolished democracy; had planted herself firmly
-on the basic doctrine that the virtues cultivated by slavery far
-outnumber its inseparable vices; and that most people, if not all,
-need a master; had been picturesquely and inaccurately eloquent on the
-subject of dynamite (which she pronounced the logical fourth dimension
-of liberty, fraternity and equality); had put the yellow rich where
-they belonged; and the red anarchists mainly under the sod; and she
-had abolished the Fourth of July to the last sputter of fire-cracker;
-thence by easy transitions she had extolled American art (which
-American patrons were too ignorant to appreciate), deplored American
-music (“The trouble isn’t that it is _canned_,” says she, “but that it
-was spoiled before they canned it!”) and was now driving a chariot of
-fire through American literature; as for the Academics, they never said
-what they thought, but only what they thought they ought to think; and
-they always mistook anemia for refinement, as another school mistook
-yelling and perspiring for vigor.
-
-Just as Winter modestly entered the arena, no less a personage than
-Henry James was under the wheels. Janet Smith had modestly confessed to
-believing him a consummate artist; and Millicent in an orotund voice
-declared that he went deep, deep down into the mysteries of life.
-
-“I don’t deny it; he _ought_ to get down deep,” returned Aunt Rebecca
-in her gentlest, softest utterance; “he’s always boring.”
-
-Mrs. Melville’s suppressed agitation made her stays creak.
-
-“Do you really think that James is not a great artist?” she breathed.
-
-“I think he is not worth while.”
-
-“Wow!” cried Tracy. “Oh, I say--”
-
-“Aunt Rebecca; you can not mean--” this was Mrs. Melville, choking with
-horror.
-
-“His style,” repeated the unmoved iconoclast, “his style has the
-remains of great beauty; all his separate phrases, if you wish, are
-gems; and he is a literary lapidary; but his sentences are so subtle,
-so complex, so intricately compounded, and so discursive that I get a
-pain in the back of my neck before I find out what he _may_ mean; and
-then--I don’t agree with him! Now is it worth while to put in so much
-hard reading only to be irritated?”
-
-“I beg pardon,” Winter interposed, with masculine pusillanimity evading
-taking sides in the question at issue, “I thought we were going to have
-some music; why don’t you boys give us some college songs? Here is a
-mandolin.”
-
-Aunt Rebecca’s still luminous eyes went from the speaker to Janet
-Smith in the corner. She said something about hearing the music better
-from the other side of the balcony. Now (as Mrs. Millicent very truly
-explained) there was not a ha’pennyworth’s difference in favor of one
-side over the other; but she followed in the wake of her imperious aunt.
-
-The colonel drew nearer to Janet Smith; in order to sink his voice
-below disturbing the music-lovers he found it necessary to sit on a
-pile of cushions at her feet.
-
-“Did you know Mercer will be back to-night?” he began, a long way from
-his ultimate object. He noticed that leaning back in the shadow her
-ready smile had dropped from her face, which looked tired. “I want to
-tell you a little story about Mercer,” he continued; “may I? It won’t
-take long.”
-
-He was aware, and it gave him a twinge of pain to see it, that she
-sat up a little straighter, like one on guard; and oh, how tired her
-face was and how sweet! He told her of all his suspicions of her
-brother-in-law; of the blood-stains and the changing of clothes; she
-did not interrupt him by a question, hardly by a motion, until he told
-of the conversation with Keatcham and the note signed “The Black Hand.”
-At this her eyes lighted; she exclaimed impetuously: “Cary Mercer never
-_did_ send that letter!” She drew a deep intake of breath. “I don’t
-believe he touched Mr. Keatcham!”
-
-“Neither do I,” said the colonel, “but wait!” He went on to the theater
-girl’s report of the receiver of the telegrams. Her hands, which
-clasped her knee, fell apart; her lips parted and closed firmly.
-
-“Did I think it was you?” said he. “Why, yes, I confess I did fear it
-might be and that you might be trying to shield Atkins.”
-
-“I!” she exclaimed hotly; “that detestable villain!”
-
-“_Isn’t_ he?” cried the colonel. “But--well, I couldn’t tell how he
-might strike a lady,” he ended lamely.
-
-“I reckon he _would_ strike a lady if she were silly enough to marry
-him and he got tired of her. He is the kind of man who will persecute a
-girl to marry him, follow her around and importune her and flatter her
-and then, if he should prevail, never forgive her for the bother she
-has given him. Oh, I never _did_ like him; I’m afraid of him--awfully.”
-
-“Not you?”--the colonel’s voice was cheerful, as if he had not shivered
-over his own foreboding vision. “I’ve seen you in action already, you
-know.”
-
-“Not fighting bombs. I hate bombs. There are so many pieces to hit you.
-You can’t run away.”
-
-“Well, you’ll find them not so bad; besides, you _did_ fight one this
-very morning, and you were cool as peppermint!”
-
-“That was quite different; I had time to think, and the danger was more
-to me than to any one else; but to think of Mrs. Winter and Archie and
-y-- all of you; that scares me.”
-
-“Now, don’t let it get on your nerves,” he soothed--of course it is
-necessary to take a girl’s hand to soothe her when she is frightened.
-But Miss Smith calmly released her hand, only reddening a little; and
-she laughed. “Where--where were we at?” she asked in her unconscious
-Southern phraseology.
-
-“Somewhere around Atkins, I think,” said the colonel; he laughed in his
-turn,--he found it easy to laugh, now that he knew how she felt toward
-Atkins. “You see, after I talked with Keatcham I couldn’t make anything
-but Atkins out of the whole business. But there were those stained
-cuffs and his changing his clothes--”
-
-“Yes,” said she.
-
-“How explain? There was only one explanation: that was, that perhaps
-Mercer had discovered Keatcham before we did, unconsciously spotted
-his cuffs, been alarmed by our approach and hidden, lest it should be
-the murderers returning. He might have wanted a chance to draw his
-revolver. Say he did that way, he might foolishly pretend to enter
-for the first time. If he made that mistake and then discovered the
-condition of his cuffs and the spots on his knee, what would be his
-natural first impulse? Why, to change them, trusting that they hadn’t
-been noticed. Maybe, then, he would wash them out--”
-
-“No,” murmured Miss Smith meekly, with a little twinkle of her eye;
-“_I_ did that; he hid them. How ridiculous of me to get in such a
-fright! But you know how Cary hated Mr. Keatcham; and you--no, you
-don’t know the lengths that such a temperament as his will go. I did
-another silly thing: I found a dagger, one of those Moorish stilettoes
-that hang in the library; it was lying in the doorway. When no one
-was looking I hid it and carried it off. I stuck it in one of the
-flower-beds; I stuck it in the ferns; I have stuck that wretched thing
-all over this yard. I didn’t dare carry it back and put it in the empty
-place with the others because some one might have noticed the place.
-And I didn’t dare say anything to Cary; I was right miserable.”
-
-“So was I,” said the colonel, “thinking you were trying to protect the
-murderer. But do you know what I had sense to do?”
-
-“Go to Mrs. Winter? Oh, I _wanted_ to!”
-
-“Exactly; and do you know what that dead game sport said to me? She
-said she found those washed and ironed cuffs and the trousers neatly
-cleaned with milka--what’s milka?--and the milka cleaned the spots so
-much cleaner than the rest that she had her own suspicions started. But
-says she, ‘Not being a plumb idiot, I went straight to Cary and he told
-me the whole story--’”
-
-“Which was like _your_ story?”
-
-“Very near. And you see it would be _like_ Atkins to leave
-incriminating testimony round loose. That is, incriminating testimony
-against Mercer and Tracy. The dagger, Tracy remembers, was not in the
-library; it was in the _patio_. Right to hand. Atkins must have got in
-and found Mr. Keatcham on the floor in a faint. Whether he meant to
-make a bargain with him or to kill him, perhaps we shall never know;
-but when he saw him helpless before him he believed his chance was come
-to kill him and get the cipher key, removing his enemy and making his
-fortune at a blow, as the French say. _Voilà tout!_”
-
-“Do you think”--her voice sank lower; she glanced over her
-shoulder--“do you reckon _Atkins_ had anything to do with that train
-robbery? Was it a mere pretext to give a chance to murder Mr. Keatcham,
-fixing the blame on ordinary bandits?”
-
-“By Jove! it might be.”
-
-“I don’t suppose we shall ever know. But, Colonel Winter, do you mind
-explaining to me just what Brother Cary’s scheme with Mr. Keatcham was?
-Mrs. Winter told me you would.”
-
-“She told _me_,” mused the colonel, “that you didn’t know anything
-about this big game which has netted them millions. They’ve closed
-out their deals and have the cash. No paper profits for Auntie! She
-said that she would not risk your being mixed up in it; so kept you
-absolutely in the dark. I’m there, too. Didn’t you know Mercer had
-kidnapped Archie?”
-
-“No; I didn’t know he was with Mr. Keatcham at the hotel. It would have
-saved me a heap of suffering; but she didn’t dare let me know for fear,
-if anything should happen, I would be mixed up in it. It was out of
-kindness, Colonel Winter, truly it was. Afterward when she saw that I
-was worried she gave me hints that I need not worry, Archie was quite
-safe.”
-
-“And the note-paper?”
-
-“I suppose she gave it to them,” answered Miss Smith.
-
-“And the voice I heard in the telephone?” He explained how firmly she
-had halted the conversation the time Archie would have reassured him.
-“You weren’t there, of course?” said he.
-
-“No, I was down-stairs in the ladies’ entrance of the court in
-the hotel; I had come in a little while before, having carried
-an advertisement to the paper; I wonder why she--maybe it was to
-communicate with them without risking a letter.”
-
-“But how did _your_ voice get into my ’phone?” he asked.
-
-She looked puzzled only a second, then laughed as he had not heard her
-laugh in San Francisco--a natural, musical, merry peal, a girlish laugh
-that made his heart bound.
-
-“Why, of course,” said she, “it is so easy! There was a reporter who
-insisted on interviewing Mrs. Winter about her jewelry; and I was
-shooing him away. Somehow the wires must have crossed.”
-
-“Do you remember--this is very, very pretty, don’t you think? Just like
-a puzzle falling into place. Do you remember coming here on the day
-Archie was returned?”
-
-“I surely do; my head was swimming, for Mrs. Winter sent me and I began
-then to suspect. She told me Brother Cary was in danger; of course I
-wanted to do anything to help him; and I carried a note to him. I
-didn’t go in, merely gave the note and saw him.”
-
-“_I_ saw you.”
-
-“You? How?”
-
-“Birdsall and I; we were here, in the _patio_; we, my dear Miss Janet,
-were the Danger! You had on a brown checked silk dress and you were
-holding a wire clipper in your hand.”
-
-“Yes, sir. I saw it on the grass and picked it up.”
-
-She laughed a little; but directly her cheeks reddened. “What must you
-have thought of me!” she murmured under her breath; and bit the lip
-that would have quivered.
-
-“I should like to tell you--_dear_,” he answered, “if you will--O Lord,
-forgive young men for living! If they are not all coming back to ask me
-to sing! But, Janet, dear, let me say it in Spanish--yes, _yes_ if you
-really won’t be bored; throw me that mandolin.”
-
-Aunt Rebecca leaned back in the arm-chair, faintly smiling, while the
-old, old words that thousands of lovers have thrilled with pain and
-hopes and dreams beyond their own power of speech and offered to their
-sweethearts, rose, winged by the eternal longing:
-
- “_Y si te mueve á lastima mi eterno padecer,
- Como te amo, amame, bellissima mujer!
- Como te amo, amame, bellissima mujer!_”
-
-“And what does it mean in English, Bertie?” said Mrs. Melville. “Can’t
-you translate it?”
-
-“Shall I?” said the colonel, his voice was careless enough, but not so
-the eyes which looked up at Janet Smith.
-
-“Not to-night, please,” said she. “I--I think Mr. Keatcham is expecting
-me to read to him a little. Good night. Thank you, Colonel Winter.”
-
-She was on her feet as she spoke; and Winter did not try to detain her;
-he had held her hand; and he had felt its shy pressure and caught a
-fleeting, frightened, very beautiful glance. His dark face paled with
-the intensity of his emotion.
-
-Janet moved away, quietly and lightly, with no break in her composure;
-but as she passed Mrs. Winter she bent and kissed her. And when Archie
-would have run after her a delicate jeweled hand was laid on his arm.
-“Not to-night, laddie; I want you to help me down the steps.”
-
-With her hand on the boy’s shoulder she came up to Rupert, and inclined
-her handsome head in Janet’s direction. “I think, by rights, that kiss
-belonged to you, _mon enfant_,” said she.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-CASA FUERTE
-
-
-Winter would have said that he was too old a man to stay awake all
-night, when he had a normal temperature; yet he saw the stars come
-out and the stars fade on that fateful April night. He entered his
-room at the hour when midnight brushes the pale skirts of dawn and
-misguided cocks are vociferating their existence to an indifferent
-world. Before he came there had been a long council with Mercer and
-his aunt. Mercer, who had been successful in his mission, had barely
-seen his chief for a moment before a gentle but imperious nurse ordered
-him away. Winter caught a queer, abrupt laugh from the financier. The
-latter beckoned to him. “See you are as obedient as I am when your time
-comes,” he chuckled; and he chuckled again when both the soldier and
-Miss Smith blushed over his awkward jocoseness. Yet, the next moment
-he extended his hand with his formal, other-generation courtesy and
-took Miss Janet’s shapely, firm fingers in his own lean and nervous
-grasp. “Allow me to offer you both my sincere congratulations,” began
-he, and halted, his eyes, which seemed so incurious but were so keen,
-traveling from the woman’s confusion to the man’s. “I beg your pardon;
-I understood--Archie who was here, gave me to understand--and I heard
-you singing; you will hardly believe it, but years ago _I_ sang that to
-my wife.”
-
-“So far as I am concerned, it _is_ settled,” said the colonel steadily.
-
-“We are all,” Keatcham continued, no longer with any trace of
-embarrassment, as he touched the hand which he still held with his
-own other hand, “we are all, as you know, my dear young lady, in
-considerable personal peril; I regret that it should be on my account;
-but it really is not my fault; it is because I will not relax my
-pursuit of a great scoundrel who is dangerous to all decent people. But
-being in such danger, I think you will be glad afterward if you are
-generously frank, and give up something of the sex’s prerogative to
-keep a lover on the anxious seat. Excuse me if--if I presume on my age
-and my privileges as a patient.”
-
-Janet lifted her sweet eyes and sent one glance as fleeting and light
-as the flash of a bird’s wing. “I--I--reckon it is settled,” murmured
-she; but immediately she was the nurse again. “Mr. Keatcham, you are
-staying awake much too late. Here is Colvin, who will see to anything
-you want. Good night.”
-
-It was then that Mr. Keatcham had taken the colonel’s breath away by
-kissing Janet’s hand; after which he shook hands with the colonel with
-a strange new cordiality, and watched them both go away together with a
-look on his gaunt face unlike any known to Colvin.
-
-Only three minutes in the hall, with the moon through the arched
-window; and his arm about her and the fragrance of her loosened hair
-against his cheek and her voice stirring his heartstrings with an
-exquisite pang. Only time for the immemorial questions of love: “Are
-you sure, dear, it is really _I?_” and “When did you first--” To this
-last she had answered with her half-humorous, adorable little lilt of
-a laugh. “Oh, I reckon it was--a--little--all along, ever since I read
-about your saving that poor little Filipino boy, like Archie; the one
-who was your servant in Manila, and going hungry for him on the march
-and jumping into the rapids to save him--when you were lame, too--”
-
-Here the colonel burst in with a groan: “Oh, that monstrous newspaper
-liar! The ‘dear little Filipino boy’ was a married man; and I didn’t go
-hungry for him, and I didn’t jump into the river to save him. It wasn’t
-more than wading depth--I only swore at him for an idiot and told him
-to _walk_ out when he tipped over his boat and was floundering about.
-And he _did_! He was the limit as a liar--”
-
-To his relief, the most sensible as well as the most lovable woman in
-the world had burst into a delicious fit of laughter; and returned:
-“Oh, well, you _would_ have jumped in and saved him if the water had
-been deep; it wasn’t _your_ fault it was shallow!” And just at this
-point Mercer and Aunt Rebecca must needs come with a most unusual
-premonitory racket, and Janet had fled.
-
-Afterward had come the council. All the coil had been unraveled.
-Birdsall appeared in person, as sleek, smiling and complacent over his
-blunders as ever. One of his first sentences was a declaration of trust
-in Miss Smith.
-
-“I certainly went off at half-cock there,” said he amiably; “and just
-because she was so awful nice I felt obliged to suspect her; but I’ve
-got the real dog that killed the sheep this time; it’s sure the real
-Red Wull!” It appeared that he had, of a verity, been usefully busy.
-He had secured the mechanic who had given Atkins a plan of the secret
-passages of Casa Fuerte. He had found the policeman who had arrested
-Tracy (he swore because he was going too fast) and the magistrate
-who had fined him; and not only that, he had captured the policeman,
-a genuine officer, not a criminal in disguise, who had been Atkins’
-instrument in kidnapping Archie. This man, whom Birdsall knew how to
-terrify completely, had confessed that it was purely by chance that
-Atkins had seen the boy, left outside in the motor-car. Atkins, so
-he said, had pretended that the boy was a tool of some enemies of
-Keatcham’s, whose secretary he was, trading, not for the only time, on
-his past position. In reality, Birdsall had come to believe Atkins knew
-that Keatcham was employing Mercer in his place.
-
-“Why, he knew the old gentleman was just off quietly with Mr. Mercer
-and some friends; knew they were all friendly, just as well as you
-or me,” declared Birdsall. He had seen Archie on the train, for, as
-the colonel remembered, he had been in the Winters’ car on the night
-of the robbery. Somehow, also, Atkins had found out about Archie’s
-disappearance from the hotel.
-
-“I can’t absolutely put my finger on his information,” said Birdsall;
-“but I _suspect_ Mrs. Melville Winter; I know she was talking to him,
-for one of my men saw her. The lady meant no harm, but she’s one of the
-kind that is always slamming the detectives and being took in by the
-rascals.”
-
-He argued that Mrs. Winter and Miss Smith knew where the boy was; for
-some reason they had let him go and were pretending not to know where
-he was. “Ain’t that so?” the detective appealed to Aunt Rebecca, who
-merely smiled, saying: “You’re a wonder, Mr. Birdsall!” According to
-Birdsall’s theory, Atkins was puzzled by Archie’s part in the affair.
-But he believed could he find the boy’s present hosts he would find
-Edwin Keatcham. It would not be the first time Keatcham had hidden
-himself, the better to spin his web for the trapping of his rivals.
-That Mercer was with his employer the ex-secretary had no manner of
-doubt, any more than he doubted that Mercer’s scheme had been to
-oust him and to build his own fortunes on Atkins’ ruin. He knew both
-Tracy and young Arnold very well by sight. When he couldn’t frighten
-Archie into telling anything, probably he went back to his first plan
-of shadowing the Winter party at the Palace. He must have seen Tracy
-here. He penetrated his disguise. (“He’s as sharp as the devil, I tell
-you, Colonel.”) He either followed him himself or had him followed;
-and he heard about the telephone. (“Somebody harking in the next room,
-most likely.”) Knowing Tracy’s intimacy with Arnold it was not hard
-for so clever and subtle a mind as Atkins’ to jump to the conclusion
-and test it in the nearest telephone book. (“At least that is how _I_
-figure it out, Colonel.”) Birdsall had traced the clever mechanic who
-was interrogated by the Eastern gentleman about to build; this man
-had given the lavish and inquisitive Easterner a plan of the secret
-passages--to use in his own future residence. Whether Atkins went alone
-or in company to the Casa Fuerte the detective could only surmise. He
-couldn’t tell whether his object would be mere blackmail, or robbery
-of the cipher, or assassination. Perhaps he found the insensible man
-in the _patio_ and was tempted by the grisly opportunity; victim and
-weapon both absolutely to his hand; for it was established that the
-dagger had been shown Tracy by Mercer as a curio, and left on the
-stone bench.
-
-Perhaps he had not found the dagger, but had his own means to make
-an end of his enemy and his own terror. Birdsall believed that he
-had accomplices, or at least one accomplice, with him. He conceived
-that they had lain in ambush watching until they saw Kito go away.
-Then an entry had been made. “Most like,” Birdsall concluded, “he
-jest flung that dagger away for you folks to find and suspect the
-domestics, say Kito, ’cause he was away.” But this was not all that
-Birdsall had to report. He had traced Atkins to the haunts of certain
-unsavory Italians; he had struck the trail, in fine. To be sure, it ran
-underground and was lost in the brick-walled and slimy-timbered cellars
-of Chinatown which harbored every sin and crime known to civilization
-or to savagery. What matter? By grace of his aunt’s powerful friend
-they could track the wolves even through those noisome burrows.
-
-“Yes,” sighed the colonel, stretching out his arms, with a resonant
-breath of relief, “we’re out of the maze; all we have to do now is to
-keep from being killed. Which isn’t such a plain proposition in ’Frisco
-as in Massachusetts! But I reckon we can tackle it! And then--then, my
-darling, I shall dare be happy!”
-
-He found himself leaning on his window-sill and staring like a boy on
-the landscape, lost in the lovely hallucinations of moonlight. It was
-no scene that he knew, it was a vision of old Spain; and by and by from
-yonder turret the princess, with violets in her loosened hair and her
-soft cheek like satin and snow, would lean and look.
-
- _Y si te mueve á lastima mi eterno padecer.
- Como te amo, amame, bellissima mujer!_
-
-“Ah, no, little girl,” he muttered with a shake of the head, “I like
-it better to have you a plain, American gentlewoman, as Aunt Becky
-would say, who could send me to battle with a nice little quivery
-smile--_sweetheart_! Oh, I’m not good enough for you, my dear, my
-dear.” He felt an immense humility as he contrasted his own lot with
-the loneliness of Keatcham and Mercer and the multitude of solitaries
-in the world, who had lost, or sadder still, had never possessed, the
-divine dream that is the only reality of the soul. As such thoughts
-moved his heart, suddenly in the full tide of hope and thankfulness,
-it stood still, chilled, as if by the glimpse of an iceberg in summer
-seas. Yet how absurd; it was only that he had recalled his stoical
-aunt’s most unexpected touch of superstition. Quite in jest he had
-asked her if she felt any presentiments or queer things in her bones
-to-night. He expected to be answered that Janet had driven every other
-anxiety out of her mind; and how was she to break it to Millicent?--or
-with some such caustic repartee. Instead, she had replied testily:
-“Yes, I _do_, Bertie. I feel--horrid! I feel as if something out of the
-common awful were going to happen. It isn’t exactly Atkins, either. Do
-you reckon it could be the _I Suey When_, that bamboo-shoots mess we
-had for dinner?”
-
-Although they spent a good twenty minutes after that, joking over
-superstitions, and he had repeated to her some of Tracy’s and Arnold’s
-most ingenious “spooky stunts,” to make the neighborhood keep its
-distance from Casa Fuerte, and they had laughed freely, she as heartily
-as he, nevertheless he divined that her smile was a pretense. Suddenly,
-an unruly tremor shook his own firm spirits. Looking out on the stepped
-and lanterned arches of the wing, he was conscious of the same tragic
-endowment of the darkened pile, which had oppressed him that night,
-weeks before, when he had stood outside on the crest of the hill;
-and the would-be murderers might have been skulking in the shadows of
-the pepper-trees. He tried vainly to shake off this distempered mood.
-Although he might succeed for a moment in a lover’s absorption, it
-would come again, insidiously, seeping through his happiness like a
-fume. After futile attempts to sleep he rose, and still at the bidding
-of his uncanny and tormenting impulse he took his bath and dressed
-himself for the day. By this time the ashen tints of dawn were in his
-chamber and on the fields outside. He stood looking at the unloveliest
-aspect of nature, a landscape on the sunless side, before the east
-is red. The air felt lifeless; there were no depths in the pale sky;
-the azure was a flat tint, opaque and thin, like a poor water-color.
-While he gazed the motionless trees, live-oaks and olives and palms,
-were shaken as by a mighty wind; the pepper plumes tossed and streamed
-and tangled like a banner; the great elms along the avenue bent over
-in a breaking strain. Yet the silken cord of the Holland window-shade
-did not so much as swing. There was not a wing’s breath of air. But
-gradually the earth and cloud vibrated with a strange grinding noise
-which has been described a hundred times, but never adequately; a
-sickening crepitation, as of the rocks in the hills scraping and
-splintering. Before the mind could question the sound, there succeeded
-an anarchy of uproar. In it was jumbled the crash of trees and
-buildings, the splintering crackle of glass, the boom of huge chimneys
-falling and of vast explosions, the hiss of steam, the hurling of
-timbers and bricks and masses of stone or sand, and the awful rush of
-frantic water escaping from engine or main.
-
-“’Quake, sure’s you’re born!” said the colonel softly.
-
-Now that his invisible peril was real, was upon him, his spirits leaped
-up to meet it. He looked coolly about him, noting in his single glance
-that the house was standing absolutely stanch, neither reeling nor
-shivering; and that the chimney just opposite his eye had not misplaced
-a brick. In the same instant he caught up his revolver and ran at his
-best pace from the room. The hall was firm under his hurrying feet. As
-he passed the great arched opening on the western balcony he saw an
-awful sight. Diagonally across from Casa Fuerte was the great house of
-the California magnate who did not worry his contractor with demands
-for Colonial honesty of workmanship as well as Colonial architecture.
-The stately mansion with its beautiful piazzas and delicate harmony of
-pillar and pediment, shone white and placid on the eye for a second;
-then rocked in ghastly wise and collapsed like a house of cards.
-Simultaneously a torchlike flame streamed into the air. A woeful din of
-human anguish pierced the inanimate tumult of wreck and crash.
-
-“Bully for Casa Fuerte!” cried the soldier, who now was making a
-frenzied speed to the other side of the house. He cast a single glance
-toward the door which he knew belonged to Janet’s room; and he thought
-of the boy, but he ran first to his old aunt. He didn’t need to go the
-whole way. She came out of her door, Janet and Archie at her side.
-They were all perfectly calm, although in very light and semi-oriental
-attire. Archie plainly had just plunged out of bed. His eyes were
-dancing with excitement.
-
-“This house is a dandy, ain’t it, Uncle Bertie?” he exclaimed. “Mr.
-Arnold told me all about the way his father built it; he said it
-wouldn’t bat its eye for an earthquake. It didn’t either; but that
-house opposite is just kindling-wood! Say! here’s Cousin Cary;
-and--look, Uncle Bertie, Mr. Keatcham has got up and he’s all dressed.
-Hullo, Colvin! Don’t be scared. It’s only a ’quake!” Colvin grinned a
-sickly grin and stammered, “Yes, sir, quite so, sir.” Not an earthquake
-could shake Colvin out of his manners.
-
-“Are you able to do this, Mr. Keatcham?” young Arnold called
-breathlessly, plunging into the _patio_ to which they had all
-instinctively gravitated. Keatcham laughed a short, grunting laugh.
-“Don’t you understand, this is no little every-day ’quake? Look out! Is
-there a way you can look and not see a spout of flame? I’ve got to go
-down-town. Are the machines all right?”
-
-“We must find Randall; the poor soul has a mortal terror of ’quakes--”
-Aunt Rebecca’s well-bred accents were unruffled; she appeared a thought
-stimulated, nothing more; danger always acted as tonic on Winter
-nerves--“Archie, you go put your clothes on this minute, honey. And I
-suppose we ought to look up Millicent.”
-
-The colonel, however, had barely set foot on the threshold when Mrs.
-Melville appeared, propelling Randall, whom she had rescued from the
-maid’s closet where she was cowering behind her neat frocks, momently
-expecting death, but decently ready for it in gown and shoes. Mrs.
-Melville herself, in the disorder of the shock, had merely added her
-best Paris hat and a skeleton bustle to her dainty nightgear. She had
-not forgotten her kimono; she had only forgotten to don it; and it
-draggled over her free arm. But her dignity was intact. The instant she
-beheld her kindred she demanded of them, as if they were responsible,
-whether _this_ was a sample of the Californian climate. Keatcham
-blushed and fled with Colvin and the giggling Arnold and Archie, who
-were too polite to giggle.
-
-Mrs. Winter put on her eye-glasses. “Millicent,” said she in the
-gentlest of tones, “your bustle is on crooked.”
-
-One wild glance at the merciless mirror in the carved pier-glass did
-Mrs. Melville give, and, then, without a word, she fled.
-
-“Randall,” said Mrs. Winter, “you look very nice; come and help me
-dress. There will most likely be some more shocks.”
-
-Randall, trembling in every limb, but instinctively assuming a composed
-mien, followed the undaunted old lady.
-
-The colonel was going in another direction, having heard a telephone
-bell. He was most anxious to put himself into communication with
-Birdsall, because not even during the earthquake had he forgotten an
-uglier peril; and it had occurred to him that Atkins was of a temper
-not to be frightened by the convulsions of order; but rather to make
-his account of it. Nor did the message through the telephone tend to
-reassure him.
-
-The man at the other end of the telephone was Birdsall. No telling how
-long the telephone service would keep up, he reported; wires were down
-around the corner; worse, the water mains were spouting; and from where
-he stood since he felt the first shock he had counted thirty-six fires.
-Ten of them were down in the quarter where some of his men had homes;
-and a field-glass had shown that the houses were all tossed about
-there; he couldn’t keep his men steady; it seemed inhuman to ask them
-to stay when their wives and children might be dying; of course it was
-his damn luck to have all married men from down there.
-
-“Well, I reckon you will have to let them go; but watch out,” begged
-the colonel, “for you know the men we are after will take advantage of
-general disorder to get in their dirty work. Now is the most dangerous
-time.”
-
-Birdsall knew it; he had had intimations that some men were trying to
-sneak up the hill; they had been turned back. They pretended to be
-some wandering railway workers; but Birdsall distrusted them. He--No
-use to ring! Vain to tap the carriage of the receiver! The telephone
-was dead, jarred out of existence somewhere beyond their ken.
-
-By this time the cold sunlight of the woefulest day that San Francisco
-had ever seen was spread over the earth. The city was spotted with
-blood-red spouts of flames. The ruin of the earthquake had hardly been
-visible from their distance, although it was ugly enough and of real
-importance; but, even in the brief space which they in Casa Fuerte
-had waited before they should set forth, fires had enkindled in all
-directions, most dreadful to see; nor did there seem to be any check
-upon them.
-
-Tracy had waked the domestic staff, and, dazed but stoical, they were
-getting breakfast. But Keatcham could not wait; he was in a cold fury
-of haste to get to the town.
-
-He had consented to wait for his breakfast under Miss Smith’s
-representation that it would be ready at once and her assurance that he
-couldn’t work through the day without it.
-
-“Happily, Archie,” explained Tracy, whose unquenchable college
-levity no earthquake could affect, “happily my domestic jewel has
-been stocked up with rice and oatmeal, two of the most nutritious of
-foods; and Miss Janet is making coffee on her traveling coffee pot for
-the Boss. That’s alcohol, and independent of gas-mains. Lucky; for
-the gas-range is out of action, and we have to try charcoal. Notice
-one interesting thing, Archie? Old Keatcham, whom we were fighting
-tooth and nail three weeks ago, is now bossing us as ruthlessly as a
-foot-ball coach; and Cousin Cary is taking his slack talk as meek as
-a freshman. Great old boy, Keatcham! And--oh, I say! has any one gone
-to the rescue of the Rogerses? I saw Kito speeding over that way from
-the garage and Haley hiking after him. I hope the nine small yellow
-domestics are not burned at the stake with Rogers; the bally fire-trap
-is blazing like a tar-barrel!”
-
-As it happened, the colonel had despatched a small party to their
-neighbor’s aid. Haley and Kito were not among them; they were to guard
-the garage which was too vital a point in their household economy to
-leave unprotected. Nevertheless, Haley and Kito did both run away,
-leaving a Mexican helper to watch; and when they returned they were
-breathless and Haley’s face was covered with blood. He was carefully
-carrying something covered with a carriage-robe in his hand.
-
-“I’ve the honor to report, sir,” Haley mumbled, stiff and straight in
-his military posture, a very grimy and blood-stained hand at salute,
-“I’ve the honor to report, sor, that Private Kito and me discovered two
-sushpicious characters making up the hillside by the sekrut road. We
-purshooed thim, sor, and whin they wu’dn’t halt we fired on thim, sor,
-ixploding this here bum which wint off whin the hindmost man tumbled.”
-
-Kito smilingly flung aside the carriage-robe, disclosing the still
-smoking shell of an ingenious round bomb, very similar to those used in
-fireworks.
-
-The colonel examined it closely; it was an ugly bit of dynamite craft.
-
-“Any casualties, Sergeant?” the colonel asked grimly.
-
-“Yes, sor. The man wid the bum was kilt be the ixplosion; the other
-man was hit by Private Kito and wounded in the shoulder but escaped. I
-mesilf have a confusion on me right arrum, me ankle is sprained; and
-ivery tooth in me head is in me pockit! That’s all.”
-
-“Report to Miss Smith at the hospital, Sergeant. Any further report?”
-
-“I wu’d like to riccommind Private Kito for honorable minshun for
-gallanthry.”
-
-“I shall certainly remember him; and you also, Sergeant, in any report
-that I may make. Look after the garage, Kito.”
-
-Kito bowed and retired, beaming, while Haley hobbled into the house.
-The consequences of the attack made on the garage did not appear at
-once. One was that young Arnold had already brought the touring-car
-into the _patio_ in the absence of Haley and Kito. Another was that
-he and Tracy and Kito all repaired to the scene of the explosion to
-examine the dead man’s body. They returned almost immediately, but for
-a few moments there was no one of the house in the court. The colonel
-went to Keatcham in a final effort to dissuade him from going into
-the city until after he himself had gone to the Presidio and returned
-with a guard. He represented as forcibly as he could the danger of
-Keatcham’s appearance during a time of such tumult and lawlessness.
-
-“We are down to the primeval passions now,” he pleaded. “Do you suppose
-if it had been Haley instead of that dago out there who was killed
-that we could have punished the murderer? Not unless we did it with
-our own hands. They are maybe lying in wait at the first street-corner
-now. If you will only wait--”
-
-Keatcham chopped off his sentence without ceremony, not irritably, but
-with the brusquerie of one whose time is too precious for dilatory
-amenities.
-
-“Will the _fire_ wait?” he demanded. “Will the thieves and toughs and
-ruffians whom we have to crush before they realize their strength,
-will _they_ wait? This is _my_ town, Winter, the only town I care a
-rap for; and I propose to help save it. I can. Danger? Of course there
-is danger; there is danger in every battle; but do you keep out of
-battles where you belong because you may get killed? This is my affair;
-if I get killed it is in the way of business, and I can’t help it! No,
-Arnold, I won’t have your father’s son mixed up in my fights; you can’t
-go.”
-
-“Somebody has to run the machine, sir,” insinuated young Arnold with a
-coaxing smile; “and I fancy I shouldn’t be my father’s son if I didn’t
-look after my guest--not very long; he’d cut me out. Tracy is going,
-too, he’s armed--”
-
-“You are not both going,” said the colonel; “somebody with a head on
-him must stay here to guard the ladies.”
-
-He would have detailed both Tracy and Mercer; but Mercer could really
-help Keatcham better than any one in any business arrangements which
-might need to be made. And Keatcham plainly wished his company. Had
-not the situation been so grimly serious Winter could have laughed
-at the grotesque reversal of their conditions; Tracy and Arnold did
-laugh; they were all taking their orders from the man who had been
-their defeated prisoner a little while back. Mercer alone kept his
-melancholy poise; he had obtained the aim of years; he was not sure but
-his revenge was subtler and completer than he had dared to hope. Being
-a zealot he was possessed by his dreams. Suppose he had converted this
-relentless and tremendous power to his own way of faith; what mightn’t
-he hope to accomplish? Meanwhile, so far as the business in hand was
-concerned, he believed in Keatcham and in Keatcham’s methods of help;
-he bowed to the innate power of the man; and he was as simply obedient
-and loyal as Kito would have been to his feudal lord.
-
-In a very brief time all the arrangements were made; the four men went
-into the _patio_ to enter the touring-car. They walked up to the
-empty machine. The colonel stepped into the front seat of the machine.
-Something in the noise of the engine which was panting and straining
-against its control, some tiny sibilant undertone which any other ear
-would have missed, warned his; he bent quickly. A dark object gyrated
-above the heads of the other two just mounting the long step; it landed
-with a prodigious splash in the fountain, flying into a multitude of
-sputtering atoms and hurling a great column of water high up in air.
-Unheeding its shrieking clamor, the soldier sprang over the side of
-the car, darted through the great arched doorway out upon the terrace
-toward a clump of rubber-trees. He fired; again he fired.
-
-In every catastrophe the spectators’ minds lose some parts of the
-action. There are blanks to be supplied by no one. Every one of the
-men and women present on that fatal morning had a different story.
-Colvin was packing; he could only remember the deafening roar and
-the shouting; and when he got down-stairs and saw--he turned deadly
-sick; his chief impression is the backs of people and the way their
-hands would shake. Janet Smith, inside, dressing Haley’s wounds, was
-first warned by the tumult and cries; she as well as Archie and Haley
-who were with her could see nothing until they got outside. All Mrs.
-Melville saw was the glistening back of the car and Mercer stepping
-into the car and instantly lurching backward. The explosion seemed
-to her simultaneous with Mercer’s entering the car. But Mrs. Rebecca
-Winter, who perhaps had the coolest head of all, and who was standing
-on the dais of the arcade exactly opposite the car, distinctly saw
-Keatcham with an amazing exertion of vigor for a man just risen from a
-sick-bed, and with a kind of whirling motion, literally hurl Mercer out
-of the car. She is sure of this because of one homely little detail,
-sickening in its very homeliness. As he clutched Mercer Keatcham’s
-soft gray hat dropped off and the light burnished the bald dome of his
-head. In the space of that glance she heard a crackle and a roar and
-Kito screamed in Japanese, running in from the carriage side. She can
-not tell whether Tracy or Arnold reached the mangled creature on the
-pavement first. Arnold only remembers how the carriage-robe flapped in
-Tracy’s shaking hands before he flung it over the man. Tracy’s fair
-skin was a streaky, bluish white, and his under jaw kept moving up and
-down like that of a fish out of water, while he gasped, never uttering
-a sound.
-
-Young Arnold was trembling so that his hands shook when he would have
-raised the wounded man. Mercer alone was composed although deathly
-pale. He had the presence of mind to throw the harmless fragments of
-the bomb into the fountain and to examine the interior of the car lest
-there should be more of destruction hidden therein. Then he approached
-the heap on the flags; but Keatcham was able to motion him away, saying
-in his old voice, not softened in the least: “Don’t you do that! I’m
-all in. No use. They got me. But it won’t do them any good; you boys
-know that will you witnessed; it gives a fifty thousand for the arrest
-and conviction or the killing of Atkins; his own cutthroats will betray
-him for that. But--where’s Winter? You damn careless fools didn’t let
-_him_ get hurt?”
-
-“Shure, sor, he didn’t let himsilf git hurted,” Haley blurted out; he
-had run in after Miss Smith, brandy bottle in hand; “’tis the murdering
-dagoes is gettin’ hurted off there behind the big rubber-trees; I kin
-see the dead legs of thim, this minnit. ’Tis a grand cool shot the
-colonel is, sor.”
-
-“Bring him in, let them go; they were only tools,” panted Keatcham
-weakly; but the brandy revived him; and his lips curled in a faint
-smile as Janet Smith struck a match to heat the teaspoonful of water
-for her hypodermic. “Make it good and strong, give me time to say
-something to Mercer and Winter--there he comes; good runners those boys
-are!”
-
-[Illustration: He kept death at bay by the sheer force of his will.
-Page 368]
-
-Tracy and Arnold, acting on a common unspoken impulse, had dashed after
-Winter and were pushing him forward between them. Keatcham was nearly
-spent, but he rallied to say the words in his mind. He kept death at
-bay by the sheer force of his will. When Winter knelt down beside him,
-with a poignant memory of another time in the same place when he had
-knelt beside a seemingly dying man, and gently touched the unmarred
-right hand lying on the carriage-robe, he could still form a smile
-with his stiff lips and mutter: “Only thing about me isn’t in tatters;
-of course you touched it and didn’t try to lift me where I’m all in
-pieces. You always understood. Listen! You, too, Mercer. Winter knows
-the things I’m bound to have go through. I’ve explained them to him.
-You’ll be my executors and trustees? A hundred thousand a year; not too
-big a salary for the work--you can do it. It’s a bigger job than the
-army one, Winter. Warnebold will look after the other end. He’s narrow
-but he is straight. I’ve made it worth his while. Some loose ends--it
-can’t be helped now. Maybe you’ll find out there are more difficulties
-in administering a big fortune than you fancied; and that it isn’t the
-easiest thing in the world helping fools who can’t ... help themselves.
-There are all those Tidewater idiots ... made me read about ... you’ll
-have to attend to them, Mercer ... old woman in the queer clothes ...
-chorus girl ... those old ladies who had one egg between them for
-breakfast ... you’ll see to them all?”
-
-“Yes,” said Mercer, looking down on the shrunken features with a look
-of pain and bewilderment. “Yes, suh, I’ll do my best.”
-
-“And--we’re even?”
-
-“I reckon I am obliged to call it so, suh,” returned Mercer with a
-long, gasping sigh, “but--my Lord! you’d better have let _me_ go!”
-
-“Very likely,” said Keatcham dryly, “the city needs me. Well, Winter,
-you must look after that. I’ve been thinking why a man throws his life
-away as I did; he _has_ to, unless he’s a poltroon. He can’t count
-whether he’s more useful than the one he saves ... he has simply _got_
-to save him ... you were a good deal right, Winter, about not doing the
-evil thing to get the good. No, it’s a bad time for me to be taken; but
-it’s an honorable discharge.... Helen will be glad ... you know I’m not
-a pig, Winter ... do what I tried to do ... where’s my kind nurse?”
-Janet was trying by almost imperceptible movements to edge a pillow
-under his shoulders; he was past turning his head, but his eyes moved
-toward her. “I’ve left you ... a wedding gift ... if I lived ... given
-to you; but made it safe, anyhow. Mercer?”
-
-His voice had grown so feeble and came in such gasps from his torn
-and laboring chest that Mercer bent close to his lips to hear the
-struggling sentences. “Mercer,” he whispered, “I want ... just ... to
-tell you ... _you didn’t convert me_!”
-
-Thus, having made amends to his own will, having also, let us humbly
-hope, made amends to that greater and wiser Will which is of more
-merciful and wider vision that our weakness can comprehend, Edwin
-Keatcham very willingly closed his eyes on earth.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-EXTRACT FROM A LETTER
-
-
-From Mrs. Rebecca Winter to Mrs. John S. G. Winslow,
-
- Fairport, Iowa.
-
- * * * * *
-
-And it was delightful to discover that you were so distressed about
-me. I must be getting a trifle maudlin in my old age, for I have had a
-lump in my throat every time I have thought of Johnny and you actually
-starting out to find me; I am thankful my telegram (Please, Peggy, do
-not call it a _wire_ again--to me! I loathe these verbal indolences)
-reached you at Omaha in time to stop you.
-
-Really, we have not had hardships. Thanks to Israel Putnam Arnold!
-I have a very admiring gratitude for that man! In these days of
-degeneracy he builded a stanch enduring house. With union labor, too! I
-don’t see how he contrived to do it. Generally, when they build houses
-here, they scamp the underpinning and weaken the joists and paint over
-the dirt instead of washing it off; and otherwise deserve to be killed.
-The unfortunate man opposite had just that kind of house, which tumbled
-down and burned up, at once; but, alas! it killed some of the people in
-it, not the guilty masons and carpenters.
-
-Our chimneys have been inspected and we are now legally as well as
-actually sound; but we did not suffer. We cooked out on the sidewalk,
-and supplemented our cooking with young Tracy’s stove.
-
-I told you of Janet’s engagement. Confidentially, my dear Peggy, I
-am a bit responsible. They met by chance on the train; and I assure
-you, although chance might have parted us, I did not let it. I clung
-to Nephew Bertie. I’m sure he wondered why. I knew better than to let
-him suspect. But a success you can’t share is like a rose without a
-smell. So I confess to you, _I_ have made this match. But when you see
-Millicent she will tell you that _she_ helped things along. She has
-abused Janet like a pickpocket; but now, since she has discovered Janet
-didn’t draw the Daughters’ caricature of her, she regards her as one of
-the gems of the century.
-
-We are recovering from the terrible events of which we wrote. It
-is certainly a relief that Atkins is killed. He was one of the two
-scoundrels who sneaked into the _patio_ and put the bombs into the
-automobile. Bertie shot him. You have no doubt heard all about Mr.
-Keatcham’s death. He was killed by the man whose wickedness he had
-unconsciously fostered. He did not know it, but I make no doubt his
-swollen fortune and the unscrupulous daring of its acquiring had a
-great influence in corrupting his secretary.
-
-And his corruption was his master’s undoing. I must say I sympathize
-with young Tracy, who said last night: “I feel as if I had been put
-to soak in crime! That bomb was the limit. In future, me for common
-or garden virtue; it may be tame but I prefer tameness to delirium
-tremens!”
-
-I used to think that I should like to match my wits against a
-first-class criminal intellect; God forgive me for the wish! I have
-been matching wits for the last month; and never putting on my shoes
-without looking in them for a baby bomblet or feeling a twinge of
-indigestion without darkly suspecting the cook--who is really the
-best creature in the world, sent Mr. Arnold by a good Chinese friend
-of mine. (I had a chance to do a good turn to my friend, by the way,
-during the earthquake and thus repay some of his to me.)
-
-Archie is well and cheerful. Isn’t it like the Winter temperament
-to lose its melancholy in such horrors as we have seen? Archie is
-distinctly happier since he came to California. As for Janet and
-Rupert--oh, well, my dear, you and Johnny _know_! The house has been
-full of people, and we have had several friends of our own for a day
-or two. I got a recipe for a delicious tea-cake from Mrs. Wigglesworth
-of Boston. She didn’t save anything but her furs and her kimono and a
-bridge set, besides what she had on; she packed her trunk with great
-care and nobody would take it down-stairs. Of course she saved her bag
-of jewels, which reminds me that poor Mr. Keatcham left Janet some
-pearls--that is, the money for them. He was very much attached to her.
-
-We buried him on the crest of the hill; later, when more settled times
-shall come, he may take another and last journey to that huge mausoleum
-where his wife and mother are buried. Poor things! it is to be hoped
-they had no taste living or else that they can’t see now how hideous
-and flamboyant is their last costly resting place. But if Keatcham
-hadn’t a taste for the fine arts he had compensating qualities. I shall
-never forget the night of his burial. It was a “wonderful great night
-of stars,” as Stevenson says. A poor little tired-out clergyman, in a
-bedraggled surplice, who had been reading prayers over people for the
-last ten hours and was fit to drop, hurried through the service; and
-the town the dead man loved was flaming miles beyond miles. About the
-grave was none of his blood, none of his ancient friends, but the men
-I believe he would have chosen--men who had fought him and then had
-fought for him faithfully. They were haggard and spent with fighting
-the fire; and they went from his burial back to days and nights of
-desperate effort. He had fought and lost and yet did not lose at the
-last, but won, snatching victory out of defeat as he was wont to do
-all his life. The heavy burdens which have dropped from his shoulders
-these others whom he chose will carry, maybe more humbly, perhaps not
-so capably, but quite as courageously. And it is singular how his
-influence persists, how it touches Kito and Haley, as well as the
-others.
-
-“Shure,” said honest Haley (whose wit you are likely to sample in the
-near future, for he has elected to be the Rupert Winters’ chauffeur;
-they don’t know it yet, but they _will_ when it is time); “shure,” says
-he, “whin thot man so mashed up there ye cudn’t move him for fear ye’d
-lose the main parrt of him, whin _he_ was thinkin’ of the town and
-nothin’ else, I hadn’t the heart to be complainin’ for the loss of a
-few teeth and a few limps about me! An’ I fair wu’ked like the divil.
-So did Kito, who’s a dacint Jap gintleman and no haythin at all.”
-
-Poor Keatcham, he had no childhood and his wife died too soon to
-revive the fragrance of his youth; but I can’t help but think he had
-a reticent, awkward, shy sort of heart somewhere about him. Well, he
-was what Millicent would call “a compelling personality.” I use plain
-language and I call him a great man. He won the lion’s share because
-he was the lion. And yet, poor Lion, his share was a lonely life and a
-tragic death.
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-
-[A] Of course, no allusions are made to any real M. 20139.
-
-[B] So still and calm the night is,
- The very winds asleep,
- My heart’s so tender sentinel
- His watch and ward doth keep.
- And on the wings of zephyrs soft
- That wander how they will,
- To thee, O woman fair, to thee
- My prayers go fluttering still.
-
- Oh, take the heart’s love to thy heart
- Of one that doth adore!
- Have pity, add not to the flame
- That burns thy troubadour!
- And if compassion stirs thy breast
- For my eternal woe,
- Oh, as I love thee, loveliest
- Of women, love me so!
-
-
-
-TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
-
-
- Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.
-
- Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
-
- Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.
-
- Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LION'S SHARE ***
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the
-United States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for an eBook, except by following
-the terms of the trademark license, including paying royalties for use
-of the Project Gutenberg trademark. If you do not charge anything for
-copies of this eBook, complying with the trademark license is very
-easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose such as creation
-of derivative works, reports, performances and research. Project
-Gutenberg eBooks may be modified and printed and given away--you may
-do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks not protected
-by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the trademark
-license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country other than the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- 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.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm website
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that:
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the manager of
-the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the Foundation as set
-forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non-profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's business office is located at 809 North 1500 West,
-Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up
-to date contact information can be found at the Foundation's website
-and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without
-widespread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine-readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our website which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This website includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/old/68875-0.zip b/old/68875-0.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index bc5a90e..0000000
--- a/old/68875-0.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/68875-h.zip b/old/68875-h.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index a482265..0000000
--- a/old/68875-h.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/68875-h/68875-h.htm b/old/68875-h/68875-h.htm
deleted file mode 100644
index 56b06f2..0000000
--- a/old/68875-h/68875-h.htm
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,11776 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE html>
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
-<head>
- <meta charset="UTF-8" />
- <title>
- The lion’s share, by Octave Thanet—A Project Gutenberg eBook
- </title>
- <link rel="icon" href="images/cover.jpg" type="image/x-cover" />
- <style> /* <![CDATA[ */
-
-body {
- margin-left: 10%;
- margin-right: 10%;
-}
-
- h1,h2 {
- text-align: center;
- clear: both;
-}
-
-p {
- margin-top: .51em;
- text-align: justify;
- margin-bottom: .49em;
-}
-
-hr {
- width: 33%;
- margin-top: 2em;
- margin-bottom: 2em;
- margin-left: 33.5%;
- margin-right: 33.5%;
- clear: both;
-}
-
-hr.tb {width: 45%; margin-left: 27.5%; margin-right: 27.5%;}
-hr.chap {width: 65%; margin-left: 17.5%; margin-right: 17.5%;}
-@media print { hr.chap {display: none; visibility: hidden;} }
-
-div.chapter {page-break-before: always;}
-h2.nobreak {page-break-before: avoid;}
-
-table {
- margin-left: auto;
- margin-right: auto;
-}
-
-.tdr {text-align: right;}
-
-.pagenum {
- position: absolute;
- left: 92%;
- font-size: smaller;
- text-align: right;
- font-style: normal;
- font-weight: normal;
- font-variant: normal;
- text-indent: 0;
-}
-
-.blockquot {
- margin-left: 17.5%;
- margin-right: 17.5%;
-}
-
-.x-ebookmaker .blockquot {
- margin-left: 7.5%;
- margin-right: 7.5%;
-}
-
-.indentright {margin-right: 8em;}
-.indentright2 {margin-right: 4em;}
-.center {text-align: center;}
-
-.right {text-align: right;}
-
-.smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
-
-.allsmcap {font-variant: small-caps; text-transform: lowercase;}
-
-.ph1 {text-align: center; font-size: large; font-weight: bold;}
-.ph2 {text-align: center; font-size: xx-large; font-weight: bold;}
-
-div.titlepage {text-align: center; page-break-before: always; page-break-after: always;}
-div.titlepage p {text-align: center; font-weight: bold; line-height: 1.5; margin-top: 2em;}
-
-
-.xxlarge {font-size: 175%;}
-
-.large {font-size: 125%;}
-
-.caption {font-weight: bold; text-align: center;}
-
-.x-ebookmaker .hide {display: none; visibility: hidden;}
-
-.figcenter {
- margin: auto;
- text-align: center;
- page-break-inside: avoid;
- max-width: 100%;
-}
-
-.footnote {margin-left: 35%; margin-right: 0%; font-size: 0.9em;}
-
-.footnote .label {position: absolute; right: 63%; text-align: right;}
-
-.fnanchor {
- vertical-align: super;
- font-size: .8em;
- text-decoration:
- none;
-}
-
-.poetry-container {text-align: center;}
-.poetry-container2 {text-align: left;}
-.poetry {display: inline-block; text-align: left;}
-.poetry .verse {text-indent: -2.5em; padding-left: 3em;}
-.poetry .stanza {margin: 1em auto;}
-.poetry .indent {text-indent: 1.5em;}
-.poetry .center {text-align: center;}
-@media print { .poetry {display: block;} }
-.x-ebookmaker .poetry {display: block;}
-
-.transnote {background-color: #E6E6FA;
- color: black;
- font-size:smaller;
- margin-left: 17.5%;
- margin-right: 17.5%;
- padding: 1em;
- margin-bottom: 1em;
- font-family:sans-serif, serif; }
-
- /* ]]> */ </style>
-</head>
-<body>
-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The lion&#039;s share, by Octave Thanet</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. 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.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The lion&#039;s share</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Octave Thanet</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Illustrator: Edmund Marion (E. M.) Ashe</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: August 30, 2022 [eBook #68875]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Most recently updated: January 28, 2023</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: 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 THE LION&#039;S SHARE ***</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter hide"><img src="images/coversmall.jpg" width="450" alt="" /></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<h1>THE LION’S SHARE</h1>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_frontis.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">“Yes,” he said quietly, “you are right, it is blood.” Page <a href="#Page_99">99</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_title.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-<p><span class="xxlarge">THE LION’S SHARE</span></p>
-
-<p><i>By</i><br />
-
-<span class="large">OCTAVE THANET</span><br />
-
-Author of<br />
-The Man of the Hour, Stories of a Western Town<br />
-The Missionary Sheriff<br />
-A Book of True Lovers, etc.</p>
-
-<p>With Illustrations by<br />
-
-E. M. ASHE</p>
-
-<p>INDIANAPOLIS<br />
-THE BOBBS-MERRILL COMPANY<br />
-PUBLISHERS</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Copyright 1907</span><br />
-
-<span class="smcap">The Bobbs-Merrill Company</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">October</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">ROBERT DRUMMOND COMPANY, PRINTERS, NEW YORK</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr"><small>CHAPTER</small></td><td class="tdr" colspan="2"><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">I</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Man with the Moles</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_1"> 1</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">II</td><td> <span class="smcap">Aunt Rebecca</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_25"> 25</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">III</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Train Robbers</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_46"> 46</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">IV</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Vanishing of Archie</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_70"> 70</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">V</td><td> <span class="smcap">Blind Clues</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_83"> 83</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VI</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Voice in the Telephone</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_100"> 100</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VII</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Haunted House</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_118"> 118</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VIII</td><td> <span class="smcap">Face to Face</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_138"> 138</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">IX</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Agent of the Fireless Stove</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_152"> 152</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">X</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Smoldering Embers</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_171"> 171</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XI</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Charm of Jade</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_195"> 195</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XII</td><td> <span class="smcap">A Blow</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_212"> 212</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XIII</td><td> <span class="smcap">Whose Feet Were Shod with Silence</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_245"> 245</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XIV</td><td> <span class="smcap">From Mrs. Melville’s Point of View</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_254"> 254</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XV</td><td> “<span class="smcap">The Light That Never was</span>”</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_265"> 265</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XVI</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Real Edwin Keatcham</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_290"> 290</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XVII</td><td> <span class="smcap">In Which the Puzzle Falls Into Place</span> &#160; &#160; </td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_321"> 321</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XVIII</td><td> <span class="smcap">Casa Fuerte</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_343"> 343</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XIX</td><td> <span class="smcap">Extract from a Letter</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_371"> 371</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse"><i>Serene, indifferent to fate,</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Thou sittest by the Western gate,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Thou seest the white seas fold their tents,</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Oh, warder of two continents.</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Thou drawest all things small and great</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>To thee beside the Western gate.</i></div>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[1]</span>
-
-<p class="ph2">THE LION’S SHARE</p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER I<br />
-
-<small>THE MAN WITH THE MOLES</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>The first time that Colonel Rupert Winter saw
-Cary Mercer was under circumstances calculated
-to fix the incident firmly in his memory. In the
-year 1903, home from the Philippines on furlough,
-and preparing to return to a task big
-enough to attract him in spite of its exile and
-hardships, he had visited the son of a friend at
-Harvard. They were walking through the corridors
-of one of the private dormitories where the
-boy roomed. Rather grimly the soldier’s eyes
-were noting marble wainscoting and tiled floors,
-and contrasting this academic environment with
-his own at West Point. A caustic comment rose
-to his lips, but it was not uttered, for he heard the
-sharp bark of a pistol, followed by a thud, and a
-crackle as of breaking glass.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you fellows amuse yourselves shooting up<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[2]</span>
-the dormitory?” said he. The boy halted; he had
-gone white.</p>
-
-<p>“It came from Mercer’s room!” he cried, and
-ran across the corridor to a door with the usual
-labeling of two visiting cards. The door was not
-locked. Entering, they passed into a vestibule,
-thence through another door which stood open.
-For many a day after the colonel could see just
-how the slender young figure looked, the shoulders
-in a huddle on the study table, one arm
-swinging nerveless; beside him, on the floor,
-a revolver and a broken glass bottle. The latter
-must have made the crackling sound. Some dark
-red liquid, soaking the open sheets of a newspaper,
-filled the room with the pungent odor of alcohol.
-Only the top of the lad’s head showed—a curly,
-silky, dark brown head; but even before the colonel
-lifted it he had seen a few thick drops matting
-the brown curls. He laid the head back gently
-and his hand slipped to the boy’s wrist.</p>
-
-<p>“No use, Ralph,” he said in the subdued tones
-that the voice takes unconsciously in the presence
-of death.</p>
-
-<p>“And Endy was going to help him,” almost
-sobbed Ralph. “He told me he would. Oh, <i>why</i>
-couldn’t he have trusted his friends!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[3]</span>The colonel was looking at the newspaper—“Was
-it money?” said he; for a glance at the
-dabbled sheet had brought him the headings of
-the stock quotations: “Another Sharp Break in
-Stocks. New Low Records.” It <i>had</i> been money.
-Later, after what needed to be done was over,
-after doctors and officers of the law were gone,
-Colonel Winter heard the wretched story. A
-young, reckless, fatally attractive Southerner,
-rich friends, college societies, joyous times; nothing
-really wicked or vicious, only a surrender to
-youth and friendship and pleasure, and then the
-day of reckoning—duns, college warnings, the
-menace of black disgrace. The young fellow was
-an orphan, with no near kindred save one brother
-much older than he. The brother was reputed to
-be rich, according to Southern standards, and
-young Mercer, who had just come into a modest
-patrimony of his own, invested in his brother’s
-ventures. As to the character of these ventures,
-whether flimsy or substantial, the colonel’s informants
-were absolutely ignorant. All they knew
-of the elder Mercer was that he was often in New
-York and had “a lot to do with Wall Street.” He
-wasn’t a broker; no, he was trying to raise money
-to hang on to some big properties that he had;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[4]</span>
-and the stocks seemed to be going at remarkable
-rates just now, the bottom dropping out of the
-market. If a certain stock of the Mercers’—they
-didn’t know the name—could be kept above
-twenty-seven he would pull through. Colonel
-Winter made no comment, but he remembered
-that when he had studied the morning’s stock-market
-pages for himself, he had noted “bad
-slump in the Southern steels,” and “Tidewater
-on the toboggan slide; off three to four points,
-declining from twenty-seven and a fraction to
-twenty-three.”</p>
-
-<p>“Another victim of the Wall Street pirates,”
-was the colonel’s silent judgment on the tragedy.
-“Lucky for her his mother’s dead.”</p>
-
-<p>The next morning he had returned and had
-gone to his young friend’s rooms.</p>
-
-<p>The boy was still full of the horror of the day
-before. Mercer’s brother was in Cambridge, he
-said—arrived that morning from New York.
-“Endy is going to fetch him round to get him out
-of the reporters’ way sometime this evening;
-maybe there’s something I can do”—this in explanation
-of his declining to dine with the colonel.
-As the two entered the rooms, Winter was a little
-in advance, and caught the first glimpse of a man<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[5]</span>
-sitting in a big mission arm-chair, his head sunk
-on his breast. So absorbed was this man in his
-own distempered musings that the new-comers’
-approach did not arouse him. He sat with knitted
-brows and clenched hands, staring into vacancy;
-his rigid and pallid features set in a ghastly intensity
-of thought. There was suffering in the
-look; but there was more: the colonel, who had
-been living among the serpent passions of the
-Orient, knew deadly anger when he saw it; it was
-branded on the face before him. Involuntarily he
-fell back; he felt as if he had blundered in on a
-naked soul. Noiselessly he slipped out of the
-range of vision. He spoke loudly, halting to ask
-some question about the rooms; this made a moment’s
-pause.</p>
-
-<p>It was sufficient; in the study they found a
-quiet, calm, although rather haggard-looking man,
-who greeted Winter’s companion courteously,
-with a Southern accent, and a very good manner.
-He was presented to the colonel as Mr. Mercer.
-He would have excused himself, professing that
-he was just going, but the colonel took the words
-out of his mouth: “Ralph, here, has a cigar for
-me—that is all I came for; see you at the Touraine,
-Ralph, to-morrow for luncheon, then.” He<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[6]</span>
-did not see the man again; neither did he see
-Ralph, although he made good, so far as in him
-lay, his fiction of an engagement at the Touraine.
-But Ralph could not come; and Winter had
-lunched, instead, with an old friend at his club,
-and had watched, through a stately Georgian window,
-the shifting greenery of the Common in an
-east wind.</p>
-
-<p>All through the luncheon the soldier’s mind
-kept swerving from the talk in hand to Cary
-Mercer’s face. Yet he never expected to see it
-again. Three years later he did see it; and this
-second encounter, of which, by the way, Mercer
-was unconscious, was the beginning of an absorbing
-chapter in his life. A short space of time that
-chapter occupied; yet into it crowded mystery,
-peril, a wonderful and awful spectacle, the keenest
-happiness and the cruelest anxiety. Let his days
-be ever so many, the series of events which followed
-Mercer’s reappearance will not be blurred
-by succeeding experiences; their vivid and haunting
-pictures will burn through commoner and
-later happenings as an electric torch flares through
-layers of mist.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing, however, could promise adventure
-less than the dull and chilly late March evening<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[7]</span>
-when the chapter began. Nor could any one be
-less on the lookout for adventure, or even interest,
-than was Rupert Winter. In truth, he was
-listless and depressed.</p>
-
-<p>When he alighted from his cab in the great
-court of the Rock Island Station he found Haley,
-his old orderly, with a hand on the door-hasp.
-Haley’s military stoicism of demeanor could not
-quite conceal a certain agitation—at least not
-from the colonel’s shrewd eye, used to catch the
-moods of his soldiers. He strangled a kind of
-sigh. “Doesn’t like it much more than I,” thought
-Rupert Winter. “This is mighty kind of you,
-Haley,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sor,” answered Haley, saluting. The
-colonel grinned feebly. Haley, busy repelling a
-youthful porter, did not notice the grin; he strode
-ahead with the colonel’s world-scarred hand-luggage,
-found an empty settee beside one of the
-square-tiled columns of the waiting-room and disposed
-his burden on the iron-railed seat next the
-corner one, which he reserved for the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“The train ain’t in yet, Colonel,” said he. “I’ll
-be telling you—”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Haley,” interrupted the colonel, whose lip
-twitched a little; and he looked aside; “best say<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[8]</span>
-good-by now; don’t wait. The fact is, I’m thinking
-of too many things you and I have gone
-through together.” He held out his hand; Haley,
-with a stony expression, gazed past it and saluted,
-while he repeated: “Yes, sor; I’ll be back to take
-the bags whin the train’s made up.” Whereupon
-he wheeled and made off with speed.</p>
-
-<p>“Just the same damned obstinate way he’s always
-had,” chuckled the colonel to himself.
-Nevertheless, something ached in his throat as he
-frowned and winked.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, get a brace on you, you played-out old
-sport!” he muttered. “The game’s on the last four
-cards and you haven’t established your suit; you’ll
-have to sit back and watch the other fellows
-play!” But his dreary thoughts persisted. Rupert
-was a colonel in the regular army of the
-United States. He had been brevetted a brigadier-general
-after the Spanish War, and had commanded,
-not only a brigade, but a division at one
-critical time in the Philippines; but for reasons
-probably known to the little knot of politicians
-who “hung it up,” although incomprehensible to
-most Americans, Congress had failed to pass the
-bill giving the wearers of brevet titles the right to
-keep their hard-won and empty honors; wherefore<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span>
-General Winter had declined to Colonel
-Winter.</p>
-
-<p>He had more substantial troubles, including a
-wound which would probably make him limp
-through life and possibly retire him from service
-at fifty. It had given him a six months’ sick leave
-(which he had not wanted), and after spending
-a month on the Atlantic coast, he was going for
-the spring to the Pacific. Haley, whose own term
-of service had expired, had not reënlisted, but had
-followed him, Mrs. Haley and the baby uncomplainingly
-bringing up the rear. It was not fair
-to Haley nor to Mrs. Haley, the colonel felt. He
-had told Haley so; he had found a good situation
-for the man, and he had added the deed for a little
-house in the suburbs of Chicago.</p>
-
-<p>If Haley wouldn’t reënlist—there never was a
-better soldier since he had downed a foolish young
-hankering for wild times and whisky—if he
-wouldn’t go back to the army, where he belonged,
-let him settle down, take up the honest carpenter’s
-trade that he had abandoned, be a good citizen
-and marry little Nora to some classmate in the
-high school, who might make a fortune and build
-her a Colonial mansion, should the Colonial still
-obtain in the twentieth century.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span>The colonel had spread a grand prospect before
-Haley, who listened unresponsively, a dumb pain
-in his wide blue Irish eyes. The colonel hated it;
-but, somehow, he hated worse the limp look of
-Haley’s back as he watched it dwindle down
-Michigan Avenue.</p>
-
-<p>However, Mrs. Haley had been more satisfactory,
-if none the less bewildering. She seemed
-very grateful over the house and the three hundred
-dollars for its furnishing. A birthday present,
-he had termed it, with a flicker of humor
-because the day was his own birthday. His fiftieth
-birthday it happened to be, and it occurred to him
-that a man ought to do something a little notable
-on such an anniversary. This rounding of the
-half-century had attributes apart; it was no mere
-annual birthday; it marked the last vanishing flutter
-of the gilded draperies of youth; the withering
-of the garlands; the fading tinkle of the light
-music of hope. It should mark a man’s solid
-achievements. Once, not so long ago, Winter had
-believed that his fiftieth birthday would see wide
-and beneficent and far-reaching results in the
-province where he ruled. That dream was shattered.
-He was generous of nature, and he could
-have been content to behold another reap the fields<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span>
-which he had sown and tilled; it was the harvest,
-whether his or another’s, for which he worked;
-but his had been the bitter office to have to stand
-aside, with no right to protest, and see his work
-go to waste because his successor had a feeble
-brain and a pusillanimous caution in place of
-his own dogged will. For all these reasons, as
-well as others, the colonel found no zest in his
-fiftieth birthday; and his reverie drifted dismally
-from one somber reflection to another until it
-brought up at the latest wound to his heart—his
-favorite brother’s death.</p>
-
-<p>There had been three Winter brothers—Rupert,
-Melville and Thomas. During the past year
-both Thomas Winter and his wife had died, leaving
-one child, a boy of fourteen, named Archibald
-after his father’s uncle. Rupert Winter and the
-boy’s great-aunt, the widow of the great-uncle for
-whom he had been named, were appointed joint
-guardians of the young Archie. To-night, in his
-jaded mood, he was assailed by reproaches because
-he had not seen more of his ward. Why, he hadn’t
-so much as looked the little chap up when he
-passed through Fairport—merely had sent him a
-letter and some truck from the Philippines; nice
-guardian <i>he</i> was! By a natural enough transition,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span>
-his thoughts swerved to his own brief and not altogether
-happy married life. He thought of the
-graves in Arizona where he had left his wife and
-his two children, and his heart felt heavy. To
-escape musings which grew drearier every second,
-he cast his eyes about the motley crowd
-shuffling over the tiled floors or resting in the
-massive dark oaken seats. And it was then that
-he saw Cary Mercer. At first he did not recognize
-the face. He only gazed indifferently at two
-well-dressed men who sat some paces away from
-him in the shadow of a great tiled column similar
-to his own. There was this difference, it happened:
-the mission lantern with its electric bulbs
-above the two men was flashing brightly, and by
-some accident that above the colonel was dark.
-He could see the men, himself in the shadow.</p>
-
-<p>The men were rather striking in appearance;
-they were evidently gentlemen; the taller one was
-young, well set-up, clean-shaven and quietly but
-most correctly dressed. His light brown hair
-showed a slight curl in its closely clipped locks;
-his gray-blue eyes had long lashes of brown
-darker than his hair; his teeth were very white,
-and there was a dimple in his cheek, plain when
-he smiled. Had his nose been straight he would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span>
-have been as handsome as a Greek god, but the
-nose was only an ordinary American nose, rather
-too broad at the base; moreover, his jaw was a
-little too square for classic lines. Nevertheless, he
-was good to look upon, as well as strong and clean
-and wholesome, and when his gray-blue eyes
-strayed about the room the dimple dented his
-cheek and his white teeth gleamed in a kind of
-merry good-nature pleasant to see. But it was the
-other man who held the colonel’s eye. This man
-was double the young man’s age, or near that; he
-was shorter, although still of fair stature, and
-slim of build. His face was oval in contour and
-delicate of feature. Although he wore no glasses,
-his brow had the far pucker of a near-sighted man.
-There was a mole on his cheek-bone and another
-just below his ear. Both were small, rather than
-large, and in no sense disfiguring; but the colonel
-noted them absently, being in the habit of photographing
-a man in a glance. The face had beauty,
-distinction even, yet about it hung some association,
-sinister as a poison label.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, where,” said the colonel to himself,
-“<i>where</i> have I seen that man?” Almost instantly
-the clue came to him. “By Jove, it’s the brother!”
-he exclaimed. Three years ago, and he had almost<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span>
-forgotten; but here was Cary Mercer—the name
-came to him after a little groping—here he was
-again; but who was the pleasant youngster with
-him? And what were they discussing with so little
-apparent and so much real earnestness?</p>
-
-<p>One of the colonel’s physical gifts was an extraordinary
-acuteness of hearing. It passed the
-mark of a faculty and became a marvel. Part of
-this uncanny power was really due, not to hearing
-alone, but to an alliance with another sense,
-because Winter had learned the lip language in
-his youth; he heard with his eyes as well as his
-ears. This combination had made an unintentional
-and embarrassed eavesdropper out of an
-honest gentleman a number of times. To set off
-such evil tricks it had saved his life once on the
-plains and had rescued his whole command another
-time in the Philippines. While he studied
-the two faces a sentence from the younger man
-gripped his attention. It was: “I don’t mind the
-risk, but I hate taking such an old woman’s
-money.”</p>
-
-<p>“She has a heap,” answered the other man
-carelessly; “besides—” He added something with
-averted head and in too low a voice to reach the
-listener unassisted. But it was convincing, evidently,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span>
-since the young man’s face grew both
-grave and stern. He nodded, muttering: “Oh, I
-understand; I wasn’t backing water; I know we
-have lost the right to be squeamish. But I say,
-old chap, how long since Mrs. Winter has seen
-you? Would she recognize you?”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel, who had been about to abandon
-his espionage as unbecoming a soldier and a gentleman,
-stowed away all his scruples at the mention
-of the name. He pricked up his ears and
-sharpened his eyes, but was careful lest they
-should catch his glance. The next sentence, owing
-to the speaker’s position, was inaudible and invisible;
-but he clearly caught the young man’s
-response:</p>
-
-<p>“You’re sure they’ll be on this train?”</p>
-
-<p>And he saw the interlocutor’s head nod.</p>
-
-<p>“The boy’s with them?”</p>
-
-<p>An inaudible reply, but another nod.</p>
-
-<p>“And you’re sure of Miss Smith?”</p>
-
-<p>This time the other’s profile was toward the
-listener, who heard the reply, “Plumb sure. I
-wish I were as sure of some other things. Have
-we settled everything? It is better not to be seen
-together.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I think you’ve put me wise on the main<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span>
-points. By the way, what <i>is</i> the penalty for kidnapping?”</p>
-
-<p>Again an averted head and hiatus, followed by
-the younger man’s sparkling smile and exclamation:
-“Wow! Riskier than foot-ball—and even
-more fun!” Something further he added, but his
-arms hid his mouth as he thrust them into his
-greatcoat, preparing to move away. He went
-alone; and the other, after a moment’s gloomy
-meditation, gathered up coat and bag and followed.
-During that moment of arrested decision,
-however, his features had dropped into sinister
-lines which the colonel remembered.</p>
-
-<p>“Dangerous customer, or I miss my guess,”
-mused the soldier, who knew the passions of men.
-“I wonder—they couldn’t mean my Aunt Rebecca?
-She’s old; she has millions of money—but
-she’s not on this train. And there’s no Miss
-Smith in our deck. I’m so used to plotting I go
-off on fake hikes! Probably I’m getting old and
-dotty. Mercer, poor fellow, may have his brain
-turned and be an anarchist or a bomb-thrower or
-a dirty kidnapper for revenge; but that boy’s a
-decent chap; I’ve licked too many second lieutenants
-into shape not to know something of youngsters.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_016fp.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">“By the way what <i>is</i> the penalty for kidnapping?” Page <a href="#Page_16">16</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span>He pushed the idea away; or, rather, his own
-problems pushed it out of his mind, which went
-back to his ward and his single living brother.
-Melville had no children, only his wife’s daughters,
-who were both married—Melville having
-married a widow with a family, an estate and a
-mind of her own. Melville was a professor in a
-state university, a mild, learned man whom nature
-intended for science but whom his wife was determined
-to make into the president of the university.</p>
-
-<p>“Even money which will win,” chuckled Rupert
-Winter to himself. “Millicent hasn’t much
-tact; but she has the perseverance of the saints.
-<i>She</i> married Mel; he doesn’t know, but she surely
-did. And she bosses him now. Well, I suppose
-Mel likes to be bossed; he never had any strenuous
-opinions except about the canals of Mars—<i>Valgame
-dios</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>With a gasp the colonel sprang to his feet.
-There before him, in the flesh, was his sister-in-law.
-Her stately figure, her Roman profile, her
-gracefully gesticulating hand, which indicated the
-colonel’s position to her heavily laden attendant,
-a lad in blue—these he knew by heart just as he
-knew that her toilet for the journey would be in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[18]</span>
-the latest mode, and that she would have the latest
-fashion of gait and mien. Millicent studied such
-things.</p>
-
-<p>She waved her luggage into place—an excellent
-place—in the same breath dismissing the porter
-and instructing him when he must return.
-Then, but not until then, did she turn graciously
-to her brother-in-law.</p>
-
-<p>“I hoped that I should find you, Bertie,” she
-said in a voice of such creamy richness that it was
-hard to credit the speaker with only three short
-trips to England. “Melville said you were to take
-this train; and I was <i>so</i> delighted, <i>so</i> relieved! I
-am in a most harassing predicament, my dear
-Bertie.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s bad,” murmured the colonel with
-sympathetic solicitude: “what’s the trouble?
-Couldn’t you get a section?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have my reservations, but I don’t know
-whether I shall go to-night.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe I’m stupid, Millicent, but I confess I
-don’t know what you mean.”</p>
-
-<p>“Really, there’s no reason why you should,
-Bertie. That’s why I was so anxious to see you—in
-time, so that I might explain to you—might
-put you on your guard.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[19]</span>“Yes?” the colonel submitted; he never hurried
-a woman.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going to visit dear Amy—you remember
-she was married two years ago and lives in Pasadena;
-she has a dear little baby and the loveliest
-home! It’s charming. And she was so delighted
-with your wedding gift, it was <i>so</i> original. Amy
-never did care for costly things; these simple,
-unique gifts always pleased her. Of course, my
-main object is to see the dear child, but I shall not
-go to-night <i>unless</i> Aunt Rebecca Winter is on the
-train. If for any reason she waits over until to-morrow
-I shall wait also.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah,” sighed the colonel very softly, not stirring
-a muscle of his politely attentive face; “and
-does Aunt Rebecca expect to go on the train?”</p>
-
-<p>“They told me at the Pullman office that she
-had the drawing-room, the state-room and two
-sections. Of course, she has her maid with her
-and Archie—”</p>
-
-<p>“Does <i>he</i> go, too?” the colonel asked, his eyes
-narrowing a little.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, she’s taking him to California; he doesn’t
-seem well enough, she thinks, to go to school, so
-he is to have a tutor out there. I’m a little afraid
-Aunt Rebecca mollycoddles the boy.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[20]</span>“Aunt Rebecca never struck me as a molly-coddler.
-I always considered her a tolerably
-cynical old Spartan. But do you mean there is
-any doubt of their going? Awfully good of you
-to wait to see if they don’t go, but I’m sure Aunt
-Rebecca wouldn’t want you to sacrifice your section—”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Melville lifted a shapely hand in a Delsartian
-gesture of arrest; her smiling words were
-the last the colonel had expected. “Hush, dear
-Bertie; Aunt Rebecca doesn’t <i>know</i> I am going.
-I don’t want her to know until we are on the
-train.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I see, a surprise?” But he did <i>not</i> see;
-and, with a quiet intentness, he watched the color
-raddle Mrs. Melville’s smooth cheeks.</p>
-
-<p>“Hardly,” returned the lady. “The truth is,
-Bertie, Melville and I are worried about Aunt Rebecca.
-She, we fear, has fallen under the influence
-of a most plausible adventuress; I suppose
-you have heard of her companion, Miss Smith?”</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t say I have exactly,” said the colonel
-placidly, but his eyes narrowed again. “Who is
-the lady?”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought—I am <i>sure</i> Melville must have
-written you. But— Oh, yes, he wrote yesterday<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[21]</span>
-to Boston. Well, Bertie, Miss Smith is a Southerner;
-she says she is a South Carolinian, but
-Aunt Rebecca picked her up in Washington,
-where she was with a kind of cousin of ours who
-was half crazy. Miss Smith took care of her and
-she died”—she fixed a darkling eye on the soldier—“she
-<i>died</i> and she left Miss Smith money.”</p>
-
-<p>“Much?”</p>
-
-<p>“A few thousands. That is how Aunt Rebecca
-met her, and she pulled the wool over auntie’s
-eyes, and they came back together. She’s awfully
-clever.”</p>
-
-<p>“Young? Pretty?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dear, no. And she’s nearer forty than
-thirty. Just the designing age for a woman when
-she’s still wanting to marry some one but beginning
-to be afraid that she can’t. Then such creatures
-always try to get <i>money</i>. If they can’t
-marry it, and there’s no man to set their caps for,
-they try to wheedle it out of some poor fool
-woman!” Millicent was in earnest, there was no
-doubt of that; the sure sign was her unconscious
-return to the direct expressions of her early life
-in the Middle West.</p>
-
-<p>“And you think Miss Smith is trying to influence
-Aunt Rebecca?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[22]</span>“Of course she is; and Aunt Rebecca is eighty,
-Rupert. And often while people of her age show
-no other sign of weakening intellect, they are not
-well regulated in their affections; they take fancies
-to people and get doting and clinging. She is
-getting to depend on Miss Smith. Really, that
-woman has more influence with her than all the
-rest of us together. She won’t hear a word against
-her. Why! when I tried to suggest how little we
-knew about Miss Smith and that it would be better
-not to trust her <i>too</i> entirely, she positively <i>resented</i>
-it. Of course I used tact, too. I was so
-hurt, so surprised!” Mrs. Millicent was plainly
-aggrieved.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel, who had his own opinion of the
-tact of his brother’s wife, was not so surprised;
-but he made an inarticulate sound which might
-pass for sympathy.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve been worried a good deal,” pursued
-Mrs. Melville, “about the way Aunt Rebecca has
-acted. She wouldn’t stay in Fairport, where we
-could have some influence over her. She was
-always going south or going to the sea-shore or going
-<i>somewhere</i>. Sometimes I suspect Miss Smith
-made her, to keep her away from <i>us</i>, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, as long as I have known Aunt Rebecca—anyhow,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[23]</span>
-ever since Uncle Archibald died—she
-has been restless and flying about.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not as she is now. And then she only had her
-maid—”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, Randall; she’s faithful as they make
-’em. What does <i>she</i> say about Miss Smith?”</p>
-
-<p>“Bertie, she’s won over Randall. Randall
-swears by her. Oh, she’s <i>deep</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>“Seems to be. But—excuse me—what’s your
-game, Millicent? How do you mean to protect
-our aged kinswoman and, incidentally, of course,
-the Winter fortune?”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall watch, Bertie; I shall be on my guard
-every waking hour. That deluded old woman is
-in more danger, perhaps, than you dream.”</p>
-
-<p>“As how?”</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Smith”—her voice sank portentously—“<i>was
-a trained nurse</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>“What harm does that do—unless you think
-she would know too much about poisons?” The
-colonel laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s no laughing matter, Bertie. Rebecca is so
-rich and this other woman is so poor, and, in my
-estimation, so ambitious. I make no insinuations,
-I only say she needs watching.”</p>
-
-<p>“You may be right about that,” said the colonel<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[24]</span>
-thoughtfully. “There is Haley and the boy for
-your bags!”</p>
-
-<p>The boy picked up the big dress-suit case, the
-smaller dress-suit case and the hat case, he
-grabbed the bundle of cloaks, the case of umbrellas,
-and the lizard-skin bag. Dubiously he
-eyed the colonel’s luggage, as he tried to disengage
-a finger.</p>
-
-<p>“Niver moind, young feller,” called Haley, peremptorily
-whisking away the nearest piece, “I’ll
-help you a bit with yours, instead; you’ve a load,
-sure!”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Melville explained in an undertone: “I
-take all the hand-luggage I possibly can; the over-weight
-charges are wicked!”</p>
-
-<p>“Haley, they won’t let you inside without a
-ticket,” objected the colonel. But Haley, unheeding,
-strode on ahead of the staggering youth.</p>
-
-<p>“I have an English bath-tub, locked, of course,
-and packed with things, but he has put <i>that</i> in the
-car,” said Mrs. Melville.</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly,” said the colonel absently; he was
-thinking: Mrs. Winter, the boy, Miss Smith—how
-ridiculously complete! Decidedly <i>something</i>
-will bear watching.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[25]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER II<br />
-
-<small>AUNT REBECCA</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>No sooner was Mrs. Melville ushered into her
-section than the colonel went through the train.
-He was not so suspicious as he told himself he
-might have been, with such a dovetailing of circumstances
-into his accidentally captured information;
-he couldn’t yet read villainy on that college
-lad’s frank face. But no reason, therefore, to neglect
-precautions. “Hope the best of men and prepare
-for the worst,” was the old campaigner’s
-motto.</p>
-
-<p>A walk through the cars showed him no signs
-of the two men. It was a tolerably complete inspection,
-too. There was only one drawing-room
-or state-room of which he did not manage to get
-a glimpse—the closed room being the property of
-a very great financial magnate, whose private car
-was waiting for him in Denver. His door was
-fast, and the click of the type-writer announced
-the tireless industry of our rulers.</p>
-
-<p>But if he did not find the college boy or the man<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[26]</span>
-with the moles he did get a surprise for his walk;
-namely, the sight of the family of Haley, and
-Haley himself beside their trig, battered luggage,
-in a section of the car next his own. Mrs.
-Haley turned a guilty red, while Haley essayed a
-stolid demeanor.</p>
-
-<p>“What does this mean?” demanded the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“Haley felt he would <i>have</i> to go with you, Colonel,”
-replied Mrs. Haley, who had timid, wide,
-blue eyes and the voice of a bird, but a courage
-under her panic, as birds have, too, when their
-nests are in peril. “We’ve rinted the house to a
-good man with grown-up children, and Haley can
-get a job if you won’t want him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yis, sor,” mumbled Haley. He was standing
-at attention, as was his wife, the toddling Nora
-being held in the posture of respect on the plush
-seat.</p>
-
-<p>“And I suppose you took the furniture money
-to buy tickets?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yis, sor.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you’re bound to go with me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yis, sor,” said Haley.</p>
-
-<p>“You ought to be ashamed of yourself, Sergeant,”
-said the colonel; but he was glad at the
-heart of him for this mutinous loyalty.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[27]</span>“Yis, sor,” said Haley.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, since you are here, I engage you from
-to-day, you understand.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yis, sor,” said Haley. Mrs. Haley whimpered
-a blessing; but the only change in the soldier was
-that his military stolidity became natural and real
-instead of forced.</p>
-
-<p>“Sit down on this seat over here with me and
-I’ll tell you what I want. You fraud, letting me
-say good-by to you—”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t want to take the liberty, sor, but you
-<i>made</i> me shake hands. I was afraid you’d catch
-on, sor. ’Tis a weight off me moind, sor.”</p>
-
-<p>“I dare say. You always have your way with
-me, you old mule. Now listen; I want you to be
-on the watch for two men”—thereupon the colonel
-described his men, laying special stress on the
-moles on the face of one, and the other’s dimple.</p>
-
-<p>Having set Haley his tasks, he went back to his
-car in better spirits.</p>
-
-<p>By this time the train was moving. He had
-seen his kinswoman and her party enter; and he
-found the object of Mrs. Melville’s darksome
-warnings sitting with a slender lad in the main
-body of the car. Aunt Rebecca was in the drawing-room,
-her maid with her. Mrs. Melville, who<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[28]</span>
-had already revealed her presence, sat across the
-aisle. She presented the colonel at once.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Smith did not look formidable; she looked
-“nice,” thought the colonel. She was of medium
-height; she was obviously plump, although well
-proportioned; her presence had an effect of radiant
-cleanliness, her eyes were so luminous and her
-teeth so fine and her white shirt-waist so immaculate.
-There was about her a certain soft illumination
-of cheerfulness, and at the same time a restful
-repose; she moved in a leisurely fashion and
-she sat perfectly still. “I never saw any one who
-looked less of an adventuress,” Winter was thinking,
-as he bowed. Then swiftly his glance went
-to the lad, a pale young fellow with hazel eyes and
-a long slim hand which felt cold.</p>
-
-<p>The boy made a little inarticulate sound in his
-throat and blushed when Colonel Winter addressed
-him. But he looked the brighter for the
-blush. It was not a plain face; rather an interesting
-one in spite of its listlessness and its sickly
-pallor; its oval was purely cut, the delicate mouth
-was closed firmly enough, and the hazel eyes with
-their long lashes would be beautiful were they not
-so veiled.</p>
-
-<p>“He has the Winter mouth, at least,” noted the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[29]</span>
-colonel. He felt a novel throb at his heart. Had
-his own boy lived, the baby that died when it was
-born, he would be only a year older than Archie.
-At least, this boy was of his own blood. Without
-father or mother, but <i>not</i> alone in the world; and,
-if any danger menaced, not without defenders.
-The depression which had enveloped him lifted
-as mist before the sun, burned away by the mere
-thought of possible difficulties. “We will see if
-any one swindles you out of your share,” said
-Rupert Winter, compressing the Winter mouth
-more firmly, “or if those gentlemanly kidnappers
-mean you.”</p>
-
-<p>His ebbing suspicion of the boy’s companion
-revived; he would be on his guard, all right.</p>
-
-<p>“Aunt Rebecca wants to see you,” Mrs. Melville
-suggested. “She is in the drawing-room with
-her solitaire.”</p>
-
-<p>“Still playing Penelope’s Web?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, she always comes back to it. But she
-plays bridge, too; Rupert, I hear your game is a
-wonder. Archie’s been learning, so he could play
-with you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good for Archie!”—he shot a glance and a
-smile at the lad’s reddening face—“we’ll have a
-game.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[30]</span>“Lord, I wish he didn’t look quite so ladylike,”
-he was grumbling within, as he dutifully made his
-way to his aunt’s presence.</p>
-
-<p>The electric lights flooded the flimsy railway
-table on which were spread rows of small-sized
-cards. An elderly lady of quality was musing
-over the pasteboard rows. A lady of quality—that
-was distinctly the phrase to catch one’s fancy
-at the first glimpse of Mrs. Winter. Not an aged
-lady, either, for even at eighty that elegantly
-moulded, slim figure, that abundance of silvery
-hair—parted in the middle and growing thickly on
-each side in nature’s own fashion, which art can
-not counterfeit, as well as softly puffed and
-massed above—that exquisitely colored and textured
-skin, strangely smooth for her years, with
-tiny wrinkles of humor, to be sure, about the eyes,
-but with cheeks and skin unmarred; that fine,
-firmly carved profile, those black eyebrows and
-lashes and still brilliant dark eyes; most of all that
-erect, alert, dainty carriage, gave no impression
-of age; but they all, and their accessories of toilet
-and manner, and a little prim touch of an older,
-more reticent day in both dress and bearing, recalled
-the last century phrase.</p>
-
-<p>A soft gray bunch of chinchilla fur lay where<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[31]</span>
-she had slipped it on her soft gray skirts; one
-hand rested in the fur—her left hand—and on the
-third finger were the only rings which she wore, a
-band of gold, worn by sixty years, and a wonderful
-ruby, wherein (at least such was Rupert’s
-phantasy) a writhing flame was held captive by
-its guard of diamond icicles. The same rings admired
-by her nephew ever since he was a cadet—just
-the same smiling, inscrutable, high-bred, unchanging
-old dame!</p>
-
-<p>“Good evening, Aunt Rebecca; not a day
-older!” said the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“Good evening, Bertie,” returned the lady, extending
-a hand over the cards; “excuse my not
-rising to greet you; I might joggle the cards. Of
-course I’m not a day older; I don’t dare to grow
-older at my age! Sit down. I’m extremely glad
-to see you; I’ve a heap to talk to you about. Do
-you mind if I run this game through first?”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel didn’t mind. He raised the proffered
-hand to his lips; such homage seemed quite
-the most natural act in the world with Mrs. Winter.
-And he unobtrusively edged his own lean and
-wiry person into the vacant seat opposite her.</p>
-
-<p>“How far are you going?” said she, after a few
-moves of the cards.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[32]</span>“My ticket says Los Angeles; but it had to say
-something, so I chose Los Angeles for luck; I’m
-an irresponsible tramp now, you know; and I may
-drop off almost anywhere. You are for southern
-California, aren’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Eventually; but we shall stop at San Francisco
-for two or three weeks.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mind if I stop off with you? I want
-to get acquainted with my ward,” said the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a good idea, Bertie.”</p>
-
-<p>“He seems rather out of sorts; you aren’t worried
-about—well, tuberculosis or that sort of
-thing?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am worried about just that sort of thing;
-although the doctor says nothing organic at all is
-the matter with him; but he is too melancholy for
-a boy; he needs rousing; losing his father and
-mother in one year, you know, and he was devoted
-to them. I can’t quite make him out, Bertie; he
-hasn’t the Winter temperament. I suppose he has
-a legal right to his mother’s nature; but it is very
-annoying. It makes him so much harder to understand—not
-that she wasn’t a good woman who
-made Tom happy; but she wasn’t a Winter.
-However, Janet has brightened him up considerably—you’ve<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[33]</span>
-seen Janet—Miss Smith? What do
-you think of her?”</p>
-
-<p>Winter said honestly that she was very nice-looking
-and that she looked right capable; he fell
-into the idiom of his youth sometimes when with
-a Southerner.</p>
-
-<p>“She is,” said Aunt Rebecca.</p>
-
-<p>“Where did you find her?” asked the colonel
-carelessly, inspecting the cards.</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Rebecca smiled. “I thought Millicent
-would have given you all the particulars. She was
-nurse, secretary, companion and diet cook to
-Cousin Angela Nelson; when <i>she</i> died I got her.
-Lucky for me.”</p>
-
-<p>“So I should judge,” commented the colonel
-politely.</p>
-
-<p>“I presume Millicent has told you that she is an
-adventuress and after my money and a heap more
-stuff. If she hasn’t she will. Get a notion once in
-Millicent’s head and a surgical operation is necessary
-to dislodge it! Janet is the only mortal person
-who could live with poor Cousin Angela, who
-had enough real diseases to kill her and enough
-imaginary ones to kill anybody who lived with
-her! Janet made her comfortable, would not
-stand everything on earth from her—though she<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[34]</span>
-did stand a heap—and really cared for her. When
-she died Cousin Angela left her some money; not
-very much, but a few thousands. She would have
-left her more, but Janet wouldn’t let her. She left
-some to some old servants, who surely deserved it
-for living with <i>her</i>, some to charities and the rest
-to her sisters, who hadn’t put a foot inside the
-house for fifteen years, but naturally resented her
-not giving them everything. I reckon they filled
-Millicent up with their notions.” She pushed the
-outspread cards together.</p>
-
-<p>“You had several moves left,” said the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“Four. But then, I was finished. Bertie, you
-play bridge, of course; and I used to hear of your
-whist triumphs; how did you happen to take to
-whist?”</p>
-
-<p>“To fill up the time, I reckon. I began it years
-ago. Now a soldier’s life is a great deal more
-varied, because a man will be shifted around and
-get a show of the different kinds of service. And
-there are the exams, and the Philippines—oh,
-plenty of diversions. But in the old days a man in
-the line was billed for an awfully stupid time. I
-didn’t care to take to drink; and I couldn’t read as
-you do if I’d had books, which I hadn’t, so I took
-to playing cards. I played skat and poker and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[35]</span>
-whist, and of late years I’ve played bridge. Millicent
-plays?”</p>
-
-<p>“Millicent is a celebrated player. She was a
-great duplicate-whist player, you know. To see
-Millicent in her glory, one should play duplicate
-with her. I’m only a chump player; my sole object
-is to win tricks.”</p>
-
-<p>“What else should it be?”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Rebecca smiled upon him. “To give information
-to your partner. The main object of
-the celebrated American-leads system is signaling
-information to your partner. Incidentally, one
-tells the adversaries, as well as one’s partner,
-which, however, doesn’t count really as much as
-you might think; for most people don’t notice
-what their partners play <i>very</i> much, and don’t
-notice what their adversaries play at all. Millicent
-is always so busy indicating things to her partner
-and watching for his signals and his indications
-that you can run a cross ruff in on her without her
-suspecting. She asked me once if she didn’t play
-an intelligible game, and I told her she did; a babe
-in arms could understand it. She didn’t seem
-quite pleased.”</p>
-
-<p>“How about Archie? Can he play a good
-game?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[36]</span>“Very fair for a boy of fourteen; he was fond
-of whist until his troubles came,” said Mrs. Winter,
-with a faint clouding of her keen gaze.
-“Since then he hasn’t taken much interest in anything.
-Janet has brightened him up more than
-any one; and when he heard you were coming
-that did rouse him. You are one of his heroes.
-He’s that sort of a boy,” she added, with a tinge
-of impatience in her soft Southern voice. As if
-to divert her thoughts, she began deftly moving
-the cards before her. Her hands showed the blue
-veins more prominently than they show in young
-hands. This was their only surrender to time;
-they were shapely and white, and the slim fingers
-were as straight as when the beaux of Fairfax
-County would have ridden all day for a chance to
-kiss them.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel watched the great ruby wink and
-glow. The ruby was a part of his memories of
-his aunt; she had always worn it. He remembered
-it, when she used to come and visit him at
-the hotel at West Point, dazzling impartially officers,
-professors, cadets and hotel waiters. Was
-that almost forty years ago? Well, thirty-four,
-anyhow! She had been very good, very generous
-to all the young Winters, then. Indeed, although<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[37]</span>
-she never quite forgave him for not marrying the
-wife of her selecting, she had always been kind
-and generous to Rupert; yet, somehow, while he
-had admired and found a humorous joy in his
-Aunt Rebecca, he wondered if he had ever loved
-her. She was both beautiful and brilliant when
-she was young, a Southern belle, a Northern society
-leader; her life was full of conquests; her
-footsteps, which had wandered over the world,
-had left a phosphorescent wake of admiration.
-She had always been a personage. She was a
-power in Washington after the war; they had
-found her uniquely delightful in royal courts long
-before Americans were the fashion; she had been
-of importance in New York, and they had loved
-her epigrams in Boston; now, in her old age, she
-held a veritable little court of her own in the provincial
-Western city which had been her husband’s
-home. He went to Congress from Fairport;
-he had made a fortune there, and when he
-died, many years ago, in Egypt, back to his Western
-home, with dogged determination and lavish
-expenditures of both money and wit, his widow
-had brought him to rest. The most intense and
-solemn experience of a woman she had missed,
-for no children had come to them, but her husband<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[38]</span>
-had been her lover so long as he lived, and
-she had loved him. She had known great men;
-she had lived through wonderful events; and
-often her hand had been on those secret levers
-which move vast forces. She had been in tragedies,
-if an inviolable coolness of head, perhaps of
-heart, had shielded her from being of them. The
-husband of her youth, the nearest of her blood, the
-friends of her middle life—all had gone into the
-dark; yet here she sat, with her smooth skin and
-her still lustrous eyes and her fragrant hands,
-keenly smiling over her solitaire. The colonel
-wondered if he could ever reconcile himself with
-such philosophy to his own narrowed and emptied
-life; she was older than he, yet she could still
-find a zest in existence. All the great passions
-gone; all the big interests; and still her clever
-mind was working, happy, possibly, in its mere
-exercise, disdaining the stake, she who had had
-every success. What a vitality! He looked at
-her, puzzling. Her complexity bewildered him,
-he not being of a complex nature himself. As he
-looked, suddenly he found himself questioning
-why her face, in its revival of youthful smoothness
-and tint, recalled some other face, recently
-studied by him—a face that had worn an absolutely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[39]</span>
-different expression; having the same delicate
-aquiline nose, the same oval contour, the
-same wide brows—who? who? queried the colonel.
-Then he nodded. Of course; it was the man
-with the moles, the brother. He looked enough
-like Mrs. Winter to be her kinsman. At once he
-put his guess to the test. “Aunt Becky,” said he,
-“have you any kin I don’t know about?”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon not. I’m an awfully kinless old
-party,” said she serenely. “I was a Winter, born
-as well as married, and so you and Mel and Archie
-are double kin to me. I was an only child, so I
-haven’t anything closer than third or fourth
-cousins, down in Virginia and Boston.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you, by chance, any cousin, near or far,
-named Mercer?”</p>
-
-<p>Resting her finger-tips on the cards, Aunt Rebecca
-seemed to let her mind search amid Virginian
-and Massachusetts genealogical tables.
-“Why, certainly,” she answered after a pause,
-“there was General Philemon Mercer—Confederate
-army, you know—and his son, Sam Nelson;
-Phil was my own cousin and Sam Nelson my second,
-and Sam Nelson’s sons would be my third,
-wouldn’t they? Phil and Sam are both dead, and
-Winnie Lee, the daughter, is dead, and poor Phil—the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[40]</span>
-grandson, you know—poor boy, <i>he</i> shot
-himself while at Harvard; but his brother Cary is
-alive.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Never saw him but once or twice. He has
-very good manners.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is he rich?”</p>
-
-<p>“He was, but after he had spent his youth
-working with incredible industry and a great deal
-of ability to build up a steel business and had put
-it into a little combination—not a big trust, just
-a genuine corporation—some of the financial
-princes wanted it for a club—to knock down bigger
-game, I reckon—and proceeded to cheapen
-the stock in order to control it. Cary held on desperately,
-bought more than he could hold, mortgaged
-everything else; but they were too big for
-him to fight. It was in 1903, you know, when
-they had an alleged financial panic, and scared the
-banks. Cary went to the wall, and Phil with him,
-and poor Phil killed himself. Afterward Cary’s
-wife died; he surely did have a mean time. And,
-to tell you the truth, Bertie, I think there has been
-a little kink in Cary’s mind ever since.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you hold any of Cary’s stock?” He was
-piecing his puzzle together.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[41]</span>“Yes, but my stock was all paid for, and I held
-on to it; now it is over par and paying dividends.
-Oh, the property was all right, had it been kept
-in honest hands and run for itself. The trouble
-with Cary was that in order to keep control of the
-property he bought a lot of shares on margins,
-and when they began to run downhill, he was
-obliged to borrow money on his actual holdings
-to protect his fictitious ones. The stock went so
-low that he was wiped out. He wouldn’t take my
-advice earlier in the game; and I knew that it
-would only be losing money to lend it to him,
-later—still, sometimes I have been rather sorry
-I didn’t. Would I better try the spade, Bertie, or
-the diamond?”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel advised the spade. He wondered
-whether he should repeat to his aunt the few
-sentences which he had overheard from Mercer
-and his companion; but a belief that old age worries
-easily, added to his natural man’s disinclination
-to attack the feminine nerves, tipped the
-scales against frankness. So, instead, he began to
-talk about Archie; what was he like? was he fond
-of athletics? or was he a bookish lad? Aunt Rebecca
-reported that he had liked riding and golf;
-but he was not very rugged, and since his father’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[42]</span>
-death he had seemed listless to a degree. “But
-he is better now,” she added with a trace of eagerness
-quite foreign to her usual manner. “Janet
-Smith has roused him up; and what do you suppose
-she has done? But really, you are the cause.”</p>
-
-<p>“I?” queried the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“Just you. Archie, Janet argued, is the kind of
-nature that must have some one to be devoted to.”</p>
-
-<p>“And has he taken a fancy to her? Or to you?”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Rebecca’s eyes dulled a little and her delicate
-lips were twisted by a smile which had more
-wistfulness than humor in it. “I’m not a lovable
-person; anyhow, he does not love easily. We are
-on terms of the highest respect, even admiration,
-but we haven’t got so far as friendship, far less
-comradeship. Janet is different. But I don’t mean
-Janet; she has grown absurdly fond of him; and
-I think he’s fond of her; but what she did was to
-make him fond of you. You, General Rupert
-Winter; why, that boy could pass an examination
-on your exploits and not miss a question. Janet
-and he have a scrap-book with every printed word
-about you, I do believe. And she has been amazingly
-shrewd. We didn’t know how to get the
-youngster back to his sports while he was out of
-school; and, in fact, an old woman like me is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[43]</span>
-rather bewildered by such a young creature, anyhow;
-but Janet rode with him; <i>you</i> are a remarkable
-rider; I helped there, because I remembered
-some anecdotes about you at West Point—”</p>
-
-<p>“But, my dear Aunt—”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t interrupt, Bertie, it’s a distinctly American
-habit. And we read in the papers that you
-had learned that Japanese trick fighting—jiu-jitsu—and
-were a wonder—”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not, I assure you; that beast of a newspaper
-man—”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind, if you are not a wonder, you’ll
-have to be; you can take lessons in Los Angeles;
-there are quantities of Japs there. Why, even in
-Chicago, Janet picked up one, and we imported
-him, and Archie took lessons, and practises every
-day. There’s a book in my bag, in the rack there,
-a very interesting book; Janet and I have both
-read it so we could talk to Archie. You would
-better skim it over a little if you really aren’t an
-expert, enough so you can <i>talk</i> jiu-jitsu, anyhow;
-we can’t be destroying Archie’s ideals until he
-gets a better appetite.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, upon my word!” breathed the colonel.
-“Do you expect me to be a fake hero? I never
-took more than two lessons in my life. That reporter<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[44]</span>
-interviewed my teacher, who was killed in
-the Japanese War, by the way; he went to the
-army after my second lesson. He didn’t know any
-English beyond ‘yes’ and ‘if you please’; and he
-used them both on the reporter, who let his own
-fancy go up like a balloon. Well, where is the
-book?”</p>
-
-<p>He found it easily; and with a couple of volumes
-of another kidney, over which he grinned.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>The Hound of the Baskervilles</i> and <i>The
-Leavenworth Case</i>! I’ve read them, too,” he said;
-“they’re great! And do you still like detective
-stories? You would have made a grand sleuth
-yourself, Aunt Becky.” Again he had half a mind
-to speak of the occurrence at the station; again
-he checked the impulse. “I remember,” he added,
-“that you used to hold strenuous opinions.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean my thinking that the reason crimes
-escape discovery is not that criminals are so
-bright, but that detectives in general are so
-particularly stupid? Oh, yes, I think that still.
-So does Sir Conan Doyle. And I have often
-wished I could measure my own wits, once, with
-a really <i>fine</i> criminal intellect. It would be worth
-the risk.”</p>
-
-<p>“God forbid!” said the colonel hastily.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[45]</span>There came a tap on the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Millicent!” groaned Aunt Rebecca. “I know
-the creaking of her stays. No, don’t stay, Bertie;
-go and get Janet and a rescue bridge party as
-quick as you can!”</p>
-
-<p>“The original and only Aunt Rebecca,” thought
-the colonel at the door, smiling. But, somehow,
-the handsome old dame never had seemed so
-nearly human to him before.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[46]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER III<br />
-
-<small>THE TRAIN ROBBERS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>When the colonel awoke next morning the
-train was running smoothly over the Iowa prairies,
-while low hills and brick factory chimneys
-announced Council Bluffs. The landscape was
-wide and monotonous; a sweep of illimitable cornfields
-in their winter disarray, or bleakly fresh
-from the plow, all painted with a palette holding
-only drabs and browns; here and there a dab of
-red in a barn or of white in windmill or house;
-but these livelier tints so scattered that they were
-no more than pin spots on the picture. The very
-sky was as dimly colored as the earth, lighter,
-yet of no brighter hue than the fog which smoked
-up from the ground. Later in the spring this same
-landscape would be of a delicate and charming
-beauty; in summer or autumn it would make the
-beholder’s pulses throb with its glorious fertility;
-but on a blurred March morning it was as dreary
-as the reveries of an aging man who has failed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[47]</span>Nevertheless, Rupert Winter’s first conscious
-sensation was not depression, only a little tingle
-of interest and excitement, such as stings pleasantly
-one who rises to a prospect of conflict in
-which he has the confidence of his own strength.
-“By Jove!” he wondered, “whatever makes me
-feel so kiddish?”</p>
-
-<p>His first impulse was to peep through his curtains
-into the car. It wore its early morning aspect
-of muffled berths and stuffy curtains, among
-which Miss Smith’s trig, carefully finished presence
-in a fresh white shirt-waist, attended by the
-pleasant whiffs of cologne water, gave the beholder
-a certain refreshing surprise. One hand
-(white and firm and beautifully cared for) held
-a wicker bottle, source of the pleasant whiffs;
-her sleek back braids were coiled about her comely
-head, and the hair grew very prettily in a blunted
-point on the creamy nape of her neck. It was
-really dark brown hair, but it looked black against
-the whiteness of her skin. She had very capable-looking
-shoulders, the colonel noted, and a flat
-back; perhaps she wasn’t pretty, but in a long
-while he had not seen a more attractive-looking
-woman. She made him think of a Bonne Celine
-rose, somehow. He could hear her talking to some<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[48]</span>
-one behind the berth’s curtains. Could those doleful
-moans emerge from Archie? Could a Winter
-boy be whimpering about the jar of the train in
-that fashion? Immediately he was aware that the
-sufferer was Randall, for Miss Smith spoke:
-“Drink the tea, and lie down again, I’ll attend to
-Mrs. Winter. Don’t you worry!”</p>
-
-<p>“Getting solid with Randall,” commented the
-colonel. “Which is she—kind-hearted, or an accomplished
-villainess? Well, it’s interesting, anyhow.”</p>
-
-<p>By the time he had made his toilet the train
-was slacking speed ready to halt in Council
-Bluffs, and all his suspicions rushed on deck
-again at the sight of Miss Smith and Archie
-walking outside.</p>
-
-<p>He joined them, and he had to admit that Miss
-Smith looked as pleased as Archie at his appearance.
-Nor did she send a single furtive glance,
-slanting or backward, while they walked in the
-crisp, clean air. Once the train had started and
-Miss Smith was in the drawing-room, breakfasting
-with Mrs. Winter and Archie, he politely attended
-Mrs. Millicent through the morning meal
-in the dining-car. It was so good a meal that he
-naturally, although illogically, thought better of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[49]</span>
-Miss Smith’s prospects of innocence; and cheerily
-he sought Haley. He found him in the smoking
-compartment of the observation-car, having for
-companions no less personages than the magnate
-and a distinguished-looking New Englander, who,
-Rupert Winter made no doubt, was a Harvard
-professor of rank and renown among his learned
-kind. He knew the earmarks of the species. The
-New Englander’s pencil was flying over a little
-improvised pad of telegraph blanks, while he
-listened with absorbed interest to Haley’s rich
-Irish tones. There was a little sidewise lunge of
-Haley’s mouth, a faint twinkle of Haley’s frank
-and simple eyes which the colonel appraised at
-very nearly their real value. He knew that it
-isn’t in Irish-American nature to perceive a wide-open
-ear and not put something worth hearing
-into it. Besides, his sharp ears had brought
-him a key to the discourse, a sorrowful remark of
-the sergeant’s as he entered: “Yes, sor, thim
-wather torchures is <i>terrible</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>He glanced suspiciously from one of Haley’s
-audience to the other. The newspaper cartoonist
-had pictured on all kinds of bodies of preying
-creatures, whether of the earth or air, the high
-brows, the round head, the delicate features, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[50]</span>
-thin cheeks, the straight line of the mouth, and
-the mild, inexpressive eyes of the man before
-him. He had been extolled as a far-sighted benefactor
-of the world, and execrated picturesquely
-as the king of pirates who would scuttle the business
-of his country without a qualm.</p>
-
-<p>Winter, amid his own questionings and problems,
-could not help a scrutiny of a man whose
-power was greater than that of medieval kings.
-He sat consuming a cigarette, more between his
-fingers than his lips; and glancing under drooping
-eyelids from questioner to narrator. At the
-colonel’s entrance he looked up, as did Haley,
-who rose to his feet with an unconscious salute.
-“I’d be glad to spake wid youse a minnit, if I
-might, General,” said Haley, “about where I put
-your dress-shute case, sor.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel, of course, did not expect any remarks
-about a suit case when he got Haley by
-himself at the observation end of the car; but
-what he did get was of sufficient import to drive
-out of his mind a curt lecture about blackening the
-reputation of the army with lies about the Philippines.
-Haley had told him that he had seen the
-man with the two moles on his face jump out of
-his own car at Council Bluffs. He had simply<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[51]</span>
-stood on the platform, looking to right and left
-for a moment; then he had swung himself back
-on the car. Haley had watched him walk down
-the aisle and enter the drawing-room. He did
-not come out; Haley had found out that the drawing-room
-belonged to Edwin S. Keatcham, “the
-big railroad man, sor.”</p>
-
-<p>“It doesn’t seem likely that <i>he</i> would be an accomplice
-of a kidnapper,” mused the colonel.
-“The man might have gone in there while he was
-out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, he might, sor; ’twas mesilf thinking that
-same; and I wint beyant to the observation-car,
-and there the ould gintleman was smoking.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you stopped to tell yarns to that other
-gentleman instead of getting back and following—”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sor, I beg your pardon, sor; I was kaping
-me eyes open and on him; for himsilf was in the
-observation-car where you are now, sor, until we
-come in, and thin he walked back, careless like, to
-his own car. Will I be afther following him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; don’t lose him.”</p>
-
-<p>They did not lose him; they both saw him enter
-the drawing-room and almost immediately come
-out and sit down in one of the open sections.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[52]</span>“See if you can’t find out from the conductor
-where he is going,” the colonel proposed to Haley;
-and he frowned over his thoughts for a bad
-quarter of an hour at the window. The precipitate
-of all this mental ferment was a determination
-to stick close to the boy, saying nothing.
-He hoped that when they stopped over night at
-Salt Lake City, according to Aunt Rebecca’s plan,
-they might shake off the “brother’s” company.
-The day passed uneventfully. He played bridge
-with Mrs. Millicent and Miss Smith and Archie,
-while Aunt Rebecca kept up her French with one
-of Bentzon’s novels.</p>
-
-<p>Afterward she said grimly to him: “I think
-you must have been converted out in the Philippines;
-you never so much as winced, that last
-hand; no, you sat there smiling over your ruin
-as sweetly as if you enjoyed it.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel smiled again. “Ah, but, you see,
-I did enjoy it; didn’t you notice the hand? No?
-Well, it was worth watching. It was the rubber
-game; they were twenty-four and we were twenty-six
-and we were on the seventh round; Miss
-Smith had made it hearts. She sat on my left,
-dummy on my right. Millicent had the lead. She
-had four little spades, a little club, the queen of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[53]</span>
-hearts and a trey; dummy had the queen, the ten
-and the nine of spades, it had the king of hearts
-and three clubs with the jack at the top. I had
-a lovely diamond suit which I hadn’t had a chance
-to touch, top sequence, ace, king, queen; I had
-the jack of trumps and the jack of spades; and
-the queen and a little club. I hadn’t a lead, you
-understand; Millicent had taken five tricks and
-they had taken one; they needed six to win the
-game, we needed two; see? Well, Millicent hadn’t
-any diamonds to lead me, and unhappily she didn’t
-think to lead trumps through dummy, which
-would have made a world of difference. She led
-a club; dummy put on the jack. I knew Miss
-Smith had the ace and one low heart; no clubs,
-a lot of low diamonds, and she might or might
-not have a spade. I figured that she had the ace
-and a little one; if she would trump in with the
-little one, as ninety-nine out of a hundred women
-would have done, her ace and her partner’s king
-would fall together; or, at worst, he would have
-to trump her diamond lead, after she had led out
-her king of spades, and lead spades, which I could
-trump and bring in all my diamonds. Do you take
-in the situation?”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean that Janet had the king of spades<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[54]</span>
-alone, the ace and the little trump and four worthless
-diamonds? I see. It is a chance for the grand
-<i>coup</i>; I reckon she played it.”</p>
-
-<p>“She <i>did</i>!” cried the colonel with unction.
-“She slapped that ace on the trick, she modestly
-led her king of spades, gathered in my jack, then
-‘she stole, she stole my child away,’ my little jack
-of trumps; it fell on dummy’s king, and dummy
-led out his spades and I had to see that whole
-diamond suit slaughtered. They made their six
-tricks, the game and the rubber; and I wanted to
-clap my hands over the neatness of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“She is a good player,” agreed Aunt Rebecca,
-“and a very pleasant person. You remember the
-epitaph, don’t you, Bertie? ‘She was so pleasant.’
-Yet Janet has had a heap of trouble; but, after
-all, happiness is not a condition but a temperament;
-I suppose Janet has the temperament. She’s
-a good loser, too; and she never takes advantage
-of the rules.”</p>
-
-<p>“She certainly loves a straight game,” reflected
-the colonel. “I confess I don’t like the kind of
-woman that is always grabbing a trick if some
-one plays out of the wrong hand.”</p>
-
-<p>He said something of the kind to Millicent,
-obtaining but scant sympathy in that quarter.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[55]</span>“She’s deep, Bertie; I told you that,” was the
-only reply, “but I’m watching. I have reason for
-my feeling.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe you have been misinformed,” ventured
-her brother-in-law with proper meekness.</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all,” retorted she sharply. “I happen
-to know that she worked against me with the
-Daughters.”</p>
-
-<p>“Daughters,” the colonel repeated inanely,
-“your daughters?”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly not! The Daughters of the Revolution.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a mighty fine society, that; did a lot during
-the Spanish War. And you are the state
-president, aren’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Rupert,” returned Mrs. Melville with
-dignity, “I am no longer state regent. By methods
-that would shame the most hardened men politicians
-I was defeated; why! didn’t you read about
-it?”</p>
-
-<p>“You know I only came back from the Philippines
-in February.”</p>
-
-<p>“It was in all the Chicago papers. I was interviewed
-myself. I assure you the other candidates
-(there were two) tried the very <i>lowest</i>
-political methods. Melville said it was scandalous.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[56]</span>
-There were at least three luncheons given against
-me. It wasn’t the congress, it was the lobby
-defeated me. And their methods! I would not
-believe that gentlewoman could stoop to such infamy
-of misrepresentation.” The colonel chewed
-his mustache; he felt for that reporter of the
-Chicago paper; he was evidently getting a phonographic
-record now; he made an inarticulate
-rumble of sympathy in his throat which was as
-the clucking of the driver to the mettled horse.
-Mrs. Melville gesticulated with Delsartian grace,
-as she poured forth her woes.</p>
-
-<p>“They accused me of a domineering spirit;
-they said I was trying to set up a machine. <i>I!</i>
-I worked for them, many a time, half the night,
-at my desk; never was a letter unanswered; I did
-half the work of the corresponding secretary; yet
-at the crucial moment <i>she betrayed me</i>! I learned
-more in those two days of the petty jealousy, the
-pitiless malevolence of <i>some</i> women than I had
-known all my life before; but at the same time,
-to the faithful band of friends”—the colonel had
-the sensation of listening to the record again—“whose
-fidelity was proof against ridicule and
-cruel misrepresentation, I return a gratitude that
-will never wane. Rupert”—she turned herself in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[57]</span>
-the seat and waved the open palm of her hand in
-a graceful and dramatic gesture, “—those women
-not only stooped to malignant falsehoods, they
-not only trampled parliamentary law underfoot,
-but they circulated through the hall a cartoon
-called the <i>Making of the Slate</i>. Of course, we
-had our quarters at a hotel, and after the evening
-meeting, after I had retired, in fact, a bell-boy
-brought me a message; it was necessary to
-have a meeting at once, to decide for the secretaryship,
-as we had found out Mrs. Ellennere
-was false. The ladies in the adjoining rooms and
-the others of us on the board who were loyal came
-into my chamber. Rupert, will you believe it,
-those women, had a grotesque picture of <i>us</i>, with
-faces cut out of the newspapers—of course, all our
-pictures were in the papers—and they had the
-audacity and the meanness to picture me in—in
-the garments of night!”</p>
-
-<p>“That was pretty tough. But where does Miss
-Smith come in?”</p>
-
-<p>“She was at the convention. She is a Daughter.
-I’ve always said we are too lax in our admissions.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who drew the picture?”</p>
-
-<p>“It may not be Miss Smith, but—she does<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[58]</span>
-draw. I’m <i>sure</i> that she worked against me; she
-covered up her footprints so that I have no proof;
-but I suspect her. She’s deep, Bertie, she’s deep.
-But she can’t hoodwink <i>me</i>. I’ll find her out.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel experienced the embarrassment
-that is the portion of a rash man trying to defend
-one woman against another; he retreated because
-he perceived defense was in vain; but he did not
-feel his growing opinion of Miss Smith’s innocence
-menaced by Mrs. Melville’s convictions.</p>
-
-<p>She played too square a game for a kidnapper—and
-Smith was the commonest of names. No,
-there must be some explanation; Rupert Winter
-had lived too long not to distrust the plausible
-surface clue. “It is the improbable that always
-happens, and the impossible most of the time,”
-Aunt Rebecca had said once. He quite agreed
-with her whimsical phrase.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing happened to arouse his suspicions that
-day. Haley reported that Cary Mercer was going
-on to San Francisco. The conductor did not
-know his name; he seemed to know Mr. Keatcham
-and was with him in his drawing-room most of
-the time. Had the great man a secretary with
-him? Yes, he seemed to have, a little fellow who
-had not much to say for himself, and jumped<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[59]</span>
-whenever his boss spoke to him. There was also
-a valet, an Englishman, who did not respond
-properly to conversational overtures. They were
-all going to get off at Denver.</p>
-
-<p>Haley was not misinformed, as the colonel
-perceived with his own eyes—and he saw Cary
-Mercer bow in parting to the great man, who
-requited the low salute with a gruff nod. Here
-was an opportunity for a nearer glimpse of Mercer,
-possibly for that explanation in which Winter
-still had a lurking hope. He caught Mercer just
-in the car doorway, and politely greeted him:
-“Mr. Mercer, I think? You may not remember
-me, Colonel Winter. I met you in Cambridge,
-three years ago—”</p>
-
-<p>It seemed a brutal thing to do, to recall a meeting
-under such circumstances; but if Mercer could
-give the explanation he would excuse him; it was
-better than suspecting an innocent man. But
-there was no opportunity for explanation. Mercer
-turned a blank and coldly suspicious face
-toward him. “I beg pahdon,” he said in his Southern
-way, “I think you have made a mistake in
-the person.”</p>
-
-<p>“And are you <i>not</i> Mr. Cary Mercer?” The
-colonel felt the disagreeable resemblance of his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[60]</span>
-own speeches to those made in newspaper stories
-by the gentleman who wishes his old friend to
-change a fifty-dollar bill or to engage in an amusing
-game with a thimble. Mercer saw it as well
-as he. “Try some one from the country,” he remarked
-with an unpleasant smile, brushing past,
-while the color mounted to the colonel’s tanned
-cheek. “The <i>next</i> time you meet me,” Rupert
-Winter vowed, “you’ll know me.”</p>
-
-<p>A new porter had come on at Denver; a light
-brown, chubby, bald man with a face that radiated
-friendliness. He was filled with the desire for
-conversation, and he had worked on the road for
-eight years, hence could supplement <i>Over the
-Range</i> and the other guide-books with personal
-gossip. He showed marked deference to the
-colonel, which that unassuming and direct man
-could not quite fathom, until Archie enlightened
-him. Archie smiled, a queer, chewed-up smile
-which the colonel hailed with:</p>
-
-<p>“Why are you making fun of me, young
-man?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s Lewis, the porter; he follows you round
-and listens to you in such an awestruck way.”</p>
-
-<p>“But why?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Sergeant Haley told him about you;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[61]</span>
-and I told him a <i>little</i>, and he says he wishes
-you’d been on the train when they had the hold-ups.
-This is an awful road for hold-ups, he says.
-He’s been at five hold-ups.”</p>
-
-<p>“And what does he advise?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he says, hold up your hands and they
-won’t hurt you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I reckon his advice is sound,” laughed
-the colonel. “See you follow it, Archie.”</p>
-
-<p>“Shall <i>you</i> hold up your hands, Uncle Bertie?”
-asked Archie.</p>
-
-<p>“Much the wisest course; these fellows shoot.”</p>
-
-<p>Archie looked disappointed. “I suppose so,”
-he sighed. “I’m afraid I’d want to, if they were
-pointing pistols at me. Lewis was on the train
-once when a man showed fight. He wouldn’t put
-up his hands, and the bandit plugged him, like a
-flash; he fell crosswise over the seat and the blood
-spurted across Lewis’ wrist; he said it was like a
-hot jet of water.”</p>
-
-<p>The homely and bizarre horror of the picture
-had evidently struck home to Archie; he half
-shivered.</p>
-
-<p>“Too much imagination,” grumbled the colonel
-to himself. “A Winter ought to take to fighting
-like a duck to water!” He betook himself<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[62]</span>
-to Miss Smith; and he was uneasily conscious
-that he was going to her for consoling. But he
-felt better after a little talk about Archie with
-her. Plainly she thought Archie had plenty of
-spirit; although, of course, he hadn’t told her
-about the bandits. The negro was “kidding” the
-passengers; and women shouldn’t be disturbed by
-such nonsense. The colonel had old-fashioned
-views of guarding his womankind from the harsh
-ways of the world. Curious, he reflected, what
-sense Miss Smith seemed to have; and how she
-understood things. He felt better acquainted with
-her than a year’s garrison intercourse would have
-made him with any other woman he knew.</p>
-
-<p>That afternoon, they two sat watching the
-fantastic cliffs which took grotesque semblance
-of ruined castles crowning their barren hillsides;
-or of deserted amphitheaters left by some vanished
-race to crumble. They had talked of many
-things. She had told him of the sleepy old South
-Carolinian town where she was born, and the plantation
-and the distant cousin who was like her
-mother, and the hospital where she had been
-taught, and the married sister who had died.
-Such a narrow, laborious, innocent existence as
-she described! How cheerfully, too, she had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[63]</span>
-shouldered her burdens! They talked of the
-South and of the Philippines; a little they talked
-of Archie and his sorrow and of the eternal
-problems that have troubled the soul of man since
-first death entered the world. As they talked, the
-colonel’s suspicions faded into grotesque shadows.
-“Millicent is ridiculous,” quoth he. Then he fell
-to wondering whether there had been a romance
-in Miss Smith’s past life. “Such a handsome
-woman would look high,” he sighed. Only twenty-four
-hours ago he had called Miss Smith “nice-looking,”
-with careless criticism. He was quite
-unconscious of his change of view. That night
-he felt lonely, of a sudden; the old wound in his
-heart ached; his future looked as bleak as the
-mountain-walled plains through which he was
-speeding. After a long time the train stopped
-with a jar and rattle, ending in a sudden shock.
-He raised the curtain to catch the flash of the
-electric lights at Glenwood. Out of the deep
-defile they glittered like diamonds in a pool of
-water. Why should he think of Miss Smith’s
-eyes? With an impatient sigh, he pulled down
-the curtain and turned over to sleep.</p>
-
-<p>His thoughts drifted, floated, were submerged
-in a wavering procession of pictures; he was back<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[64]</span>
-in the Philippines; they had surprised the fort;
-how could that be when he was on guard? But
-they were there— He sat up in his berth. Instinctively
-he slipped the revolver out of his bag
-and held it in one hand, as he peeped through the
-crevice of the curtains. There was no motion, no
-sound of moving; but heads were emerging between
-the curtains in every direction; and Archie
-was standing, his hands shaking above his tumbled
-brown head and pale face. A man in a soft
-hat held two revolvers while another man was
-pounding on the drawing-room door, gruffly
-commanding those inside to come out. “No, we
-shall not come out,” responded Aunt Rebecca’s
-composed, well-bred accents, her neat enunciation
-not disturbed by a quiver. “If you want to
-kill an old woman, you will have to break down
-the door.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let them alone, Shay, it takes too long; let’s
-finish here, first,” called the man with the revolver;
-“they’ll come soon enough when we want
-them. Here, young feller, fish out! Nobody’ll
-get hurt if you keep quiet; if you don’t you’ll get
-a dose like the man in number six, two years ago.
-Hustle, young feller!”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel was eying every motion, every<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[65]</span>
-shifting from one foot to the other. Let them once
-get by Archie—</p>
-
-<p>The boy handed over his pocket-book.</p>
-
-<p>“Now your watch,” commanded the brigand;
-“take it, Shay!”</p>
-
-<p>“Won’t you please let me keep that watch?”
-faltered Archie; “that was papa’s watch.”</p>
-
-<p>The childish name from the tall lad made the
-robber laugh. “And mama’s little pet wants to
-keep it, does he? Well, he can’t. Get a move on
-you!”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel had the sensation of an electric
-shock; as the second robber grabbed at the fob
-in the boy’s belt, Archie struck him with the edge
-of his open hand so swiftly and so fiercely under
-the jaw that he reeled back against his companion.
-The colonel’s surprise did not disturb the automatic
-aim of an old fighter of the plains; his revolver
-barked; and he sprang out, on the man he
-shot. “Get back in the berths, all of you,” he
-shouted; “give me a chance to shoot!”</p>
-
-<p>The voice of the porter, whose hands had been
-turning up the lights not quite steadily, now
-pealed out with camp-meeting power, “Dat’s it;
-give de colonel a chance to do some killing!”</p>
-
-<p>Both bandits were sprawling on the floor of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[66]</span>
-the aisle, one limp and moaning; but the other
-got one hand up to shoot; only to have Archie
-kick the revolver out of it, while at the same instant
-an umbrella handle fell with a wicked whack
-on the man’s shoulder. The New England professor
-was out of his berth. He had been a baseball
-man in his own college days; his bat was a
-frail one, but he hit with a will; and a groan told
-of his success. Nevertheless, the fellow scrambled
-to his feet. Mrs. Melville was also out of her
-berth, thanks to which circumstance he was able
-to escape; as the colonel (who had grappled with
-the other man and prevented his rising) must
-needs have shot through his sister-in-law to hit
-the fleeing form.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_066fp.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">Miss Smith was sitting beside Archie, holding the watch. Page <a href="#Page_67">67</a></p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter?” demanded Mrs. Melville,
-while the New Englander used an expression
-which, no doubt, as a good church-member,
-he regretted, later, and the colonel thundered:
-“All the women back into their berths. Don’t
-anybody shoot! You, professor, look after that
-fellow on the floor.” He was obeyed; instinctively,
-the master of the hour is obeyed. The porter
-came forward and helped the New Englander
-bind the prostrate outlaw, with two silk handkerchiefs
-and a pair of pajamas, guard mount<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[67]</span>
-being supplied by three men in very startling costumes;
-and a kind of seraglio audience behind the
-curtains of the berth being enacted by all the
-women in the car, only excepting Aunt Rebecca
-and Miss Smith. Aunt Rebecca, in her admirable
-traveling costume of a soft gray silk wrapper,
-looked as undisturbed as if midnight alarms were
-an every-night feature of journeys. Miss Smith’s
-black hair was loosely knotted; and her face
-looked pale, while her dark eyes shone. They all
-heard the colonel’s revolver; they all saw the two
-men who had met him at the car door spring off
-the platform into the dark. The robbers had
-horses waiting. The colonel got one shot; he saw
-the man fall over his horse’s neck; but the horse
-galloped on; and the night, beyond the little splash
-of light, swallowed them completely.</p>
-
-<p>After the conductor and the engineer had both
-consulted him, and the express messenger had appeared,
-armed to the teeth, a little too late for
-the fray, but not too late for lucid argument, Winter
-made his way back to the car. Miss Smith
-was sitting beside Archie; she was holding the
-watch, which had played so important a part in
-the battle, up under the electric light to examine
-an inscription. The loose black sleeves of her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[68]</span>
-blouse fell back, revealing her arms; they were
-white and softly rounded. She looked up; and the
-soldier felt the sudden rush of an emotion that he
-had not known for years; it caught at his throat
-almost like an invisible hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Archie,” he said foolishly, “good for
-jiu-jitsu!”</p>
-
-<p>Archie flushed up to his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Why didn’t you obey orders, young man,
-and hold up your hands?” said Colonel Rupert
-Winter. “You’re as bad as poor Haley, who is
-nearly weeping that he had no chance, but only
-broke away from Mrs. Haley in time to see the
-robbers make off.”</p>
-
-<p>“I—I did at first; but I got so mad I forgot,”
-stammered Archie happily. “Afterward you were
-my superior officer and I had to do what you
-said.”</p>
-
-<p>All the while he chaffed the boy, he was watching
-for that beautiful look in Janet Smith’s eyes;
-and wondering when he could get her off by herself
-to brag to her of the boy’s courage. When
-his chance at a few words did come he chuckled:
-“Regular fool Winter! I knew he would act in
-just that absurd, reckless way.” Then he caught
-the look he wanted; it surely was a lovely, womanly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[69]</span>
-look; and it meant—what in thunder <i>did</i> it
-mean? As he puzzled, his pulses gave the same
-unaccountable, smothering leap; and he felt as the
-boy of twenty had felt, coming back from his first
-battle to his first love.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[70]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IV<br />
-
-<small>THE VANISHING OF ARCHIE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>“In my opinion,” said Aunt Rebecca, critically
-eying her new drawing-room on the train to San
-Francisco; “the object of our legal methods seems
-to be to defend the criminal. And a very efficient
-means to this end is to make it so uncomfortable
-and costly and inconvenient for any witness of
-a crime that he runs away rather than endure
-it. Here we have had to stay over so long in Salt
-Lake we nearly lost our drawing-room. But never
-mind, you got your man committed. Did you find
-out anything about his gang?”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel shook his head. “No, he’s a tough
-country boy; he has the rural distrust of lawyers
-and of sweat-boxes. He does absolutely nothing
-but groan and swear, pretending his wound hurts
-him. But I’ve a notion there are bigger people
-back of him. It’s most awfully good of you,
-Aunt Rebecca, to stick to me this way.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course, I stick to you; I’m too old to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[71]</span>
-fickle. Did you ever know a Winter who wouldn’t
-stand by his friends? I belong to the old régime,
-Bertie; we had our faults—glaring ones, I dare
-say—but if we condoned sin too readily, we never
-condoned meanness; such a trick as that upstart
-Keatcham is doing would have been impossible to
-my contemporaries. You saw the morning papers;
-you know he means to eat up the Midland?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I know,” mused the colonel; “and turn
-Tracy, the president, down—the one who gave
-him his start on his bucaneering career. Tracy
-declines to be his tool, being, I understand, a
-very decent sort of man, who has always run
-his road for his stock-holders and not for the
-stock-market. A capital crime, that, in these days.
-So Keatcham has, somehow, by one trick or
-another, got enough directors since Baneleigh
-died to give him the control; though he couldn’t
-get enough of the stock; and now he means to
-grab the road to use for himself. Poor Tracy,
-who loves the road as a child, they say, will have
-to stand by and see it turned into a Wall Street
-foot-ball; and the equipment run down as fast
-as its reputation. I think I’m sorry for Tracy. Besides,
-it’s a bad lookout, the power of such fellows;
-men who are not captains of industry, not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[72]</span>
-a little bit; only inspired gamblers. Yet they are
-running the country. I wonder where is the class
-that will save us.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know. I don’t admire the present century,
-Bertie. We had people of quality in my day;
-we have only people of culture in this. I confess
-I prefer the quality. They had robuster nerves
-and really asked less of people, although they
-may have appeared to ask more. <i>We</i> used to be
-contented with respect from our inferiors and
-courtesy from our equals—”</p>
-
-<p>“And what from your betters, Aunt Rebecca?”
-drawled the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“We had no betters, Rupert; we were the best.
-I think partly it was our assurance of our position,
-which nobody else doubted any more than
-we, that kept us so mannerly. Nowadays, nobody
-has a real position. He may have wealth
-and a servile following, who expect to make something
-out of him, but he hasn’t position. The
-newspapers can make fun of him. The common
-people watch him drive by and never think of
-removing their caps. Nobody takes him seriously
-except his toadies and himself. And as for the
-sentiments of reverence and loyalty, very useful
-sentiments in running a world, they seem to have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[73]</span>
-clean disappeared, except”—she smiled a half-reluctant
-smile—“except with youngsters like
-Archie, who would find it agreeable to be chopped
-into bits for <i>you</i>, and the women who have not
-lived in the world, like Janet, who makes a heroine
-out of <i>me</i>—upon my word, Bertie, <i>je t’ai fait
-rougir</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all,” said the colonel; “an illusion of
-the sunset; but what do you mean when you say
-people of quality required less than people of culture?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, simply this; all <i>we</i> demanded was deference;
-but your cultivated gang wants admiration
-and submission, and will not let us possess our
-secret souls, even, in peace. And, then, the quality
-despised no one, but the cultivated despise every
-one. Ah, well—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">‘Those good old times are past and gone,</div>
-<div class="indent">I sigh for them in vain,—’</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Janet, I wish Archie would fish his mandolin out
-and you would sing to me; I like to hear the songs
-of my youth. Not rag-time, or coon-songs, but
-dear old Foster’s melodies; <i>Old Kentucky Home</i>,
-and <i>Massa’s in the Col’, Col’ Ground</i>, and <i>Nellie
-Was a Lady</i>—what makes that so sad, I wonder?—‘Nellie<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[74]</span>
-was a lady, las’ night she died;’ it’s
-all in that single line; I think it is because it
-represents the pathetic idealization of love; Nellie
-was that black lover’s ideal of all that was lovely,
-and she was dead. Is the orchestra ready—and
-the choir? Yes, shut the door; we are for art’s
-sake only, not for the applause of the cold world
-in the car.”</p>
-
-<p>Afterward, when he was angry over his own
-folly, his own blind, dogged, trustfulness against
-all the odds of evidence, Rupert Winter laid his
-weakness to that hour; to a woman’s sweet, untrained,
-tender voice singing the simple melodies
-of his youth. They sang one song after another
-while the sun sank lower and stained the western
-sky. Through the snow-sheds they could catch
-glimpses of a wild and strange nature; austere,
-yet not repelling; vistas of foot-hills bathed in the
-evening glow; rank on rank of firs, tall, straight,
-beautiful, not wind-tortured and maimed, like the
-woeful dwarfs of Colorado; and wonderful snow-capped
-mountain peaks, with violet shadows and
-glinting streaks of silver. Snow everywhere: on
-the hillsides; on the close thatch of the firs; on the
-ice-locked rivers; snow freshly fallen, softly tinted,
-infinitely, awesomely pure.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[75]</span>Presently they came out into a lumber country
-where the mills huddled in the hollows, over the
-streams. Huge fires were blazing on the river-banks.
-Their tawny red glare dyed the snow for
-a long distance, making entrancing tints of rose
-and yellow; and the dark green of the pines,
-against this background, looked strangely fresh.
-And then, without warning, they plunged into
-the dimness of another long wooden tunnel and
-emerged into lovely spring. The trees were in
-leaf, and not alone the trees; the undulating swells
-of pasture land and roadside by the mountains
-were covered with a tender verdure; and there
-were innumerable vines and low glossy shrubs
-with faintly colored flowers.</p>
-
-<p>“This is like the South,” said Miss Smith.</p>
-
-<p>Archie was devouring the scene. “Doesn’t it
-just somehow make you feel as if you couldn’t
-breathe, Miss Janet?” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you troubled with the high altitude?”
-asked Millicent anxiously; “I have prepared a
-little vial of spirits of ammonia; I’ll fetch it for
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel had some ado to rescue Archie;
-but he was aided by the porter, who was now passing
-through the car proclaiming: “You all have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[76]</span>
-seen Dutch Flat Mr. Bret Hahte wrote ’bout; nex’
-station is Shady Run; and eve’ybody look and
-see the greates’ scenic ’traction of dis or any
-odder railroad, Cape Hohn!”</p>
-
-<p>Instantly, Mrs. Melville fished her guide-book
-and began to read:</p>
-
-<p>“‘There are few mountain passes more famous
-than that known to the world as Cape Horn. The
-approach to it is picturesque, the north fork of
-the American River raging and foaming in its
-rocky bed, fifteen hundred feet below and parallel
-with the track—’”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mind, Millicent, if we look instead
-of listen?” Aunt Rebecca interrupted, and Mrs.
-Melville lapsed into an injured muteness.</p>
-
-<p>Truly, Cape Horn has a poignant grandeur
-that strikes speech from the lips. One can not
-look down that sheer height to the luminous ghost
-of a river below, without a thrill. If to pass along
-the cliff is a shivering experience, what must the
-actual execution of that stupendous bit of engineering
-have been to the workmen who hewed
-the road out of the rock, suspended over the
-abyss! Their dangling black figures seem to
-sway still as one swings around the curve.</p>
-
-<p>Our travelers sat in silence, until the “Cape”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[77]</span>
-was passed and again they could see their road-bed
-on the side. Then Mrs. Melville made a polite
-excuse for departure; she had promised a
-“Daughter” whom she had met at various “biennials”
-that she would have a little talk with her.
-Thus she escaped. They did not miss her. Hardly
-speaking, the four sat in the dimly lighted, tiny
-room, while mountains and fields and star-sown
-skies drifted by. Unconsciously, Archie drew
-closer to his uncle, and the older man threw an
-arm about the young shoulders. He looked up to
-meet Janet’s eyes shining and sweet, in the flash
-of a passing station light. Mrs. Winter smiled,
-her wise old smile.</p>
-
-<p>With the next morning came another shift of
-scene; they were in the fertile valleys of California.
-At every turn the landscape became more
-softly tinted, more gracious. Aunt Rebecca was
-in the best of humor and announced herself as
-having the journey of her life. The golden green
-of the grain fields, the towering palms, the pepper-trees
-with their fascinating grace, the round tops
-of the live-oaks, the gloss of the orange groves,
-the calla-lily hedges and the heliotrope and geranium
-trees which climbed to the second story of
-the stucco houses, filled her with the enthusiasm<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[78]</span>
-of a child. She drank in the cries of the enterprising
-young liar who cried “Fresh figs,” months
-out of season, and she ate fruit, withered in cold
-storage, with a trustful zest. No less than three
-books about the flora of California came out of
-her bag. A certain vine called the Bougainvillea,
-she was trying to find, if only the cars
-would not go so fast; as for poinsettias, she certainly
-should raise her own for Christmas. She
-was learned in gardens and she discoursed with
-Miss Smith on the different kinds of trumpet-vine,
-and whether the white jasmine trailing
-among the gaudy clusters was of the same family
-as that jasmine which they knew in the pine forests.
-But she disparaged the roses; they looked
-shop-worn. The colonel watched her in amazement.</p>
-
-<p>“Bertie, I make you think of that little dwarf
-of Dickens’, don’t I?” she cried. “Miss Muffins,
-Muggins? what <i>was</i> her name? You are expecting
-me to exclaim, ‘Ain’t I volatile?’ Thank
-Heaven, I am. I could always take an interest in
-trifles. It has been my salvation to cultivate an
-interest in trifles, Bertie; there are a great many
-more trifles than crises in life. Where has Janet
-gone? Oh, to give the porter the collodion for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[79]</span>
-his cut thumb. People with troubles, big or little,
-are always making straight for Janet. Bertie,
-have you made your mind up about her?”</p>
-
-<p>“Only that she is charming,” replied the colonel.
-He did not change color, but he was uneasily
-conscious that he winced, and that the shrewd old
-critic of life and manners perceived it. But she
-was mercifully blind to all appearance; she went
-on with the little frown of the solver of a psychological
-enigma. “Yes, Janet is charming; and
-why? She is the stillest creature. Have you noticed?
-Yet you never have the sense that she
-hasn’t answered you. She’s the best listener in the
-world; and there’s one thing about her unusual
-in most listeners—her eyes never grow vacant.”</p>
-
-<p>Rupert had noticed; he called himself a doddering
-old donkey silently, because he had assumed
-that there was anything personal in the interest
-of those eyes when he had spoken. Of
-course not; it was her way with every one, even
-Millicent, no doubt. His aunt’s next words were
-lost, but a sentence caught his ear directly: “For
-all she’s so gentle, she has plenty of spirit. Bertie,
-did I ever tell you about the time our precious
-cousin threw our great-great-grandfather’s gold
-snuff-box at her? No? It was funny. She flew<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[80]</span>
-into one of her towering rages, and shrieking,
-‘Take <i>that</i>!’ hurled the snuff-box at Janet. Janet
-wasn’t used to having things thrown at her. She
-caught the box, then she rang the bell. ‘Thank
-you very much,’ says Janet; and when old Aunt
-Phrosie came, she handed the snuff-box to her,
-saying it had just been given to her as a present.
-But she sent it that same day to one of the sisters.
-There was never anything else thrown at her, I
-can tell you.”</p>
-
-<p>They found a wonderful sunset on the bay when
-San Francisco was reached. Still in her golden
-humor, as they rattled over the cobblestones of
-the picturesque streets to the Palace Hotel, Mrs.
-Winter told anecdotes of Robert Louis Stevenson,
-obtained from a friend who had known his
-mother. Mrs. Winter had chosen the Palace in
-preference to the St. Francis, to Mrs. Melville’s
-high disgust.</p>
-
-<p>“She thinks it more typical,” sneered Millicent;
-“myself, I prefer cleanliness and comfort to
-types.”</p>
-
-<p>Their rooms were waiting for them and two
-bell-boys ushered Mrs. Winter into her suite.
-Randall was lodged on the same floor, and Mrs.
-Melville, who was to spend a few days with her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[81]</span>
-aunt on the latter’s invitation, was on a lower
-floor. The colonel had begged to have Archie
-next to him; and he examined the quarters with
-approbation. His own room was the last of the
-suite; to the right hand, between his room and
-Archie’s, was their bath; then the parlor of Mrs.
-Winter’s suite next her room and bath, and last,
-to the right, Miss Smith’s room.</p>
-
-<p>Archie was sitting by the window looking
-out on the street; only the oval of his soft boyish
-cheek showed. The colonel went by him to the
-parlor beyond, where he encountered his aunt,
-her hands full of gay postal cards.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Souvenirs de voyage</i>,” she answered his
-glance; “I am going to post them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t I take them for you?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, thanks, I want the exercise.”</p>
-
-<p>“May I go with you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed, no. My dear Bertie, I’m only aged,
-I’m not infirm.”</p>
-
-<p>“You will <i>never</i> be aged,” responded the colonel
-gallantly. He turned away and walked along
-the arcade which looked down into the great court
-of the hotel. Millicent was approaching him; Millicent
-in something of a temper. Her room was
-hideously draughty and she could not get any one,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[82]</span>
-although she had rung and telephoned to the office
-and tried every device which was effectual in
-a well-conducted hotel; but this, she concluded
-bitterly, was not well-conducted; it was only
-typical.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s a lovely fire in Aunt Rebecca’s parlor,”
-soothed the colonel; “come in there.”</p>
-
-<p>Afterward it seemed to him that this whole interview
-with Millicent could not have occupied
-more than four minutes; that it was not more than
-seven minutes since he had seen Archie’s shapely
-curly head against the curtain fall of the window.</p>
-
-<p>But when he opened the door, Miss Smith
-came toward them. “Is Archie with Aunt Rebecca?”
-said she.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel answered that he had left him in
-the parlor; perhaps he had stepped into his own
-room.</p>
-
-<p>But neither in Archie’s nor the colonel’s nor in
-any room of the party could they find the boy.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[83]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER V<br />
-
-<small>BLIND CLUES</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>“But this is preposterous,” cried Mrs. Melville,
-“you <i>must</i> have seen him had he come out of the
-room; you were directly in front of the doors all
-the time.”</p>
-
-<p>“I was,” admitted the colonel; “can—can the
-boy be hiding to scare us?” He spoke to Miss
-Smith. She had grown pale; he did not know
-that his own color had turned. Millicent stared
-from one to the other.</p>
-
-<p>“How ridiculous!” she exclaimed; “of course
-not; but he must be somewhere; let <i>me</i> look!”</p>
-
-<p>Look as they might through all the staring,
-empty rooms, there was no vestige of the boy. He
-was as clean vanished as if he had fallen out of
-the closed and locked windows. The colonel examined
-them all; had there been one open, he
-would have peered outside, frightened as he had
-never been when death was at his elbow. But it
-certainly wasn’t possible to jump through a window,
-and not only shut, but lock it after one.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[84]</span>Under every bed, in every closet, he prowled;
-he was searching still when Mrs. Winter returned.
-By this time Mrs. Melville was agitated,
-and, naturally, irritated as well. “I think it is unpardonable
-in Archie to sneak out in this fashion,”
-she complained.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose the boy wanted to see the town a
-bit,” observed Aunt Rebecca placidly. “Rupert,
-come in and sit down; he will be back in a moment;
-smoke a cigar, if your nerves need calming.”</p>
-
-<p>Rupert felt as if he were a boy of ten, called
-back to common sense out of imaginary horrors
-of the dark.</p>
-
-<p>“But, if he wanted to go out, why did he leave
-his hat and coat behind him?” asked Miss Smith.</p>
-
-<p>“He may be only exploring the hotel,” said
-Mrs. Winter. “Don’t be so restless, Bertie; sit
-down.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel’s eye was furtively photographing
-every article of furniture in the room; it lingered
-longest on Mrs. Winter’s wardrobe-trunk, which
-was standing in her room. Randall had been despatched
-for a hot-water bottle in lieu of one
-which had sprung a leak on the train; so the trunk
-stood, its door ajar.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[85]</span>“Maybe he is doing the Genevra stunt in there—is
-that what you are thinking?” she jeered.
-“Well, go and look.”</p>
-
-<p>Light as her tone was, she was not unaffected
-by the contagion of anxiety about her; after a moment,
-while Rupert was looking at the wardrobe-trunk,
-and even profanely exploring the swathed
-gowns held in rigid safety by bands of rubber,
-she moved about the rooms herself.</p>
-
-<p>“There isn’t room for a mouse in that box,”
-growled the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course not,” said his aunt languidly, sinking
-into the easiest chair; “but your mind is easier.
-Archie will come back for dinner; don’t worry.”</p>
-
-<p>“How could he get by <i>me</i>?” retorted the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps he went into one of the neighboring
-rooms,” Miss Smith suggested. “Shall I go out
-and rap on the door of the next room on the left?”
-On the right the last room of the party was a
-corner room.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, you <i>might</i>,” acquiesced Aunt Rebecca;
-but Mrs. Melville cut the ends of her words.</p>
-
-<p>“Pray let me go, Aunt Rebecca,” she begged,
-suiting the action to the words, and was out of
-the door almost ahead of her sentence.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[86]</span>The others waited; they were silent; little flecks
-of color raddled Mrs. Winter’s cheeks. They
-could hear Millicent’s knock reverberating. There
-was no answer. “Telephone to the adjacent
-rooms,” proposed the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll telephone,” said Mrs. Winter, and rang
-up the number of the next room. There was no
-response; but when she called the number of the
-room adjoining, she seemed to get an answer, for
-she announced her name. “Have you seen a
-young lad?” she continued, after an apology for
-disturbing them. “He belongs to our party; has
-he by chance got into your room? and is he
-there?” In a second she put down the receiver
-with a heightened color, saying, “They might be
-a little civiler in their answers, if it <i>is</i> Mr. Keatcham’s
-suite.”</p>
-
-<p>“What did the beggar say?” bristled the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“Only that it was Mr. Keatcham’s suite—Mr.
-E. S. Keatcham—as if <i>that</i> put getting into it
-quite out of the question. Some underling, I presume.”</p>
-
-<p>“There is the unoccupied room between. That
-is not accounted for. But it shall be. I will find
-out who is in there.” Rupert rose as he spoke,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[87]</span>
-pricked by the craving for action of a man accustomed
-to quick decision. He heard his aunt
-brusquely repelling Millicent’s proposal of the police,
-as he left the room. Indeed, she called him
-back to exact a promise that he would not make
-Archie’s disappearance public. “We want to find
-him,” was her grim addendum; “and we can’t
-have the police and the newspapers hindering us.”</p>
-
-<p>In the office, he found external courtesy and a
-rather perfunctory sympathy, based on a suppressed,
-but perfectly visible conviction that the
-boy had stolen out for a glimpse of the city, and
-would be back shortly.</p>
-
-<p>The manager had no objection to telling Colonel
-Winter, whom he knew slightly, that the occupant
-of the next room was a New England lady
-of the highest respectability, Mrs. Winthrop
-Wigglesworth. If the young fellow didn’t turn
-up for dinner, he should be glad to ask Mrs. Wigglesworth
-to let Mrs. Winter examine her room;
-but he rather thought they would be seeing young
-Winter before then—oh, his hat? They usually
-carried caps in their pockets; and as to coats—boys
-never thought of their coats.</p>
-
-<p>The manager’s cheeriness did not especially uplift
-the colonel. He warmed it over dutifully,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[88]</span>
-however, for his womankind’s benefit. Miss
-Smith had gone out; why, he was not told, and
-did not venture to ask. Mrs. Melville kept making
-cautious signals to him behind his aunt’s back;
-otherwise she was preserving the mien of sympathetic
-solemnity which she was used to show at
-funerals and first visits of condolence and congratulation
-to divorced friends. Mrs. Winter, as
-usual, wore an inscrutable composure. She was
-still firmly opposed to calling in the aid of the police.</p>
-
-<p>Did she object to his making a few inquiries
-among the hotel bell-boys, the elevator boy and
-the people in the restaurant or in the office?</p>
-
-<p>Not at all, if he would be cautious.</p>
-
-<p>So he sallied out, and, in the midst of his fruitless
-inquisition, Millicent appeared.</p>
-
-<p>Forcing a civil smile, he awaited her pleasure.
-“Go on, don’t mind me,” said she mournfully;
-“you will feel better to have done everything in
-your power.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I shall not discover anything?”</p>
-
-<p>“I fear not. Has it not occurred to you that he
-has been kidnapped?”</p>
-
-<p>“Hmn!” said the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“And did you notice how perturbed Miss Smith<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[89]</span>
-seemed? She was quite pale; her agitation was
-quite noticeable.”</p>
-
-<p>“She is tremendously fond of Archie.”</p>
-
-<p>“Or—she knows more than she will say.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, what rot!” sputtered the colonel; then he
-begged her pardon.</p>
-
-<p>“Wait,” he counseled, and his man’s resistance
-to appearances had its effect, as masculine immobility
-always has, on the feminine effervescence
-before him. “Wait,” was his word, “at least until
-we give the boy a chance to turn up; if he has
-slipped by us, he is taking a little <i>pasear</i> on his
-own account; lads do get restless sometimes if
-they are held too steadily in the leash, especially—if
-you will excuse me—by, well, by ladies.”</p>
-
-<p>“If he has frightened us out of our wits—well,
-I don’t know what oughtn’t to be done to him!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh well, let us wait and hear <i>his</i> story,” repeated
-the soldier.</p>
-
-<p>But the last streaks of red faded out of the
-west; a chill fog smoked up from the darkening
-hills, and Archie had not come. At eight, Mrs.
-Winter ordered dinner to be served in their
-rooms. Miss Smith had not returned. The colonel
-attempted a military cheerfulness, which his
-aunt told him bluntly, later in the evening, reminded<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[90]</span>
-her of a physician’s manner in critical
-cases where the patient’s mind must be kept absolutely
-quiet.</p>
-
-<p>But she ate more than he at dinner; although
-her own record was not a very good one. Millicent
-avowed that she was too worried to eat, but
-she was tempted by the strawberries and carp,
-and wondered were the California fowls really
-so poor; and gave the sample the benefit of impartial
-and fair examination, in the end making
-a very fair meal.</p>
-
-<p>It is not to be supposed that Winter had been
-idle; before dinner he had put a guard in the hall
-and had seen Haley, who reported that his wife
-and child had gone to a kinswoman in Santa Barbara.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure the woman has a fine house intirely, and
-she’s fair crazy over the baby that’s named afther
-her, for she’s a widdy woman with never a child
-excipt wan that’s in hivin, a little gurrl; and she
-wudn’t let us rist ’til she’d got the cratur’. Nor
-I wasn’t objictin’, for I’m thinking there’ll be
-something doin’ and the wimin is onconvanient,
-thim times.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel admitted that he shared Haley’s
-opinion. He questioned the man minutely about<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[91]</span>
-Mercer’s conduct on the train. It was absolutely
-commonplace. If he had any connection (as the
-colonel had suspected) with the bandits, he made
-no sign. He sent no telegrams; he wrote no letters;
-he made no acquaintances, smoking his
-solitary cigar over a newspaper. Indeed, absolutely
-the only matter of note (if that were one)
-was that he read so many newspapers—buying
-every different journal vended. At San Francisco
-he got into a cab and Haley heard him give
-the order: “To the St. Francis.” Having his
-wife and child with him, the sergeant couldn’t
-follow; but he went around to the St. Francis
-later, and inquired for Mr. Mercer, for whom he
-had a letter (as was indeed the case—the colonel
-having provided him with one), but no such name
-appeared on the register. Invited to leave the letter
-to await the gentleman’s arrival, Haley said
-that he was instructed to give it to the gentleman
-himself; therefore, he took it away with him.
-He had carried it to all the other hotels or boarding-places
-in San Francisco which he could find,
-aided greatly thereto by a friend of his, formerly
-in “the old —th,” a sergeant, now stationed at the
-Presidio. Thanks to him, Haley could say definitely
-that Mercer was not at any of the hotels<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[92]</span>
-or more prominent boarding-houses in the city, at
-least under his own name.</p>
-
-<p>“And you haven’t seen him since he got into
-the cab at the station?” the colonel summed up.</p>
-
-<p>Haley’s reply was unexpected: “Yes, sor, I
-seen him this day, in the marning, in this same
-hotel.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where?”</p>
-
-<p>“Drinking coffee at a table in th’ coort. He
-wint out, havin’ paid the man, not a-signin’, an’
-he guv the waiter enough to make him say,
-‘Thank ye, sor,’ but not enough to make him
-smile and stay round to pull aff the chair. I follied
-him to the dure, but he got into an autymobile—”</p>
-
-<p>“Get the number?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yis, sor. Number—here ’tis, sor, I wrote it
-down to make sure.” He passed over to the colonel
-an old envelope on which was written a number.
-<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a>“M. 20139,” read the colonel, carefully noting
-down the number in his own memorandum-book.
-And he reflected, “That is a Massachusetts
-number—humph!”</p>
-
-<p>Haley’s information ended there. He heard of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[93]</span>
-Archie’s disappearance with his usual stolid mien,
-but his hands slowly clenched. The colonel continued:</p>
-
-<p>“You are to find out, if you can, by scraping
-acquaintance with the carriage men, if that auto—you
-have written a description, I see, as well
-as the number—find out if that auto left this hotel
-this afternoon between six and seven o’clock.
-Find out who were in it. Find out where it is
-kept and who owns it. Get H. Birdsall, Merchants’
-Exchange Building, to send a man to help
-you. Wait, I’ve a card ready for you to give him
-from me; he has sent me men before. Report by
-telephone as soon as you know anything. If I’m
-not here, speak Spanish and have them write it
-down. Be back here to-night by ten, if you can,
-yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>Haley dismissed, and his own appetite for dinner
-effectually dispelled by his report, Winter
-joined his aunt. Should he tell her his suspicions
-and their ground? Wasn’t he morally obliged,
-now, to tell her? She was co-guardian with him
-of the boy, who, he had no doubt, had been spirited
-away by Mercer and his accomplice; and
-hadn’t she a right to any information on the matter
-in his possession?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[94]</span>Reluctantly he admitted that she did have such
-a right; and, he admitted further, being a man
-who never cheated at solitaire, that his object in
-keeping the talk of the two men from her had
-not been so much the desire to guard her nerves
-(which he knew perfectly well were of a robuster
-fiber than those of most women twenty or forty
-years younger than she); no, he admitted it
-grimly, he had not so much spared his aunt as
-Janet Smith; he could not bear to direct suspicion
-toward her. But how could he keep silent longer?
-Kicking this question about in his mind, he
-spoiled the flavor of his after-dinner cigar, although
-his aunt graciously bade him smoke it in
-her parlor.</p>
-
-<p>And still Miss Smith had not returned; really,
-it was only fair to her to have her present when
-he told his story to his aunt; no, he was <i>not</i> grabbing
-at any excuse for delay; if he could watch
-that girl’s face while he told his story he would—well,
-he would have his mind settled one way or
-another.</p>
-
-<p>Here the telephone bell rang; the manager informed
-Colonel Winter that Mrs. Wigglesworth
-had returned.</p>
-
-<p>“Wigglesworth? what an extraordinary name!”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[95]</span>
-cried Millicent when the colonel shared his information.</p>
-
-<p>“Good old New England name; I know some
-extremely nice Wigglesworths in Boston,” Mrs.
-Winter amended with a touch of hauteur; and, at
-this moment, there came a knock at the door.</p>
-
-<p>There is all the difference in the world between
-knocks; a knock as often as not conveys a most
-unintentional hint in regard to the character of
-the one behind the knuckles; and often, also, the
-mood of the knocker is reflected in the sound
-which he makes. Were there truth in this, one
-would judge that the person who knocked at this
-moment must be a woman, for the knock was not
-loud, but almost timidly gentle; one might even
-guess that she was agitated, for the tapping was
-in a hurried, uneven measure.</p>
-
-<p>“I believe it is Mrs. Wigglesworth herself,” declared
-Aunt Rebecca. “Bertie, I’m going into the
-other room; she will talk more freely to you. She
-would want to spare my nerves. That is the
-nuisance of being old. Now open the door.”</p>
-
-<p>She was half-way across the threshold before
-she finished, and the colonel’s fingers on the door-knob
-waited only for the closing of her door to
-turn to admit the lady in waiting.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[96]</span>A lady she was beyond doubt, and any one who
-had traveled would have been sure that she was a
-lady from Massachusetts. She wore that little
-close bonnet which certain elderly Boston gentlewomen
-can neither be driven nor allured to abandon;
-her rich and quiet black silken gown might
-have been made any year within the last five, and
-her furs would have graced a princess. She had
-beautiful gray hair and a soft complexion and
-wore glasses. Equally evident to the observer was
-the fact of her suppressed agitation.</p>
-
-<p>She waved aside the colonel’s proffered chair,
-introducing herself in a musical, almost tremulous
-voice with the crisp enunciation of her section of
-the country. “I am Mrs. Wigglesworth; I understand,
-Colonel Winter—you?—y-yes, no, thank
-you, I will not sit. I—I understood Mrs. Winter—ah,
-your aunt, is an elderly woman.”</p>
-
-<p>“This is my sister-in-law, Mrs. Melville Winter,”
-explained the colonel. “My aunt is elderly
-in years, but in nothing else.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Wigglesworth smiled a faint smile; the
-colonel could see a tremble of the hand that was
-unconsciously drawing her fur collar more tightly
-about her throat. “How very nice—yes, to be
-sure,” she faltered. “But you will understand that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[97]</span>
-I did not wish to alarm her. I heard that you
-wanted to speak to me, and that the little boy was
-lost.”</p>
-
-<p>“Or stolen,” Mrs. Melville said crisply.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel, in a few words, displayed the situation.
-He had prevailed upon his visitor to sit
-down, and while he spoke he noticed that her
-hands held each other tightly, although she appeared
-perfectly composed and did not interrupt.
-She answered his questions directly and quietly.
-She had been away taking tea with a friend; she
-had remained to dine. Her maid had gone out
-earlier to spend the day and night with a sister in
-the city; so the room was empty between six and
-seven o’clock.</p>
-
-<p>“The chambermaid wasn’t there, then?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think so. She usually does the room
-and brings the towels for the bath in the morning.
-But I asked her, to make sure, and she says that
-she was not there since morning. She seems a
-good girl; I think she didn’t—but I have found
-something. At least I am af—I may have found
-something. I thought I might see Mrs. Winter’s
-niece about it”—she glanced toward Millicent,
-who said, “Certainly,” at a venture; and looked
-frightened.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[98]</span>“And you found—?” said the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“Only this. I went to my rooms, turned on the
-light and was taking off my gloves before I untied
-my bonnet. One of my rings fell on the floor.
-It went under a rug, and I at once remarked that
-it was a different place for the rug to the one
-where it had been before. Before, it was in front
-of the dresser, a very natural place, but now it is
-on the carpet to one side, a place where there
-seemed no reason for its presence. These details
-seem trivial, but—”</p>
-
-<p>“I can see they are not,” said the colonel.
-“Pray proceed, Madam. The ring had rolled under
-the rug!”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Wigglesworth gave him a grateful nod.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, it had. And when I removed the rug I
-saw it; but as I bent to pick it up I saw something
-else. In one place there was a stain, as large as
-the palm of my hand, a little pool of—it looks
-like blood.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Melville uttered an exclamation of horror.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel’s face stiffened; but there was no
-change in his polite attention.</p>
-
-<p>“May we be permitted to see this—ah, stain?”
-said he.</p>
-
-<p>The three stepped through the corridor to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[99]</span>
-outside door, and went into the chamber. The
-rug was flung to one side, and there on the gray
-velvet nap of the carpet was an irregular, sprawling
-stain about which were spattered other stains,
-some crimson, some almost black.</p>
-
-<p>Millicent recoiled, shuddering. The colonel
-knelt down and examined the stains. “Yes,” he
-said very quietly, “you are right, it is blood.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a tap on the door, which was opened
-immediately without waiting for a permission.
-Millicent, rigid with fright, could only stare helplessly
-at the erect figure, the composed, pale face
-and the brilliant, imperious eyes of her aunt.</p>
-
-<p>“What did you say, Bertie?” said Rebecca Winter.
-“I think I have a right to the whole truth.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[100]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VI<br />
-
-<small>THE VOICE IN THE TELEPHONE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Well, Bertie?” Mrs. Winter had gone back to
-her parlor in the most docile manner in the world.
-Her submission struck Rupert on the heart; it was
-as if she were stunned, he felt.</p>
-
-<p>He was sitting opposite her, his slender, rather
-short figure looking shrunken in the huge, ugly,
-upholstered easy-chair; he kept an almost constrained
-attitude of military erectness, of which
-he was conscious, himself; and at which he smiled
-forlornly, recalling the same pose in Haley whenever
-the sergeant was disconcerted.</p>
-
-<p>“But, first,” pursued his aunt, “who was that
-red-headed bell-boy with whom you exchanged
-signals in the hall?”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel suppressed a whistle. “Aunt
-Becky, you’re a wonder! Did you notice? And
-he simply shut the palm of his hand! Why, it’s
-this way: I was convinced that Archie must be
-on the premises; he <i>couldn’t</i> get off. So I telephoned<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[101]</span>
-a detective that I know here, a private
-agency, <i>not</i> the police, to send me a sure man to
-watch. He is made up as a bell-boy (with the
-hotel manager’s consent, of course); either I, or
-Millicent, or that boy has kept an eye on the
-Keatcham doors and the next room ever since I
-found Archie was gone. No one has gone out
-without our seeing him. If any suspicious person
-goes out, we have it arranged to detain him long
-enough for me to get a good look. I can tell you
-exactly who left the room.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is you who are the wonder, Bertie,” said
-Aunt Rebecca, a little wearily, but smiling. “Who
-has gone out?”</p>
-
-<p>“At seven Mr. Keatcham’s secretary went down
-to the office and ordered dinner, very carefully.
-I didn’t see him, but my sleuth did. He had the
-secretary and the valet of the Keatcham party
-pointed out to him; he saw them. They had one
-visitor, young Arnold, <i>the</i> Arnold’s son—”</p>
-
-<p>“The one who has all the orange groves and
-railways? Yes, I knew his father.”</p>
-
-<p>“That one; he only came a few moments since.
-Mr. Keatcham and his secretary dined together,
-and Keatcham’s own man waited on them; but
-the waiter for this floor brought up the dishes. At<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[102]</span>
-nine the dishes were brought out and my man
-helped Keatcham’s valet to pile them a little farther
-down the corridor in the hall.”</p>
-
-<p>These items the colonel was reading out of his
-little red book.</p>
-
-<p>“You have put all that down. Do you think it
-means anything?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have put everything down. One can’t weed
-until there is a crop of information, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“True,” murmured Aunt Rebecca, nodding her
-head thoughtfully. “Well, did anything else happen?”</p>
-
-<p>“The secretary posted a lot of letters in the
-shute. They are all smoking now. Yes—” he
-was on his feet and at the door in almost a single
-motion. There had been just the slightest tattoo
-on the panel. When the door was opened the
-colonel could hear the rattle of the elevator. He
-was too late to catch it, but he could see the inmates.
-Three gentlemen stood in the car. One was
-Keatcham, the other two had their backs to Winter.
-One seemed to be supporting Keatcham, who
-looked pale. He saw the colonel and darted at
-him a single glance in which was something
-like a poignant appeal; what, it was too brief for
-the receiver to decide, for in the space of an eye-blink<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[103]</span>
-a shoulder of the other man intervened,
-and simultaneously the elevator car began to
-sink.</p>
-
-<p>There was need to decide instantly who should
-follow, who stay on guard. Rupert bade the boy
-go down by the stairs, while, with a kind of bulldog
-instinct, he clung to the rooms. The lad was
-to fetch the manager and the keys of the Keatcham
-suite.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Rupert paced back and forth before
-the closed doors, whence there penetrated the
-rustle of packing and a murmur of voices. Presently
-Keatcham’s valet opened the farther door.
-He spoke to some one inside. “Yes, sir,” he said,
-“the porter hought to be ’ere now.”</p>
-
-<p>The porter was there; at least he was coming
-down the corridor which led to the elevator, trundling
-his truck before him. He entered the rooms
-and busied himself about the luggage.</p>
-
-<p>Doggedly the colonel stuck to his guard until
-the valet and another man, a clean-shaven, fresh-faced
-young man whom the watcher had never
-seen before, came out of the room. The valet
-superintended the taking of two trunks, accepting
-tickets and checks from the porter with a thoroughly
-Anglican suspicion and thoroughness of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[104]</span>
-inspection, while the young man stood tapping his
-immaculate trousers-leg with the stick of his admirably
-slender umbrella.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s all right, Colvin,” he broke in impatiently;
-“three tickets to Los Angeles, drawing-room, one
-lower berth, one section, checks for two trunks;
-come on!”</p>
-
-<p>Very methodically the man called Colvin
-stowed away his green and red slips, first in an
-envelope, then in his pocket-book, finally buttoning
-an inside pocket over all. He was the image
-of a rather stupid, conscientious English serving
-creature. Carefully he counted out a liberal but
-not lavish tip for the porter, and watched that
-functionary depart. Last of all, he locked the
-door.</p>
-
-<p>With extreme courtesy of manner Winter approached
-the young man.</p>
-
-<p>“Pardon me,” said he. “I am Colonel Winter;
-my aunt, Mrs. Winter, has the rooms near yours,
-and she finds that she needs another room or two.
-Are you leaving yours?”</p>
-
-<p>“These are Mr. Keatcham’s rooms, not mine,”
-the young man responded politely. “<i>He</i> is leaving
-them.”</p>
-
-<p>“When you give up your keys, would you mind<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[105]</span>
-asking the clerk to send them up to me?” pursued
-the colonel. “Room three twenty-seven.”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly,” replied the young man, “or would
-you like to look at them a moment now?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why—if it wouldn’t detain you,” hesitated
-Winter; he was hardly prepared for the offer of
-admittance.</p>
-
-<p>“Get the elevator and hold it a minute, Colvin,”
-said the young man, and he instantly fitted the key
-to the door, which he flung open.</p>
-
-<p>“Excuse me,” said he, as they stood in the
-room, “but aren’t you the Colonel Winter who
-held that mountain pass to let the other fellows
-get off, after your ammunition was exhausted?”</p>
-
-<p>“I seem to recall some such episode, only it
-sounds rather gaudy the way you put it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I read about you in the papers; you swam a
-river with Funston; did all kinds of stunts—”</p>
-
-<p>“Or the newspaper reporter did. You don’t
-happen to know anything about the price of these
-rooms, I suppose?”</p>
-
-<p>The young man did not know, but he showed
-the colonel through all the rooms with vast civility.
-He seemed quite indifferent to the colonel’s
-interest in closets, baths and wardrobes; he only
-wanted to talk about the Philippines.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[106]</span>The colonel, who always shied like a mettled
-horse from the flutter of his own laurels, grew
-red with discomfort and rattled the door-knobs.</p>
-
-<p>“There the suite ends,” said the young man.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, we don’t want it all, only a room or two,”
-Colonel Winter demurred. “Any one of these
-rooms would do. Well, I will not detain you. The
-elevator boy will be tired, and Mr. Keatcham will
-grow impatient.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all; he will have gone. I—I’m so very
-glad to have met you, Colonel—”</p>
-
-<p>In this manner, with mutual civilities, they
-parted, the young man escorting the colonel to his
-own door, which the latter was forced to enter by
-the sheer demands of the situation.</p>
-
-<p>But hardly had the door closed than he popped
-out again. The young man was swinging round
-the corner next the elevator.</p>
-
-<p>“Is he an innocent bystander or what?” puzzled
-the soldier. He resumed his march up and down
-the corridor. The next room to the Keatcham
-suite was evidently held by an agent of the Fireless
-Cooking Stove, since one of his samples had
-strayed into the hall and was mutely proclaiming
-its own exceeding worth in very black letters on
-a very white placard.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[107]</span>“If the young man and the valet are straight
-goods, the key will come up reasonably soon from
-the office,” thought the watcher.</p>
-
-<p>Sure enough, the keys, in the hands of Winter’s
-own spy, appeared before he had waited three
-minutes. He reported that the old gentleman got
-into a cab with his secretary and the valet, and the
-other gentlemen took another cab. The secretary
-paid the bill. Had he gone sooner than expected?
-No; he had engaged the rooms until Thursday
-night; this was Thursday night.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel asked about the next room, which
-was directly on the cross corridor leading to the
-elevator. The detective had been instructed to
-watch it. How long had the Fireless Cooking
-Stove man had it? There was no meat for suspicion
-in the answer. The stove man had come
-the day before the Keatcham party. He was a
-perfectly commonplace, good-looking young man,
-representing the Peerless Fireless Cooking Stove
-with much picturesque eloquence; he had sold a
-lot of stoves to people in the hotel, and he tried
-without much success to tackle “old Keatcham”;
-he had attacked even the sleuth himself. “He
-gave me a mighty good cigar, too,” chuckled the
-red-headed one.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[108]</span>“Hmn, you got it now?”</p>
-
-<p>“Only the memory,” the boy grinned.</p>
-
-<p>“You ought to have kept it, Birdsall would tell
-you; you are watching every one in these rooms.
-Did it have a necktie? And did you throw that
-away?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir, I kept that; after I got to smoking, I
-just thought I’d keep it.”</p>
-
-<p>When he took the tiny scrap of paper from his
-pocket-book the colonel eyed it grimly. “‘<i>A de
-Villar y Villar</i>,’” he read, with a slight ironic
-inflection. “Decidedly our young Fireless Stove
-promoter smokes good cigars!”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe Mr. Keatcham gave it to him. He was
-in there.”</p>
-
-<p>“Was he? Oh, yes, trying to sell his stove—but
-not succeeding?”</p>
-
-<p>“He said he was trying to get past the valet
-and the secretary; he thought if he could only get
-at the old man and demonstrate his stove he could
-make the sale. He could cook all right, that
-feller.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel made no comment, and presently
-betook himself to his aunt. She was waiting for
-him in the parlor, playing solitaire. Through the
-open door the white bed that ought to have been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[109]</span>
-Archie’s was gleaming faintly. The colonel’s
-brows met.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Bertie? Did you find anything?” Mrs.
-Winter inquired smoothly.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid not; but here is the report.” He
-gave it to her, even down to the cigar wrapper.</p>
-
-<p>“It doesn’t seem likely that Mr. Keatcham has
-anything to do with it,” said she. “He, no doubt,
-has stolen many a little railway, but a little boy
-is too small game.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t suspect Keatcham; but I wish I
-had caught the elevator to-night. He looked at
-me in a mighty queer way.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you recognize his secretary as any one
-whom you ever saw before?” asked Mrs. Winter.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t say,” was the answer, given with a
-little hesitation. “I’m not sure.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think I quite understand you, Bertie;
-better make a clean breast of all you know. I’m
-getting a little worried myself.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel reached across the cards and tapped
-his aunt’s arm affectionately. He felt the warmest
-impulse toward sympathy for her that he had
-ever known; it glistened in his eyes. Mrs. Winter’s
-cheeks slowly crimsoned; she turned her
-head, exclaiming, did she hear a noise; but the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[110]</span>
-colonel’s keen ears had not been warned. “Poor
-woman,” he thought, “she is worried to death,
-but she will not admit it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now, Bertie,” said Mrs. Winter calmly, but
-her elbow fell on her cards and spoiled a very
-promising game of Penelope’s Web, “now, Bertie,
-<i>what</i> are you keeping back?”</p>
-
-<p>Then, at last, the colonel told her of his experience
-in Chicago. She heard him quite without
-comment, and he could detect no shift of emotion
-in her demeanor of absorbed but perfectly calm
-attention, unless a certain tension of attitude and
-feature (as if, he phrased it, she were “holding
-herself in”) might be so considered. And he was
-not sure of this. When he came to the words
-which stuck in his throat, the sentence about Miss
-Smith, she smiled frankly, almost laughed.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of the recital—and the colonel had
-not omitted a word or a look in his memory—she
-merely said: “Then you think Cary Mercer has
-kidnapped Archie, and the nice-looking Harvard
-boy is helping him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you think it looks that way, yourself?”</p>
-
-<p>She answered that question by another one:
-“But you don’t think, do you, that Janet is the
-Miss Smith mentioned?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[111]</span>His reply came after an almost imperceptible
-hesitation: “No!”</p>
-
-<p>Again she smiled. “That is because you know
-Janet; if you didn’t know her you would think
-the chances were in favor of their meaning her?
-Naturally! Well, I know Cary a little. I knew
-his father <i>well</i>. I don’t believe he would harm a
-hair of Archie’s head. He isn’t a cruel fellow—at
-least not toward women and children. I’ve a notion
-that what he calls his wrongs have upset his
-wits a bit, and he might turn the screws on the
-Wall Street crowd that ruined him. That is, if
-he had a chance; but he is poor; he would need
-millions to get even a chance for a blow at them.
-But a child, a lad who looks like his brother—no,
-you may be sure he wouldn’t hurt Archie! He
-<i>couldn’t</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>“But—the name, Winter; it is not such a common
-name; and the words about a lady of—of—”
-The polite soldier hesitated.</p>
-
-<p>“An old woman, do you mean?” said Aunt Rebecca,
-with a little curving of her still unwrinkled
-upper lip.</p>
-
-<p>“It sounds so complete,” submitted her nephew.</p>
-
-<p>“Therefore distrust it,” she argued dryly.
-“Gaboriau’s great detective and Conan Doyle’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[112]</span>
-both have that same maxim—not to pick out easy
-answers.”</p>
-
-<p>Winter smiled in his own turn. “Still, sometimes
-the easy answers are right. Now, here is
-the situation: I hear this conversation at the
-depot. I find one of the men on the same train
-with me. He, presumably, if he <i>is</i> Cary Mercer,
-and I don’t think I can be mistaken in his identity—”</p>
-
-<p>“Unless another man is making up as Cary!”</p>
-
-<p>“It may seem conceited, but I don’t think I
-could be fooled. This man had every expression
-of the other’s, and I was too struck by the—I may
-almost call it malignant—look he had, not to recognize
-him. No, it <i>was</i> Mercer; he would certainly
-recognize you, and he would know who I
-am; he would not be called upon to snub me as a
-possible confidence man.”</p>
-
-<p>“That rankles yet, Bertie?”</p>
-
-<p>He made a grimace and nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“But,” he insisted, “isn’t it so? If he is up to
-some mischief, any mischief—doesn’t care to have
-his kin meet him—that is the way he would act,
-don’t you think?”</p>
-
-<p>“He might be up to mischief, yet have no designs
-on his kin.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[113]</span>“He might,” said the colonel musingly. A
-thought which he did not confide to the shrewd
-old woman had just flipped his mind. But he
-went on with his plea.</p>
-
-<p>“He avoids you; he avoids me. He is seen going
-into Keatcham’s drawing-room; that means
-some sort of an acquaintance with Keatcham,
-enough to talk to him, anyway. How much, I
-can’t say. Then comes the attack by the robbers;
-he is in another car, so there is no call for him to
-do anything; there is no light whatever on
-whether he had anything to do with the robbery.</p>
-
-<p>“Then we come here. Keatcham has the room
-next but one. Archie goes into his own room; we
-see him go; I am outside, directly outside; it is
-simply impossible for him to go out into the hall
-without my seeing him; besides, I found the doors
-outside all locked except the one to the right where
-we entered your suite; then we may assume that
-he could not go out. He could not climb out of
-locked windows on the third floor down a sheer
-descent of some forty or fifty feet. Your last
-room to the right, Miss Smith’s bedroom, is a
-corner room; besides, she was in it; that excludes
-every exit except that to the left. We find Mrs.
-Wigglesworth was absent, and there were evidences<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[114]</span>
-of—an—an attack of some kind carefully
-hidden, afterward. But there is no sign of the
-boy. I watch the rooms. If he is hidden somewhere
-in Keatcham’s rooms, the chances are, after
-Keatcham goes, they will try to take him off. I
-don’t think it probable that Keatcham knows anything
-about the kidnapping; in fact, it is wildly
-<i>im</i>probable. Well, Keatcham goes; immediately
-I get into the room. The valet and the young man
-visiting Keatcham, young Arnold, let me in without
-the slightest demur. Either they know nothing
-of the boy or somehow they have got him
-away, else they would not let me in so easily.
-Maybe they are ignorant and the boy is gone,
-both. We go to the rooms very soon after; there
-is not the smallest trace of Archie.”</p>
-
-<p>“How did he get out?”</p>
-
-<p>“They must have outwitted me, somehow,” the
-colonel sighed, “and it looks as if he went voluntarily;
-there was no possible carrying away by
-force. And there was no odor of chloroform
-about; that is very penetrating; it would get into
-the halls. They must have persuaded him to go—but
-how?”</p>
-
-<p>“If they have kidnapped him,” said Mrs. Winter,
-“they will send me some word, and if they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[115]</span>
-have persuaded him to run away, plainly he must
-be able to walk, and that—mess in Mrs. Wigglesworth’s
-room doesn’t mean anything bad.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course not,” said the colonel firmly.</p>
-
-<p>Then, in as casual a tone as he could command:
-“By the way, where is Miss Smith? She is back,
-isn’t she?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, a long time ago,” said Mrs. Winter. “I
-sent her to bed.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been frank with you. You will reciprocate
-and tell me why, for what, you sent her out?”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Winter made not the least evasion. She
-answered frankly: “I sent her with a carefully
-worded advertisement—but you needn’t tell Millicent,
-who has also gone to bed, thank Heaven—I
-sent her with a carefully worded advertisement to
-all the papers. This is the advertisement. It will
-reach the kidnappers, and it will not reach any
-one else. See.” She handed him a slip of paper
-from her card-case. He read:</p>
-
-<p>“To the holders of Archie W: Communicate
-with R. S. W., same address as before, and you
-will hear of something to your advantage. Perfectly
-safe.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel read it thoughtfully, a little puzzled.
-Before he had time to speak, his quick ears<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[116]</span>
-caught the sharp ring of his room telephone bell.
-He excused himself to answer it. His room was
-the last of the suite, but he shut the door on his
-way to the telephone.</p>
-
-<p>He expected Haley; nor was he disappointed.
-Haley reported—in Spanish—that he had traced
-the automobile; it was the property of young Mr.
-Arnold, son of the rich Mr. Arnold. Young Arnold
-had been at Harvard last year, and he took
-out a Massachusetts license; he had a California
-one, too. Should he (Haley) look up young Arnold?
-And should he come to report that night?</p>
-
-<p>The colonel thought he could wait till morning,
-and, a little comforted, hung up the receiver.
-Barely was it out of his hand when the bell
-shrilled again, sharply, vehemently. Winter put
-the tube to his ear.</p>
-
-<p>“Does any one want Colonel Winter, Palace
-Hotel?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>A sweet, eager, boyish voice called back: “Uncle
-Bertie! Uncle Bertie, don’t you worry; I’m
-all right!”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Archie!</i>” cried the colonel. “<i>Where are you?</i>”</p>
-
-<p>But there was no answer. He called again, and
-a second time; he told the lad that they were
-dreadfully anxious about him. He got no response<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[117]</span>
-from the boy; but another voice, a woman’s
-voice, said, with cold distinctness, as if to
-some one in the room: “No, don’t let him; it is
-impossible!” Then a dead wall of silence and Central’s
-impassive ignorance. He could get nothing.</p>
-
-<p>Rupert Winter stood a moment, frowning and
-thinking deeply. Directly, with a shrug of the
-shoulders, he walked out of his own outside door,
-locking it, and went straight to Miss Smith’s.</p>
-
-<p>He knocked, at first very gently, then more
-vigorously. But there was no answer. He went
-away from the door, but he did not reënter his
-room. He did not bear to his aunt the news which,
-with all its meagerness and irritating incompleteness,
-had been an enormous relief to him. He
-simply waited in the corridor. Five minutes, ten
-minutes passed; then he heard the elevator whir,
-and, standing with his hand on the knob of his
-open door, he saw his aunt’s companion, dressed
-for the street, step out and speed down the corridor
-to her own door.</p>
-
-<p>The other voice—the woman’s voice—had been
-Janet Smith’s.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[118]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VII<br />
-
-<small>THE HAUNTED HOUSE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>A mud-splashed automobile runabout containing
-two men was turning off Van Ness Avenue
-down a narrower and shadier side street in the
-afternoon of the Sunday following the disappearance
-of Archie Winter. One of the occupants
-seemed to be an invalid whom the brilliant March
-sunshine had not tempted out of his heavy wrappings
-and cap; the other was a short, thick-set,
-corduroy-jacketed chauffeur. One marked the
-runabout at a glance as a hardly used livery motor-car;
-but a moment’s inspection might have
-shown that it was running with admirable smoothness
-and quiet. The chauffeur wore goggles,
-hence his eyes were shielded, but he turned a
-broad smile upon the pallid cheeks and sharpened
-profile beside him.</p>
-
-<p>“Colonel, as a health-seeker who can’t keep
-warm enough, you’re great!” he cried. “Lord,
-but you look the part!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[119]</span>“If I can’t shed some of these confounded
-mufflers soon,” growled the pale sufferer addressed,
-“I’ll get so red with heat it will come
-through my beautiful powder. I hope those fellows
-won’t see us, for they will be on to us, all
-right.”</p>
-
-<p>“Our own mothers wouldn’t be on to us in these
-rigs,” the chauffeur replied cheerily; he seemed to
-be in a hopeful mood; “and let us once get into
-the house, and surprise ’em, and there’ll be something
-drop. But I haven’t really had a chance to
-tell you the latest—having to pick you up at a
-drug store this way. Now, let’s sum things up!
-You think the boy got out through Keatcham’s
-apartment? Or Mrs. Wigglesworth’s?”</p>
-
-<p>“How else?” said the colonel, “he can’t fly,
-and if he could, he couldn’t fly out and then lock
-the windows from the inside.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see”—the chauffeur appeared thoughtful—“and
-the Wigglesworth door was locked. You
-think that Keatcham is in it, someway?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not Keatcham,” said the colonel. “There
-was another man in the car—Atkins they called
-him, though he has disappeared. But Mercer remains.
-His secretary and that valet of his; I
-think the secretary is Cary Mercer. The boy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[120]</span>
-might have slipped out in those few moments we
-were hunting for him inside. Afterward, either
-Mrs. Melville Winter or I was on guard until
-your man came. He might go to the Fireless
-Stove man, slip out of his rooms, and round the
-corner to the elevator in a couple of seconds.
-Then, of course, I might see their rooms—”</p>
-
-<p>“Provided, that is, the Fireless Stove drummer
-is in the plot, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“The Fireless Stove drummer who smokes <i>Villar
-y Villar</i> cigars? He is in it, I think, Birdsall.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ll assume that. Next thing: you get
-the telephone call. And you say the voice sounded
-chipper; didn’t look like he was being hurt or
-bothered anyway, did it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all. Besides, you know the letter Miss
-Smith got this morning?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think I’d like another peek at that; will you
-drive her a minute, while I look at the letter
-again?” The instant his hands were free Birdsall
-pulled out the envelope from his leather-rimmed
-pocket.</p>
-
-<p>It was rectangular in shape and smaller than
-the ordinary business envelope. The paper was
-linen of a common diamond pattern, having no
-engraved heading. The detective ran his eyes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[121]</span>
-down the few lines written in an unformed boyish
-hand. There was neither date nor place; only
-these words:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Dear Miss Janet</span>—Don’t you or auntie be woried about
-me because I am well and safe and having a good time. I
-had the nose bleed that is why I spoted the carpet. Tell
-Auntie to please pay for it out of my next week’s allowance.
-Be sure and don’t wory.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="indentright">Your aff. friend,</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Archibald Page Winter</span>.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“You’re sure this is the boy’s writing?” was
-the detective’s comment.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure. And his spelling, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” said Birdsall, watching the colonel’s
-keen, aquiline profile as he spoke, “now you notice
-there’s no heading or mark on the paper;
-and the water-mark is only O. K. E., Mass., 1904.
-And that amounts to nothing; those folks sell all
-over the country. But you notice that it is not
-the ordinary business paper; it looks rather ladylike
-than commercial, doesn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel admitted that it did look so.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, assuming that this letter was sent with
-the connivance of the kidnappers, it looks as if
-our young gentleman wasn’t in any particular
-danger of having a hard time. To me, it looks<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[122]</span>
-pretty certain he must have skipped himself;
-tolled along someway, maybe, but not making
-any resistance. Now, is there anybody that you
-know who has enough influence over him for that?
-How about the lady’s maid?”</p>
-
-<p>“Randall has been a faithful servant for twenty
-years, a middle-aged, serious-minded, decent
-woman. Out of the question.”</p>
-
-<p>“This Miss Smith, your aunt’s companion, who
-is she? Do you know?”</p>
-
-<p>“A South Carolinian; good family; she has
-lived with my aunt as secretary and companion
-for a year; my aunt is very fond of her.”</p>
-
-<p>“That all you know? Well <i>I</i> have found out
-a little more; she used to live with a Mrs. James
-S. Hastings, a rich Washington woman. The
-lady’s only son fell in love with her; <i>somehow</i>
-the marriage was broken off.”</p>
-
-<p>“What was his name?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lawrence. They call him Larry. He went to
-Manila. Maybe you’ve met him there.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I knew him; I don’t believe he ever was
-accepted by her.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know. I have only had two days on
-her biography. Later, she went to Johns Hopkins
-Hospital. One of the doctors was very attentive<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[123]</span>
-to her—but it did not come to anything. She
-didn’t graduate. Don’t know why. Then she
-went to live with Miss Angela Nelson, who died
-and left her money, away from her own family.
-There was talk of breaking the will; but it wasn’t
-done. Then she came to Mrs. Winter.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel was silent; there was nothing discreditable
-in these details. He had known before
-that Janet Smith was poor; that she had been
-thrown on the world early; that she must earn
-her own livelihood; yet, somehow, as Birdsall
-marshaled the facts, there was an insidious, malarious
-hint of the adventuress, bandied from place
-to place, hawking her attractions about, wheedling,
-charming for hire, entrapping imbecile
-young cubs—Larry Hastings wasn’t more than
-twenty-two—somehow he felt a revolt against
-the picture and against the man submitting it—and,
-confound Millicent!</p>
-
-<p>The detective changed the manner of his questions
-a little. “I suppose your aunt is pretty advanced
-in years, though she is as well preserved
-an old lady as I have ever met, and as
-shrewd. Say, wouldn’t she be likely to leave the
-boy a lot of money?”</p>
-
-<p>“I dare say.” The colonel was conscious of an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[124]</span>
-intemperate impulse to kick Birdsall, who had
-been such a useful fellow in the Philippines.</p>
-
-<p>“If anything was to happen to him, who would
-get the money?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Mrs. Melville and I are next of kin,”
-returned the colonel dryly. “Do you suspect <i>us</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>“I did look up Mrs. Melville,” answered the
-unabashed detective, “but I guess she’s straight
-goods all right. But say, how about Miss Smith?”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel stared, then he laughed. “Birdsall,”
-said he, “there’s somewhat too much mention
-of ladies’ names to suit my Virginian taste.
-But if you mean to imply that Miss Smith is going
-to kill Archie to get my aunt’s money, I can tell
-you you are <i>’way off!</i> Your imagination is too
-active for your profession. You ought to hire
-out to the yellow journals.”</p>
-
-<p>His employer’s satire did not even flick the
-dust off Birdsall’s complacency; he grinned cheerfully.
-“Oh, I’m not so bad as <i>that</i>; I don’t suppose
-she did kill the boy; I think he’s alive, all
-right. But say, Colonel, I’ll give it to you straight;
-I do think the señora coaxed the boy off. You
-admit, don’t you, he went off. Well, then he was
-coaxed, somehow. Now, who’s got influence
-enough to coax him? You cross out the maid;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[125]</span>
-so do I. You cross out Mrs. Melville Winter; so
-do I. I guess we both cross out the old lady.
-Well, there’s you and the señora left. I don’t
-suspect <i>you</i>, General.”</p>
-
-<p>“Really? I don’t see why. I stand to make
-more than anybody else, if you are digging up
-motives. And how about the chambermaid?”</p>
-
-<p>Birdsall flashed a glance of reproach on his
-companion. “Now, Colonel, do you think I ain’t
-looked <i>her</i> up? First thing. Nothing in it. Decent
-Vermont girl, three years in the hotel. Came
-for her lungs. She ain’t in it. But let’s get back
-to Miss Smith. Did you know she is Cary
-Mercer’s sister-in-law?”</p>
-
-<p>He delivered his shot in a casual way, and the
-colonel took it stonily; nevertheless, it went to
-the mark. Birdsall continued. “Now, question is,
-<i>was</i> Mercer the secretary? You didn’t see the man
-in the elevator, except his back. Had he two
-moles?”</p>
-
-<p>“I couldn’t see. He had different clothes;
-but still there was something like Mercer about
-the shoulders.”</p>
-
-<p>“Burney didn’t get a chance to take a snapshot,
-but he did snap the stove man. Here it is. Pull
-that book out of my pocket.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[126]</span>Obeying, the colonel lifted a couple of small
-prints which he scrutinized intently, at the end,
-admitting, “Yes, it is he all right. Now do you
-know what <i>I</i> think?”</p>
-
-<p>Birdsall couldn’t form an idea.</p>
-
-<p>“I think the Keatcham party is in it; and I
-think they are after bigger game than Archie.
-Maybe the train robbers were a part of the
-scheme—although I’m not so sure of that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, the robbers were in it all right. But now
-come to Miss Smith; where does she come in?
-Or are you as sure of her as Mercer was in Chicago?”</p>
-
-<p>If he had expected to get a spark out of the
-Winter tinder by this scraping stroke, he was
-mistaken; the soldier did not even move his brooding
-gaze fixed on the hills beyond the house
-roofs; and he answered in a level tone: “Did you
-get <i>that</i> story from my aunt, or was it Mrs. Melville?
-I’m pretty certain you got your biography
-from that quarter. My aunt might have told her.”</p>
-
-<p>“That would be betraying a lady’s confidence.
-I’m only a detective, whose business is to pry,
-but I never go back on the ladies. And I think,
-same’s you, that the lady in question is a real
-nice, high-toned lady; but I can’t disregard the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[127]</span>
-evidence. I never give out my system, but I’ve
-got one, all the same. Look here, see this paper?”—he
-had replaced the envelope in his pocket;
-he pulled it out again; or rather, so the colonel
-fancied, until Birdsall turned the envelope over,
-revealing it to be blank. “There’s a sheet of
-paper inside; take it out. Look at the water-mark,
-look at the pattern; then compare it with this
-letter”—handing the colonel the original envelope.
-“Same exactly, ain’t they?”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel, who had studied the two sheets
-of paper silently, nodded as silently; and he had
-a premonition of Birdsall’s next sentence before
-it came. “Well, Mrs. Melville Winter, this morning,
-took me to Miss Smith’s desk, where we
-found this and a lot more like it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You seem to be right in thinking the paper
-widely distributed,” observed the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“And you don’t think that suspicious?”</p>
-
-<p>“I should think it more suspicious if the paper
-were not out on her desk. If she is such a deep
-one as you seem to think, she would hide such an
-incriminating bit of evidence.”</p>
-
-<p>“She didn’t know we suspected her. Of course,
-you haven’t shadowed her a little bit?”</p>
-
-<p>“There is a limit to detective duty in the case<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[128]</span>
-of a gentleman,” returned the colonel haughtily.
-“I have not.”</p>
-
-<p>Little Birdsall sighed; then in a propitiatory
-tone: “Well, of course, we both think there are
-other people in the job; I don’t know exactly what
-you mean by bigger game, but I can make a stagger
-at it. Now, say, did you get any answer when
-you wrote to Keatcham himself?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said the colonel grimly, “I heard. You
-know the sort of letter I wrote; telling him of our
-dreadful anxiety and about the lad’s being an
-orphan; don’t you think it was the sort of letter a
-decent man would answer, no matter how busy
-he might be?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure. Didn’t you get an answer?”</p>
-
-<p>“I did.” The colonel extricated himself from
-his wrappings enough to find a pale blue envelope,
-which he handed to Birdsall, at the same time
-taking the motor handle. “You see; type-written,
-very polite, chilly sort of letter, kind to make a
-man hot under the collar and swear at Keatcham’s
-heartlessness. Mr. Keatcham unable to answer,
-having been ill since he left San Francisco. Did
-not see anything of any boy. Probably boy ran
-away. Has no information of any kind to afford.
-And the writer is very sincerely mine. The minute<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[129]</span>
-I read it I was sure Mercer wrote it; and he
-wrote it to make me so disgusted with Keatcham
-I wouldn’t pursue the subject with him. Just the
-same way he snubbed my aunt; and, for that matter,
-just the way he tried to snub me on the train.
-But he missed his mark; I wired every hotel in
-Santa Barbara and every one in Los Angeles;
-and Keatcham isn’t there and hasn’t been there.
-He has a big bunch of mail at Santa Barbara
-waiting for him, forwarded from Los Angeles,
-but he hasn’t shown himself.”</p>
-
-<p>Birdsall shot a glance of cordial admiration
-at the colonel. “You’re all there, General,” he
-cried with unquenchable familiarity. “I’ve been
-trying to call up the Keatcham outfit, and <i>I</i>
-couldn’t get a line, either. They haven’t used the
-tickets they bought—their reservations went
-empty to Los Angeles. Now, what do you make
-out of that?”</p>
-
-<p>“I make out that Archie is only part of their
-game,” replied the soldier. “Now see, Birdsall,
-you are not going to get a couple of rich young
-college fellows to do just plain kidnapping and
-scaring women out of their money—”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord, General,” interrupted Birdsall, “those
-college guys don’t turn a hair at kidnapping;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[130]</span>
-they regularly steal the president of the freshman
-class, and the things they do at their hazing bees
-and initiations would make an Apache Indian sit
-up and take notice. I tell you, General, they’re
-the limit for deviltry.”</p>
-
-<p>“Some kinds. Not that kind; it’s too dirty.
-Arnold was one of the cleanest foot-ball players
-at Harvard. And I don’t know anything about
-human nature if that other youngster isn’t decent.
-But Mercer—<i>es un loco</i>; you can look out for
-anything from him. Now, see the combination.
-Arnold was at Harvard! I have traced the motor-car
-they used to him; and then, if you add that
-his father is away safe in Europe and he has an
-empty house, off to one side, with a quantity of
-space around it and the reputation of being
-haunted, why—”</p>
-
-<p>“It looks good to me. And I understand my
-men have got around it on the quiet all right.
-How’s your man Haley got on, hiring out to the
-Jap in charge?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well enough; the Jap took him on to mow,
-but either Mr. Caretaker doesn’t know anything
-or he won’t tell. He’s bubbling over with conversation
-about the flowers and the country and the
-Philippines, where he used to be; but he only<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[131]</span>
-knows that the honorable family are all away
-and he is to shun the house. Aren’t we almost
-there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Just around the corner. I guess when you
-see it you’ll think it’s just the <i>patio</i> a spook of
-taste would freeze to.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Why</i> is it haunted?”</p>
-
-<p>“Now you have me. I ain’t on to such dream
-stuff. Gimme five cards. Mrs. Arnold died off in
-Europe, so ’tain’t her; and the house has only
-been built two years; but the neighbors have seen
-lights and heard groans and a pick chopping at
-the stones. Some folks say the land belonged
-to an old miner and he died before he could tell
-where he’d buried his <i>mazuma</i>; so he is taking a
-little <i>buscar</i> after it. There’s the house, General.”</p>
-
-<p>The street climbed a gentle hill, and on its
-crest a large house, in mission style, looked over
-a pleasant land. Its position on a corner and the
-unusual size of the grounds about it gave the mansion
-an effect of space. Of almost rawly recent
-erection though it was, the kindly climate had so
-fostered the growth of the pines, acacias and live-oaks,
-the eucalypti and the orange-trees, which
-made a rich blur of color on the hillside, had so
-lavishly tended the creeping ivies and Bougainvilleas<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[132]</span>
-which masked the rounded lantern arches
-of the stern gray façade, and so sumptuously blazoned
-the flower-beds in the garden on the one
-hand, yet, on the other, had so cunningly dulled
-the greenish gray of the cobblestones from California
-arroyos in chimney and foundation, and
-had so softly streaked the marble of the garden
-statues and the plaster of walls and mansion with
-tiny filaments of lichens or faint green moss, that
-the beholder might fancy the house to be the ancient
-home of some Spanish hidalgo, handed down
-with an hereditary curse, through generations, to
-the last of his race. One was tempted to such a
-flutter of fancy because of the impression given
-by the mansion. A sullen reticence hung about the
-place. The windows, for the most part, were
-heavily shuttered. Not a pane of glass flashed
-back at the sunlight; even those casements not
-shuttered turned blank dark green shades, like
-bandaged eyes, on the court and the beautiful terraces
-and the lovely sweep of hillsides where the
-wonderful shadows swayed and melted.</p>
-
-<p>The bent figure of a man raking, distorted by
-the perspective, was visible just beyond the high
-pillars of the gateway. He paid no attention to
-the motions of the motor-car, nor did he answer<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[133]</span>
-a hail until it was repeated. Then he approached
-the car. Birdsall was in the roadway trying to
-unlock the gate. The man, whose Japanese features
-were quite distinguishable, bowed; he explained
-that the honorable owners were not at
-home; his insignificant self was the only keeper
-of the grounds. He spoke sufficiently good English
-with the accompaniment of a deprecatory,
-amiable smile. Birdsall, in turn, told him that his
-own companion was a very great gentleman from
-the East who belonged to a society of vast power
-which was investigating spectral appearances, and
-that he had come thousands of miles to see the
-ghost.</p>
-
-<p>The Japanese extended both hands, while the
-appeal of his smile deepened. “Too bad, velly,”
-he murmured, “but not leally any g’lost, no, nev’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you believe in the ghost?” asked Colonel
-Winter.</p>
-
-<p>“No, me Clistian boy, no believe not’ing.”</p>
-
-<p>“All the samee,” said the colonel, laboriously
-swinging himself from his vantage-ground of the
-motor seat to the flat top of the wall, thence dropping
-to the greensward below, “allee samee, like
-go in house hunt ghost.” He crackled a bank-note
-in the palm of the slim brown hand, smiling and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[134]</span>
-nodding as if to break the force of his brusque action.
-Meanwhile, Birdsall had safely shut off his
-engine before he placed himself beside the others
-with an agility hardly to be expected of his rotund
-build.</p>
-
-<p>As for the caretaker, whether because he perceived
-himself outnumbered, or because he was
-really void of suspicion, he accepted the money
-with outward gratitude and proffered his guidance
-through the garden and the orchards. He
-slipped into the rôle of cicerone with no atom of
-resistance; he was voluble; he was gracious; he
-was artlessly delighted with his señors. In spite
-of this flood of suavity, however, there seemed to
-be no possibility of persuading him to admit them
-to the house.</p>
-
-<p>Assured of this, the two fell back for a second,
-time for the merest eyeflash from the detective
-to the soldier, who at once limped briskly up to
-the Jap, saying: “We are very much obliged to
-you; this is a beautiful house, beautiful gardens;
-but we want to see the ghost; and if you can give
-me young Mr. Arnold’s address I will see him—or
-write, and we can come back.”</p>
-
-<p>The gardener, with many apologies and smiles,
-did not know Mr. Arnold’s honorable address, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[135]</span>
-he drew out a soiled card, explaining that it bore
-the name of the gentleman in charge of the property.
-Birdsall, peering over the Jap’s shoulders,
-added that it was the card of a well-known legal
-firm.</p>
-
-<p>“Then,” said the colonel with deliberation, “we
-will thank you again for your courtesy, and—what’s
-that?”</p>
-
-<p>The Jap turned; they all started at the barking
-detonation of some explosion; while they gazed
-about them there came another booming sound,
-and they could see smoke pouring from the chimney
-and leaking through the window joints of a
-room in the rear of the house. Like a hare, not
-breaking his wind by a single cry, the Jap sped
-toward the court. The others were hard on his
-heels, though the colonel limped and showed signs
-of distress by the time they reached the great iron
-door.</p>
-
-<p>The Jap pulled out a key; he turned it and
-swung the door barely wide enough to enter, calling
-on them to stay out; he would tell them if he
-needed them.</p>
-
-<p>“Augustly stay; maybe honolable t’ieves!” he
-cried.</p>
-
-<p>But the detective had interposed a stalwart leg<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[136]</span>
-and shoulder. Instantly the door swung open; he
-acted as if he had lost his wits with excitement.
-“You’re burning up! Lord! you’re burning!
-<i>Fire!</i> <i>Fire!</i>” he bawled, and rushed boldly into the
-room.</p>
-
-<p>Winter followed him, also calling aloud in a
-strident voice. And it was to be observed, being
-such an unusual preparation for a conflagration,
-that he had drawn a heavy revolver and ran with
-it in his hand. Before he jumped out of the car
-he had discarded his thick top-coat and all his
-wrappings.</p>
-
-<p>An observer, also (had there been one near),
-would have taken note of a robust Irishman, who
-had been weeding the flower-beds, and would have
-seen him straighten at the first peal of the explosion,
-stare wildly at the chimneys before any
-distinct smoke was to be seen, then run swiftly
-and climb up to a low chimney on a wing of the
-house, watering-pot in hand. He would have seen
-him empty his inadequate fire extinguisher and
-rapidly descend the ladder, while the smoke volleyed
-forth, as if defying his puny efforts; later,
-he would have seen the watering-pot bearer pursue
-the others into the house, emitting noble yells
-of “Fire!” and “Help!”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_136fp.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">The detective had interposed a stalwart leg and shoulder. Page <a href="#Page_135">135</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[137]</span>Further, this same observer, had he been an intimate
-friend of Sergeant Dennis Haley, certainly
-would have recognized that resourceful man of
-war in the amateur fireman.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[138]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VIII<br />
-
-<small>FACE TO FACE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>When the two men got into the house the dim
-rooms made them stumble for a moment after
-the brilliant sunshine of the outer skies; but in
-a second Birdsall’s groping hand had found an
-electric push-button and the room was flooded
-with light. They were in a small office off the
-kitchen, apparently. Smoke of a peculiarly pungent
-odor and eye-smarting character blurred all
-the surroundings; but during the moment the Jap
-halted to explore its cause the others perceived two
-doors and made for them. One was locked, but
-the other must have been free to open, since Haley,
-with his watering-can, bounded through it
-while they were tugging at the other. Almost immediately,
-however, Haley was back again shouting
-and pointing down the dark passage.</p>
-
-<p>“The fire’s <i>there</i>,” screamed the detective. “I
-can smell smoke! The smoke comes through the
-keyhole!” But while the Jap fitted a key in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[139]</span>
-lock and swung back the door, and Haley, who
-had paused to replenish his watering-can at a convenient
-faucet, darted after the other two, the
-colonel stood listening with every auditory nerve
-strained to catch some sound. He yelled “Fire!
-help!” at the top of his voice, but not moving a
-muscle. “Too far off,” he muttered, then he
-yelled again and threw a heavy chair as if he had
-stumbled against it. Another pause; he got down
-on his knees to put his ear to the floor. Directly
-he rose; he did not speak, but the words that he
-said to himself were only: “Just possible. Some
-one down cellar; but not under here.” Meanwhile
-he was hurrying in pursuit of the others as swiftly
-as his stiff knee would allow. He found them in
-a side hall with tiled or brick floor, gathered about
-a water-soaked heap of charred red paper.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis terrible!” announced Haley, “a bum for
-sure! a dinnermite bum!”—fishing out something
-like a tin tomato can from the sodden mass.</p>
-
-<p>“Anyhow, <i>there</i> goes the real thing,” observed
-the colonel coolly, as a formidable explosion
-jarred the air.</p>
-
-<p>“If you blow us up, I kill you flist!” hissed the
-Jap, and his knife flashed.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Chito, Chito!</i>” soothed the colonel, lifting his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[140]</span>
-revolver almost carelessly. Simultaneously two
-brawny arms pinioned the Jap’s own arms at his
-sides.</p>
-
-<p>“Shure, Mister Samurai, ’tis the ongrateful
-chap youse is,” expostulated Haley. “I hate to
-reshtrain ye, but if ye thry any jehujits on me
-’twill be sahanara wid youse mighty quick.”</p>
-
-<p>“No understan’,” murmured the Jap plaintively.
-“Why you hult me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Come, put out the fire first,” said the colonel;
-“you know the house, you go ahead.”</p>
-
-<p>The Jap darted on ahead so swiftly that they
-had some ado to follow; which seemed necessary,
-since he might have clashed a bolt on them at any
-turn. The colonel’s stiff leg kept him in the rear,
-but Haley was never a hand’s-breadth behind the
-runner.</p>
-
-<p>They found smoke in two places, but they easily
-extinguished the tiny flames. In both cases the
-bombs turned out to be no more dangerous than
-a common kind of fireworks yielding a suffocating
-smoke in an inclosure, but doing no especial damage
-on safe and fire-proof ground, like a hearth.
-They were quickly extinguished. In their search
-they passed from one luxurious room to another,
-the Jap leading, until he finally halted in a spacious<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[141]</span>
-library hung in Spanish leather, with ancient,
-richly carved Spanish tables and entrancing
-Spanish chairs of turned wood and age-mellowed
-cane, and bookcases sumptuously tempting a
-book-lover. But the colonel cared only for the soul
-of a book, not its body; the richest and clearest of
-black letter or the daintiest of tooling had left
-him cold; moreover, every fiber in him was strung
-by his quest; and Haley, naturally, was immune;
-strangely enough, it was the cheerful, vulgar little
-detective who gave a glance, rapid but full of admiration,
-at the shelves and pile of missals on the
-table, incongruously jostled by magazines of the
-day.</p>
-
-<p>Winter faced the Jap, who was sheathed again
-in his bland and impassive politeness. “Where is
-Mr. Mercer?” said he.</p>
-
-<p>The Jap waved his hands in an eloquent oriental
-gesture. He assured the honorable questioner
-that he did not know any Mr. Mercer.
-There was no one in the house.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel had seated himself in a priceless
-arm-chair in Cordova stamped leather; he no
-longer looked like an invalid. “Show your star,
-please,” he commanded Birdsall, and the latter silently
-flung back the lapel of his coat.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[142]</span>“I ought to tell you,” continued Rupert Winter,
-“that the game is up. It would do no good
-for you to run that poisoned bit of steel of yours
-into me or into any of us; we have only to stay
-here a little too long and the police of San Francisco
-will be down on you—oh, I know all about
-what sort they are, but we have money to spend
-as well as you. You take the note I shall write to
-Mr. Mercer, or whatever you choose to call him,
-and bring his answer. We stay here until he
-comes.”</p>
-
-<p>Having thus spoken in an even, gentle voice, he
-scribbled a few words on a piece of paper which
-he took out of his note-book. This he proffered to
-the Jap.</p>
-
-<p>On his part, the latter kept his self-respect; he
-abated no jot of his assurance that they were alone
-in the house; he insinuated his suspicion that they
-were there for no honest purpose; finally he was
-willing to search the house if they would stay
-where they were.</p>
-
-<p>“I am not often mistaken in people,” was the
-colonel’s rather oblique answer, “and I think you
-are a gentleman who might kill me if you had a
-chance, but would not break his word to me. If
-you will promise to play fair with us, do no harm<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[143]</span>
-to my nephew, take this letter and bring me an answer—if
-you find any one—on your word of
-honor as a Japanese soldier and gentleman, you
-may go; we will not signal the police. Is it a
-bargain?”</p>
-
-<p>The Jap gravely assented, still in the language
-of the East, “saving his face” by the declaration
-of the absence of his principals. And he went off
-as gracefully and courteously as if only the highest
-civilities had passed between them.</p>
-
-<p>“Won’t he try some skin game on us?” the detective
-questioned; but Winter only motioned toward
-the telephone desk. “Listen at it,” he said,
-“you can tell if the wires are cut; and he knows
-your men are outside hiding, somewhere; he
-doesn’t know how many. You see, we have the
-advantage of them there; to be safe they don’t
-dare to let many people into their secret. <i>We</i> can
-have a whole gang. We haven’t many, but they
-may <i>think</i> we have.”</p>
-
-<p>Birdsall, who had lifted the receiver to his ear,
-laid it down with an appeased nod. Immediately
-he proceeded to satisfy his professional conscience
-by a search in every nook and cranny of the apartment.
-But no result appeared important enough to
-justify the production of his red morocco note-book<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[144]</span>
-and his fountain-pen. He had paused in disgust
-when the colonel sat up suddenly, erect in his
-chair; his keener ears had caught some sound
-which made him dart to all the windows in succession.
-He called Haley (whom he had posted
-outside to guard the door) and despatched him
-across the hall to reconnoiter. “I am sure it was
-the sound of wheels,” he explained, “but Haley
-will be too late; we are on the wrong side of the
-house.”</p>
-
-<p>As he spoke the buzz of an electric bell jarred
-their ears. “Somebody is coming in the front
-door,” hazarded Birdsall.</p>
-
-<p>“Evidently,” returned the colonel dryly. “How
-can our absent friends get in otherwise—at least
-how can they let us understand they have come
-in? I think we are going to have the pleasure of
-an interview with the elusive Mr. Mercer.”</p>
-
-<p>They waited. The colonel motioned Birdsall to
-a seat by the table, within breathing distance of
-the telephone. He himself fluttered the loose
-journals and magazines, his ironic smile creasing
-his cheek. “Our Japanese friend reads the newspapers,”
-he remarked. “Here are to-day’s papers;
-yes, <i>Examiner</i> and <i>Chronicle</i>, unfolded and
-smoked over. Cigar, too, not cigarette, for here<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[145]</span>
-is a stump—decidedly our cherry-blossom friends
-are getting civilized!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, there is somebody <i>in</i> here all right,”
-grunted Birdsall. “Say, Colonel, you are sure
-Mrs. Winter has had no answer to her ad? No
-kind of notice about sending money?”</p>
-
-<p>“I haven’t seen her for a few hours, but I saw
-Mrs. Melville Winter; she was positive no word
-had come. She thought my aunt was more worried
-than she would admit, and Miss Smith looked
-pale, although she seemed hopeful.”</p>
-
-<p>“She didn’t really want to give me the letter, I
-thought,” said the detective. The colonel gave
-him no reply save a black look. A silence fell. A
-footfall outside broke it, a firm, in nowise
-stealthy footfall. Birdsall slipped his hand inside
-his coat. The colonel rose and bowed gravely to
-Cary Mercer.</p>
-
-<p>On his part, Mercer was not in the least flurried;
-he looked at the two men, not with the arrogant
-suspicion which had stung Winter on the
-train, but with the melancholy courtesy of his
-bearing at Cambridge, three years before.</p>
-
-<p>“This, I think, is Colonel Winter?” he said, returning
-the bow, but not extending his hand,
-which hung down, slack and empty at his side.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[146]</span>“I am glad you recognized me this time, Mr.
-Mercer.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am sorry that I did not recognize you before,”
-answered Mercer. “Will you gentlemen be
-seated? I am not the owner of the house nor his
-son; I am not even a friend, only a casual acquaintance
-of the young man, but I seem to be
-rather in the position of host, so will you be
-seated, and may I offer you some Scotch and
-Shasta—Mr.—ah—”</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Horatio Birdsall, of the Birdsall and
-Gwen Detective Agency,” interposed Winter.
-Birdsall bowed. Mercer bowed. “Excuse me if
-I decline for us both; our time is limited—no,
-thank you, not a cigar, either. Now, Mr. Mercer,
-to come to the point, I want my nephew. I understand
-he is in this house.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are quite mistaken,” Mercer responded
-with unshaken calm. “He is not.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where is he, then?”</p>
-
-<p>“I do not know, Colonel Winter. What I
-should recommend is for you to go back to the
-Palace, and if you do not find him there—why,
-come and shoot us up again!” His eye strayed
-for a second to the blackened, reeking mass on
-the great stone hearth.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[147]</span>“Have you sent him home? Is that what you
-mean to imply?”</p>
-
-<p>“I imply nothing, Colonel; I don’t dare to with
-such strenuous fighters as you gentlemen; only
-go and see, and if you do find the young gentleman
-has had no ill treatment, no scare—only a
-little adventure such as boys like, I hope you will
-come out here, or wherever I may be, and have
-that cigar you are refusing.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel was frankly puzzled. He couldn’t
-quite focus his wits on this bravado which had
-nothing of the bravo about it, in fact had a tinge
-of wistfulness in its quiet. One would have said
-the man regretted his compulsory attitude of antagonism;
-that he wanted peace.</p>
-
-<p>Mercer smiled faintly. “You ought to know
-by this time when a man is lying, Colonel,” he
-continued, “but I will go further. I may have
-done plenty of wrong things in my life, some
-things, maybe, which the law might call a crime;
-but I have never done anything which would debar
-me from passing my word of honor as a gentleman;
-nor any one else from taking it. I give
-you my word of honor that I have meant and I
-do mean no slightest harm to Archie Winter; and
-that, while I do not <i>know</i> where he is at this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[148]</span>
-speaking, I believe you will find him safe under
-your aunt’s protection when you get back to the
-Palace.”</p>
-
-<p>“Call up the Palace Hotel, Mr. Birdsall,” was
-the colonel’s reply. “Mr. Mercer, I do not distrust
-that you are speaking exactly, but you know
-your Shakespeare; and there are promises which
-keep their word to the ear but break it to the
-sense.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t wonder at your mistake; but you are
-mistaken, suh.”</p>
-
-<p>Birdsall was phlegmatically ringing up Mrs.
-Winter, having the usual experience of the rash
-person who intrudes his paltry needs on the complex
-workings of a great hotel system.</p>
-
-<p>“No, I don’t know the number, I haven’t the
-book here, but <i>you</i> know, Palace Hotel. Well
-give me Information, then—Busy? Well, give
-me another Information, then—yes, I want the
-Palace Hotel—P-a-l-a-c-e—yes, yes, Palace Hotel;
-yes, certainly. Yes? Mrs. Archibald Winter.
-Yes—line busy? Well, hold on until it is disengaged.
-Say, Miss Furber, that you? This is
-Birdsall and Gwen. Yes. Give me Mrs. Winter,
-will you, 337? This Mrs. Winter? Oh! When
-will she be back? Is Mrs. Melville Winter in?<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[149]</span>
-Well, Miss Smith in? She’s gone, too? Has Master
-Archibald got back, yet, to the hotel? Hasn’t?
-Thank you—eh?” in answer to the colonel’s interruption.
-“What say, Colonel?”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell her to call up this number,”—the colonel
-read it out of the telephone book—“when Master
-Archie does get back, will you? I am afraid, Mr.
-Mercer, that you will have to allow us to trespass
-on your hospitality for a little longer.”</p>
-
-<p>He suspected that Mercer was annoyed, although
-he answered lightly enough: “As you
-please, Colonel Winter. I am sure you will hear
-very soon. Now, there is another matter, your
-machine; I understand you left it outside. Will
-you ring for Kito, Colonel? Under the circumstances
-you may prefer to do your own ringing.
-I will ask him to attend to the car.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel made proper acknowledgments.
-He was thinking that had Mercer cared to confiscate
-the motor, he would have done it without
-ringing; on the other hand, did he desire some
-special intercourse with his retainer, wherein, under
-their very noses, he could issue his orders—well,
-possibly they might get a whiff of the secret
-themselves were he allowed to try. At present the
-game baffled him. Therefore he nodded at Birdsall’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[150]</span>
-puckered face behind Mercer’s shoulder.
-And he rang the bell.</p>
-
-<p>The Jap answered it with suspicious alacrity.</p>
-
-<p>“Kito,” said Mercer, “will you attend to General
-Winter’s car? Bring it up to the court.”</p>
-
-<p>Absolutely harmless, to all appearances, but
-Birdsall, from his safe position behind master and
-man, looked shrewd suspicion at the soldier.</p>
-
-<p>“Shall your man in the hall go with him?”
-asked Mercer.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel shook his head. “No,” he said
-quietly, “we have other men outside if he needs
-help. Call Skid, please.” But when Birdsall attempted
-to get Central there was no response.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel merely shrugged his shoulders, although
-Birdsall frowned with vexation. “What a
-pity!” said Winter softly. “Now the fellows will
-come when the time is up; we can’t call them off.”</p>
-
-<p>Mercer smiled faintly. “There are two more
-telephones in the house,” he observed. “You can
-call off your dogs easily any time you wish. Also
-you can hear from the Palace. Will you come up-stairs
-with me? I assure you I have not the least
-intention to harm you or the honest sergeant.”</p>
-
-<p>“You take the first trick, Mercer,” said the colonel.
-“I supposed the bell was your signal to have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[151]</span>
-the wires cut. But about going; no, I think we
-will stay here. There is a door out on the court
-which, if you will open—thank you. A charming
-prospect! Excuse me if I send Haley out there;
-and may I go myself?”</p>
-
-<p>Anticipating the answer, he stepped under the
-low mission lintel into a fairy-like Californian
-court or <i>patio</i> of pepper-trees and palms and a
-moss-grown fountain. There was the usual colonnade
-with a stone seat running round the wall.
-Mercer, smiling, motioned to one of them. “I
-wish I could convince you, Colonel, that you are
-in no need of that plaything in your hand, and
-that you are going to dine with your boy—isn’t
-he a fine fellow?”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel did not note either his admission
-that he had seen Archie, nor a curious warming
-of his tone; he had stiffened and grown rigid like
-a man who receives a blow which he will not
-admit. He stole a glance at the detective and met
-an atrocious smirk of complacency. They both
-had caught a glimpse of a figure flitting into a
-door of the court. They both had seen a woman’s
-profile and a hand holding a little steel tool which
-had ends like an alligator’s nose. And both men
-had recognized Miss Smith.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[152]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IX<br />
-
-<small>THE AGENT OF THE FIRELESS STOVE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>The time was two hours later. Rupert Winter
-was sitting on one of the stone benches of the
-colonnade about the <i>patio</i>. The court was suffused
-with the golden glow presaging sunset.
-Warm afternoon shadows lay along the flags;
-wavering silhouettes of leafage or plant; blurred
-reflections from the bold bas-reliefs of Spanish
-warriors and Spanish priests sculptured between
-the spandrels of the arches. Winter’s dull eyes
-hardly noted them: the exotic luxuriance of foliage,
-the Spanish armor and Spanish cowls were
-all too common to a denizen of a Spanish colony
-in the tropics, to distract his thoughts from his
-own ugly problem. He had been having it out
-with himself, as he phrased it. And there had
-been moments during those two hours, when he
-had ground his teeth and clenched his fists because
-of the futile and furious pain in him.</p>
-
-<p>When he recognized Janet Smith, by that same<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[153]</span>
-illuminating flash he recognized that this woman
-who had been tricking him was the woman that
-he loved. He believed that he had said his last
-word to love, but love, after seeming to accept the
-curt dismissal, was lightly riding his heart again.
-“Fooled a second time,” he thought with inexpressible
-bitterness, recalling his unhappy married
-life and the pretty, weak creature who had
-caused him such humiliation. Yet with her
-there had been no real wrong-doing, only absolute
-lack of discretion and a childish craving for gaiety
-and adulation. Poor child! what a woeful ending
-for it all! The baby, the little boy who was
-their only living child, to die of a sudden access
-of an apparently trifling attack of croup, while
-the mother was dancing at a post ball! He was
-East, taking his examination for promotion. The
-frantic drive home in the chill of the dawn had
-given her a cold which her shock and grief left her
-no strength to resist—she was always a frail little
-creature, poor butterfly!—and she followed her
-baby inside of a month. Had she lived, her husband
-might have found it hard to forgive her, for
-already a sore heart was turning to the child for
-comfort; but she was dead, and he did not let his
-thoughts misuse her memory. Now—here was another,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[154]</span>
-so different but just as false. Then, he
-brought himself up with a jerk; he would be fair;
-he would look at things as they were; many a man
-had been fooled by the dummy. He would not
-jump at conclusions because they were cruel, any
-more than he would because they were kind.
-There was such a thing, he knew well, as credulous
-suspicion; it did more harm than credulous
-trust. Meanwhile, he had his detail. He was to
-find Archie; therefore, he waited. They were in
-the house; it were only folly to give up their advantage
-under the stress of any of Mercer’s plausible
-lurings to the outside.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, by degrees, he became convinced
-that Mercer, certainly to some extent, was sincere
-in his profession of belief in Archie’s absence and
-safety. This, in spite of hearing several times that
-Archie was not returned. Mercer did all the
-speaking, but he allowed Birdsall to hold the receiver
-and take the message from Mrs. Winter.</p>
-
-<p>The telephone was in an adjoining room, but
-by shifting his position a number of times the
-colonel was able to catch a murmur of the conversation.
-He heard Mercer’s voice distinctly. He
-had turned away and was following the detective
-out of the room. “I don’t understand it any more<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[155]</span>
-than you do, Mr. Birdsall,” he said; “you won’t
-believe me, suh, but I am right worried.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I believe you,” purred the detective
-so softly that the colonel knew he did not believe
-any more than Mercer suspected. “Of course I
-believe you; but I don’t know what to do. It ain’t
-on the map. I guess it’s up to you to throw a
-little light. I’ve called the boys off twice already
-and told ’em to wait an hour or a half-hour longer.
-I got to see the colonel.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can trust my intuitions, or I can trust the
-circumstantial evidence,” thought the colonel. He
-jumped up and began to pace the court.</p>
-
-<p>“Seems to be like a game of bridge before one
-can see the dummy,” he complained; and as so
-often happens in the crises of life, a trivial illustration
-struck a wavering mind with the force of
-an argument. His thoughts reverted whimsically
-to the card-table; how many times had he hesitated
-over the first lead between evenly balanced
-suits of four; and how often had he regretted or
-won, depending solely upon whether his card instinct
-had been denied or obeyed! It might be instinct,
-this much-discussed “card instinct,” or it
-might be a summing up of logical deductions so
-swift that the obscure steps were lost, and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[156]</span>
-reasoner was unconscious of his own logical processes.
-“Now,” groaned Rupert Winter, “I am up
-against it. She <i>looks</i> like a good woman; she
-<i>seems</i> like a good woman; but I have only my
-impressions and Aunt Rebecca’s against the apparent
-facts in the case. Well, Aunt Rebecca is a
-shrewd one!” He sat down and thought harder.
-Finally he rose, smiling. He had threshed out his
-problem; and his conclusion, inaudibly but very
-distinctly uttered to himself, was: “Me for my
-own impressions! If that girl is in with this gang,
-either what they are after isn’t so bad—or they
-have made her believe it isn’t bad.”</p>
-
-<p>He looked idly about him at the arched doorway
-of the outer court. It was carved with a favorite
-mission design of eight-pointed flowers
-with vase-like fluting below. There was a tiny
-crack in one of the flowers, the tiniest crack in
-the world. He looked at it without seeing it, or
-seeing it with only the outer half of his senses,
-but—he could not have told how—into his effort
-to pierce his own tangle there crept a sudden interest,
-a sudden keenness of scrutiny of this minute,
-insignificant crack in the stone. He became aware
-that the crack was singularly regular, preserving
-the form of the flower and the fluting beneath.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[157]</span>
-Kito, the Japanese, who was sitting at the far
-end of the court, conversing in amity with Haley,
-just here rose and came to this particular pillar.
-The Irishman sat alone, rimmed by the sunset
-gold, little spangles of motes drifting about him;
-for the merest second Winter’s glance lingered
-on him ere it went to the Jap, who passed him,
-courteously saluting.</p>
-
-<p>After he had passed, the colonel looked again
-at the column and the crack—it was not there.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Chito, chito!</i>” muttered the colonel. Carelessly
-he approached the column and took the
-same posture as the Jap. Unobtrusively his fingers
-strayed over the stone. He scratched the
-surface; not stone, but cement. He tapped cautiously,
-keeping his hand well hidden by his body;
-no hollow sound rewarded him; but all at once
-his groping fingers touched a little round object
-under the bold point of an eight-pointed flower.
-He didn’t dare press on it; instead he resumed his
-cautious tapping. It seemed to him that the sound
-had changed. He glanced about him. Save for
-Haley he was alone in the <i>patio</i>. He pressed on
-the round white knob, and what he had half expected
-happened: a segment of the column
-swung on inner hinges, disclosing the hollow<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[158]</span>
-center of the engaged columns on either side.
-He looked down. Nothing but darkness was visible,
-but while he stood, tensely holding his breath,
-his abnormally sensitive auricular nerve caught
-distinctly the staccato breath of that kind of sigh
-which is like a groan, and a voice said more wearily
-than angrily: “Oh, damn it all!”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Almost simultaneously, he heard the faint footfalls
-of the men within; he must replace his
-movable flower. The column was intact, and he
-was bending his frowning brows on the stylobate
-of another when Birdsall and Mercer entered
-together, Mercer, with a shrug of his shoulders at
-the detective’s dogged suspicion, preceding the
-latter.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said the colonel, “did you get my
-aunt?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, suh, I got your aunt herself,” responded
-Mercer, with his Virginian survival of the formal
-civility of an earlier generation. “Yes, suh; but
-I regret to say Archie is not there.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where is he?” The soldier’s voice was curt.</p>
-
-<p>“Honestly,” declared Mercer, “I wish I knew,
-suh, I certainly <i>do</i>. But—” Mercer’s jaw fell;
-he turned sharply at the soft whir of an electric<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[159]</span>
-stanhope gently entering the <i>patio</i> through the
-great arched gateway. It stopped abreast of the
-group, and its only occupant, a handsome young
-man, jumped nimbly out of the vehicle. He greeted
-them with a polite removal of his cap, a bow,
-and a flashing smile which made the circuit of
-the beholders. Birdsall and the colonel recognized
-the traveling enthusiast of the Fireless
-Stove.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel took matters into his own hands.</p>
-
-<p>“I think you’re the young gentleman who took
-my nephew away,” said he. “Will you kindly
-tell us where he is?”</p>
-
-<p>“And don’t get giddy, young gentleman,”
-Birdsall chimed in, “because we know perfectly
-well that you are <i>not</i> the agent of the Peerless
-Fireless Stove.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got one here on trial, and I’ve come back
-to see if they like it,” explained the young man,
-in silken accents, but with a dancing gleam of the
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“We are going to keep it,” said Mercer.
-“Kito,” calling the unseen Jap, “fetch that Fireless
-Stove this gentleman left us, and show it to
-this gentleman here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, cut it out!” Birdsall waved him off.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[160]</span>
-“It’s only ten minutes before our fellows will
-come. You can put the police court wise with
-all that. Try it on <i>them</i>; it don’t go with us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where is the boy?” said the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell him, if you know,” said Mercer. “This
-gentleman,” he explained, “left a stove with us
-to test. He was here about it this morning, and we
-gave Archie to <i>him</i> to take to the Palace Hotel.”</p>
-
-<p>“And he is there now,” said the young man.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you leave him there?” asked the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, <i>did</i> you?” insisted Mercer.</p>
-
-<p>The young man looked from Mercer to the
-other two men. There was no visible appeal to
-the Southerner, but Winter felt sure of two
-things: one, that the new-comer was Mercer’s
-confederate whom he was striving to shield by
-pretending to disavow; the other, that for some
-reason Mercer was as anxious for the answer as
-were they.</p>
-
-<p>“Why-y,” hesitated the stove promoter, “you
-see, Mr.—ah, gentlemen, you see, I was told to
-take the boy to the Palace Hotel, and I set out to
-do it. We weren’t going at more than an eight-mile-an-hour
-clip, yet some foozler of a cop
-arrested us for speeding. It was perfectly ridiculous,
-and I tried to shake him, but it was no use.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[161]</span>
-They carried us off to a police court and stuck
-me for ten dollars. Meanwhile my machine and
-my passenger were outside. When I got outside
-I couldn’t find them. I skirmished around, and
-finally did get the machine. I’d taken the precaution
-to fix it so it couldn’t be run before I
-left it—took the key out, you know—it must
-have been trundled off by hand somewhere!—but
-I couldn’t find the boy. Naturally, I was a
-bit worried; but after I had looked up the force
-and the neighborhood, it occurred to me to ’phone
-to the Palace. I did, and I was told he was there.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who told you?” The question came simultaneously
-out of three throats.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Mrs. Winter—that’s what she called
-herself.”</p>
-
-<p>“But not three minutes ago Mrs. Winter told
-me that he wasn’t there,” remarked Mercer coldly.
-“<i>When</i> did you telephone?”</p>
-
-<p>“It was at least fifteen minutes ago,” the young
-man said dolefully. “I say, wouldn’t you better
-call them up again? There may be some explanation.
-I shouldn’t have come back without the kid
-if I hadn’t been <i>sure</i> he was safe.”</p>
-
-<p>“Was it Mrs. Melville or Mrs. Winter you
-got?” This came from the colonel. “Did she by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[162]</span>
-chance have an English accent, or was it Southern?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no, not Southern,” protested the young
-man. “Yes, I should say it was English—or trying
-to be.”</p>
-
-<p>“It would be exactly like Millicent,” thought
-the colonel wrathfully, “to try to fool the kidnappers,
-who had apparently lost Archie, by pretending
-he was at the hotel!”</p>
-
-<p>He made no comment aloud, but he nodded assent
-to Mercer’s proposal to telephone; and then
-he walked up to the stove man.</p>
-
-<p>“The game is up,” he said quietly. “We have
-a lot of men waiting outside. If we signal, they
-will come any minute; if we don’t signal, they
-will come in ten minutes. Give us a chance to
-be merciful to you. This is no kind of a scrape
-for your father’s son—or for Arnold’s.”</p>
-
-<p>Shot without range though it was, Winter
-was sure that it went home under all the young
-fellow’s assumed bewilderment. He continued,
-looking kindly at him:</p>
-
-<p>“You look now, I’ll wager, about as you used to
-look in the office when you called on the dean—by
-invitation—and were wondering just where
-the inquiry was going to light!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[163]</span>The dimple showed in the young man’s cheek.
-“I admit,” he replied, “that I didn’t take advantage
-as I should of my university opportunities.
-Probably that is why I have to earn a strenuous
-livelihood boosting the Only Peerless Fireless
-Stove. By the way, have <i>you</i> ever seen the Fireless
-in action? Just the thing for the army! Fills
-a long-felt want. I should be very pleased to
-demonstrate. We have a stove here.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel grinned responsively. “You do it
-very well,” said he. “Can’t you let me into the
-game?”</p>
-
-<p>There was the slightest waver in the promoter’s
-glance, although he smiled brilliantly as he
-answered: “I’ll take it into consideration, but—will
-you excuse me? I want to speak to Mr. Mercer
-about the stove.”</p>
-
-<p>The moment he had removed his affable young
-presence Birdsall approached his employer. It
-had been a difficult quarter of an hour with the
-detective. Vague instinct warned him not to touch
-the subject of Miss Smith; he felt in no way assured
-about anything else. The result had been
-that he had fidgeted in silence. But the accumulated
-flood could no longer be held.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve found out one thing,” exploded Birdsall,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[164]</span>
-puffing in the haste of his utterance. “The boy
-is on the premises.”</p>
-
-<p>“Think so?” was all the colonel’s answer.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sure of it. Say, I overheard Mercer talking
-down a speaking-tube.”</p>
-
-<p>“What did he say?”</p>
-
-<p>“Talked French, damn him! But say, what’s
-<i>gorge</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>“Throat.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s <i>cupillo gorge</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure he wasn’t talking of a carriage, or did
-he say <i>je le couperai la gorge</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe. I wouldn’t swear to it. I don’t <i>parlez
-français</i> a little bit.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you hear any other noises? Where were
-they?”</p>
-
-<p>Birdsall thought he had heard other noises,
-and that they were down cellar. “And anyhow,
-Colonel, I’m dead-to-rights sure those guys are
-giving us hot stuff to get us out of the house.
-I’m for getting our men in now and rushing the
-house. It’s me for the cellar.”</p>
-
-<p>While the colonel was rolling Birdsall’s information
-around in his mind, he heard the echo of
-steps on the flagging which preceded Mercer and
-the other man.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[165]</span>There was that in the bearing and the look of
-them that made the watcher, used to the signs of
-decision on men’s faces, instantly sure that their
-whole course of plans and action was changed.</p>
-
-<p>Mercer spoke first and in a low tone to the
-colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“I have no right,” said he, “to ask so much
-trust from you, but will you trust me enough
-to step aside with this young man and me for a
-moment only—out of ear-shot? I give you my
-word of honor I mean no slightest harm to you.
-I want to be frank. I will go alone if you desire.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel eyed him intently for the briefest
-space. “I’ll trust you,” said he. Then: “I think
-you have the key to this queer mix-up. At your
-service. And let your friend come, too. He is an
-ingenuous sort, and he amuses me.”</p>
-
-<p>Birdsall looked distinctly sullen over the request
-to wait, intimating quite frankly that his
-employer was walking into a trap. “I won’t
-stand here more than fifteen minutes,” he grumbled.
-“I’ve given those fellows <i>poco tiente</i> long
-enough.” But the colonel insisted on twenty minutes,
-and reluctantly Birdsall acquiesced.</p>
-
-<p>Mercer conducted the others to the library.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[166]</span>
-When they were seated he began in his composed,
-melancholy fashion:</p>
-
-<p>“I earnestly beg of you to listen to me, and
-to believe me, for your nephew’s sake. I am going
-to tell you the absolute truth. It is the only
-way now. When you came, we handed him over
-to this gentleman, exactly as we have said. I do
-not know why he should have been stopped. I
-do not know why he left the machine—”</p>
-
-<p>“Might he not have been <i>carried</i> away?” said
-Winter.</p>
-
-<p>“He might; but I don’t know what motive—”</p>
-
-<p>“What motive had <i>you</i>? You kidnapped him!”</p>
-
-<p>“Not exactly. We had no intention of harming
-him. He came accidentally into the room between
-Mrs. Winter’s and Mr. Keatcham’s suites.
-Standing in that room, trying to stanch the bleeding
-of a sudden hemorrhage of the nose, he overheard
-me and my friend—”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>You?</i>” asked the colonel laconically of the
-young Harvard man.</p>
-
-<p>“I,” smilingly confessed the latter. “I am
-ready to own up. You are a decent fellow, and
-you are shrewd. You ought to be on our side,
-not fighting us. I tell you, you don’t want to have
-the boy turn up safe and sound any more than I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[167]</span>
-do. Mr. Mercer was talking to me, and the kid
-overheard. We heard him and went into the
-room—”</p>
-
-<p>“How?”</p>
-
-<p>“Knocked on the door and he opened it. And
-we jumped on him. It was life and death for us
-not to be blown on; so, as we didn’t wish to kill
-the kid, and as we didn’t know the youngster well
-enough to trust him <i>then</i>—although we might,
-for he is game and the whitest chap!—but we
-didn’t know—why, we just told him he would
-have to stay with us a while until our rush was
-over. That was all we meant; and we let him
-’phone you.”</p>
-
-<p>“How about his great-aunt—the cruel anxiety—”</p>
-
-<p>“Anxiety nothing!” began the other man, but
-a glance from Mercer cut him short.</p>
-
-<p>The Southerner took the word in his slow, gentle
-voice. “I tried to reassure our aunt, Colonel
-Winter. I think I succeeded. She telephoned and
-I told her it was all right. As for Archie,
-after we talked with him, he was willing enough
-to go. He stole out with my friend inside of
-five minutes, while you all were searching your
-rooms. It was <i>he</i> insisted on calling you up, lest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[168]</span>
-you should be worried. He said you were right
-afraid of kidnappers, and you would be sending
-the police after us. You can call Mrs. Winter up
-and find out if I am not telling you the exact
-facts.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well, I <i>will</i>,” said Winter. They met
-the sullen detective at the door. Cary Mercer,
-with his mirthless smile, led the way. Mercer
-rang up the hotel for Winter, himself. To the
-colonel’s vast relief Aunt Rebecca answered the
-call.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Est-ce que c’est vous-même, mon neveu?</i>”
-said she dryly.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Mais oui, ma tante.</i> Why are you speaking
-so formally in foreign tongues? Is Millicent on
-deck?”</p>
-
-<p>“In her room,” came the answer, still in
-French. “Well, you have got us in a pretty mess.
-Where is my boy?”</p>
-
-<p>“I only wish I knew! Tell me now, though, is
-Mercer’s story straight?”</p>
-
-<p>“Absolutely. You may trust him.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s his real game, then? The one he was
-afraid Archie would expose?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ask him.”</p>
-
-<p>“But <i>you</i> are in it, aren’t you?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[169]</span>“Enough to ask that you abandon the chase—immediately!
-Unless you wish to ruin me!”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll have to speak plainer. I’ve been kept
-in the dark as long as I can stand in this matter.”</p>
-
-<p>But before he could finish the sentence.
-“<i>Pas ici, pas maintenant—c’est trop de péril</i>,”
-she cried, and she must have gone, for he could
-get no more from her. When he rang again,
-Randall responded:</p>
-
-<p>“Mrs. Winter says, sir, will you please come
-up here as quick as you can. She’s gone out. She
-thought she caught sight of Mr. Archie on the
-street.”</p>
-
-<p>To the colonel’s demand, “Where, how did
-she see him?” he obtained no answer, and on his
-vicious pealing of the bell there came, eventually,
-mellow Anglican accents which asked: “Yes?
-Whom do you wish to see?” It is an evidence of
-the undisciplined nature of the sex that the soldier
-made a face and—hung up the receiver.</p>
-
-<p>He found himself—although this to a really
-open mind is no excuse—in a muddle of conflicting
-impulses. He was on edge to get into the
-street for the search after the boy; he was clutched
-in a vise by his conviction that the clue to Archie’s
-whereabouts lay in Mercer’s hands, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[170]</span>
-that the Southerner meant no harm to the lad.
-And all the while he could feel Birdsall tugging
-at the leash.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s on the cards,” he grumbled, with a wry
-face, “quite on the cards that he may bolt in spite
-of me, and do some foolish stunt of his own that
-will make a most awful muddle.”</p>
-
-<p>Not nearly so composed as he looked, therefore,
-he turned to Mercer. However, his ammunition
-was ready, and to Mercer’s inquiry, was he satisfied?
-he replied calmly: “Well, not entirely. If
-Archie isn’t in the house, <i>who</i> is it whose throat
-you wish to cut? Who is hidden here?”</p>
-
-<p>It could not have been an unexpected question
-or Mercer hardly had answered so readily: “You
-know who it is,” said he. “It is Mr. Keatcham.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[171]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER X<br />
-
-<small>THE SMOLDERING EMBERS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>If Mercer’s avowal surprised the colonel, there
-was no trace of such emotion in his face or his
-manner. “I rather thought it might be,” he said.
-“And our young friend who is promoting Fireless
-Stoves with the solemn energy he learned doing
-Dicky stunts?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Endicott Tracy.” Mercer had the manner
-of a ceremonious introduction. Tracy flavored
-the customary murmur of pleasure with his radiant
-smile.</p>
-
-<p>“Pleased, I am sure,” said the colonel in turn,
-bowing. “Your father, I suppose, is the president
-of the Midland; and Mr. Keatcham will, I suppose,
-not be able to prevent his reëlection to-morrow.
-Is that the game?”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Tracy’s son admitted that it might be.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, very clever,” said the colonel, “very.
-Any side-show, for example?”</p>
-
-<p>“I did not go into this for money.” Mercer’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[172]</span>
-level gaze did not relax, and he kept his dreary
-eyes unflinchingly on Winter’s. A peculiar look
-in the eyes recalled some tragic and alien memory,
-just what, Rupert could not capture; it flitted
-hazily through his thoughts ere the next words
-drove it off. “Nevertheless, it is true that if we
-win out I shall have enough to pay back to all
-the people who trusted me the money they lost
-when they were frightened into selling their stock
-in the Tidewater, and your aunt and Mr. Tracy
-stand to make money.”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you expect to make it?”</p>
-
-<p>“The M. and S. stock is away down because
-of rumors Keatcham is likely to control it. When
-it is settled it is not to be looted by him, the stock
-will rise—we are sure of the ten points; we may
-make twenty—”</p>
-
-<p>“And my aunt has financed your scheme, has
-she?—paid all your expenses?”</p>
-
-<p>The Harvard man laughed out. “Our <i>expenses</i>?
-Oh, yes, she has grub-staked us, all
-right; but she has done a good deal more—she
-has furnished more than half a million to us for
-our gamble.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel considered; then: “But why did
-you keep him here so long beforehand?” said he.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[173]</span>“It was not long beforehand,” said Mercer.
-“The meeting was adjourned for a day—we
-don’t know why—we fancy that his partners suspect
-something. It is called for to-morrow, in
-spite of their efforts to have it put off a week.
-But we want more; we want to induce Keatcham
-to vote his own stock for us, and to call off his
-dogs himself.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you can’t force him to do it?”</p>
-
-<p>“We shall force him, easily enough,” returned
-Mercer, “but we don’t trust him. We want his
-private code book to be sure he is playing fair.
-In fact, we have to have it, because nothing gets
-any attention that isn’t, so to speak, properly introduced.”</p>
-
-<p>“And he will not give it to you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Says he has lost it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps he <i>has</i>,” mused the soldier. “But
-now, all this is not my concern, except that I
-have no right, as a soldier, even passively to aid
-in breaking the laws. It is my duty to rescue and
-free Mr. Keatcham.”</p>
-
-<p>But before he could speak further Mercer lifted
-a hand in apologetic interruption. Would Colonel
-Winter excuse him, but he must ask Mr. Tracy
-to go back to the <i>patio</i> and have an eye on the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[174]</span>
-detective. Endicott only exchanged a single
-glance before he obeyed. Mercer’s eyes followed
-him. “It was not to be helped,” he said, half to
-himself, “but I have been sorry more than once
-that I had to take him into this.”</p>
-
-<p>Winter looked at him, more puzzled than he
-wanted to admit to himself; indeed, he was rather
-glad to have the next word come from Mercer.</p>
-
-<p>“I have a few things I want to say to you;
-they go easier when we are alone—but won’t you
-sit down?” When the colonel had seated himself
-he went on: “I’d like to explain things a bit.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d like to have you,” answered the soldier.
-“I think you have the clue to Archie’s whereabouts
-and don’t recognize it yourself; so put me
-wise, as the slang goes.”</p>
-
-<p>Then, without preface, in brief, nervous sentences,
-spoken hardly with a quiver of a muscle
-or a wavering cadence of the voice, yet nevertheless
-instinct with a deadly earnestness, Mercer
-began to talk. He told of his struggling youth
-on the drained plantation, mortgaged so that after
-the interest was paid there was barely enough to
-get the meagerest living for his mother and sister
-and little brother; of his accidental discovery of
-iron ore on the place; of his working as a common<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[175]</span>
-laborer in the steel mills; of his being “rooster,”
-“strand-boy,” “rougher,” “heater,” “roller,”
-during three years while he was waiting for his
-chance; of his heart-draining toil; of his solitary
-studies.</p>
-
-<p>“I never was the kind of fellow to make
-friends,” he said, in his soft, monotonous voice,
-“so I expect I was the fonder of my own kin.
-I’d a mighty good mother, sir, and sister; and
-there was Phil—my little brother. We were right
-happy all together on the old place that’s been
-in our family for a hundred years, and it was all
-we asked to stay there; but it had every dollar
-of mortgage it could stand, and the soil all worn-out,
-needing all kinds of things; and I wish you
-could have seen the makeshifts we had for machines!
-I was blacksmith and carpenter and
-painter—just sixteen, and not an especially
-bright chap, but mighty willing to work; and my
-mother and Sis and I—we did a heap. When I
-stumbled on the ore I couldn’t be sure, but I
-wrote to Aunt Rebecca Winter. She sent a man
-down. He looked up things. It would take a heap
-of money to work the mines, but it might be a
-big thing. She paid off the mortgage and took
-another. First to last, she’s been mighty kind to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[176]</span>
-us. She would have done more had we let her.
-So I went to Pittsburgh and learned my trade,
-and I made enough to pay interest, and the people
-at home got a fairly good living. When I was
-twenty-one I was back home, and got a company
-started and put up a mill. You know how those
-things have to creep up. But there was ore, all
-right, and I understood my business and taught
-the hands. We’d a right sweet little mill. Well,
-I don’t want to take up your time, suh. Those
-next ten or twelve years were right hard work,
-but they were happy, too. We prospered; we
-helped the whole county prosper. We paid Aunt
-Becky. We were in good shape. We went
-through ’93 paying our dividends just as regular,
-and making them, too, though we didn’t much
-more—it was close sailing. But we were honest;
-we made a mighty good article; and everybody
-trusted us. Then came the craze for mergers,
-and a number of us got together. Still we weren’t
-very big, but we were big enough to be listed.
-I didn’t want it, but some of the men thought it
-was a terrible fine thing to be ‘Iron Kings.’ That
-was how. Keatcham was looking over the country
-for fish for his net; he somehow heard that here
-was a heap of good ore and new mills. The first<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[177]</span>
-intimation we had was his secretary coming as a
-Northern invalid—why, he stayed at our house
-because we were so sorry for him, the hotel being
-in new hands and not right comfortable. He
-seemed so interested in our mills, and bought
-some stock, and sent presents to Phil and my
-mother after he went.”</p>
-
-<p>“That was Keatcham’s private secretary, you
-say?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, suh, Atkins. You met him on the train—as
-sleek and deadly a little scoundrel as ever
-got rich quick. Oh, he’s deep. Well, suh, you
-know the usual process. Convinced of the value
-of the property, Keatcham and one or two others
-set out to buy it. They got little blocks of it
-here and there. Then Atkins wrote me in confidence
-that some men were after the controlling
-interest and meant to squeeze us all out—offered
-to lend me money to buy—of course, on a margin.
-And I was plumb idiot enough to be tolled
-into his trap! I, who had never speculated with
-a dollar before, I didn’t borrow <i>his</i> money, but I
-took all I could raise myself, and I bought
-enough to be sure I could control the next election.
-Then—the slump came, and after the slump
-the long, slow crumbling. I controlled the election<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[178]</span>
-all right, of course, but before the next one
-came I was ruined, and Keatcham put his own
-men in. I went desperately to New York. I
-didn’t know how to fight those fellows; it was a
-new game. I didn’t find Atkins. Maybe because
-that wasn’t his name when I had known him. I
-was so sure that the property was good—as if
-that mattered! As if anything mattered with
-these gamblers who play with loaded dice and
-dope the horses they bet against! Phil had all
-his property in the mills; we all had. We mortgaged
-the house; we had to, to protect our stock.
-You know how the fight ended, and what happened
-at Cambridge. That isn’t all. My wife—”
-He stood a little straighter, and the light went
-out of his eyes. “I told you I don’t make friends
-easily, and I am not the kind of man women take
-to; all the same, the loveliest girl in the South
-loved me ever since I jumped over the mill-dam
-to save her rag doll, once, when she was visiting
-her aunt near us. I’d married, when we seemed
-prosperous. Now, understand me, I don’t say
-it was my ruin and Phil’s death that killed her
-and the baby; she had pneumonia, and it may be
-that seeing that paper by accident didn’t turn the
-scale; but I do say that she had her last hours<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[179]</span>
-embittered by it. That’s enough for me. When
-I got home with—with Phil, she was dead.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tough,” said the colonel. He began to revise
-his impressions of Mercer.</p>
-
-<p>“Wasn’t it?” the other asked, with a simplicity
-of appeal that affected the listener more than anything
-he had heard. He jumped out of his chair
-and began pacing the room, talking more rapidly.
-“You’re a <i>man</i>; you know what I wanted to do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Kill somebody, I suppose. <i>I</i> should.”</p>
-
-<p>“Just that. I ran Atkins to cover after a while
-through Endicott Tracy. That boy is one of the
-noblest fellows that ever lived; yes, suh. He was
-going to help poor Phil, Phil’s room-mate had
-told him. All those boys—look a-here, Colonel
-Winter, if ever anybody talks to you about Harvard
-fellows being indifferent—”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall tell him he can’t get under the American
-surface. A Harvard boy will do anything on
-earth for his friends.”</p>
-
-<p>“They were mighty good to me. It was Endy
-found out about Atkins, just from my description
-of him. I found out about Keatcham for myself.
-And you are quite right—for a little while
-I wanted to kill them both. Looked like I just
-naturally <i>had</i> to kill them! But there was my<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[180]</span>
-mother. There was nobody to take care of her
-but Sis and me, and a trial for murder is terribly
-expensive. Of course, anybody can get off
-who has got money and can spend it; but it takes
-such an awful heap of money. And we were all
-ruined together, for what little was left was all
-in the company, and that promptly stopped paying
-dividends. I couldn’t risk it. I had to wait. I
-had to go to work to support my mother, to pay
-Sis and her back, don’t you see? We came here.
-I got a job, a well-paid one, too, through Endy’s
-father, reporting on the condition of the mills—a
-kind of examiner. And the job was for
-Keatcham.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why did you take it? I know, though. You
-did it to familiarize him with your appearance,
-so that he would not be warned when your
-chance came.”</p>
-
-<p>“How did you know that?”</p>
-
-<p>“A man I knew in the Philippines—a Filipino—was
-wronged by a white man, who took his
-wife and threw her aside when he tired of her.
-The girl killed herself. Her husband watched
-his chance for a year, found it at last—thanks
-to that very fact that his victim wasn’t on guard
-against him—and sent his knife home. He’d<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[181]</span>
-been that fellow’s servant. I picked the dead man
-up. That Filipino looked as you looked a minute
-ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“What became of the Filipino?” inquired his
-listener.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel had not told the story quite without
-intention. He argued subconsciously, that
-if Mercer were a good sort under all, he would
-have a movement of sympathy for a more cruelly
-wronged man than he; if not, he would drive
-ahead to his purpose, whatever that might be.
-His keen eyes looked a little more gentle as he
-answered: “He poisoned himself. The best way
-out, I reckon. I should hate to have had him
-shot after I knew the story. But there was really
-no option. But I’m interrupting you. You did
-your work well and won Keatcham’s confidence?”</p>
-
-<p>“He isn’t a very confiding man. I didn’t see
-him often. My dealings were with Atkins. He
-didn’t know that I had found him out; he thought
-that he had only to explain his two names, and
-expected gratitude for his warning, as he called
-it. He is slimy; but I was able to repay a little
-of my score with him. I was employed by more
-than Keatcham, and I saw a good many industrial
-back-yards. Just by chance, I came on a clue, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[182]</span>
-Endy Tracy and I worked it up together. Atkins
-was selling information to Keatcham’s enemies.
-We did not make out a complete case, but enough
-of one to make Keatcham suspect him, and at
-the right time. But that happened later—you see,
-I don’t know how to tell a story even with so
-much at stake.” He pulled out his handkerchief,
-and Winter caught the gleam of the beads on his
-sallow forehead. “It was this way,” he went on.
-“At first I was only looking about for a safe
-chance to kill him, and to kill that snake of an
-Atkins; but then it grew on me; it was all too
-easy a punishment—just a quick death, when his
-victims had years of misery. I wanted him to
-wade through the hell <i>I</i> had to wade through.
-I wanted him to know <i>why</i> he was condemned.
-Then it was I began to collect just the cases I
-knew about—just one little section of the horrible
-swath of agony and humiliation and poverty and
-sin he and his crowd had made—the one I knew
-every foot of, because I’d gone over it every night
-I wasn’t so dead tired I <i>had</i> to sleep. God! do you
-know what it is to have the people who used to
-be running out of their houses just to say howdy
-to you, curse you for a swindler or a fool or
-turn out of one street and down the other not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[183]</span>
-to pass you? Did <i>you</i> ever have a little woman
-who used to give you frosted cake when you were
-a boy push her crape veil off her gray hair and
-hand you the envelope with her stock, with your
-handwriting on the envelope, and beg you—trying
-so hard not to cry, ’twas worse than if she
-had—beg you to lend her just half her interest
-money—<i>and you couldn’t do it</i>? Did you—never
-mind. I said I waded through hell. I <i>did!</i> Not I
-alone—that was the worst—all the people that had
-trusted me! And just that some rich men should
-be richer. Why should <i>they</i> have the lion’s share?
-The lion’s share belongs to the lion. <i>They</i> are
-nothing but jackals. They’re meaner than jackals,
-for the jackals take what the lion leaves, and
-these fellows steal the lion’s meat away from
-him. We made honest money; we paid honest
-wages; folks had more paint on their houses
-and more meat in their storehouses, and wore better
-clothes Sunday, and there were more school-houses
-and fewer saloons, and the negroes were
-learning a trade instead of loafing. The whole
-county was the better off for our prosperity, and
-there isn’t a mill in the outfit—and I know what
-I’m talking about—there isn’t a shop or a mine
-that’s as well run or makes as big an output now<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[184]</span>
-as it did when the old crowd was in. You find
-it that way everywhere; and that’s what is going
-to break things down. We saw to all the little
-affairs; they were <i>our</i> affairs, don’t you know?
-But Keatcham’s new men draw their salaries and
-let things slide. Yet Keatcham is a great manager
-if he would only take the time; only he’s too busy
-stealing to develop his businesses; there’s more
-money in stealing a railway than in building one
-up. Oh, he isn’t a fool; if I could once get him
-where he would <i>have</i> to listen, I know I could
-make him understand. He’s pretty cold-blooded,
-and he doesn’t realize. He only sees straight
-ahead, not all round, like all these superhumanly
-clever thieves; they have mighty stupid streaks.
-Well, I’ve got him now, and it is kill or cure for
-him. He can’t make a riffle. I knew I couldn’t
-do anything alone; I had to wait. I had to have
-stronger men than I am to help. By and by they
-tried their jackal business on a real lion—on
-Tracy. They wanted to steal <i>his</i> road. I got on
-to them first. I see a heap of people in a heap of
-different businesses—the little people who talk.
-They notice all right, but they can see only their
-own little patch. I was the fellow riding round
-and seeing the township. I pieced together the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[185]</span>
-plot and I told Endy Tracy. He wouldn’t believe
-me at first, because his father had given Keatcham
-his first start and done a hundred things for him.
-To be sure, his father has been obliged as an honest
-man to oppose Keatcham lately, but Keatcham
-couldn’t mean to burn him out that way. But he
-soon found that was precisely what Keatcham
-did mean. Then he was glad enough to help me
-save his father. The old man doesn’t know a
-thing; we don’t mean he ever shall know. We let
-him put up the best sort of a fight a man can with
-his hands tied while the other fellow is free. <i>My</i>
-hands are free, too. I don’t respect the damned
-imbecile laws that let me be plundered any more
-than they do; and since my poor mother died last
-summer I am not afraid of anything; they <i>are</i>;
-that’s where I have the choice of weapons. I tell
-you, suh, <i>nobody</i> is big enough to oppress a desperate
-man! Keatcham had one advantage—he
-had unlimited money. But Aunt Rebecca helped
-us out there. Colonel, I want you to know I didn’t
-ask her for more than the bare grub-stake; it was
-she herself that planned our stock deal.”</p>
-
-<p>“She is a dead game sport,” the colonel
-chuckled. “I believe you.”</p>
-
-<p>“And I hope you don’t allow that I was willing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[186]</span>
-to have her mix herself in our risks. She would
-come; she said she wanted to see the fun—”</p>
-
-<p>“I believe you again,” the colonel assured him,
-and he remembered the odd sentence which his
-aunt had used the first night of their journey,
-when she expressed her hankering to match her
-wits against those of a first-class criminal.</p>
-
-<p>“We didn’t reckon on your turning up, or the
-complication with Archie. I wish to God we’d
-taken the boy’s own word! But, now you know
-all about it, will you keep your hands off? That’s
-all we ask.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,”—the colonel examined his finger-nails,
-rubbing his hands softly, the back of one over the
-palm of the other—“well, you haven’t quite told
-me all. Don’t, unless you are prepared to have it
-used against you, as the policemen say <i>before</i> the
-sweat-box. What did you do to Keatcham to get
-him to go with you so like Mary’s little lamb?”</p>
-
-<p>“I learned of a little device that looks like a
-tiny currycomb and is so flat and small you can
-bind it on a man’s arm just over an artery. Just
-press on the spring and give the least scratch, and
-the man falls down in convulsions. I showed him
-a rat I had had fetched me, and killed it like a
-flash. He had his choice of walking out quietly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[187]</span>
-with me—I had my hand on his arm—or dropping
-down dead. He went quietly enough.”</p>
-
-<p>“That was the meaning of his look at me, was
-it?” Winter thought. He said only: “Did Endicott
-Tracy know about that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course not,” Mercer denied. “Do you
-reckon I want to mix the boy up in this more than
-I have? And Arnold only knew I was trying
-some kind of bluff game.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will lay odds, though,” the colonel ventured
-in his gentlest tone, “that Mr. Samurai, as Haley
-calls him, knew more. But when did you get rid
-of Atkins?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Keatcham discharged him at Denver. I
-met Mr. Keatcham here; it was arranged on the
-train. We had it planned out. If that plan had
-failed I had another.”</p>
-
-<p>“Neat. Very neat. And then you became the
-secretary?”</p>
-
-<p>Mercer flushed in an unexpected fashion. “Certainly
-not!” he said with emphasis. “Do you think
-I would take his wages and not do the work faithfully?
-No, suh. I assumed to be his secretary in
-the office; that gave me a chance to arrange everything.
-But I did it to oblige him. I never touched
-a cent of his money. I paid, in fact, for our board<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[188]</span>
-out of our own money. It would have burned my
-fingers, suh!”</p>
-
-<p>“And the valet? Was he in your plot? Don’t
-answer if you—”</p>
-
-<p>“He was not, suh,” replied Cary Mercer. “He
-is a right worthy fellow, and he thought, after he
-had seen to the tickets—which he did very carefully—and
-given them to me, he could go off on
-the little vacation which came to him by his master
-through me.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a little bit evasive. However, I haven’t
-the right to ask you to give away your partners,
-anyhow.” He was peering at Mercer’s face behind
-his glasses, but the pallid, tired features returned
-him no clue to the thoughts in the head
-above them. “What have you done with Mr.
-Keatcham?” he concluded suddenly.</p>
-
-<p>The question brought no change of expression,
-and Mercer answered readily: “I put him off by
-himself, where he sees no one and hears nothing.
-I read a good deal about prisons and the most
-effectual way of taming men, and solitary confinement
-is recommended by all the authorities.
-His meals are handed to him by—by a mechanical
-device. He has electric light some of the time,
-turned on from the outside. He has a comfortable<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[189]</span>
-room and his own shower-bath. He has comfortable
-meals. And he is supplied with reading.”</p>
-
-<p>“Reading?” repeated the colonel, his surprise
-in his voice.</p>
-
-<p>For the first time he saw Mercer smile, but it
-was hardly a pleasant smile. “Yes, suh, reading,”
-he said. “I have had type-written copies made of
-all the cases which I discovered in regard to his
-stealing our company. I reasoned that when he
-would get absolutely tired of himself and his own
-thoughts he would just naturally be <i>obliged</i> to
-read, and that would be ready for him. He tore
-up one copy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hmn—I can’t say I wonder. What did you
-do?”</p>
-
-<p>“I sent him another. I expected he would do
-that way. After a while he will go back to it, because
-it will draw him. He’ll hate it, but he will
-want to know them all. I know his nature, you
-see.”</p>
-
-<p>“What are you going to do with him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Let him go, after he does what we want and
-promises never to molest any of us.”</p>
-
-<p>“But can you trust him?”</p>
-
-<p>“He never breaks his word,” replied Mercer
-indifferently, “and besides, he knows he will be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[190]</span>
-killed if he should. He isn’t given to being scared,
-but he’s scared of me, all right.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you want him to do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Promise to be a decenter man and to let Mr.
-Tracy alone in future; meanwhile, to send a wire
-in his secret code saying he has changed his mind.
-It will not surprise his crowd. He never confides
-in them, and he expects them to obey blindly anything
-in that code language. I reckon other telegrams
-are just for show, and they don’t notice
-them much.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel took a turn around the room to
-pack away this information in an orderly fashion
-in his mind. Mercer waited patiently; he had said
-truly that he was used to waiting. Perhaps he
-supposed that Winter was trying the case in his
-own mind; but in reality Rupert was seeking only
-one clue, as little diverted from his purpose as a
-bloodhound. He began to understand the man
-whose fixed purpose had his own quality, but
-sharpened by wrong and suffering. This man had
-not harmed Archie; as much as his warped and
-fevered soul could feel softer emotions, he was
-kindly intentioned toward the lad. Who had carried
-him away, then? Or was he off on his own
-account, really, this time? Or suppose Atkins,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[191]</span>
-the missing secretary discharged at Denver, coming
-back for another appeal to his employer, finding
-Keatcham gone, but, let one say, stumbling
-on some trace of mystery in his departure; suppose
-him to consider the chance of his having his
-past condoned and a rosy future given him if his
-suspicions should prove true and <i>he</i> should release
-the captive—wouldn’t such a prospect spur on a
-man who was as cunning as he was unprincipled?
-Mightn’t he have watched all possible clues, and
-mightn’t he have heard about Archie and plotted
-to capture the child, thinking he would be easily
-pumped? That would presuppose that Atkins
-knew that Archie was at the Arnolds’ or—no, he
-might only have seen the boy on the street; he
-knew him by sight; the colonel remembered that
-several times Archie had been with him in Keatcham’s
-car. It was worth considering, anyhow. He
-spoke out of his thoughts: “Do you think Keatcham
-could have told the truth, and that code of
-his be lost or stolen? Why couldn’t Atkins have
-stolen it? He had the chance, and he isn’t hampered
-by principle, you say.”</p>
-
-<p>Mercer frowned; it was plain the possibility
-had its argument for him. “He might,” he conceded,
-“but I doubt it. Why hasn’t he done something<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[192]</span>
-with it? He hasn’t. They wouldn’t have
-postponed that meeting if he had wired his proxy
-and his directions in the code. He’d have voted
-his employer’s stock. He’s got too much at stake.
-I happen to know he thought it a sure tip to sell
-short, and he has put almost all he has on it. You
-see, Keatcham was banking on that; he knew it.
-He thought Atkins wouldn’t dare give any of his
-secrets away or go against him in this deal, because
-they were in the same boat.”</p>
-
-<p>“Still, I reckon I’ll have to see Keatcham.”</p>
-
-<p>Mercer shook his head, gently but with decision.
-“I hate to refuse you, Colonel, but unless
-you promise not to interfere, it is impossible. But
-I’ll gladly go with you to see if we can find any
-trace of Archie. I’ll risk that much. And if you
-will promise—”</p>
-
-<p>“Such a promise would be impossible to an officer
-and a gentleman,” the colonel urged lightly,
-smiling. “Besides, don’t you see I have all the
-cards? I have only to call in my men. I’d hate to
-do it, but if you force me, you would have no
-chance resisting.”</p>
-
-<p>“We shouldn’t resist, Colonel, no, suh; your
-force is overwhelming. But it would do no good;
-you couldn’t find him.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[193]</span>“We could try; and we may be better sleuths
-than you imagine.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then it would be the worse for him; for if you
-find him, you will find him dead.”</p>
-
-<p>There was something so chilling in his level
-tones that Winter broke out sharply: “Are you
-fooling with me? Have you been such an incredible
-madman as to kill him already?”</p>
-
-<p>Mercer’s faint smile made the colonel feel boyish
-and impetuous. “Of course not, suh,” he answered.
-“I told you he was alive, myself. I reckoned
-you knew when a man is lying and when he
-is telling the solemn truth. You <i>know</i> I have told
-you the truth and treated you on the square. But,
-just the same, if you try to take that man away,
-you’ll only have his dead body. He can’t do any
-more harm then, and a dead man can’t vote.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel, who had taken out his cigarette case,
-opened it and meditatively fingered the rubber
-band. “Do you reckon,” he suggested, in his
-most amiable voice, “do you reckon young Arnold
-and Endicott Tracy will stand for such frills
-in warfare as assassination?”</p>
-
-<p>“I do not, suh,” replied Mercer gravely, and as
-he spoke he pushed back the heavy tapestry hiding
-a window opposite the colonel’s head, “but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[194]</span>
-they can both prove an alibi. Mr. Arnold is in
-Pasadena, and there goes Mr. Tracy now in his
-machine—to try to find Archie. Do you see?”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel saw. He inclined his head, at the
-same time proffering his case.</p>
-
-<p>“I rather think, Mr. Mercer, that I was wrong.
-<i>You</i> have the last trump.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[195]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XI<br />
-
-<small>THE CHARM OF JADE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>It was no false lure to distract pursuit, that hurried
-sentence of Randall’s which had met the colonel’s
-angry appeal for information. The woman
-was not only repeating Mrs. Winter’s message;
-the message itself described a fact. As she stood
-at her room telephone, Aunt Rebecca had happened
-to glance at Randall, supplementing the perfunctory
-dusting of the hotel maid with her own
-sanitary, dampened, clean cloth; Randall’s eyes
-suddenly glazed and bulged in such startling transformation
-that, instead of questioning her, Mrs.
-Winter stepped swiftly to the window where she
-was at work, to seek the cause of her agitation.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Lord! Oh, Mrs. Winter!” gasped Randall.
-“Ain’t <i>that</i> Master Archie?”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Winter saw for herself; the face at a cab
-window, the waving of a slim hand—Archie’s
-face, Archie’s hand. Brief as was the Space of his
-passing (for the two horses in the cab were trotting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[196]</span>
-smartly), she was sure of both. “Give me my
-bonnet,” she commanded, “<i>any</i> bonnet, <i>any</i>
-gloves! And my bag with some money!”</p>
-
-<p>It was as she flung through the door that she
-threw her message to the colonel back exactly as
-Randall had submitted it. Miss Smith was coming
-along the loggia. “Don’t stop me!” said Mrs.
-Winter sternly. “I’ve seen Archie; I’m after
-him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Stop!” cried Miss Smith—but it was to the
-elevator boy who was whizzing below them in his
-cage, not to her employer; and she boarded the
-elevator with the older woman. “I’ll go with
-you,” she said. There was no vibration in her
-even tones, although a bright red flickered up in
-her cheek.</p>
-
-<p>But Rebecca Winter caught savagely at her
-breath, which was coming fast. “It is not with
-the running; you needn’t think it, Janet,” she
-panted sharply, in a second. “It was the sight of
-his face—so suddenly; I never expected <i>any</i> face
-would make my heart pump like that again. All
-of which shows”—she was speaking quite naturally
-and placidly again—“that women may grow
-too old for men to make fools of them, but never
-for children. Come; it was a shabby sort of hack<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[197]</span>
-he was in, drawn by two horses with auburn tails.
-Here’s the office floor.”</p>
-
-<p>Not a word did Janet Smith say; she was not a
-woman of words in any case. Moreover, the pace
-which Mrs. Winter struck was too rapid for comments
-or questions; it swept them both past the
-palm-shaded <i>patio</i> into the side hall, out on the
-noisy, dazzling, swaying street. Looking before
-her, Miss Smith could see the dusty body of a
-hack a block away. Mrs. Winter had stepped up
-to a huge crimson motor-car, in the front seat of
-which lounged the chauffeur, his forehead and
-eyes hunched under his leather visor. The machine
-was puffing, with the engine working, ready
-to leap forward at a touch of the lever.</p>
-
-<p>“Twenty dollars an hour if you let me get in
-now!” said Mrs. Winter, lightly mounting by his
-side as she spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“Hey, me? what!” gurgled the chauffeur,
-plucked out of a half-doze. “Oh, say, beg your
-pardon, lady, but this is hired, it belongs—”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t care to whom it belongs, I have to have
-it,” announced Mrs. Winter calmly. “Whoever
-hired it can get another. I’ll make it all right.
-You start on and catch that hack with the auburn-tailed
-horses—”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[198]</span>“<i>I’ll</i> make it right with your fare!” Miss Smith
-cut in before the chauffeur could answer. “It’s a
-case of kidnapping. You catch that cab!” She
-was standing on the curb, and even as she spoke
-an elderly man and his wife came out of a shop.
-They stared from her to the automobile, and in
-their gaze was a proprietary irritation. This was
-instantly transfused by a more vivid emotion. The
-woman looked shocked and compassionate. “Oh,
-pa!” she gasped, “did you hear <i>that</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>The man was a country banker from Iowa. He
-had a very quick, keen eye; it flashed. “Case of
-kidnapping, hey?” snapped he, instantly grasping
-the character of the speakers and jumping at the
-situation. “Take the auto, Madam. Get a move
-on you, Mr. Chauffeur!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I’m moving, all right,” called the chauffeur,
-as he skilfully dived his lower wheels under
-the projecting load of a great wagon and obliquely
-bumped over the edge of a street-car fender, pursued
-by the motorman’s curses. “I see ’em, lady;
-I see the red tails; I’ll catch ’em!”</p>
-
-<p>His boast most likely had been made good
-(since for another block they bore straight on
-their course) but for an orange-wagon which had
-been overturned. There was a rush of pursuit of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[199]</span>
-the golden balls from the sidewalk; a policeman
-came to the rescue of traffic and ordered everything
-to halt until the cart was righted. The boys
-and girls in the street chased back to the sidewalk.
-The episode took barely a couple of minutes, but
-on the edge of the last minute the cab turned a
-corner. The motor-car turned the same corner,
-but saw no guiding oriflamme of waving red
-horsehair. The cross street next was equally bare.
-They were obliged to explore two adjacent highways
-before they came upon the hack again. This
-time it was in distant perspective, foreshortened to
-a blur of black and a swish of red. And even as
-they caught sight of it the horses swung round
-into profile and turned another corner. In the
-turn a man wearing a black derby hat stuck his
-arm and head out of the window in order to give
-some direction to the driver. Then he turned half
-around. It was almost as if he looked back at his
-pursuers; yet this, Mrs. Winter argued, hardly
-could be, since he had not expected pursuit, and
-anyhow, the chances were he could not know her
-by sight.</p>
-
-<p>It was a mean street, narrow and noisome, but
-full of shipping traffic and barred by tramways—a
-heartbreaking street for a chase. The chauffeur<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[200]</span>
-was a master of his art; he jumped his great craft
-at every vacant arm’s-length; he steered it through
-incredibly narrow lanes; he progressed sometimes
-by luffs, like a boat under sail when the forward
-passage must be reached in such indirect fashion;
-but the crowd of ungainly vehicles, loaded dizzily
-above his head, made the superior speed of the
-motor of no avail. In spite of him they could see
-the red tails lessening. Again and yet again, the
-hack turned; again, but each time with a loss, the
-motor struck its trail. By now the street was
-changed; the dingy two-story buildings lining it
-were brightened by gold-leaf and vermilion; oriental
-arms and garbs and embroidery spangled
-the windows and oriental faces looked inscrutably
-out of doorways. There rose the blended odors
-of spice, sandalwood and uncleanliness that announce
-the East, reeking up out of gratings and
-puffing out of shops.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah,” said Mrs. Winter softly to herself, “Chinese
-quarter, is it? Well.” Her eyes changed;
-they softened in a fashion that would have amazed
-one who only knew the surface of Mrs. Winter,
-the eccentric society potentate. She looked past
-the squalid, garish scene, past the shining sand-hills
-and the redwood trees, beyond into a stranger<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[201]</span>
-landscape glowing under a blinder glare of sun.
-Half mechanically she lifted a tiny gold chain that
-had slipped down her throat under the gray gown.
-Raising the yellow thread and the carven jade
-ornament depending therefrom, she let it lie outside
-amid the white lace and chiffon.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re making good now,” called the chauffeur.
-“Will I run alongside and hail ’em, or
-what?”</p>
-
-<p>She told him quietly to run alongside. But her
-lips twitched, and when she put up her hand to
-press them still, she smiled to discover that the
-hand was bare. She had forgotten to pull on her
-glove. She began to pull it on now.</p>
-
-<p>“The road is narrow,” said she. “Run ahead
-of the hack and block its way. You can do it
-without hitting the horses, can’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I guess,” returned the chauffeur, instantly
-accomplishing the manœuver in fine style.</p>
-
-<p>But he missed his deserved commendation; indeed,
-he forgot it himself; because, as he looked
-back at the horses rearing on the sudden check
-and tossing their auburn manes, then ran his scrutiny
-behind them to the hack, he perceived no life
-in it; and when his own passenger jumped with
-amazing nimbleness from her seat and flung the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[202]</span>
-crazy door wide open, she recoiled, exclaiming:
-“Where are they? Where did you leave them?”</p>
-
-<p>“Leave who?” queried the hackman. “Say,
-what you stoppin’ me fur? Runnin’ into me with
-your devil-wagon! <i>Say!</i>”—then his wrath trailed
-into an inarticulate mutter as he appreciated better
-the evident quality of the gentlewoman before
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“You may be mixed up in a penitentiary offense,
-my man,” said she placidly. “It is a case
-of kidnapping. Where did you leave that boy
-who was in the cab? If you give us information
-that will find him, there’s five dollars; if you fool
-us—well, I have your number. Where did you
-leave the boy?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, there was a cop with ’im—a cop and
-a gentleman. Ain’t you got hold of the wrong
-party, lady?”</p>
-
-<p>“A brown-haired boy in a gray suit with a blue
-cravat—you know he was in your cab. And how
-do you know it was a real policeman?”</p>
-
-<p>“Or he wasn’t helping on the deviltry if it
-was?” sneered the chauffeur, who had now become
-a full-fledged partizan. “Ain’t you lived in
-this burg long enough to find out how to make a
-little <i>mazuma</i> on the side? You’re too good for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[203]</span>
-’Frisco. Heaven is your home, my Christian
-friend.”</p>
-
-<p>“Cut it out!” retorted the man. “I guess I
-know how to find my way round as well as the
-next man—”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly you do,” soothed Mrs. Winter, who
-was fingering a crisp new five-dollar bank-note,
-“and you are no kidnapper, either; you made no
-bargain with those men—”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure I didn’t,” agreed the hackman, “nor I
-ain’t standin’ for kidnapping, neither. Why, I got
-kids of my own, and my woman she’d broom me
-outer the house if I was to do them games. Say,
-I’ll tell you all I knows. They got off, them three,
-at that there corner, and I was to drive fast ’s I
-could three blocks ahead and then git home any
-old way. And that’s God’s truth, I—”</p>
-
-<p>“You didn’t see where they went?” Mrs. Winter
-was quietly insistent.</p>
-
-<p>“No, I didn’t. I guess I was a dumb fool not
-ter notice, but they paid me well, and I’d a bad
-thirst, and I was hiking to a place I know for
-beer; and that’s—”</p>
-
-<p>“Did the boy seem willing?”</p>
-
-<p>“He didn’t do no kicking as I seen.”</p>
-
-<p>A few more questions revealed that the man<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[204]</span>
-had unpacked his full kit of information. He had
-never seen either of the men before. The gentleman—yes,
-he was sure he was a gentleman; he
-wasn’t no swell confidence guy; he was the regular
-thing—gentleman engaged him to take a party
-to the Chinese quarter; he’d tell where to stop;
-didn’t need a guide; only wanted to make a few
-purchases, he said, and he knew where the things
-was; yes, ma’am, that was all; only down there
-on Market Street, or maybe—why, somewhere
-near by—he stuck his head out and told him to
-turn the corner, and then he kept telling him to
-turn corners, until finally he told him to stop and
-they got out.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Winter gave the man the bank-note, counseling
-him to keep his eyes open for the two men
-and the boy, and to report to her at the Palace
-Hotel, giving his number, should he see either
-man or boy. It would be very well worth his
-while.</p>
-
-<p>The chauffeur did not interrupt, but he shook
-his head over the departing hack. “He’d ought to
-have known it wan’t on the square, but these hack
-drivers ain’t got good sense even when they’re, so
-to speak, sober, which ain’t often,” he soliloquized.
-“Well, lady, if they’ve took to the Chinese<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[205]</span>
-quarter, we’d better be looking up a Chink
-to help us, I guess. I know a fairly decent one—”</p>
-
-<p>“I think I know a better,” interrupted Mrs.
-Winter, with a faint smile. She had detected a
-suppressed pity in the man’s regard. “Motor
-slowly along the street. There is a shop, if I can
-find it, where there ought to be a man—”</p>
-
-<p>“Man you know? Say, lady, I guess I better go
-in with you, if you don’t mind—”</p>
-
-<p>“No; stay in your car. You don’t know how
-safe I am. Not only my gray hair protects me,
-but I have only to say a few words and any of
-these men will fight for me if necessary. But this
-is in confidence—just between us, you understand.
-You are not to repeat it, ever.”</p>
-
-<p>She looked at him with a frank smile, and involuntarily
-his hand went up to his cap. “What
-you say goes, lady. But jest remember I’m right
-here, spark going all the time, ready to throw her
-wide open when you step in; and”—his voice
-sank—“I ain’t absolutely unprepared for a scrap,
-either.”</p>
-
-<p>“I understand,” said she, looking at him
-keenly, and a few moments later she stepped
-briskly into the shop before which he halted with
-a little lightening of the heart because of this uncouth<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[206]</span>
-knight of the lever. The shop itself was
-like any one of a score on the street, crowded
-with oriental objects, bizarre carvings of ivory
-and jade, daggers and strings of cash, swords,
-gorgeous embroidered robes of silk and gold in a
-huddle over a counter or swinging and gleaming
-in the dusky background, squat little green and
-brown gods with puffy eyelids, smiling inscrutably
-amid shoes and fans and Chinese lanterns of glass
-and bronze, glittering with beads—in all these,
-like the score about it; yet the clean windows and
-a certain order within gave it a touch out of the
-common. A man and a boy served the shop, both
-in the American dress, with their pigtails tucked
-under visorless caps. Both greeted her in the
-serene oriental fashion, bowing and smiling, their
-obsequious courtesy showing no smallest sign of
-the surprise which the sight of an unattended
-woman must have given them.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, Mrs. Winter was aware that both,
-under their lowered eyelids, took cognizance of
-that soft-carven disk of jade among the laces on
-her breast. She asked the man if he had seen a lad
-and an older man, or it might be two older men,
-one a policeman, come into that or any other
-neighboring shop. She explained that the lad was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[207]</span>
-her grand-nephew and was lost (she eschewed the
-harsher word, for she had no desire to set afloat a
-rumor which might bring the police upon her).
-She named a sum large enough to kindle a sudden
-gleam in the boy’s eyes, as the reward awaiting
-the lucky man who might put her on the right
-track. But her words struck no responsive spark
-from the Chinaman’s veiled gaze. In perfect
-English and a very soft voice he avowed ignorance
-and sympathy with the same breath.</p>
-
-<p>And all the while she could feel his glance slant
-down at the jade ornament.</p>
-
-<p>“Send the boy to look in the shop next door,”
-said she. As she spoke she raised the charm between
-her thumb and first two fingers, looking at
-him directly. Her tone was that of command, not
-request. He frowned very slightly, making an almost
-imperceptible gesture, to which she returned
-a single Chinese phrase, spoken so low that had
-he not expected the words they had been indistinguishable
-to his ear. Instantly he addressed the
-boy rapidly in their own language. The boy went
-out. The master of the shop returned to Mrs.
-Winter. His manner had utterly changed; the
-tradesman’s perfunctory deference was displaced
-by an almost eager humility of bearing. He would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[208]</span>
-have her sit—there were a few cane-seated American
-arm-chairs, in grotesque contrast to all their
-accompaniments—he prostrated himself before
-her; he put himself at her service; still to her
-trained eye there was a corner of his mind where
-incredulity wrestled with a stronger emotion.</p>
-
-<p>“Do not fear,” she said gently. “It is really my
-own, and he gave it to me himself, almost thirty
-years ago. He was hardly thirty years old himself
-then. You see, my husband had been so fortunate
-as to do him a kindness. It was he who
-had it first. When he died it came to me, and now
-for the second time in my life I am using it. I
-knew you belonged. I saw the sign. Will you
-help me find my boy?”</p>
-
-<p>“Did your ladyship know <i>he</i> is he’e, in San
-Flancisco?”</p>
-
-<p>If she had not already dissipated any doubt in
-his mind, her evident relief blew the last shred
-away now. “Haven’t you such a thing as a telephone
-somewhere?” cried Rebecca Winter. “Time
-is precious. Can’t you speak to him—have him
-come here?”</p>
-
-<p>It appeared that there was a telephone, and in
-a moment she was put into communication by the
-shopkeeper. He stood in an attitude of deep respect<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[209]</span>
-while she talked. He heard with unsmiling
-attention her first Chinese words; he listened as
-she returned to English, speaking very quietly,
-but with a controlled earnestness, explaining that
-she was Archibald Winter’s widow, giving dates
-and places, in nowise alluding to the service which
-had won the charm about her neck. Yet as he listened,
-insensibly the Chinaman grew certain that
-she had spoken the truth. Presently she turned to
-him. “He wishes to speak to you,” she said, and
-went back to the shop. She sighed as one sighs
-from whose heart a great burden rolls. “To find
-him here, and still grateful!” she was thinking.
-“What wonderful good fortune!”</p>
-
-<p>She sat down, and her face grew dreamy. She
-was no longer thinking of Archie. Her vision was
-on another face, another scene, a time of peril,
-when almost against her reason her instinctive
-woman’s recoil of pity for a fellow-creature in
-danger of unthinkable torture had been so intense
-that she had more than acquiesced in her husband’s
-plan of risking both their lives to save him;
-she had impelled him to it; she had overcome his
-terror of the risks on her account. “It is only
-death we have to fear, at worst,” she had argued.
-“We have the means to escape in a second, both<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[210]</span>
-of us, from anything else; and if we run away
-and leave this poor wretch, who hasn’t done anything
-but love his country, just as we love ours,
-and be too civilized for his trifling, ornery, pusillanimous
-country-people to understand, to get
-slashed to pieces by their horrible ling-ling—whatever
-they call it—Archibald Winter, don’t
-you reckon we shall have nightmares as long as
-we live?”</p>
-
-<p>Thirty years ago—yet it seemed like yesterday.
-Distinctly she could hear her husband’s voice; it
-had not come back to her with such reality for
-years; it was more real than the cries of the street
-outside; and her heart was beating faster for his
-words: “Becky, there never was a woman like
-you! You could make a dead man hop up and
-fight, bless you!”</p>
-
-<p>“Your ladyship”—it was the shopkeeper back
-again; he had lived in England, and he offered
-the most respectful western title of his knowledge—“your
-ladyship may be chee’ful. All will be
-done of the best. The young gentleman will be
-back fo’ to-night. If your ladyship will now letu’n
-to the hotel.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_211fp.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">It took only a moment to transfer a passenger. Page <a href="#Page_211">211</a></p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Winter bowed slightly; she was quite her
-self-possessed self again. “I will go certainly,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[211]</span>
-she said, “but I shall hope to see you, also, to-night;
-and meanwhile, will you accept, as a token
-from a friend who trusts you, <i>this</i>?” She took a
-little gem-encrusted watch from her fob and
-handed it to him. Her manner was that of a
-queen who rewards her general. And she left
-him bowing low. She entered the motor-car. It
-was no longer a lone motor. Another car steamed
-and snorted near by, in which sat the amiable
-banker from Iowa, his wife and Janet Smith.</p>
-
-<p>It took only a moment to transfer a passenger,
-to explain that she hoped to find the boy who had
-been lost—no, she would not use such a strenuous
-word as kidnapped—and would they complete
-their kindness by not mentioning the affair to any
-one? One hated so to get into the papers. And
-would they let her see them again to thank them?
-Then, as she sank back on the cushions, she remarked,
-as much to the expectant chauffeur as to
-Janet: “Yes, I think it is all right. I think we
-shall see Archie to-night.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[212]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XII<br />
-
-<small>A BLOW</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>There was no one but Mrs. Winter to welcome
-the colonel when, jaded, warm and dusty, he
-tapped on Aunt Rebecca’s parlor door. Mrs. Millicent
-was bristling with a sense of injury; one
-couldn’t touch her conversationally without risk
-of a scratch. The colonel put up the shield of his
-unsuitable appearance, his fatigue and his deplorable
-need of a bath, and escaped into his own
-apartment. But he made his toilet with reckless
-haste. All the time he was questioning his recent
-experience, trying to sort over his theories, which
-had been plunged into confusion by Mercer’s confession.
-“I suppose,” he reflected, “that I had no
-right to give Mercer that hint at the door.” The
-hint had been given just as they parted. It was
-in a single sentence:</p>
-
-<p>“By the way, Mercer, if that pillar in the <i>patio</i>
-is of importance in your combination, you would
-better keep an eye on it; it has a trick of cracking.”</p>
-
-<p>“The devil it has!” grunted Mercer. Then he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[213]</span>
-thanked him, with a kind of reluctant admiration
-in his tone.</p>
-
-<p>“You are sure you don’t object to my detective’s
-staying?” questioned the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“No, suh; prefer to have him. You told him to
-have his men in and overhaul the house?”</p>
-
-<p>“I did. I warned you I should have to. You
-promise there shall be no racket? But I—I think
-I’ll take Haley.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you. That’s right kind of you, suh.
-Good-by, suh.”</p>
-
-<p>This had been the manner of their parting—assuredly
-a singular one, after the sinister suspicions
-and the violent promises which the soldier had
-made himself in regard to this very man. After
-leaving, he had motored into town, down to
-the police courts, to discover no records of the
-arrest and no trace of Archie. Thence, discouraged,
-perplexed and more worried than he liked
-to admit, he had repaired to the hotel. His aunt
-was gone, Miss Smith was gone, and Randall
-could only relate how Mrs. Winter “had flewed
-like a bird, sir, into a big red motor-car and gone
-off, and then Miss Smith and a lady and gentleman
-had got into a white car and gone off in the
-same direction.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[214]</span>He was meditating on his next step, when Birdsall
-was announced below. The detective looked
-as warm and as tired as the colonel had felt an
-hour before. Rupert was not eager to see him,
-but neither was he anxious for the tête-à-tête with
-Millicent which awaited him in the parlor. Between
-the two he chose Birdsall.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” he greeted him, “did you find any trace
-of the boy?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I did,” growled Birdsall. “They
-didn’t try to hide ’im. They had him lodged in a
-dandy room with his own bath. Of course, he
-left his tooth-brush. They’d got him some automobile
-togs, too, and he’d left some leggings when
-he packed, and a letter begun on a pad to Miss
-Smith—‘Dear Miss Janet,’ it begins, ‘I am having
-a bully time. I can steer the machine, only I
-can’t back’—that’s all. Say, the young dog has
-been having it fat while we were in the frying-pan
-for fear somebody was bothering him.”</p>
-
-<p>“But he is not in the house now?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, nor nothing else.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Nobody</i> hidden away? Where did the groans
-you heard come from?” queried the colonel
-politely.</p>
-
-<p>Birdsall flushed. “I do believe that slick deceiver<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[215]</span>
-you call Mercer put up a game on us out
-of meanness—just to git me guessing.”</p>
-
-<p>“That sort of thing looks more like the college
-boys.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say, it might have been. This thing is giving
-me nervous prostration. Say, why didn’t you see
-the thing out with me?”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel shamelessly told the truth to deceive.
-“I was called here. I was told that Mrs.
-Winter, my aunt, had seen Archie in the street.”</p>
-
-<p>“She was just getting out of a machine as I
-came up. Miss Smith was with her, and they had
-their hands full of candy boxes. They were
-laughing. I made sure the boy had been found.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not to my knowledge,” said the colonel. But
-in some excitement he walked into the parlor.
-The ladies had arrived; they stood in the center
-of the room while Randall took away the boxes.</p>
-
-<p>“Candy for Archie,” explained Aunt Rebecca,
-and these were the first words to reach Rupert
-Winter’s ears. “I expect him to dinner.”</p>
-
-<p>“Aunt Rebecca,” proclaimed Millicent, “I never
-have been one to complain, but there <i>are</i> limits to
-human endurance. I am a modern person, a civilized
-Episcopalian, accustomed to a regular and
-well-ordered life, and for the last few days I seem<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[216]</span>
-to have been living in a kind of medieval mystery,
-with kidnappers, and blood-stains, and, for anything
-I know, somebody ready to stick a knife into
-any one of us any time! You people may enjoy
-this sort of thing—<i>you seem to</i>—but I don’t.
-And I tell you frankly that I am going to apply
-to the police, not to any private detective inquiry
-office, as like as not in league with the criminals”—thus
-ungratefully did Mrs. Millicent slur the
-motives of her only truly interested auditor—“but
-<i>real</i> policemen. I shall apply—”</p>
-
-<p>She did not tell where she should apply, the
-words being snapped out of her mouth by the
-sharp tinkle of the telephone bell.</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Rebecca responded to the call. “Send him
-up,” was her answer to the inaudible questioner.</p>
-
-<p>She laid down the receiver. Then she put it
-back. Then she stood up, her silver head in the
-air, her erect little figure held motionless.</p>
-
-<p>Janet Smith’s dark eyes sought hers; her lips
-parted only to close firmly again.</p>
-
-<p>Even the detective perceived the electric intensity
-of the moment, and Rupert shut his fists
-tight, with a quickened beating of the heart; but
-emotional vibrations did not disturb Mrs. Melville
-Winter’s poise. She continued her plaint.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[217]</span>“This present situation is unbearable, unprecedented
-and un—un—unexpected,” she declaimed,
-rather groping for a climax which escaped her.
-Aunt Rebecca raised her hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Would you be so very kind, Millicent,” said
-she, “as to wait a moment? I am trying to listen.”</p>
-
-<p>Like a response to her words, the knob of the
-door was turned, the door swung, and Archie entered
-the room, smiling his odd little chewed-up
-smile.</p>
-
-<p>Janet uttered a faint cry and took a single step,
-but, as if recognizing a superior right, hung back
-while the boy put his arm about his great-aunt’s
-waist and rather bashfully kissed her cheek.</p>
-
-<p>She received the salute with entire composure,
-except for a tiny splash of red which crept up to
-each cheek-bone. “Is it really you, Archie?” said
-she. “You are a little late for dinner day before
-yesterday, but quite in time for to-day. Sit down
-and tell us where you have been.”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite so!” exclaimed Mrs. Millicent. “Good
-heavens! Do you know how we have suffered?
-<i>Where</i> have you been? <i>Why</i> did you run away?”</p>
-
-<p>But Archie, who had surrendered one-half of
-him to be hugged by Miss Smith and the other to
-be clapped on the shoulder by his uncle, seemed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[218]</span>
-to think a vaguely polite “How-de-do, Aunt Millicent;
-I’m sorry to have worried you!” to be answer
-enough. Only when the question was repeated
-by Mrs. Winter herself did he reply: “I’m
-awfully sorry, Aunt Rebecca, but I’ve promised
-not to say anything about it. But, truly, I didn’t
-mean to bother you.”</p>
-
-<p>Millicent exploded in an access of indignation:
-“And do you mean that you expect us to accept
-such a ridiculous promise—after all we have been
-through?”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite so,” remarked Aunt Rebecca, with a
-precise echo of her niece’s most Anglican utterance—the
-gift of mimicry had been one of Mrs.
-Winter’s most admired and distrusted social gifts
-from her youth.</p>
-
-<p>Rupert Winter hastened to distract Millicent’s
-attention by saying decisively: “If the boy has
-promised, that ends it; he can’t break his parole.
-Anyhow, they don’t seem to have hurt you, old
-son?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, they treated me dandy, those fellows,”
-said Archie. “Miss Janet, I know how to run an
-electric motor-car, except backing.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll bet you do,” muttered the detective.</p>
-
-<p>Here the colonel came to the boy’s relief a second<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[219]</span>
-time and drew Birdsall aside. “Best let me
-pump the chap a little. You get down-stairs and
-see how he got here, who brought him. They’ll
-get clean away. It is late for that as it is. You
-can report to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>It was the colonel, also, who eliminated Mrs.
-Millicent by the masterly stratagem of suggesting
-that she pass the news to Mrs. Wigglesworth. He
-artfully added that it would require tact to let the
-lady from Boston understand that the lad had
-been found without in any way gratifying her
-natural curiosity in regard to the manner of finding
-or the cause of disappearance. “I’ll have to
-leave <i>that</i> to you,” he concluded. “Maybe you can
-see a way out; I confess my hands are in the air.”</p>
-
-<p>Millicent thus relegated to the ambassador’s
-shelf, the colonel slipped comfortably into his pet
-arm-chair facing his nephew on the lounge between
-Aunt Rebecca and Miss Smith. Miss Smith
-looked frankly, charmingly happy. Aunt Rebecca
-looked rather tired.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course,” remarked he, “I understand, old
-man, that you have promised secrecy to—well, to
-the Fireless Stove gang, as we’ll call them; but the
-<i>other</i> kidnappers, the crowd that held up your car
-and then switched you off on a side track while<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[220]</span>
-young Fireless was detained—they haven’t any
-hold on you?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir,” said Archie; “but—you see, that
-strange gentleman and Aunt Millicent—I was
-scared lest I’d give something away.”</p>
-
-<p>“They’re not here now. All friends here. Suppose
-you make a clean breast of your second kidnapping.
-It may be important you should.”</p>
-
-<p>Nothing loath, Archie told his story. Left outside
-while Tracy went into the office with a policeman,
-to whom he gave his assumed name, he
-remained for hardly two minutes before a gentleman
-and a “cop” came up to him, and the latter
-ordered him to descend from the machine—but
-not until they had found it impossible to move
-the vehicle. When they did discover that the key
-was out and gone, the man in citizen’s clothes
-hailed a cab and the officer curtly informed Archie
-that Gardiner (Tracy’s traveling name) had been
-taken to another court and he was to follow. He
-didn’t suspect anything beyond a collision with
-the speed regulations of the city, but had he seen
-a chance to dive under his escort’s arm the boy
-would have taken it. Such chance was not afforded
-him, and all he was able to do was to lean
-out suddenly as they passed the Palace and to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[221]</span>
-wave at Randall. “I wanted them to stop and let
-me get some one to pay my fine,” said Archie,
-“but they said I was only a witness. They
-wouldn’t let me stop; they run down the curtain—at
-least so far as it would run. It was like all
-those hack curtains, you know—all out of order.”</p>
-
-<p>“Archie,” the colonel interjected here, “was one
-of the men a little fellow, clean-shaven, with a
-round black head, blue eyes—one of his eyes
-winks a little faster than the other?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir. How did you know?”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t know; I guessed. Well, get on; they
-wanted to pump you when they got you safely out
-of sight?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” Archie said, “they put me into the
-sweat-box, all right.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you tell them anything?” asked Mrs. Winter.</p>
-
-<p>Archie looked at her reproachfully. Did she
-think that he had gone to boarding-school for
-nothing? He explained that, being a stranger in
-the town, he could not tell anything about where
-he’d been. There was an agent at the house trying
-to sell stoves, and they let him take him off back
-to the hotel. The man seemed to know all about
-who he (Archie) was, and about his having gone<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[222]</span>
-away. The men asked him an awful lot of questions
-about how he was taken away. He said he
-didn’t know, and he’d promised not to tell. He
-couldn’t tell. They said he would have to go to
-jail if he didn’t tell, because the men who had him
-were such bad men. But he didn’t tell.</p>
-
-<p>“Did they try to frighten you—to make you
-tell?” said Mrs. Winter.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, they bluffed a little,” returned Archie carelessly,
-yet the keen eyes on him—eyes both
-worldly-wise and shrewd—noted that the lad’s
-color shifted and he winced the least in the world
-over some remembrance.</p>
-
-<p>“But they didn’t hurt you? They didn’t burn
-you or cut you or twist your arms, or try any
-other of their playful ways?” Mrs. Winter demanded;
-and Janet began feeling the boy’s arms,
-breathing more quickly. The colonel only looked.</p>
-
-<p>“No, they didn’t do a thing. I knew they
-wouldn’t, too,” Archie assured her earnestly. “I
-told them if they did anything, Uncle Rupert and
-you would make them pay.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you weren’t frightened, away from every
-one—in that hideous quarter?” cried Miss Smith.
-“Oh, my dear!” She choked.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, maybe I was a little scared. I kept thinking<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[223]</span>
-of a rotten yarn of Kipling’s; something happened
-to <i>him</i>, down in the underground quarter,
-in just such a hot, nasty-smelling hole, I guess, as
-I was in; you remember, Miss Janet, about the
-game of cards and the Mexican stabbing a Chink
-for cheating, and how Kipling jumped up and ran
-for his life, never looked around; and don’t you
-remember that nasty bit, how he felt sure they
-had dealt with the greaser their own way and he’d
-never get up to the light again—”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been remembering that story all this afternoon,”
-answered Miss Smith with a shudder.</p>
-
-<p>“Agreeable little tale,” said Aunt Rebecca
-dryly. “Archie, you must have had a right nasty
-quarter of an hour; what stopped it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, a Chink came and called the little man
-off; and there was a lot of talking which I couldn’t
-hear, and the cop was swearing; I think they
-didn’t like it. But, in a minute the Chinaman—he
-was an awful nice little feller—he came up to
-me and took me out, led me all sorts of ways, not
-a bit like the way I came in, and got me out to
-the street. The other fellows were very polite;
-they told me that they were my friends and only
-wanted to find a clue to my kidnappers; and the
-burning holes in me was only a joke to give me<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[224]</span>
-an excuse to break my word under compulsion—why,
-<i>they</i> wouldn’t hurt me for the world! I
-pretended to be fooled, and said it was all right,
-and looked pleasant; but—I’d like to scare them
-the same way, once, all the same.”</p>
-
-<p>The boy caught at his lip which was trembling,
-and ended with a shaky laugh. Miss Smith
-clenched the fist by her side; but she dropped the
-arm near Archie, and said in a matter-of-fact,
-sprightly tone: “Archie, you really ought to go
-dress—and wash for dinner; excuse me for mentioning
-it, but you have no idea how grimy you
-are.”</p>
-
-<p>The commonplace turn of thought did its errand.
-Archie, who had been bracing himself anew
-against the horror which he remembered, dropped
-back into his familiar habits and jumped up consciously.
-“It’s the dust, motoring,” he offered
-bashfully. “I ought to have washed before I came
-up. Well, that’s all; we came straight here. Now,
-may I go take a bath?”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Rebecca was fingering a curious jade
-locket on her neck. She watched the boy run to
-the open door.</p>
-
-<p>“I wish you’d go into your room, Colonel,”
-said Miss Smith, “and see that nothing happens<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[225]</span>
-to him. It’s silly, but I am expecting to see him
-vanish again!”</p>
-
-<p>The sentence affected the colonel unpleasantly;
-why need she be posing before him, as if that first
-disappearance had had any real fright in it? Of
-course she didn’t know yet (although Aunt Rebecca
-might have told her—she <i>ought</i> to have told
-her and stopped this unnecessary deceit) that
-he was on to the game; but—he didn’t like it.
-Unconsciously, his inward criticism made his tone
-drier as he replied with a little bow that he imagined
-Archie was quite safe, now, and he would
-ask to be excused, as he had to attend to something
-before dinner.</p>
-
-<p>Was it his fancy that her face changed and her
-eyes looked wistful? It must have been. He
-walked stiffly away. Hardly had he entered his
-room and turned his mind on the changed situation
-before the telephone apprised him that a
-gentleman, Mr. Gardiner, who represented the
-Fireless Cook Stove, said that he had an appointment
-with Colonel Winter to explain the stove;
-should he be sent up?</p>
-
-<p>Directly, Endicott Tracy entered, smiling.
-“Where’s the kid? I know he’s back,” were his
-first words; and he explained that he had been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[226]</span>
-hunting the kidnappers to no purpose. “Except
-that I learned enough to know they put up a job
-with the justice, all right; I got next to that game
-without any Machiavellian exertions. But they
-got away. Who is it? Any of Keatcham’s gang?”</p>
-
-<p>“Atkins,” said the colonel concisely.</p>
-
-<p>Tracy whistled and apologized. “It’s a blow,”
-he confessed. “That little wretch! He has brains
-to burn and not an ounce of conscience. You
-know he has been mousing round at the hotels
-after Keatcham’s mail—”</p>
-
-<p>“He didn’t get it?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Cary had covered that point. Cary has
-thought this all out very carefully, but Atkins
-has got on to the fact that Cary was here in this
-hotel with Keatcham. But he doesn’t know where
-we come in; whether Keatcham’s gang is just
-lying low for some game of its own, or whether
-<i>we’ve</i> got him. At least, I don’t believe he
-knows.”</p>
-
-<p>“You ought not to be talking so freely to me;
-I haven’t promised you anything, you know,”
-warned the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“But you’ve got your nephew back all right;
-we have been on the square with <i>you</i>; why should
-you butt in? I know you won’t.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[227]</span>“I don’t seem to have a fair call to,” observed
-the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“And I think the old boy is going to give in;
-he has made signals of distress, to my thinking.
-Wanted his mail; and wanted to write; and informed
-Cary—he saw him for the first time to-day—that
-he had bigger things on deck than the
-Midland; and wanted to get at them. We’re
-going to win out all right.”</p>
-
-<p>“Unless Atkins gets at him to-night,” the
-colonel suggested. “You oughtn’t to have come
-here, Gardiner. Don’t go home, now. Wait until
-later, and let me rig you up in another lot of togs
-and give you my own motor-car. Better.”</p>
-
-<p>Tracy was more than impressed by the proposal;
-he was plainly grateful. He entered with
-enthusiasm into the soldier’s masquerade—Tracy
-had always had a weakness for theatricals and
-some of his Hasty Pudding <i>Portraits of Unknown
-People We Know</i> had won him fame at Cambridge.
-Ten minutes later, there sat opposite the
-colonel a florid-faced, mustached, western commercial
-traveler whose plaided tweeds, being an
-ill-advised venture of Haley’s which the colonel
-had taken off his hands and found no subject of
-charity quite obnoxious enough to deserve them,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[228]</span>
-naturally did not fit the present wearer, but suited
-his inane complacence of bearing and might pass
-for a bad case of ready-made purchase.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” said the adviser, “I’ll notify Haley
-to have my own hired motor ready for you and
-you can slip out and take it after you’ve had
-something to eat. Here’s the restaurant card.
-Haley will be there. Leave it at the drug store
-on Van Ness Street—Haley will give you the
-number—and get home as unobtrusively as possible.
-You can peel off these togs in the motor
-if necessary. You’ve your own underneath except
-your coat. Wrap that in a newspaper and
-carry it. I don’t know that Atkins has any one
-on guard at the hotel, but I think it more than
-likely he suspects some connection between our
-party and Keatcham’s. But first, tell me about
-Atkins; what do you know about him? It’s an
-American name.”</p>
-
-<p>“America can take all the glory of him, I fancy,”
-said Tracy. “He’s been Keatcham’s secretary for
-six years. He seems awfully mild and useful and
-timid. He’s not a bit timid. He’s full of resource;
-he’s sidled suggestions into Keatcham’s ear and
-has been gradually working to make himself absolutely
-necessary. I think he aimed at a partnership;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[229]</span>
-but Keatcham wouldn’t stand for it. I
-think it was in revenge that he sold out some of
-Keatcham’s secrets. Cary got on to that and has a
-score of his own to settle with him, besides. I
-don’t know how he managed, but he showed him
-up; and Keatcham gave him the sack in his own
-cold-blooded way. I know him only casually.
-But my cousin, Ralph Schuyler, went to prep.
-school with him, so I got his character straight
-off the bat. His father was a patent-medicine
-man from Mississippi, who made a fair pile, a
-couple of hundred thousand which looked good
-to that section, you know. I don’t know anything
-about his people except that his father made the
-‘Celebrated Atkins’ Ague Busters’; and that Atkins
-was ashamed of his people and shook his
-married sisters who came to see him, in rather
-a brutal fashion; but I know a thing or two about
-him; he was one of those bounders who curry
-favor with the faculty and the popular boys and
-never break rules apparently, but go off and have
-sly little bats by themselves. He never was popular,
-yet, somehow, he got into things; he knew
-where to lend money; and he was simply sickeningly
-clever; in math. he was a wonder. Ralph
-hated him. For one thing, he caught him in a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[230]</span>
-dirty lie. Atkins hated him back and contrived to
-prevent his being elected class president, and when
-he couldn’t prevent Ralph’s making his senior society
-the happy thought struck Atkins to get on
-the initiation committee. They had a cheery little
-branding game to make the fellows quite sure they
-belonged, you know, and he rammed his cigar
-stump into Ralph’s arm so that Ralph had blood-poisoning
-and a narrow squeak for his life. You
-see that I’m not prepossessed in the fellow’s favor.
-He’s got too vivid an imagination for me!”</p>
-
-<p>“Seems to have,” acquiesced the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“I think, you know”—Tracy made an effort
-to be just—“I think Atkins was rather soured.
-Some of the fellows made fun of the ‘Ague Busters’;
-he had a notion that the reason it was
-such uphill work for him in the school, was his
-father’s trade. No doubt he did get nasty licks,
-at first; and he’s revengeful. He hasn’t got on
-in society outside, either—this he lays to his not
-being a university man. You see his father lost
-some of his money and put him to work instead
-of in college. He was willing enough at the time—I
-think he wanted to get married—but afterward,
-when he was getting a good salary and piling
-up money on his tips, he began to think that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[231]</span>
-he had lost more than he had bargained for.
-Altogether, he’s soured. Now, what he wants
-is to make a thundering big strike and to pull
-out of Wall Street, buy what he calls ‘a seat
-on the James’ and set-up for a Southern gentleman.
-He’s trying to marry a Southern girl, they
-say, who is kin to the Carters and the Byrds and
-the Lees and the Carys—why, <i>you</i> know her,
-she’s Mrs. Winter’s secretary.”</p>
-
-<p>“Does—does she care for him?” The colonel
-suddenly felt his mouth parched; he was savagely
-conscious of his mounting color. What a fiendish
-trick of fate! he had never dreamed of this!
-Well, whether she cared for him or not, the man
-was a brute; he shouldn’t get her. That was one
-certainty in the colonel’s mind.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Cary vows she doesn’t, that it was only
-a girlish bit of nonsense up in Virginia, that time
-he was prospecting, you know. But I don’t feel
-so safe. She’s too nice for such a cur. But you
-know what women are; the nicest of them seem
-to be awfully queer about men. There’s no betting
-on them.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid not,” remarked the colonel lightly.
-But he put his fingers inside his collar and
-loosened it, as if he felt choked.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[232]</span>Because he had a dozen questions quarreling
-for precedence in his head, he asked not one.
-He only inquired regarding the situation; discovering
-that both Mercer and Tracy were equally
-in the dark with himself as to Atkins’ plans, Atkins’
-store of information, Atkins’ resources.
-How he could have waylaid Tracy and the boy
-without knowing whence they came was puzzling;
-it was quite as puzzling, however, assuming
-that he did know their whereabouts, to decide
-why he was so keen to interrogate the boy. In
-fact, it was, as Tracy said, “too much like Professor
-Santa Anna’s description of a German definition
-of metaphysics, ‘A blind man hunting in a
-dark room for a black cat that isn’t there.’”</p>
-
-<p>“In any event, you would better keep away
-from <i>me</i>,” was the colonel’s summing up of the
-situation; “I don’t want to be inhospitable, but
-the sooner you are off, and out of the hotel, the
-safer for your speculation.”</p>
-
-<p>“Friends will please accept the intimation,”
-said Tracy good-humoredly. “Very well, it’s
-twenty-three for me. I’m hoping you’ll see your
-way clear to run over as soon as the old man has
-surrendered; I’m going to invite him to make us
-a proper visit, then, and see the country. I’m always<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[233]</span>
-for letting the conquered keep their side-arms.”</p>
-
-<p>He went away smiling his flashing smile, and
-turned it up at the hotel as he walked out; the
-colonel made no sign of recognition from the
-window whence he observed him. Instead, he
-drew back quickly, frowning; it might be a mere
-accident that only a hand’s-breadth of space from
-the young Harvard man was a dapper little shape
-in evening clothes, a man still young, with a
-round black head; if so, it was an accident not to
-the colonel’s liking.</p>
-
-<p>“Damn you!” whispered Rupert Winter very
-softly. “What is your little game?”</p>
-
-<p>At once he descended, having telephoned Haley
-to meet him at the court. When he entered
-and sent his glance rapidly among the little tables,
-by this time filled with diners, he experienced a
-disagreeable surprise. It did not come from the
-sight of Sergeant Haley in his Sunday civilian
-clothes, stolidly reading the <i>Call</i>; it came from a
-vision of Atkins standing, bowing, animatedly
-talking with Janet Smith.</p>
-
-<p>Instead of approaching Haley, Winter fell back
-and scribbled a few words on a page of his note-book,
-while safely shielded by a great palm. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[234]</span>
-note he despatched to Haley, who promptly
-joined him. While they stood, talking on apparently
-indifferent subjects, Miss Smith passed
-them. Whether because he was become suspicious
-or because she had come upon him suddenly, she
-colored slightly. But she smiled as she saluted
-him and spoke in her usual tranquil tone. “You
-are going to dine with us, aren’t you, Colonel?”
-said she. “I think dinner is just about to be
-served.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel would be with them directly.</p>
-
-<p>Haley’s eyes followed her; he had returned her
-nod and inquiry for his wife and little Nora with
-a military salute and the assurance that they were
-both wonderfully well and pleased with the country.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, ain’t it remarkable the way that lady do
-keep names in her mind?” cried he. “An’ don’t
-she walk foine and straight? Oi’ve been always
-towld thim Southern ladies had the gran’ way
-wid ’em; Oi see now ’tis thrue.” The unusual
-richness of Haley’s brogue was a sure sign of feeling.
-The colonel only looked grim. After he had
-taken Haley to a safe nook for his confidence, a
-nook where there were neither ears nor eyes to
-be feared, he would have made his way up-stairs;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[235]</span>
-but half-way down the office he was hailed by
-the manager. The manager was glad to hear that
-the young gentleman was safely back. He let the
-faint radiance of an intelligent, respectfully tactful
-smile illumine his words and intimate that
-his listener would have no awkward questions to
-parry from him. The colonel felt an ungrateful
-wrath, a reprehensible snare of temper which did
-not show in his confidentially lowered voice, as he
-replied: “Mighty lucky, too, we are; the boy’s all
-right; but San Francisco is no place for an innocent
-kid even to take the safest-looking walk.
-What sort of a police system have you, anyhow?”</p>
-
-<p>The manager shook his head. “I’m not bragging
-about it; nor about the Chinese quarter,
-either. I confess I’ve felt particularly uncomfortable,
-myself, the last day. Well—if you’ll excuse
-the advice—least said, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel nodded. He proffered his cigar-case;
-the manager complimented its contents, as
-he selected a cigar; and both gentlemen bowed.
-A wandering, homesick Frenchman, who viewed
-their parting, felt refreshed as by a breath from
-his own land of admirable manners. Meanwhile,
-the colonel was fuming within: “Confound his
-insinuating curiosity! but I reckon I headed him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[236]</span>
-off. And who would have thought,” he wondered
-forlornly, “that I could be going to dine with the
-boy safe and sound and be feeling so like a
-whipped hound!”</p>
-
-<p>But none of this showed during the dinner at
-which Millicent was in high good humor, having
-obtained information about most astounding bargains
-in the Chinese quarter from Mrs. Wigglesworth.
-Her good humor extended even to Miss
-Smith, who received it without enthusiasm, albeit
-courteously; and who readily consented to be her
-companion for the morning sally on the distressed
-Orientals, whose difficulties with the customs had
-reduced them to the necessity of sales at any cost.
-Aunt Rebecca listened with an absent smile, while
-Archie laughed at every feeblest joke of his uncle
-in a boyish interest so little like his former apathy
-that often Miss Smith’s eyes brightened and half
-timidly sought the uncle’s, as if calling his attention
-to the change. Only a few hours back, his
-would have brightened gratefully in answer;
-now, he avoided her glances. Yet somehow, his
-heart felt heavier when they ceased. For his part,
-he was thankful to have his aunt request his company
-in a little promenade around the “loggia,” as
-she termed it, overlooking the great court.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[237]</span>She took him aside to tell him her afternoon
-experience, and to ask his opinion of the enigmatical
-appearance of Atkins. He was strongly tempted,
-in return, to question her frankly about Miss
-Smith, to tell her of seeing the latter with Atkins
-only that evening. He knew that it was the
-sensible thing to do—but he simply could not do
-it. To frame his suspicions past or present of
-the woman he loved; to discuss the chances of
-her affection for a man loathsomely unworthy of
-her; worse, to balance the possibilities of her
-turning betrayer in her turn and chancing any
-damage to her benefactress and her kinsman for
-this fellow’s sake—no, it was beyond him. He
-had intended to discuss his aunt’s part in the
-waylaying of Keatcham, with calmness and with
-the deference due her, but unsparingly; he meant
-to show her the legal if not moral obliquity of
-her course, to point out to her the pitfalls besetting
-it, to warn her how hideous might be the consequences
-of a misstep. Somehow, however, his
-miserable new anxiety about Miss Smith had disturbed
-all his calculations and upset his wits; and
-he could not rally any of the poignant phrases
-which he had prepared. All he was able to say
-was something about the rashness of the business;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[238]</span>
-it was like the Filipinos with their bows and arrows
-fighting machine-guns.</p>
-
-<p>“Or David with his ridiculous little sling going
-against Goliath,” added she. “Very well put,
-Bertie; only the good advice comes too late; the
-question now is, how to get out with a whole
-skin. Surprising as it may be, I expect to—with
-your help.”</p>
-
-<p>“Honored, I’m sure,” growled Bertie.</p>
-
-<p>“There is one thing I meant to ask you—I
-haven’t, but I shall now. Instead of making it
-impossible for me to sleep to-night, as you virtuously
-intended in order to clear your conscience
-before you tried to pull me out of the trap I’ve
-set for myself, suppose you do me a favor, right
-now.”</p>
-
-<p>“You put it so well, you make me ashamed of
-my moral sense, Aunt Becky; what is it you
-want?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, nothing unbefitting a soldier and a gentleman,
-dear boy; just this: Cary has to have some
-money. I meant to give it to Stoves, but you
-hustled him off in such a rush that I didn’t get
-at him. You know where he is, don’t you? You
-haven’t sent him straight back?”</p>
-
-<p>“I can find him, I reckon.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[239]</span>“Then I’ll give <i>you</i> the money, at once.”</p>
-
-<p>How weak a thing is man! Here was an eminently
-cool-headed, reasonable man of affairs
-who knew that paws which had escaped from the
-fire unsinged had no excuse to venture back for
-other people’s chestnuts; he had expressed himself
-clearly to this effect to young Tracy; now,
-behold him as unable to resist the temptation of a
-conflict and the chance to baffle Atkins as if he
-were a hot-headed boy in plain shoulder-straps!</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll do better for you, Aunt Rebecca,” said he.
-“I’ll not only take Fireless the money, I’ll go with
-him to the house. I can make a sneak from here;
-and Atkins is safely down-stairs at this moment.
-He may be shadowing Fireless; if he is, perhaps
-I can throw him off the track.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus it befell that not an hour later Rupert
-Winter was guiding the shabby and noisy runabout
-a second time toward the haunted house.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing doin’,” said the joyous apprentice
-to crime; “I called old Cary up and got a furious
-slating for doing it; but he said there wasn’t a
-watch-dog in sight; and the old man had surrendered.
-He was going to let him into the
-library on parole.”</p>
-
-<p>“You need a guardian,” growled the colonel;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[240]</span>
-“where did you telephone? <i>Not</i> in the drug
-store?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dear, no, not in such a public place; I’ve
-a shrinking nature that never did intrude its
-private, personal affairs on the curious world.
-I used the ’phone of that nice quiet little restaurant
-where they gave me a lovely meal but were
-so long preparing it, I used up all the literature
-in sight, which was the <i>Ladies’ Home Journal</i> and
-a tract on the virtues of Knox’s Gelatine. When
-I couldn’t think of anything else to do I routed
-out Cary—I’d smoked all my cigarettes and all
-my cigars but one which I was keeping for after
-dinner. And Cary rowed me good and plenty.
-There wasn’t a soul in the room.”</p>
-
-<p>“Has any one followed you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a man, woman or child, not even a yellow
-dog. I kept looking round, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“It was a dreadfully risky thing to do; you
-don’t deserve to escape; but perhaps you did.
-Atkins may have come to the Palace for some
-other purpose and never have noticed you.”</p>
-
-<p>“My own father wouldn’t have got on to me
-in that dinky rig.”</p>
-
-<p>Winter was not so easy in his mind. But he
-hoped for the best, since there was nothing else<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[241]</span>
-for him to do. They were in sight of the house
-now, which loomed against the dim horizon,
-darker, grimmer than ever. Where the upper
-stories were pierced with semicircular arches, the
-star-sown sky shone through with an extraordinary
-effect of depth and mystery. All the lighter
-features of the architecture, carving on pediment
-or lintel or archivolt, delicate iron tracery of
-<i>rejas</i>, relief of arcature and colonnade—all these
-the dusk blurred if it did not obliterate; the great
-dark bulk of the house with its massive buttresses,
-its pyramidal copings and receding upper stories,
-was the more boldly silhouetted on the violet sky;
-yet because of the very flatness of the picture, the
-very lack of shadow and projection, it seemed unsubstantial,
-hardly more of reality than the giant
-shadow it cast upon the hillside. Electric lights
-wavered and bristled dazzling beams on either
-side of the street; not a gleam, red, white or yellow,
-leaked through the shuttered windows of
-the house. In its blackness, its silence, its determined
-isolation it renewed, but with a greater
-force, the first sinister thrill which the sight of
-it had given the man who came to rifle it of its
-secrets.</p>
-
-<p>“Lonesome-looking old shanty, isn’t it?” said<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[242]</span>
-the Harvard boy; “seems almost indecorous to
-speak out loud. Here’s where we <i>cache</i> the car
-and make a gentle detour by aid of the shrubbery
-up the arroyo to the north side of the <i>patio</i>. See?”</p>
-
-<p>He directed the colonel’s course through an
-almost imperceptible opening in the hedge along
-sharp turns and oblique and narrow ways into a
-small vacant space where the vines covered an
-adobe hut. Jumping out, Tracy unlocked the door
-of this tiny building so that the colonel could
-run the car inside; and after Winter had emerged
-again, he re-locked the door. As there was no
-window, the purpose of the hut was effectually
-concealed.</p>
-
-<p>“Very neat,” the colonel approved; whereat
-Tracy flashed his smile at him in the moonlight
-and owned with ingenuous pride that he himself
-was the contriver of this reticent garage.</p>
-
-<p>From this point he took the lead. Neither
-spoke. They toiled up the hill, in this part of the
-grounds less of the nature of a hill than of an
-arroyo or ravine through which rocks had thrust
-their rugged sides and over which spiked semi-tropical
-cacti had sprawled, and purple and white
-flowered vines had made their own untended
-tangle. Before they reached the level the colonel<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[243]</span>
-was breathing hard, every breath a stab. Tracy, a
-famous track man who had won his H in a wonderful
-cross-country run, felt no distress—until
-he heard his companion gasp.</p>
-
-<p>“Jove! But that hill’s fierce!” he breathed explosively.
-“Do you mind resting a minute?”</p>
-
-<p>“Hardly,”—the colonel was just able to hold
-his voice steady—“I have a Filipino bullet in my
-leg somewhere which the X-ray has never been
-able to account for; and I’m not exactly a mountain
-goat!”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, of course, I’m a brute not to let you run
-up the drive in the machine. Not a rat watching
-us to-night, either; but I wanted you to see the
-place; and you seem so fit—”</p>
-
-<p>“You oughtn’t to give away your secrets to
-me, an outsider—”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re no outsider; I consider you the treasurer
-of the band,” laughed Tracy. They had
-somehow come to an unexpressed but perfectly
-understood footing of sympathy. The colonel
-even let the younger man help him up the last
-stiff clamber of the path. He forgot his first chill,
-as of a witness approaching a tragedy; there was
-a smile on his lips when the two of them passed
-into the <i>patio</i>. It lingered there as he stood in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[244]</span>
-flower-scented gloom. It was there as Tracy stumbled
-to a half-remembered push-button, wondering
-aloud what had become of Cary and Kito that
-they shouldn’t have answered his whistle; it was
-there, still, when Tracy slipped, and grumbled:
-“What sticky stuff has Kito spilled on this floor?”—and
-instantly flooded the court with light.
-Then—he saw the black, slimy pool and the long
-slide of Tracy’s nailed sole in it; and just to
-one side, almost pressing against his own foot, he
-saw a man in a gray suit huddled into the shape
-of a crooked U, with his arms limp at his side
-and his head of iron-gray fallen back askew.
-The light shone on the broad bald dome of the
-forehead. He had been stabbed between the shoulders,
-in the back; and one side of the gray coat
-was ugly to see.</p>
-
-<p>“Good God!” whispered Tracy, growing white.
-“It’s Keatcham! they’ve killed him! Oh, why
-didn’t I come back before!”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[245]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIII<br />
-
-<small>WHOSE FEET WERE SHOD WITH SILENCE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Get out your revolver,” ordered the colonel;
-“look sharp! there may be some one here.”</p>
-
-<p>But there was not a sign of life revealed by
-the search. Meanwhile, Winter was examining
-the body. His first thought was that Keatcham
-had tried to escape and had been struck down in
-his flight. Kito would not scruple at such a deed;
-nor for that matter, Mercer. But why leave the
-man thus? Why not dispose of the body—unless,
-indeed, the assassins had been interrupted. Anyhow,
-what a horrid mess this murder would make
-of the affair! and how was he to keep the women
-out of it! All at once, in the examination which
-he had been making (while a dozen gruesome
-possibilities tumbled over one another in his
-mind) he stopped; he put his ear to the man’s
-heart.</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t he dead?” asked Tracy under his breath.</p>
-
-<p>“No, he is not dead, but I’m afraid he’ll never<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[246]</span>
-find it out,” returned the colonel, shrugging his
-shoulders. “However, any brandy handy? And
-get me some water.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know where there is some brandy—I’ll get
-it; there is some water in the fountain right—<i>Cary!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter?” demanded Cary Mercer
-in one of the arcade doorways of the <i>patio</i>.
-“What’s happened? The devil! Who did this?”
-He strode up to the kneeling soldier.</p>
-
-<p>“You are in a position to know much better
-than I,” said the colonel dryly. “We came this
-moment; we found this.”</p>
-
-<p>“Cary, did <i>you</i> do it?”—the young man laid his
-hand on Cary’s shoulder; his face was ashy but
-his voice rang full and clear. “If you did, I am
-sure you had a reason; but I want to know;
-we’re partners in this thing to the finish.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, boy,” said Cary gently, “that’s
-good to hear. But I didn’t hurt him, Endy. Why
-should I? We’d got what we wanted.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Who did?</i>” asked the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t and Kito didn’t. He went away to
-see his only brother who is sick. He hasn’t got
-back. I don’t know who did it; but whoever
-stabbed him must have done it without warning<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[247]</span>
-him; for I didn’t hear a sound. I was in the
-library.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s breathing a little, I think,” murmured
-the young man, who was sopping the gray mask
-of a face while Winter trickled brandy drop by
-drop into the sagging mouth, “and—look! somebody
-has tried to rob him; that’s a money belt!”</p>
-
-<p>The waistcoat was open and Winter could see,
-beneath, a money belt with buttoned pockets,
-which had been torn apart with such haste that
-one of the buttons had been wrenched off.</p>
-
-<p>“They seem to have been after money,” said
-he; “see! the belt is full of bills; there’s only one
-pocket empty.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps he was interrupted,” explained Mercer.
-“Push the brandy, Colonel, he’s moving his
-eyelids, suh!”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve got to do something to that hole in
-him, first,” said the colonel. “Is there any doctor—”</p>
-
-<p>“I daren’t send for one.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tony Arnold might know one we could trust,”
-suggested Tracy. “I can get him over the long
-distance.”</p>
-
-<p>“We want somebody <i>now</i>, this minute,” declared
-the colonel.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[248]</span>“There’s Janet Smith,” said Mercer, “my sister-in-law;
-she’s Mrs. Winter’s companion; she
-used to be a trained nurse and a mighty good one;
-<i>she</i> could be trusted.”</p>
-
-<p>Could she? And how the terms of his distrust
-had changed! He had fought against an answer
-in the affirmative this morning; now his heart
-was begging for it; he was cold with fear lest
-she wasn’t this conspirator’s confederate.</p>
-
-<p>“Send for them both,” said he with no sign of
-emotion.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll call up Aunt Rebecca,” said Mercer.
-“Isn’t he reviving? No? Best not move him till
-we get the wound dressed, don’t you reckon,
-Colonel?”</p>
-
-<p>But the colonel was already making a rough
-tourniquet out of his handkerchief and a pencil
-to stanch the bleeding. The others obeyed his curt
-directions; and it was not until the still unconscious
-man was disposed in a more comfortable
-posture on the cushions which Tracy brought,
-that Winter sent the latter to the telephone; and
-then he addressed Mercer. He took a sealed package
-from an inner pocket and tendered it, saying:
-“You know who sent it. Whatever happens,
-you’re a Southern gentleman, and I look to you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[249]</span>
-to see that she—they are kept out of this nasty
-mess—absolutely.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course,” returned Mercer, with a trace
-of irritation; “what do you take me for? Now,
-hadn’t I better call Janet?”</p>
-
-<p>“But if this were to be discovered—”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>She</i> wouldn’t have done anything; she is only
-nursing a wounded man whom she doesn’t know,
-at my request.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” acquiesced the colonel, with a
-long sigh as he turned away.</p>
-
-<p>He sat down, cross-legged, like a Turk, on the
-flags beside the wounded man. Mercer was standing
-a little way off. It was to be observed that
-he had not touched Keatcham, nor even approached
-him close enough to reach him by an
-outstretched hand. Winter studied his face, his
-attitude—and suppressed the slightest of starts;
-Mercer had turned his arm to light another electric
-bulb and the action revealed some crimson
-spots on his cuff and a smear on his light trousers
-above the knee. The lamp was rather high and
-he was obliged to raise his arm, thus lifting the
-skirts of his coat which had previously hidden
-the stain. He did not seem aware that his action
-had made any disclosure. He was busy with the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[250]</span>
-light. “That’ll be better,” said he; “I’ll go call up
-Sister Janet.”</p>
-
-<p>How had those stains come? Mercer professed
-just to have entered. Vainly Winter’s brain tried
-to labor through the crazy bewilderment of it all;
-Mercer spoke like an honest man—but look at his
-cuffs! How could any outside assassin enter that
-locked and guarded house?—yet, if Mercer had
-not lied, some one must have stolen in and struck
-Keatcham. Kito? But the Jap was out of the
-house—perhaps! And Janet Smith, what was she
-doing talking to Atkins? Had she given that reptile
-any clue? Could he—but it was his opportunity
-to rescue Keatcham, not to murder him—what
-a confounded maze!</p>
-
-<p>And what business had he, Rupert Winter, who
-had supposed himself to be an honorable man,
-who had sworn to support the Constitution and
-the laws of the United States, what business had
-<i>he</i> to help law-breakers and murderers escape the
-just punishment of their deeds? He almost
-ground his teeth. Oh, well, there was one way out,
-and that was to resign his commission. He would
-do it this very night, he resolved; and he swore
-miserably at himself, at his venerable aunt who
-must be protected at such a sacrifice, at Atkins,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[251]</span>
-at the feebly moaning wretch whom he had not
-ceased all this while to ply carefully with drops of
-brandy. “You everlasting man-eater, if you dare
-to die, I’ll <i>kill</i> you!” he snorted.</p>
-
-<p>Thereupon he went at the puzzle again. Before
-any answer could come to the telephone calls, a
-low, mournful, inhuman cry penetrated the thick
-walls. It was repeated thrice; on the third call,
-Tracy ran quickly through the <i>patio</i> to a side
-door, barred and locked like all the entrances,
-released and swung it open and let in Kito. A
-few murmured words passed between them. The
-Jap uttered a startled exclamation. “But how can
-it to be? How? no one can get in! And who
-shall stab him? For <i>why</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>He examined the wounded man, after a gravely
-courteous salute to Winter; and frowned and
-sighed. “What did it?” said he; “did who
-stabbed, take it ’way, he must give <i>stlong</i> pull!”</p>
-
-<p>“Whoever did it,” said the colonel, “must have
-put a knee on the man’s back and pulled a strong
-pull, as you say.” In speaking the words he felt a
-shiver, for he seemed to see that red smear above
-Mercer’s knee.</p>
-
-<p>He felt the shiver again when Mercer returned
-and he glanced at him; there was not a stain on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[252]</span>
-his shining white cuffs; he had changed them;
-he had also changed his suit of clothes and his
-shoes. His eyes met the colonel’s; and Winter
-fancied there was a glint of defiance in them; he
-made no comment, for no doubt a plausible excuse
-for the fresh clothes was ready. Well, he
-(Winter) wouldn’t ask it. Poor devil! he had had
-provocation.</p>
-
-<p>For the next half-hour they were all busy with
-Keatcham.</p>
-
-<p>“He is better,” pronounced the Jap; “he will
-not live, maybe, but he will talk, he can say who
-hult him.”</p>
-
-<p>“If he can only do that!” cried Mercer. “It
-is <i>infernal</i> to think any one can get in here and do
-such a thing!”</p>
-
-<p>“Rotten,” Tracy moaned.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>They were all still working over Keatcham
-when a bell pealed. Tracy started; but Mercer
-looked a shade relieved. “They’ve come,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>They?</i>” repeated the colonel. He scrambled to
-his feet and gasped.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Smith was coming down the colonnade,
-but not Miss Smith alone. Aunt Rebecca walked
-beside her, serene, erect and bearing a small hand-bag.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[253]</span>
-Miss Smith carried a larger bag; and Tracy
-had possessed himself of a dress-suit case.</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly, Bertie,” remarked his aunt in her
-softest tone, “I came with Janet. My generation
-believed in <i>les convenances</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>All the colonel could articulate was a feeble,
-“And Archie? and Millicent?”</p>
-
-<p>“Haley is staying in your room with Archie.
-Millicent had retired; if she asks for us in the
-morning we shall not be up. She has an appointment
-with Janet, but it isn’t until half-past eleven.
-Randall has her instructions.”</p>
-
-<p>“But—but—how did you get here?”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Rebecca drew herself up. “I trust now,
-Bertie, you will admit that I am as fit as any of
-you to rough it. If there is one mode of transit
-I abominate, it is those loathsome, unsanitary,
-uncivil, joggly street-cars; we came as far as the
-corner in the <i>street-cars</i>, then we walked. Did we
-want to give the number to a cab-man, do you
-suppose? Bertie, have you such a thing as a match
-about you? I think Janet wants to heat a teaspoonful
-of water for a strychnine hypodermic.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[254]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIV<br />
-
-<small>FROM MRS. MELVILLE’S POINT OF VIEW</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="indentright">The Palace Hotel,</span><br />
-San Francisco, March 24, 1906.</p>
-
-<p>My dear Husband:</p>
-
-<p>Although I sent you a postal yesterday, I am
-writing again to-day to try to keep you in touch
-with our <i>extraordinary series</i> of events. Nothing
-has been heard from Archie except the letter—<i>if
-he wrote it</i>—which tells nothing except that
-his kidnappers use the same kind of writing paper
-as Miss Janet Smith. I grow more suspicious of
-her all the time. You ask (but of course you
-wrote before the recent mysterious and tragical
-occurrences) you ask do I like Miss Smith any
-better, now that I am thrown with her so closely.
-No, Melville, <i>I</i> have not the <i>fatal credulity</i> of the
-Winters! I distrust her <i>more</i>. She has, I admit,
-an engaging personality; there is a superficial
-amiability that would be dangerous to one not on
-her guard. But I am never off my guard with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[255]</span>
-her. I’m sorry to say, however, that your brother
-seems deceived by her plausible ways. And, of
-course, our poor aunt is still her blind dupe.
-Aunt Rebecca has failed a good deal this last year;
-she is quite irritable with me, sometimes; and I
-suppose it is the insensibility of age, but she does
-not appear to realize the full horror of this kidnapping.
-Miss Smith actually seems to suffer
-more; she looks pale and haggard and has no
-appetite. I do not think it <i>all pretense</i>, either; I
-dare say much of it is <i>remorse</i>! The situation is
-dreadful. Sometimes I think Aunt Rebecca will
-not yield to the demands of these wretches who
-have our poor boy, and that he will be mutilated
-or murdered; sometimes I think that they have
-murdered him already and are writing forged letters
-to throw us off the track. You can imagine
-how my nerves are shaken! I have seen hardly
-anything of the city; and of course have not gone
-into society at all. Indeed, I have met only one
-pleasant person; that was the secretary of the great
-financier, Mr. Edwin Keatcham, who was here,
-next to us. The secretary is a pleasing person
-quite <i>comme il faut</i> in appearance. I met him here
-in the court where he nearly knocked me over;
-and he apologized profusely—and really very<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[256]</span>
-nicely, using my name. That surprised me, but
-he explained that they had been on the train with
-us. Then I remembered him. His name is Horatio
-Atkins; and he is very polite. He is on a two
-weeks’ vacation and came here to see Mr.
-Keatcham, not knowing he was gone. He was
-really most agreeable and so sympathetic about
-poor dear Archie. He agreed with me that such a
-nervous temperament as Archie’s suffers much
-more from unkindness. I could see, in spite of
-his assumed hopefulness, that he shared my fears.
-He has met quite a number of our friends. He
-may (through Mr. Keatcham) be a <i>most valuable</i>
-acquaintance. Didn’t you tell me, once, that
-Keatcham was the leading benefactor of the university?</p>
-
-<p>He (Mr. Atkins) got his vacation on account
-of his health; and he is going to Southern California.
-I don’t wonder. I have never suffered
-more than in this land of sunshine! It is not so
-much the cold of the air as the humidity! Do
-pray be cautious about changing to your summer
-underwear. <i>Don’t do it!</i> I nearly perished, in the
-bleak wind yesterday, when I tried to visit a few
-shops. Be sure and take the cough medicine <i>on
-the second shelf of our bath-room medicine closet</i>;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[257]</span>
-don’t mistake <i>rheumatism liniment</i> for it; they
-are both on the same shelf; you would better
-sort them out. You are <i>so</i> absent-minded, Melville,
-I haven’t a peaceful day when I’m away
-from you; and do for Heaven’s sake try to bow
-to Mrs. Farrell and call her by her right name!
-You certainly have been to the president’s house
-often enough to know his wife on the street; and
-I don’t think that it was a good excuse which
-you gave to Professor Dale for calling “Good
-morning, Katy!” to Mrs. Dale (who was born a
-Schuyler and is <i>most</i> punctilious) <i>that you mistook
-her for our cook</i>!</p>
-
-<p>I miss you very much. Give my love to all
-our friends and be sure to wear your galoshes
-(your <i>rubbers</i>, you know) when the campus is
-wet, whether it is raining or not.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="indentright2">Your aff. wife,</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">M. Winter.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">THE SAME TO THE SAME</p>
-
-<p class="right">The Palace Hotel, March 25, ten <span class="allsmcap">P. M.</span></p>
-
-<p>My dear Husband:</p>
-
-<p>What do you think has happened? I am almost
-too excited to write. <i>Archie is back!</i> Yes, back<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[258]</span>
-safe and sound, and absolutely indifferent, to
-all appearances, to all our indescribable sufferings
-on his account! He walked into the
-parlor about six or a little after, grinning like
-an ape, as if to disappear from the face of the
-earth and come back to it were quite the usual
-thing. And when we questioned him, he professed
-to be on his word not to tell anything. And Bertie
-upheld him in this ridiculous position! However,
-I was told by the detective whom Bertie
-employed, rather a decent, vulgar, little man, that
-they (Bertie and he) had cornered the kidnappers
-and “called their bluff,” as he expressed it;
-but I’m inclined to think they got their ransom
-from our unfortunate, victimized aunt who is too
-proud to admit it, and that they probably managed
-it through Miss S—. I know they called up the
-room to know if the boy was back; and I puzzled
-them well, I fancy, by saying he <i>was</i>. I may have
-saved our poor aunt some money by that; but I
-can’t tell, of course. Melville, I am almost <i>sure</i>
-that Miss J. S— is at the bottom of it, whatever
-the mystery is. I am almost sure that, not content
-with blackmailing and plundering auntie, Miss
-S— is now <i>making a dead set</i> at poor, blind, simple-hearted
-Bertie! I have reasons which I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[259]</span>
-haven’t time to enumerate. Bertie will hardly
-bear a word of criticism of her patiently; in fact,
-I have ceased to criticize her to him or to Aunt
-Rebecca—ah, it is a lonely, lonely lot to be clear-sighted;
-but <i>noblesse oblige</i>. But often during the
-last few days I have thought that Cassandra
-wasn’t enough pitied.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="indentright2">Your aff. wife,</span><br />
-M.</p>
-
-<p class="center">THE SAME TO THE SAME</p>
-
-<p class="right">Casa Fuerte, San Francisco, Cal.,<br />
-Wednesday. &#160; &#160;</p>
-
-<p>Dear Husband:</p>
-
-<p>This heading may surprise you. But we are
-making a visit to Mr. Anthony Arnold (<i>the</i>
-Arnold’s son) in his beautiful house in the suburbs
-of the city. It was far more convenient
-for me at the Palace where I found Mrs. Wigglesworth
-most attentive and congenial and
-found some <i>great bargains</i>; but you know I can
-not be false to my <i>Trust</i>. To watch Aunt Rebecca
-Winter (without seeming to watch, of course, for
-the aged always resent the care which they need)
-is my chief object in this trip; therefore when Mr.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[260]</span>
-Arnold (whose father she knows, but the old gentleman
-is traveling in Europe with his married
-daughter and her family) when the young Arnold
-urged us all to come and spend a couple of
-weeks with him, I could not very well refuse.
-Though a stranger to me, he is not to Auntie or
-Bertie. The house is his own, left him by his
-mother, who died not very long ago. At first, I
-remained at the Palace with Bertie and Archie;
-Bertie seemed so disturbed at the idea of my going
-and Aunt Rebecca was very liberal, insisting that
-I was just as much her guest as before, it was
-only she who was running away; and the end of
-it was (she has such a compelling personality,
-you know) that she went with Randall and J. S.
-to Casa Fuerte (Strong House—and you would
-call it well-named could you see it; it is a massive
-structure!) while we others remained until Sunday.
-On account of what I have hinted in regard
-to the designs of a certain lady I was not sorry
-to have Bertie under another roof. He has a fortune
-of his own, you know, and a reputation as
-well. Wealth and position at one blow certainly
-would appeal to her, an obscure dependent probably
-of no family (it is not a romantic name), and
-Bertie is very well-bred and rather handsome with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[261]</span>
-his black eyebrows and gray hair and aquiline
-nose. I have been very, very worried, but I feel
-relieved as to that. Melville, <i>she is flying at higher
-game</i>! In this house is a multimillionaire, in fact
-the fourth richest man in the United States, Edwin
-S. Keatcham. He is ill—probably with appendicitis
-which seems to be the common lot. I
-asked the doctor—of course, very delicately—and
-he said, “Well, not exactly, but—” and smiled
-very confidentially; and begged me not to mention
-Mr. Keatcham’s illness or even that he was in the
-house. “You know,” he said, “that when these
-great financiers sneeze, the stock-market shakes;
-so absolute secrecy, please, my dear madam.”
-Don’t mention it to a soul, will you? Of course
-I haven’t seen the invalid; but I’ve seen his valet,
-who is very English; and I have seen his nurse.
-Who do you suppose she is? Janet Smith! Yes;
-you know she has been a trained nurse. Was there
-ever a more artful creature! But Mr. K. is none
-of my affairs; he will have to save himself or be
-lost. Once she is his wife we are safe from that
-designing woman. I am quite willing to admit his
-danger and her fascination. Now, Melville, for
-once admit that I can be just to a woman whom I
-dislike.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[262]</span>This house is sumptuous; I’ve a lovely bath-room
-and a beautiful huge closet with a window.
-It must have cost a mint of money. I have been
-told that Arnold <i>père</i> made a present of it to his
-wife; he let the architect and her draw all the
-plans of it, but he insisted on attending to the
-construction himself; he said he was not going to
-have any contract work or “scamping,” such as I
-am reliably informed has been common in these
-towering new buildings in San Francisco; he
-picked out all the materials himself and inspected
-the inspector. It has what they call “reinforced
-concrete” and all the beams, etc., are steel and the
-lower story is enormously thick as to walls, in the
-genuine Mission style. He said he built for earthquakes.
-The house is all in the Spanish <i>hidalgo</i>
-fashion. I wish you could see the bas-reliefs and
-the carved furniture with cane seats of the seventeenth
-century, <i>all genuine</i>; and the stamped
-leather and the iron grille work—<i>rejas</i> they call it—all
-copied from famous Spanish models from
-Toledo; you know the ancient Spaniards were renowned
-for their <i>rejas</i>. The pictures are fine—all
-Spanish; I don’t know half the names of the
-artists, but they are all old and imposing and some
-of them wonderfully preserved. The electric<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[263]</span>
-lights are all in the shape of lanterns. The <i>patio</i>,
-as they call the court around which the house is
-built, reminded me of the court in Mrs. Gardiner’s
-palace in Boston, only it was not so crowded with
-<i>objets</i> and the pillars are much thicker and the
-tropical plants and vines more luxuriant—on account
-of the climate, I suppose. It is all certainly
-very beautiful.</p>
-
-<p>There is a great arched gateway for carriages—which
-reminds me, do be sure to send the horses
-into the country to rest, one at a time; and have
-Erastus clean the stable properly while they are
-gone. You can keep one horse for golf; but don’t
-use the brougham ever; and why not send the surrey
-to be done over while I am gone? Is the
-piazza painted yet? How does the new cook do?
-Insist upon her cooking you nourishing food.
-You might have the Bridge Club of an evening—there
-are only the four of you—and she might,
-with Emily’s help, get you a nice repast of lobster
-à la Newburg, sandwiches and chicken salad; but
-be sure <i>you</i> don’t touch the lobster! You know
-what happened the last time; and I shan’t be there
-to put on mustard-plasters and give you Hunyadi
-water. If Erastus needs any more chamois skins
-Emily knows where they are, but admonish him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[264]</span>
-to be careful with them; I never saw mortal man
-go through chamois skins the way he can; sometimes
-I think he gives them to the horses to eat!</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="indentright">Good-by,</span><br />
-<span class="indentright2">Your aff. wife,</span><br />
-M.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[265]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XV<br />
-
-<small>“THE LIGHT THAT NEVER WAS”</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>The changes which Mrs. Melville had accepted
-so philosophically, the metamorphosis of the tragic
-and lonely house of mystery into a luxurious
-country villa, the flinging open of the shutters, the
-marshaling of servants, the turning, one may say,
-of the lime-light on a rich man’s ordinary life—all
-this had occurred as swiftly and with as little
-warning as a scene shifts on the stage.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Rebecca Winter may have the credit for
-this <i>bouleversement</i> of plans. By an astonishingly
-early hour, the next morning, she was awake and
-down-stairs, where Kito and Tracy were making
-coffee, toasting bread and admiring the oatmeal
-which had cooked, while they slept, in the Fireless
-Stove. Tracy had planned a surprise of brown
-bread, but through no fault of the Fireless, owing
-solely to his omitting what he called “the pick-me-up,”
-commonly known as soda—an accident,
-as he truly said, which might happen to any lady—the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[266]</span>
-bread was “rather too adhesive.” The
-breakfast, notwithstanding, was a cheerful one,
-because Miss Smith reported the patient a shade
-better. She looked smiling, although rather heavy-eyed.
-Mercer and the colonel had taken turns sitting
-in the adjoining room to bring her ice or hot
-water or be of service outside.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel had suggested calling a doctor, but
-Aunt Rebecca had demurred: “Janet can do
-everything; it is just a question of his heart; and
-she has digitalis and nitroglycerin and strychnine,
-the whole outfit of whips. She has dressed the
-wound with antiseptics. To-morrow will be soon
-enough for the medical talent.” It was she, however,
-who, as soon as breakfast was over, took first
-Mercer and Tracy, then the colonel apart, and
-proposed calling up Keatcham’s confidential associates
-on the long-distance telephone. “Strike,
-but hear me, nephew,” she said languidly, smiling
-at his bewilderment. “Our only chance now is to
-exhaust trumps. Yesterday the game was won.
-Keatcham had surrendered, he had told his partners
-in the deal to make no fight on Tracy’s election;
-they could get what they wanted without
-the Midland; he advised them to cover their shorts
-and get ready for a bull market—”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[267]</span>“How did he do all that when he had lost his
-private code book?”</p>
-
-<p>“How would <i>you</i> do it? You would use the
-long distance telephone. We caught them at Seattle,
-where his men had gone for the meeting.
-I don’t understand why they needed me to suggest
-that. There the poor man was, as your
-Harvard stove agent calls it, rubbering about the
-library, trying to find <i>The Fortunes of Nigel</i> in
-the edition Darley had illustrated; of course, it
-wasn’t there. He had lost it just before he came
-to the Palace, he thought. It seems his old cipher
-needs a particular book, that kind. No doubt in
-my mind that your theory is right and that Atkins
-stole it and perhaps thought he stole the key, but
-didn’t get it. He took a memorandum of ciphers
-which looked like a key. There Keatcham was,
-with millions hanging on his wires and his modern
-substitute for the medieval signet-ring that
-would enforce the message quite lost. What to
-do? Why, there was nothing to do but get another
-cipher! They made up a temporary one,
-right in that library, yesterday afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p>“But how could Mercer be sure Keatcham
-would not play a trick on him? Did he hear the
-conversation?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[268]</span>“Certainly not. He took Keatcham’s word.
-Whatever his faults, Keatcham has always kept
-his word. Mercer was sure he would keep it. He
-went out of the room. He was in the library when
-Keatcham was stabbed.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel drew a long, difficult breath.
-“Then you don’t believe Mercer did it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sure he didn’t. He didn’t hurt him. Why
-should he kill him after he had surrendered? He
-had nothing to gain and considerable to risk, if
-not to lose. We want that bull market.”</p>
-
-<p>“But who did then? Atkins? But he is trying
-to rescue him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is he? How do we know? The rescue was
-only our supposition. I’m only certain none of
-our crowd did it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Kito?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Kito keeps absolutely within his orders;
-he knew how things stood when he went away.
-Mercer saw him go. He couldn’t get in, either;
-he had to signal to be let in. They were as careful
-as that. Now, assuming they all are innocent, isn’t
-it the best plan to telephone to Seattle to Keatcham’s
-next friend there?”</p>
-
-<p>“He hasn’t any family, has he? His wife died
-and there were no children, I think.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[269]</span>“No, and if he ever had any brothers or sisters
-they died when they were little; his business associates
-are the only people Cary knows about.
-He is anxious to have word sent at once, because
-there are important things to do in Keatcham’s
-own interest; he came to California and he has
-employed Cary in a big Portland cement investment;
-Cary has been working all the time on it
-for him—I beg your pardon—” for the colonel
-had raised his hand with a little gasp.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mean,” said he, “that Mercer has been
-acting as Keatcham’s agent, working in <i>his interest</i>
-all the time he was holding him a prisoner and
-ready to kill him rather than let him go?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not? Cary is a man of honor. This cement
-deal is a perfectly fair one which will give
-a fair price to the present owners and make a
-great business proposition. There are other
-schemes, too, very large ones, which need the man
-at the wheel. Now, I have talked with Cary and
-Endicott Tracy and my plan is to call up Warnebold,
-his next friend, who knows Mercer has been
-employed by Keatcham and knows his voice and
-knows he is a trusty man (for Mercer has done
-some inquiries for him and saved him once from
-buying a water-logged steel plant) to call <i>him</i><span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[270]</span>
-up and—tell him the truth. We can say Mr.
-Keatcham was mysteriously stabbed; we can ask
-what is best to do. By that time we can report
-that we have the best medical assistance—young
-Arnold will get his family physician, who can be
-trusted. Warnebold will instruct Mercer, I
-reckon, to keep the fact of the assault a secret, not
-even mention that Mr. Keatcham is ill; and very
-likely he or some one else will come straight on
-here. Meanwhile, young Arnold can open the
-house, hire some servants who won’t talk—I can
-get them for him; we all say nothing of the magnate’s
-presence. And the bull market will come
-all right.”</p>
-
-<p>After a little reflection the colonel agreed that
-the bold course would be the safest. Thus it came
-about, with amazing rapidity, that the haunted
-house was opened; that sleek, smiling Chinamen
-whisked brooms and cleaning cloths at open windows;
-and Haley and Kito frankly told any curious
-inquirers who hailed them over the lawn and
-the flower-beds that young Mr. Arnold was coming
-home and going to have a house-party of
-friends. The servants had been carefully selected
-by Mrs. Winter’s powerful Chinese friend; they
-had no dread of white spooks, however they might<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[271]</span>
-cringe before yellow ones. Mrs. Winter and Randall
-left their hotel, after all the appropriate ceremonies,
-amid the lavish bows and smiles of
-liberally paid bell-boys and porters. They gave
-out that they were to visit friends; and the colonel,
-who remained, was to take charge of their mail;
-hence, with no appearance of secrecy, the trail
-took to water and was lost, since the motor-car
-which carried them was supplied by Birdsall and
-driven by a safe man of his own.</p>
-
-<p>Regarding the detective, Rupert Winter had
-had what he called “a stiff think;” he could not
-afford even the remote risk of his going with the
-picturesque assortment of information which he
-had obtained about Casa Fuerte and Mercer, into
-Atkins’ employ; therefore he hired him, still, himself.
-He made a partial but absolutely truthful
-statement of the case; he said frankly: “Birdsall,
-I’m not going to treat you fair, for I’m not going
-to tell you all I know, because—well, for one
-thing, I don’t feel sure how much I do know myself.
-But all I’m going to ask of you is to watch
-the house, day and night, without seeming to
-watch it. You will oblige Mr. Keatcham as well
-as me. There is a big game going on, but it isn’t
-what you thought. Mr. Keatcham’s best helpers<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[272]</span>
-are right in that house. Mercer and I and young
-Fireless and Arnold are doing our best to guard
-him, not hurt him. Now, there is big money for
-you if you will watch out for us.”</p>
-
-<p>Birdsall reflected a moment before he answered,
-but he did answer, screwing up his face: “I don’t
-like these jobs in the dark; but I like you, Colonel,
-and it’s a go.”</p>
-
-<p>Keatcham’s valet was next summoned from his
-vacation and became, in Tracy’s phrase, “a dandy
-sub-nurse.”</p>
-
-<p>The Tracys’ family physician came twice a day.
-He was known to be visiting one of the guests
-who had fallen ill. Mercer sent three or four telegrams
-a day to Seattle and to New York, to
-Keatcham’s associates. Several times he held a
-conversation of importance over the telephone
-with the man who acted as distributer of intelligence.
-Warnebold, himself, came on to San Francisco
-from Seattle, and was received with every
-courtesy. He questioned Kito, questioned Mercer,
-questioned the colonel. Tracy had effaced
-himself and was in Pasadena for a day or two.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel was the star witness (at least this
-was young Arnold’s verdict). His narrative was
-to the effect that he had gone out to see Mercer,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[273]</span>
-who was a family connection; no, he was not
-alone, he had a young friend with him; confidentially,
-he would admit that the friend was Mr.
-Tracy’s son; and, while he could not be sure, he
-had reason to suspect that he, “young Tracy,”
-had been conducting some delicate negotiations
-with Mr. Keatcham. At this point the interlocutor
-nodded slightly; he was making the deductions
-expected and explaining to himself Keatcham’s
-astonishing communication over the telephone.
-So, he was surmising shrewdly, <i>that</i> was the clue;
-the old man had been making some sort of a deal
-with Tracy through the son; well, they were protected,
-thanks to Keatcham’s orders. Likely as not
-they never would know all the reasons for this
-side-stepping.</p>
-
-<p>“I understand, then,” he said, as one who holds
-a clue but has no notion of letting it slip out of his
-own fingers, “you and young Tracy got here and
-you found Mr. Keatcham? How did you get in?
-Did Mr. Mercer let you in? How did it happen he
-didn’t discover Mr. Keatcham instead of you, or
-did you come in on the side?”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Winter who was in the room had a diversion
-ready, but it was not needed; the colonel
-answered unhesitatingly, with a frank smile:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[274]</span>
-“No, we came in ourselves; young Tracy had a
-key.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he <i>had</i>, had he?” returned Warnebold
-with a shrug of the shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>“He is a great friend of young Arnold’s; they
-were at Harvard together, belonged to the same
-societies.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I understand; well—”</p>
-
-<p>The rest of the interview was clear sailing.
-Mrs. Winter’s presence was explained in her very
-own words. “Of course I was put out a good deal
-at first,” added the colonel, “by the women getting
-mixed up in it; but Miss Smith undoubtedly saved
-Mr. Keatcham’s life. I never saw any one who
-seemed to think of so many things to do. Half a
-dozen times, that first night, he seemed to be fading
-away; but every time she brought him back.
-I was anxious to have a doctor called in; but
-Mercer seemed opposed to making a stir—”</p>
-
-<p>“He knew his business thoroughly,” interjected
-Keatcham’s confidant, “he undoubtedly had his
-instructions to keep Keatcham’s presence here
-a secret.”</p>
-
-<p>“He <i>had</i>,” said Mrs. Winter; “besides, Miss
-Smith is his sister-in-law and he knew that she
-could be trusted to do everything possible. And,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[275]</span>
-really, it didn’t look as if anything could help
-him. I hardly believed that he could live an hour
-when I saw him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nor I,” the colonel corroborated.</p>
-
-<p>Warnebold, plainly impressed by Mrs. Winter’s
-grand air, assured them both that he felt that
-everything that could be done had been done;
-Miss Smith was quite wonderful; and he would
-admit (of course, confidentially) that Mr. Keatcham
-did have a heart trouble; Mr. Mercer had recalled
-one or two fainting fits; there was some
-congestion; and the doctor found a sad absence of
-reaction; he believed that there had been a—er—syncope
-of some sort before the stabbing; Mr.
-Keatcham himself, although he was still too weak
-to talk much, had no recollection of anything except
-a very great faintness. Mr. Mercer’s theory
-seemed to cover the ground.</p>
-
-<p>“Except as to who did the stabbing,” said the
-colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“Has Mr. Keatcham any bitter enemies?”
-asked Aunt Rebecca thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p>“What man who has made a great fortune
-hasn’t?” demanded Warnebold with a saturnine
-wrinkle of the lips. “But our enemies don’t stab
-or shoot us, nowadays.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[276]</span>“They do out West,” said the colonel genially;
-“we’re crude.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you in earnest?”</p>
-
-<p>“Entirely. I know a man, a mine superintendent,
-who got into a row with his miners because
-he discharged a foreman, one of the union lights,
-for stealing ore. In consequence he got a big
-strike on his hands, found a dynamite bomb under
-his front piazza, and was shot at twice. The
-second time he was too quick for them; he shot
-back and killed one of them. He thought it was
-time to put a stop to so much excitement, so he
-sent for the second assassin—”</p>
-
-<p>“And had him arrested?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dear, no; he wasn’t in Massachusetts; I
-told you he wanted the thing stopped. No, he sent
-for him and told him that he had no special ill
-feeling toward <i>him</i>, but that the next time anything
-of the kind happened he had made arrangements
-to have not him, or any other thug who
-was doing the work, but the two men who were at
-the bottom of the whole business, killed within
-twenty-four hours. They took the hint and kind
-feeling now prevails.”</p>
-
-<p>Warnebold grunted; he declared it to be a
-beastly creepy situation; he said he never wanted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[277]</span>
-to sit down without a wall against his back; and
-he intimated that the president of the United
-States was to blame for more than he realized. “I
-hope you have some one watching the house,” he
-fumed, “and that he—well, he doesn’t belong to
-the police force.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, he’s an honest mercenary,” said the colonel;
-“I’ll introduce him to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you haven’t found any method of entering
-the house?” fumed the financier.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Aunt Rebecca.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>He laughed as they both whirled round on him.</p>
-
-<p>“You speak first, my dear aunt,” he proposed politely;
-“I’ll explain later.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Winter said that a most careful examination
-had been made not only by Mercer and the
-colonel together, but also by young Arnold. They
-found everything absolutely secure; all the windows
-were bolted and all the cellar gratings firm
-and impossible to open.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, you?” said Warnebold.</p>
-
-<p>“I only found out to-day,” apologized the colonel,
-“or I should have spoken of it. I got to
-thinking; and it occurred to me that in a house
-built, as I understood from Arnold, by a very<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[278]</span>
-original architect, there might be some queer features,
-such as secret passages. With that in my
-mind, I induced the young gentleman to hunt up
-the architect, as he lives in San Francisco. He not
-only showed us some very pretty secret passages
-about the house, but one that led into it. Shall I
-show it to you?”</p>
-
-<p>On their instantly expressed desire to see the
-hidden way, the colonel led them to the <i>patio</i>.
-He walked to the engaged column which once
-before had interested him; he pressed a concealed
-spring under the boldly carved eight-pointed
-flower; instantly, the entire side of the columns
-swung as a door might swing. As they peered
-into the dusky space below, the colonel, who had
-put down his arm, pressed an electric button and
-the white light flooded the shaft, revealing an ingenious
-ladder of cleats fitted into steel uprights.</p>
-
-<p>“Here,” said the colonel, “is a secret way from
-the <i>patio</i> to the cellar. The cellar extends a little
-beyond the <i>patio</i> and there is a way down from the
-yard to the cellar—I can quickly show you, if you
-like.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, thank you,” replied Warnebold, who was
-a man of full habit and older than the colonel, “I
-will take <i>your</i> personal experience instead.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[279]</span>“Then if you will go out into the yard with me
-I will show you where a charming pergola ends
-in a vine-wreathed sun-dial of stone that you
-may tug at and not move; but press your foot on
-a certain stone, the whole dial swings round on a
-concealed turn-table such as they have in garages,
-you know. You will have no difficulty in finding
-the right stone, because an inscription runs round
-the dial: <i>Más vale tarde que nunca</i>; and the stone
-is directly opposite <i>nunca</i>. When you have moved
-away your dial you will see a gently inclining tunnel,
-high enough for a man to walk in without
-stooping, wide enough for two, and much better
-ventilated than the New York subway. That tunnel
-leads to a secret door opening directly into the
-cellar, so skilfully contrived that it looks like an
-air-shaft. This door is only a few feet from the
-shaft to the <i>patio</i>. We have found a bolt and put
-it on this entrance, but there wasn’t any before;
-nor did any one in the house know of the secret
-passage.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel went on to say that on questioning
-the architect he averred that he had never mentioned
-the secret passage to his knowledge—except
-that very recently, only a few days before,
-at a dinner, he had barely alluded to it; and one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[280]</span>
-of the gentlemen present, an Easterner, had asked
-him where he got a man to make such a contrivance—it
-must take skill. He had mentioned the
-name of the workman. The colonel had hunted
-up the artisan mentioned, only to find that he had
-left town to take a job somewhere; no one seemed
-to know where. Of course he had inquired of
-everybody. The name of the Easterner was Atkins.</p>
-
-<p>“Atkins,” cried Warnebold, at this turn of the
-narrative, “Keatcham’s secretary? Why, he’s the
-boldest and slyest scoundrel in the United States!
-He started a leak in Keatcham’s office that made
-him a couple of hundred thousands and lost us a
-million, and might have lost us more if Mercer
-hadn’t got on to him. Keatcham wouldn’t believe
-he had been done to the extent he was at first—you
-know the old man hates to own to any one’s
-getting the better of him; it’s the one streak of
-vanity I’ve ever been able to discover in him.
-Otherwise, he’s cold and keen as a razor on a
-frosty morning. He was convinced enough, however,
-to discharge Atkins; the next news I had,
-he was trying to send him to the pen. Gave us
-instructions how to get the evidence. No allusion
-to his past confidence in the fellow, simply the orders—as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[281]</span>
-if we knew all the preliminaries. Wonderful
-man, Mr. Keatcham, Colonel Winter.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very,” agreed the colonel dryly.</p>
-
-<p>By this time the warrior and the man of finance
-were on easy terms. Warnebold remained three
-days. Before he left the patient had been pronounced
-out of danger and had revived enough to
-give some succinct business directions. Mercer
-had been sent to look out for the cement deal;
-and Keatcham appeared a little relieved and
-brighter when he was told that Mercer was on
-his way.</p>
-
-<p>“He will put it through if it can be put,” he
-had said weakly to Warnebold; “he’s moderately
-smart and perfectly honest.” Such words, Warnebold
-explained later to Mrs. Winter, coming from
-Keatcham might be regarded almost as extravagant
-commendation. “Your cousin’s fortune is
-made,” he pronounced solemnly; “he can get Atkins’
-place, I make no doubt.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Winter thought that Mercer was a very
-valuable man.</p>
-
-<p>“Only always so melancholy; I’ve been afraid
-he had something serious the matter with his digestion.
-It’s these abominable quick lunches that
-are ruining the health of all our steady young<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[282]</span>
-men. I don’t know but they are almost as bad
-as chorus girls and late suppers. Well, Mrs. Winter,
-I’m afraid we shall not have another chance
-at bridge until I see you in New York. But, anyhow,
-we stung the colonel once—and with Miss
-Smith playing her greatest game, too. Pity she
-can’t induce Mr. Keatcham to play; but he never
-touches a card, hardly ever takes anything to
-drink, doesn’t like smoking especially, takes a cigarette
-once in a while only, never plays the races or
-bets on the run of the vessel—positively such icy
-virtue gives an ordinary sinner the cramps! Very
-great man though, Mrs. Winter, and a man we
-are all proud to follow; he may be overbearing;
-and he doesn’t praise you too much, but somehow
-you always have the consciousness that he sees
-every bit of good work you do and is marking it
-up in your favor; and you won’t be the loser.
-There is no question he has a hold on his associates;
-but he certainly is not what I call a genial
-man.”</p>
-
-<p>Only on the day of his departure did Warnebold,
-in young Arnold’s language, “loosen up”
-enough to tell Arnold and the colonel a vital incident.
-The night of the attack a telegram was
-sent to Warnebold in Keatcham’s confidential<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[283]</span>
-cipher, directing the campaign against Tracy to
-be pushed hard, ordering the dumping of some big
-blocks of stock on the market and arranging for
-their dummy purchasers. The naming of Atkins
-as the man in charge was plausible enough, presuming
-there had been no knowledge of the break
-in his relations with Keatcham. The message was
-couched in Keatcham’s characteristic crisp phraseology.
-But for the receiver’s knowledge of the
-break and but for the previous long-distance conversation,
-it had reached its mark. The associates
-of Keatcham were puzzled. The hands were the
-hands of Esau but the voice was the voice of
-Jacob. There had been a hurried consultation into
-which the second long-distance telephone from
-San Francisco broke like a thunderclap. It decided
-the hearers to keep to their instructions and
-disregard the cipher despatch.</p>
-
-<p>“And didn’t you send any answer?” the colonel
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, certainly; we had an address given, The
-Palace Hotel, Mr. John G. Makers. We wired
-Mr. Makers—in cipher. ‘Despatch received. Will
-attend to it,’ I signed. And I wired to the manager
-of the hotel to notice the man who took the
-despatch. It wasn’t a man, it was a lady.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[284]</span>“A lady?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, she had an order for Mr. Makers’ telegrams.
-Mr. Makers gave the order. Mr. Makers
-himself only stopped one night and went away in
-the morning and nobody seemed to remember him
-particularly; he was a nondescript sort of party.”</p>
-
-<p>“But the lady?” The colonel’s mouth felt dry.</p>
-
-<p>“The lady? She was tall, fine figure, well
-dressed, dark hair, the telegraph girl thought, but
-she didn’t pay any special attention. She had a
-very pleasant, musical voice.”</p>
-
-<p>“That doesn’t seem to be very definite,” remarked
-the colonel with a crooked smile.</p>
-
-<p>It didn’t look like a clue to Warnebold, either;
-but he was convinced of one thing, namely, that
-it would pay to watch the ex-secretary.</p>
-
-<p>“And,” chuckled he, “there’s a cheerful side to
-the affair. Atkins is loaded to the guards with
-short contracts; and the Midland is booming; if
-the rise continues, he can’t cover without losing
-about all he has. By the way, we got another wire
-later in the day demanding what we were about,
-what it all meant that we hadn’t obeyed instructions.
-Same address for answer. This time we
-thought we had laid a nice trap. But you can’t
-reckon on a hotel; somehow, before we got warning,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[285]</span>
-Mr. Makers had telephoned for his despatch
-and got it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where did he telephone from?”</p>
-
-<p>“From his room in the Palace.”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought he had given up his room?”</p>
-
-<p>“He had. But—somebody telephoned to the
-telegraph office from somewhere in the hotel and
-got Mr. Makers’ wire. You can get pretty much
-everything except a moderate bill out of a hotel.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see,” said the colonel and immediately in his
-heart compared himself to the immortal “blind
-man;” for his wits appeared to him to be tramping
-round futilely in a maze; no nearer the exit
-than when the tramp began.</p>
-
-<p>That night, after Warnebold had departed,
-leaving most effusive thanks and expressions of
-confidence, Winter was standing at his window
-absently looking at the garden faintly colored by
-the moonlight, while his mind was plying back
-and forth between half a dozen contradictions.</p>
-
-<p>He went over the night of the attack on Keatcham;
-he summoned every look, every motion of
-Janet Smith; in one phase of feeling he cudgeled
-himself for a wooden fool who had been absolutely
-brutal to a defenseless woman who trusted
-him; he hated himself for the way he would not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[286]</span>
-see her when she looked toward him; no wonder
-at last she stiffened, and now she absolutely
-avoided him! But, in a swift revulsion against
-his own softness he was instantly laying on the
-blows as lustily because of his incredible, pig-headed
-credulity. How absolutely simple the
-thing was! She <i>cared</i> for this scoundrel of an Atkins
-who had first betrayed his employer and then
-tried to murder him. Very likely they had been
-half engaged down there in Virginia; and he had
-crawled out of his engagement; it would be quite
-like the cur! Later he found that just such a distinguished,
-charming woman, who had family
-and friends, was what he wanted; it would be easy
-enough for him to warm up his old passion, curse
-him! Then, he had met her and run in a bunch
-of plausible lies that had convinced her that he
-had been a regular angel in plain clothes; hadn’t
-done a thing to Cary or to her. Atkins was such
-a smooth devil! Winter could just picture him
-whining to the girl, putting his life in her hands
-and all that rot; and making all kinds of a tool of
-her—why, the whole hand was on the board! So
-she was ready to throw them all overboard to
-save Atkins from getting his feet wet. That was
-why she looked so pale and haggard of a morning<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[287]</span>
-sometimes, in spite of that ready smile of hers;
-that was why her eyes were so wistful; she wasn’t
-a false woman and she sickened of her squalid
-part. She loved Aunt Rebecca and Archie—all
-the same, she would turn them both down for
-him; while as to Rupert Winter, late of the United
-States army, a worn-out, lame, elderly idiot who
-had flung away the profession he loved and every
-chance of a future career in order to have his
-hands free to keep her out of danger—where were
-there words blistering enough for such puppy-dog
-folly! At this point in his jealous imaginings the
-pain in him goaded him into motion; he began
-furiously pacing the room, although his lame leg,
-which he had been using remorselessly all day,
-was sending jabs and twists of agony through
-him. But after a little he halted again before the
-casement window.</p>
-
-<p>The wide, darkening view; the great, silent city
-with its myriad lights; the shining mist of the
-bay; the foot-hills with their sheer, straw-colored
-streaks through the forests and vineyards; the illimitable
-depths of star-sown, violet sky—all these
-touched his fevered mood with a sudden calm.
-His unrest was quieted, as one whose senses are
-cooled by a running stream.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[288]</span>“You hot-headed Southerner!” he upbraided
-himself, “don’t get up in the air without any real
-proof!”</p>
-
-<p>Almost in the flitting of the words through his
-brain he saw her. The white gown, which was her
-constant wear in the sick-room, defined her figure
-clearly against a clump of Japan plum-trees.
-Their purplish red foliage rustled; and an unseen
-fountain beyond made a delicate tinkle of water
-splashing a marble basin. Her face was hidden;
-only the moonlight gently drew the oval of her
-cheek. She was standing still, except that one foot
-was groping back and forth as if trying to find
-something. But, as he looked, his face growing
-tender, she knelt on the sod and pulled something
-out of the ground. This something she seemed to
-dust off with her handkerchief—he could not see
-the object, but he could see the flutter of the handkerchief;
-and when she rose the white linen partly
-hid the thing in her hand. Only partly, because
-when she passed around the terrace wall the glow
-from an electric lantern, in an arch, fell full upon
-her and burnished a long, thin blade of steel.</p>
-
-<p>He looked down on her from his unlighted
-chamber; and suddenly she looked up straight at
-the windows of the room where she thought he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[289]</span>
-was sleeping; and smiled a dim, amused, weary,
-tender smile. Then she sped by, erect and light of
-foot; and the deep shadow of the great gateway
-took her. All he could see was the moonlight on
-the bluish green lawn; and the white electric light
-on the gleaming rubber-trees and dusty palms.</p>
-
-<p>He sat down. He clasped his hands over his
-knee. He whistled softly a little Spanish air. He
-laughed very gently. “My dear little girl,” said
-he, “I am going to marry you. You may be swindled
-into helping a dozen murderers; but I am
-going to marry you!”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[290]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XVI<br />
-
-<small>THE REAL EDWIN KEATCHAM</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>One Sunday after Mrs. Melville Winter and
-Archie came to Casa Fuerte, Mr. Keatcham sent
-for the colonel. There was nothing unusual in
-such a summons. From the beginning of his illness
-he had shown a curious, inexpressive desire
-for the soldier’s company. He would have him
-sit in the room, although too weak to talk to him,
-supposing he wished to talk, which was not at all
-sure. “I like-to-see-him-just-sitting-there,” he faltered
-to his nurse, “can’t-he-read-or-play-solitaire-like-the-old-lady?”</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes Winter would be conscious that the
-feeble creature in the bed, with the bluish-white
-face, was staring at him. Whether the glassy eyes
-beheld his figure or went beyond him to unfinished
-colossal schemes that might change the fate of a
-continent, or drifted backward to the poverty-stricken
-home, the ferocious toil and the unending
-self-denial of Keatcham’s youth on the Pacific<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[291]</span>
-slope, the dim gaze gave no clue. All that was
-apparent was that it was always on Winter, as he
-curled his legs under his chair, wrote or knitted
-his brow over rows of playing-cards.</p>
-
-<p>At the very first, Keatcham’s mind had wandered;
-he used to shrink from imaginary people
-who were in the room; he would try to talk to
-them, distressing himself painfully, for he was so
-weak that his nurses turned his head on the pillow;
-he would feebly motion them away. In such aberrations
-he would sometimes appeal, in a changed,
-thin, childish voice, to the obscure, toil-worn
-pioneer woman who had died while he was a lad.
-“Mother, I <i>was</i> a good boy; I always got up when
-you called me, didn’t I? I helped you iron when
-the other boys were playing—mother, please don’t
-let that old woman stay and cry here!” Or he
-would plead: “Mother, tell her, say, <i>you</i> tell her
-I didn’t know her son would kill himself—I
-couldn’t tell—he was a damn coward, anyhow—excuse
-me, mama, I didn’t mean to swear, but
-they make me so awful mad!” There was a girl
-who came, sometimes, from whose presence he
-shrank; a girl he had never seen; nor, indeed, had
-he ever known in the flesh any of the shapes
-which haunted him. They had lived; but never<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[292]</span>
-had his eyes fallen on them. Nevertheless, their
-presence was as real to him as that of the people
-about him whom he could hear and touch and see.
-It did not take Winter’s imagination long to piece
-out the explanation of these apparitions: they
-were specters of the characters in those dramas
-of ruthless conquest which Mercer had culled out
-of newspaper “stories” and affidavits and court
-reports and forced upon Keatcham’s attention.
-Miss Smith helped him to the solution, although
-her own ignorance of Mercer’s method was puzzling.
-“How did he ever know old Mrs. Ferris?”
-she said. “He called her Ferris and he talks about
-her funny dress—she always did wear a queer little
-basque and full skirt after all the world went
-into blouses—but how did <i>he</i> ever come across
-her? They had a place on the James that had
-been in the family a hundred years and had to
-lose it on account of the Tidewater; and Nelson
-Ferris blew his brains out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you know how?” asked the colonel.
-“Well, I’ll tell you my guess sometime. Who is
-the girl who seems to make him throw a fit so?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not sure; I imagine it is poor Mabel Ray;
-there were two of them, sisters; they made money
-out of their Tidewater stock and went to New<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[293]</span>
-York to visit some kin; and they got scared when
-the stock fell and the dividends stopped; and they
-sold out at a great loss. They never did come
-back; they had persuaded all their kin to invest;
-and the stopping of the dividends made it difficult
-for some of the poor ones—Mabel said she
-couldn’t face her old aunts. She went on the stage
-in New York. She was very pretty; she wasn’t
-very strong. Anyway, you can imagine the end
-of the story. I saw her in the park last winter
-when Mrs. Winter was in New York; she turned
-her face away—poor Mabel!”</p>
-
-<p>Through Janet Smith’s knowledge of her dead
-sister’s neighbors, Winter got a dozen pitiful records
-of the wreckage of the Tidewater. “Mighty
-interesting reading,” he thought grimly, “but
-hardly likely to make the man responsible for
-them stuck on himself!” Then he would look at
-the drawn face on the pillow and listen to the babblings
-of the boy who had had no childhood; and
-the frown would melt off his brow.</p>
-
-<p>He did not always talk to his mother when his
-mind wandered; several times he addressed an invisible
-presence as “Helen” and “Dear” with an
-accent of tenderness very strange on those inflexible
-lips. When he talked to this phantasm he was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[294]</span>
-never angry or distressed; his turgid scowl
-cleared; the austere lines chiseling his cheeks and
-brow faded; he looked years younger. But for
-the most part, it was to no unreal creature that he
-turned, but to Colonel Rupert Winter. He would
-address him with punctilious civility, but as one
-who was under some obligation to assist him, saying,
-for instance, “Colonel Winter, I must beg
-you not to let those persons in the room again.
-They annoy me. But you needn’t let Mercer know
-that. Please attend to it yourself, and get them
-away. Miss Smith says you will. Explain to them
-that when I get up I will investigate their claims.
-I’m too sick now!”</p>
-
-<p>Conscious and free from fever, he was barely
-able to articulate, but when delirious fancies possessed
-him he could talk rapidly, in a good voice.
-Very soon it was clear that he was calmer for the
-colonel’s presence. Hence, the latter got into the
-habit of sitting in the room. He would request
-imaginary ruined and desperate beings to leave
-Keatcham in peace; he would gravely rise and
-close the door on their departure. He never was
-surprised nor at a loss; and his dramatic nerve
-never failed. Later, as the visions faded, a moody
-reserve wrapped the sick man. He lay motionless,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[295]</span>
-evidently absorbed by thought. In one way he
-was what doctors call a very good patient. He
-obeyed all directions; he was not restless. But
-neither was he ever cheerful. Every day he asked
-for his pulse record and his temperature and his
-respiration. After a consultation with the doctor,
-Miss Smith gave them to him.</p>
-
-<p>“It is against the rules,” grumbled the doctor,
-“but I suppose each patient has to make his own
-rules.” On the same theory he permitted the colonel’s
-visits.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, with no surprise, Winter received
-and obeyed the summons. Keatcham greeted him
-with his usual stiff courtesy.</p>
-
-<p>“The doctor says I can have the—papers—will
-you pick out—the—one—day after I was
-stabbed.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Smith indicated a pile on a little table,
-placed ready at hand. “I kept them for him,” she
-said.</p>
-
-<p>“Read about—the Midland,” commanded the
-faint, indomitable voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Want the election and the newspaper sentiments?”
-asked the colonel; he gave it all, conscious
-the while of Janet Smith’s compassionate,
-perplexed, sorrowful eyes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[296]</span>“Don’t skip!” Keatcham managed to articulate
-after a pause.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel gave him a keen glance. “Want it
-straight, without a chaser?”</p>
-
-<p>Keatcham closed his eyes and nodded.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel read about the virtually unanimous
-election of Tracy; the astonishment of the outsiders
-among the supposed anti-Tracy element;
-the composed and impenetrable front of the men
-closest to Keatcham; the reticence and amiability
-of Tracy himself, in whose mien there could be
-detected no hint either of hostility or of added
-cordiality toward the men who had been expected
-“to drag his bleeding pride in the dust;” finally of
-the response of the stock-market in a phenomenal
-rise of Midland.</p>
-
-<p>Keatcham listened with his undecipherable
-mask of attention; there was not so much as the
-flicker of an eyelid or the twitch of a muscle. All
-he said was: “Now, read if there is anything
-about the endowment of the new fellowships in
-some medical schools for experimental research.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who gives the endowment?”</p>
-
-<p>“Anonymous. In memory of Maria Warren
-Keatcham and Helen Bradford Keatcham. Find
-anything?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[297]</span>The colonel found a great deal about it. The
-paper was full of this munificent gift, amounting
-to many millions of dollars and filling (with
-most carefully and wisely planned details) an
-almost absolute vacuum in the American scheme
-of education. The dignity and fame of the chairs
-and fellowships endowed were ample to tempt the
-best ability of the profession. The reader grew enthusiastic
-as he read.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, it’s immense! And we have always
-needed it!” he exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>“There are some letters about it, there,”—Keatcham
-feebly motioned to a number of neatly
-opened, neatly assorted letters on a desk. “The
-doctor said I might have the letters read to me.
-Miss Smith got him to. For fear of exciting you,
-the doctors usually let you worry your head off
-because you don’t know about things. I’ve got to
-carry a few things through if it kills me. Don’t
-you see?”</p>
-
-<p>“I see,” said the colonel, “you shall.”</p>
-
-<p>The next time he saw the financier, although
-only a few days had elapsed, he was much
-stronger; he was able to breathe comfortably, he
-spoke with ease, in his ordinary voice; in fine, he
-looked his old self again, merely thinner and paler.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[298]</span>
-Hardly was the colonel seated before he said
-without preface—Keatcham never made approaches
-to his subject, regarding conversational
-road-making as waste of brains for a busy man:</p>
-
-<p>“Colonel, Miss Smith hasn’t time to be my
-nurse and secretary both. I won’t have one sent
-from New York; will you help her out?”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel’s lips twitched; he was thinking
-that were Miss Smith working for Atkins, she
-couldn’t have a better chance to make a killing.
-“But I’ll bet my life she isn’t,” he added; “she
-may be trying to save his life, but she isn’t playing
-his game!”</p>
-
-<p>He said aloud: “I will, Mr. Keatcham, if you
-will let me do it as part of the obligation of the
-situation; and there is no bally rot about compensation.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” said Keatcham. He did not hesitate;
-it was (as the colonel had already discovered)
-the rarest thing in the world for him to
-hesitate; he thought with astonishing rapidity;
-and he formulated his answer while his interlocutor
-talked; before the speech was over the answer
-was ready. Another trait of his had struck the
-soldier, namely, the laborious correctness of his
-speech; it was often formal and old-fashioned;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">[299]</span>
-Aunt Rebecca said that he talked like Daniel
-Webster’s speeches; but it had none of the homely
-and pungent savor one might expect from a man
-whose boyhood had scrambled through miners’
-camps into a San Francisco stock office; who had
-never gone to school in his life by daylight; who
-had been mine superintendent, small speculator
-and small director in California until he became
-a big speculator and big railway controller in
-New York.</p>
-
-<p>“You might begin on the morning mail,”
-Keatcham continued. “Let me sort them first.”
-He merely glanced at the inscriptions on the envelopes,
-opening and taking out one which he read
-rather carelessly, frowning a little before he
-placed it to one side.</p>
-
-<p>A number of the letters concerned the endowments
-of the experimental chairs at the universities.
-Keatcham’s attention was not lightened by
-any ray of pleasure. Once he said: “That fellow
-has caught my idea,” and once: “That’s right,”
-but there was no animation in his voice, no interest
-in his pallid face. Stealing a furtive scrutiny
-of it, now and then, Rupert Winter was impressed
-with its mystical likeness to that of Cary Mercer.
-There was no physical similarity of color or feature;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">[300]</span>
-it was a likeness of the spirit rather than the
-flesh. The colonel’s eyes flashed.</p>
-
-<p>“I have it!” he exclaimed within, “I have it;
-they are fanatics, both of them; Keatcham’s a
-fanatic of finance and Mercer is a fanatic of another
-sort; but fanatics they both are, ready to go
-any length for their principles or their ambitions
-or their revenge! <i>J’ai trouvé le mot d’énigme</i>,
-as Aunt Becky would say—I wonder what
-she’ll say to this sudden psychological splurge of
-mine.”</p>
-
-<p>“The business hour is up,”—it was Miss Smith
-entering with a bowl on a white-covered tray; the
-sun glinted the lump of ice in the milk and the
-silver spoon was dazzling against the linen—“your
-biscuit and milk, Mr. Keatcham. Didn’t
-you have it when you were a boy?”</p>
-
-<p>“I did, Miss Janet,”—and Keatcham actually
-smiled. “I used to think crackers and milk the
-nicest thing in the world.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is because you never tasted corn pone
-and milk; but you are going to.”</p>
-
-<p>“When you make it for me. I’m glad you’re
-such a good cook. It’s one of your ways I like.
-My mother was a very good cook. She could
-make better dishes out of almost nothing than<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">[301]</span>
-these mongrel chefs can make with the whole
-world.”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon she could,” said Miss Smith; she was
-speaking sincerely.</p>
-
-<p>“When my father didn’t strike pay dirt, my
-mother would open her bakery and make pies for
-the miners; she could make bread with potato
-yeast or ‘salt-emptins’—can you make salt-rising
-bread?”</p>
-
-<p>“I can—shall I make you some, to-morrow?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d like it. My mother used to make more
-money than my father; sometimes when we children
-were low in clothes and dad owed a bigger
-lot of money than usual, we had a laundry at our
-house as well as a bakery. Yet, in spite of all the
-work, my mother found time to teach all of us;
-and she knew how to teach, too; for she was principal
-of a school when my father married her.
-She was a New Englander; so was he; but they
-went West. We’re forty-niners. I saw the place
-where our little cloth-and-board shack used to
-stand. After the big fire, you know. It burned us
-all up; we had saved a good deal and my mother
-had a nice bakery. She worked too hard; it killed
-her. Work and struggle and losing the children.”</p>
-
-<p>“They died?” said Miss Janet.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">[302]</span>“Diphtheria. They didn’t know anything about
-the disease then. We all had it; and my little sister
-and both my brothers died; but I’m tough.
-I lived. My mother fell into what they called a
-decline. I was making a little money then—I was
-sixteen; but I couldn’t keep her from working.
-Perhaps it made no difference; but it did make a
-difference her not having the—the right kind of
-food. Nobody knew anything about consumption
-then. I used to go out in the morning and be
-afraid I’d find her dead when I got back. One
-night I did.” He stopped abruptly, crimsoning up
-to his eyes—“I don’t know why I’m telling you
-all this.”</p>
-
-<p>“I call that tough,”—as the colonel blurted out
-the words, he was conscious of a sense of repetition.
-When had he said those very same words
-before, to whom? Of all people in the world, to
-Cary Mercer. “Mighty tough,” murmured he
-softly.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Keatcham, “it was.” He did not
-say anything more. Neither did the colonel.
-Keatcham obediently ate his milk and biscuit;
-and very shortly the colonel took his leave.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning after an uneventful hour of
-sorting, reading and answering letters for Miss<span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">[303]</span>
-Smith to copy on the traveling type-writer,
-Keatcham gave his new secretary a sharp sensation;
-he ordered in his quiet but peremptory
-fashion: “Now put that trash away; sit down;
-tell me all you know of Cary—real name is Cary
-Mercer, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel said it was; he asked him if he
-wanted everything.</p>
-
-<p>“Everything. Straight. Without a chaser,”
-snapped Keatcham.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel gave it to him. He began with
-his own acquaintance; he told about Phil Mercer;
-he did not slur a detail; neither did he underscore
-one; Keatcham got the uncolored facts. He heard
-them impassively, making only one comment:
-“A great deal of damage would be saved in this
-world if youngsters could be shut up until they
-had sense enough not to fool with firearms.”
-When Winter came to Mercer’s own exposition
-of his motives and his design if successful in his
-raid on the kings of the market, Keatcham grunted;
-at the end he breathed a noiseless jet of a
-sigh. “You don’t think Mercer is at all”—he
-tapped the side of the head.</p>
-
-<p>“No more than you are.”</p>
-
-<p>“Or you?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">[304]</span>“Oh, well,” the colonel jested, “we all have a
-prejudice in favor of our own sanity. What I
-meant was that Mercer is a bit of a fanatic; his
-hard luck has—well, prejudiced him—”</p>
-
-<p>Keatcham’s cold, firm lips straightened into his
-peculiar smile, which was rather of perception
-than of humor.</p>
-
-<p>One might say of him—Aunt Rebecca Winter
-did say of him—that he saw the incongruous,
-which makes up for humor, but he never enjoyed
-it; possibly it was only another factor in his contempt
-of mankind.</p>
-
-<p>“Colonel,” said Keatcham, “do you think Wall
-Street is a den of thieves?”</p>
-
-<p>“I do,” said the colonel promptly. “I should
-like to take a machine gun or two and clean you
-all out.”</p>
-
-<p>Keatcham did not smile; he blinked his eyes
-and nodded. “I presume a good many people
-share your opinion of us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Millions,” replied the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>Again Keatcham nodded. “I thought so,” said
-he. “Of course you are all off; Wall Street is as
-necessary to the commonwealth as the pores to
-your skin; they don’t make the poison in the system
-any more than the pores do; they only let it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">[305]</span>
-escape. And I suppose you think that big financiers
-who control the trusts and the railways
-and—”</p>
-
-<p>“Us,” the colonel struck in, “well?”</p>
-
-<p>“You think we are thieves and liars and murderers
-and despots?”</p>
-
-<p>“All of that,” said the colonel placidly; “also
-fools.”</p>
-
-<p>“You certainly don’t mince your words.”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t want me to. What use would my
-opinion be in a one-thousandth attenuation?
-You’re no homeopath; and whatever else you may
-be, you’re no coward.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yet, you think I surrendered to Mercer? You
-think I did it because I was afraid he would
-kill me? I suppose he would have killed me if I
-hadn’t, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“He can speak for himself about that; he
-seems—well, an earnest sort of man. But I don’t
-think you gave in because you were afraid, if that
-is what you mean. You are no more afraid than he
-was! You wanted to live, probably; you had big
-things on hand. The Midland was only a trump
-in the game; you could win the odd trick with
-something else; you let the Midland go.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pretty close,”—Keatcham really smiled—“but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">[306]</span>
-there is a good deal more of it. I was shut up with
-the results of my—my work. He did it very
-cleverly. I had nothing to distract me. There
-were the big type-written pages about the foolish
-people who had lost their money, in some cases
-really through my course, mostly because they
-got scared and let go and were wiped out when,
-if they had had confidence in me and held on, they
-would be very much better off, now. But they
-didn’t, and they were ruined and they starved and
-took their boys out of college and mortgaged their
-confounded homes that had been in their families
-ever since Adam; and the old people died of
-broken hearts and the girls went wrong and some
-of the idiotic quitters killed themselves—it was
-not the kind of crowd you would want shut up
-with you in the dark! I was shut up with them.
-He had some sort of way of switching off the
-lights from the outside. I never saw a face or
-heard a voice. I would have to sit there in the
-dark after he thought I had read enough to
-occupy my mind. It—was unpleasant. Perhaps
-you suppose that brought me round to his way of
-thinking?”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel meditated. “I’ll tell you honestly,”
-he said after a pause, “I was of that opinion, or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">[307]</span>
-something of the kind, until I talked your case
-over with my aunt—”</p>
-
-<p>“The old dame is not a fool; what did she say?”</p>
-
-<p>“She said no, he didn’t convert you; but he
-convinced you how other people looked at your
-methods. You couldn’t get round the fact that a
-majority of your countrymen think your type of
-financier is worse than smallpox, and more contagious.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, she put it that way, did she? I wish she
-would write a prospectus for me. Well, you
-think she was nearer right than you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think <i>you</i> do; I myself think it was a little
-of both. You’ve got a heart and a conscience
-originally, though they have got pretty well
-tanned out in the weather; you didn’t want to be
-sorry for those people, but you are. They have
-bothered you a lot; but it has bothered you more
-to think that instead of going down the ages as a
-colossal benefactor and empire builder, you are
-hung up on the hook to see where you’re at;
-and where you <i>will</i> be if the people get thoroughly
-aroused. You all are building bigger balloons
-when it ought to be you for the cyclone cellar!
-But <i>you</i> are different. You can see ahead. I give
-you credit for seeing.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">[308]</span>“Have you ever considered,” said Keatcham
-slowly, “that in spite of the iniquitous greed of
-the men you are condemning, in spite of their
-oppression of the people, the prosperity of the
-country is unparalleled? How do you explain it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Crops,” said the colonel; “the crops were too
-big for you.”</p>
-
-<p>“You might give <i>us</i> a little credit—your aunt
-does. She was here to-day; she is a manufacturer
-and she comprehended that the methods of business
-can not be revolutionized without somebody’s
-getting hurt. Yet, on the whole, the change
-might be immensely advantageous. Now, why,
-in a nutshell, do you condemn us?”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re after the opinion of the average man,
-are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose so, the high average.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel crossed his legs and uncrossed
-them again; he looked straight into the other’s
-eyes; his own narrowed with thought.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll tell you,” said he. “I don’t know much
-about the Street or high finance or industrial development.
-I’m a plain soldier; I’m not a manufacturer
-and I’m not a speculator. I understand
-perfectly that you can’t have great changes without
-somebody’s getting hurt in the shuffle. It<span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">[309]</span>
-is beyond me to decide whether the new industrial
-arrangements with the stock-jobber on top
-instead of the manufacturer will make for better
-or for worse—but I know this; it is against the
-fundamental law to do evil that good may come.
-And you fellows in Wall Street, when, to get rich
-quick, you lie about stocks in order to buy
-cheap and then lie another way to sell dear; when
-you make a panic out of whole cloth, as you did
-in 1903, because, having made about all you can
-out of things going up, you want to make all you
-can out of them going down; when you play foot-ball
-with great railway properties and insurance
-properties, because you are as willing to rob the
-dead as the living; when you do all that, and
-when your imitators, who haven’t so much brains
-or so much decency as you, when <i>they</i> buy up
-legislatures and city councils; and <i>their</i> imitators
-run the Black Hand business and hold people up
-who have money and are not strong enough,
-they think, to hunt them down—why, not being
-a philosopher but just a plain soldier, I call it bad,
-<i>rotten</i> bad. What’s more, I can tell you the American
-people won’t stand for it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You think they can help themselves?”</p>
-
-<p>“I know they can. You fellows are big, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">[310]</span>
-you won’t last over night if the American people
-get really aroused. And they are stirring in their
-sleep and kicking off the bed-clothes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yet you ought to belong to the conservatives.”</p>
-
-<p>“I do. That’s why the situation is dangerous.
-You as an old San Franciscan ought to remember
-how conservative was that celebrated Vigilance
-Committee. It is when the long-suffering, pusillanimous,
-conservative element gets fighting mad
-that something is doing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe,” muttered Keatcham thoughtfully. “I
-believe we can manage for you better than you
-can for yourselves; but when the brakes are
-broken good driving can’t stop the machine; all
-the chauffeur can do is to keep the middle of the
-road. I like to be beaten as little as any of them;
-but I’m not a fool. Winter, you are used to accomplishing
-things; what is your notion of the
-secret?”</p>
-
-<p>“Knowing when to stop exhausting trumps, I
-reckon—but you don’t play cards.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is the same old game whatever you play,”
-said the railway king. He did not pursue the
-discussion; his questions, Winter had found, invariably
-had a purpose, and that purpose was
-never argument. He lay back on the big leather<span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">[311]</span>
-cushions of the lounge, his long, lean fingers
-drumming on the table beside him and an odd
-smile playing about the corners of his mouth;
-his next speech dived into new waters. He said:
-“Have those men from New York got Atkins,
-yet?”</p>
-
-<p>“They couldn’t find him,” answered the colonel.
-“I have been having him shadowed, on my
-own idea—I think he stabbed you, though I have
-no proof of it; I take it you have proof of your
-matter.”</p>
-
-<p>“Plenty,” said Keatcham. “I was going to
-send him to the pen in self-defense. It isn’t safe
-for me to have it creep out that my secretary
-made a fortune selling my secrets. Besides, I
-don’t want to be killed. You say they can’t find
-him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Seems to have gone to Japan—”</p>
-
-<p>“Seems? What do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am not sure. He was booked for a steamer;
-and a man under his name, of his build and color,
-did actually sail on the boat,” announced the
-colonel blandly.</p>
-
-<p>“Hmn! He’s right here in San Francisco; read
-that note.”</p>
-
-<p>Winter read the note, written on Palace Hotel<span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">[312]</span>
-note-paper, in a sharp, scrawling, Italian hand.
-The contents were sufficiently startling.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Dear friend Hoping this find you well. Why do you
-disregard a true Warning? We did write you afore once
-for say you give that money or we shal be unfortunately
-compel to kill you quick. No? You laff. God knows we got
-have that twenty-five thousan dol. Yes. And now because
-of such great expence it is fifty thousan you shall pay. We
-did not mean kill you dead only show you for sure there
-is no place so secret you can Hide no place so strong can
-defend you. Be Warn. You come with $50000.00 in $100
-bills. You go or send Mr. Mercer to the Red Hat; ask
-for Louis. Say to Louis For the Black Hand. Louis will
-say For the Black Hand. You follow him. No harm will
-come to you. You will be forgive all heretobefores. Elseways
-you must die April 15-20. <i>This is sure</i>. You have
-felt our dagger the other is worse.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="indentright2">You well wishing Fren,</span><br />
-The Black Hand.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Sounds like Atkins pretending to be a Dago,”
-said the colonel dryly. “I could do better myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very likely,” said Keatcham.</p>
-
-<p>“Does he mean business? What’s he after?”</p>
-
-<p>“To get me out of the way. He knows he isn’t
-safe until I’m dead. Then he hasn’t been cleaned
-out, but he has lost a lot of money in this Midland
-business. The cipher he has is of no use to him,
-there, or in the other things which unluckily he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">[313]</span>
-knows about. With me dead and the cipher in his
-hands, he could have made millions; even without
-the cipher, if he knows I’m dead before the rest of
-the world, he ought to make at least a half-million.
-I think you will find that he has put everything
-he has on the chance. I told you he was
-slick. And unstable. What do you anticipate he
-will do? Straight, with no chaser, as you say.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, straight with no chaser, I should say a
-bomb was the meanest trick in sight, so, naturally,
-he will choose a bomb.”</p>
-
-<p>“I agree with you. You say the house is
-patrolled?”</p>
-
-<p>“The whole place. But we’ll put on a bigger
-force; I’ll see Birdsall at once. Atkins would
-have to hire his explosive talent, wouldn’t he?”
-questioned the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he knows plenty of the under-world rascals;
-and besides, for a fellow of his habits, there
-is a big chance for loot. Mrs. Millicent Winter
-tells me that your aunt has valuable jewels with
-her. If she told me, she may have told other people,
-and Atkins may know. He will use other
-people, but he will come, too, in my opinion.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see,” said the colonel; “to make sure they
-don’t foozle the bomb. But he’ll have his alibi<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">[314]</span>
-ready all right. Mr. Keatcham, did they send
-you a previous letter?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dear no; that’s only part of the game;
-makes a better story. So is using the hotel paper;
-if it throws suspicion on anybody it would be
-your party; you see Atkins knew Mercer had a
-grudge against me as well as him. He was counting
-on that. I rather wonder that he didn’t fix
-up some proof for you to find.”</p>
-
-<p>“By Jove!” cried the colonel; “maybe he did.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you didn’t find it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you see I was too busy with you; the
-others must have overlooked it. Hard on Atkins
-after he took so much trouble, wasn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I told you he was too subtle. But it is not
-wise to underrate him, or bombs either; we must
-get the women and those boys out of the house.”</p>
-
-<p>“But how? You are not really acquainted with
-my aunt, Mrs. Rebecca Winter, I take it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You think she wouldn’t go if there was any
-chance of danger?”</p>
-
-<p>“You couldn’t fire her unless out of a cannon;
-but she would help get Archie away; Mrs. Melville
-and Miss Smith—”</p>
-
-<p>“Well—ur—Miss Smith, I am afraid, will not
-be easy to manage; you see, she knows—”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">[315]</span>“Knows? Did you tell her?” asked Colonel
-Winter anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, not exactly. As the children say, it told
-itself. There has been a kind of an attempt, already.
-A box came, marked from a man I know
-in New York, properly labeled with express company’s
-labels. Miss Smith opened it; I could see
-her, because she was in the bath-room with the
-door open. There was another box inside,
-wrapped in white tissue paper. Very neatly. She
-examined that box with singular care and then
-she drew some water in the lavatory basin, half
-opened the box and put the whole thing under
-water in the basin. Then I thought it was time
-for me and I asked her if it was a bomb. Do you
-know that girl had sense enough not to try to
-deceive me? She saw that I had seen every move
-she had made. She said merely that it was safe
-under water. It was an ingenious little affair
-which had an electrical arrangement for touching
-off a spark when the lid of the box would be
-lifted.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, yes. Thoughtful little plan to amuse an
-invalid by letting him open the box, himself, to
-see the nice surprises from New York. Very
-neat, indeed. What did you do with the box?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">[316]</span>“Nothing, so far. It only came about an hour
-ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you reckon some of the Black Hands are
-out on the street, rubbering to see if there are any
-signs of anything doing?”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps; you might let Birdsall keep a watch
-for anything like that. But they hear, somehow;
-there is a leak somewhere in our establishment.
-It is not your aunt; she can hold her tongue as
-well as use it; the boy, Archie, does not know
-anything to tell—”</p>
-
-<p>“He wouldn’t tell it if he did,” interrupted
-the colonel; and very concisely but with evident
-pride he gave Archie’s experience in the Chinese
-quarter.</p>
-
-<p>Keatcham’s comment took the listener’s breath
-away; so far afield was it and so unlike his experience
-of the man; it was: “Winter, a son like
-that would be a good deal of a comfort, wouldn’t
-he?”</p>
-
-<p>“Poor little chap!” said Winter. “He hasn’t
-any father to be proud of him—father and mother
-both dead.”</p>
-
-<p>Keatcham eyed Winter thoughtfully a moment,
-then he said: “You’ve been married and lost
-children, your aunt says. That must be hard.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">[317]</span>
-But—did you ever read that poem of James
-Whitcomb Riley’s to his friend whose child was
-dead? It’s true what he says—they were better
-off than he ‘who had no child to die.’”</p>
-
-<p>Rupert was looking away from the speaker
-with the instinctive embarrassment of a man who
-surprises the deeper feelings of another. He
-could see out of the window the lovely April garden
-and Janet Smith amid the almond blossoms.
-Only her shining black head and her white shoulders
-and bodice rose above the pink clusters.
-She looked up and nodded, seeing him; her face
-was a little pale, but she was smiling.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,” he said, “it’s hard enough
-either way for a man.”</p>
-
-<p>“I never lost any children”—Keatcham’s tone
-was dry, still, but it had not quite the former
-desiccated quality—“but I was married, for a
-little while. If it’s as bad to lose your children
-as it is to lose the hope of having them, it must
-be hard. You lost your wife, too?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Rupert Winter.</p>
-
-<p>At this moment he became conscious that
-Keatcham was avoiding his gaze in the very
-manner of his avoiding of Keatcham’s a moment
-ago; and it gave him a bewildering sensation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">[318]</span>“I wanted to marry my wife for seven years
-before we were married,” Keatcham continued
-in that carefully monotonous voice. “She was the
-daughter of the superintendent of the mine where
-I was working. I was only eighteen when I first
-saw her. I was twenty-five when we were married.
-She used to give me lessons; she was educated
-and accomplished. She did more than is
-easy telling, for me. Of course, her parents were
-opposed at first because they looked higher for her,
-but she brought them round by her patience and
-her sweetness and her faith in me. Six months
-after we were married, she had an accident which
-left her a helpless invalid in a wheeled chair, at
-the best; at the worst, suffering—you’ve known
-what it is to see anybody, whom you care for, in
-horrible pain and trying not to show it when you
-come near?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have,” said Winter; “merry hell, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have seen that expression,” said Keatcham;
-“I never recognized its peculiar appropriateness
-before. Yes, it is that. Yet, Winter, those two
-years she lived afterwards were the happiest of
-my whole life. She said, the last night she was
-with me, that they had been the happiest of hers.”
-The same flush which once before, when he had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">[319]</span>
-seemed moved, had crept up to his temples, burned
-his hollow cheeks. He was holding the edge of
-the table with the tips of his fingers and the blood
-settled about the nails with the pressure of his
-grip. There was an intense moment during which
-Winter vainly struggled to think of something to
-say and looked more of his sympathy than he was
-aware; then: “Cary Mercer needn’t think that he
-has had all the hard times in the world!” said
-Keatcham in his usual toneless voice, relaxing
-his hold and leaning back on his pillows. The
-color ebbed away gradually from his face.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t wonder you didn’t marry again,” said
-Winter.</p>
-
-<p>“You would not wonder if you had known
-Helen. She always understood. Of course, now,
-at sixty-one, I could buy a pretty, innocent, young
-girl who would do as her parents bade her, and
-cry her eyes out before the wedding, or a handsome
-and brilliant society woman with plenty of
-matrimonial experience—but I don’t want them.
-I should have to explain myself to them; I don’t
-know how to explain myself; you see I can’t half
-do it—”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon I understand a little.”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess you do. You are different, too. Well,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">[320]</span>
-let’s get down to business, think up some way of
-getting the women out of the house; and get your
-sleuths after Atkins. It is ‘we get him, or he gets
-us!’”</p>
-
-<p>The amateur secretary assented and prepared
-to go, for the valet was at the door, ready to relieve
-him; but opposite Keatcham, he paused a
-second, made a pretense of hunting for his hat,
-picked it up in his left hand and held out the
-right hand, saying, “Well, take care of yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>Keatcham nodded; he shook the hand with a
-good firm pressure. “Much obliged, Winter,”
-said he.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” meditated the soldier as he went his
-way, “I never did think to take that financial
-bucaneer by the hand; but—it wasn’t the bucaneer,
-it was the real Edwin Keatcham.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">[321]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XVII<br />
-
-<small>IN WHICH THE PUZZLE FALLS INTO PLACE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>While the colonel was trying to decipher his
-tragical puzzle, while Edwin Keatcham was
-busied with plans that affected empires and incidentally
-were to save and to extinguish some
-human lives, while Janet Smith had her own
-troubles, while Mrs. Rebecca Winter enjoyed
-a game more exciting and deadly than Penelope’s
-Web, Mrs. Millicent Winter and the younger people
-found the days full of joyous business. The
-household had fallen into normal ways of living.
-Although the secret patrol watched every rod
-of approach to the house, the espial was so unobtrusive
-that guests came and went, tradesmen
-rattled over the driveways; the policemen, themselves,
-slumbered by day and loitered majestically
-by night without the Casa Fuerte portals, never
-suspecting. Little Birdsall had his admirable
-points; they were now in evidence. To all outward<span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">[322]</span>
-seeming, a pleasant house-party was enjoying
-the lavish Californian hospitality of Casa
-Fuerte; and Black Care was bundled off to the
-closet with the family skeleton, according to the
-traditions of mannerly people. Arnold had opened
-his garage and his stables. There was bridge of
-an evening; and the billiard-balls clinked on the
-pool-table. Archie could now back the electric
-motor into almost any predicament. The new
-Chinese chef was a wonder and Tracy was initiating
-him into the possibilities of the Fireless, despite
-a modest shrinking on the part of the oriental
-artist who considered it to be a new kind of
-bomb.</p>
-
-<p>Millicent, encouraged by Arnold, had had Mrs.
-Wigglesworth and two errant Daughters, whose
-husbands were state regents for Melville’s university,
-to luncheon and to dinner; the versatile
-Kito donning a chauffeur’s livery and motoring
-them back to the city in the Limousine, on both
-occasions; all of which redounded to Millicent’s
-own proper glory and state.</p>
-
-<p>Indeed, about this time, Millicent was in high
-good humor with her world. Even Janet Smith
-was no longer politely obliterated as “the nurse,”
-but became “our dear Miss Janet”; and was presented<span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">[323]</span>
-with two of Mrs. Melville’s last year’s
-Christmas gifts which she could not contrive
-to use; therefore carried about for general decorative
-generosity. One was a sage-green linen
-handkerchief case, quite fresh, on which was
-etched, in brown silk, the humorous inscription:
-“<span class="allsmcap">WIPE ME BUT DO NOT SWIPE ME</span>!” The other
-was a white celluloid brush-broom holder bedecked
-with azure forget-me-nots enframing a
-complicated monogram which might just as well
-stand for J. B. B. S. (Janet Byrd Brandon
-Smith) as for M. S. W. (Millicent Sears Winter)
-or any other alphabetical herd. These unpretending
-but (considering their source) distinguished
-gifts she bestowed in the kindest manner. Janet
-was no doubt grateful; she embroidered half a
-dozen luncheon napkins with Mrs. Melville’s monogram
-and crest, in sign thereof; and very prettily,
-she being a skilful needle-woman. On her
-part, Mrs. Mellville was so pleased that she remarked
-to her brother-in-law, shortly after, that
-she believed Cousin Angela’s sisters hadn’t been
-just to Miss Smith; she was a nice girl; and if
-she married (which is quite possible, insinuated
-Mrs. Melville archly), she meant to give a tea in
-her honor.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">[324]</span>“Now, that’s right decent of you, Millie,” cried
-the colonel; and he smiled gratefully after Mrs.
-Melville’s beautifully fitted back. Yet a scant five
-minutes before he had been pursuing that same
-charming back through the garden terraces, in
-a most unbrotherly frame, resolved to give his sister-in-law
-a “warning with a fog-horn.” The cause
-of said warning was his discovery of her acquaintance
-with Atkins. For days a bit of information
-had been blistering his mind. It came from the
-girl at the telegraph office at the Palace, not in a
-bee-line, but indirectly, through her chum, the
-girl who booked the theater tickets. It could not
-be analyzed properly because the telegraph girl
-was gone to Southern California. But before she
-went she told the theater girl that the lady who
-received Mr. Makers’ wires was one of Mrs.
-Winter’s party! This bit of information was like
-a live coal underfoot in the colonel’s mind; whenever
-he trod on it in his mental excursions he
-jumped.</p>
-
-<p>“Who else but Janet?” he demanded. But by
-degrees he became first doubtful, then daring. He
-had Birdsall fetch the telegraph girl back to San
-Francisco. A ten minutes’ interview assured him
-that it was his brother’s wife who had called for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">[325]</span>
-Mr. Makers’ messages, armed with Mr. Makers’
-order.</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Rebecca was not nearly so vehement as he
-when he told her. She listened to his angry criticism
-with a lurking smile and a little shrug of
-her shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course she has butted in, as you tersely
-express it, in the language of this mannerless generation;
-Millicent always butts in. How did she
-get acquainted with this unpleasant, assassinating,
-poor white trash? My dear child, <i>she</i> didn’t
-probably; he made an acquaintance with her. He
-pumped her and lied to her. We know he wanted
-to find out Mr. Keatcham’s abode; he may have
-got his clue from her; she knew young Arnold
-had been to see him. There’s no telling. I only
-know that in the interest of keeping a roof over
-our heads and having our heads whole instead
-of in pieces from explosives, I butted in a few
-days ago when somebody wanted Mrs. Melville
-Winter on the telephone. I answered it. The person
-asked if I was Mrs. Melville Winter; it was
-a strange man’s voice. I don’t believe in Christian
-Science or theosophy or psychics, but I do believe
-I felt in my bones that here was an occasion
-to be canny rather than conscientious. You know<span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">[326]</span>
-I can talk like Millicent—or anybody else; so I
-intoned through the telephone in her silken
-Anglican accents, ‘Do you want Mrs. Melville
-Winter or Aunt Rebecca, <i>Madam</i> Winter?’ I
-hate to be called Madam Winter, and she knows
-it, but Millicent is catty, you know, and she
-always calls me Madam Winter behind my back.
-The fellow fell into the trap at once—recognized
-the voice, I dare say, and announced that it was
-Mr. Makers; Mr. Atkins, who had left for Japan,
-had not been able to pay his respects and say good-by;
-but he had left with him an embroidered
-Chinese kimono for Professor Winter, whom he
-had admired so much; and if it wouldn’t be too
-much trouble for her to pay a visit to her friend—one
-of those women she had to luncheon, who’s
-at the St. Francis—he would like to show her
-several left by Mr. Atkins, for her to select one.
-Then in the most casual way, he asked after Mr.
-Keatcham’s health. I believed he was improving;
-had had a very good night. I fancy it didn’t
-please him, but he made a good pretense. Then
-he went off into remarks about its being such a
-pity Mr. Atkins had left Mr. Keatcham; but
-he was so conscientious, a Southern gentleman I
-knew; yet he really thought a great deal still of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">[327]</span>
-Mr. Keatcham, who had many fine qualities; only
-on account of the unfortunate differences—Atkins
-was so proud and sensitive; he was anxious
-to hear, but not for the world would he have
-any one know that he had inquired; so would I
-be very careful not to let any one know he had
-asked. Of course I would be; I promised effusively;
-and said I quite understood. I think I
-<i>do</i>, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“They are keeping tab on us through Millicent,”
-fumed the colonel. “I dare say she gave
-it away that Arnold was visiting Keatcham at
-the hotel; and it wouldn’t take Atkins long to
-piece out a good deal more, especially if his spy
-overheard Tracy’s ’phone. Well, I shall warn
-Millicent—with a fog-horn!”</p>
-
-<p>The way he warned Millicent has been related.
-But from Millicent he deflected to another subject—the
-impulse of confession being strong upon
-him. He freed his mind about the stains on Cary
-Mercer’s cuffs; and, when at last he sought Millicent
-he was in his soul praising his aunt for a
-wise old woman. After justice was disarmed by
-his miscomprehension of Millicent’s words, he
-took out his cigarette case and began pacing the
-garden walks, smoking and humming a little<span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">[328]</span>
-Spanish love song, far older than the statehood of
-California.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse"><i>La noche está serena, tranquilo el aquilon;</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Tu dulce centinella te guarda el corazon.</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Y en al as de los céfiros, que vagan par doquier,</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Volando van mis suplicas, á ti, bella mujer!</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Volando van mis suplicas, á ti, bella mujer!</i></div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse"><i>De un corazon que te ama, recibe el tierno amor;</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>No aumentes mas la llama, piedad, á an trobador.</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Y si te mueve á lastima eterno padecer,</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Como te amo, amama, bellissima mujer!</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Como te amo, amama, bellissima mujer!</i><a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[B]</a></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_329">[329]</span>The words belonged to the air which he had
-whistled a weary week ago. Young Tracy came
-along, and caught up the air, although he was
-innocent of Spanish; he had his mandolin on his
-arm; he proffered it to the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Janet has been singing coon-songs to his
-nibs, who is really getting almost human,” he
-observed affably; “well, a little patience and interest
-will reveal new possibilities of the Fireless
-Stove! In man or metal. Shall we get under
-his nibs’ window and give him the <i>Bedouin Love
-Song</i> and <i>I Picked Me a Lemon in the Garden of
-Love</i> and the Sextette from <i>Lucia</i> and other
-choice selections? He seemed to be sitting up and
-taking notice; let’s lift him above the sordid
-thoughts of Wall Street and his plans for busting
-other financiers.”</p>
-
-<p>The soldier gave this persiflage no answer; his
-own thoughts were far from gay. He stood drinking
-in the beauty of the April night. The air was
-wonderfully hushed and clear; and the play of
-the moonlight on the great heliotrope bushes and
-the rose-trees, which dangled their clusters of
-yellow and white over the stone parapets of the
-balconies, tinted the leafage and flickered delicately
-over the tracery of shadow on the gray<span class="pagenum" id="Page_330">[330]</span>
-walls. Not a cloud flecked the vast aërial landscape—only
-stars beyond stars, through unfathomable
-depths of dim violet, and beneath the
-stars a pale moon swimming low in the heavens;
-one could see it between the spandrels of the
-arches spanning the colonnade.</p>
-
-<p>“Looks like a prize night-scene on the stage,
-doesn’t it?” said Tracy. “Jolly good shadows—and
-aren’t these walls bulging out at the bottom
-bully? I used to know the right name for such
-architectural stunts when I was taking Fine Arts
-Four—dreadful to neglect your educational advantages
-and then forget all the little you didn’t
-neglect, ain’t it? I say, get on to those balconies—that
-isn’t the right word for the mission style,
-I guess; but never mind; aren’t they stunning?
-Do you see the ladies up there? Is that Archie
-sniggering? What do you think of the haunted
-house, <i>now</i>, Colonel?”</p>
-
-<p>Tracy’s gay eyes sought the other’s gaze to find
-it turn somber. Winter couldn’t have told why;
-but a sudden realization of the hideous peril
-dogging the warm, lighted, tenanted house, submerged
-him and suffocated him like a foul gas.
-Let their guards be vigilant as fear, let their
-wonderful new search-light flood rock and slope<span class="pagenum" id="Page_331">[331]</span>
-and dusky Chaparral bush; and peer as it might
-through the forest aisles beyond; yet—yet—who
-could tell!</p>
-
-<p>But he forced an equal smile in a second for
-the college boy; and chatted easily enough as
-they climbed up the stepped arches to the balcony
-and the little group looking seaward.</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Rebecca in black lace and jewels was
-tilting with the world in general and Millicent
-Winter in particular; she displayed her most
-cynical mood. She had demolished democracy;
-had planted herself firmly on the basic doctrine
-that the virtues cultivated by slavery far outnumber
-its inseparable vices; and that most people,
-if not all, need a master; had been picturesquely
-and inaccurately eloquent on the subject of dynamite
-(which she pronounced the logical fourth
-dimension of liberty, fraternity and equality); had
-put the yellow rich where they belonged; and the
-red anarchists mainly under the sod; and she had
-abolished the Fourth of July to the last sputter
-of fire-cracker; thence by easy transitions she
-had extolled American art (which American patrons
-were too ignorant to appreciate), deplored
-American music (“The trouble isn’t that it is
-<i>canned</i>,” says she, “but that it was spoiled before<span class="pagenum" id="Page_332">[332]</span>
-they canned it!”) and was now driving a chariot
-of fire through American literature; as for the
-Academics, they never said what they thought,
-but only what they thought they ought to think;
-and they always mistook anemia for refinement,
-as another school mistook yelling and perspiring
-for vigor.</p>
-
-<p>Just as Winter modestly entered the arena, no
-less a personage than Henry James was under the
-wheels. Janet Smith had modestly confessed to
-believing him a consummate artist; and Millicent
-in an orotund voice declared that he went deep,
-deep down into the mysteries of life.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t deny it; he <i>ought</i> to get down deep,”
-returned Aunt Rebecca in her gentlest, softest
-utterance; “he’s always boring.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Melville’s suppressed agitation made her
-stays creak.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you really think that James is not a great
-artist?” she breathed.</p>
-
-<p>“I think he is not worth while.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wow!” cried Tracy. “Oh, I say—”</p>
-
-<p>“Aunt Rebecca; you can not mean—” this was
-Mrs. Melville, choking with horror.</p>
-
-<p>“His style,” repeated the unmoved iconoclast,
-“his style has the remains of great beauty; all his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_333">[333]</span>
-separate phrases, if you wish, are gems; and he is
-a literary lapidary; but his sentences are so subtle,
-so complex, so intricately compounded, and so
-discursive that I get a pain in the back of my neck
-before I find out what he <i>may</i> mean; and then—I
-don’t agree with him! Now is it worth while to
-put in so much hard reading only to be irritated?”</p>
-
-<p>“I beg pardon,” Winter interposed, with masculine
-pusillanimity evading taking sides in the
-question at issue, “I thought we were going to
-have some music; why don’t you boys give us
-some college songs? Here is a mandolin.”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Rebecca’s still luminous eyes went from
-the speaker to Janet Smith in the corner. She
-said something about hearing the music better
-from the other side of the balcony. Now (as Mrs.
-Millicent very truly explained) there was not a
-ha’pennyworth’s difference in favor of one side
-over the other; but she followed in the wake of
-her imperious aunt.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel drew nearer to Janet Smith; in
-order to sink his voice below disturbing the music-lovers
-he found it necessary to sit on a pile of
-cushions at her feet.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you know Mercer will be back to-night?”
-he began, a long way from his ultimate object.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_334">[334]</span>
-He noticed that leaning back in the shadow her
-ready smile had dropped from her face, which
-looked tired. “I want to tell you a little story
-about Mercer,” he continued; “may I? It won’t
-take long.”</p>
-
-<p>He was aware, and it gave him a twinge of
-pain to see it, that she sat up a little straighter,
-like one on guard; and oh, how tired her face was
-and how sweet! He told her of all his suspicions
-of her brother-in-law; of the blood-stains and the
-changing of clothes; she did not interrupt him by
-a question, hardly by a motion, until he told of the
-conversation with Keatcham and the note signed
-“The Black Hand.” At this her eyes lighted; she
-exclaimed impetuously: “Cary Mercer never <i>did</i>
-send that letter!” She drew a deep intake of
-breath. “I don’t believe he touched Mr. Keatcham!”</p>
-
-<p>“Neither do I,” said the colonel, “but wait!”
-He went on to the theater girl’s report of the receiver
-of the telegrams. Her hands, which clasped
-her knee, fell apart; her lips parted and closed
-firmly.</p>
-
-<p>“Did I think it was you?” said he. “Why, yes,
-I confess I did fear it might be and that you might
-be trying to shield Atkins.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_335">[335]</span>“I!” she exclaimed hotly; “that detestable villain!”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Isn’t</i> he?” cried the colonel. “But—well, I
-couldn’t tell how he might strike a lady,” he ended
-lamely.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon he <i>would</i> strike a lady if she were
-silly enough to marry him and he got tired of her.
-He is the kind of man who will persecute a girl
-to marry him, follow her around and importune
-her and flatter her and then, if he should prevail,
-never forgive her for the bother she has given
-him. Oh, I never <i>did</i> like him; I’m afraid of him—awfully.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not you?”—the colonel’s voice was cheerful,
-as if he had not shivered over his own foreboding
-vision. “I’ve seen you in action already, you
-know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not fighting bombs. I hate bombs. There are
-so many pieces to hit you. You can’t run away.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you’ll find them not so bad; besides, you
-<i>did</i> fight one this very morning, and you were
-cool as peppermint!”</p>
-
-<p>“That was quite different; I had time to think,
-and the danger was more to me than to any one
-else; but to think of Mrs. Winter and Archie and
-y—all of you; that scares me.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">[336]</span>“Now, don’t let it get on your nerves,” he
-soothed—of course it is necessary to take a girl’s
-hand to soothe her when she is frightened. But
-Miss Smith calmly released her hand, only reddening
-a little; and she laughed. “Where—where
-were we at?” she asked in her unconscious Southern
-phraseology.</p>
-
-<p>“Somewhere around Atkins, I think,” said the
-colonel; he laughed in his turn,—he found it easy
-to laugh, now that he knew how she felt toward
-Atkins. “You see, after I talked with Keatcham
-I couldn’t make anything but Atkins out of the
-whole business. But there were those stained cuffs
-and his changing his clothes—”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said she.</p>
-
-<p>“How explain? There was only one explanation:
-that was, that perhaps Mercer had discovered
-Keatcham before we did, unconsciously
-spotted his cuffs, been alarmed by our approach
-and hidden, lest it should be the murderers returning.
-He might have wanted a chance to draw
-his revolver. Say he did that way, he might foolishly
-pretend to enter for the first time. If he
-made that mistake and then discovered the condition
-of his cuffs and the spots on his knee, what
-would be his natural first impulse? Why, to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">[337]</span>
-change them, trusting that they hadn’t been noticed.
-Maybe, then, he would wash them out—”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” murmured Miss Smith meekly, with
-a little twinkle of her eye; “<i>I</i> did that; he hid
-them. How ridiculous of me to get in such a
-fright! But you know how Cary hated Mr.
-Keatcham; and you—no, you don’t know the
-lengths that such a temperament as his will go.
-I did another silly thing: I found a dagger, one
-of those Moorish stilettoes that hang in the library;
-it was lying in the doorway. When no
-one was looking I hid it and carried it off. I
-stuck it in one of the flower-beds; I stuck it in
-the ferns; I have stuck that wretched thing all
-over this yard. I didn’t dare carry it back and
-put it in the empty place with the others because
-some one might have noticed the place. And I
-didn’t dare say anything to Cary; I was right
-miserable.”</p>
-
-<p>“So was I,” said the colonel, “thinking you
-were trying to protect the murderer. But do you
-know what I had sense to do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Go to Mrs. Winter? Oh, I <i>wanted</i> to!”</p>
-
-<p>“Exactly; and do you know what that dead
-game sport said to me? She said she found those
-washed and ironed cuffs and the trousers neatly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_338">[338]</span>
-cleaned with milka—what’s milka?—and the
-milka cleaned the spots so much cleaner than the
-rest that she had her own suspicions started. But
-says she, ‘Not being a plumb idiot, I went straight
-to Cary and he told me the whole story—’”</p>
-
-<p>“Which was like <i>your</i> story?”</p>
-
-<p>“Very near. And you see it would be <i>like</i> Atkins
-to leave incriminating testimony round loose.
-That is, incriminating testimony against Mercer
-and Tracy. The dagger, Tracy remembers, was
-not in the library; it was in the <i>patio</i>. Right to
-hand. Atkins must have got in and found Mr.
-Keatcham on the floor in a faint. Whether he
-meant to make a bargain with him or to kill him,
-perhaps we shall never know; but when he saw
-him helpless before him he believed his chance
-was come to kill him and get the cipher key, removing
-his enemy and making his fortune at a
-blow, as the French say. <i>Voilà tout!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think”—her voice sank lower; she
-glanced over her shoulder—“do you reckon <i>Atkins</i>
-had anything to do with that train robbery?
-Was it a mere pretext to give a chance to murder
-Mr. Keatcham, fixing the blame on ordinary bandits?”</p>
-
-<p>“By Jove! it might be.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">[339]</span>“I don’t suppose we shall ever know. But,
-Colonel Winter, do you mind explaining to me
-just what Brother Cary’s scheme with Mr.
-Keatcham was? Mrs. Winter told me you
-would.”</p>
-
-<p>“She told <i>me</i>,” mused the colonel, “that you
-didn’t know anything about this big game which
-has netted them millions. They’ve closed out their
-deals and have the cash. No paper profits for
-Auntie! She said that she would not risk your
-being mixed up in it; so kept you absolutely in
-the dark. I’m there, too. Didn’t you know Mercer
-had kidnapped Archie?”</p>
-
-<p>“No; I didn’t know he was with Mr. Keatcham
-at the hotel. It would have saved me a heap of
-suffering; but she didn’t dare let me know for
-fear, if anything should happen, I would be mixed
-up in it. It was out of kindness, Colonel Winter,
-truly it was. Afterward when she saw that I was
-worried she gave me hints that I need not worry,
-Archie was quite safe.”</p>
-
-<p>“And the note-paper?”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose she gave it to them,” answered Miss
-Smith.</p>
-
-<p>“And the voice I heard in the telephone?” He
-explained how firmly she had halted the conversation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">[340]</span>
-the time Archie would have reassured him.
-“You weren’t there, of course?” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“No, I was down-stairs in the ladies’ entrance
-of the court in the hotel; I had come in a little
-while before, having carried an advertisement to
-the paper; I wonder why she—maybe it was to
-communicate with them without risking a letter.”</p>
-
-<p>“But how did <i>your</i> voice get into my ’phone?”
-he asked.</p>
-
-<p>She looked puzzled only a second, then laughed
-as he had not heard her laugh in San Francisco—a
-natural, musical, merry peal, a girlish laugh that
-made his heart bound.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, of course,” said she, “it is so easy!
-There was a reporter who insisted on interviewing
-Mrs. Winter about her jewelry; and I was
-shooing him away. Somehow the wires must have
-crossed.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you remember—this is very, very pretty,
-don’t you think? Just like a puzzle falling into
-place. Do you remember coming here on the day
-Archie was returned?”</p>
-
-<p>“I surely do; my head was swimming, for Mrs.
-Winter sent me and I began then to suspect. She
-told me Brother Cary was in danger; of course I
-wanted to do anything to help him; and I carried<span class="pagenum" id="Page_341">[341]</span>
-a note to him. I didn’t go in, merely gave the note
-and saw him.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>I</i> saw you.”</p>
-
-<p>“You? How?”</p>
-
-<p>“Birdsall and I; we were here, in the <i>patio</i>;
-we, my dear Miss Janet, were the Danger! You
-had on a brown checked silk dress and you were
-holding a wire clipper in your hand.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir. I saw it on the grass and picked it
-up.”</p>
-
-<p>She laughed a little; but directly her cheeks reddened.
-“What must you have thought of me!”
-she murmured under her breath; and bit the lip
-that would have quivered.</p>
-
-<p>“I should like to tell you—<i>dear</i>,” he answered,
-“if you will—O Lord, forgive young men for living!
-If they are not all coming back to ask me to
-sing! But, Janet, dear, let me say it in Spanish—yes,
-<i>yes</i> if you really won’t be bored; throw me
-that mandolin.”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Rebecca leaned back in the arm-chair,
-faintly smiling, while the old, old words that
-thousands of lovers have thrilled with pain and
-hopes and dreams beyond their own power of
-speech and offered to their sweethearts, rose,
-winged by the eternal longing:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_342">[342]</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“<i>Y si te mueve á lastima mi eterno padecer,</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Como te amo, amame, bellissima mujer!</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Como te amo, amame, bellissima mujer!</i>”</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>“And what does it mean in English, Bertie?”
-said Mrs. Melville. “Can’t you translate it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Shall I?” said the colonel, his voice was careless
-enough, but not so the eyes which looked up
-at Janet Smith.</p>
-
-<p>“Not to-night, please,” said she. “I—I think
-Mr. Keatcham is expecting me to read to him a
-little. Good night. Thank you, Colonel Winter.”</p>
-
-<p>She was on her feet as she spoke; and Winter
-did not try to detain her; he had held her hand;
-and he had felt its shy pressure and caught a
-fleeting, frightened, very beautiful glance. His
-dark face paled with the intensity of his emotion.</p>
-
-<p>Janet moved away, quietly and lightly, with
-no break in her composure; but as she passed Mrs.
-Winter she bent and kissed her. And when Archie
-would have run after her a delicate jeweled
-hand was laid on his arm. “Not to-night, laddie;
-I want you to help me down the steps.”</p>
-
-<p>With her hand on the boy’s shoulder she came
-up to Rupert, and inclined her handsome head in
-Janet’s direction. “I think, by rights, that kiss
-belonged to you, <i>mon enfant</i>,” said she.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_343">[343]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XVIII<br />
-
-<small>CASA FUERTE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Winter would have said that he was too old a
-man to stay awake all night, when he had a normal
-temperature; yet he saw the stars come out
-and the stars fade on that fateful April night. He
-entered his room at the hour when midnight
-brushes the pale skirts of dawn and misguided
-cocks are vociferating their existence to an indifferent
-world. Before he came there had been a
-long council with Mercer and his aunt. Mercer,
-who had been successful in his mission, had barely
-seen his chief for a moment before a gentle but
-imperious nurse ordered him away. Winter
-caught a queer, abrupt laugh from the financier.
-The latter beckoned to him. “See you are as obedient
-as I am when your time comes,” he
-chuckled; and he chuckled again when both the
-soldier and Miss Smith blushed over his awkward
-jocoseness. Yet, the next moment he extended
-his hand with his formal, other-generation courtesy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_344">[344]</span>
-and took Miss Janet’s shapely, firm fingers
-in his own lean and nervous grasp. “Allow me to
-offer you both my sincere congratulations,” began
-he, and halted, his eyes, which seemed so
-incurious but were so keen, traveling from the
-woman’s confusion to the man’s. “I beg your
-pardon; I understood—Archie who was here,
-gave me to understand—and I heard you singing;
-you will hardly believe it, but years ago <i>I</i>
-sang that to my wife.”</p>
-
-<p>“So far as I am concerned, it <i>is</i> settled,” said
-the colonel steadily.</p>
-
-<p>“We are all,” Keatcham continued, no longer
-with any trace of embarrassment, as he touched
-the hand which he still held with his own other
-hand, “we are all, as you know, my dear young
-lady, in considerable personal peril; I regret that
-it should be on my account; but it really is not my
-fault; it is because I will not relax my pursuit of
-a great scoundrel who is dangerous to all decent
-people. But being in such danger, I think you will
-be glad afterward if you are generously frank,
-and give up something of the sex’s prerogative
-to keep a lover on the anxious seat. Excuse me if—if
-I presume on my age and my privileges as a
-patient.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_345">[345]</span>Janet lifted her sweet eyes and sent one glance
-as fleeting and light as the flash of a bird’s wing.
-“I—I—reckon it is settled,” murmured she; but
-immediately she was the nurse again. “Mr.
-Keatcham, you are staying awake much too late.
-Here is Colvin, who will see to anything you
-want. Good night.”</p>
-
-<p>It was then that Mr. Keatcham had taken the
-colonel’s breath away by kissing Janet’s hand;
-after which he shook hands with the colonel with
-a strange new cordiality, and watched them both
-go away together with a look on his gaunt face
-unlike any known to Colvin.</p>
-
-<p>Only three minutes in the hall, with the moon
-through the arched window; and his arm about
-her and the fragrance of her loosened hair against
-his cheek and her voice stirring his heartstrings
-with an exquisite pang. Only time for the immemorial
-questions of love: “Are you sure, dear,
-it is really <i>I?</i>” and “When did you first—” To
-this last she had answered with her half-humorous,
-adorable little lilt of a laugh. “Oh, I reckon
-it was—a—little—all along, ever since I read
-about your saving that poor little Filipino boy,
-like Archie; the one who was your servant in
-Manila, and going hungry for him on the march<span class="pagenum" id="Page_346">[346]</span>
-and jumping into the rapids to save him—when
-you were lame, too—”</p>
-
-<p>Here the colonel burst in with a groan: “Oh,
-that monstrous newspaper liar! The ‘dear little
-Filipino boy’ was a married man; and I didn’t
-go hungry for him, and I didn’t jump into the
-river to save him. It wasn’t more than wading
-depth—I only swore at him for an idiot and told
-him to <i>walk</i> out when he tipped over his boat and
-was floundering about. And he <i>did</i>! He was the
-limit as a liar—”</p>
-
-<p>To his relief, the most sensible as well as the
-most lovable woman in the world had burst into
-a delicious fit of laughter; and returned: “Oh,
-well, you <i>would</i> have jumped in and saved him
-if the water had been deep; it wasn’t <i>your</i> fault
-it was shallow!” And just at this point Mercer
-and Aunt Rebecca must needs come with a most
-unusual premonitory racket, and Janet had fled.</p>
-
-<p>Afterward had come the council. All the coil
-had been unraveled. Birdsall appeared in person,
-as sleek, smiling and complacent over his blunders
-as ever. One of his first sentences was a declaration
-of trust in Miss Smith.</p>
-
-<p>“I certainly went off at half-cock there,” said
-he amiably; “and just because she was so awful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_347">[347]</span>
-nice I felt obliged to suspect her; but I’ve got the
-real dog that killed the sheep this time; it’s sure
-the real Red Wull!” It appeared that he had, of
-a verity, been usefully busy. He had secured the
-mechanic who had given Atkins a plan of the
-secret passages of Casa Fuerte. He had found
-the policeman who had arrested Tracy (he swore
-because he was going too fast) and the magistrate
-who had fined him; and not only that, he had captured
-the policeman, a genuine officer, not a criminal
-in disguise, who had been Atkins’ instrument
-in kidnapping Archie. This man, whom Birdsall
-knew how to terrify completely, had confessed
-that it was purely by chance that Atkins had seen
-the boy, left outside in the motor-car. Atkins, so
-he said, had pretended that the boy was a tool of
-some enemies of Keatcham’s, whose secretary he
-was, trading, not for the only time, on his past
-position. In reality, Birdsall had come to believe
-Atkins knew that Keatcham was employing Mercer
-in his place.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, he knew the old gentleman was just off
-quietly with Mr. Mercer and some friends; knew
-they were all friendly, just as well as you or me,”
-declared Birdsall. He had seen Archie on the
-train, for, as the colonel remembered, he had been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_348">[348]</span>
-in the Winters’ car on the night of the robbery.
-Somehow, also, Atkins had found out about
-Archie’s disappearance from the hotel.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t absolutely put my finger on his information,”
-said Birdsall; “but I <i>suspect</i> Mrs.
-Melville Winter; I know she was talking to him,
-for one of my men saw her. The lady meant no
-harm, but she’s one of the kind that is always
-slamming the detectives and being took in by the
-rascals.”</p>
-
-<p>He argued that Mrs. Winter and Miss Smith
-knew where the boy was; for some reason they
-had let him go and were pretending not to know
-where he was. “Ain’t that so?” the detective appealed
-to Aunt Rebecca, who merely smiled, saying:
-“You’re a wonder, Mr. Birdsall!” According
-to Birdsall’s theory, Atkins was puzzled by Archie’s
-part in the affair. But he believed could he
-find the boy’s present hosts he would find Edwin
-Keatcham. It would not be the first time Keatcham
-had hidden himself, the better to spin his web
-for the trapping of his rivals. That Mercer was
-with his employer the ex-secretary had no manner
-of doubt, any more than he doubted that Mercer’s
-scheme had been to oust him and to build his own
-fortunes on Atkins’ ruin. He knew both Tracy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_349">[349]</span>
-and young Arnold very well by sight. When he
-couldn’t frighten Archie into telling anything,
-probably he went back to his first plan of shadowing
-the Winter party at the Palace. He must have
-seen Tracy here. He penetrated his disguise.
-(“He’s as sharp as the devil, I tell you, Colonel.”)
-He either followed him himself or had him followed;
-and he heard about the telephone. (“Somebody
-harking in the next room, most likely.”)
-Knowing Tracy’s intimacy with Arnold it was not
-hard for so clever and subtle a mind as Atkins’ to
-jump to the conclusion and test it in the nearest
-telephone book. (“At least that is how <i>I</i> figure it
-out, Colonel.”) Birdsall had traced the clever mechanic
-who was interrogated by the Eastern gentleman
-about to build; this man had given the lavish
-and inquisitive Easterner a plan of the secret
-passages—to use in his own future residence.
-Whether Atkins went alone or in company to the
-Casa Fuerte the detective could only surmise. He
-couldn’t tell whether his object would be mere
-blackmail, or robbery of the cipher, or assassination.
-Perhaps he found the insensible man in the
-<i>patio</i> and was tempted by the grisly opportunity;
-victim and weapon both absolutely to his hand;
-for it was established that the dagger had been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_350">[350]</span>
-shown Tracy by Mercer as a curio, and left on
-the stone bench.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps he had not found the dagger, but had
-his own means to make an end of his enemy and
-his own terror. Birdsall believed that he had accomplices,
-or at least one accomplice, with him.
-He conceived that they had lain in ambush watching
-until they saw Kito go away. Then an entry
-had been made. “Most like,” Birdsall concluded,
-“he jest flung that dagger away for you folks to
-find and suspect the domestics, say Kito, ’cause
-he was away.” But this was not all that Birdsall
-had to report. He had traced Atkins to the haunts
-of certain unsavory Italians; he had struck the
-trail, in fine. To be sure, it ran underground and
-was lost in the brick-walled and slimy-timbered
-cellars of Chinatown which harbored every sin
-and crime known to civilization or to savagery.
-What matter? By grace of his aunt’s powerful
-friend they could track the wolves even through
-those noisome burrows.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” sighed the colonel, stretching out his
-arms, with a resonant breath of relief, “we’re out
-of the maze; all we have to do now is to keep
-from being killed. Which isn’t such a plain proposition
-in ’Frisco as in Massachusetts! But I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_351">[351]</span>
-reckon we can tackle it! And then—then, my
-darling, I shall dare be happy!”</p>
-
-<p>He found himself leaning on his window-sill
-and staring like a boy on the landscape, lost in the
-lovely hallucinations of moonlight. It was no
-scene that he knew, it was a vision of old Spain;
-and by and by from yonder turret the princess,
-with violets in her loosened hair and her soft
-cheek like satin and snow, would lean and look.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse"><i>Y si te mueve á lastima mi eterno padecer.</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Como te amo, amame, bellissima mujer!</i></div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>“Ah, no, little girl,” he muttered with a shake
-of the head, “I like it better to have you a plain,
-American gentlewoman, as Aunt Becky would
-say, who could send me to battle with a nice little
-quivery smile—<i>sweetheart</i>! Oh, I’m not good
-enough for you, my dear, my dear.” He felt an
-immense humility as he contrasted his own lot
-with the loneliness of Keatcham and Mercer and
-the multitude of solitaries in the world, who had
-lost, or sadder still, had never possessed, the divine
-dream that is the only reality of the soul. As
-such thoughts moved his heart, suddenly in the
-full tide of hope and thankfulness, it stood still,
-chilled, as if by the glimpse of an iceberg in summer<span class="pagenum" id="Page_352">[352]</span>
-seas. Yet how absurd; it was only that he
-had recalled his stoical aunt’s most unexpected
-touch of superstition. Quite in jest he had asked
-her if she felt any presentiments or queer things
-in her bones to-night. He expected to be answered
-that Janet had driven every other anxiety out of
-her mind; and how was she to break it to Millicent?—or
-with some such caustic repartee. Instead,
-she had replied testily: “Yes, I <i>do</i>, Bertie.
-I feel—horrid! I feel as if something out of the
-common awful were going to happen. It isn’t exactly
-Atkins, either. Do you reckon it could be
-the <i>I Suey When</i>, that bamboo-shoots mess we
-had for dinner?”</p>
-
-<p>Although they spent a good twenty minutes
-after that, joking over superstitions, and he had
-repeated to her some of Tracy’s and Arnold’s most
-ingenious “spooky stunts,” to make the neighborhood
-keep its distance from Casa Fuerte, and they
-had laughed freely, she as heartily as he, nevertheless
-he divined that her smile was a pretense.
-Suddenly, an unruly tremor shook his own firm
-spirits. Looking out on the stepped and lanterned
-arches of the wing, he was conscious of the same
-tragic endowment of the darkened pile, which had
-oppressed him that night, weeks before, when he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_353">[353]</span>
-had stood outside on the crest of the hill; and
-the would-be murderers might have been skulking
-in the shadows of the pepper-trees. He tried
-vainly to shake off this distempered mood. Although
-he might succeed for a moment in a lover’s
-absorption, it would come again, insidiously, seeping
-through his happiness like a fume. After futile
-attempts to sleep he rose, and still at the bidding
-of his uncanny and tormenting impulse he took his
-bath and dressed himself for the day. By this
-time the ashen tints of dawn were in his chamber
-and on the fields outside. He stood looking at
-the unloveliest aspect of nature, a landscape on the
-sunless side, before the east is red. The air felt
-lifeless; there were no depths in the pale sky; the
-azure was a flat tint, opaque and thin, like a poor
-water-color. While he gazed the motionless trees,
-live-oaks and olives and palms, were shaken as by
-a mighty wind; the pepper plumes tossed and
-streamed and tangled like a banner; the great elms
-along the avenue bent over in a breaking strain.
-Yet the silken cord of the Holland window-shade
-did not so much as swing. There was not a wing’s
-breath of air. But gradually the earth and cloud
-vibrated with a strange grinding noise which has
-been described a hundred times, but never adequately;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_354">[354]</span>
-a sickening crepitation, as of the rocks in
-the hills scraping and splintering. Before the
-mind could question the sound, there succeeded
-an anarchy of uproar. In it was jumbled the crash
-of trees and buildings, the splintering crackle of
-glass, the boom of huge chimneys falling and of
-vast explosions, the hiss of steam, the hurling of
-timbers and bricks and masses of stone or sand,
-and the awful rush of frantic water escaping from
-engine or main.</p>
-
-<p>“’Quake, sure’s you’re born!” said the colonel
-softly.</p>
-
-<p>Now that his invisible peril was real, was upon
-him, his spirits leaped up to meet it. He looked
-coolly about him, noting in his single glance that
-the house was standing absolutely stanch, neither
-reeling nor shivering; and that the chimney just
-opposite his eye had not misplaced a brick. In
-the same instant he caught up his revolver and
-ran at his best pace from the room. The hall was
-firm under his hurrying feet. As he passed the
-great arched opening on the western balcony he
-saw an awful sight. Diagonally across from Casa
-Fuerte was the great house of the California magnate
-who did not worry his contractor with demands
-for Colonial honesty of workmanship as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_355">[355]</span>
-well as Colonial architecture. The stately mansion
-with its beautiful piazzas and delicate harmony
-of pillar and pediment, shone white and
-placid on the eye for a second; then rocked in
-ghastly wise and collapsed like a house of cards.
-Simultaneously a torchlike flame streamed into
-the air. A woeful din of human anguish pierced
-the inanimate tumult of wreck and crash.</p>
-
-<p>“Bully for Casa Fuerte!” cried the soldier, who
-now was making a frenzied speed to the other
-side of the house. He cast a single glance toward
-the door which he knew belonged to Janet’s room;
-and he thought of the boy, but he ran first to his
-old aunt. He didn’t need to go the whole way. She
-came out of her door, Janet and Archie at her
-side. They were all perfectly calm, although in
-very light and semi-oriental attire. Archie plainly
-had just plunged out of bed. His eyes were dancing
-with excitement.</p>
-
-<p>“This house is a dandy, ain’t it, Uncle Bertie?”
-he exclaimed. “Mr. Arnold told me all about the
-way his father built it; he said it wouldn’t bat its
-eye for an earthquake. It didn’t either; but that
-house opposite is just kindling-wood! Say! here’s
-Cousin Cary; and—look, Uncle Bertie, Mr.
-Keatcham has got up and he’s all dressed. Hullo,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_356">[356]</span>
-Colvin! Don’t be scared. It’s only a ’quake!”
-Colvin grinned a sickly grin and stammered,
-“Yes, sir, quite so, sir.” Not an earthquake could
-shake Colvin out of his manners.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you able to do this, Mr. Keatcham?”
-young Arnold called breathlessly, plunging into
-the <i>patio</i> to which they had all instinctively gravitated.
-Keatcham laughed a short, grunting laugh.
-“Don’t you understand, this is no little every-day
-’quake? Look out! Is there a way you can look
-and not see a spout of flame? I’ve got to go
-down-town. Are the machines all right?”</p>
-
-<p>“We must find Randall; the poor soul has a
-mortal terror of ’quakes—” Aunt Rebecca’s well-bred
-accents were unruffled; she appeared a
-thought stimulated, nothing more; danger always
-acted as tonic on Winter nerves—“Archie, you
-go put your clothes on this minute, honey. And
-I suppose we ought to look up Millicent.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel, however, had barely set foot on
-the threshold when Mrs. Melville appeared, propelling
-Randall, whom she had rescued from the
-maid’s closet where she was cowering behind
-her neat frocks, momently expecting death,
-but decently ready for it in gown and shoes. Mrs.
-Melville herself, in the disorder of the shock, had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_357">[357]</span>
-merely added her best Paris hat and a skeleton
-bustle to her dainty nightgear. She had not forgotten
-her kimono; she had only forgotten to don
-it; and it draggled over her free arm. But her
-dignity was intact. The instant she beheld her
-kindred she demanded of them, as if they were
-responsible, whether <i>this</i> was a sample of the
-Californian climate. Keatcham blushed and fled
-with Colvin and the giggling Arnold and Archie,
-who were too polite to giggle.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Winter put on her eye-glasses. “Millicent,”
-said she in the gentlest of tones, “your
-bustle is on crooked.”</p>
-
-<p>One wild glance at the merciless mirror in the
-carved pier-glass did Mrs. Melville give, and,
-then, without a word, she fled.</p>
-
-<p>“Randall,” said Mrs. Winter, “you look very
-nice; come and help me dress. There will most
-likely be some more shocks.”</p>
-
-<p>Randall, trembling in every limb, but instinctively
-assuming a composed mien, followed the
-undaunted old lady.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel was going in another direction,
-having heard a telephone bell. He was most anxious
-to put himself into communication with Birdsall,
-because not even during the earthquake had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_358">[358]</span>
-he forgotten an uglier peril; and it had occurred
-to him that Atkins was of a temper not to be
-frightened by the convulsions of order; but rather
-to make his account of it. Nor did the message
-through the telephone tend to reassure him.</p>
-
-<p>The man at the other end of the telephone was
-Birdsall. No telling how long the telephone service
-would keep up, he reported; wires were down
-around the corner; worse, the water mains were
-spouting; and from where he stood since he felt
-the first shock he had counted thirty-six fires.
-Ten of them were down in the quarter where some
-of his men had homes; and a field-glass had shown
-that the houses were all tossed about there; he
-couldn’t keep his men steady; it seemed inhuman
-to ask them to stay when their wives and children
-might be dying; of course it was his damn
-luck to have all married men from down there.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I reckon you will have to let them go;
-but watch out,” begged the colonel, “for you
-know the men we are after will take advantage
-of general disorder to get in their dirty work.
-Now is the most dangerous time.”</p>
-
-<p>Birdsall knew it; he had had intimations that
-some men were trying to sneak up the hill; they
-had been turned back. They pretended to be some<span class="pagenum" id="Page_359">[359]</span>
-wandering railway workers; but Birdsall distrusted
-them. He—No use to ring! Vain to tap
-the carriage of the receiver! The telephone was
-dead, jarred out of existence somewhere beyond
-their ken.</p>
-
-<p>By this time the cold sunlight of the woefulest
-day that San Francisco had ever seen was spread
-over the earth. The city was spotted with blood-red
-spouts of flames. The ruin of the earthquake
-had hardly been visible from their distance, although
-it was ugly enough and of real importance;
-but, even in the brief space which they in
-Casa Fuerte had waited before they should set
-forth, fires had enkindled in all directions, most
-dreadful to see; nor did there seem to be any
-check upon them.</p>
-
-<p>Tracy had waked the domestic staff, and, dazed
-but stoical, they were getting breakfast. But
-Keatcham could not wait; he was in a cold fury
-of haste to get to the town.</p>
-
-<p>He had consented to wait for his breakfast under
-Miss Smith’s representation that it would be
-ready at once and her assurance that he couldn’t
-work through the day without it.</p>
-
-<p>“Happily, Archie,” explained Tracy, whose unquenchable
-college levity no earthquake could affect,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_360">[360]</span>
-“happily my domestic jewel has been stocked
-up with rice and oatmeal, two of the most nutritious
-of foods; and Miss Janet is making coffee
-on her traveling coffee pot for the Boss. That’s
-alcohol, and independent of gas-mains. Lucky;
-for the gas-range is out of action, and we have to
-try charcoal. Notice one interesting thing, Archie?
-Old Keatcham, whom we were fighting
-tooth and nail three weeks ago, is now bossing
-us as ruthlessly as a foot-ball coach; and Cousin
-Cary is taking his slack talk as meek as a freshman.
-Great old boy, Keatcham! And—oh, I say!
-has any one gone to the rescue of the Rogerses?
-I saw Kito speeding over that way from the garage
-and Haley hiking after him. I hope the nine
-small yellow domestics are not burned at the stake
-with Rogers; the bally fire-trap is blazing like a
-tar-barrel!”</p>
-
-<p>As it happened, the colonel had despatched a
-small party to their neighbor’s aid. Haley and
-Kito were not among them; they were to guard
-the garage which was too vital a point in their
-household economy to leave unprotected. Nevertheless,
-Haley and Kito did both run away, leaving
-a Mexican helper to watch; and when they
-returned they were breathless and Haley’s face<span class="pagenum" id="Page_361">[361]</span>
-was covered with blood. He was carefully carrying
-something covered with a carriage-robe in his
-hand.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve the honor to report, sir,” Haley mumbled,
-stiff and straight in his military posture, a very
-grimy and blood-stained hand at salute, “I’ve the
-honor to report, sor, that Private Kito and me
-discovered two sushpicious characters making up
-the hillside by the sekrut road. We purshooed
-thim, sor, and whin they wu’dn’t halt we fired on
-thim, sor, ixploding this here bum which wint
-off whin the hindmost man tumbled.”</p>
-
-<p>Kito smilingly flung aside the carriage-robe,
-disclosing the still smoking shell of an ingenious
-round bomb, very similar to those used in fireworks.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel examined it closely; it was an
-ugly bit of dynamite craft.</p>
-
-<p>“Any casualties, Sergeant?” the colonel asked
-grimly.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sor. The man wid the bum was kilt be
-the ixplosion; the other man was hit by Private
-Kito and wounded in the shoulder but escaped. I
-mesilf have a confusion on me right arrum, me
-ankle is sprained; and ivery tooth in me head is
-in me pockit! That’s all.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_362">[362]</span>“Report to Miss Smith at the hospital, Sergeant.
-Any further report?”</p>
-
-<p>“I wu’d like to riccommind Private Kito for
-honorable minshun for gallanthry.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall certainly remember him; and you also,
-Sergeant, in any report that I may make. Look
-after the garage, Kito.”</p>
-
-<p>Kito bowed and retired, beaming, while Haley
-hobbled into the house. The consequences of the
-attack made on the garage did not appear at once.
-One was that young Arnold had already brought
-the touring-car into the <i>patio</i> in the absence of
-Haley and Kito. Another was that he and Tracy
-and Kito all repaired to the scene of the explosion
-to examine the dead man’s body. They returned
-almost immediately, but for a few moments there
-was no one of the house in the court. The colonel
-went to Keatcham in a final effort to dissuade him
-from going into the city until after he himself had
-gone to the Presidio and returned with a guard.
-He represented as forcibly as he could the danger
-of Keatcham’s appearance during a time of such
-tumult and lawlessness.</p>
-
-<p>“We are down to the primeval passions now,”
-he pleaded. “Do you suppose if it had been Haley
-instead of that dago out there who was killed that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_363">[363]</span>
-we could have punished the murderer? Not unless
-we did it with our own hands. They are
-maybe lying in wait at the first street-corner now.
-If you will only wait—”</p>
-
-<p>Keatcham chopped off his sentence without
-ceremony, not irritably, but with the brusquerie
-of one whose time is too precious for dilatory
-amenities.</p>
-
-<p>“Will the <i>fire</i> wait?” he demanded. “Will the
-thieves and toughs and ruffians whom we have to
-crush before they realize their strength, will <i>they</i>
-wait? This is <i>my</i> town, Winter, the only town I
-care a rap for; and I propose to help save it. I
-can. Danger? Of course there is danger; there
-is danger in every battle; but do you keep out of
-battles where you belong because you may get
-killed? This is my affair; if I get killed it is in
-the way of business, and I can’t help it! No, Arnold,
-I won’t have your father’s son mixed up in
-my fights; you can’t go.”</p>
-
-<p>“Somebody has to run the machine, sir,” insinuated
-young Arnold with a coaxing smile;
-“and I fancy I shouldn’t be my father’s son if I
-didn’t look after my guest—not very long; he’d
-cut me out. Tracy is going, too, he’s armed—”</p>
-
-<p>“You are not both going,” said the colonel;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_364">[364]</span>
-“somebody with a head on him must stay here to
-guard the ladies.”</p>
-
-<p>He would have detailed both Tracy and Mercer;
-but Mercer could really help Keatcham better
-than any one in any business arrangements which
-might need to be made. And Keatcham plainly
-wished his company. Had not the situation been
-so grimly serious Winter could have laughed at
-the grotesque reversal of their conditions; Tracy
-and Arnold did laugh; they were all taking their
-orders from the man who had been their defeated
-prisoner a little while back. Mercer alone kept
-his melancholy poise; he had obtained the aim of
-years; he was not sure but his revenge was subtler
-and completer than he had dared to hope. Being
-a zealot he was possessed by his dreams. Suppose
-he had converted this relentless and tremendous
-power to his own way of faith; what mightn’t he
-hope to accomplish? Meanwhile, so far as the
-business in hand was concerned, he believed in
-Keatcham and in Keatcham’s methods of help; he
-bowed to the innate power of the man; and he
-was as simply obedient and loyal as Kito would
-have been to his feudal lord.</p>
-
-<p>In a very brief time all the arrangements were
-made; the four men went into the <i>patio</i> to enter<span class="pagenum" id="Page_365">[365]</span>
-the touring-car. They walked up to the empty
-machine. The colonel stepped into the front seat
-of the machine. Something in the noise of the
-engine which was panting and straining against
-its control, some tiny sibilant undertone which any
-other ear would have missed, warned his; he bent
-quickly. A dark object gyrated above the heads
-of the other two just mounting the long step; it
-landed with a prodigious splash in the fountain,
-flying into a multitude of sputtering atoms and
-hurling a great column of water high up in air.
-Unheeding its shrieking clamor, the soldier
-sprang over the side of the car, darted through
-the great arched doorway out upon the terrace
-toward a clump of rubber-trees. He fired; again
-he fired.</p>
-
-<p>In every catastrophe the spectators’ minds lose
-some parts of the action. There are blanks to be
-supplied by no one. Every one of the men and
-women present on that fatal morning had a different
-story. Colvin was packing; he could only
-remember the deafening roar and the shouting;
-and when he got down-stairs and saw—he turned
-deadly sick; his chief impression is the backs of
-people and the way their hands would shake.
-Janet Smith, inside, dressing Haley’s wounds,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_366">[366]</span>
-was first warned by the tumult and cries; she as
-well as Archie and Haley who were with her
-could see nothing until they got outside. All
-Mrs. Melville saw was the glistening back of the
-car and Mercer stepping into the car and instantly
-lurching backward. The explosion seemed to her
-simultaneous with Mercer’s entering the car. But
-Mrs. Rebecca Winter, who perhaps had the coolest
-head of all, and who was standing on the dais
-of the arcade exactly opposite the car, distinctly
-saw Keatcham with an amazing exertion of vigor
-for a man just risen from a sick-bed, and with a
-kind of whirling motion, literally hurl Mercer out
-of the car. She is sure of this because of one
-homely little detail, sickening in its very homeliness.
-As he clutched Mercer Keatcham’s soft
-gray hat dropped off and the light burnished the
-bald dome of his head. In the space of that glance
-she heard a crackle and a roar and Kito screamed
-in Japanese, running in from the carriage side.
-She can not tell whether Tracy or Arnold reached
-the mangled creature on the pavement first. Arnold
-only remembers how the carriage-robe
-flapped in Tracy’s shaking hands before he flung
-it over the man. Tracy’s fair skin was a streaky,
-bluish white, and his under jaw kept moving up<span class="pagenum" id="Page_367">[367]</span>
-and down like that of a fish out of water, while
-he gasped, never uttering a sound.</p>
-
-<p>Young Arnold was trembling so that his hands
-shook when he would have raised the wounded
-man. Mercer alone was composed although
-deathly pale. He had the presence of mind to
-throw the harmless fragments of the bomb into
-the fountain and to examine the interior of the
-car lest there should be more of destruction hidden
-therein. Then he approached the heap on the
-flags; but Keatcham was able to motion him
-away, saying in his old voice, not softened in the
-least: “Don’t you do that! I’m all in. No use.
-They got me. But it won’t do them any good;
-you boys know that will you witnessed; it gives a
-fifty thousand for the arrest and conviction or the
-killing of Atkins; his own cutthroats will betray
-him for that. But—where’s Winter? You damn
-careless fools didn’t let <i>him</i> get hurt?”</p>
-
-<p>“Shure, sor, he didn’t let himsilf git hurted,”
-Haley blurted out; he had run in after Miss
-Smith, brandy bottle in hand; “’tis the murdering
-dagoes is gettin’ hurted off there behind the big
-rubber-trees; I kin see the dead legs of thim, this
-minnit. ’Tis a grand cool shot the colonel is, sor.”</p>
-
-<p>“Bring him in, let them go; they were only<span class="pagenum" id="Page_368">[368]</span>
-tools,” panted Keatcham weakly; but the brandy
-revived him; and his lips curled in a faint smile
-as Janet Smith struck a match to heat the teaspoonful
-of water for her hypodermic. “Make it
-good and strong, give me time to say something
-to Mercer and Winter—there he comes; good
-runners those boys are!”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_368fp.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">He kept death at bay by the sheer force of his will. Page <a href="#Page_368">368</a></p>
-
-<p>Tracy and Arnold, acting on a common unspoken
-impulse, had dashed after Winter and
-were pushing him forward between them. Keatcham
-was nearly spent, but he rallied to say the
-words in his mind. He kept death at bay by the
-sheer force of his will. When Winter knelt down
-beside him, with a poignant memory of another
-time in the same place when he had knelt beside
-a seemingly dying man, and gently touched the
-unmarred right hand lying on the carriage-robe,
-he could still form a smile with his stiff lips and
-mutter: “Only thing about me isn’t in tatters;
-of course you touched it and didn’t try to lift me
-where I’m all in pieces. You always understood.
-Listen! You, too, Mercer. Winter knows the
-things I’m bound to have go through. I’ve explained
-them to him. You’ll be my executors and
-trustees? A hundred thousand a year; not too
-big a salary for the work—you can do it. It’s a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_369">[369]</span>
-bigger job than the army one, Winter. Warnebold
-will look after the other end. He’s narrow
-but he is straight. I’ve made it worth his while.
-Some loose ends—it can’t be helped now. Maybe
-you’ll find out there are more difficulties in administering
-a big fortune than you fancied; and
-that it isn’t the easiest thing in the world helping
-fools who can’t ... help themselves. There
-are all those Tidewater idiots ... made me
-read about ... you’ll have to attend to them,
-Mercer ... old woman in the queer clothes
-... chorus girl ... those old ladies who
-had one egg between them for breakfast ...
-you’ll see to them all?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Mercer, looking down on the
-shrunken features with a look of pain and bewilderment.
-“Yes, suh, I’ll do my best.”</p>
-
-<p>“And—we’re even?”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon I am obliged to call it so, suh,” returned
-Mercer with a long, gasping sigh, “but—my
-Lord! you’d better have let <i>me</i> go!”</p>
-
-<p>“Very likely,” said Keatcham dryly, “the city
-needs me. Well, Winter, you must look after
-that. I’ve been thinking why a man throws his
-life away as I did; he <i>has</i> to, unless he’s a poltroon.
-He can’t count whether he’s more useful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_370">[370]</span>
-than the one he saves ... he has simply <i>got</i>
-to save him ... you were a good deal right,
-Winter, about not doing the evil thing to get the
-good. No, it’s a bad time for me to be taken; but
-it’s an honorable discharge.... Helen will
-be glad ... you know I’m not a pig, Winter
-... do what I tried to do ... where’s my
-kind nurse?” Janet was trying by almost imperceptible
-movements to edge a pillow under his
-shoulders; he was past turning his head, but his
-eyes moved toward her. “I’ve left you ... a
-wedding gift ... if I lived ... given to
-you; but made it safe, anyhow. Mercer?”</p>
-
-<p>His voice had grown so feeble and came in such
-gasps from his torn and laboring chest that Mercer
-bent close to his lips to hear the struggling
-sentences. “Mercer,” he whispered, “I want ...
-just ... to tell you ... <i>you didn’t convert
-me</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>Thus, having made amends to his own will,
-having also, let us humbly hope, made amends
-to that greater and wiser Will which is of more
-merciful and wider vision that our weakness can
-comprehend, Edwin Keatcham very willingly
-closed his eyes on earth.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_371">[371]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIX<br />
-
-<small>EXTRACT FROM A LETTER</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>From Mrs. Rebecca Winter to Mrs. John S. G.
-Winslow,</p>
-
-<p class="right">Fairport, Iowa.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>And it was delightful to discover that you were
-so distressed about me. I must be getting a trifle
-maudlin in my old age, for I have had a lump in
-my throat every time I have thought of Johnny
-and you actually starting out to find me; I am
-thankful my telegram (Please, Peggy, do not
-call it a <i>wire</i> again—to me! I loathe these verbal
-indolences) reached you at Omaha in time to stop
-you.</p>
-
-<p>Really, we have not had hardships. Thanks to
-Israel Putnam Arnold! I have a very admiring
-gratitude for that man! In these days of degeneracy
-he builded a stanch enduring house. With
-union labor, too! I don’t see how he contrived to
-do it. Generally, when they build houses here,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_372">[372]</span>
-they scamp the underpinning and weaken the
-joists and paint over the dirt instead of washing
-it off; and otherwise deserve to be killed. The unfortunate
-man opposite had just that kind of
-house, which tumbled down and burned up, at
-once; but, alas! it killed some of the people in it,
-not the guilty masons and carpenters.</p>
-
-<p>Our chimneys have been inspected and we are
-now legally as well as actually sound; but we did
-not suffer. We cooked out on the sidewalk, and
-supplemented our cooking with young Tracy’s
-stove.</p>
-
-<p>I told you of Janet’s engagement. Confidentially,
-my dear Peggy, I am a bit responsible.
-They met by chance on the train; and I assure
-you, although chance might have parted us, I did
-not let it. I clung to Nephew Bertie. I’m sure he
-wondered why. I knew better than to let him
-suspect. But a success you can’t share is like a
-rose without a smell. So I confess to you, <i>I</i> have
-made this match. But when you see Millicent she
-will tell you that <i>she</i> helped things along. She
-has abused Janet like a pickpocket; but now, since
-she has discovered Janet didn’t draw the Daughters’
-caricature of her, she regards her as one of
-the gems of the century.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_373">[373]</span>We are recovering from the terrible events of
-which we wrote. It is certainly a relief that Atkins
-is killed. He was one of the two scoundrels
-who sneaked into the <i>patio</i> and put the bombs
-into the automobile. Bertie shot him. You have
-no doubt heard all about Mr. Keatcham’s death.
-He was killed by the man whose wickedness he
-had unconsciously fostered. He did not know it,
-but I make no doubt his swollen fortune and the
-unscrupulous daring of its acquiring had a great
-influence in corrupting his secretary.</p>
-
-<p>And his corruption was his master’s undoing.
-I must say I sympathize with young Tracy, who
-said last night: “I feel as if I had been put to soak
-in crime! That bomb was the limit. In future,
-me for common or garden virtue; it may be tame
-but I prefer tameness to delirium tremens!”</p>
-
-<p>I used to think that I should like to match my
-wits against a first-class criminal intellect; God
-forgive me for the wish! I have been matching
-wits for the last month; and never putting on my
-shoes without looking in them for a baby bomblet
-or feeling a twinge of indigestion without darkly
-suspecting the cook—who is really the best creature
-in the world, sent Mr. Arnold by a good
-Chinese friend of mine. (I had a chance to do a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_374">[374]</span>
-good turn to my friend, by the way, during the
-earthquake and thus repay some of his to me.)</p>
-
-<p>Archie is well and cheerful. Isn’t it like the
-Winter temperament to lose its melancholy in
-such horrors as we have seen? Archie is distinctly
-happier since he came to California. As
-for Janet and Rupert—oh, well, my dear, you
-and Johnny <i>know</i>! The house has been full of
-people, and we have had several friends of our
-own for a day or two. I got a recipe for a delicious
-tea-cake from Mrs. Wigglesworth of Boston.
-She didn’t save anything but her furs and
-her kimono and a bridge set, besides what she
-had on; she packed her trunk with great care and
-nobody would take it down-stairs. Of course she
-saved her bag of jewels, which reminds me that
-poor Mr. Keatcham left Janet some pearls—that
-is, the money for them. He was very much attached
-to her.</p>
-
-<p>We buried him on the crest of the hill; later,
-when more settled times shall come, he may take
-another and last journey to that huge mausoleum
-where his wife and mother are buried. Poor
-things! it is to be hoped they had no taste living
-or else that they can’t see now how hideous and
-flamboyant is their last costly resting place. But<span class="pagenum" id="Page_375">[375]</span>
-if Keatcham hadn’t a taste for the fine arts he had
-compensating qualities. I shall never forget the
-night of his burial. It was a “wonderful great
-night of stars,” as Stevenson says. A poor little
-tired-out clergyman, in a bedraggled surplice,
-who had been reading prayers over people for the
-last ten hours and was fit to drop, hurried through
-the service; and the town the dead man loved was
-flaming miles beyond miles. About the grave was
-none of his blood, none of his ancient friends, but
-the men I believe he would have chosen—men
-who had fought him and then had fought for him
-faithfully. They were haggard and spent with
-fighting the fire; and they went from his burial
-back to days and nights of desperate effort. He
-had fought and lost and yet did not lose at the
-last, but won, snatching victory out of defeat as
-he was wont to do all his life. The heavy burdens
-which have dropped from his shoulders these
-others whom he chose will carry, maybe more
-humbly, perhaps not so capably, but quite as courageously.
-And it is singular how his influence persists,
-how it touches Kito and Haley, as well as
-the others.</p>
-
-<p>“Shure,” said honest Haley (whose wit you are
-likely to sample in the near future, for he has<span class="pagenum" id="Page_376">[376]</span>
-elected to be the Rupert Winters’ chauffeur; they
-don’t know it yet, but they <i>will</i> when it is time);
-“shure,” says he, “whin thot man so mashed up
-there ye cudn’t move him for fear ye’d lose the
-main parrt of him, whin <i>he</i> was thinkin’ of the
-town and nothin’ else, I hadn’t the heart to be
-complainin’ for the loss of a few teeth and a few
-limps about me! An’ I fair wu’ked like the divil.
-So did Kito, who’s a dacint Jap gintleman and no
-haythin at all.”</p>
-
-<p>Poor Keatcham, he had no childhood and his
-wife died too soon to revive the fragrance of his
-youth; but I can’t help but think he had a reticent,
-awkward, shy sort of heart somewhere about him.
-Well, he was what Millicent would call “a compelling
-personality.” I use plain language and I
-call him a great man. He won the lion’s share because
-he was the lion. And yet, poor Lion, his
-share was a lonely life and a tragic death.</p>
-
-<p class="center">THE END</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1">FOOTNOTES:</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[A]</a> Of course, no allusions are made to any real M. 20139.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[B]</a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container2">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">So still and calm the night is,</div>
-<div class="indent">The very winds asleep,</div>
-<div class="verse">My heart’s so tender sentinel</div>
-<div class="indent">His watch and ward doth keep.</div>
-<div class="verse">And on the wings of zephyrs soft</div>
-<div class="indent">That wander how they will,</div>
-<div class="indent">To thee, O woman fair, to thee</div>
-<div class="indent">My prayers go fluttering still.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Oh, take the heart’s love to thy heart</div>
-<div class="indent">Of one that doth adore!</div>
-<div class="verse">Have pity, add not to the flame</div>
-<div class="indent">That burns thy troubadour!</div>
-<div class="verse">And if compassion stirs thy breast</div>
-<div class="indent">For my eternal woe,</div>
-<div class="indent">Oh, as I love thee, loveliest</div>
-<div class="indent">Of women, love me so!</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-</div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="transnote">
-<p class="ph1">TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:</p>
-
-<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
-
-<p>Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.</p>
-
-<p>Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.</p>
-</div></div>
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LION&#039;S SHARE ***</div>
-<div style='text-align:left'>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Updated editions will replace the previous one&#8212;the old editions will
-be renamed.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG&#8482;
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for an eBook, except by following
-the terms of the trademark license, including paying royalties for use
-of the Project Gutenberg trademark. If you do not charge anything for
-copies of this eBook, complying with the trademark license is very
-easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose such as creation
-of derivative works, reports, performances and research. Project
-Gutenberg eBooks may be modified and printed and given away&#8212;you may
-do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks not protected
-by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the trademark
-license, especially commercial redistribution.
-</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:1em; font-size:1.1em; text-align:center'>START: FULL LICENSE</div>
-<div style='text-align:center;font-size:0.9em'>THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE</div>
-<div style='text-align:center;font-size:0.9em'>PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-To protect the Project Gutenberg&#8482; mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase &#8220;Project
-Gutenberg&#8221;), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person
-or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.B. &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation (&#8220;the
-Foundation&#8221; or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg&#8482; mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg&#8482; work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country other than the United States.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg&#8482; work (any work
-on which the phrase &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; appears, or with which the
-phrase &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-</div>
-
-<blockquote>
- <div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
- other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
- whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
- of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
- at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. 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.
- </div>
-</blockquote>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase &#8220;Project
-Gutenberg&#8221; associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg&#8482; License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg&#8482;.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; License.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg&#8482; work in a format
-other than &#8220;Plain Vanilla ASCII&#8221; or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg&#8482; website
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original &#8220;Plain
-Vanilla ASCII&#8221; or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg&#8482; works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-provided that:
-</div>
-
-<div style='margin-left:0.7em;'>
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &#8226; You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg&#8482; works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg&#8482; trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, &#8220;Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation.&#8221;
- </div>
-
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &#8226; You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg&#8482;
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
- works.
- </div>
-
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &#8226; You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
- </div>
-
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &#8226; You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg&#8482; works.
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the manager of
-the Project Gutenberg&#8482; trademark. Contact the Foundation as set
-forth in Section 3 below.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain &#8220;Defects,&#8221; such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the &#8220;Right
-of Replacement or Refund&#8221; described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you &#8216;AS-IS&#8217;, WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg&#8482; work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg&#8482; work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg&#8482;&#8217;s
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg&#8482; collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg&#8482; and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at www.gutenberg.org.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non-profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation&#8217;s EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state&#8217;s laws.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-The Foundation&#8217;s business office is located at 809 North 1500 West,
-Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up
-to date contact information can be found at the Foundation&#8217;s website
-and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; depends upon and cannot survive without widespread
-public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine-readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular state
-visit <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/donate/">www.gutenberg.org/donate</a>.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Please check the Project Gutenberg web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg&#8482; eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Most people start at our website which has the main PG search
-facility: <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This website includes information about Project Gutenberg&#8482;,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-</div>
-
-</div>
-</body>
-</html>
diff --git a/old/68875-h/images/cover.jpg b/old/68875-h/images/cover.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 8cc4b35..0000000
--- a/old/68875-h/images/cover.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/68875-h/images/coversmall.jpg b/old/68875-h/images/coversmall.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index ed12bef..0000000
--- a/old/68875-h/images/coversmall.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/68875-h/images/i_016fp.jpg b/old/68875-h/images/i_016fp.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 9931adf..0000000
--- a/old/68875-h/images/i_016fp.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/68875-h/images/i_066fp.jpg b/old/68875-h/images/i_066fp.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index f490b7c..0000000
--- a/old/68875-h/images/i_066fp.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/68875-h/images/i_136fp.jpg b/old/68875-h/images/i_136fp.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index e514f09..0000000
--- a/old/68875-h/images/i_136fp.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/68875-h/images/i_211fp.jpg b/old/68875-h/images/i_211fp.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index e3ebc68..0000000
--- a/old/68875-h/images/i_211fp.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/68875-h/images/i_368fp.jpg b/old/68875-h/images/i_368fp.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index e8211bc..0000000
--- a/old/68875-h/images/i_368fp.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/68875-h/images/i_frontis.jpg b/old/68875-h/images/i_frontis.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index e5e7c40..0000000
--- a/old/68875-h/images/i_frontis.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/68875-h/images/i_title.jpg b/old/68875-h/images/i_title.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index a2200f8..0000000
--- a/old/68875-h/images/i_title.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/old/68875-0.txt b/old/old/68875-0.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 2eb38aa..0000000
--- a/old/old/68875-0.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,8749 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The lion's share, by Octave Thanet
-
-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: The lion's share
-
-Author: Octave Thanet
-
-Illustrator: Edmund Marion (E. M.) Ashe
-
-Release Date: August 30, 2022 [eBook #68875]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: 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 THE LION'S SHARE ***
-
-
-
-
-
-THE LION’S SHARE
-
-[Illustration: “Yes,” he said quietly, “you are right, it is blood.”
-Page 99]
-
-
-
-
- THE LION’S SHARE
-
- _By_
- OCTAVE THANET
-
- Author of
- The Man of the Hour, Stories of a Western Town
- The Missionary Sheriff
- A Book of True Lovers, etc.
-
- With Illustrations by
- E. M. ASHE
-
- INDIANAPOLIS
- THE BOBBS-MERRILL COMPANY
- PUBLISHERS
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT 1907
- THE BOBBS-MERRILL COMPANY
-
- OCTOBER
-
- ROBERT DRUMMOND COMPANY, PRINTERS, NEW YORK
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- I THE MAN WITH THE MOLES 1
-
- II AUNT REBECCA 25
-
- III THE TRAIN ROBBERS 46
-
- IV THE VANISHING OF ARCHIE 70
-
- V BLIND CLUES 83
-
- VI THE VOICE IN THE TELEPHONE 100
-
- VII THE HAUNTED HOUSE 118
-
- VIII FACE TO FACE 138
-
- IX THE AGENT OF THE FIRELESS STOVE 152
-
- X THE SMOLDERING EMBERS 171
-
- XI THE CHARM OF JADE 195
-
- XII A BLOW 212
-
- XIII WHOSE FEET WERE SHOD WITH SILENCE 245
-
- XIV FROM MRS. MELVILLE’S POINT OF VIEW 254
-
- XV “THE LIGHT THAT NEVER WAS” 265
-
- XVI THE REAL EDWIN KEATCHAM 290
-
- XVII IN WHICH THE PUZZLE FALLS INTO PLACE 321
-
- XVIII CASA FUERTE 343
-
- XIX EXTRACT FROM A LETTER 371
-
-
-
-
- _Serene, indifferent to fate,
- Thou sittest by the Western gate,
- Thou seest the white seas fold their tents,
- Oh, warder of two continents.
- Thou drawest all things small and great
- To thee beside the Western gate._
-
-
-
-
-THE LION’S SHARE
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-THE MAN WITH THE MOLES
-
-
-The first time that Colonel Rupert Winter saw Cary Mercer was under
-circumstances calculated to fix the incident firmly in his memory. In
-the year 1903, home from the Philippines on furlough, and preparing to
-return to a task big enough to attract him in spite of its exile and
-hardships, he had visited the son of a friend at Harvard. They were
-walking through the corridors of one of the private dormitories where
-the boy roomed. Rather grimly the soldier’s eyes were noting marble
-wainscoting and tiled floors, and contrasting this academic environment
-with his own at West Point. A caustic comment rose to his lips, but it
-was not uttered, for he heard the sharp bark of a pistol, followed by a
-thud, and a crackle as of breaking glass.
-
-“Do you fellows amuse yourselves shooting up the dormitory?” said he.
-The boy halted; he had gone white.
-
-“It came from Mercer’s room!” he cried, and ran across the corridor to
-a door with the usual labeling of two visiting cards. The door was not
-locked. Entering, they passed into a vestibule, thence through another
-door which stood open. For many a day after the colonel could see just
-how the slender young figure looked, the shoulders in a huddle on the
-study table, one arm swinging nerveless; beside him, on the floor,
-a revolver and a broken glass bottle. The latter must have made the
-crackling sound. Some dark red liquid, soaking the open sheets of a
-newspaper, filled the room with the pungent odor of alcohol. Only the
-top of the lad’s head showed--a curly, silky, dark brown head; but even
-before the colonel lifted it he had seen a few thick drops matting the
-brown curls. He laid the head back gently and his hand slipped to the
-boy’s wrist.
-
-“No use, Ralph,” he said in the subdued tones that the voice takes
-unconsciously in the presence of death.
-
-“And Endy was going to help him,” almost sobbed Ralph. “He told me he
-would. Oh, _why_ couldn’t he have trusted his friends!”
-
-The colonel was looking at the newspaper--“Was it money?” said he;
-for a glance at the dabbled sheet had brought him the headings of the
-stock quotations: “Another Sharp Break in Stocks. New Low Records.”
-It _had_ been money. Later, after what needed to be done was over,
-after doctors and officers of the law were gone, Colonel Winter heard
-the wretched story. A young, reckless, fatally attractive Southerner,
-rich friends, college societies, joyous times; nothing really wicked
-or vicious, only a surrender to youth and friendship and pleasure, and
-then the day of reckoning--duns, college warnings, the menace of black
-disgrace. The young fellow was an orphan, with no near kindred save
-one brother much older than he. The brother was reputed to be rich,
-according to Southern standards, and young Mercer, who had just come
-into a modest patrimony of his own, invested in his brother’s ventures.
-As to the character of these ventures, whether flimsy or substantial,
-the colonel’s informants were absolutely ignorant. All they knew of the
-elder Mercer was that he was often in New York and had “a lot to do
-with Wall Street.” He wasn’t a broker; no, he was trying to raise money
-to hang on to some big properties that he had; and the stocks seemed
-to be going at remarkable rates just now, the bottom dropping out of
-the market. If a certain stock of the Mercers’--they didn’t know the
-name--could be kept above twenty-seven he would pull through. Colonel
-Winter made no comment, but he remembered that when he had studied
-the morning’s stock-market pages for himself, he had noted “bad slump
-in the Southern steels,” and “Tidewater on the toboggan slide; off
-three to four points, declining from twenty-seven and a fraction to
-twenty-three.”
-
-“Another victim of the Wall Street pirates,” was the colonel’s silent
-judgment on the tragedy. “Lucky for her his mother’s dead.”
-
-The next morning he had returned and had gone to his young friend’s
-rooms.
-
-The boy was still full of the horror of the day before. Mercer’s
-brother was in Cambridge, he said--arrived that morning from New York.
-“Endy is going to fetch him round to get him out of the reporters’
-way sometime this evening; maybe there’s something I can do”--this
-in explanation of his declining to dine with the colonel. As the two
-entered the rooms, Winter was a little in advance, and caught the first
-glimpse of a man sitting in a big mission arm-chair, his head sunk on
-his breast. So absorbed was this man in his own distempered musings
-that the new-comers’ approach did not arouse him. He sat with knitted
-brows and clenched hands, staring into vacancy; his rigid and pallid
-features set in a ghastly intensity of thought. There was suffering in
-the look; but there was more: the colonel, who had been living among
-the serpent passions of the Orient, knew deadly anger when he saw it;
-it was branded on the face before him. Involuntarily he fell back; he
-felt as if he had blundered in on a naked soul. Noiselessly he slipped
-out of the range of vision. He spoke loudly, halting to ask some
-question about the rooms; this made a moment’s pause.
-
-It was sufficient; in the study they found a quiet, calm, although
-rather haggard-looking man, who greeted Winter’s companion courteously,
-with a Southern accent, and a very good manner. He was presented to the
-colonel as Mr. Mercer. He would have excused himself, professing that
-he was just going, but the colonel took the words out of his mouth:
-“Ralph, here, has a cigar for me--that is all I came for; see you at
-the Touraine, Ralph, to-morrow for luncheon, then.” He did not see
-the man again; neither did he see Ralph, although he made good, so far
-as in him lay, his fiction of an engagement at the Touraine. But Ralph
-could not come; and Winter had lunched, instead, with an old friend
-at his club, and had watched, through a stately Georgian window, the
-shifting greenery of the Common in an east wind.
-
-All through the luncheon the soldier’s mind kept swerving from the talk
-in hand to Cary Mercer’s face. Yet he never expected to see it again.
-Three years later he did see it; and this second encounter, of which,
-by the way, Mercer was unconscious, was the beginning of an absorbing
-chapter in his life. A short space of time that chapter occupied; yet
-into it crowded mystery, peril, a wonderful and awful spectacle, the
-keenest happiness and the cruelest anxiety. Let his days be ever so
-many, the series of events which followed Mercer’s reappearance will
-not be blurred by succeeding experiences; their vivid and haunting
-pictures will burn through commoner and later happenings as an electric
-torch flares through layers of mist.
-
-Nothing, however, could promise adventure less than the dull and chilly
-late March evening when the chapter began. Nor could any one be less
-on the lookout for adventure, or even interest, than was Rupert Winter.
-In truth, he was listless and depressed.
-
-When he alighted from his cab in the great court of the Rock Island
-Station he found Haley, his old orderly, with a hand on the door-hasp.
-Haley’s military stoicism of demeanor could not quite conceal a certain
-agitation--at least not from the colonel’s shrewd eye, used to catch
-the moods of his soldiers. He strangled a kind of sigh. “Doesn’t like
-it much more than I,” thought Rupert Winter. “This is mighty kind of
-you, Haley,” he said.
-
-“Yes, sor,” answered Haley, saluting. The colonel grinned feebly.
-Haley, busy repelling a youthful porter, did not notice the grin; he
-strode ahead with the colonel’s world-scarred hand-luggage, found an
-empty settee beside one of the square-tiled columns of the waiting-room
-and disposed his burden on the iron-railed seat next the corner one,
-which he reserved for the colonel.
-
-“The train ain’t in yet, Colonel,” said he. “I’ll be telling you--”
-
-“No, Haley,” interrupted the colonel, whose lip twitched a little; and
-he looked aside; “best say good-by now; don’t wait. The fact is, I’m
-thinking of too many things you and I have gone through together.” He
-held out his hand; Haley, with a stony expression, gazed past it and
-saluted, while he repeated: “Yes, sor; I’ll be back to take the bags
-whin the train’s made up.” Whereupon he wheeled and made off with speed.
-
-“Just the same damned obstinate way he’s always had,” chuckled the
-colonel to himself. Nevertheless, something ached in his throat as he
-frowned and winked.
-
-“Oh, get a brace on you, you played-out old sport!” he muttered. “The
-game’s on the last four cards and you haven’t established your suit;
-you’ll have to sit back and watch the other fellows play!” But his
-dreary thoughts persisted. Rupert was a colonel in the regular army
-of the United States. He had been brevetted a brigadier-general after
-the Spanish War, and had commanded, not only a brigade, but a division
-at one critical time in the Philippines; but for reasons probably
-known to the little knot of politicians who “hung it up,” although
-incomprehensible to most Americans, Congress had failed to pass the
-bill giving the wearers of brevet titles the right to keep their
-hard-won and empty honors; wherefore General Winter had declined to
-Colonel Winter.
-
-He had more substantial troubles, including a wound which would
-probably make him limp through life and possibly retire him from
-service at fifty. It had given him a six months’ sick leave (which he
-had not wanted), and after spending a month on the Atlantic coast,
-he was going for the spring to the Pacific. Haley, whose own term of
-service had expired, had not reënlisted, but had followed him, Mrs.
-Haley and the baby uncomplainingly bringing up the rear. It was not
-fair to Haley nor to Mrs. Haley, the colonel felt. He had told Haley
-so; he had found a good situation for the man, and he had added the
-deed for a little house in the suburbs of Chicago.
-
-If Haley wouldn’t reënlist--there never was a better soldier since he
-had downed a foolish young hankering for wild times and whisky--if he
-wouldn’t go back to the army, where he belonged, let him settle down,
-take up the honest carpenter’s trade that he had abandoned, be a good
-citizen and marry little Nora to some classmate in the high school,
-who might make a fortune and build her a Colonial mansion, should the
-Colonial still obtain in the twentieth century.
-
-The colonel had spread a grand prospect before Haley, who listened
-unresponsively, a dumb pain in his wide blue Irish eyes. The colonel
-hated it; but, somehow, he hated worse the limp look of Haley’s back as
-he watched it dwindle down Michigan Avenue.
-
-However, Mrs. Haley had been more satisfactory, if none the less
-bewildering. She seemed very grateful over the house and the three
-hundred dollars for its furnishing. A birthday present, he had termed
-it, with a flicker of humor because the day was his own birthday. His
-fiftieth birthday it happened to be, and it occurred to him that a
-man ought to do something a little notable on such an anniversary.
-This rounding of the half-century had attributes apart; it was no mere
-annual birthday; it marked the last vanishing flutter of the gilded
-draperies of youth; the withering of the garlands; the fading tinkle
-of the light music of hope. It should mark a man’s solid achievements.
-Once, not so long ago, Winter had believed that his fiftieth birthday
-would see wide and beneficent and far-reaching results in the province
-where he ruled. That dream was shattered. He was generous of nature,
-and he could have been content to behold another reap the fields which
-he had sown and tilled; it was the harvest, whether his or another’s,
-for which he worked; but his had been the bitter office to have to
-stand aside, with no right to protest, and see his work go to waste
-because his successor had a feeble brain and a pusillanimous caution in
-place of his own dogged will. For all these reasons, as well as others,
-the colonel found no zest in his fiftieth birthday; and his reverie
-drifted dismally from one somber reflection to another until it brought
-up at the latest wound to his heart--his favorite brother’s death.
-
-There had been three Winter brothers--Rupert, Melville and Thomas.
-During the past year both Thomas Winter and his wife had died, leaving
-one child, a boy of fourteen, named Archibald after his father’s uncle.
-Rupert Winter and the boy’s great-aunt, the widow of the great-uncle
-for whom he had been named, were appointed joint guardians of the young
-Archie. To-night, in his jaded mood, he was assailed by reproaches
-because he had not seen more of his ward. Why, he hadn’t so much as
-looked the little chap up when he passed through Fairport--merely had
-sent him a letter and some truck from the Philippines; nice guardian
-_he_ was! By a natural enough transition, his thoughts swerved to his
-own brief and not altogether happy married life. He thought of the
-graves in Arizona where he had left his wife and his two children,
-and his heart felt heavy. To escape musings which grew drearier every
-second, he cast his eyes about the motley crowd shuffling over the
-tiled floors or resting in the massive dark oaken seats. And it was
-then that he saw Cary Mercer. At first he did not recognize the face.
-He only gazed indifferently at two well-dressed men who sat some paces
-away from him in the shadow of a great tiled column similar to his own.
-There was this difference, it happened: the mission lantern with its
-electric bulbs above the two men was flashing brightly, and by some
-accident that above the colonel was dark. He could see the men, himself
-in the shadow.
-
-The men were rather striking in appearance; they were evidently
-gentlemen; the taller one was young, well set-up, clean-shaven and
-quietly but most correctly dressed. His light brown hair showed a
-slight curl in its closely clipped locks; his gray-blue eyes had long
-lashes of brown darker than his hair; his teeth were very white, and
-there was a dimple in his cheek, plain when he smiled. Had his nose
-been straight he would have been as handsome as a Greek god, but
-the nose was only an ordinary American nose, rather too broad at the
-base; moreover, his jaw was a little too square for classic lines.
-Nevertheless, he was good to look upon, as well as strong and clean
-and wholesome, and when his gray-blue eyes strayed about the room the
-dimple dented his cheek and his white teeth gleamed in a kind of merry
-good-nature pleasant to see. But it was the other man who held the
-colonel’s eye. This man was double the young man’s age, or near that;
-he was shorter, although still of fair stature, and slim of build. His
-face was oval in contour and delicate of feature. Although he wore no
-glasses, his brow had the far pucker of a near-sighted man. There was
-a mole on his cheek-bone and another just below his ear. Both were
-small, rather than large, and in no sense disfiguring; but the colonel
-noted them absently, being in the habit of photographing a man in a
-glance. The face had beauty, distinction even, yet about it hung some
-association, sinister as a poison label.
-
-“Now, where,” said the colonel to himself, “_where_ have I seen that
-man?” Almost instantly the clue came to him. “By Jove, it’s the
-brother!” he exclaimed. Three years ago, and he had almost forgotten;
-but here was Cary Mercer--the name came to him after a little
-groping--here he was again; but who was the pleasant youngster with
-him? And what were they discussing with so little apparent and so much
-real earnestness?
-
-One of the colonel’s physical gifts was an extraordinary acuteness of
-hearing. It passed the mark of a faculty and became a marvel. Part
-of this uncanny power was really due, not to hearing alone, but to
-an alliance with another sense, because Winter had learned the lip
-language in his youth; he heard with his eyes as well as his ears. This
-combination had made an unintentional and embarrassed eavesdropper out
-of an honest gentleman a number of times. To set off such evil tricks
-it had saved his life once on the plains and had rescued his whole
-command another time in the Philippines. While he studied the two faces
-a sentence from the younger man gripped his attention. It was: “I don’t
-mind the risk, but I hate taking such an old woman’s money.”
-
-“She has a heap,” answered the other man carelessly; “besides--” He
-added something with averted head and in too low a voice to reach the
-listener unassisted. But it was convincing, evidently, since the young
-man’s face grew both grave and stern. He nodded, muttering: “Oh, I
-understand; I wasn’t backing water; I know we have lost the right to
-be squeamish. But I say, old chap, how long since Mrs. Winter has seen
-you? Would she recognize you?”
-
-The colonel, who had been about to abandon his espionage as unbecoming
-a soldier and a gentleman, stowed away all his scruples at the mention
-of the name. He pricked up his ears and sharpened his eyes, but was
-careful lest they should catch his glance. The next sentence, owing to
-the speaker’s position, was inaudible and invisible; but he clearly
-caught the young man’s response:
-
-“You’re sure they’ll be on this train?”
-
-And he saw the interlocutor’s head nod.
-
-“The boy’s with them?”
-
-An inaudible reply, but another nod.
-
-“And you’re sure of Miss Smith?”
-
-This time the other’s profile was toward the listener, who heard the
-reply, “Plumb sure. I wish I were as sure of some other things. Have we
-settled everything? It is better not to be seen together.”
-
-“Yes, I think you’ve put me wise on the main points. By the way, what
-_is_ the penalty for kidnapping?”
-
-Again an averted head and hiatus, followed by the younger man’s
-sparkling smile and exclamation: “Wow! Riskier than foot-ball--and even
-more fun!” Something further he added, but his arms hid his mouth as he
-thrust them into his greatcoat, preparing to move away. He went alone;
-and the other, after a moment’s gloomy meditation, gathered up coat and
-bag and followed. During that moment of arrested decision, however, his
-features had dropped into sinister lines which the colonel remembered.
-
-“Dangerous customer, or I miss my guess,” mused the soldier, who knew
-the passions of men. “I wonder--they couldn’t mean my Aunt Rebecca?
-She’s old; she has millions of money--but she’s not on this train.
-And there’s no Miss Smith in our deck. I’m so used to plotting I go
-off on fake hikes! Probably I’m getting old and dotty. Mercer, poor
-fellow, may have his brain turned and be an anarchist or a bomb-thrower
-or a dirty kidnapper for revenge; but that boy’s a decent chap; I’ve
-licked too many second lieutenants into shape not to know something of
-youngsters.”
-
-[Illustration: “By the way what _is_ the penalty for kidnapping?” Page
-16]
-
-He pushed the idea away; or, rather, his own problems pushed it out of
-his mind, which went back to his ward and his single living brother.
-Melville had no children, only his wife’s daughters, who were both
-married--Melville having married a widow with a family, an estate and
-a mind of her own. Melville was a professor in a state university, a
-mild, learned man whom nature intended for science but whom his wife
-was determined to make into the president of the university.
-
-“Even money which will win,” chuckled Rupert Winter to himself.
-“Millicent hasn’t much tact; but she has the perseverance of the
-saints. _She_ married Mel; he doesn’t know, but she surely did. And she
-bosses him now. Well, I suppose Mel likes to be bossed; he never had
-any strenuous opinions except about the canals of Mars--_Valgame dios_!”
-
-With a gasp the colonel sprang to his feet. There before him, in the
-flesh, was his sister-in-law. Her stately figure, her Roman profile,
-her gracefully gesticulating hand, which indicated the colonel’s
-position to her heavily laden attendant, a lad in blue--these he knew
-by heart just as he knew that her toilet for the journey would be in
-the latest mode, and that she would have the latest fashion of gait and
-mien. Millicent studied such things.
-
-She waved her luggage into place--an excellent place--in the same
-breath dismissing the porter and instructing him when he must return.
-Then, but not until then, did she turn graciously to her brother-in-law.
-
-“I hoped that I should find you, Bertie,” she said in a voice of such
-creamy richness that it was hard to credit the speaker with only three
-short trips to England. “Melville said you were to take this train;
-and I was _so_ delighted, _so_ relieved! I am in a most harassing
-predicament, my dear Bertie.”
-
-“That’s bad,” murmured the colonel with sympathetic solicitude: “what’s
-the trouble? Couldn’t you get a section?”
-
-“I have my reservations, but I don’t know whether I shall go to-night.”
-
-“Maybe I’m stupid, Millicent, but I confess I don’t know what you mean.”
-
-“Really, there’s no reason why you should, Bertie. That’s why I was so
-anxious to see you--in time, so that I might explain to you--might put
-you on your guard.”
-
-“Yes?” the colonel submitted; he never hurried a woman.
-
-“I’m going to visit dear Amy--you remember she was married two years
-ago and lives in Pasadena; she has a dear little baby and the loveliest
-home! It’s charming. And she was so delighted with your wedding gift,
-it was _so_ original. Amy never did care for costly things; these
-simple, unique gifts always pleased her. Of course, my main object
-is to see the dear child, but I shall not go to-night _unless_ Aunt
-Rebecca Winter is on the train. If for any reason she waits over until
-to-morrow I shall wait also.”
-
-“Ah,” sighed the colonel very softly, not stirring a muscle of his
-politely attentive face; “and does Aunt Rebecca expect to go on the
-train?”
-
-“They told me at the Pullman office that she had the drawing-room, the
-state-room and two sections. Of course, she has her maid with her and
-Archie--”
-
-“Does _he_ go, too?” the colonel asked, his eyes narrowing a little.
-
-“Yes, she’s taking him to California; he doesn’t seem well enough, she
-thinks, to go to school, so he is to have a tutor out there. I’m a
-little afraid Aunt Rebecca mollycoddles the boy.”
-
-“Aunt Rebecca never struck me as a molly-coddler. I always considered
-her a tolerably cynical old Spartan. But do you mean there is any doubt
-of their going? Awfully good of you to wait to see if they don’t go,
-but I’m sure Aunt Rebecca wouldn’t want you to sacrifice your section--”
-
-Mrs. Melville lifted a shapely hand in a Delsartian gesture of arrest;
-her smiling words were the last the colonel had expected. “Hush, dear
-Bertie; Aunt Rebecca doesn’t _know_ I am going. I don’t want her to
-know until we are on the train.”
-
-“Oh, I see, a surprise?” But he did _not_ see; and, with a quiet
-intentness, he watched the color raddle Mrs. Melville’s smooth cheeks.
-
-“Hardly,” returned the lady. “The truth is, Bertie, Melville and I
-are worried about Aunt Rebecca. She, we fear, has fallen under the
-influence of a most plausible adventuress; I suppose you have heard of
-her companion, Miss Smith?”
-
-“Can’t say I have exactly,” said the colonel placidly, but his eyes
-narrowed again. “Who is the lady?”
-
-“I thought--I am _sure_ Melville must have written you. But-- Oh,
-yes, he wrote yesterday to Boston. Well, Bertie, Miss Smith is a
-Southerner; she says she is a South Carolinian, but Aunt Rebecca picked
-her up in Washington, where she was with a kind of cousin of ours who
-was half crazy. Miss Smith took care of her and she died”--she fixed a
-darkling eye on the soldier--“she _died_ and she left Miss Smith money.”
-
-“Much?”
-
-“A few thousands. That is how Aunt Rebecca met her, and she pulled the
-wool over auntie’s eyes, and they came back together. She’s awfully
-clever.”
-
-“Young? Pretty?”
-
-“Oh, dear, no. And she’s nearer forty than thirty. Just the designing
-age for a woman when she’s still wanting to marry some one but
-beginning to be afraid that she can’t. Then such creatures always try
-to get _money_. If they can’t marry it, and there’s no man to set
-their caps for, they try to wheedle it out of some poor fool woman!”
-Millicent was in earnest, there was no doubt of that; the sure sign was
-her unconscious return to the direct expressions of her early life in
-the Middle West.
-
-“And you think Miss Smith is trying to influence Aunt Rebecca?”
-
-“Of course she is; and Aunt Rebecca is eighty, Rupert. And often while
-people of her age show no other sign of weakening intellect, they are
-not well regulated in their affections; they take fancies to people
-and get doting and clinging. She is getting to depend on Miss Smith.
-Really, that woman has more influence with her than all the rest of
-us together. She won’t hear a word against her. Why! when I tried to
-suggest how little we knew about Miss Smith and that it would be better
-not to trust her _too_ entirely, she positively _resented_ it. Of
-course I used tact, too. I was so hurt, so surprised!” Mrs. Millicent
-was plainly aggrieved.
-
-The colonel, who had his own opinion of the tact of his brother’s wife,
-was not so surprised; but he made an inarticulate sound which might
-pass for sympathy.
-
-“We’ve been worried a good deal,” pursued Mrs. Melville, “about the way
-Aunt Rebecca has acted. She wouldn’t stay in Fairport, where we could
-have some influence over her. She was always going south or going to
-the sea-shore or going _somewhere_. Sometimes I suspect Miss Smith made
-her, to keep her away from _us_, you know.”
-
-“Well, as long as I have known Aunt Rebecca--anyhow, ever since Uncle
-Archibald died--she has been restless and flying about.”
-
-“Not as she is now. And then she only had her maid--”
-
-“Oh, yes, Randall; she’s faithful as they make ’em. What does _she_ say
-about Miss Smith?”
-
-“Bertie, she’s won over Randall. Randall swears by her. Oh, she’s
-_deep_!”
-
-“Seems to be. But--excuse me--what’s your game, Millicent? How do you
-mean to protect our aged kinswoman and, incidentally, of course, the
-Winter fortune?”
-
-“I shall watch, Bertie; I shall be on my guard every waking hour. That
-deluded old woman is in more danger, perhaps, than you dream.”
-
-“As how?”
-
-“Miss Smith”--her voice sank portentously--“_was a trained nurse_.”
-
-“What harm does that do--unless you think she would know too much about
-poisons?” The colonel laughed.
-
-“It’s no laughing matter, Bertie. Rebecca is so rich and this other
-woman is so poor, and, in my estimation, so ambitious. I make no
-insinuations, I only say she needs watching.”
-
-“You may be right about that,” said the colonel thoughtfully. “There
-is Haley and the boy for your bags!”
-
-The boy picked up the big dress-suit case, the smaller dress-suit
-case and the hat case, he grabbed the bundle of cloaks, the case of
-umbrellas, and the lizard-skin bag. Dubiously he eyed the colonel’s
-luggage, as he tried to disengage a finger.
-
-“Niver moind, young feller,” called Haley, peremptorily whisking away
-the nearest piece, “I’ll help you a bit with yours, instead; you’ve a
-load, sure!”
-
-Mrs. Melville explained in an undertone: “I take all the hand-luggage I
-possibly can; the over-weight charges are wicked!”
-
-“Haley, they won’t let you inside without a ticket,” objected the
-colonel. But Haley, unheeding, strode on ahead of the staggering youth.
-
-“I have an English bath-tub, locked, of course, and packed with things,
-but he has put _that_ in the car,” said Mrs. Melville.
-
-“Certainly,” said the colonel absently; he was thinking: Mrs. Winter,
-the boy, Miss Smith--how ridiculously complete! Decidedly _something_
-will bear watching.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-AUNT REBECCA
-
-
-No sooner was Mrs. Melville ushered into her section than the colonel
-went through the train. He was not so suspicious as he told himself
-he might have been, with such a dovetailing of circumstances into his
-accidentally captured information; he couldn’t yet read villainy on
-that college lad’s frank face. But no reason, therefore, to neglect
-precautions. “Hope the best of men and prepare for the worst,” was the
-old campaigner’s motto.
-
-A walk through the cars showed him no signs of the two men. It was a
-tolerably complete inspection, too. There was only one drawing-room or
-state-room of which he did not manage to get a glimpse--the closed room
-being the property of a very great financial magnate, whose private car
-was waiting for him in Denver. His door was fast, and the click of the
-type-writer announced the tireless industry of our rulers.
-
-But if he did not find the college boy or the man with the moles he
-did get a surprise for his walk; namely, the sight of the family of
-Haley, and Haley himself beside their trig, battered luggage, in a
-section of the car next his own. Mrs. Haley turned a guilty red, while
-Haley essayed a stolid demeanor.
-
-“What does this mean?” demanded the colonel.
-
-“Haley felt he would _have_ to go with you, Colonel,” replied Mrs.
-Haley, who had timid, wide, blue eyes and the voice of a bird, but a
-courage under her panic, as birds have, too, when their nests are in
-peril. “We’ve rinted the house to a good man with grown-up children,
-and Haley can get a job if you won’t want him.”
-
-“Yis, sor,” mumbled Haley. He was standing at attention, as was his
-wife, the toddling Nora being held in the posture of respect on the
-plush seat.
-
-“And I suppose you took the furniture money to buy tickets?”
-
-“Yis, sor.”
-
-“And you’re bound to go with me?”
-
-“Yis, sor,” said Haley.
-
-“You ought to be ashamed of yourself, Sergeant,” said the colonel; but
-he was glad at the heart of him for this mutinous loyalty.
-
-“Yis, sor,” said Haley.
-
-“Well, since you are here, I engage you from to-day, you understand.”
-
-“Yis, sor,” said Haley. Mrs. Haley whimpered a blessing; but the only
-change in the soldier was that his military stolidity became natural
-and real instead of forced.
-
-“Sit down on this seat over here with me and I’ll tell you what I want.
-You fraud, letting me say good-by to you--”
-
-“I didn’t want to take the liberty, sor, but you _made_ me shake hands.
-I was afraid you’d catch on, sor. ’Tis a weight off me moind, sor.”
-
-“I dare say. You always have your way with me, you old mule. Now
-listen; I want you to be on the watch for two men”--thereupon the
-colonel described his men, laying special stress on the moles on the
-face of one, and the other’s dimple.
-
-Having set Haley his tasks, he went back to his car in better spirits.
-
-By this time the train was moving. He had seen his kinswoman and her
-party enter; and he found the object of Mrs. Melville’s darksome
-warnings sitting with a slender lad in the main body of the car. Aunt
-Rebecca was in the drawing-room, her maid with her. Mrs. Melville, who
-had already revealed her presence, sat across the aisle. She presented
-the colonel at once.
-
-Miss Smith did not look formidable; she looked “nice,” thought
-the colonel. She was of medium height; she was obviously plump,
-although well proportioned; her presence had an effect of radiant
-cleanliness, her eyes were so luminous and her teeth so fine and her
-white shirt-waist so immaculate. There was about her a certain soft
-illumination of cheerfulness, and at the same time a restful repose;
-she moved in a leisurely fashion and she sat perfectly still. “I never
-saw any one who looked less of an adventuress,” Winter was thinking, as
-he bowed. Then swiftly his glance went to the lad, a pale young fellow
-with hazel eyes and a long slim hand which felt cold.
-
-The boy made a little inarticulate sound in his throat and blushed
-when Colonel Winter addressed him. But he looked the brighter for the
-blush. It was not a plain face; rather an interesting one in spite of
-its listlessness and its sickly pallor; its oval was purely cut, the
-delicate mouth was closed firmly enough, and the hazel eyes with their
-long lashes would be beautiful were they not so veiled.
-
-“He has the Winter mouth, at least,” noted the colonel. He felt a
-novel throb at his heart. Had his own boy lived, the baby that died
-when it was born, he would be only a year older than Archie. At least,
-this boy was of his own blood. Without father or mother, but _not_
-alone in the world; and, if any danger menaced, not without defenders.
-The depression which had enveloped him lifted as mist before the sun,
-burned away by the mere thought of possible difficulties. “We will
-see if any one swindles you out of your share,” said Rupert Winter,
-compressing the Winter mouth more firmly, “or if those gentlemanly
-kidnappers mean you.”
-
-His ebbing suspicion of the boy’s companion revived; he would be on his
-guard, all right.
-
-“Aunt Rebecca wants to see you,” Mrs. Melville suggested. “She is in
-the drawing-room with her solitaire.”
-
-“Still playing Penelope’s Web?”
-
-“Oh, she always comes back to it. But she plays bridge, too; Rupert, I
-hear your game is a wonder. Archie’s been learning, so he could play
-with you.”
-
-“Good for Archie!”--he shot a glance and a smile at the lad’s reddening
-face--“we’ll have a game.”
-
-“Lord, I wish he didn’t look quite so ladylike,” he was grumbling
-within, as he dutifully made his way to his aunt’s presence.
-
-The electric lights flooded the flimsy railway table on which were
-spread rows of small-sized cards. An elderly lady of quality was musing
-over the pasteboard rows. A lady of quality--that was distinctly the
-phrase to catch one’s fancy at the first glimpse of Mrs. Winter. Not
-an aged lady, either, for even at eighty that elegantly moulded,
-slim figure, that abundance of silvery hair--parted in the middle
-and growing thickly on each side in nature’s own fashion, which art
-can not counterfeit, as well as softly puffed and massed above--that
-exquisitely colored and textured skin, strangely smooth for her years,
-with tiny wrinkles of humor, to be sure, about the eyes, but with
-cheeks and skin unmarred; that fine, firmly carved profile, those black
-eyebrows and lashes and still brilliant dark eyes; most of all that
-erect, alert, dainty carriage, gave no impression of age; but they all,
-and their accessories of toilet and manner, and a little prim touch of
-an older, more reticent day in both dress and bearing, recalled the
-last century phrase.
-
-A soft gray bunch of chinchilla fur lay where she had slipped it on
-her soft gray skirts; one hand rested in the fur--her left hand--and on
-the third finger were the only rings which she wore, a band of gold,
-worn by sixty years, and a wonderful ruby, wherein (at least such was
-Rupert’s phantasy) a writhing flame was held captive by its guard of
-diamond icicles. The same rings admired by her nephew ever since he was
-a cadet--just the same smiling, inscrutable, high-bred, unchanging old
-dame!
-
-“Good evening, Aunt Rebecca; not a day older!” said the colonel.
-
-“Good evening, Bertie,” returned the lady, extending a hand over the
-cards; “excuse my not rising to greet you; I might joggle the cards. Of
-course I’m not a day older; I don’t dare to grow older at my age! Sit
-down. I’m extremely glad to see you; I’ve a heap to talk to you about.
-Do you mind if I run this game through first?”
-
-The colonel didn’t mind. He raised the proffered hand to his lips; such
-homage seemed quite the most natural act in the world with Mrs. Winter.
-And he unobtrusively edged his own lean and wiry person into the vacant
-seat opposite her.
-
-“How far are you going?” said she, after a few moves of the cards.
-
-“My ticket says Los Angeles; but it had to say something, so I chose
-Los Angeles for luck; I’m an irresponsible tramp now, you know; and I
-may drop off almost anywhere. You are for southern California, aren’t
-you?”
-
-“Eventually; but we shall stop at San Francisco for two or three weeks.”
-
-“Do you mind if I stop off with you? I want to get acquainted with my
-ward,” said the colonel.
-
-“That’s a good idea, Bertie.”
-
-“He seems rather out of sorts; you aren’t worried about--well,
-tuberculosis or that sort of thing?”
-
-“I am worried about just that sort of thing; although the doctor says
-nothing organic at all is the matter with him; but he is too melancholy
-for a boy; he needs rousing; losing his father and mother in one year,
-you know, and he was devoted to them. I can’t quite make him out,
-Bertie; he hasn’t the Winter temperament. I suppose he has a legal
-right to his mother’s nature; but it is very annoying. It makes him so
-much harder to understand--not that she wasn’t a good woman who made
-Tom happy; but she wasn’t a Winter. However, Janet has brightened him
-up considerably--you’ve seen Janet--Miss Smith? What do you think of
-her?”
-
-Winter said honestly that she was very nice-looking and that she looked
-right capable; he fell into the idiom of his youth sometimes when with
-a Southerner.
-
-“She is,” said Aunt Rebecca.
-
-“Where did you find her?” asked the colonel carelessly, inspecting the
-cards.
-
-Aunt Rebecca smiled. “I thought Millicent would have given you all
-the particulars. She was nurse, secretary, companion and diet cook to
-Cousin Angela Nelson; when _she_ died I got her. Lucky for me.”
-
-“So I should judge,” commented the colonel politely.
-
-“I presume Millicent has told you that she is an adventuress and after
-my money and a heap more stuff. If she hasn’t she will. Get a notion
-once in Millicent’s head and a surgical operation is necessary to
-dislodge it! Janet is the only mortal person who could live with poor
-Cousin Angela, who had enough real diseases to kill her and enough
-imaginary ones to kill anybody who lived with her! Janet made her
-comfortable, would not stand everything on earth from her--though she
-did stand a heap--and really cared for her. When she died Cousin Angela
-left her some money; not very much, but a few thousands. She would
-have left her more, but Janet wouldn’t let her. She left some to some
-old servants, who surely deserved it for living with _her_, some to
-charities and the rest to her sisters, who hadn’t put a foot inside the
-house for fifteen years, but naturally resented her not giving them
-everything. I reckon they filled Millicent up with their notions.” She
-pushed the outspread cards together.
-
-“You had several moves left,” said the colonel.
-
-“Four. But then, I was finished. Bertie, you play bridge, of course;
-and I used to hear of your whist triumphs; how did you happen to take
-to whist?”
-
-“To fill up the time, I reckon. I began it years ago. Now a soldier’s
-life is a great deal more varied, because a man will be shifted around
-and get a show of the different kinds of service. And there are the
-exams, and the Philippines--oh, plenty of diversions. But in the old
-days a man in the line was billed for an awfully stupid time. I didn’t
-care to take to drink; and I couldn’t read as you do if I’d had books,
-which I hadn’t, so I took to playing cards. I played skat and poker
-and whist, and of late years I’ve played bridge. Millicent plays?”
-
-“Millicent is a celebrated player. She was a great duplicate-whist
-player, you know. To see Millicent in her glory, one should play
-duplicate with her. I’m only a chump player; my sole object is to win
-tricks.”
-
-“What else should it be?”
-
-Aunt Rebecca smiled upon him. “To give information to your partner.
-The main object of the celebrated American-leads system is signaling
-information to your partner. Incidentally, one tells the adversaries,
-as well as one’s partner, which, however, doesn’t count really as much
-as you might think; for most people don’t notice what their partners
-play _very_ much, and don’t notice what their adversaries play at
-all. Millicent is always so busy indicating things to her partner and
-watching for his signals and his indications that you can run a cross
-ruff in on her without her suspecting. She asked me once if she didn’t
-play an intelligible game, and I told her she did; a babe in arms could
-understand it. She didn’t seem quite pleased.”
-
-“How about Archie? Can he play a good game?”
-
-“Very fair for a boy of fourteen; he was fond of whist until his
-troubles came,” said Mrs. Winter, with a faint clouding of her keen
-gaze. “Since then he hasn’t taken much interest in anything. Janet has
-brightened him up more than any one; and when he heard you were coming
-that did rouse him. You are one of his heroes. He’s that sort of a
-boy,” she added, with a tinge of impatience in her soft Southern voice.
-As if to divert her thoughts, she began deftly moving the cards before
-her. Her hands showed the blue veins more prominently than they show in
-young hands. This was their only surrender to time; they were shapely
-and white, and the slim fingers were as straight as when the beaux of
-Fairfax County would have ridden all day for a chance to kiss them.
-
-The colonel watched the great ruby wink and glow. The ruby was a part
-of his memories of his aunt; she had always worn it. He remembered
-it, when she used to come and visit him at the hotel at West Point,
-dazzling impartially officers, professors, cadets and hotel waiters.
-Was that almost forty years ago? Well, thirty-four, anyhow! She had
-been very good, very generous to all the young Winters, then. Indeed,
-although she never quite forgave him for not marrying the wife of
-her selecting, she had always been kind and generous to Rupert; yet,
-somehow, while he had admired and found a humorous joy in his Aunt
-Rebecca, he wondered if he had ever loved her. She was both beautiful
-and brilliant when she was young, a Southern belle, a Northern society
-leader; her life was full of conquests; her footsteps, which had
-wandered over the world, had left a phosphorescent wake of admiration.
-She had always been a personage. She was a power in Washington after
-the war; they had found her uniquely delightful in royal courts long
-before Americans were the fashion; she had been of importance in New
-York, and they had loved her epigrams in Boston; now, in her old age,
-she held a veritable little court of her own in the provincial Western
-city which had been her husband’s home. He went to Congress from
-Fairport; he had made a fortune there, and when he died, many years
-ago, in Egypt, back to his Western home, with dogged determination and
-lavish expenditures of both money and wit, his widow had brought him to
-rest. The most intense and solemn experience of a woman she had missed,
-for no children had come to them, but her husband had been her lover
-so long as he lived, and she had loved him. She had known great men;
-she had lived through wonderful events; and often her hand had been on
-those secret levers which move vast forces. She had been in tragedies,
-if an inviolable coolness of head, perhaps of heart, had shielded
-her from being of them. The husband of her youth, the nearest of her
-blood, the friends of her middle life--all had gone into the dark; yet
-here she sat, with her smooth skin and her still lustrous eyes and her
-fragrant hands, keenly smiling over her solitaire. The colonel wondered
-if he could ever reconcile himself with such philosophy to his own
-narrowed and emptied life; she was older than he, yet she could still
-find a zest in existence. All the great passions gone; all the big
-interests; and still her clever mind was working, happy, possibly, in
-its mere exercise, disdaining the stake, she who had had every success.
-What a vitality! He looked at her, puzzling. Her complexity bewildered
-him, he not being of a complex nature himself. As he looked, suddenly
-he found himself questioning why her face, in its revival of youthful
-smoothness and tint, recalled some other face, recently studied by
-him--a face that had worn an absolutely different expression; having
-the same delicate aquiline nose, the same oval contour, the same wide
-brows--who? who? queried the colonel. Then he nodded. Of course; it was
-the man with the moles, the brother. He looked enough like Mrs. Winter
-to be her kinsman. At once he put his guess to the test. “Aunt Becky,”
-said he, “have you any kin I don’t know about?”
-
-“I reckon not. I’m an awfully kinless old party,” said she serenely. “I
-was a Winter, born as well as married, and so you and Mel and Archie
-are double kin to me. I was an only child, so I haven’t anything closer
-than third or fourth cousins, down in Virginia and Boston.”
-
-“Have you, by chance, any cousin, near or far, named Mercer?”
-
-Resting her finger-tips on the cards, Aunt Rebecca seemed to let her
-mind search amid Virginian and Massachusetts genealogical tables. “Why,
-certainly,” she answered after a pause, “there was General Philemon
-Mercer--Confederate army, you know--and his son, Sam Nelson; Phil was
-my own cousin and Sam Nelson my second, and Sam Nelson’s sons would be
-my third, wouldn’t they? Phil and Sam are both dead, and Winnie Lee,
-the daughter, is dead, and poor Phil--the grandson, you know--poor
-boy, _he_ shot himself while at Harvard; but his brother Cary is alive.”
-
-“Do you know him?”
-
-“Never saw him but once or twice. He has very good manners.”
-
-“Is he rich?”
-
-“He was, but after he had spent his youth working with incredible
-industry and a great deal of ability to build up a steel business and
-had put it into a little combination--not a big trust, just a genuine
-corporation--some of the financial princes wanted it for a club--to
-knock down bigger game, I reckon--and proceeded to cheapen the stock
-in order to control it. Cary held on desperately, bought more than he
-could hold, mortgaged everything else; but they were too big for him
-to fight. It was in 1903, you know, when they had an alleged financial
-panic, and scared the banks. Cary went to the wall, and Phil with him,
-and poor Phil killed himself. Afterward Cary’s wife died; he surely did
-have a mean time. And, to tell you the truth, Bertie, I think there has
-been a little kink in Cary’s mind ever since.”
-
-“Did you hold any of Cary’s stock?” He was piecing his puzzle together.
-
-“Yes, but my stock was all paid for, and I held on to it; now it is
-over par and paying dividends. Oh, the property was all right, had it
-been kept in honest hands and run for itself. The trouble with Cary
-was that in order to keep control of the property he bought a lot of
-shares on margins, and when they began to run downhill, he was obliged
-to borrow money on his actual holdings to protect his fictitious ones.
-The stock went so low that he was wiped out. He wouldn’t take my advice
-earlier in the game; and I knew that it would only be losing money to
-lend it to him, later--still, sometimes I have been rather sorry I
-didn’t. Would I better try the spade, Bertie, or the diamond?”
-
-The colonel advised the spade. He wondered whether he should repeat
-to his aunt the few sentences which he had overheard from Mercer and
-his companion; but a belief that old age worries easily, added to his
-natural man’s disinclination to attack the feminine nerves, tipped the
-scales against frankness. So, instead, he began to talk about Archie;
-what was he like? was he fond of athletics? or was he a bookish lad?
-Aunt Rebecca reported that he had liked riding and golf; but he was not
-very rugged, and since his father’s death he had seemed listless to
-a degree. “But he is better now,” she added with a trace of eagerness
-quite foreign to her usual manner. “Janet Smith has roused him up; and
-what do you suppose she has done? But really, you are the cause.”
-
-“I?” queried the colonel.
-
-“Just you. Archie, Janet argued, is the kind of nature that must have
-some one to be devoted to.”
-
-“And has he taken a fancy to her? Or to you?”
-
-Aunt Rebecca’s eyes dulled a little and her delicate lips were twisted
-by a smile which had more wistfulness than humor in it. “I’m not a
-lovable person; anyhow, he does not love easily. We are on terms of
-the highest respect, even admiration, but we haven’t got so far as
-friendship, far less comradeship. Janet is different. But I don’t mean
-Janet; she has grown absurdly fond of him; and I think he’s fond of
-her; but what she did was to make him fond of you. You, General Rupert
-Winter; why, that boy could pass an examination on your exploits and
-not miss a question. Janet and he have a scrap-book with every printed
-word about you, I do believe. And she has been amazingly shrewd. We
-didn’t know how to get the youngster back to his sports while he was
-out of school; and, in fact, an old woman like me is rather bewildered
-by such a young creature, anyhow; but Janet rode with him; _you_ are a
-remarkable rider; I helped there, because I remembered some anecdotes
-about you at West Point--”
-
-“But, my dear Aunt--”
-
-“Don’t interrupt, Bertie, it’s a distinctly American habit. And
-we read in the papers that you had learned that Japanese trick
-fighting--jiu-jitsu--and were a wonder--”
-
-“I’m not, I assure you; that beast of a newspaper man--”
-
-“Never mind, if you are not a wonder, you’ll have to be; you can take
-lessons in Los Angeles; there are quantities of Japs there. Why, even
-in Chicago, Janet picked up one, and we imported him, and Archie took
-lessons, and practises every day. There’s a book in my bag, in the
-rack there, a very interesting book; Janet and I have both read it so
-we could talk to Archie. You would better skim it over a little if you
-really aren’t an expert, enough so you can _talk_ jiu-jitsu, anyhow; we
-can’t be destroying Archie’s ideals until he gets a better appetite.”
-
-“Well, upon my word!” breathed the colonel. “Do you expect me to be
-a fake hero? I never took more than two lessons in my life. That
-reporter interviewed my teacher, who was killed in the Japanese War,
-by the way; he went to the army after my second lesson. He didn’t know
-any English beyond ‘yes’ and ‘if you please’; and he used them both on
-the reporter, who let his own fancy go up like a balloon. Well, where
-is the book?”
-
-He found it easily; and with a couple of volumes of another kidney,
-over which he grinned.
-
-“_The Hound of the Baskervilles_ and _The Leavenworth Case_! I’ve read
-them, too,” he said; “they’re great! And do you still like detective
-stories? You would have made a grand sleuth yourself, Aunt Becky.”
-Again he had half a mind to speak of the occurrence at the station;
-again he checked the impulse. “I remember,” he added, “that you used to
-hold strenuous opinions.”
-
-“You mean my thinking that the reason crimes escape discovery is not
-that criminals are so bright, but that detectives in general are so
-particularly stupid? Oh, yes, I think that still. So does Sir Conan
-Doyle. And I have often wished I could measure my own wits, once, with
-a really _fine_ criminal intellect. It would be worth the risk.”
-
-“God forbid!” said the colonel hastily.
-
-There came a tap on the door.
-
-“Millicent!” groaned Aunt Rebecca. “I know the creaking of her stays.
-No, don’t stay, Bertie; go and get Janet and a rescue bridge party as
-quick as you can!”
-
-“The original and only Aunt Rebecca,” thought the colonel at the door,
-smiling. But, somehow, the handsome old dame never had seemed so nearly
-human to him before.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-THE TRAIN ROBBERS
-
-
-When the colonel awoke next morning the train was running smoothly
-over the Iowa prairies, while low hills and brick factory chimneys
-announced Council Bluffs. The landscape was wide and monotonous; a
-sweep of illimitable cornfields in their winter disarray, or bleakly
-fresh from the plow, all painted with a palette holding only drabs and
-browns; here and there a dab of red in a barn or of white in windmill
-or house; but these livelier tints so scattered that they were no more
-than pin spots on the picture. The very sky was as dimly colored as the
-earth, lighter, yet of no brighter hue than the fog which smoked up
-from the ground. Later in the spring this same landscape would be of
-a delicate and charming beauty; in summer or autumn it would make the
-beholder’s pulses throb with its glorious fertility; but on a blurred
-March morning it was as dreary as the reveries of an aging man who has
-failed.
-
-Nevertheless, Rupert Winter’s first conscious sensation was not
-depression, only a little tingle of interest and excitement, such as
-stings pleasantly one who rises to a prospect of conflict in which
-he has the confidence of his own strength. “By Jove!” he wondered,
-“whatever makes me feel so kiddish?”
-
-His first impulse was to peep through his curtains into the car. It
-wore its early morning aspect of muffled berths and stuffy curtains,
-among which Miss Smith’s trig, carefully finished presence in a fresh
-white shirt-waist, attended by the pleasant whiffs of cologne water,
-gave the beholder a certain refreshing surprise. One hand (white and
-firm and beautifully cared for) held a wicker bottle, source of the
-pleasant whiffs; her sleek back braids were coiled about her comely
-head, and the hair grew very prettily in a blunted point on the
-creamy nape of her neck. It was really dark brown hair, but it looked
-black against the whiteness of her skin. She had very capable-looking
-shoulders, the colonel noted, and a flat back; perhaps she wasn’t
-pretty, but in a long while he had not seen a more attractive-looking
-woman. She made him think of a Bonne Celine rose, somehow. He could
-hear her talking to some one behind the berth’s curtains. Could those
-doleful moans emerge from Archie? Could a Winter boy be whimpering
-about the jar of the train in that fashion? Immediately he was aware
-that the sufferer was Randall, for Miss Smith spoke: “Drink the tea,
-and lie down again, I’ll attend to Mrs. Winter. Don’t you worry!”
-
-“Getting solid with Randall,” commented the colonel. “Which is
-she--kind-hearted, or an accomplished villainess? Well, it’s
-interesting, anyhow.”
-
-By the time he had made his toilet the train was slacking speed ready
-to halt in Council Bluffs, and all his suspicions rushed on deck again
-at the sight of Miss Smith and Archie walking outside.
-
-He joined them, and he had to admit that Miss Smith looked as pleased
-as Archie at his appearance. Nor did she send a single furtive glance,
-slanting or backward, while they walked in the crisp, clean air.
-Once the train had started and Miss Smith was in the drawing-room,
-breakfasting with Mrs. Winter and Archie, he politely attended Mrs.
-Millicent through the morning meal in the dining-car. It was so good
-a meal that he naturally, although illogically, thought better of
-Miss Smith’s prospects of innocence; and cheerily he sought Haley.
-He found him in the smoking compartment of the observation-car,
-having for companions no less personages than the magnate and a
-distinguished-looking New Englander, who, Rupert Winter made no doubt,
-was a Harvard professor of rank and renown among his learned kind. He
-knew the earmarks of the species. The New Englander’s pencil was flying
-over a little improvised pad of telegraph blanks, while he listened
-with absorbed interest to Haley’s rich Irish tones. There was a little
-sidewise lunge of Haley’s mouth, a faint twinkle of Haley’s frank and
-simple eyes which the colonel appraised at very nearly their real
-value. He knew that it isn’t in Irish-American nature to perceive a
-wide-open ear and not put something worth hearing into it. Besides, his
-sharp ears had brought him a key to the discourse, a sorrowful remark
-of the sergeant’s as he entered: “Yes, sor, thim wather torchures is
-_terrible_!”
-
-He glanced suspiciously from one of Haley’s audience to the other. The
-newspaper cartoonist had pictured on all kinds of bodies of preying
-creatures, whether of the earth or air, the high brows, the round head,
-the delicate features, the thin cheeks, the straight line of the
-mouth, and the mild, inexpressive eyes of the man before him. He had
-been extolled as a far-sighted benefactor of the world, and execrated
-picturesquely as the king of pirates who would scuttle the business of
-his country without a qualm.
-
-Winter, amid his own questionings and problems, could not help a
-scrutiny of a man whose power was greater than that of medieval kings.
-He sat consuming a cigarette, more between his fingers than his lips;
-and glancing under drooping eyelids from questioner to narrator. At the
-colonel’s entrance he looked up, as did Haley, who rose to his feet
-with an unconscious salute. “I’d be glad to spake wid youse a minnit,
-if I might, General,” said Haley, “about where I put your dress-shute
-case, sor.”
-
-The colonel, of course, did not expect any remarks about a suit case
-when he got Haley by himself at the observation end of the car; but
-what he did get was of sufficient import to drive out of his mind a
-curt lecture about blackening the reputation of the army with lies
-about the Philippines. Haley had told him that he had seen the man with
-the two moles on his face jump out of his own car at Council Bluffs.
-He had simply stood on the platform, looking to right and left for a
-moment; then he had swung himself back on the car. Haley had watched
-him walk down the aisle and enter the drawing-room. He did not come
-out; Haley had found out that the drawing-room belonged to Edwin S.
-Keatcham, “the big railroad man, sor.”
-
-“It doesn’t seem likely that _he_ would be an accomplice of a
-kidnapper,” mused the colonel. “The man might have gone in there while
-he was out.”
-
-“Sure, he might, sor; ’twas mesilf thinking that same; and I wint
-beyant to the observation-car, and there the ould gintleman was
-smoking.”
-
-“And you stopped to tell yarns to that other gentleman instead of
-getting back and following--”
-
-“No, sor, I beg your pardon, sor; I was kaping me eyes open and on him;
-for himsilf was in the observation-car where you are now, sor, until we
-come in, and thin he walked back, careless like, to his own car. Will I
-be afther following him?”
-
-“Yes; don’t lose him.”
-
-They did not lose him; they both saw him enter the drawing-room and
-almost immediately come out and sit down in one of the open sections.
-
-“See if you can’t find out from the conductor where he is going,” the
-colonel proposed to Haley; and he frowned over his thoughts for a bad
-quarter of an hour at the window. The precipitate of all this mental
-ferment was a determination to stick close to the boy, saying nothing.
-He hoped that when they stopped over night at Salt Lake City, according
-to Aunt Rebecca’s plan, they might shake off the “brother’s” company.
-The day passed uneventfully. He played bridge with Mrs. Millicent and
-Miss Smith and Archie, while Aunt Rebecca kept up her French with one
-of Bentzon’s novels.
-
-Afterward she said grimly to him: “I think you must have been converted
-out in the Philippines; you never so much as winced, that last hand;
-no, you sat there smiling over your ruin as sweetly as if you enjoyed
-it.”
-
-The colonel smiled again. “Ah, but, you see, I did enjoy it; didn’t you
-notice the hand? No? Well, it was worth watching. It was the rubber
-game; they were twenty-four and we were twenty-six and we were on the
-seventh round; Miss Smith had made it hearts. She sat on my left, dummy
-on my right. Millicent had the lead. She had four little spades, a
-little club, the queen of hearts and a trey; dummy had the queen, the
-ten and the nine of spades, it had the king of hearts and three clubs
-with the jack at the top. I had a lovely diamond suit which I hadn’t
-had a chance to touch, top sequence, ace, king, queen; I had the jack
-of trumps and the jack of spades; and the queen and a little club. I
-hadn’t a lead, you understand; Millicent had taken five tricks and
-they had taken one; they needed six to win the game, we needed two;
-see? Well, Millicent hadn’t any diamonds to lead me, and unhappily she
-didn’t think to lead trumps through dummy, which would have made a
-world of difference. She led a club; dummy put on the jack. I knew Miss
-Smith had the ace and one low heart; no clubs, a lot of low diamonds,
-and she might or might not have a spade. I figured that she had the
-ace and a little one; if she would trump in with the little one, as
-ninety-nine out of a hundred women would have done, her ace and her
-partner’s king would fall together; or, at worst, he would have to
-trump her diamond lead, after she had led out her king of spades, and
-lead spades, which I could trump and bring in all my diamonds. Do you
-take in the situation?”
-
-“You mean that Janet had the king of spades alone, the ace and the
-little trump and four worthless diamonds? I see. It is a chance for the
-grand _coup_; I reckon she played it.”
-
-“She _did_!” cried the colonel with unction. “She slapped that ace on
-the trick, she modestly led her king of spades, gathered in my jack,
-then ‘she stole, she stole my child away,’ my little jack of trumps;
-it fell on dummy’s king, and dummy led out his spades and I had to see
-that whole diamond suit slaughtered. They made their six tricks, the
-game and the rubber; and I wanted to clap my hands over the neatness of
-it.”
-
-“She is a good player,” agreed Aunt Rebecca, “and a very pleasant
-person. You remember the epitaph, don’t you, Bertie? ‘She was so
-pleasant.’ Yet Janet has had a heap of trouble; but, after all,
-happiness is not a condition but a temperament; I suppose Janet has the
-temperament. She’s a good loser, too; and she never takes advantage of
-the rules.”
-
-“She certainly loves a straight game,” reflected the colonel. “I
-confess I don’t like the kind of woman that is always grabbing a trick
-if some one plays out of the wrong hand.”
-
-He said something of the kind to Millicent, obtaining but scant
-sympathy in that quarter.
-
-“She’s deep, Bertie; I told you that,” was the only reply, “but I’m
-watching. I have reason for my feeling.”
-
-“Maybe you have been misinformed,” ventured her brother-in-law with
-proper meekness.
-
-“Not at all,” retorted she sharply. “I happen to know that she worked
-against me with the Daughters.”
-
-“Daughters,” the colonel repeated inanely, “your daughters?”
-
-“Certainly not! The Daughters of the Revolution.”
-
-“It’s a mighty fine society, that; did a lot during the Spanish War.
-And you are the state president, aren’t you?”
-
-“No, Rupert,” returned Mrs. Melville with dignity, “I am no longer
-state regent. By methods that would shame the most hardened men
-politicians I was defeated; why! didn’t you read about it?”
-
-“You know I only came back from the Philippines in February.”
-
-“It was in all the Chicago papers. I was interviewed myself. I assure
-you the other candidates (there were two) tried the very _lowest_
-political methods. Melville said it was scandalous. There were at
-least three luncheons given against me. It wasn’t the congress, it was
-the lobby defeated me. And their methods! I would not believe that
-gentlewoman could stoop to such infamy of misrepresentation.” The
-colonel chewed his mustache; he felt for that reporter of the Chicago
-paper; he was evidently getting a phonographic record now; he made an
-inarticulate rumble of sympathy in his throat which was as the clucking
-of the driver to the mettled horse. Mrs. Melville gesticulated with
-Delsartian grace, as she poured forth her woes.
-
-“They accused me of a domineering spirit; they said I was trying to
-set up a machine. _I!_ I worked for them, many a time, half the night,
-at my desk; never was a letter unanswered; I did half the work of the
-corresponding secretary; yet at the crucial moment _she betrayed me_!
-I learned more in those two days of the petty jealousy, the pitiless
-malevolence of _some_ women than I had known all my life before; but at
-the same time, to the faithful band of friends”--the colonel had the
-sensation of listening to the record again--“whose fidelity was proof
-against ridicule and cruel misrepresentation, I return a gratitude
-that will never wane. Rupert”--she turned herself in the seat and
-waved the open palm of her hand in a graceful and dramatic gesture,
-“--those women not only stooped to malignant falsehoods, they not only
-trampled parliamentary law underfoot, but they circulated through the
-hall a cartoon called the _Making of the Slate_. Of course, we had
-our quarters at a hotel, and after the evening meeting, after I had
-retired, in fact, a bell-boy brought me a message; it was necessary
-to have a meeting at once, to decide for the secretaryship, as we had
-found out Mrs. Ellennere was false. The ladies in the adjoining rooms
-and the others of us on the board who were loyal came into my chamber.
-Rupert, will you believe it, those women, had a grotesque picture of
-_us_, with faces cut out of the newspapers--of course, all our pictures
-were in the papers--and they had the audacity and the meanness to
-picture me in--in the garments of night!”
-
-“That was pretty tough. But where does Miss Smith come in?”
-
-“She was at the convention. She is a Daughter. I’ve always said we are
-too lax in our admissions.”
-
-“Who drew the picture?”
-
-“It may not be Miss Smith, but--she does draw. I’m _sure_ that she
-worked against me; she covered up her footprints so that I have no
-proof; but I suspect her. She’s deep, Bertie, she’s deep. But she can’t
-hoodwink _me_. I’ll find her out.”
-
-The colonel experienced the embarrassment that is the portion of a rash
-man trying to defend one woman against another; he retreated because he
-perceived defense was in vain; but he did not feel his growing opinion
-of Miss Smith’s innocence menaced by Mrs. Melville’s convictions.
-
-She played too square a game for a kidnapper--and Smith was the
-commonest of names. No, there must be some explanation; Rupert Winter
-had lived too long not to distrust the plausible surface clue. “It is
-the improbable that always happens, and the impossible most of the
-time,” Aunt Rebecca had said once. He quite agreed with her whimsical
-phrase.
-
-Nothing happened to arouse his suspicions that day. Haley reported
-that Cary Mercer was going on to San Francisco. The conductor did not
-know his name; he seemed to know Mr. Keatcham and was with him in his
-drawing-room most of the time. Had the great man a secretary with him?
-Yes, he seemed to have, a little fellow who had not much to say for
-himself, and jumped whenever his boss spoke to him. There was also a
-valet, an Englishman, who did not respond properly to conversational
-overtures. They were all going to get off at Denver.
-
-Haley was not misinformed, as the colonel perceived with his own
-eyes--and he saw Cary Mercer bow in parting to the great man, who
-requited the low salute with a gruff nod. Here was an opportunity for a
-nearer glimpse of Mercer, possibly for that explanation in which Winter
-still had a lurking hope. He caught Mercer just in the car doorway, and
-politely greeted him: “Mr. Mercer, I think? You may not remember me,
-Colonel Winter. I met you in Cambridge, three years ago--”
-
-It seemed a brutal thing to do, to recall a meeting under such
-circumstances; but if Mercer could give the explanation he would
-excuse him; it was better than suspecting an innocent man. But there
-was no opportunity for explanation. Mercer turned a blank and coldly
-suspicious face toward him. “I beg pahdon,” he said in his Southern
-way, “I think you have made a mistake in the person.”
-
-“And are you _not_ Mr. Cary Mercer?” The colonel felt the disagreeable
-resemblance of his own speeches to those made in newspaper stories by
-the gentleman who wishes his old friend to change a fifty-dollar bill
-or to engage in an amusing game with a thimble. Mercer saw it as well
-as he. “Try some one from the country,” he remarked with an unpleasant
-smile, brushing past, while the color mounted to the colonel’s tanned
-cheek. “The _next_ time you meet me,” Rupert Winter vowed, “you’ll know
-me.”
-
-A new porter had come on at Denver; a light brown, chubby, bald man
-with a face that radiated friendliness. He was filled with the desire
-for conversation, and he had worked on the road for eight years, hence
-could supplement _Over the Range_ and the other guide-books with
-personal gossip. He showed marked deference to the colonel, which
-that unassuming and direct man could not quite fathom, until Archie
-enlightened him. Archie smiled, a queer, chewed-up smile which the
-colonel hailed with:
-
-“Why are you making fun of me, young man?”
-
-“It’s Lewis, the porter; he follows you round and listens to you in
-such an awestruck way.”
-
-“But why?”
-
-“Why, Sergeant Haley told him about you; and I told him a _little_,
-and he says he wishes you’d been on the train when they had the
-hold-ups. This is an awful road for hold-ups, he says. He’s been at
-five hold-ups.”
-
-“And what does he advise?”
-
-“Oh, he says, hold up your hands and they won’t hurt you.”
-
-“Well, I reckon his advice is sound,” laughed the colonel. “See you
-follow it, Archie.”
-
-“Shall _you_ hold up your hands, Uncle Bertie?” asked Archie.
-
-“Much the wisest course; these fellows shoot.”
-
-Archie looked disappointed. “I suppose so,” he sighed. “I’m afraid I’d
-want to, if they were pointing pistols at me. Lewis was on the train
-once when a man showed fight. He wouldn’t put up his hands, and the
-bandit plugged him, like a flash; he fell crosswise over the seat and
-the blood spurted across Lewis’ wrist; he said it was like a hot jet of
-water.”
-
-The homely and bizarre horror of the picture had evidently struck home
-to Archie; he half shivered.
-
-“Too much imagination,” grumbled the colonel to himself. “A Winter
-ought to take to fighting like a duck to water!” He betook himself to
-Miss Smith; and he was uneasily conscious that he was going to her for
-consoling. But he felt better after a little talk about Archie with
-her. Plainly she thought Archie had plenty of spirit; although, of
-course, he hadn’t told her about the bandits. The negro was “kidding”
-the passengers; and women shouldn’t be disturbed by such nonsense.
-The colonel had old-fashioned views of guarding his womankind from
-the harsh ways of the world. Curious, he reflected, what sense Miss
-Smith seemed to have; and how she understood things. He felt better
-acquainted with her than a year’s garrison intercourse would have made
-him with any other woman he knew.
-
-That afternoon, they two sat watching the fantastic cliffs which took
-grotesque semblance of ruined castles crowning their barren hillsides;
-or of deserted amphitheaters left by some vanished race to crumble.
-They had talked of many things. She had told him of the sleepy old
-South Carolinian town where she was born, and the plantation and the
-distant cousin who was like her mother, and the hospital where she
-had been taught, and the married sister who had died. Such a narrow,
-laborious, innocent existence as she described! How cheerfully, too,
-she had shouldered her burdens! They talked of the South and of the
-Philippines; a little they talked of Archie and his sorrow and of the
-eternal problems that have troubled the soul of man since first death
-entered the world. As they talked, the colonel’s suspicions faded into
-grotesque shadows. “Millicent is ridiculous,” quoth he. Then he fell to
-wondering whether there had been a romance in Miss Smith’s past life.
-“Such a handsome woman would look high,” he sighed. Only twenty-four
-hours ago he had called Miss Smith “nice-looking,” with careless
-criticism. He was quite unconscious of his change of view. That night
-he felt lonely, of a sudden; the old wound in his heart ached; his
-future looked as bleak as the mountain-walled plains through which
-he was speeding. After a long time the train stopped with a jar and
-rattle, ending in a sudden shock. He raised the curtain to catch the
-flash of the electric lights at Glenwood. Out of the deep defile they
-glittered like diamonds in a pool of water. Why should he think of Miss
-Smith’s eyes? With an impatient sigh, he pulled down the curtain and
-turned over to sleep.
-
-His thoughts drifted, floated, were submerged in a wavering procession
-of pictures; he was back in the Philippines; they had surprised the
-fort; how could that be when he was on guard? But they were there--
-He sat up in his berth. Instinctively he slipped the revolver out of
-his bag and held it in one hand, as he peeped through the crevice
-of the curtains. There was no motion, no sound of moving; but heads
-were emerging between the curtains in every direction; and Archie was
-standing, his hands shaking above his tumbled brown head and pale face.
-A man in a soft hat held two revolvers while another man was pounding
-on the drawing-room door, gruffly commanding those inside to come
-out. “No, we shall not come out,” responded Aunt Rebecca’s composed,
-well-bred accents, her neat enunciation not disturbed by a quiver. “If
-you want to kill an old woman, you will have to break down the door.”
-
-“Let them alone, Shay, it takes too long; let’s finish here, first,”
-called the man with the revolver; “they’ll come soon enough when we
-want them. Here, young feller, fish out! Nobody’ll get hurt if you keep
-quiet; if you don’t you’ll get a dose like the man in number six, two
-years ago. Hustle, young feller!”
-
-The colonel was eying every motion, every shifting from one foot to
-the other. Let them once get by Archie--
-
-The boy handed over his pocket-book.
-
-“Now your watch,” commanded the brigand; “take it, Shay!”
-
-“Won’t you please let me keep that watch?” faltered Archie; “that was
-papa’s watch.”
-
-The childish name from the tall lad made the robber laugh. “And mama’s
-little pet wants to keep it, does he? Well, he can’t. Get a move on
-you!”
-
-The colonel had the sensation of an electric shock; as the second
-robber grabbed at the fob in the boy’s belt, Archie struck him with the
-edge of his open hand so swiftly and so fiercely under the jaw that
-he reeled back against his companion. The colonel’s surprise did not
-disturb the automatic aim of an old fighter of the plains; his revolver
-barked; and he sprang out, on the man he shot. “Get back in the berths,
-all of you,” he shouted; “give me a chance to shoot!”
-
-The voice of the porter, whose hands had been turning up the lights not
-quite steadily, now pealed out with camp-meeting power, “Dat’s it; give
-de colonel a chance to do some killing!”
-
-Both bandits were sprawling on the floor of the aisle, one limp and
-moaning; but the other got one hand up to shoot; only to have Archie
-kick the revolver out of it, while at the same instant an umbrella
-handle fell with a wicked whack on the man’s shoulder. The New England
-professor was out of his berth. He had been a baseball man in his own
-college days; his bat was a frail one, but he hit with a will; and
-a groan told of his success. Nevertheless, the fellow scrambled to
-his feet. Mrs. Melville was also out of her berth, thanks to which
-circumstance he was able to escape; as the colonel (who had grappled
-with the other man and prevented his rising) must needs have shot
-through his sister-in-law to hit the fleeing form.
-
-[Illustration: Miss Smith was sitting beside Archie, holding the watch.
-Page 67]
-
-“What’s the matter?” demanded Mrs. Melville, while the New Englander
-used an expression which, no doubt, as a good church-member, he
-regretted, later, and the colonel thundered: “All the women back into
-their berths. Don’t anybody shoot! You, professor, look after that
-fellow on the floor.” He was obeyed; instinctively, the master of the
-hour is obeyed. The porter came forward and helped the New Englander
-bind the prostrate outlaw, with two silk handkerchiefs and a pair of
-pajamas, guard mount being supplied by three men in very startling
-costumes; and a kind of seraglio audience behind the curtains of the
-berth being enacted by all the women in the car, only excepting Aunt
-Rebecca and Miss Smith. Aunt Rebecca, in her admirable traveling
-costume of a soft gray silk wrapper, looked as undisturbed as if
-midnight alarms were an every-night feature of journeys. Miss Smith’s
-black hair was loosely knotted; and her face looked pale, while her
-dark eyes shone. They all heard the colonel’s revolver; they all saw
-the two men who had met him at the car door spring off the platform
-into the dark. The robbers had horses waiting. The colonel got one
-shot; he saw the man fall over his horse’s neck; but the horse galloped
-on; and the night, beyond the little splash of light, swallowed them
-completely.
-
-After the conductor and the engineer had both consulted him, and the
-express messenger had appeared, armed to the teeth, a little too late
-for the fray, but not too late for lucid argument, Winter made his
-way back to the car. Miss Smith was sitting beside Archie; she was
-holding the watch, which had played so important a part in the battle,
-up under the electric light to examine an inscription. The loose black
-sleeves of her blouse fell back, revealing her arms; they were white
-and softly rounded. She looked up; and the soldier felt the sudden rush
-of an emotion that he had not known for years; it caught at his throat
-almost like an invisible hand.
-
-“Well, Archie,” he said foolishly, “good for jiu-jitsu!”
-
-Archie flushed up to his eyes.
-
-“Why didn’t you obey orders, young man, and hold up your hands?” said
-Colonel Rupert Winter. “You’re as bad as poor Haley, who is nearly
-weeping that he had no chance, but only broke away from Mrs. Haley in
-time to see the robbers make off.”
-
-“I--I did at first; but I got so mad I forgot,” stammered Archie
-happily. “Afterward you were my superior officer and I had to do what
-you said.”
-
-All the while he chaffed the boy, he was watching for that beautiful
-look in Janet Smith’s eyes; and wondering when he could get her off by
-herself to brag to her of the boy’s courage. When his chance at a few
-words did come he chuckled: “Regular fool Winter! I knew he would act
-in just that absurd, reckless way.” Then he caught the look he wanted;
-it surely was a lovely, womanly look; and it meant--what in thunder
-_did_ it mean? As he puzzled, his pulses gave the same unaccountable,
-smothering leap; and he felt as the boy of twenty had felt, coming back
-from his first battle to his first love.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-THE VANISHING OF ARCHIE
-
-
-“In my opinion,” said Aunt Rebecca, critically eying her new
-drawing-room on the train to San Francisco; “the object of our legal
-methods seems to be to defend the criminal. And a very efficient means
-to this end is to make it so uncomfortable and costly and inconvenient
-for any witness of a crime that he runs away rather than endure it.
-Here we have had to stay over so long in Salt Lake we nearly lost our
-drawing-room. But never mind, you got your man committed. Did you find
-out anything about his gang?”
-
-The colonel shook his head. “No, he’s a tough country boy; he has
-the rural distrust of lawyers and of sweat-boxes. He does absolutely
-nothing but groan and swear, pretending his wound hurts him. But I’ve a
-notion there are bigger people back of him. It’s most awfully good of
-you, Aunt Rebecca, to stick to me this way.”
-
-“Of course, I stick to you; I’m too old to be fickle. Did you ever
-know a Winter who wouldn’t stand by his friends? I belong to the old
-régime, Bertie; we had our faults--glaring ones, I dare say--but if
-we condoned sin too readily, we never condoned meanness; such a trick
-as that upstart Keatcham is doing would have been impossible to my
-contemporaries. You saw the morning papers; you know he means to eat up
-the Midland?”
-
-“Yes, I know,” mused the colonel; “and turn Tracy, the president,
-down--the one who gave him his start on his bucaneering career. Tracy
-declines to be his tool, being, I understand, a very decent sort of
-man, who has always run his road for his stock-holders and not for the
-stock-market. A capital crime, that, in these days. So Keatcham has,
-somehow, by one trick or another, got enough directors since Baneleigh
-died to give him the control; though he couldn’t get enough of the
-stock; and now he means to grab the road to use for himself. Poor
-Tracy, who loves the road as a child, they say, will have to stand by
-and see it turned into a Wall Street foot-ball; and the equipment run
-down as fast as its reputation. I think I’m sorry for Tracy. Besides,
-it’s a bad lookout, the power of such fellows; men who are not captains
-of industry, not a little bit; only inspired gamblers. Yet they are
-running the country. I wonder where is the class that will save us.”
-
-“I don’t know. I don’t admire the present century, Bertie. We had
-people of quality in my day; we have only people of culture in this. I
-confess I prefer the quality. They had robuster nerves and really asked
-less of people, although they may have appeared to ask more. _We_ used
-to be contented with respect from our inferiors and courtesy from our
-equals--”
-
-“And what from your betters, Aunt Rebecca?” drawled the colonel.
-
-“We had no betters, Rupert; we were the best. I think partly it was our
-assurance of our position, which nobody else doubted any more than we,
-that kept us so mannerly. Nowadays, nobody has a real position. He may
-have wealth and a servile following, who expect to make something out
-of him, but he hasn’t position. The newspapers can make fun of him.
-The common people watch him drive by and never think of removing their
-caps. Nobody takes him seriously except his toadies and himself. And
-as for the sentiments of reverence and loyalty, very useful sentiments
-in running a world, they seem to have clean disappeared, except”--she
-smiled a half-reluctant smile--“except with youngsters like Archie,
-who would find it agreeable to be chopped into bits for _you_, and the
-women who have not lived in the world, like Janet, who makes a heroine
-out of _me_--upon my word, Bertie, _je t’ai fait rougir_!”
-
-“Not at all,” said the colonel; “an illusion of the sunset; but what do
-you mean when you say people of quality required less than people of
-culture?”
-
-“Oh, simply this; all _we_ demanded was deference; but your cultivated
-gang wants admiration and submission, and will not let us possess our
-secret souls, even, in peace. And, then, the quality despised no one,
-but the cultivated despise every one. Ah, well--
-
- ‘Those good old times are past and gone,
- I sigh for them in vain,--’
-
-Janet, I wish Archie would fish his mandolin out and you would sing to
-me; I like to hear the songs of my youth. Not rag-time, or coon-songs,
-but dear old Foster’s melodies; _Old Kentucky Home_, and _Massa’s in
-the Col’, Col’ Ground_, and _Nellie Was a Lady_--what makes that so
-sad, I wonder?--‘Nellie was a lady, las’ night she died;’ it’s all
-in that single line; I think it is because it represents the pathetic
-idealization of love; Nellie was that black lover’s ideal of all that
-was lovely, and she was dead. Is the orchestra ready--and the choir?
-Yes, shut the door; we are for art’s sake only, not for the applause of
-the cold world in the car.”
-
-Afterward, when he was angry over his own folly, his own blind,
-dogged, trustfulness against all the odds of evidence, Rupert Winter
-laid his weakness to that hour; to a woman’s sweet, untrained, tender
-voice singing the simple melodies of his youth. They sang one song
-after another while the sun sank lower and stained the western sky.
-Through the snow-sheds they could catch glimpses of a wild and strange
-nature; austere, yet not repelling; vistas of foot-hills bathed in
-the evening glow; rank on rank of firs, tall, straight, beautiful,
-not wind-tortured and maimed, like the woeful dwarfs of Colorado; and
-wonderful snow-capped mountain peaks, with violet shadows and glinting
-streaks of silver. Snow everywhere: on the hillsides; on the close
-thatch of the firs; on the ice-locked rivers; snow freshly fallen,
-softly tinted, infinitely, awesomely pure.
-
-Presently they came out into a lumber country where the mills huddled
-in the hollows, over the streams. Huge fires were blazing on the
-river-banks. Their tawny red glare dyed the snow for a long distance,
-making entrancing tints of rose and yellow; and the dark green of the
-pines, against this background, looked strangely fresh. And then,
-without warning, they plunged into the dimness of another long wooden
-tunnel and emerged into lovely spring. The trees were in leaf, and not
-alone the trees; the undulating swells of pasture land and roadside
-by the mountains were covered with a tender verdure; and there were
-innumerable vines and low glossy shrubs with faintly colored flowers.
-
-“This is like the South,” said Miss Smith.
-
-Archie was devouring the scene. “Doesn’t it just somehow make you feel
-as if you couldn’t breathe, Miss Janet?” said he.
-
-“Are you troubled with the high altitude?” asked Millicent anxiously;
-“I have prepared a little vial of spirits of ammonia; I’ll fetch it for
-you.”
-
-The colonel had some ado to rescue Archie; but he was aided by the
-porter, who was now passing through the car proclaiming: “You all have
-seen Dutch Flat Mr. Bret Hahte wrote ’bout; nex’ station is Shady Run;
-and eve’ybody look and see the greates’ scenic ’traction of dis or any
-odder railroad, Cape Hohn!”
-
-Instantly, Mrs. Melville fished her guide-book and began to read:
-
-“‘There are few mountain passes more famous than that known to the
-world as Cape Horn. The approach to it is picturesque, the north fork
-of the American River raging and foaming in its rocky bed, fifteen
-hundred feet below and parallel with the track--’”
-
-“Do you mind, Millicent, if we look instead of listen?” Aunt Rebecca
-interrupted, and Mrs. Melville lapsed into an injured muteness.
-
-Truly, Cape Horn has a poignant grandeur that strikes speech from the
-lips. One can not look down that sheer height to the luminous ghost
-of a river below, without a thrill. If to pass along the cliff is a
-shivering experience, what must the actual execution of that stupendous
-bit of engineering have been to the workmen who hewed the road out of
-the rock, suspended over the abyss! Their dangling black figures seem
-to sway still as one swings around the curve.
-
-Our travelers sat in silence, until the “Cape” was passed and again
-they could see their road-bed on the side. Then Mrs. Melville made a
-polite excuse for departure; she had promised a “Daughter” whom she
-had met at various “biennials” that she would have a little talk with
-her. Thus she escaped. They did not miss her. Hardly speaking, the
-four sat in the dimly lighted, tiny room, while mountains and fields
-and star-sown skies drifted by. Unconsciously, Archie drew closer to
-his uncle, and the older man threw an arm about the young shoulders.
-He looked up to meet Janet’s eyes shining and sweet, in the flash of a
-passing station light. Mrs. Winter smiled, her wise old smile.
-
-With the next morning came another shift of scene; they were in the
-fertile valleys of California. At every turn the landscape became more
-softly tinted, more gracious. Aunt Rebecca was in the best of humor
-and announced herself as having the journey of her life. The golden
-green of the grain fields, the towering palms, the pepper-trees with
-their fascinating grace, the round tops of the live-oaks, the gloss
-of the orange groves, the calla-lily hedges and the heliotrope and
-geranium trees which climbed to the second story of the stucco houses,
-filled her with the enthusiasm of a child. She drank in the cries
-of the enterprising young liar who cried “Fresh figs,” months out of
-season, and she ate fruit, withered in cold storage, with a trustful
-zest. No less than three books about the flora of California came out
-of her bag. A certain vine called the Bougainvillea, she was trying
-to find, if only the cars would not go so fast; as for poinsettias,
-she certainly should raise her own for Christmas. She was learned in
-gardens and she discoursed with Miss Smith on the different kinds of
-trumpet-vine, and whether the white jasmine trailing among the gaudy
-clusters was of the same family as that jasmine which they knew in the
-pine forests. But she disparaged the roses; they looked shop-worn. The
-colonel watched her in amazement.
-
-“Bertie, I make you think of that little dwarf of Dickens’, don’t
-I?” she cried. “Miss Muffins, Muggins? what _was_ her name? You are
-expecting me to exclaim, ‘Ain’t I volatile?’ Thank Heaven, I am. I
-could always take an interest in trifles. It has been my salvation to
-cultivate an interest in trifles, Bertie; there are a great many more
-trifles than crises in life. Where has Janet gone? Oh, to give the
-porter the collodion for his cut thumb. People with troubles, big or
-little, are always making straight for Janet. Bertie, have you made
-your mind up about her?”
-
-“Only that she is charming,” replied the colonel. He did not change
-color, but he was uneasily conscious that he winced, and that the
-shrewd old critic of life and manners perceived it. But she was
-mercifully blind to all appearance; she went on with the little frown
-of the solver of a psychological enigma. “Yes, Janet is charming; and
-why? She is the stillest creature. Have you noticed? Yet you never have
-the sense that she hasn’t answered you. She’s the best listener in the
-world; and there’s one thing about her unusual in most listeners--her
-eyes never grow vacant.”
-
-Rupert had noticed; he called himself a doddering old donkey silently,
-because he had assumed that there was anything personal in the interest
-of those eyes when he had spoken. Of course not; it was her way with
-every one, even Millicent, no doubt. His aunt’s next words were lost,
-but a sentence caught his ear directly: “For all she’s so gentle, she
-has plenty of spirit. Bertie, did I ever tell you about the time our
-precious cousin threw our great-great-grandfather’s gold snuff-box at
-her? No? It was funny. She flew into one of her towering rages, and
-shrieking, ‘Take _that_!’ hurled the snuff-box at Janet. Janet wasn’t
-used to having things thrown at her. She caught the box, then she rang
-the bell. ‘Thank you very much,’ says Janet; and when old Aunt Phrosie
-came, she handed the snuff-box to her, saying it had just been given to
-her as a present. But she sent it that same day to one of the sisters.
-There was never anything else thrown at her, I can tell you.”
-
-They found a wonderful sunset on the bay when San Francisco was
-reached. Still in her golden humor, as they rattled over the
-cobblestones of the picturesque streets to the Palace Hotel, Mrs.
-Winter told anecdotes of Robert Louis Stevenson, obtained from a
-friend who had known his mother. Mrs. Winter had chosen the Palace in
-preference to the St. Francis, to Mrs. Melville’s high disgust.
-
-“She thinks it more typical,” sneered Millicent; “myself, I prefer
-cleanliness and comfort to types.”
-
-Their rooms were waiting for them and two bell-boys ushered Mrs.
-Winter into her suite. Randall was lodged on the same floor, and Mrs.
-Melville, who was to spend a few days with her aunt on the latter’s
-invitation, was on a lower floor. The colonel had begged to have Archie
-next to him; and he examined the quarters with approbation. His own
-room was the last of the suite; to the right hand, between his room and
-Archie’s, was their bath; then the parlor of Mrs. Winter’s suite next
-her room and bath, and last, to the right, Miss Smith’s room.
-
-Archie was sitting by the window looking out on the street; only the
-oval of his soft boyish cheek showed. The colonel went by him to the
-parlor beyond, where he encountered his aunt, her hands full of gay
-postal cards.
-
-“_Souvenirs de voyage_,” she answered his glance; “I am going to post
-them.”
-
-“Can’t I take them for you?”
-
-“No, thanks, I want the exercise.”
-
-“May I go with you?”
-
-“Indeed, no. My dear Bertie, I’m only aged, I’m not infirm.”
-
-“You will _never_ be aged,” responded the colonel gallantly. He turned
-away and walked along the arcade which looked down into the great court
-of the hotel. Millicent was approaching him; Millicent in something of
-a temper. Her room was hideously draughty and she could not get any
-one, although she had rung and telephoned to the office and tried
-every device which was effectual in a well-conducted hotel; but this,
-she concluded bitterly, was not well-conducted; it was only typical.
-
-“There’s a lovely fire in Aunt Rebecca’s parlor,” soothed the colonel;
-“come in there.”
-
-Afterward it seemed to him that this whole interview with Millicent
-could not have occupied more than four minutes; that it was not more
-than seven minutes since he had seen Archie’s shapely curly head
-against the curtain fall of the window.
-
-But when he opened the door, Miss Smith came toward them. “Is Archie
-with Aunt Rebecca?” said she.
-
-The colonel answered that he had left him in the parlor; perhaps he had
-stepped into his own room.
-
-But neither in Archie’s nor the colonel’s nor in any room of the party
-could they find the boy.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-BLIND CLUES
-
-
-“But this is preposterous,” cried Mrs. Melville, “you _must_ have seen
-him had he come out of the room; you were directly in front of the
-doors all the time.”
-
-“I was,” admitted the colonel; “can--can the boy be hiding to scare
-us?” He spoke to Miss Smith. She had grown pale; he did not know that
-his own color had turned. Millicent stared from one to the other.
-
-“How ridiculous!” she exclaimed; “of course not; but he must be
-somewhere; let _me_ look!”
-
-Look as they might through all the staring, empty rooms, there was no
-vestige of the boy. He was as clean vanished as if he had fallen out of
-the closed and locked windows. The colonel examined them all; had there
-been one open, he would have peered outside, frightened as he had never
-been when death was at his elbow. But it certainly wasn’t possible to
-jump through a window, and not only shut, but lock it after one.
-
-Under every bed, in every closet, he prowled; he was searching still
-when Mrs. Winter returned. By this time Mrs. Melville was agitated,
-and, naturally, irritated as well. “I think it is unpardonable in
-Archie to sneak out in this fashion,” she complained.
-
-“I suppose the boy wanted to see the town a bit,” observed Aunt Rebecca
-placidly. “Rupert, come in and sit down; he will be back in a moment;
-smoke a cigar, if your nerves need calming.”
-
-Rupert felt as if he were a boy of ten, called back to common sense out
-of imaginary horrors of the dark.
-
-“But, if he wanted to go out, why did he leave his hat and coat behind
-him?” asked Miss Smith.
-
-“He may be only exploring the hotel,” said Mrs. Winter. “Don’t be so
-restless, Bertie; sit down.”
-
-The colonel’s eye was furtively photographing every article of
-furniture in the room; it lingered longest on Mrs. Winter’s
-wardrobe-trunk, which was standing in her room. Randall had been
-despatched for a hot-water bottle in lieu of one which had sprung a
-leak on the train; so the trunk stood, its door ajar.
-
-“Maybe he is doing the Genevra stunt in there--is that what you are
-thinking?” she jeered. “Well, go and look.”
-
-Light as her tone was, she was not unaffected by the contagion of
-anxiety about her; after a moment, while Rupert was looking at the
-wardrobe-trunk, and even profanely exploring the swathed gowns held in
-rigid safety by bands of rubber, she moved about the rooms herself.
-
-“There isn’t room for a mouse in that box,” growled the colonel.
-
-“Of course not,” said his aunt languidly, sinking into the easiest
-chair; “but your mind is easier. Archie will come back for dinner;
-don’t worry.”
-
-“How could he get by _me_?” retorted the colonel.
-
-“Perhaps he went into one of the neighboring rooms,” Miss Smith
-suggested. “Shall I go out and rap on the door of the next room on the
-left?” On the right the last room of the party was a corner room.
-
-“Why, you _might_,” acquiesced Aunt Rebecca; but Mrs. Melville cut the
-ends of her words.
-
-“Pray let me go, Aunt Rebecca,” she begged, suiting the action to the
-words, and was out of the door almost ahead of her sentence.
-
-The others waited; they were silent; little flecks of color raddled
-Mrs. Winter’s cheeks. They could hear Millicent’s knock reverberating.
-There was no answer. “Telephone to the adjacent rooms,” proposed the
-colonel.
-
-“I’ll telephone,” said Mrs. Winter, and rang up the number of the next
-room. There was no response; but when she called the number of the
-room adjoining, she seemed to get an answer, for she announced her
-name. “Have you seen a young lad?” she continued, after an apology for
-disturbing them. “He belongs to our party; has he by chance got into
-your room? and is he there?” In a second she put down the receiver with
-a heightened color, saying, “They might be a little civiler in their
-answers, if it _is_ Mr. Keatcham’s suite.”
-
-“What did the beggar say?” bristled the colonel.
-
-“Only that it was Mr. Keatcham’s suite--Mr. E. S. Keatcham--as if
-_that_ put getting into it quite out of the question. Some underling, I
-presume.”
-
-“There is the unoccupied room between. That is not accounted for.
-But it shall be. I will find out who is in there.” Rupert rose as he
-spoke, pricked by the craving for action of a man accustomed to quick
-decision. He heard his aunt brusquely repelling Millicent’s proposal of
-the police, as he left the room. Indeed, she called him back to exact a
-promise that he would not make Archie’s disappearance public. “We want
-to find him,” was her grim addendum; “and we can’t have the police and
-the newspapers hindering us.”
-
-In the office, he found external courtesy and a rather perfunctory
-sympathy, based on a suppressed, but perfectly visible conviction that
-the boy had stolen out for a glimpse of the city, and would be back
-shortly.
-
-The manager had no objection to telling Colonel Winter, whom he knew
-slightly, that the occupant of the next room was a New England lady
-of the highest respectability, Mrs. Winthrop Wigglesworth. If the
-young fellow didn’t turn up for dinner, he should be glad to ask
-Mrs. Wigglesworth to let Mrs. Winter examine her room; but he rather
-thought they would be seeing young Winter before then--oh, his hat?
-They usually carried caps in their pockets; and as to coats--boys never
-thought of their coats.
-
-The manager’s cheeriness did not especially uplift the colonel. He
-warmed it over dutifully, however, for his womankind’s benefit. Miss
-Smith had gone out; why, he was not told, and did not venture to ask.
-Mrs. Melville kept making cautious signals to him behind his aunt’s
-back; otherwise she was preserving the mien of sympathetic solemnity
-which she was used to show at funerals and first visits of condolence
-and congratulation to divorced friends. Mrs. Winter, as usual, wore an
-inscrutable composure. She was still firmly opposed to calling in the
-aid of the police.
-
-Did she object to his making a few inquiries among the hotel bell-boys,
-the elevator boy and the people in the restaurant or in the office?
-
-Not at all, if he would be cautious.
-
-So he sallied out, and, in the midst of his fruitless inquisition,
-Millicent appeared.
-
-Forcing a civil smile, he awaited her pleasure. “Go on, don’t mind me,”
-said she mournfully; “you will feel better to have done everything in
-your power.”
-
-“But I shall not discover anything?”
-
-“I fear not. Has it not occurred to you that he has been kidnapped?”
-
-“Hmn!” said the colonel.
-
-“And did you notice how perturbed Miss Smith seemed? She was quite
-pale; her agitation was quite noticeable.”
-
-“She is tremendously fond of Archie.”
-
-“Or--she knows more than she will say.”
-
-“Oh, what rot!” sputtered the colonel; then he begged her pardon.
-
-“Wait,” he counseled, and his man’s resistance to appearances had
-its effect, as masculine immobility always has, on the feminine
-effervescence before him. “Wait,” was his word, “at least until we give
-the boy a chance to turn up; if he has slipped by us, he is taking a
-little _pasear_ on his own account; lads do get restless sometimes if
-they are held too steadily in the leash, especially--if you will excuse
-me--by, well, by ladies.”
-
-“If he has frightened us out of our wits--well, I don’t know what
-oughtn’t to be done to him!”
-
-“Oh well, let us wait and hear _his_ story,” repeated the soldier.
-
-But the last streaks of red faded out of the west; a chill fog smoked
-up from the darkening hills, and Archie had not come. At eight, Mrs.
-Winter ordered dinner to be served in their rooms. Miss Smith had
-not returned. The colonel attempted a military cheerfulness, which
-his aunt told him bluntly, later in the evening, reminded her of a
-physician’s manner in critical cases where the patient’s mind must be
-kept absolutely quiet.
-
-But she ate more than he at dinner; although her own record was not a
-very good one. Millicent avowed that she was too worried to eat, but
-she was tempted by the strawberries and carp, and wondered were the
-California fowls really so poor; and gave the sample the benefit of
-impartial and fair examination, in the end making a very fair meal.
-
-It is not to be supposed that Winter had been idle; before dinner he
-had put a guard in the hall and had seen Haley, who reported that his
-wife and child had gone to a kinswoman in Santa Barbara.
-
-“Sure the woman has a fine house intirely, and she’s fair crazy over
-the baby that’s named afther her, for she’s a widdy woman with never a
-child excipt wan that’s in hivin, a little gurrl; and she wudn’t let
-us rist ’til she’d got the cratur’. Nor I wasn’t objictin’, for I’m
-thinking there’ll be something doin’ and the wimin is onconvanient,
-thim times.”
-
-The colonel admitted that he shared Haley’s opinion. He questioned the
-man minutely about Mercer’s conduct on the train. It was absolutely
-commonplace. If he had any connection (as the colonel had suspected)
-with the bandits, he made no sign. He sent no telegrams; he wrote no
-letters; he made no acquaintances, smoking his solitary cigar over a
-newspaper. Indeed, absolutely the only matter of note (if that were
-one) was that he read so many newspapers--buying every different
-journal vended. At San Francisco he got into a cab and Haley heard
-him give the order: “To the St. Francis.” Having his wife and child
-with him, the sergeant couldn’t follow; but he went around to the St.
-Francis later, and inquired for Mr. Mercer, for whom he had a letter
-(as was indeed the case--the colonel having provided him with one),
-but no such name appeared on the register. Invited to leave the letter
-to await the gentleman’s arrival, Haley said that he was instructed
-to give it to the gentleman himself; therefore, he took it away with
-him. He had carried it to all the other hotels or boarding-places in
-San Francisco which he could find, aided greatly thereto by a friend
-of his, formerly in “the old --th,” a sergeant, now stationed at the
-Presidio. Thanks to him, Haley could say definitely that Mercer was not
-at any of the hotels or more prominent boarding-houses in the city, at
-least under his own name.
-
-“And you haven’t seen him since he got into the cab at the station?”
-the colonel summed up.
-
-Haley’s reply was unexpected: “Yes, sor, I seen him this day, in the
-marning, in this same hotel.”
-
-“Where?”
-
-“Drinking coffee at a table in th’ coort. He wint out, havin’ paid
-the man, not a-signin’, an’ he guv the waiter enough to make him say,
-‘Thank ye, sor,’ but not enough to make him smile and stay round to
-pull aff the chair. I follied him to the dure, but he got into an
-autymobile--”
-
-“Get the number?”
-
-“Yis, sor. Number--here ’tis, sor, I wrote it down to make sure.” He
-passed over to the colonel an old envelope on which was written a
-number.
-
-[A]“M. 20139,” read the colonel, carefully noting down the number in
-his own memorandum-book. And he reflected, “That is a Massachusetts
-number--humph!”
-
-Haley’s information ended there. He heard of Archie’s disappearance
-with his usual stolid mien, but his hands slowly clenched. The colonel
-continued:
-
-“You are to find out, if you can, by scraping acquaintance with the
-carriage men, if that auto--you have written a description, I see,
-as well as the number--find out if that auto left this hotel this
-afternoon between six and seven o’clock. Find out who were in it. Find
-out where it is kept and who owns it. Get H. Birdsall, Merchants’
-Exchange Building, to send a man to help you. Wait, I’ve a card ready
-for you to give him from me; he has sent me men before. Report by
-telephone as soon as you know anything. If I’m not here, speak Spanish
-and have them write it down. Be back here to-night by ten, if you can,
-yourself.”
-
-Haley dismissed, and his own appetite for dinner effectually dispelled
-by his report, Winter joined his aunt. Should he tell her his
-suspicions and their ground? Wasn’t he morally obliged, now, to tell
-her? She was co-guardian with him of the boy, who, he had no doubt, had
-been spirited away by Mercer and his accomplice; and hadn’t she a right
-to any information on the matter in his possession?
-
-Reluctantly he admitted that she did have such a right; and, he
-admitted further, being a man who never cheated at solitaire, that his
-object in keeping the talk of the two men from her had not been so much
-the desire to guard her nerves (which he knew perfectly well were of a
-robuster fiber than those of most women twenty or forty years younger
-than she); no, he admitted it grimly, he had not so much spared his
-aunt as Janet Smith; he could not bear to direct suspicion toward her.
-But how could he keep silent longer? Kicking this question about in his
-mind, he spoiled the flavor of his after-dinner cigar, although his
-aunt graciously bade him smoke it in her parlor.
-
-And still Miss Smith had not returned; really, it was only fair to her
-to have her present when he told his story to his aunt; no, he was
-_not_ grabbing at any excuse for delay; if he could watch that girl’s
-face while he told his story he would--well, he would have his mind
-settled one way or another.
-
-Here the telephone bell rang; the manager informed Colonel Winter that
-Mrs. Wigglesworth had returned.
-
-“Wigglesworth? what an extraordinary name!” cried Millicent when the
-colonel shared his information.
-
-“Good old New England name; I know some extremely nice Wigglesworths
-in Boston,” Mrs. Winter amended with a touch of hauteur; and, at this
-moment, there came a knock at the door.
-
-There is all the difference in the world between knocks; a knock
-as often as not conveys a most unintentional hint in regard to the
-character of the one behind the knuckles; and often, also, the mood of
-the knocker is reflected in the sound which he makes. Were there truth
-in this, one would judge that the person who knocked at this moment
-must be a woman, for the knock was not loud, but almost timidly gentle;
-one might even guess that she was agitated, for the tapping was in a
-hurried, uneven measure.
-
-“I believe it is Mrs. Wigglesworth herself,” declared Aunt Rebecca.
-“Bertie, I’m going into the other room; she will talk more freely to
-you. She would want to spare my nerves. That is the nuisance of being
-old. Now open the door.”
-
-She was half-way across the threshold before she finished, and the
-colonel’s fingers on the door-knob waited only for the closing of her
-door to turn to admit the lady in waiting.
-
-A lady she was beyond doubt, and any one who had traveled would have
-been sure that she was a lady from Massachusetts. She wore that little
-close bonnet which certain elderly Boston gentlewomen can neither be
-driven nor allured to abandon; her rich and quiet black silken gown
-might have been made any year within the last five, and her furs
-would have graced a princess. She had beautiful gray hair and a soft
-complexion and wore glasses. Equally evident to the observer was the
-fact of her suppressed agitation.
-
-She waved aside the colonel’s proffered chair, introducing herself in
-a musical, almost tremulous voice with the crisp enunciation of her
-section of the country. “I am Mrs. Wigglesworth; I understand, Colonel
-Winter--you?--y-yes, no, thank you, I will not sit. I--I understood
-Mrs. Winter--ah, your aunt, is an elderly woman.”
-
-“This is my sister-in-law, Mrs. Melville Winter,” explained the
-colonel. “My aunt is elderly in years, but in nothing else.”
-
-Mrs. Wigglesworth smiled a faint smile; the colonel could see a tremble
-of the hand that was unconsciously drawing her fur collar more tightly
-about her throat. “How very nice--yes, to be sure,” she faltered. “But
-you will understand that I did not wish to alarm her. I heard that you
-wanted to speak to me, and that the little boy was lost.”
-
-“Or stolen,” Mrs. Melville said crisply.
-
-The colonel, in a few words, displayed the situation. He had prevailed
-upon his visitor to sit down, and while he spoke he noticed that her
-hands held each other tightly, although she appeared perfectly composed
-and did not interrupt. She answered his questions directly and quietly.
-She had been away taking tea with a friend; she had remained to dine.
-Her maid had gone out earlier to spend the day and night with a sister
-in the city; so the room was empty between six and seven o’clock.
-
-“The chambermaid wasn’t there, then?”
-
-“I don’t think so. She usually does the room and brings the towels
-for the bath in the morning. But I asked her, to make sure, and she
-says that she was not there since morning. She seems a good girl; I
-think she didn’t--but I have found something. At least I am af--I may
-have found something. I thought I might see Mrs. Winter’s niece about
-it”--she glanced toward Millicent, who said, “Certainly,” at a venture;
-and looked frightened.
-
-“And you found--?” said the colonel.
-
-“Only this. I went to my rooms, turned on the light and was taking off
-my gloves before I untied my bonnet. One of my rings fell on the floor.
-It went under a rug, and I at once remarked that it was a different
-place for the rug to the one where it had been before. Before, it
-was in front of the dresser, a very natural place, but now it is on
-the carpet to one side, a place where there seemed no reason for its
-presence. These details seem trivial, but--”
-
-“I can see they are not,” said the colonel. “Pray proceed, Madam. The
-ring had rolled under the rug!”
-
-Mrs. Wigglesworth gave him a grateful nod.
-
-“Yes, it had. And when I removed the rug I saw it; but as I bent to
-pick it up I saw something else. In one place there was a stain, as
-large as the palm of my hand, a little pool of--it looks like blood.”
-
-Mrs. Melville uttered an exclamation of horror.
-
-The colonel’s face stiffened; but there was no change in his polite
-attention.
-
-“May we be permitted to see this--ah, stain?” said he.
-
-The three stepped through the corridor to the outside door, and went
-into the chamber. The rug was flung to one side, and there on the gray
-velvet nap of the carpet was an irregular, sprawling stain about which
-were spattered other stains, some crimson, some almost black.
-
-Millicent recoiled, shuddering. The colonel knelt down and examined the
-stains. “Yes,” he said very quietly, “you are right, it is blood.”
-
-There was a tap on the door, which was opened immediately without
-waiting for a permission. Millicent, rigid with fright, could only
-stare helplessly at the erect figure, the composed, pale face and the
-brilliant, imperious eyes of her aunt.
-
-“What did you say, Bertie?” said Rebecca Winter. “I think I have a
-right to the whole truth.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-THE VOICE IN THE TELEPHONE
-
-
-“Well, Bertie?” Mrs. Winter had gone back to her parlor in the most
-docile manner in the world. Her submission struck Rupert on the heart;
-it was as if she were stunned, he felt.
-
-He was sitting opposite her, his slender, rather short figure looking
-shrunken in the huge, ugly, upholstered easy-chair; he kept an almost
-constrained attitude of military erectness, of which he was conscious,
-himself; and at which he smiled forlornly, recalling the same pose in
-Haley whenever the sergeant was disconcerted.
-
-“But, first,” pursued his aunt, “who was that red-headed bell-boy with
-whom you exchanged signals in the hall?”
-
-The colonel suppressed a whistle. “Aunt Becky, you’re a wonder! Did you
-notice? And he simply shut the palm of his hand! Why, it’s this way: I
-was convinced that Archie must be on the premises; he _couldn’t_ get
-off. So I telephoned a detective that I know here, a private agency,
-_not_ the police, to send me a sure man to watch. He is made up as
-a bell-boy (with the hotel manager’s consent, of course); either I,
-or Millicent, or that boy has kept an eye on the Keatcham doors and
-the next room ever since I found Archie was gone. No one has gone out
-without our seeing him. If any suspicious person goes out, we have it
-arranged to detain him long enough for me to get a good look. I can
-tell you exactly who left the room.”
-
-“It is you who are the wonder, Bertie,” said Aunt Rebecca, a little
-wearily, but smiling. “Who has gone out?”
-
-“At seven Mr. Keatcham’s secretary went down to the office and ordered
-dinner, very carefully. I didn’t see him, but my sleuth did. He had the
-secretary and the valet of the Keatcham party pointed out to him; he
-saw them. They had one visitor, young Arnold, _the_ Arnold’s son--”
-
-“The one who has all the orange groves and railways? Yes, I knew his
-father.”
-
-“That one; he only came a few moments since. Mr. Keatcham and his
-secretary dined together, and Keatcham’s own man waited on them; but
-the waiter for this floor brought up the dishes. At nine the dishes
-were brought out and my man helped Keatcham’s valet to pile them a
-little farther down the corridor in the hall.”
-
-These items the colonel was reading out of his little red book.
-
-“You have put all that down. Do you think it means anything?”
-
-“I have put everything down. One can’t weed until there is a crop of
-information, you know.”
-
-“True,” murmured Aunt Rebecca, nodding her head thoughtfully. “Well,
-did anything else happen?”
-
-“The secretary posted a lot of letters in the shute. They are all
-smoking now. Yes--” he was on his feet and at the door in almost a
-single motion. There had been just the slightest tattoo on the panel.
-When the door was opened the colonel could hear the rattle of the
-elevator. He was too late to catch it, but he could see the inmates.
-Three gentlemen stood in the car. One was Keatcham, the other two had
-their backs to Winter. One seemed to be supporting Keatcham, who looked
-pale. He saw the colonel and darted at him a single glance in which
-was something like a poignant appeal; what, it was too brief for the
-receiver to decide, for in the space of an eye-blink a shoulder of the
-other man intervened, and simultaneously the elevator car began to sink.
-
-There was need to decide instantly who should follow, who stay on
-guard. Rupert bade the boy go down by the stairs, while, with a kind
-of bulldog instinct, he clung to the rooms. The lad was to fetch the
-manager and the keys of the Keatcham suite.
-
-Meanwhile Rupert paced back and forth before the closed doors, whence
-there penetrated the rustle of packing and a murmur of voices.
-Presently Keatcham’s valet opened the farther door. He spoke to some
-one inside. “Yes, sir,” he said, “the porter hought to be ’ere now.”
-
-The porter was there; at least he was coming down the corridor which
-led to the elevator, trundling his truck before him. He entered the
-rooms and busied himself about the luggage.
-
-Doggedly the colonel stuck to his guard until the valet and another
-man, a clean-shaven, fresh-faced young man whom the watcher had never
-seen before, came out of the room. The valet superintended the taking
-of two trunks, accepting tickets and checks from the porter with a
-thoroughly Anglican suspicion and thoroughness of inspection, while
-the young man stood tapping his immaculate trousers-leg with the stick
-of his admirably slender umbrella.
-
-“It’s all right, Colvin,” he broke in impatiently; “three tickets to
-Los Angeles, drawing-room, one lower berth, one section, checks for two
-trunks; come on!”
-
-Very methodically the man called Colvin stowed away his green and red
-slips, first in an envelope, then in his pocket-book, finally buttoning
-an inside pocket over all. He was the image of a rather stupid,
-conscientious English serving creature. Carefully he counted out a
-liberal but not lavish tip for the porter, and watched that functionary
-depart. Last of all, he locked the door.
-
-With extreme courtesy of manner Winter approached the young man.
-
-“Pardon me,” said he. “I am Colonel Winter; my aunt, Mrs. Winter, has
-the rooms near yours, and she finds that she needs another room or two.
-Are you leaving yours?”
-
-“These are Mr. Keatcham’s rooms, not mine,” the young man responded
-politely. “_He_ is leaving them.”
-
-“When you give up your keys, would you mind asking the clerk to send
-them up to me?” pursued the colonel. “Room three twenty-seven.”
-
-“Certainly,” replied the young man, “or would you like to look at them
-a moment now?”
-
-“Why--if it wouldn’t detain you,” hesitated Winter; he was hardly
-prepared for the offer of admittance.
-
-“Get the elevator and hold it a minute, Colvin,” said the young man,
-and he instantly fitted the key to the door, which he flung open.
-
-“Excuse me,” said he, as they stood in the room, “but aren’t you the
-Colonel Winter who held that mountain pass to let the other fellows get
-off, after your ammunition was exhausted?”
-
-“I seem to recall some such episode, only it sounds rather gaudy the
-way you put it.”
-
-“I read about you in the papers; you swam a river with Funston; did all
-kinds of stunts--”
-
-“Or the newspaper reporter did. You don’t happen to know anything about
-the price of these rooms, I suppose?”
-
-The young man did not know, but he showed the colonel through all the
-rooms with vast civility. He seemed quite indifferent to the colonel’s
-interest in closets, baths and wardrobes; he only wanted to talk about
-the Philippines.
-
-The colonel, who always shied like a mettled horse from the flutter of
-his own laurels, grew red with discomfort and rattled the door-knobs.
-
-“There the suite ends,” said the young man.
-
-“Oh, we don’t want it all, only a room or two,” Colonel Winter
-demurred. “Any one of these rooms would do. Well, I will not detain
-you. The elevator boy will be tired, and Mr. Keatcham will grow
-impatient.”
-
-“Not at all; he will have gone. I--I’m so very glad to have met you,
-Colonel--”
-
-In this manner, with mutual civilities, they parted, the young man
-escorting the colonel to his own door, which the latter was forced to
-enter by the sheer demands of the situation.
-
-But hardly had the door closed than he popped out again. The young man
-was swinging round the corner next the elevator.
-
-“Is he an innocent bystander or what?” puzzled the soldier. He resumed
-his march up and down the corridor. The next room to the Keatcham suite
-was evidently held by an agent of the Fireless Cooking Stove, since one
-of his samples had strayed into the hall and was mutely proclaiming its
-own exceeding worth in very black letters on a very white placard.
-
-“If the young man and the valet are straight goods, the key will come
-up reasonably soon from the office,” thought the watcher.
-
-Sure enough, the keys, in the hands of Winter’s own spy, appeared
-before he had waited three minutes. He reported that the old gentleman
-got into a cab with his secretary and the valet, and the other
-gentlemen took another cab. The secretary paid the bill. Had he gone
-sooner than expected? No; he had engaged the rooms until Thursday
-night; this was Thursday night.
-
-The colonel asked about the next room, which was directly on the cross
-corridor leading to the elevator. The detective had been instructed to
-watch it. How long had the Fireless Cooking Stove man had it? There was
-no meat for suspicion in the answer. The stove man had come the day
-before the Keatcham party. He was a perfectly commonplace, good-looking
-young man, representing the Peerless Fireless Cooking Stove with much
-picturesque eloquence; he had sold a lot of stoves to people in the
-hotel, and he tried without much success to tackle “old Keatcham”; he
-had attacked even the sleuth himself. “He gave me a mighty good cigar,
-too,” chuckled the red-headed one.
-
-“Hmn, you got it now?”
-
-“Only the memory,” the boy grinned.
-
-“You ought to have kept it, Birdsall would tell you; you are watching
-every one in these rooms. Did it have a necktie? And did you throw that
-away?”
-
-“No, sir, I kept that; after I got to smoking, I just thought I’d keep
-it.”
-
-When he took the tiny scrap of paper from his pocket-book the colonel
-eyed it grimly. “‘_A de Villar y Villar_,’” he read, with a slight
-ironic inflection. “Decidedly our young Fireless Stove promoter smokes
-good cigars!”
-
-“Maybe Mr. Keatcham gave it to him. He was in there.”
-
-“Was he? Oh, yes, trying to sell his stove--but not succeeding?”
-
-“He said he was trying to get past the valet and the secretary; he
-thought if he could only get at the old man and demonstrate his stove
-he could make the sale. He could cook all right, that feller.”
-
-The colonel made no comment, and presently betook himself to his aunt.
-She was waiting for him in the parlor, playing solitaire. Through the
-open door the white bed that ought to have been Archie’s was gleaming
-faintly. The colonel’s brows met.
-
-“Well, Bertie? Did you find anything?” Mrs. Winter inquired smoothly.
-
-“I’m afraid not; but here is the report.” He gave it to her, even down
-to the cigar wrapper.
-
-“It doesn’t seem likely that Mr. Keatcham has anything to do with it,”
-said she. “He, no doubt, has stolen many a little railway, but a little
-boy is too small game.”
-
-“Oh, I don’t suspect Keatcham; but I wish I had caught the elevator
-to-night. He looked at me in a mighty queer way.”
-
-“Did you recognize his secretary as any one whom you ever saw before?”
-asked Mrs. Winter.
-
-“I can’t say,” was the answer, given with a little hesitation. “I’m not
-sure.”
-
-“I don’t think I quite understand you, Bertie; better make a clean
-breast of all you know. I’m getting a little worried myself.”
-
-The colonel reached across the cards and tapped his aunt’s arm
-affectionately. He felt the warmest impulse toward sympathy for her
-that he had ever known; it glistened in his eyes. Mrs. Winter’s cheeks
-slowly crimsoned; she turned her head, exclaiming, did she hear a
-noise; but the colonel’s keen ears had not been warned. “Poor woman,”
-he thought, “she is worried to death, but she will not admit it.”
-
-“Now, Bertie,” said Mrs. Winter calmly, but her elbow fell on her cards
-and spoiled a very promising game of Penelope’s Web, “now, Bertie,
-_what_ are you keeping back?”
-
-Then, at last, the colonel told her of his experience in Chicago.
-She heard him quite without comment, and he could detect no shift of
-emotion in her demeanor of absorbed but perfectly calm attention,
-unless a certain tension of attitude and feature (as if, he phrased it,
-she were “holding herself in”) might be so considered. And he was not
-sure of this. When he came to the words which stuck in his throat, the
-sentence about Miss Smith, she smiled frankly, almost laughed.
-
-At the end of the recital--and the colonel had not omitted a word or a
-look in his memory--she merely said: “Then you think Cary Mercer has
-kidnapped Archie, and the nice-looking Harvard boy is helping him?”
-
-“Don’t you think it looks that way, yourself?”
-
-She answered that question by another one: “But you don’t think, do
-you, that Janet is the Miss Smith mentioned?”
-
-His reply came after an almost imperceptible hesitation: “No!”
-
-Again she smiled. “That is because you know Janet; if you didn’t know
-her you would think the chances were in favor of their meaning her?
-Naturally! Well, I know Cary a little. I knew his father _well_. I
-don’t believe he would harm a hair of Archie’s head. He isn’t a cruel
-fellow--at least not toward women and children. I’ve a notion that what
-he calls his wrongs have upset his wits a bit, and he might turn the
-screws on the Wall Street crowd that ruined him. That is, if he had a
-chance; but he is poor; he would need millions to get even a chance for
-a blow at them. But a child, a lad who looks like his brother--no, you
-may be sure he wouldn’t hurt Archie! He _couldn’t_.”
-
-“But--the name, Winter; it is not such a common name; and the words
-about a lady of--of--” The polite soldier hesitated.
-
-“An old woman, do you mean?” said Aunt Rebecca, with a little curving
-of her still unwrinkled upper lip.
-
-“It sounds so complete,” submitted her nephew.
-
-“Therefore distrust it,” she argued dryly. “Gaboriau’s great detective
-and Conan Doyle’s both have that same maxim--not to pick out easy
-answers.”
-
-Winter smiled in his own turn. “Still, sometimes the easy answers are
-right. Now, here is the situation: I hear this conversation at the
-depot. I find one of the men on the same train with me. He, presumably,
-if he _is_ Cary Mercer, and I don’t think I can be mistaken in his
-identity--”
-
-“Unless another man is making up as Cary!”
-
-“It may seem conceited, but I don’t think I could be fooled. This man
-had every expression of the other’s, and I was too struck by the--I may
-almost call it malignant--look he had, not to recognize him. No, it
-_was_ Mercer; he would certainly recognize you, and he would know who
-I am; he would not be called upon to snub me as a possible confidence
-man.”
-
-“That rankles yet, Bertie?”
-
-He made a grimace and nodded.
-
-“But,” he insisted, “isn’t it so? If he is up to some mischief, any
-mischief--doesn’t care to have his kin meet him--that is the way he
-would act, don’t you think?”
-
-“He might be up to mischief, yet have no designs on his kin.”
-
-“He might,” said the colonel musingly. A thought which he did not
-confide to the shrewd old woman had just flipped his mind. But he went
-on with his plea.
-
-“He avoids you; he avoids me. He is seen going into Keatcham’s
-drawing-room; that means some sort of an acquaintance with Keatcham,
-enough to talk to him, anyway. How much, I can’t say. Then comes the
-attack by the robbers; he is in another car, so there is no call for
-him to do anything; there is no light whatever on whether he had
-anything to do with the robbery.
-
-“Then we come here. Keatcham has the room next but one. Archie goes
-into his own room; we see him go; I am outside, directly outside; it
-is simply impossible for him to go out into the hall without my seeing
-him; besides, I found the doors outside all locked except the one to
-the right where we entered your suite; then we may assume that he could
-not go out. He could not climb out of locked windows on the third floor
-down a sheer descent of some forty or fifty feet. Your last room to
-the right, Miss Smith’s bedroom, is a corner room; besides, she was
-in it; that excludes every exit except that to the left. We find Mrs.
-Wigglesworth was absent, and there were evidences of--an--an attack
-of some kind carefully hidden, afterward. But there is no sign of
-the boy. I watch the rooms. If he is hidden somewhere in Keatcham’s
-rooms, the chances are, after Keatcham goes, they will try to take him
-off. I don’t think it probable that Keatcham knows anything about the
-kidnapping; in fact, it is wildly _im_probable. Well, Keatcham goes;
-immediately I get into the room. The valet and the young man visiting
-Keatcham, young Arnold, let me in without the slightest demur. Either
-they know nothing of the boy or somehow they have got him away, else
-they would not let me in so easily. Maybe they are ignorant and the boy
-is gone, both. We go to the rooms very soon after; there is not the
-smallest trace of Archie.”
-
-“How did he get out?”
-
-“They must have outwitted me, somehow,” the colonel sighed, “and it
-looks as if he went voluntarily; there was no possible carrying away
-by force. And there was no odor of chloroform about; that is very
-penetrating; it would get into the halls. They must have persuaded him
-to go--but how?”
-
-“If they have kidnapped him,” said Mrs. Winter, “they will send me some
-word, and if they have persuaded him to run away, plainly he must be
-able to walk, and that--mess in Mrs. Wigglesworth’s room doesn’t mean
-anything bad.”
-
-“Of course not,” said the colonel firmly.
-
-Then, in as casual a tone as he could command: “By the way, where is
-Miss Smith? She is back, isn’t she?”
-
-“Oh, a long time ago,” said Mrs. Winter. “I sent her to bed.”
-
-“I’ve been frank with you. You will reciprocate and tell me why, for
-what, you sent her out?”
-
-Mrs. Winter made not the least evasion. She answered frankly: “I
-sent her with a carefully worded advertisement--but you needn’t tell
-Millicent, who has also gone to bed, thank Heaven--I sent her with
-a carefully worded advertisement to all the papers. This is the
-advertisement. It will reach the kidnappers, and it will not reach any
-one else. See.” She handed him a slip of paper from her card-case. He
-read:
-
-“To the holders of Archie W: Communicate with R. S. W., same address
-as before, and you will hear of something to your advantage. Perfectly
-safe.”
-
-The colonel read it thoughtfully, a little puzzled. Before he had time
-to speak, his quick ears caught the sharp ring of his room telephone
-bell. He excused himself to answer it. His room was the last of the
-suite, but he shut the door on his way to the telephone.
-
-He expected Haley; nor was he disappointed. Haley reported--in
-Spanish--that he had traced the automobile; it was the property of
-young Mr. Arnold, son of the rich Mr. Arnold. Young Arnold had been at
-Harvard last year, and he took out a Massachusetts license; he had a
-California one, too. Should he (Haley) look up young Arnold? And should
-he come to report that night?
-
-The colonel thought he could wait till morning, and, a little
-comforted, hung up the receiver. Barely was it out of his hand when the
-bell shrilled again, sharply, vehemently. Winter put the tube to his
-ear.
-
-“Does any one want Colonel Winter, Palace Hotel?” he asked.
-
-A sweet, eager, boyish voice called back: “Uncle Bertie! Uncle Bertie,
-don’t you worry; I’m all right!”
-
-“_Archie!_” cried the colonel. “_Where are you?_”
-
-But there was no answer. He called again, and a second time; he
-told the lad that they were dreadfully anxious about him. He got no
-response from the boy; but another voice, a woman’s voice, said, with
-cold distinctness, as if to some one in the room: “No, don’t let him;
-it is impossible!” Then a dead wall of silence and Central’s impassive
-ignorance. He could get nothing.
-
-Rupert Winter stood a moment, frowning and thinking deeply. Directly,
-with a shrug of the shoulders, he walked out of his own outside door,
-locking it, and went straight to Miss Smith’s.
-
-He knocked, at first very gently, then more vigorously. But there was
-no answer. He went away from the door, but he did not reënter his room.
-He did not bear to his aunt the news which, with all its meagerness
-and irritating incompleteness, had been an enormous relief to him. He
-simply waited in the corridor. Five minutes, ten minutes passed; then
-he heard the elevator whir, and, standing with his hand on the knob of
-his open door, he saw his aunt’s companion, dressed for the street,
-step out and speed down the corridor to her own door.
-
-The other voice--the woman’s voice--had been Janet Smith’s.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-THE HAUNTED HOUSE
-
-
-A mud-splashed automobile runabout containing two men was turning
-off Van Ness Avenue down a narrower and shadier side street in the
-afternoon of the Sunday following the disappearance of Archie Winter.
-One of the occupants seemed to be an invalid whom the brilliant March
-sunshine had not tempted out of his heavy wrappings and cap; the
-other was a short, thick-set, corduroy-jacketed chauffeur. One marked
-the runabout at a glance as a hardly used livery motor-car; but a
-moment’s inspection might have shown that it was running with admirable
-smoothness and quiet. The chauffeur wore goggles, hence his eyes were
-shielded, but he turned a broad smile upon the pallid cheeks and
-sharpened profile beside him.
-
-“Colonel, as a health-seeker who can’t keep warm enough, you’re great!”
-he cried. “Lord, but you look the part!”
-
-“If I can’t shed some of these confounded mufflers soon,” growled
-the pale sufferer addressed, “I’ll get so red with heat it will come
-through my beautiful powder. I hope those fellows won’t see us, for
-they will be on to us, all right.”
-
-“Our own mothers wouldn’t be on to us in these rigs,” the chauffeur
-replied cheerily; he seemed to be in a hopeful mood; “and let us once
-get into the house, and surprise ’em, and there’ll be something drop.
-But I haven’t really had a chance to tell you the latest--having
-to pick you up at a drug store this way. Now, let’s sum things up!
-You think the boy got out through Keatcham’s apartment? Or Mrs.
-Wigglesworth’s?”
-
-“How else?” said the colonel, “he can’t fly, and if he could, he
-couldn’t fly out and then lock the windows from the inside.”
-
-“I see”--the chauffeur appeared thoughtful--“and the Wigglesworth door
-was locked. You think that Keatcham is in it, someway?”
-
-“Not Keatcham,” said the colonel. “There was another man in the
-car--Atkins they called him, though he has disappeared. But Mercer
-remains. His secretary and that valet of his; I think the secretary is
-Cary Mercer. The boy might have slipped out in those few moments we
-were hunting for him inside. Afterward, either Mrs. Melville Winter or
-I was on guard until your man came. He might go to the Fireless Stove
-man, slip out of his rooms, and round the corner to the elevator in a
-couple of seconds. Then, of course, I might see their rooms--”
-
-“Provided, that is, the Fireless Stove drummer is in the plot, too.”
-
-“The Fireless Stove drummer who smokes _Villar y Villar_ cigars? He is
-in it, I think, Birdsall.”
-
-“Well, I’ll assume that. Next thing: you get the telephone call. And
-you say the voice sounded chipper; didn’t look like he was being hurt
-or bothered anyway, did it?”
-
-“Not at all. Besides, you know the letter Miss Smith got this morning?”
-
-“I think I’d like another peek at that; will you drive her a minute,
-while I look at the letter again?” The instant his hands were free
-Birdsall pulled out the envelope from his leather-rimmed pocket.
-
-It was rectangular in shape and smaller than the ordinary business
-envelope. The paper was linen of a common diamond pattern, having
-no engraved heading. The detective ran his eyes down the few lines
-written in an unformed boyish hand. There was neither date nor place;
-only these words:
-
- DEAR MISS JANET--Don’t you or auntie be woried about me because I am
- well and safe and having a good time. I had the nose bleed that is
- why I spoted the carpet. Tell Auntie to please pay for it out of my
- next week’s allowance. Be sure and don’t wory.
-
- Your aff. friend,
- ARCHIBALD PAGE WINTER.
-
-“You’re sure this is the boy’s writing?” was the detective’s comment.
-
-“Sure. And his spelling, too.”
-
-“Now,” said Birdsall, watching the colonel’s keen, aquiline profile
-as he spoke, “now you notice there’s no heading or mark on the paper;
-and the water-mark is only O. K. E., Mass., 1904. And that amounts to
-nothing; those folks sell all over the country. But you notice that
-it is not the ordinary business paper; it looks rather ladylike than
-commercial, doesn’t it?”
-
-The colonel admitted that it did look so.
-
-“Now, assuming that this letter was sent with the connivance of the
-kidnappers, it looks as if our young gentleman wasn’t in any particular
-danger of having a hard time. To me, it looks pretty certain he must
-have skipped himself; tolled along someway, maybe, but not making
-any resistance. Now, is there anybody that you know who has enough
-influence over him for that? How about the lady’s maid?”
-
-“Randall has been a faithful servant for twenty years, a middle-aged,
-serious-minded, decent woman. Out of the question.”
-
-“This Miss Smith, your aunt’s companion, who is she? Do you know?”
-
-“A South Carolinian; good family; she has lived with my aunt as
-secretary and companion for a year; my aunt is very fond of her.”
-
-“That all you know? Well _I_ have found out a little more; she used to
-live with a Mrs. James S. Hastings, a rich Washington woman. The lady’s
-only son fell in love with her; _somehow_ the marriage was broken off.”
-
-“What was his name?”
-
-“Lawrence. They call him Larry. He went to Manila. Maybe you’ve met him
-there.”
-
-“Yes, I knew him; I don’t believe he ever was accepted by her.”
-
-“I don’t know. I have only had two days on her biography. Later, she
-went to Johns Hopkins Hospital. One of the doctors was very attentive
-to her--but it did not come to anything. She didn’t graduate. Don’t
-know why. Then she went to live with Miss Angela Nelson, who died and
-left her money, away from her own family. There was talk of breaking
-the will; but it wasn’t done. Then she came to Mrs. Winter.”
-
-The colonel was silent; there was nothing discreditable in these
-details. He had known before that Janet Smith was poor; that she
-had been thrown on the world early; that she must earn her own
-livelihood; yet, somehow, as Birdsall marshaled the facts, there was
-an insidious, malarious hint of the adventuress, bandied from place
-to place, hawking her attractions about, wheedling, charming for
-hire, entrapping imbecile young cubs--Larry Hastings wasn’t more than
-twenty-two--somehow he felt a revolt against the picture and against
-the man submitting it--and, confound Millicent!
-
-The detective changed the manner of his questions a little. “I suppose
-your aunt is pretty advanced in years, though she is as well preserved
-an old lady as I have ever met, and as shrewd. Say, wouldn’t she be
-likely to leave the boy a lot of money?”
-
-“I dare say.” The colonel was conscious of an intemperate impulse to
-kick Birdsall, who had been such a useful fellow in the Philippines.
-
-“If anything was to happen to him, who would get the money?”
-
-“Well, Mrs. Melville and I are next of kin,” returned the colonel
-dryly. “Do you suspect _us_?”
-
-“I did look up Mrs. Melville,” answered the unabashed detective, “but I
-guess she’s straight goods all right. But say, how about Miss Smith?”
-
-The colonel stared, then he laughed. “Birdsall,” said he, “there’s
-somewhat too much mention of ladies’ names to suit my Virginian taste.
-But if you mean to imply that Miss Smith is going to kill Archie to get
-my aunt’s money, I can tell you you are _’way off!_ Your imagination
-is too active for your profession. You ought to hire out to the yellow
-journals.”
-
-His employer’s satire did not even flick the dust off Birdsall’s
-complacency; he grinned cheerfully. “Oh, I’m not so bad as _that_; I
-don’t suppose she did kill the boy; I think he’s alive, all right.
-But say, Colonel, I’ll give it to you straight; I do think the señora
-coaxed the boy off. You admit, don’t you, he went off. Well, then he
-was coaxed, somehow. Now, who’s got influence enough to coax him? You
-cross out the maid; so do I. You cross out Mrs. Melville Winter; so do
-I. I guess we both cross out the old lady. Well, there’s you and the
-señora left. I don’t suspect _you_, General.”
-
-“Really? I don’t see why. I stand to make more than anybody else, if
-you are digging up motives. And how about the chambermaid?”
-
-Birdsall flashed a glance of reproach on his companion. “Now, Colonel,
-do you think I ain’t looked _her_ up? First thing. Nothing in it.
-Decent Vermont girl, three years in the hotel. Came for her lungs. She
-ain’t in it. But let’s get back to Miss Smith. Did you know she is Cary
-Mercer’s sister-in-law?”
-
-He delivered his shot in a casual way, and the colonel took it stonily;
-nevertheless, it went to the mark. Birdsall continued. “Now, question
-is, _was_ Mercer the secretary? You didn’t see the man in the elevator,
-except his back. Had he two moles?”
-
-“I couldn’t see. He had different clothes; but still there was
-something like Mercer about the shoulders.”
-
-“Burney didn’t get a chance to take a snapshot, but he did snap the
-stove man. Here it is. Pull that book out of my pocket.”
-
-Obeying, the colonel lifted a couple of small prints which he
-scrutinized intently, at the end, admitting, “Yes, it is he all right.
-Now do you know what _I_ think?”
-
-Birdsall couldn’t form an idea.
-
-“I think the Keatcham party is in it; and I think they are after
-bigger game than Archie. Maybe the train robbers were a part of the
-scheme--although I’m not so sure of that.”
-
-“Oh, the robbers were in it all right. But now come to Miss Smith;
-where does she come in? Or are you as sure of her as Mercer was in
-Chicago?”
-
-If he had expected to get a spark out of the Winter tinder by this
-scraping stroke, he was mistaken; the soldier did not even move his
-brooding gaze fixed on the hills beyond the house roofs; and he
-answered in a level tone: “Did you get _that_ story from my aunt, or
-was it Mrs. Melville? I’m pretty certain you got your biography from
-that quarter. My aunt might have told her.”
-
-“That would be betraying a lady’s confidence. I’m only a detective,
-whose business is to pry, but I never go back on the ladies. And I
-think, same’s you, that the lady in question is a real nice, high-toned
-lady; but I can’t disregard the evidence. I never give out my system,
-but I’ve got one, all the same. Look here, see this paper?”--he had
-replaced the envelope in his pocket; he pulled it out again; or rather,
-so the colonel fancied, until Birdsall turned the envelope over,
-revealing it to be blank. “There’s a sheet of paper inside; take it
-out. Look at the water-mark, look at the pattern; then compare it with
-this letter”--handing the colonel the original envelope. “Same exactly,
-ain’t they?”
-
-The colonel, who had studied the two sheets of paper silently, nodded
-as silently; and he had a premonition of Birdsall’s next sentence
-before it came. “Well, Mrs. Melville Winter, this morning, took me to
-Miss Smith’s desk, where we found this and a lot more like it.”
-
-“You seem to be right in thinking the paper widely distributed,”
-observed the colonel.
-
-“And you don’t think that suspicious?”
-
-“I should think it more suspicious if the paper were not out on her
-desk. If she is such a deep one as you seem to think, she would hide
-such an incriminating bit of evidence.”
-
-“She didn’t know we suspected her. Of course, you haven’t shadowed her
-a little bit?”
-
-“There is a limit to detective duty in the case of a gentleman,”
-returned the colonel haughtily. “I have not.”
-
-Little Birdsall sighed; then in a propitiatory tone: “Well, of course,
-we both think there are other people in the job; I don’t know exactly
-what you mean by bigger game, but I can make a stagger at it. Now, say,
-did you get any answer when you wrote to Keatcham himself?”
-
-“Yes,” said the colonel grimly, “I heard. You know the sort of letter
-I wrote; telling him of our dreadful anxiety and about the lad’s being
-an orphan; don’t you think it was the sort of letter a decent man would
-answer, no matter how busy he might be?”
-
-“Sure. Didn’t you get an answer?”
-
-“I did.” The colonel extricated himself from his wrappings enough to
-find a pale blue envelope, which he handed to Birdsall, at the same
-time taking the motor handle. “You see; type-written, very polite,
-chilly sort of letter, kind to make a man hot under the collar and
-swear at Keatcham’s heartlessness. Mr. Keatcham unable to answer,
-having been ill since he left San Francisco. Did not see anything of
-any boy. Probably boy ran away. Has no information of any kind to
-afford. And the writer is very sincerely mine. The minute I read it I
-was sure Mercer wrote it; and he wrote it to make me so disgusted with
-Keatcham I wouldn’t pursue the subject with him. Just the same way he
-snubbed my aunt; and, for that matter, just the way he tried to snub
-me on the train. But he missed his mark; I wired every hotel in Santa
-Barbara and every one in Los Angeles; and Keatcham isn’t there and
-hasn’t been there. He has a big bunch of mail at Santa Barbara waiting
-for him, forwarded from Los Angeles, but he hasn’t shown himself.”
-
-Birdsall shot a glance of cordial admiration at the colonel. “You’re
-all there, General,” he cried with unquenchable familiarity. “I’ve been
-trying to call up the Keatcham outfit, and _I_ couldn’t get a line,
-either. They haven’t used the tickets they bought--their reservations
-went empty to Los Angeles. Now, what do you make out of that?”
-
-“I make out that Archie is only part of their game,” replied the
-soldier. “Now see, Birdsall, you are not going to get a couple of rich
-young college fellows to do just plain kidnapping and scaring women out
-of their money--”
-
-“Lord, General,” interrupted Birdsall, “those college guys don’t turn a
-hair at kidnapping; they regularly steal the president of the freshman
-class, and the things they do at their hazing bees and initiations
-would make an Apache Indian sit up and take notice. I tell you,
-General, they’re the limit for deviltry.”
-
-“Some kinds. Not that kind; it’s too dirty. Arnold was one of the
-cleanest foot-ball players at Harvard. And I don’t know anything about
-human nature if that other youngster isn’t decent. But Mercer--_es
-un loco_; you can look out for anything from him. Now, see the
-combination. Arnold was at Harvard! I have traced the motor-car they
-used to him; and then, if you add that his father is away safe in
-Europe and he has an empty house, off to one side, with a quantity of
-space around it and the reputation of being haunted, why--”
-
-“It looks good to me. And I understand my men have got around it on the
-quiet all right. How’s your man Haley got on, hiring out to the Jap in
-charge?”
-
-“Well enough; the Jap took him on to mow, but either Mr. Caretaker
-doesn’t know anything or he won’t tell. He’s bubbling over with
-conversation about the flowers and the country and the Philippines,
-where he used to be; but he only knows that the honorable family are
-all away and he is to shun the house. Aren’t we almost there?”
-
-“Just around the corner. I guess when you see it you’ll think it’s just
-the _patio_ a spook of taste would freeze to.”
-
-“_Why_ is it haunted?”
-
-“Now you have me. I ain’t on to such dream stuff. Gimme five cards.
-Mrs. Arnold died off in Europe, so ’tain’t her; and the house has
-only been built two years; but the neighbors have seen lights and
-heard groans and a pick chopping at the stones. Some folks say the
-land belonged to an old miner and he died before he could tell where
-he’d buried his _mazuma_; so he is taking a little _buscar_ after it.
-There’s the house, General.”
-
-The street climbed a gentle hill, and on its crest a large house, in
-mission style, looked over a pleasant land. Its position on a corner
-and the unusual size of the grounds about it gave the mansion an
-effect of space. Of almost rawly recent erection though it was, the
-kindly climate had so fostered the growth of the pines, acacias and
-live-oaks, the eucalypti and the orange-trees, which made a rich blur
-of color on the hillside, had so lavishly tended the creeping ivies
-and Bougainvilleas which masked the rounded lantern arches of the
-stern gray façade, and so sumptuously blazoned the flower-beds in the
-garden on the one hand, yet, on the other, had so cunningly dulled the
-greenish gray of the cobblestones from California arroyos in chimney
-and foundation, and had so softly streaked the marble of the garden
-statues and the plaster of walls and mansion with tiny filaments of
-lichens or faint green moss, that the beholder might fancy the house
-to be the ancient home of some Spanish hidalgo, handed down with an
-hereditary curse, through generations, to the last of his race. One
-was tempted to such a flutter of fancy because of the impression given
-by the mansion. A sullen reticence hung about the place. The windows,
-for the most part, were heavily shuttered. Not a pane of glass flashed
-back at the sunlight; even those casements not shuttered turned blank
-dark green shades, like bandaged eyes, on the court and the beautiful
-terraces and the lovely sweep of hillsides where the wonderful shadows
-swayed and melted.
-
-The bent figure of a man raking, distorted by the perspective, was
-visible just beyond the high pillars of the gateway. He paid no
-attention to the motions of the motor-car, nor did he answer a hail
-until it was repeated. Then he approached the car. Birdsall was in the
-roadway trying to unlock the gate. The man, whose Japanese features
-were quite distinguishable, bowed; he explained that the honorable
-owners were not at home; his insignificant self was the only keeper of
-the grounds. He spoke sufficiently good English with the accompaniment
-of a deprecatory, amiable smile. Birdsall, in turn, told him that his
-own companion was a very great gentleman from the East who belonged to
-a society of vast power which was investigating spectral appearances,
-and that he had come thousands of miles to see the ghost.
-
-The Japanese extended both hands, while the appeal of his smile
-deepened. “Too bad, velly,” he murmured, “but not leally any g’lost,
-no, nev’.”
-
-“Don’t you believe in the ghost?” asked Colonel Winter.
-
-“No, me Clistian boy, no believe not’ing.”
-
-“All the samee,” said the colonel, laboriously swinging himself from
-his vantage-ground of the motor seat to the flat top of the wall,
-thence dropping to the greensward below, “allee samee, like go in house
-hunt ghost.” He crackled a bank-note in the palm of the slim brown
-hand, smiling and nodding as if to break the force of his brusque
-action. Meanwhile, Birdsall had safely shut off his engine before he
-placed himself beside the others with an agility hardly to be expected
-of his rotund build.
-
-As for the caretaker, whether because he perceived himself outnumbered,
-or because he was really void of suspicion, he accepted the money with
-outward gratitude and proffered his guidance through the garden and
-the orchards. He slipped into the rôle of cicerone with no atom of
-resistance; he was voluble; he was gracious; he was artlessly delighted
-with his señors. In spite of this flood of suavity, however, there
-seemed to be no possibility of persuading him to admit them to the
-house.
-
-Assured of this, the two fell back for a second, time for the merest
-eyeflash from the detective to the soldier, who at once limped briskly
-up to the Jap, saying: “We are very much obliged to you; this is a
-beautiful house, beautiful gardens; but we want to see the ghost; and
-if you can give me young Mr. Arnold’s address I will see him--or write,
-and we can come back.”
-
-The gardener, with many apologies and smiles, did not know Mr. Arnold’s
-honorable address, but he drew out a soiled card, explaining that it
-bore the name of the gentleman in charge of the property. Birdsall,
-peering over the Jap’s shoulders, added that it was the card of a
-well-known legal firm.
-
-“Then,” said the colonel with deliberation, “we will thank you again
-for your courtesy, and--what’s that?”
-
-The Jap turned; they all started at the barking detonation of some
-explosion; while they gazed about them there came another booming
-sound, and they could see smoke pouring from the chimney and leaking
-through the window joints of a room in the rear of the house. Like a
-hare, not breaking his wind by a single cry, the Jap sped toward the
-court. The others were hard on his heels, though the colonel limped and
-showed signs of distress by the time they reached the great iron door.
-
-The Jap pulled out a key; he turned it and swung the door barely wide
-enough to enter, calling on them to stay out; he would tell them if he
-needed them.
-
-“Augustly stay; maybe honolable t’ieves!” he cried.
-
-But the detective had interposed a stalwart leg and shoulder.
-Instantly the door swung open; he acted as if he had lost his wits with
-excitement. “You’re burning up! Lord! you’re burning! _Fire!_ _Fire!_”
-he bawled, and rushed boldly into the room.
-
-Winter followed him, also calling aloud in a strident voice. And it was
-to be observed, being such an unusual preparation for a conflagration,
-that he had drawn a heavy revolver and ran with it in his hand. Before
-he jumped out of the car he had discarded his thick top-coat and all
-his wrappings.
-
-An observer, also (had there been one near), would have taken note of a
-robust Irishman, who had been weeding the flower-beds, and would have
-seen him straighten at the first peal of the explosion, stare wildly at
-the chimneys before any distinct smoke was to be seen, then run swiftly
-and climb up to a low chimney on a wing of the house, watering-pot in
-hand. He would have seen him empty his inadequate fire extinguisher
-and rapidly descend the ladder, while the smoke volleyed forth, as if
-defying his puny efforts; later, he would have seen the watering-pot
-bearer pursue the others into the house, emitting noble yells of
-“Fire!” and “Help!”
-
-[Illustration: The detective had interposed a stalwart leg and
-shoulder. Page 135]
-
-Further, this same observer, had he been an intimate friend of Sergeant
-Dennis Haley, certainly would have recognized that resourceful man of
-war in the amateur fireman.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-FACE TO FACE
-
-
-When the two men got into the house the dim rooms made them stumble
-for a moment after the brilliant sunshine of the outer skies; but in
-a second Birdsall’s groping hand had found an electric push-button
-and the room was flooded with light. They were in a small office
-off the kitchen, apparently. Smoke of a peculiarly pungent odor and
-eye-smarting character blurred all the surroundings; but during the
-moment the Jap halted to explore its cause the others perceived two
-doors and made for them. One was locked, but the other must have been
-free to open, since Haley, with his watering-can, bounded through it
-while they were tugging at the other. Almost immediately, however,
-Haley was back again shouting and pointing down the dark passage.
-
-“The fire’s _there_,” screamed the detective. “I can smell smoke!
-The smoke comes through the keyhole!” But while the Jap fitted a key
-in the lock and swung back the door, and Haley, who had paused to
-replenish his watering-can at a convenient faucet, darted after the
-other two, the colonel stood listening with every auditory nerve
-strained to catch some sound. He yelled “Fire! help!” at the top of his
-voice, but not moving a muscle. “Too far off,” he muttered, then he
-yelled again and threw a heavy chair as if he had stumbled against it.
-Another pause; he got down on his knees to put his ear to the floor.
-Directly he rose; he did not speak, but the words that he said to
-himself were only: “Just possible. Some one down cellar; but not under
-here.” Meanwhile he was hurrying in pursuit of the others as swiftly as
-his stiff knee would allow. He found them in a side hall with tiled or
-brick floor, gathered about a water-soaked heap of charred red paper.
-
-“’Tis terrible!” announced Haley, “a bum for sure! a dinnermite
-bum!”--fishing out something like a tin tomato can from the sodden mass.
-
-“Anyhow, _there_ goes the real thing,” observed the colonel coolly, as
-a formidable explosion jarred the air.
-
-“If you blow us up, I kill you flist!” hissed the Jap, and his knife
-flashed.
-
-“_Chito, Chito!_” soothed the colonel, lifting his revolver almost
-carelessly. Simultaneously two brawny arms pinioned the Jap’s own arms
-at his sides.
-
-“Shure, Mister Samurai, ’tis the ongrateful chap youse is,”
-expostulated Haley. “I hate to reshtrain ye, but if ye thry any
-jehujits on me ’twill be sahanara wid youse mighty quick.”
-
-“No understan’,” murmured the Jap plaintively. “Why you hult me?”
-
-“Come, put out the fire first,” said the colonel; “you know the house,
-you go ahead.”
-
-The Jap darted on ahead so swiftly that they had some ado to follow;
-which seemed necessary, since he might have clashed a bolt on them at
-any turn. The colonel’s stiff leg kept him in the rear, but Haley was
-never a hand’s-breadth behind the runner.
-
-They found smoke in two places, but they easily extinguished the tiny
-flames. In both cases the bombs turned out to be no more dangerous
-than a common kind of fireworks yielding a suffocating smoke in an
-inclosure, but doing no especial damage on safe and fire-proof ground,
-like a hearth. They were quickly extinguished. In their search they
-passed from one luxurious room to another, the Jap leading, until he
-finally halted in a spacious library hung in Spanish leather, with
-ancient, richly carved Spanish tables and entrancing Spanish chairs of
-turned wood and age-mellowed cane, and bookcases sumptuously tempting
-a book-lover. But the colonel cared only for the soul of a book, not
-its body; the richest and clearest of black letter or the daintiest
-of tooling had left him cold; moreover, every fiber in him was strung
-by his quest; and Haley, naturally, was immune; strangely enough, it
-was the cheerful, vulgar little detective who gave a glance, rapid but
-full of admiration, at the shelves and pile of missals on the table,
-incongruously jostled by magazines of the day.
-
-Winter faced the Jap, who was sheathed again in his bland and impassive
-politeness. “Where is Mr. Mercer?” said he.
-
-The Jap waved his hands in an eloquent oriental gesture. He assured the
-honorable questioner that he did not know any Mr. Mercer. There was no
-one in the house.
-
-The colonel had seated himself in a priceless arm-chair in Cordova
-stamped leather; he no longer looked like an invalid. “Show your star,
-please,” he commanded Birdsall, and the latter silently flung back the
-lapel of his coat.
-
-“I ought to tell you,” continued Rupert Winter, “that the game is up.
-It would do no good for you to run that poisoned bit of steel of yours
-into me or into any of us; we have only to stay here a little too long
-and the police of San Francisco will be down on you--oh, I know all
-about what sort they are, but we have money to spend as well as you.
-You take the note I shall write to Mr. Mercer, or whatever you choose
-to call him, and bring his answer. We stay here until he comes.”
-
-Having thus spoken in an even, gentle voice, he scribbled a few words
-on a piece of paper which he took out of his note-book. This he
-proffered to the Jap.
-
-On his part, the latter kept his self-respect; he abated no jot of
-his assurance that they were alone in the house; he insinuated his
-suspicion that they were there for no honest purpose; finally he was
-willing to search the house if they would stay where they were.
-
-“I am not often mistaken in people,” was the colonel’s rather oblique
-answer, “and I think you are a gentleman who might kill me if you had
-a chance, but would not break his word to me. If you will promise to
-play fair with us, do no harm to my nephew, take this letter and bring
-me an answer--if you find any one--on your word of honor as a Japanese
-soldier and gentleman, you may go; we will not signal the police. Is it
-a bargain?”
-
-The Jap gravely assented, still in the language of the East, “saving
-his face” by the declaration of the absence of his principals. And
-he went off as gracefully and courteously as if only the highest
-civilities had passed between them.
-
-“Won’t he try some skin game on us?” the detective questioned; but
-Winter only motioned toward the telephone desk. “Listen at it,” he
-said, “you can tell if the wires are cut; and he knows your men are
-outside hiding, somewhere; he doesn’t know how many. You see, we have
-the advantage of them there; to be safe they don’t dare to let many
-people into their secret. _We_ can have a whole gang. We haven’t many,
-but they may _think_ we have.”
-
-Birdsall, who had lifted the receiver to his ear, laid it down with
-an appeased nod. Immediately he proceeded to satisfy his professional
-conscience by a search in every nook and cranny of the apartment. But
-no result appeared important enough to justify the production of his
-red morocco note-book and his fountain-pen. He had paused in disgust
-when the colonel sat up suddenly, erect in his chair; his keener
-ears had caught some sound which made him dart to all the windows in
-succession. He called Haley (whom he had posted outside to guard the
-door) and despatched him across the hall to reconnoiter. “I am sure it
-was the sound of wheels,” he explained, “but Haley will be too late; we
-are on the wrong side of the house.”
-
-As he spoke the buzz of an electric bell jarred their ears. “Somebody
-is coming in the front door,” hazarded Birdsall.
-
-“Evidently,” returned the colonel dryly. “How can our absent friends
-get in otherwise--at least how can they let us understand they have
-come in? I think we are going to have the pleasure of an interview with
-the elusive Mr. Mercer.”
-
-They waited. The colonel motioned Birdsall to a seat by the table,
-within breathing distance of the telephone. He himself fluttered the
-loose journals and magazines, his ironic smile creasing his cheek.
-“Our Japanese friend reads the newspapers,” he remarked. “Here are
-to-day’s papers; yes, _Examiner_ and _Chronicle_, unfolded and smoked
-over. Cigar, too, not cigarette, for here is a stump--decidedly our
-cherry-blossom friends are getting civilized!”
-
-“Oh, there is somebody _in_ here all right,” grunted Birdsall. “Say,
-Colonel, you are sure Mrs. Winter has had no answer to her ad? No kind
-of notice about sending money?”
-
-“I haven’t seen her for a few hours, but I saw Mrs. Melville Winter;
-she was positive no word had come. She thought my aunt was more worried
-than she would admit, and Miss Smith looked pale, although she seemed
-hopeful.”
-
-“She didn’t really want to give me the letter, I thought,” said the
-detective. The colonel gave him no reply save a black look. A silence
-fell. A footfall outside broke it, a firm, in nowise stealthy footfall.
-Birdsall slipped his hand inside his coat. The colonel rose and bowed
-gravely to Cary Mercer.
-
-On his part, Mercer was not in the least flurried; he looked at the
-two men, not with the arrogant suspicion which had stung Winter on the
-train, but with the melancholy courtesy of his bearing at Cambridge,
-three years before.
-
-“This, I think, is Colonel Winter?” he said, returning the bow, but not
-extending his hand, which hung down, slack and empty at his side.
-
-“I am glad you recognized me this time, Mr. Mercer.”
-
-“I am sorry that I did not recognize you before,” answered Mercer.
-“Will you gentlemen be seated? I am not the owner of the house nor his
-son; I am not even a friend, only a casual acquaintance of the young
-man, but I seem to be rather in the position of host, so will you be
-seated, and may I offer you some Scotch and Shasta--Mr.--ah--”
-
-“Mr. Horatio Birdsall, of the Birdsall and Gwen Detective Agency,”
-interposed Winter. Birdsall bowed. Mercer bowed. “Excuse me if I
-decline for us both; our time is limited--no, thank you, not a cigar,
-either. Now, Mr. Mercer, to come to the point, I want my nephew. I
-understand he is in this house.”
-
-“You are quite mistaken,” Mercer responded with unshaken calm. “He is
-not.”
-
-“Where is he, then?”
-
-“I do not know, Colonel Winter. What I should recommend is for you to
-go back to the Palace, and if you do not find him there--why, come and
-shoot us up again!” His eye strayed for a second to the blackened,
-reeking mass on the great stone hearth.
-
-“Have you sent him home? Is that what you mean to imply?”
-
-“I imply nothing, Colonel; I don’t dare to with such strenuous fighters
-as you gentlemen; only go and see, and if you do find the young
-gentleman has had no ill treatment, no scare--only a little adventure
-such as boys like, I hope you will come out here, or wherever I may be,
-and have that cigar you are refusing.”
-
-The colonel was frankly puzzled. He couldn’t quite focus his wits on
-this bravado which had nothing of the bravo about it, in fact had
-a tinge of wistfulness in its quiet. One would have said the man
-regretted his compulsory attitude of antagonism; that he wanted peace.
-
-Mercer smiled faintly. “You ought to know by this time when a man is
-lying, Colonel,” he continued, “but I will go further. I may have done
-plenty of wrong things in my life, some things, maybe, which the law
-might call a crime; but I have never done anything which would debar
-me from passing my word of honor as a gentleman; nor any one else from
-taking it. I give you my word of honor that I have meant and I do mean
-no slightest harm to Archie Winter; and that, while I do not _know_
-where he is at this speaking, I believe you will find him safe under
-your aunt’s protection when you get back to the Palace.”
-
-“Call up the Palace Hotel, Mr. Birdsall,” was the colonel’s reply. “Mr.
-Mercer, I do not distrust that you are speaking exactly, but you know
-your Shakespeare; and there are promises which keep their word to the
-ear but break it to the sense.”
-
-“I don’t wonder at your mistake; but you are mistaken, suh.”
-
-Birdsall was phlegmatically ringing up Mrs. Winter, having the usual
-experience of the rash person who intrudes his paltry needs on the
-complex workings of a great hotel system.
-
-“No, I don’t know the number, I haven’t the book here, but
-_you_ know, Palace Hotel. Well give me Information, then--Busy?
-Well, give me another Information, then--yes, I want the Palace
-Hotel--P-a-l-a-c-e--yes, yes, Palace Hotel; yes, certainly. Yes? Mrs.
-Archibald Winter. Yes--line busy? Well, hold on until it is disengaged.
-Say, Miss Furber, that you? This is Birdsall and Gwen. Yes. Give me
-Mrs. Winter, will you, 337? This Mrs. Winter? Oh! When will she be
-back? Is Mrs. Melville Winter in? Well, Miss Smith in? She’s gone,
-too? Has Master Archibald got back, yet, to the hotel? Hasn’t? Thank
-you--eh?” in answer to the colonel’s interruption. “What say, Colonel?”
-
-“Tell her to call up this number,”--the colonel read it out of the
-telephone book--“when Master Archie does get back, will you? I am
-afraid, Mr. Mercer, that you will have to allow us to trespass on your
-hospitality for a little longer.”
-
-He suspected that Mercer was annoyed, although he answered lightly
-enough: “As you please, Colonel Winter. I am sure you will hear very
-soon. Now, there is another matter, your machine; I understand you left
-it outside. Will you ring for Kito, Colonel? Under the circumstances
-you may prefer to do your own ringing. I will ask him to attend to the
-car.”
-
-The colonel made proper acknowledgments. He was thinking that had
-Mercer cared to confiscate the motor, he would have done it without
-ringing; on the other hand, did he desire some special intercourse
-with his retainer, wherein, under their very noses, he could issue his
-orders--well, possibly they might get a whiff of the secret themselves
-were he allowed to try. At present the game baffled him. Therefore he
-nodded at Birdsall’s puckered face behind Mercer’s shoulder. And he
-rang the bell.
-
-The Jap answered it with suspicious alacrity.
-
-“Kito,” said Mercer, “will you attend to General Winter’s car? Bring it
-up to the court.”
-
-Absolutely harmless, to all appearances, but Birdsall, from his safe
-position behind master and man, looked shrewd suspicion at the soldier.
-
-“Shall your man in the hall go with him?” asked Mercer.
-
-The colonel shook his head. “No,” he said quietly, “we have other
-men outside if he needs help. Call Skid, please.” But when Birdsall
-attempted to get Central there was no response.
-
-The colonel merely shrugged his shoulders, although Birdsall frowned
-with vexation. “What a pity!” said Winter softly. “Now the fellows will
-come when the time is up; we can’t call them off.”
-
-Mercer smiled faintly. “There are two more telephones in the house,” he
-observed. “You can call off your dogs easily any time you wish. Also
-you can hear from the Palace. Will you come up-stairs with me? I assure
-you I have not the least intention to harm you or the honest sergeant.”
-
-“You take the first trick, Mercer,” said the colonel. “I supposed the
-bell was your signal to have the wires cut. But about going; no, I
-think we will stay here. There is a door out on the court which, if you
-will open--thank you. A charming prospect! Excuse me if I send Haley
-out there; and may I go myself?”
-
-Anticipating the answer, he stepped under the low mission lintel into
-a fairy-like Californian court or _patio_ of pepper-trees and palms
-and a moss-grown fountain. There was the usual colonnade with a stone
-seat running round the wall. Mercer, smiling, motioned to one of them.
-“I wish I could convince you, Colonel, that you are in no need of
-that plaything in your hand, and that you are going to dine with your
-boy--isn’t he a fine fellow?”
-
-The colonel did not note either his admission that he had seen Archie,
-nor a curious warming of his tone; he had stiffened and grown rigid
-like a man who receives a blow which he will not admit. He stole a
-glance at the detective and met an atrocious smirk of complacency.
-They both had caught a glimpse of a figure flitting into a door of the
-court. They both had seen a woman’s profile and a hand holding a little
-steel tool which had ends like an alligator’s nose. And both men had
-recognized Miss Smith.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-THE AGENT OF THE FIRELESS STOVE
-
-
-The time was two hours later. Rupert Winter was sitting on one of
-the stone benches of the colonnade about the _patio_. The court was
-suffused with the golden glow presaging sunset. Warm afternoon shadows
-lay along the flags; wavering silhouettes of leafage or plant; blurred
-reflections from the bold has-reliefs of Spanish warriors and Spanish
-priests sculptured between the spandrels of the arches. Winter’s dull
-eyes hardly noted them: the exotic luxuriance of foliage, the Spanish
-armor and Spanish cowls were all too common to a denizen of a Spanish
-colony in the tropics, to distract his thoughts from his own ugly
-problem. He had been having it out with himself, as he phrased it. And
-there had been moments during those two hours, when he had ground his
-teeth and clenched his fists because of the futile and furious pain in
-him.
-
-When he recognized Janet Smith, by that same illuminating flash he
-recognized that this woman who had been tricking him was the woman
-that he loved. He believed that he had said his last word to love, but
-love, after seeming to accept the curt dismissal, was lightly riding
-his heart again. “Fooled a second time,” he thought with inexpressible
-bitterness, recalling his unhappy married life and the pretty, weak
-creature who had caused him such humiliation. Yet with her there had
-been no real wrong-doing, only absolute lack of discretion and a
-childish craving for gaiety and adulation. Poor child! what a woeful
-ending for it all! The baby, the little boy who was their only living
-child, to die of a sudden access of an apparently trifling attack of
-croup, while the mother was dancing at a post ball! He was East, taking
-his examination for promotion. The frantic drive home in the chill
-of the dawn had given her a cold which her shock and grief left her
-no strength to resist--she was always a frail little creature, poor
-butterfly!--and she followed her baby inside of a month. Had she lived,
-her husband might have found it hard to forgive her, for already a sore
-heart was turning to the child for comfort; but she was dead, and he
-did not let his thoughts misuse her memory. Now--here was another, so
-different but just as false. Then, he brought himself up with a jerk;
-he would be fair; he would look at things as they were; many a man had
-been fooled by the dummy. He would not jump at conclusions because they
-were cruel, any more than he would because they were kind. There was
-such a thing, he knew well, as credulous suspicion; it did more harm
-than credulous trust. Meanwhile, he had his detail. He was to find
-Archie; therefore, he waited. They were in the house; it were only
-folly to give up their advantage under the stress of any of Mercer’s
-plausible lurings to the outside.
-
-Moreover, by degrees, he became convinced that Mercer, certainly to
-some extent, was sincere in his profession of belief in Archie’s
-absence and safety. This, in spite of hearing several times that Archie
-was not returned. Mercer did all the speaking, but he allowed Birdsall
-to hold the receiver and take the message from Mrs. Winter.
-
-The telephone was in an adjoining room, but by shifting his position
-a number of times the colonel was able to catch a murmur of the
-conversation. He heard Mercer’s voice distinctly. He had turned away
-and was following the detective out of the room. “I don’t understand it
-any more than you do, Mr. Birdsall,” he said; “you won’t believe me,
-suh, but I am right worried.”
-
-“Of course I believe you,” purred the detective so softly that the
-colonel knew he did not believe any more than Mercer suspected. “Of
-course I believe you; but I don’t know what to do. It ain’t on the map.
-I guess it’s up to you to throw a little light. I’ve called the boys
-off twice already and told ’em to wait an hour or a half-hour longer. I
-got to see the colonel.”
-
-“I can trust my intuitions, or I can trust the circumstantial
-evidence,” thought the colonel. He jumped up and began to pace the
-court.
-
-“Seems to be like a game of bridge before one can see the dummy,” he
-complained; and as so often happens in the crises of life, a trivial
-illustration struck a wavering mind with the force of an argument. His
-thoughts reverted whimsically to the card-table; how many times had he
-hesitated over the first lead between evenly balanced suits of four;
-and how often had he regretted or won, depending solely upon whether
-his card instinct had been denied or obeyed! It might be instinct, this
-much-discussed “card instinct,” or it might be a summing up of logical
-deductions so swift that the obscure steps were lost, and the reasoner
-was unconscious of his own logical processes. “Now,” groaned Rupert
-Winter, “I am up against it. She _looks_ like a good woman; she _seems_
-like a good woman; but I have only my impressions and Aunt Rebecca’s
-against the apparent facts in the case. Well, Aunt Rebecca is a shrewd
-one!” He sat down and thought harder. Finally he rose, smiling. He
-had threshed out his problem; and his conclusion, inaudibly but very
-distinctly uttered to himself, was: “Me for my own impressions! If that
-girl is in with this gang, either what they are after isn’t so bad--or
-they have made her believe it isn’t bad.”
-
-He looked idly about him at the arched doorway of the outer court. It
-was carved with a favorite mission design of eight-pointed flowers with
-vase-like fluting below. There was a tiny crack in one of the flowers,
-the tiniest crack in the world. He looked at it without seeing it, or
-seeing it with only the outer half of his senses, but--he could not
-have told how--into his effort to pierce his own tangle there crept
-a sudden interest, a sudden keenness of scrutiny of this minute,
-insignificant crack in the stone. He became aware that the crack was
-singularly regular, preserving the form of the flower and the fluting
-beneath. Kito, the Japanese, who was sitting at the far end of the
-court, conversing in amity with Haley, just here rose and came to this
-particular pillar. The Irishman sat alone, rimmed by the sunset gold,
-little spangles of motes drifting about him; for the merest second
-Winter’s glance lingered on him ere it went to the Jap, who passed him,
-courteously saluting.
-
-After he had passed, the colonel looked again at the column and the
-crack--it was not there.
-
-“_Chito, chito!_” muttered the colonel. Carelessly he approached
-the column and took the same posture as the Jap. Unobtrusively his
-fingers strayed over the stone. He scratched the surface; not stone,
-but cement. He tapped cautiously, keeping his hand well hidden by his
-body; no hollow sound rewarded him; but all at once his groping fingers
-touched a little round object under the bold point of an eight-pointed
-flower. He didn’t dare press on it; instead he resumed his cautious
-tapping. It seemed to him that the sound had changed. He glanced about
-him. Save for Haley he was alone in the _patio_. He pressed on the
-round white knob, and what he had half expected happened: a segment
-of the column swung on inner hinges, disclosing the hollow center
-of the engaged columns on either side. He looked down. Nothing but
-darkness was visible, but while he stood, tensely holding his breath,
-his abnormally sensitive auricular nerve caught distinctly the staccato
-breath of that kind of sigh which is like a groan, and a voice said
-more wearily than angrily: “Oh, damn it all!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Almost simultaneously, he heard the faint footfalls of the men within;
-he must replace his movable flower. The column was intact, and he was
-bending his frowning brows on the stylobate of another when Birdsall
-and Mercer entered together, Mercer, with a shrug of his shoulders at
-the detective’s dogged suspicion, preceding the latter.
-
-“Well,” said the colonel, “did you get my aunt?”
-
-“Yes, suh, I got your aunt herself,” responded Mercer, with his
-Virginian survival of the formal civility of an earlier generation.
-“Yes, suh; but I regret to say Archie is not there.”
-
-“Where is he?” The soldier’s voice was curt.
-
-“Honestly,” declared Mercer, “I wish I knew, suh, I certainly _do_.
-But--” Mercer’s jaw fell; he turned sharply at the soft whir of an
-electric stanhope gently entering the _patio_ through the great arched
-gateway. It stopped abreast of the group, and its only occupant, a
-handsome young man, jumped nimbly out of the vehicle. He greeted them
-with a polite removal of his cap, a bow, and a flashing smile which
-made the circuit of the beholders. Birdsall and the colonel recognized
-the traveling enthusiast of the Fireless Stove.
-
-The colonel took matters into his own hands.
-
-“I think you’re the young gentleman who took my nephew away,” said he.
-“Will you kindly tell us where he is?”
-
-“And don’t get giddy, young gentleman,” Birdsall chimed in, “because
-we know perfectly well that you are _not_ the agent of the Peerless
-Fireless Stove.”
-
-“I’ve got one here on trial, and I’ve come back to see if they like
-it,” explained the young man, in silken accents, but with a dancing
-gleam of the eyes.
-
-“We are going to keep it,” said Mercer. “Kito,” calling the unseen Jap,
-“fetch that Fireless Stove this gentleman left us, and show it to this
-gentleman here.”
-
-“Oh, cut it out!” Birdsall waved him off. “It’s only ten minutes
-before our fellows will come. You can put the police court wise with
-all that. Try it on _them_; it don’t go with us.”
-
-“Where is the boy?” said the colonel.
-
-“Tell him, if you know,” said Mercer. “This gentleman,” he explained,
-“left a stove with us to test. He was here about it this morning, and
-we gave Archie to _him_ to take to the Palace Hotel.”
-
-“And he is there now,” said the young man.
-
-“Did you leave him there?” asked the colonel.
-
-“Yes, _did_ you?” insisted Mercer.
-
-The young man looked from Mercer to the other two men. There was no
-visible appeal to the Southerner, but Winter felt sure of two things:
-one, that the new-comer was Mercer’s confederate whom he was striving
-to shield by pretending to disavow; the other, that for some reason
-Mercer was as anxious for the answer as were they.
-
-“Why-y,” hesitated the stove promoter, “you see, Mr.--ah, gentlemen,
-you see, I was told to take the boy to the Palace Hotel, and I set out
-to do it. We weren’t going at more than an eight-mile-an-hour clip,
-yet some foozler of a cop arrested us for speeding. It was perfectly
-ridiculous, and I tried to shake him, but it was no use. They carried
-us off to a police court and stuck me for ten dollars. Meanwhile my
-machine and my passenger were outside. When I got outside I couldn’t
-find them. I skirmished around, and finally did get the machine. I’d
-taken the precaution to fix it so it couldn’t be run before I left
-it--took the key out, you know--it must have been trundled off by
-hand somewhere!--but I couldn’t find the boy. Naturally, I was a bit
-worried; but after I had looked up the force and the neighborhood, it
-occurred to me to ’phone to the Palace. I did, and I was told he was
-there.”
-
-“Who told you?” The question came simultaneously out of three throats.
-
-“Why, Mrs. Winter--that’s what she called herself.”
-
-“But not three minutes ago Mrs. Winter told me that he wasn’t there,”
-remarked Mercer coldly. “_When_ did you telephone?”
-
-“It was at least fifteen minutes ago,” the young man said dolefully.
-“I say, wouldn’t you better call them up again? There may be some
-explanation. I shouldn’t have come back without the kid if I hadn’t
-been _sure_ he was safe.”
-
-“Was it Mrs. Melville or Mrs. Winter you got?” This came from the
-colonel. “Did she by chance have an English accent, or was it
-Southern?”
-
-“Oh, no, not Southern,” protested the young man. “Yes, I should say it
-was English--or trying to be.”
-
-“It would be exactly like Millicent,” thought the colonel wrathfully,
-“to try to fool the kidnappers, who had apparently lost Archie, by
-pretending he was at the hotel!”
-
-He made no comment aloud, but he nodded assent to Mercer’s proposal to
-telephone; and then he walked up to the stove man.
-
-“The game is up,” he said quietly. “We have a lot of men waiting
-outside. If we signal, they will come any minute; if we don’t signal,
-they will come in ten minutes. Give us a chance to be merciful to you.
-This is no kind of a scrape for your father’s son--or for Arnold’s.”
-
-Shot without range though it was, Winter was sure that it went home
-under all the young fellow’s assumed bewilderment. He continued,
-looking kindly at him:
-
-“You look now, I’ll wager, about as you used to look in the office when
-you called on the dean--by invitation--and were wondering just where
-the inquiry was going to light!”
-
-The dimple showed in the young man’s cheek. “I admit,” he replied,
-“that I didn’t take advantage as I should of my university
-opportunities. Probably that is why I have to earn a strenuous
-livelihood boosting the Only Peerless Fireless Stove. By the way, have
-_you_ ever seen the Fireless in action? Just the thing for the army!
-Fills a long-felt want. I should be very pleased to demonstrate. We
-have a stove here.”
-
-The colonel grinned responsively. “You do it very well,” said he.
-“Can’t you let me into the game?”
-
-There was the slightest waver in the promoter’s glance, although he
-smiled brilliantly as he answered: “I’ll take it into consideration,
-but--will you excuse me? I want to speak to Mr. Mercer about the stove.”
-
-The moment he had removed his affable young presence Birdsall
-approached his employer. It had been a difficult quarter of an hour
-with the detective. Vague instinct warned him not to touch the subject
-of Miss Smith; he felt in no way assured about anything else. The
-result had been that he had fidgeted in silence. But the accumulated
-flood could no longer be held.
-
-“I’ve found out one thing,” exploded Birdsall, puffing in the haste of
-his utterance. “The boy is on the premises.”
-
-“Think so?” was all the colonel’s answer.
-
-“I’m sure of it. Say, I overheard Mercer talking down a speaking-tube.”
-
-“What did he say?”
-
-“Talked French, damn him! But say, what’s _gorge_?”
-
-“Throat.”
-
-“What’s _cupillo gorge_?”
-
-“Sure he wasn’t talking of a carriage, or did he say _je le couperai la
-gorge_?”
-
-“Maybe. I wouldn’t swear to it. I don’t _parlez français_ a little bit.”
-
-“Did you hear any other noises? Where were they?”
-
-Birdsall thought he had heard other noises, and that they were down
-cellar. “And anyhow, Colonel, I’m dead-to-rights sure those guys are
-giving us hot stuff to get us out of the house. I’m for getting our men
-in now and rushing the house. It’s me for the cellar.”
-
-While the colonel was rolling Birdsall’s information around in his
-mind, he heard the echo of steps on the flagging which preceded Mercer
-and the other man.
-
-There was that in the bearing and the look of them that made the
-watcher, used to the signs of decision on men’s faces, instantly sure
-that their whole course of plans and action was changed.
-
-Mercer spoke first and in a low tone to the colonel.
-
-“I have no right,” said he, “to ask so much trust from you, but will
-you trust me enough to step aside with this young man and me for a
-moment only--out of ear-shot? I give you my word of honor I mean no
-slightest harm to you. I want to be frank. I will go alone if you
-desire.”
-
-The colonel eyed him intently for the briefest space. “I’ll trust you,”
-said he. Then: “I think you have the key to this queer mix-up. At your
-service. And let your friend come, too. He is an ingenuous sort, and he
-amuses me.”
-
-Birdsall looked distinctly sullen over the request to wait, intimating
-quite frankly that his employer was walking into a trap. “I won’t stand
-here more than fifteen minutes,” he grumbled. “I’ve given those fellows
-_poco tiente_ long enough.” But the colonel insisted on twenty minutes,
-and reluctantly Birdsall acquiesced.
-
-Mercer conducted the others to the library. When they were seated he
-began in his composed, melancholy fashion:
-
-“I earnestly beg of you to listen to me, and to believe me, for your
-nephew’s sake. I am going to tell you the absolute truth. It is the
-only way now. When you came, we handed him over to this gentleman,
-exactly as we have said. I do not know why he should have been stopped.
-I do not know why he left the machine--”
-
-“Might he not have been _carried_ away?” said Winter.
-
-“He might; but I don’t know what motive--”
-
-“What motive had _you_? You kidnapped him!”
-
-“Not exactly. We had no intention of harming him. He came accidentally
-into the room between Mrs. Winter’s and Mr. Keatcham’s suites. Standing
-in that room, trying to stanch the bleeding of a sudden hemorrhage of
-the nose, he overheard me and my friend--”
-
-“_You?_” asked the colonel laconically of the young Harvard man.
-
-“I,” smilingly confessed the latter. “I am ready to own up. You are a
-decent fellow, and you are shrewd. You ought to be on our side, not
-fighting us. I tell you, you don’t want to have the boy turn up safe
-and sound any more than I do. Mr. Mercer was talking to me, and the
-kid overheard. We heard him and went into the room--”
-
-“How?”
-
-“Knocked on the door and he opened it. And we jumped on him. It was
-life and death for us not to be blown on; so, as we didn’t wish to kill
-the kid, and as we didn’t know the youngster well enough to trust him
-_then_--although we might, for he is game and the whitest chap!--but
-we didn’t know--why, we just told him he would have to stay with us a
-while until our rush was over. That was all we meant; and we let him
-’phone you.”
-
-“How about his great-aunt--the cruel anxiety--”
-
-“Anxiety nothing!” began the other man, but a glance from Mercer cut
-him short.
-
-The Southerner took the word in his slow, gentle voice. “I tried to
-reassure our aunt, Colonel Winter. I think I succeeded. She telephoned
-and I told her it was all right. As for Archie, after we talked with
-him, he was willing enough to go. He stole out with my friend inside
-of five minutes, while you all were searching your rooms. It was _he_
-insisted on calling you up, lest you should be worried. He said you
-were right afraid of kidnappers, and you would be sending the police
-after us. You can call Mrs. Winter up and find out if I am not telling
-you the exact facts.”
-
-“Very well, I _will_,” said Winter. They met the sullen detective at
-the door. Cary Mercer, with his mirthless smile, led the way. Mercer
-rang up the hotel for Winter, himself. To the colonel’s vast relief
-Aunt Rebecca answered the call.
-
-“_Est-ce que c’est vous-même, mon neveu?_” said she dryly.
-
-“_Mais oui, ma tante._ Why are you speaking so formally in foreign
-tongues? Is Millicent on deck?”
-
-“In her room,” came the answer, still in French. “Well, you have got us
-in a pretty mess. Where is my boy?”
-
-“I only wish I knew! Tell me now, though, is Mercer’s story straight?”
-
-“Absolutely. You may trust him.”
-
-“What’s his real game, then? The one he was afraid Archie would expose?”
-
-“Ask him.”
-
-“But _you_ are in it, aren’t you?”
-
-“Enough to ask that you abandon the chase--immediately! Unless you wish
-to ruin me!”
-
-“You’ll have to speak plainer. I’ve been kept in the dark as long as I
-can stand in this matter.”
-
-But before he could finish the sentence. “_Pas ici, pas
-maintenant--c’est trop de péril_,” she cried, and she must have
-gone, for he could get no more from her. When he rang again, Randall
-responded:
-
-“Mrs. Winter says, sir, will you please come up here as quick as you
-can. She’s gone out. She thought she caught sight of Mr. Archie on the
-street.”
-
-To the colonel’s demand, “Where, how did she see him?” he obtained no
-answer, and on his vicious pealing of the bell there came, eventually,
-mellow Anglican accents which asked: “Yes? Whom do you wish to see?” It
-is an evidence of the undisciplined nature of the sex that the soldier
-made a face and--hung up the receiver.
-
-He found himself--although this to a really open mind is no excuse--in
-a muddle of conflicting impulses. He was on edge to get into the
-street for the search after the boy; he was clutched in a vise by his
-conviction that the clue to Archie’s whereabouts lay in Mercer’s hands,
-and that the Southerner meant no harm to the lad. And all the while he
-could feel Birdsall tugging at the leash.
-
-“It’s on the cards,” he grumbled, with a wry face, “quite on the cards
-that he may bolt in spite of me, and do some foolish stunt of his own
-that will make a most awful muddle.”
-
-Not nearly so composed as he looked, therefore, he turned to Mercer.
-However, his ammunition was ready, and to Mercer’s inquiry, was he
-satisfied? he replied calmly: “Well, not entirely. If Archie isn’t in
-the house, _who_ is it whose throat you wish to cut? Who is hidden
-here?”
-
-It could not have been an unexpected question or Mercer hardly had
-answered so readily: “You know who it is,” said he. “It is Mr.
-Keatcham.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-THE SMOLDERING EMBERS
-
-
-If Mercer’s avowal surprised the colonel, there was no trace of such
-emotion in his face or his manner. “I rather thought it might be,” he
-said. “And our young friend who is promoting Fireless Stoves with the
-solemn energy he learned doing Dicky stunts?”
-
-“Mr. Endicott Tracy.” Mercer had the manner of a ceremonious
-introduction. Tracy flavored the customary murmur of pleasure with his
-radiant smile.
-
-“Pleased, I am sure,” said the colonel in turn, bowing. “Your father,
-I suppose, is the president of the Midland; and Mr. Keatcham will, I
-suppose, not be able to prevent his reëlection to-morrow. Is that the
-game?”
-
-Mr. Tracy’s son admitted that it might be.
-
-“Ah, very clever,” said the colonel, “very. Any side-show, for example?”
-
-“I did not go into this for money.” Mercer’s level gaze did not relax,
-and he kept his dreary eyes unflinchingly on Winter’s. A peculiar look
-in the eyes recalled some tragic and alien memory, just what, Rupert
-could not capture; it flitted hazily through his thoughts ere the
-next words drove it off. “Nevertheless, it is true that if we win out
-I shall have enough to pay back to all the people who trusted me the
-money they lost when they were frightened into selling their stock in
-the Tidewater, and your aunt and Mr. Tracy stand to make money.”
-
-“How do you expect to make it?”
-
-“The M. and S. stock is away down because of rumors Keatcham is likely
-to control it. When it is settled it is not to be looted by him, the
-stock will rise--we are sure of the ten points; we may make twenty--”
-
-“And my aunt has financed your scheme, has she?--paid all your
-expenses?”
-
-The Harvard man laughed out. “Our _expenses_? Oh, yes, she has
-grub-staked us, all right; but she has done a good deal more--she has
-furnished more than half a million to us for our gamble.”
-
-The colonel considered; then: “But why did you keep him here so long
-beforehand?” said he.
-
-“It was not long beforehand,” said Mercer. “The meeting was adjourned
-for a day--we don’t know why--we fancy that his partners suspect
-something. It is called for to-morrow, in spite of their efforts to
-have it put off a week. But we want more; we want to induce Keatcham to
-vote his own stock for us, and to call off his dogs himself.”
-
-“And you can’t force him to do it?”
-
-“We shall force him, easily enough,” returned Mercer, “but we don’t
-trust him. We want his private code book to be sure he is playing fair.
-In fact, we have to have it, because nothing gets any attention that
-isn’t, so to speak, properly introduced.”
-
-“And he will not give it to you?”
-
-“Says he has lost it.”
-
-“Perhaps he _has_,” mused the soldier. “But now, all this is not my
-concern, except that I have no right, as a soldier, even passively
-to aid in breaking the laws. It is my duty to rescue and free Mr.
-Keatcham.”
-
-But before he could speak further Mercer lifted a hand in apologetic
-interruption. Would Colonel Winter excuse him, but he must ask Mr.
-Tracy to go back to the _patio_ and have an eye on the detective.
-Endicott only exchanged a single glance before he obeyed. Mercer’s eyes
-followed him. “It was not to be helped,” he said, half to himself, “but
-I have been sorry more than once that I had to take him into this.”
-
-Winter looked at him, more puzzled than he wanted to admit to himself;
-indeed, he was rather glad to have the next word come from Mercer.
-
-“I have a few things I want to say to you; they go easier when we are
-alone--but won’t you sit down?” When the colonel had seated himself he
-went on: “I’d like to explain things a bit.”
-
-“I’d like to have you,” answered the soldier. “I think you have the
-clue to Archie’s whereabouts and don’t recognize it yourself; so put me
-wise, as the slang goes.”
-
-Then, without preface, in brief, nervous sentences, spoken hardly
-with a quiver of a muscle or a wavering cadence of the voice, yet
-nevertheless instinct with a deadly earnestness, Mercer began to talk.
-He told of his struggling youth on the drained plantation, mortgaged
-so that after the interest was paid there was barely enough to get
-the meagerest living for his mother and sister and little brother;
-of his accidental discovery of iron ore on the place; of his working
-as a common laborer in the steel mills; of his being “rooster,”
-“strand-boy,” “rougher,” “heater,” “roller,” during three years while
-he was waiting for his chance; of his heart-draining toil; of his
-solitary studies.
-
-“I never was the kind of fellow to make friends,” he said, in his soft,
-monotonous voice, “so I expect I was the fonder of my own kin. I’d a
-mighty good mother, sir, and sister; and there was Phil--my little
-brother. We were right happy all together on the old place that’s
-been in our family for a hundred years, and it was all we asked to
-stay there; but it had every dollar of mortgage it could stand, and
-the soil all worn-out, needing all kinds of things; and I wish you
-could have seen the makeshifts we had for machines! I was blacksmith
-and carpenter and painter--just sixteen, and not an especially bright
-chap, but mighty willing to work; and my mother and Sis and I--we did
-a heap. When I stumbled on the ore I couldn’t be sure, but I wrote to
-Aunt Rebecca Winter. She sent a man down. He looked up things. It would
-take a heap of money to work the mines, but it might be a big thing.
-She paid off the mortgage and took another. First to last, she’s been
-mighty kind to us. She would have done more had we let her. So I went
-to Pittsburgh and learned my trade, and I made enough to pay interest,
-and the people at home got a fairly good living. When I was twenty-one
-I was back home, and got a company started and put up a mill. You
-know how those things have to creep up. But there was ore, all right,
-and I understood my business and taught the hands. We’d a right sweet
-little mill. Well, I don’t want to take up your time, suh. Those next
-ten or twelve years were right hard work, but they were happy, too.
-We prospered; we helped the whole county prosper. We paid Aunt Becky.
-We were in good shape. We went through ’93 paying our dividends just
-as regular, and making them, too, though we didn’t much more--it was
-close sailing. But we were honest; we made a mighty good article; and
-everybody trusted us. Then came the craze for mergers, and a number
-of us got together. Still we weren’t very big, but we were big enough
-to be listed. I didn’t want it, but some of the men thought it was a
-terrible fine thing to be ‘Iron Kings.’ That was how. Keatcham was
-looking over the country for fish for his net; he somehow heard that
-here was a heap of good ore and new mills. The first intimation we had
-was his secretary coming as a Northern invalid--why, he stayed at our
-house because we were so sorry for him, the hotel being in new hands
-and not right comfortable. He seemed so interested in our mills, and
-bought some stock, and sent presents to Phil and my mother after he
-went.”
-
-“That was Keatcham’s private secretary, you say?”
-
-“Yes, suh, Atkins. You met him on the train--as sleek and deadly a
-little scoundrel as ever got rich quick. Oh, he’s deep. Well, suh,
-you know the usual process. Convinced of the value of the property,
-Keatcham and one or two others set out to buy it. They got little
-blocks of it here and there. Then Atkins wrote me in confidence that
-some men were after the controlling interest and meant to squeeze us
-all out--offered to lend me money to buy--of course, on a margin. And
-I was plumb idiot enough to be tolled into his trap! I, who had never
-speculated with a dollar before, I didn’t borrow _his_ money, but I
-took all I could raise myself, and I bought enough to be sure I could
-control the next election. Then--the slump came, and after the slump
-the long, slow crumbling. I controlled the election all right, of
-course, but before the next one came I was ruined, and Keatcham put
-his own men in. I went desperately to New York. I didn’t know how to
-fight those fellows; it was a new game. I didn’t find Atkins. Maybe
-because that wasn’t his name when I had known him. I was so sure that
-the property was good--as if that mattered! As if anything mattered
-with these gamblers who play with loaded dice and dope the horses they
-bet against! Phil had all his property in the mills; we all had. We
-mortgaged the house; we had to, to protect our stock. You know how
-the fight ended, and what happened at Cambridge. That isn’t all. My
-wife--” He stood a little straighter, and the light went out of his
-eyes. “I told you I don’t make friends easily, and I am not the kind of
-man women take to; all the same, the loveliest girl in the South loved
-me ever since I jumped over the mill-dam to save her rag doll, once,
-when she was visiting her aunt near us. I’d married, when we seemed
-prosperous. Now, understand me, I don’t say it was my ruin and Phil’s
-death that killed her and the baby; she had pneumonia, and it may be
-that seeing that paper by accident didn’t turn the scale; but I do say
-that she had her last hours embittered by it. That’s enough for me.
-When I got home with--with Phil, she was dead.”
-
-“Tough,” said the colonel. He began to revise his impressions of Mercer.
-
-“Wasn’t it?” the other asked, with a simplicity of appeal that affected
-the listener more than anything he had heard. He jumped out of his
-chair and began pacing the room, talking more rapidly. “You’re a _man_;
-you know what I wanted to do.”
-
-“Kill somebody, I suppose. _I_ should.”
-
-“Just that. I ran Atkins to cover after a while through Endicott Tracy.
-That boy is one of the noblest fellows that ever lived; yes, suh. He
-was going to help poor Phil, Phil’s room-mate had told him. All those
-boys--look a-here, Colonel Winter, if ever anybody talks to you about
-Harvard fellows being indifferent--”
-
-“I shall tell him he can’t get under the American surface. A Harvard
-boy will do anything on earth for his friends.”
-
-“They were mighty good to me. It was Endy found out about Atkins, just
-from my description of him. I found out about Keatcham for myself. And
-you are quite right--for a little while I wanted to kill them both.
-Looked like I just naturally _had_ to kill them! But there was my
-mother. There was nobody to take care of her but Sis and me, and a
-trial for murder is terribly expensive. Of course, anybody can get off
-who has got money and can spend it; but it takes such an awful heap
-of money. And we were all ruined together, for what little was left
-was all in the company, and that promptly stopped paying dividends.
-I couldn’t risk it. I had to wait. I had to go to work to support
-my mother, to pay Sis and her back, don’t you see? We came here. I
-got a job, a well-paid one, too, through Endy’s father, reporting on
-the condition of the mills--a kind of examiner. And the job was for
-Keatcham.”
-
-“Why did you take it? I know, though. You did it to familiarize him
-with your appearance, so that he would not be warned when your chance
-came.”
-
-“How did you know that?”
-
-“A man I knew in the Philippines--a Filipino--was wronged by a white
-man, who took his wife and threw her aside when he tired of her. The
-girl killed herself. Her husband watched his chance for a year, found
-it at last--thanks to that very fact that his victim wasn’t on guard
-against him--and sent his knife home. He’d been that fellow’s servant.
-I picked the dead man up. That Filipino looked as you looked a minute
-ago.”
-
-“What became of the Filipino?” inquired his listener.
-
-The colonel had not told the story quite without intention. He argued
-subconsciously, that if Mercer were a good sort under all, he would
-have a movement of sympathy for a more cruelly wronged man than he;
-if not, he would drive ahead to his purpose, whatever that might be.
-His keen eyes looked a little more gentle as he answered: “He poisoned
-himself. The best way out, I reckon. I should hate to have had him
-shot after I knew the story. But there was really no option. But I’m
-interrupting you. You did your work well and won Keatcham’s confidence?”
-
-“He isn’t a very confiding man. I didn’t see him often. My dealings
-were with Atkins. He didn’t know that I had found him out; he thought
-that he had only to explain his two names, and expected gratitude for
-his warning, as he called it. He is slimy; but I was able to repay a
-little of my score with him. I was employed by more than Keatcham, and
-I saw a good many industrial back-yards. Just by chance, I came on a
-clue, and Endy Tracy and I worked it up together. Atkins was selling
-information to Keatcham’s enemies. We did not make out a complete
-case, but enough of one to make Keatcham suspect him, and at the right
-time. But that happened later--you see, I don’t know how to tell a
-story even with so much at stake.” He pulled out his handkerchief, and
-Winter caught the gleam of the beads on his sallow forehead. “It was
-this way,” he went on. “At first I was only looking about for a safe
-chance to kill him, and to kill that snake of an Atkins; but then it
-grew on me; it was all too easy a punishment--just a quick death, when
-his victims had years of misery. I wanted him to wade through the hell
-_I_ had to wade through. I wanted him to know _why_ he was condemned.
-Then it was I began to collect just the cases I knew about--just one
-little section of the horrible swath of agony and humiliation and
-poverty and sin he and his crowd had made--the one I knew every foot
-of, because I’d gone over it every night I wasn’t so dead tired I _had_
-to sleep. God! do you know what it is to have the people who used to
-be running out of their houses just to say howdy to you, curse you for
-a swindler or a fool or turn out of one street and down the other not
-to pass you? Did _you_ ever have a little woman who used to give you
-frosted cake when you were a boy push her crape veil off her gray hair
-and hand you the envelope with her stock, with your handwriting on the
-envelope, and beg you--trying so hard not to cry, ’twas worse than if
-she had--beg you to lend her just half her interest money--_and you
-couldn’t do it_? Did you--never mind. I said I waded through hell. I
-_did!_ Not I alone--that was the worst--all the people that had trusted
-me! And just that some rich men should be richer. Why should _they_
-have the lion’s share? The lion’s share belongs to the lion. _They_ are
-nothing but jackals. They’re meaner than jackals, for the jackals take
-what the lion leaves, and these fellows steal the lion’s meat away from
-him. We made honest money; we paid honest wages; folks had more paint
-on their houses and more meat in their storehouses, and wore better
-clothes Sunday, and there were more school-houses and fewer saloons,
-and the negroes were learning a trade instead of loafing. The whole
-county was the better off for our prosperity, and there isn’t a mill in
-the outfit--and I know what I’m talking about--there isn’t a shop or a
-mine that’s as well run or makes as big an output now as it did when
-the old crowd was in. You find it that way everywhere; and that’s what
-is going to break things down. We saw to all the little affairs; they
-were _our_ affairs, don’t you know? But Keatcham’s new men draw their
-salaries and let things slide. Yet Keatcham is a great manager if he
-would only take the time; only he’s too busy stealing to develop his
-businesses; there’s more money in stealing a railway than in building
-one up. Oh, he isn’t a fool; if I could once get him where he would
-_have_ to listen, I know I could make him understand. He’s pretty
-cold-blooded, and he doesn’t realize. He only sees straight ahead,
-not all round, like all these superhumanly clever thieves; they have
-mighty stupid streaks. Well, I’ve got him now, and it is kill or cure
-for him. He can’t make a riffle. I knew I couldn’t do anything alone;
-I had to wait. I had to have stronger men than I am to help. By and by
-they tried their jackal business on a real lion--on Tracy. They wanted
-to steal _his_ road. I got on to them first. I see a heap of people
-in a heap of different businesses--the little people who talk. They
-notice all right, but they can see only their own little patch. I was
-the fellow riding round and seeing the township. I pieced together the
-plot and I told Endy Tracy. He wouldn’t believe me at first, because
-his father had given Keatcham his first start and done a hundred things
-for him. To be sure, his father has been obliged as an honest man to
-oppose Keatcham lately, but Keatcham couldn’t mean to burn him out that
-way. But he soon found that was precisely what Keatcham did mean. Then
-he was glad enough to help me save his father. The old man doesn’t know
-a thing; we don’t mean he ever shall know. We let him put up the best
-sort of a fight a man can with his hands tied while the other fellow
-is free. _My_ hands are free, too. I don’t respect the damned imbecile
-laws that let me be plundered any more than they do; and since my poor
-mother died last summer I am not afraid of anything; they _are_; that’s
-where I have the choice of weapons. I tell you, suh, _nobody_ is big
-enough to oppress a desperate man! Keatcham had one advantage--he had
-unlimited money. But Aunt Rebecca helped us out there. Colonel, I want
-you to know I didn’t ask her for more than the bare grub-stake; it was
-she herself that planned our stock deal.”
-
-“She is a dead game sport,” the colonel chuckled. “I believe you.”
-
-“And I hope you don’t allow that I was willing to have her mix herself
-in our risks. She would come; she said she wanted to see the fun--”
-
-“I believe you again,” the colonel assured him, and he remembered the
-odd sentence which his aunt had used the first night of their journey,
-when she expressed her hankering to match her wits against those of a
-first-class criminal.
-
-“We didn’t reckon on your turning up, or the complication with Archie.
-I wish to God we’d taken the boy’s own word! But, now you know all
-about it, will you keep your hands off? That’s all we ask.”
-
-“Well,”--the colonel examined his finger-nails, rubbing his hands
-softly, the back of one over the palm of the other--“well, you haven’t
-quite told me all. Don’t, unless you are prepared to have it used
-against you, as the policemen say _before_ the sweat-box. What did you
-do to Keatcham to get him to go with you so like Mary’s little lamb?”
-
-“I learned of a little device that looks like a tiny currycomb and is
-so flat and small you can bind it on a man’s arm just over an artery.
-Just press on the spring and give the least scratch, and the man falls
-down in convulsions. I showed him a rat I had had fetched me, and
-killed it like a flash. He had his choice of walking out quietly with
-me--I had my hand on his arm--or dropping down dead. He went quietly
-enough.”
-
-“That was the meaning of his look at me, was it?” Winter thought. He
-said only: “Did Endicott Tracy know about that?”
-
-“Of course not,” Mercer denied. “Do you reckon I want to mix the boy up
-in this more than I have? And Arnold only knew I was trying some kind
-of bluff game.”
-
-“I will lay odds, though,” the colonel ventured in his gentlest tone,
-“that Mr. Samurai, as Haley calls him, knew more. But when did you get
-rid of Atkins?”
-
-“Mr. Keatcham discharged him at Denver. I met Mr. Keatcham here; it was
-arranged on the train. We had it planned out. If that plan had failed I
-had another.”
-
-“Neat. Very neat. And then you became the secretary?”
-
-Mercer flushed in an unexpected fashion. “Certainly not!” he said with
-emphasis. “Do you think I would take his wages and not do the work
-faithfully? No, suh. I assumed to be his secretary in the office; that
-gave me a chance to arrange everything. But I did it to oblige him. I
-never touched a cent of his money. I paid, in fact, for our board out
-of our own money. It would have burned my fingers, suh!”
-
-“And the valet? Was he in your plot? Don’t answer if you--”
-
-“He was not, suh,” replied Cary Mercer. “He is a right worthy fellow,
-and he thought, after he had seen to the tickets--which he did very
-carefully--and given them to me, he could go off on the little vacation
-which came to him by his master through me.”
-
-“That’s a little bit evasive. However, I haven’t the right to ask you
-to give away your partners, anyhow.” He was peering at Mercer’s face
-behind his glasses, but the pallid, tired features returned him no clue
-to the thoughts in the head above them. “What have you done with Mr.
-Keatcham?” he concluded suddenly.
-
-The question brought no change of expression, and Mercer answered
-readily: “I put him off by himself, where he sees no one and hears
-nothing. I read a good deal about prisons and the most effectual way
-of taming men, and solitary confinement is recommended by all the
-authorities. His meals are handed to him by--by a mechanical device. He
-has electric light some of the time, turned on from the outside. He has
-a comfortable room and his own shower-bath. He has comfortable meals.
-And he is supplied with reading.”
-
-“Reading?” repeated the colonel, his surprise in his voice.
-
-For the first time he saw Mercer smile, but it was hardly a pleasant
-smile. “Yes, suh, reading,” he said. “I have had type-written copies
-made of all the cases which I discovered in regard to his stealing our
-company. I reasoned that when he would get absolutely tired of himself
-and his own thoughts he would just naturally be _obliged_ to read, and
-that would be ready for him. He tore up one copy.”
-
-“Hmn--I can’t say I wonder. What did you do?”
-
-“I sent him another. I expected he would do that way. After a while he
-will go back to it, because it will draw him. He’ll hate it, but he
-will want to know them all. I know his nature, you see.”
-
-“What are you going to do with him?”
-
-“Let him go, after he does what we want and promises never to molest
-any of us.”
-
-“But can you trust him?”
-
-“He never breaks his word,” replied Mercer indifferently, “and besides,
-he knows he will be killed if he should. He isn’t given to being
-scared, but he’s scared of me, all right.”
-
-“What do you want him to do?”
-
-“Promise to be a decenter man and to let Mr. Tracy alone in future;
-meanwhile, to send a wire in his secret code saying he has changed his
-mind. It will not surprise his crowd. He never confides in them, and he
-expects them to obey blindly anything in that code language. I reckon
-other telegrams are just for show, and they don’t notice them much.”
-
-The colonel took a turn around the room to pack away this information
-in an orderly fashion in his mind. Mercer waited patiently; he had said
-truly that he was used to waiting. Perhaps he supposed that Winter was
-trying the case in his own mind; but in reality Rupert was seeking
-only one clue, as little diverted from his purpose as a bloodhound. He
-began to understand the man whose fixed purpose had his own quality,
-but sharpened by wrong and suffering. This man had not harmed Archie;
-as much as his warped and fevered soul could feel softer emotions,
-he was kindly intentioned toward the lad. Who had carried him away,
-then? Or was he off on his own account, really, this time? Or suppose
-Atkins, the missing secretary discharged at Denver, coming back for
-another appeal to his employer, finding Keatcham gone, but, let one
-say, stumbling on some trace of mystery in his departure; suppose him
-to consider the chance of his having his past condoned and a rosy
-future given him if his suspicions should prove true and _he_ should
-release the captive--wouldn’t such a prospect spur on a man who was as
-cunning as he was unprincipled? Mightn’t he have watched all possible
-clues, and mightn’t he have heard about Archie and plotted to capture
-the child, thinking he would be easily pumped? That would presuppose
-that Atkins knew that Archie was at the Arnolds’ or--no, he might only
-have seen the boy on the street; he knew him by sight; the colonel
-remembered that several times Archie had been with him in Keatcham’s
-car. It was worth considering, anyhow. He spoke out of his thoughts:
-“Do you think Keatcham could have told the truth, and that code of
-his be lost or stolen? Why couldn’t Atkins have stolen it? He had the
-chance, and he isn’t hampered by principle, you say.”
-
-Mercer frowned; it was plain the possibility had its argument for him.
-“He might,” he conceded, “but I doubt it. Why hasn’t he done something
-with it? He hasn’t. They wouldn’t have postponed that meeting if he
-had wired his proxy and his directions in the code. He’d have voted
-his employer’s stock. He’s got too much at stake. I happen to know he
-thought it a sure tip to sell short, and he has put almost all he has
-on it. You see, Keatcham was banking on that; he knew it. He thought
-Atkins wouldn’t dare give any of his secrets away or go against him in
-this deal, because they were in the same boat.”
-
-“Still, I reckon I’ll have to see Keatcham.”
-
-Mercer shook his head, gently but with decision. “I hate to refuse you,
-Colonel, but unless you promise not to interfere, it is impossible. But
-I’ll gladly go with you to see if we can find any trace of Archie. I’ll
-risk that much. And if you will promise--”
-
-“Such a promise would be impossible to an officer and a gentleman,” the
-colonel urged lightly, smiling. “Besides, don’t you see I have all the
-cards? I have only to call in my men. I’d hate to do it, but if you
-force me, you would have no chance resisting.”
-
-“We shouldn’t resist, Colonel, no, suh; your force is overwhelming. But
-it would do no good; you couldn’t find him.”
-
-“We could try; and we may be better sleuths than you imagine.”
-
-“Then it would be the worse for him; for if you find him, you will find
-him dead.”
-
-There was something so chilling in his level tones that Winter broke
-out sharply: “Are you fooling with me? Have you been such an incredible
-madman as to kill him already?”
-
-Mercer’s faint smile made the colonel feel boyish and impetuous. “Of
-course not, suh,” he answered. “I told you he was alive, myself. I
-reckoned you knew when a man is lying and when he is telling the solemn
-truth. You _know_ I have told you the truth and treated you on the
-square. But, just the same, if you try to take that man away, you’ll
-only have his dead body. He can’t do any more harm then, and a dead man
-can’t vote.”
-
-The colonel, who had taken out his cigarette case, opened it and
-meditatively fingered the rubber band. “Do you reckon,” he suggested,
-in his most amiable voice, “do you reckon young Arnold and Endicott
-Tracy will stand for such frills in warfare as assassination?”
-
-“I do not, suh,” replied Mercer gravely, and as he spoke he pushed back
-the heavy tapestry hiding a window opposite the colonel’s head, “but
-they can both prove an alibi. Mr. Arnold is in Pasadena, and there goes
-Mr. Tracy now in his machine--to try to find Archie. Do you see?”
-
-The colonel saw. He inclined his head, at the same time proffering his
-case.
-
-“I rather think, Mr. Mercer, that I was wrong. _You_ have the last
-trump.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-THE CHARM OF JADE
-
-
-It was no false lure to distract pursuit, that hurried sentence of
-Randall’s which had met the colonel’s angry appeal for information. The
-woman was not only repeating Mrs. Winter’s message; the message itself
-described a fact. As she stood at her room telephone, Aunt Rebecca had
-happened to glance at Randall, supplementing the perfunctory dusting of
-the hotel maid with her own sanitary, dampened, clean cloth; Randall’s
-eyes suddenly glazed and bulged in such startling transformation that,
-instead of questioning her, Mrs. Winter stepped swiftly to the window
-where she was at work, to seek the cause of her agitation.
-
-“Oh, Lord! Oh, Mrs. Winter!” gasped Randall. “Ain’t _that_ Master
-Archie?”
-
-Mrs. Winter saw for herself; the face at a cab window, the waving of a
-slim hand--Archie’s face, Archie’s hand. Brief as was the Space of his
-passing (for the two horses in the cab were trotting smartly), she was
-sure of both. “Give me my bonnet,” she commanded, “_any_ bonnet, _any_
-gloves! And my bag with some money!”
-
-It was as she flung through the door that she threw her message to the
-colonel back exactly as Randall had submitted it. Miss Smith was coming
-along the loggia. “Don’t stop me!” said Mrs. Winter sternly. “I’ve seen
-Archie; I’m after him.”
-
-“Stop!” cried Miss Smith--but it was to the elevator boy who was
-whizzing below them in his cage, not to her employer; and she boarded
-the elevator with the older woman. “I’ll go with you,” she said. There
-was no vibration in her even tones, although a bright red flickered up
-in her cheek.
-
-But Rebecca Winter caught savagely at her breath, which was coming
-fast. “It is not with the running; you needn’t think it, Janet,”
-she panted sharply, in a second. “It was the sight of his face--so
-suddenly; I never expected _any_ face would make my heart pump like
-that again. All of which shows”--she was speaking quite naturally and
-placidly again--“that women may grow too old for men to make fools of
-them, but never for children. Come; it was a shabby sort of hack he
-was in, drawn by two horses with auburn tails. Here’s the office floor.”
-
-Not a word did Janet Smith say; she was not a woman of words in any
-case. Moreover, the pace which Mrs. Winter struck was too rapid for
-comments or questions; it swept them both past the palm-shaded _patio_
-into the side hall, out on the noisy, dazzling, swaying street. Looking
-before her, Miss Smith could see the dusty body of a hack a block away.
-Mrs. Winter had stepped up to a huge crimson motor-car, in the front
-seat of which lounged the chauffeur, his forehead and eyes hunched
-under his leather visor. The machine was puffing, with the engine
-working, ready to leap forward at a touch of the lever.
-
-“Twenty dollars an hour if you let me get in now!” said Mrs. Winter,
-lightly mounting by his side as she spoke.
-
-“Hey, me? what!” gurgled the chauffeur, plucked out of a half-doze.
-“Oh, say, beg your pardon, lady, but this is hired, it belongs--”
-
-“I don’t care to whom it belongs, I have to have it,” announced
-Mrs. Winter calmly. “Whoever hired it can get another. I’ll make it
-all right. You start on and catch that hack with the auburn-tailed
-horses--”
-
-“_I’ll_ make it right with your fare!” Miss Smith cut in before the
-chauffeur could answer. “It’s a case of kidnapping. You catch that
-cab!” She was standing on the curb, and even as she spoke an elderly
-man and his wife came out of a shop. They stared from her to the
-automobile, and in their gaze was a proprietary irritation. This was
-instantly transfused by a more vivid emotion. The woman looked shocked
-and compassionate. “Oh, pa!” she gasped, “did you hear _that_?”
-
-The man was a country banker from Iowa. He had a very quick, keen eye;
-it flashed. “Case of kidnapping, hey?” snapped he, instantly grasping
-the character of the speakers and jumping at the situation. “Take the
-auto, Madam. Get a move on you, Mr. Chauffeur!”
-
-“Oh, I’m moving, all right,” called the chauffeur, as he skilfully
-dived his lower wheels under the projecting load of a great wagon and
-obliquely bumped over the edge of a street-car fender, pursued by the
-motorman’s curses. “I see ’em, lady; I see the red tails; I’ll catch
-’em!”
-
-His boast most likely had been made good (since for another block they
-bore straight on their course) but for an orange-wagon which had been
-overturned. There was a rush of pursuit of the golden balls from
-the sidewalk; a policeman came to the rescue of traffic and ordered
-everything to halt until the cart was righted. The boys and girls in
-the street chased back to the sidewalk. The episode took barely a
-couple of minutes, but on the edge of the last minute the cab turned
-a corner. The motor-car turned the same corner, but saw no guiding
-oriflamme of waving red horsehair. The cross street next was equally
-bare. They were obliged to explore two adjacent highways before they
-came upon the hack again. This time it was in distant perspective,
-foreshortened to a blur of black and a swish of red. And even as they
-caught sight of it the horses swung round into profile and turned
-another corner. In the turn a man wearing a black derby hat stuck his
-arm and head out of the window in order to give some direction to the
-driver. Then he turned half around. It was almost as if he looked back
-at his pursuers; yet this, Mrs. Winter argued, hardly could be, since
-he had not expected pursuit, and anyhow, the chances were he could not
-know her by sight.
-
-It was a mean street, narrow and noisome, but full of shipping
-traffic and barred by tramways--a heartbreaking street for a chase.
-The chauffeur was a master of his art; he jumped his great craft at
-every vacant arm’s-length; he steered it through incredibly narrow
-lanes; he progressed sometimes by luffs, like a boat under sail when
-the forward passage must be reached in such indirect fashion; but the
-crowd of ungainly vehicles, loaded dizzily above his head, made the
-superior speed of the motor of no avail. In spite of him they could
-see the red tails lessening. Again and yet again, the hack turned;
-again, but each time with a loss, the motor struck its trail. By now
-the street was changed; the dingy two-story buildings lining it were
-brightened by gold-leaf and vermilion; oriental arms and garbs and
-embroidery spangled the windows and oriental faces looked inscrutably
-out of doorways. There rose the blended odors of spice, sandalwood and
-uncleanliness that announce the East, reeking up out of gratings and
-puffing out of shops.
-
-“Ah,” said Mrs. Winter softly to herself, “Chinese quarter, is it?
-Well.” Her eyes changed; they softened in a fashion that would have
-amazed one who only knew the surface of Mrs. Winter, the eccentric
-society potentate. She looked past the squalid, garish scene, past
-the shining sand-hills and the redwood trees, beyond into a stranger
-landscape glowing under a blinder glare of sun. Half mechanically she
-lifted a tiny gold chain that had slipped down her throat under the
-gray gown. Raising the yellow thread and the carven jade ornament
-depending therefrom, she let it lie outside amid the white lace and
-chiffon.
-
-“We’re making good now,” called the chauffeur. “Will I run alongside
-and hail ’em, or what?”
-
-She told him quietly to run alongside. But her lips twitched, and when
-she put up her hand to press them still, she smiled to discover that
-the hand was bare. She had forgotten to pull on her glove. She began to
-pull it on now.
-
-“The road is narrow,” said she. “Run ahead of the hack and block its
-way. You can do it without hitting the horses, can’t you?”
-
-“Well, I guess,” returned the chauffeur, instantly accomplishing the
-manœuver in fine style.
-
-But he missed his deserved commendation; indeed, he forgot it himself;
-because, as he looked back at the horses rearing on the sudden check
-and tossing their auburn manes, then ran his scrutiny behind them to
-the hack, he perceived no life in it; and when his own passenger jumped
-with amazing nimbleness from her seat and flung the crazy door wide
-open, she recoiled, exclaiming: “Where are they? Where did you leave
-them?”
-
-“Leave who?” queried the hackman. “Say, what you stoppin’ me fur?
-Runnin’ into me with your devil-wagon! _Say!_”--then his wrath trailed
-into an inarticulate mutter as he appreciated better the evident
-quality of the gentlewoman before him.
-
-“You may be mixed up in a penitentiary offense, my man,” said she
-placidly. “It is a case of kidnapping. Where did you leave that boy who
-was in the cab? If you give us information that will find him, there’s
-five dollars; if you fool us--well, I have your number. Where did you
-leave the boy?”
-
-“Why, there was a cop with ’im--a cop and a gentleman. Ain’t you got
-hold of the wrong party, lady?”
-
-“A brown-haired boy in a gray suit with a blue cravat--you know he was
-in your cab. And how do you know it was a real policeman?”
-
-“Or he wasn’t helping on the deviltry if it was?” sneered the
-chauffeur, who had now become a full-fledged partizan. “Ain’t you lived
-in this burg long enough to find out how to make a little _mazuma_
-on the side? You’re too good for ’Frisco. Heaven is your home, my
-Christian friend.”
-
-“Cut it out!” retorted the man. “I guess I know how to find my way
-round as well as the next man--”
-
-“Certainly you do,” soothed Mrs. Winter, who was fingering a crisp new
-five-dollar bank-note, “and you are no kidnapper, either; you made no
-bargain with those men--”
-
-“Sure I didn’t,” agreed the hackman, “nor I ain’t standin’ for
-kidnapping, neither. Why, I got kids of my own, and my woman she’d
-broom me outer the house if I was to do them games. Say, I’ll tell you
-all I knows. They got off, them three, at that there corner, and I was
-to drive fast ’s I could three blocks ahead and then git home any old
-way. And that’s God’s truth, I--”
-
-“You didn’t see where they went?” Mrs. Winter was quietly insistent.
-
-“No, I didn’t. I guess I was a dumb fool not ter notice, but they paid
-me well, and I’d a bad thirst, and I was hiking to a place I know for
-beer; and that’s--”
-
-“Did the boy seem willing?”
-
-“He didn’t do no kicking as I seen.”
-
-A few more questions revealed that the man had unpacked his full
-kit of information. He had never seen either of the men before. The
-gentleman--yes, he was sure he was a gentleman; he wasn’t no swell
-confidence guy; he was the regular thing--gentleman engaged him to take
-a party to the Chinese quarter; he’d tell where to stop; didn’t need
-a guide; only wanted to make a few purchases, he said, and he knew
-where the things was; yes, ma’am, that was all; only down there on
-Market Street, or maybe--why, somewhere near by--he stuck his head out
-and told him to turn the corner, and then he kept telling him to turn
-corners, until finally he told him to stop and they got out.
-
-Mrs. Winter gave the man the bank-note, counseling him to keep his eyes
-open for the two men and the boy, and to report to her at the Palace
-Hotel, giving his number, should he see either man or boy. It would be
-very well worth his while.
-
-The chauffeur did not interrupt, but he shook his head over the
-departing hack. “He’d ought to have known it wan’t on the square, but
-these hack drivers ain’t got good sense even when they’re, so to speak,
-sober, which ain’t often,” he soliloquized. “Well, lady, if they’ve
-took to the Chinese quarter, we’d better be looking up a Chink to help
-us, I guess. I know a fairly decent one--”
-
-“I think I know a better,” interrupted Mrs. Winter, with a faint smile.
-She had detected a suppressed pity in the man’s regard. “Motor slowly
-along the street. There is a shop, if I can find it, where there ought
-to be a man--”
-
-“Man you know? Say, lady, I guess I better go in with you, if you don’t
-mind--”
-
-“No; stay in your car. You don’t know how safe I am. Not only my gray
-hair protects me, but I have only to say a few words and any of these
-men will fight for me if necessary. But this is in confidence--just
-between us, you understand. You are not to repeat it, ever.”
-
-She looked at him with a frank smile, and involuntarily his hand went
-up to his cap. “What you say goes, lady. But jest remember I’m right
-here, spark going all the time, ready to throw her wide open when you
-step in; and”--his voice sank--“I ain’t absolutely unprepared for a
-scrap, either.”
-
-“I understand,” said she, looking at him keenly, and a few moments
-later she stepped briskly into the shop before which he halted with
-a little lightening of the heart because of this uncouth knight of
-the lever. The shop itself was like any one of a score on the street,
-crowded with oriental objects, bizarre carvings of ivory and jade,
-daggers and strings of cash, swords, gorgeous embroidered robes of silk
-and gold in a huddle over a counter or swinging and gleaming in the
-dusky background, squat little green and brown gods with puffy eyelids,
-smiling inscrutably amid shoes and fans and Chinese lanterns of glass
-and bronze, glittering with beads--in all these, like the score about
-it; yet the clean windows and a certain order within gave it a touch
-out of the common. A man and a boy served the shop, both in the
-American dress, with their pigtails tucked under visorless caps. Both
-greeted her in the serene oriental fashion, bowing and smiling, their
-obsequious courtesy showing no smallest sign of the surprise which the
-sight of an unattended woman must have given them.
-
-Nevertheless, Mrs. Winter was aware that both, under their lowered
-eyelids, took cognizance of that soft-carven disk of jade among the
-laces on her breast. She asked the man if he had seen a lad and an
-older man, or it might be two older men, one a policeman, come into
-that or any other neighboring shop. She explained that the lad was
-her grand-nephew and was lost (she eschewed the harsher word, for she
-had no desire to set afloat a rumor which might bring the police upon
-her). She named a sum large enough to kindle a sudden gleam in the
-boy’s eyes, as the reward awaiting the lucky man who might put her on
-the right track. But her words struck no responsive spark from the
-Chinaman’s veiled gaze. In perfect English and a very soft voice he
-avowed ignorance and sympathy with the same breath.
-
-And all the while she could feel his glance slant down at the jade
-ornament.
-
-“Send the boy to look in the shop next door,” said she. As she
-spoke she raised the charm between her thumb and first two fingers,
-looking at him directly. Her tone was that of command, not request.
-He frowned very slightly, making an almost imperceptible gesture, to
-which she returned a single Chinese phrase, spoken so low that had he
-not expected the words they had been indistinguishable to his ear.
-Instantly he addressed the boy rapidly in their own language. The
-boy went out. The master of the shop returned to Mrs. Winter. His
-manner had utterly changed; the tradesman’s perfunctory deference was
-displaced by an almost eager humility of bearing. He would have her
-sit--there were a few cane-seated American arm-chairs, in grotesque
-contrast to all their accompaniments--he prostrated himself before her;
-he put himself at her service; still to her trained eye there was a
-corner of his mind where incredulity wrestled with a stronger emotion.
-
-“Do not fear,” she said gently. “It is really my own, and he gave it
-to me himself, almost thirty years ago. He was hardly thirty years old
-himself then. You see, my husband had been so fortunate as to do him a
-kindness. It was he who had it first. When he died it came to me, and
-now for the second time in my life I am using it. I knew you belonged.
-I saw the sign. Will you help me find my boy?”
-
-“Did your ladyship know _he_ is he’e, in San Flancisco?”
-
-If she had not already dissipated any doubt in his mind, her evident
-relief blew the last shred away now. “Haven’t you such a thing as a
-telephone somewhere?” cried Rebecca Winter. “Time is precious. Can’t
-you speak to him--have him come here?”
-
-It appeared that there was a telephone, and in a moment she was put
-into communication by the shopkeeper. He stood in an attitude of deep
-respect while she talked. He heard with unsmiling attention her first
-Chinese words; he listened as she returned to English, speaking very
-quietly, but with a controlled earnestness, explaining that she was
-Archibald Winter’s widow, giving dates and places, in nowise alluding
-to the service which had won the charm about her neck. Yet as he
-listened, insensibly the Chinaman grew certain that she had spoken the
-truth. Presently she turned to him. “He wishes to speak to you,” she
-said, and went back to the shop. She sighed as one sighs from whose
-heart a great burden rolls. “To find him here, and still grateful!” she
-was thinking. “What wonderful good fortune!”
-
-She sat down, and her face grew dreamy. She was no longer thinking
-of Archie. Her vision was on another face, another scene, a time of
-peril, when almost against her reason her instinctive woman’s recoil of
-pity for a fellow-creature in danger of unthinkable torture had been
-so intense that she had more than acquiesced in her husband’s plan
-of risking both their lives to save him; she had impelled him to it;
-she had overcome his terror of the risks on her account. “It is only
-death we have to fear, at worst,” she had argued. “We have the means
-to escape in a second, both of us, from anything else; and if we run
-away and leave this poor wretch, who hasn’t done anything but love his
-country, just as we love ours, and be too civilized for his trifling,
-ornery, pusillanimous country-people to understand, to get slashed to
-pieces by their horrible ling-ling--whatever they call it--Archibald
-Winter, don’t you reckon we shall have nightmares as long as we live?”
-
-Thirty years ago--yet it seemed like yesterday. Distinctly she could
-hear her husband’s voice; it had not come back to her with such reality
-for years; it was more real than the cries of the street outside; and
-her heart was beating faster for his words: “Becky, there never was a
-woman like you! You could make a dead man hop up and fight, bless you!”
-
-“Your ladyship”--it was the shopkeeper back again; he had lived in
-England, and he offered the most respectful western title of his
-knowledge--“your ladyship may be chee’ful. All will be done of the
-best. The young gentleman will be back fo’ to-night. If your ladyship
-will now letu’n to the hotel.”
-
-[Illustration: It took only a moment to transfer a passenger. Page 211]
-
-Mrs. Winter bowed slightly; she was quite her self-possessed self
-again. “I will go certainly,” she said, “but I shall hope to see you,
-also, to-night; and meanwhile, will you accept, as a token from a
-friend who trusts you, _this_?” She took a little gem-encrusted watch
-from her fob and handed it to him. Her manner was that of a queen who
-rewards her general. And she left him bowing low. She entered the
-motor-car. It was no longer a lone motor. Another car steamed and
-snorted near by, in which sat the amiable banker from Iowa, his wife
-and Janet Smith.
-
-It took only a moment to transfer a passenger, to explain that she
-hoped to find the boy who had been lost--no, she would not use such a
-strenuous word as kidnapped--and would they complete their kindness
-by not mentioning the affair to any one? One hated so to get into the
-papers. And would they let her see them again to thank them? Then, as
-she sank back on the cushions, she remarked, as much to the expectant
-chauffeur as to Janet: “Yes, I think it is all right. I think we shall
-see Archie to-night.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-A BLOW
-
-
-There was no one but Mrs. Winter to welcome the colonel when, jaded,
-warm and dusty, he tapped on Aunt Rebecca’s parlor door. Mrs.
-Millicent was bristling with a sense of injury; one couldn’t touch her
-conversationally without risk of a scratch. The colonel put up the
-shield of his unsuitable appearance, his fatigue and his deplorable
-need of a bath, and escaped into his own apartment. But he made his
-toilet with reckless haste. All the time he was questioning his recent
-experience, trying to sort over his theories, which had been plunged
-into confusion by Mercer’s confession. “I suppose,” he reflected, “that
-I had no right to give Mercer that hint at the door.” The hint had been
-given just as they parted. It was in a single sentence:
-
-“By the way, Mercer, if that pillar in the _patio_ is of importance in
-your combination, you would better keep an eye on it; it has a trick of
-cracking.”
-
-“The devil it has!” grunted Mercer. Then he thanked him, with a kind
-of reluctant admiration in his tone.
-
-“You are sure you don’t object to my detective’s staying?” questioned
-the colonel.
-
-“No, suh; prefer to have him. You told him to have his men in and
-overhaul the house?”
-
-“I did. I warned you I should have to. You promise there shall be no
-racket? But I--I think I’ll take Haley.”
-
-“Thank you. That’s right kind of you, suh. Good-by, suh.”
-
-This had been the manner of their parting--assuredly a singular one,
-after the sinister suspicions and the violent promises which the
-soldier had made himself in regard to this very man. After leaving,
-he had motored into town, down to the police courts, to discover no
-records of the arrest and no trace of Archie. Thence, discouraged,
-perplexed and more worried than he liked to admit, he had repaired
-to the hotel. His aunt was gone, Miss Smith was gone, and Randall
-could only relate how Mrs. Winter “had flewed like a bird, sir, into
-a big red motor-car and gone off, and then Miss Smith and a lady and
-gentleman had got into a white car and gone off in the same direction.”
-
-He was meditating on his next step, when Birdsall was announced below.
-The detective looked as warm and as tired as the colonel had felt
-an hour before. Rupert was not eager to see him, but neither was he
-anxious for the tête-à-tête with Millicent which awaited him in the
-parlor. Between the two he chose Birdsall.
-
-“Well,” he greeted him, “did you find any trace of the boy?”
-
-“Of course I did,” growled Birdsall. “They didn’t try to hide ’im.
-They had him lodged in a dandy room with his own bath. Of course, he
-left his tooth-brush. They’d got him some automobile togs, too, and
-he’d left some leggings when he packed, and a letter begun on a pad to
-Miss Smith--‘Dear Miss Janet,’ it begins, ‘I am having a bully time. I
-can steer the machine, only I can’t back’--that’s all. Say, the young
-dog has been having it fat while we were in the frying-pan for fear
-somebody was bothering him.”
-
-“But he is not in the house now?”
-
-“No, nor nothing else.”
-
-“_Nobody_ hidden away? Where did the groans you heard come from?”
-queried the colonel politely.
-
-Birdsall flushed. “I do believe that slick deceiver you call Mercer
-put up a game on us out of meanness--just to git me guessing.”
-
-“That sort of thing looks more like the college boys.”
-
-“Say, it might have been. This thing is giving me nervous prostration.
-Say, why didn’t you see the thing out with me?”
-
-The colonel shamelessly told the truth to deceive. “I was called here.
-I was told that Mrs. Winter, my aunt, had seen Archie in the street.”
-
-“She was just getting out of a machine as I came up. Miss Smith was
-with her, and they had their hands full of candy boxes. They were
-laughing. I made sure the boy had been found.”
-
-“Not to my knowledge,” said the colonel. But in some excitement he
-walked into the parlor. The ladies had arrived; they stood in the
-center of the room while Randall took away the boxes.
-
-“Candy for Archie,” explained Aunt Rebecca, and these were the first
-words to reach Rupert Winter’s ears. “I expect him to dinner.”
-
-“Aunt Rebecca,” proclaimed Millicent, “I never have been one
-to complain, but there _are_ limits to human endurance. I am a
-modern person, a civilized Episcopalian, accustomed to a regular
-and well-ordered life, and for the last few days I seem to have
-been living in a kind of medieval mystery, with kidnappers, and
-blood-stains, and, for anything I know, somebody ready to stick a
-knife into any one of us any time! You people may enjoy this sort of
-thing--_you seem to_--but I don’t. And I tell you frankly that I am
-going to apply to the police, not to any private detective inquiry
-office, as like as not in league with the criminals”--thus ungratefully
-did Mrs. Millicent slur the motives of her only truly interested
-auditor--“but _real_ policemen. I shall apply--”
-
-She did not tell where she should apply, the words being snapped out of
-her mouth by the sharp tinkle of the telephone bell.
-
-Aunt Rebecca responded to the call. “Send him up,” was her answer to
-the inaudible questioner.
-
-She laid down the receiver. Then she put it back. Then she stood up,
-her silver head in the air, her erect little figure held motionless.
-
-Janet Smith’s dark eyes sought hers; her lips parted only to close
-firmly again.
-
-Even the detective perceived the electric intensity of the moment, and
-Rupert shut his fists tight, with a quickened beating of the heart; but
-emotional vibrations did not disturb Mrs. Melville Winter’s poise. She
-continued her plaint.
-
-“This present situation is unbearable, unprecedented and
-un--un--unexpected,” she declaimed, rather groping for a climax which
-escaped her. Aunt Rebecca raised her hand.
-
-“Would you be so very kind, Millicent,” said she, “as to wait a moment?
-I am trying to listen.”
-
-Like a response to her words, the knob of the door was turned, the door
-swung, and Archie entered the room, smiling his odd little chewed-up
-smile.
-
-Janet uttered a faint cry and took a single step, but, as if
-recognizing a superior right, hung back while the boy put his arm about
-his great-aunt’s waist and rather bashfully kissed her cheek.
-
-She received the salute with entire composure, except for a tiny splash
-of red which crept up to each cheek-bone. “Is it really you, Archie?”
-said she. “You are a little late for dinner day before yesterday, but
-quite in time for to-day. Sit down and tell us where you have been.”
-
-“Quite so!” exclaimed Mrs. Millicent. “Good heavens! Do you know how we
-have suffered? _Where_ have you been? _Why_ did you run away?”
-
-But Archie, who had surrendered one-half of him to be hugged by Miss
-Smith and the other to be clapped on the shoulder by his uncle, seemed
-to think a vaguely polite “How-de-do, Aunt Millicent; I’m sorry to have
-worried you!” to be answer enough. Only when the question was repeated
-by Mrs. Winter herself did he reply: “I’m awfully sorry, Aunt Rebecca,
-but I’ve promised not to say anything about it. But, truly, I didn’t
-mean to bother you.”
-
-Millicent exploded in an access of indignation: “And do you mean that
-you expect us to accept such a ridiculous promise--after all we have
-been through?”
-
-“Quite so,” remarked Aunt Rebecca, with a precise echo of her niece’s
-most Anglican utterance--the gift of mimicry had been one of Mrs.
-Winter’s most admired and distrusted social gifts from her youth.
-
-Rupert Winter hastened to distract Millicent’s attention by saying
-decisively: “If the boy has promised, that ends it; he can’t break his
-parole. Anyhow, they don’t seem to have hurt you, old son?”
-
-“Oh, they treated me dandy, those fellows,” said Archie. “Miss Janet, I
-know how to run an electric motor-car, except backing.”
-
-“I’ll bet you do,” muttered the detective.
-
-Here the colonel came to the boy’s relief a second time and drew
-Birdsall aside. “Best let me pump the chap a little. You get
-down-stairs and see how he got here, who brought him. They’ll get clean
-away. It is late for that as it is. You can report to-morrow.”
-
-It was the colonel, also, who eliminated Mrs. Millicent by the masterly
-stratagem of suggesting that she pass the news to Mrs. Wigglesworth. He
-artfully added that it would require tact to let the lady from Boston
-understand that the lad had been found without in any way gratifying
-her natural curiosity in regard to the manner of finding or the cause
-of disappearance. “I’ll have to leave _that_ to you,” he concluded.
-“Maybe you can see a way out; I confess my hands are in the air.”
-
-Millicent thus relegated to the ambassador’s shelf, the colonel
-slipped comfortably into his pet arm-chair facing his nephew on the
-lounge between Aunt Rebecca and Miss Smith. Miss Smith looked frankly,
-charmingly happy. Aunt Rebecca looked rather tired.
-
-“Of course,” remarked he, “I understand, old man, that you have
-promised secrecy to--well, to the Fireless Stove gang, as we’ll call
-them; but the _other_ kidnappers, the crowd that held up your car
-and then switched you off on a side track while young Fireless was
-detained--they haven’t any hold on you?”
-
-“No, sir,” said Archie; “but--you see, that strange gentleman and Aunt
-Millicent--I was scared lest I’d give something away.”
-
-“They’re not here now. All friends here. Suppose you make a clean
-breast of your second kidnapping. It may be important you should.”
-
-Nothing loath, Archie told his story. Left outside while Tracy went
-into the office with a policeman, to whom he gave his assumed name, he
-remained for hardly two minutes before a gentleman and a “cop” came up
-to him, and the latter ordered him to descend from the machine--but not
-until they had found it impossible to move the vehicle. When they did
-discover that the key was out and gone, the man in citizen’s clothes
-hailed a cab and the officer curtly informed Archie that Gardiner
-(Tracy’s traveling name) had been taken to another court and he was to
-follow. He didn’t suspect anything beyond a collision with the speed
-regulations of the city, but had he seen a chance to dive under his
-escort’s arm the boy would have taken it. Such chance was not afforded
-him, and all he was able to do was to lean out suddenly as they passed
-the Palace and to wave at Randall. “I wanted them to stop and let me
-get some one to pay my fine,” said Archie, “but they said I was only
-a witness. They wouldn’t let me stop; they run down the curtain--at
-least so far as it would run. It was like all those hack curtains, you
-know--all out of order.”
-
-“Archie,” the colonel interjected here, “was one of the men a little
-fellow, clean-shaven, with a round black head, blue eyes--one of his
-eyes winks a little faster than the other?”
-
-“Yes, sir. How did you know?”
-
-“I didn’t know; I guessed. Well, get on; they wanted to pump you when
-they got you safely out of sight?”
-
-“Yes,” Archie said, “they put me into the sweat-box, all right.”
-
-“Did you tell them anything?” asked Mrs. Winter.
-
-Archie looked at her reproachfully. Did she think that he had gone to
-boarding-school for nothing? He explained that, being a stranger in
-the town, he could not tell anything about where he’d been. There was
-an agent at the house trying to sell stoves, and they let him take him
-off back to the hotel. The man seemed to know all about who he (Archie)
-was, and about his having gone away. The men asked him an awful lot of
-questions about how he was taken away. He said he didn’t know, and he’d
-promised not to tell. He couldn’t tell. They said he would have to go
-to jail if he didn’t tell, because the men who had him were such bad
-men. But he didn’t tell.
-
-“Did they try to frighten you--to make you tell?” said Mrs. Winter.
-
-“Oh, they bluffed a little,” returned Archie carelessly, yet the
-keen eyes on him--eyes both worldly-wise and shrewd--noted that the
-lad’s color shifted and he winced the least in the world over some
-remembrance.
-
-“But they didn’t hurt you? They didn’t burn you or cut you or twist
-your arms, or try any other of their playful ways?” Mrs. Winter
-demanded; and Janet began feeling the boy’s arms, breathing more
-quickly. The colonel only looked.
-
-“No, they didn’t do a thing. I knew they wouldn’t, too,” Archie assured
-her earnestly. “I told them if they did anything, Uncle Rupert and you
-would make them pay.”
-
-“And you weren’t frightened, away from every one--in that hideous
-quarter?” cried Miss Smith. “Oh, my dear!” She choked.
-
-“Well, maybe I was a little scared. I kept thinking of a rotten yarn
-of Kipling’s; something happened to _him_, down in the underground
-quarter, in just such a hot, nasty-smelling hole, I guess, as I was
-in; you remember, Miss Janet, about the game of cards and the Mexican
-stabbing a Chink for cheating, and how Kipling jumped up and ran for
-his life, never looked around; and don’t you remember that nasty bit,
-how he felt sure they had dealt with the greaser their own way and he’d
-never get up to the light again--”
-
-“I’ve been remembering that story all this afternoon,” answered Miss
-Smith with a shudder.
-
-“Agreeable little tale,” said Aunt Rebecca dryly. “Archie, you must
-have had a right nasty quarter of an hour; what stopped it?”
-
-“Why, a Chink came and called the little man off; and there was a lot
-of talking which I couldn’t hear, and the cop was swearing; I think
-they didn’t like it. But, in a minute the Chinaman--he was an awful
-nice little feller--he came up to me and took me out, led me all sorts
-of ways, not a bit like the way I came in, and got me out to the
-street. The other fellows were very polite; they told me that they were
-my friends and only wanted to find a clue to my kidnappers; and the
-burning holes in me was only a joke to give me an excuse to break my
-word under compulsion--why, _they_ wouldn’t hurt me for the world! I
-pretended to be fooled, and said it was all right, and looked pleasant;
-but--I’d like to scare them the same way, once, all the same.”
-
-The boy caught at his lip which was trembling, and ended with a shaky
-laugh. Miss Smith clenched the fist by her side; but she dropped the
-arm near Archie, and said in a matter-of-fact, sprightly tone: “Archie,
-you really ought to go dress--and wash for dinner; excuse me for
-mentioning it, but you have no idea how grimy you are.”
-
-The commonplace turn of thought did its errand. Archie, who had been
-bracing himself anew against the horror which he remembered, dropped
-back into his familiar habits and jumped up consciously. “It’s the
-dust, motoring,” he offered bashfully. “I ought to have washed before I
-came up. Well, that’s all; we came straight here. Now, may I go take a
-bath?”
-
-Aunt Rebecca was fingering a curious jade locket on her neck. She
-watched the boy run to the open door.
-
-“I wish you’d go into your room, Colonel,” said Miss Smith, “and see
-that nothing happens to him. It’s silly, but I am expecting to see him
-vanish again!”
-
-The sentence affected the colonel unpleasantly; why need she be
-posing before him, as if that first disappearance had had any real
-fright in it? Of course she didn’t know yet (although Aunt Rebecca
-might have told her--she _ought_ to have told her and stopped this
-unnecessary deceit) that he was on to the game; but--he didn’t like it.
-Unconsciously, his inward criticism made his tone drier as he replied
-with a little bow that he imagined Archie was quite safe, now, and he
-would ask to be excused, as he had to attend to something before dinner.
-
-Was it his fancy that her face changed and her eyes looked wistful?
-It must have been. He walked stiffly away. Hardly had he entered his
-room and turned his mind on the changed situation before the telephone
-apprised him that a gentleman, Mr. Gardiner, who represented the
-Fireless Cook Stove, said that he had an appointment with Colonel
-Winter to explain the stove; should he be sent up?
-
-Directly, Endicott Tracy entered, smiling. “Where’s the kid? I know
-he’s back,” were his first words; and he explained that he had been
-hunting the kidnappers to no purpose. “Except that I learned enough to
-know they put up a job with the justice, all right; I got next to that
-game without any Machiavellian exertions. But they got away. Who is it?
-Any of Keatcham’s gang?”
-
-“Atkins,” said the colonel concisely.
-
-Tracy whistled and apologized. “It’s a blow,” he confessed. “That
-little wretch! He has brains to burn and not an ounce of conscience.
-You know he has been mousing round at the hotels after Keatcham’s
-mail--”
-
-“He didn’t get it?”
-
-“No, Cary had covered that point. Cary has thought this all out very
-carefully, but Atkins has got on to the fact that Cary was here in this
-hotel with Keatcham. But he doesn’t know where we come in; whether
-Keatcham’s gang is just lying low for some game of its own, or whether
-_we’ve_ got him. At least, I don’t believe he knows.”
-
-“You ought not to be talking so freely to me; I haven’t promised you
-anything, you know,” warned the colonel.
-
-“But you’ve got your nephew back all right; we have been on the square
-with _you_; why should you butt in? I know you won’t.”
-
-“I don’t seem to have a fair call to,” observed the colonel.
-
-“And I think the old boy is going to give in; he has made signals of
-distress, to my thinking. Wanted his mail; and wanted to write; and
-informed Cary--he saw him for the first time to-day--that he had bigger
-things on deck than the Midland; and wanted to get at them. We’re going
-to win out all right.”
-
-“Unless Atkins gets at him to-night,” the colonel suggested. “You
-oughtn’t to have come here, Gardiner. Don’t go home, now. Wait until
-later, and let me rig you up in another lot of togs and give you my own
-motor-car. Better.”
-
-Tracy was more than impressed by the proposal; he was plainly grateful.
-He entered with enthusiasm into the soldier’s masquerade--Tracy had
-always had a weakness for theatricals and some of his Hasty Pudding
-_Portraits of Unknown People We Know_ had won him fame at Cambridge.
-Ten minutes later, there sat opposite the colonel a florid-faced,
-mustached, western commercial traveler whose plaided tweeds, being an
-ill-advised venture of Haley’s which the colonel had taken off his
-hands and found no subject of charity quite obnoxious enough to deserve
-them, naturally did not fit the present wearer, but suited his inane
-complacence of bearing and might pass for a bad case of ready-made
-purchase.
-
-“Now,” said the adviser, “I’ll notify Haley to have my own hired
-motor ready for you and you can slip out and take it after you’ve had
-something to eat. Here’s the restaurant card. Haley will be there.
-Leave it at the drug store on Van Ness Street--Haley will give you
-the number--and get home as unobtrusively as possible. You can peel
-off these togs in the motor if necessary. You’ve your own underneath
-except your coat. Wrap that in a newspaper and carry it. I don’t know
-that Atkins has any one on guard at the hotel, but I think it more than
-likely he suspects some connection between our party and Keatcham’s.
-But first, tell me about Atkins; what do you know about him? It’s an
-American name.”
-
-“America can take all the glory of him, I fancy,” said Tracy. “He’s
-been Keatcham’s secretary for six years. He seems awfully mild and
-useful and timid. He’s not a bit timid. He’s full of resource;
-he’s sidled suggestions into Keatcham’s ear and has been gradually
-working to make himself absolutely necessary. I think he aimed at a
-partnership; but Keatcham wouldn’t stand for it. I think it was in
-revenge that he sold out some of Keatcham’s secrets. Cary got on to
-that and has a score of his own to settle with him, besides. I don’t
-know how he managed, but he showed him up; and Keatcham gave him the
-sack in his own cold-blooded way. I know him only casually. But my
-cousin, Ralph Schuyler, went to prep. school with him, so I got his
-character straight off the bat. His father was a patent-medicine man
-from Mississippi, who made a fair pile, a couple of hundred thousand
-which looked good to that section, you know. I don’t know anything
-about his people except that his father made the ‘Celebrated Atkins’
-Ague Busters’; and that Atkins was ashamed of his people and shook
-his married sisters who came to see him, in rather a brutal fashion;
-but I know a thing or two about him; he was one of those bounders who
-curry favor with the faculty and the popular boys and never break
-rules apparently, but go off and have sly little bats by themselves.
-He never was popular, yet, somehow, he got into things; he knew where
-to lend money; and he was simply sickeningly clever; in math. he was
-a wonder. Ralph hated him. For one thing, he caught him in a dirty
-lie. Atkins hated him back and contrived to prevent his being elected
-class president, and when he couldn’t prevent Ralph’s making his senior
-society the happy thought struck Atkins to get on the initiation
-committee. They had a cheery little branding game to make the fellows
-quite sure they belonged, you know, and he rammed his cigar stump into
-Ralph’s arm so that Ralph had blood-poisoning and a narrow squeak for
-his life. You see that I’m not prepossessed in the fellow’s favor. He’s
-got too vivid an imagination for me!”
-
-“Seems to have,” acquiesced the colonel.
-
-“I think, you know”--Tracy made an effort to be just--“I think Atkins
-was rather soured. Some of the fellows made fun of the ‘Ague Busters’;
-he had a notion that the reason it was such uphill work for him in
-the school, was his father’s trade. No doubt he did get nasty licks,
-at first; and he’s revengeful. He hasn’t got on in society outside,
-either--this he lays to his not being a university man. You see his
-father lost some of his money and put him to work instead of in
-college. He was willing enough at the time--I think he wanted to get
-married--but afterward, when he was getting a good salary and piling up
-money on his tips, he began to think that he had lost more than he had
-bargained for. Altogether, he’s soured. Now, what he wants is to make a
-thundering big strike and to pull out of Wall Street, buy what he calls
-‘a seat on the James’ and set-up for a Southern gentleman. He’s trying
-to marry a Southern girl, they say, who is kin to the Carters and the
-Byrds and the Lees and the Carys--why, _you_ know her, she’s Mrs.
-Winter’s secretary.”
-
-“Does--does she care for him?” The colonel suddenly felt his mouth
-parched; he was savagely conscious of his mounting color. What a
-fiendish trick of fate! he had never dreamed of this! Well, whether she
-cared for him or not, the man was a brute; he shouldn’t get her. That
-was one certainty in the colonel’s mind.
-
-“Why, Cary vows she doesn’t, that it was only a girlish bit of nonsense
-up in Virginia, that time he was prospecting, you know. But I don’t
-feel so safe. She’s too nice for such a cur. But you know what women
-are; the nicest of them seem to be awfully queer about men. There’s no
-betting on them.”
-
-“I’m afraid not,” remarked the colonel lightly. But he put his fingers
-inside his collar and loosened it, as if he felt choked.
-
-Because he had a dozen questions quarreling for precedence in his head,
-he asked not one. He only inquired regarding the situation; discovering
-that both Mercer and Tracy were equally in the dark with himself as to
-Atkins’ plans, Atkins’ store of information, Atkins’ resources. How he
-could have waylaid Tracy and the boy without knowing whence they came
-was puzzling; it was quite as puzzling, however, assuming that he did
-know their whereabouts, to decide why he was so keen to interrogate the
-boy. In fact, it was, as Tracy said, “too much like Professor Santa
-Anna’s description of a German definition of metaphysics, ‘A blind man
-hunting in a dark room for a black cat that isn’t there.’”
-
-“In any event, you would better keep away from _me_,” was the colonel’s
-summing up of the situation; “I don’t want to be inhospitable, but
-the sooner you are off, and out of the hotel, the safer for your
-speculation.”
-
-“Friends will please accept the intimation,” said Tracy good-humoredly.
-“Very well, it’s twenty-three for me. I’m hoping you’ll see your way
-clear to run over as soon as the old man has surrendered; I’m going to
-invite him to make us a proper visit, then, and see the country. I’m
-always for letting the conquered keep their side-arms.”
-
-He went away smiling his flashing smile, and turned it up at the hotel
-as he walked out; the colonel made no sign of recognition from the
-window whence he observed him. Instead, he drew back quickly, frowning;
-it might be a mere accident that only a hand’s-breadth of space from
-the young Harvard man was a dapper little shape in evening clothes, a
-man still young, with a round black head; if so, it was an accident not
-to the colonel’s liking.
-
-“Damn you!” whispered Rupert Winter very softly. “What is your little
-game?”
-
-At once he descended, having telephoned Haley to meet him at the court.
-When he entered and sent his glance rapidly among the little tables, by
-this time filled with diners, he experienced a disagreeable surprise.
-It did not come from the sight of Sergeant Haley in his Sunday civilian
-clothes, stolidly reading the _Call_; it came from a vision of Atkins
-standing, bowing, animatedly talking with Janet Smith.
-
-Instead of approaching Haley, Winter fell back and scribbled a few
-words on a page of his note-book, while safely shielded by a great
-palm. The note he despatched to Haley, who promptly joined him. While
-they stood, talking on apparently indifferent subjects, Miss Smith
-passed them. Whether because he was become suspicious or because she
-had come upon him suddenly, she colored slightly. But she smiled as she
-saluted him and spoke in her usual tranquil tone. “You are going to
-dine with us, aren’t you, Colonel?” said she. “I think dinner is just
-about to be served.”
-
-The colonel would be with them directly.
-
-Haley’s eyes followed her; he had returned her nod and inquiry for his
-wife and little Nora with a military salute and the assurance that they
-were both wonderfully well and pleased with the country.
-
-“Sure, ain’t it remarkable the way that lady do keep names in her
-mind?” cried he. “An’ don’t she walk foine and straight? Oi’ve been
-always towld thim Southern ladies had the gran’ way wid ’em; Oi see now
-’tis thrue.” The unusual richness of Haley’s brogue was a sure sign of
-feeling. The colonel only looked grim. After he had taken Haley to a
-safe nook for his confidence, a nook where there were neither ears nor
-eyes to be feared, he would have made his way up-stairs; but half-way
-down the office he was hailed by the manager. The manager was glad
-to hear that the young gentleman was safely back. He let the faint
-radiance of an intelligent, respectfully tactful smile illumine his
-words and intimate that his listener would have no awkward questions to
-parry from him. The colonel felt an ungrateful wrath, a reprehensible
-snare of temper which did not show in his confidentially lowered
-voice, as he replied: “Mighty lucky, too, we are; the boy’s all right;
-but San Francisco is no place for an innocent kid even to take the
-safest-looking walk. What sort of a police system have you, anyhow?”
-
-The manager shook his head. “I’m not bragging about it; nor about
-the Chinese quarter, either. I confess I’ve felt particularly
-uncomfortable, myself, the last day. Well--if you’ll excuse the
-advice--least said, you know.”
-
-The colonel nodded. He proffered his cigar-case; the manager
-complimented its contents, as he selected a cigar; and both gentlemen
-bowed. A wandering, homesick Frenchman, who viewed their parting,
-felt refreshed as by a breath from his own land of admirable manners.
-Meanwhile, the colonel was fuming within: “Confound his insinuating
-curiosity! but I reckon I headed him off. And who would have thought,”
-he wondered forlornly, “that I could be going to dine with the boy safe
-and sound and be feeling so like a whipped hound!”
-
-But none of this showed during the dinner at which Millicent was in
-high good humor, having obtained information about most astounding
-bargains in the Chinese quarter from Mrs. Wigglesworth. Her good humor
-extended even to Miss Smith, who received it without enthusiasm, albeit
-courteously; and who readily consented to be her companion for the
-morning sally on the distressed Orientals, whose difficulties with the
-customs had reduced them to the necessity of sales at any cost. Aunt
-Rebecca listened with an absent smile, while Archie laughed at every
-feeblest joke of his uncle in a boyish interest so little like his
-former apathy that often Miss Smith’s eyes brightened and half timidly
-sought the uncle’s, as if calling his attention to the change. Only a
-few hours back, his would have brightened gratefully in answer; now,
-he avoided her glances. Yet somehow, his heart felt heavier when they
-ceased. For his part, he was thankful to have his aunt request his
-company in a little promenade around the “loggia,” as she termed it,
-overlooking the great court.
-
-She took him aside to tell him her afternoon experience, and to ask
-his opinion of the enigmatical appearance of Atkins. He was strongly
-tempted, in return, to question her frankly about Miss Smith, to tell
-her of seeing the latter with Atkins only that evening. He knew that
-it was the sensible thing to do--but he simply could not do it. To
-frame his suspicions past or present of the woman he loved; to discuss
-the chances of her affection for a man loathsomely unworthy of her;
-worse, to balance the possibilities of her turning betrayer in her turn
-and chancing any damage to her benefactress and her kinsman for this
-fellow’s sake--no, it was beyond him. He had intended to discuss his
-aunt’s part in the waylaying of Keatcham, with calmness and with the
-deference due her, but unsparingly; he meant to show her the legal if
-not moral obliquity of her course, to point out to her the pitfalls
-besetting it, to warn her how hideous might be the consequences of a
-misstep. Somehow, however, his miserable new anxiety about Miss Smith
-had disturbed all his calculations and upset his wits; and he could not
-rally any of the poignant phrases which he had prepared. All he was
-able to say was something about the rashness of the business; it was
-like the Filipinos with their bows and arrows fighting machine-guns.
-
-“Or David with his ridiculous little sling going against Goliath,”
-added she. “Very well put, Bertie; only the good advice comes too late;
-the question now is, how to get out with a whole skin. Surprising as it
-may be, I expect to--with your help.”
-
-“Honored, I’m sure,” growled Bertie.
-
-“There is one thing I meant to ask you--I haven’t, but I shall now.
-Instead of making it impossible for me to sleep to-night, as you
-virtuously intended in order to clear your conscience before you tried
-to pull me out of the trap I’ve set for myself, suppose you do me a
-favor, right now.”
-
-“You put it so well, you make me ashamed of my moral sense, Aunt Becky;
-what is it you want?”
-
-“Oh, nothing unbefitting a soldier and a gentleman, dear boy; just
-this: Cary has to have some money. I meant to give it to Stoves, but
-you hustled him off in such a rush that I didn’t get at him. You know
-where he is, don’t you? You haven’t sent him straight back?”
-
-“I can find him, I reckon.”
-
-“Then I’ll give _you_ the money, at once.”
-
-How weak a thing is man! Here was an eminently cool-headed, reasonable
-man of affairs who knew that paws which had escaped from the fire
-unsinged had no excuse to venture back for other people’s chestnuts;
-he had expressed himself clearly to this effect to young Tracy; now,
-behold him as unable to resist the temptation of a conflict and the
-chance to baffle Atkins as if he were a hot-headed boy in plain
-shoulder-straps!
-
-“I’ll do better for you, Aunt Rebecca,” said he. “I’ll not only take
-Fireless the money, I’ll go with him to the house. I can make a sneak
-from here; and Atkins is safely down-stairs at this moment. He may be
-shadowing Fireless; if he is, perhaps I can throw him off the track.”
-
-Thus it befell that not an hour later Rupert Winter was guiding the
-shabby and noisy runabout a second time toward the haunted house.
-
-“Nothing doin’,” said the joyous apprentice to crime; “I called old
-Cary up and got a furious slating for doing it; but he said there
-wasn’t a watch-dog in sight; and the old man had surrendered. He was
-going to let him into the library on parole.”
-
-“You need a guardian,” growled the colonel; “where did you telephone?
-_Not_ in the drug store?”
-
-“Oh, dear, no, not in such a public place; I’ve a shrinking nature that
-never did intrude its private, personal affairs on the curious world.
-I used the ’phone of that nice quiet little restaurant where they gave
-me a lovely meal but were so long preparing it, I used up all the
-literature in sight, which was the _Ladies’ Home Journal_ and a tract
-on the virtues of Knox’s Gelatine. When I couldn’t think of anything
-else to do I routed out Cary--I’d smoked all my cigarettes and all my
-cigars but one which I was keeping for after dinner. And Cary rowed me
-good and plenty. There wasn’t a soul in the room.”
-
-“Has any one followed you?”
-
-“Not a man, woman or child, not even a yellow dog. I kept looking
-round, too.”
-
-“It was a dreadfully risky thing to do; you don’t deserve to escape;
-but perhaps you did. Atkins may have come to the Palace for some other
-purpose and never have noticed you.”
-
-“My own father wouldn’t have got on to me in that dinky rig.”
-
-Winter was not so easy in his mind. But he hoped for the best, since
-there was nothing else for him to do. They were in sight of the house
-now, which loomed against the dim horizon, darker, grimmer than ever.
-Where the upper stories were pierced with semicircular arches, the
-star-sown sky shone through with an extraordinary effect of depth and
-mystery. All the lighter features of the architecture, carving on
-pediment or lintel or archivolt, delicate iron tracery of _rejas_,
-relief of arcature and colonnade--all these the dusk blurred if it
-did not obliterate; the great dark bulk of the house with its massive
-buttresses, its pyramidal copings and receding upper stories, was the
-more boldly silhouetted on the violet sky; yet because of the very
-flatness of the picture, the very lack of shadow and projection, it
-seemed unsubstantial, hardly more of reality than the giant shadow it
-cast upon the hillside. Electric lights wavered and bristled dazzling
-beams on either side of the street; not a gleam, red, white or yellow,
-leaked through the shuttered windows of the house. In its blackness,
-its silence, its determined isolation it renewed, but with a greater
-force, the first sinister thrill which the sight of it had given the
-man who came to rifle it of its secrets.
-
-“Lonesome-looking old shanty, isn’t it?” said the Harvard boy; “seems
-almost indecorous to speak out loud. Here’s where we _cache_ the car
-and make a gentle detour by aid of the shrubbery up the arroyo to the
-north side of the _patio_. See?”
-
-He directed the colonel’s course through an almost imperceptible
-opening in the hedge along sharp turns and oblique and narrow ways into
-a small vacant space where the vines covered an adobe hut. Jumping
-out, Tracy unlocked the door of this tiny building so that the colonel
-could run the car inside; and after Winter had emerged again, he
-re-locked the door. As there was no window, the purpose of the hut was
-effectually concealed.
-
-“Very neat,” the colonel approved; whereat Tracy flashed his smile at
-him in the moonlight and owned with ingenuous pride that he himself was
-the contriver of this reticent garage.
-
-From this point he took the lead. Neither spoke. They toiled up the
-hill, in this part of the grounds less of the nature of a hill than of
-an arroyo or ravine through which rocks had thrust their rugged sides
-and over which spiked semi-tropical cacti had sprawled, and purple
-and white flowered vines had made their own untended tangle. Before
-they reached the level the colonel was breathing hard, every breath
-a stab. Tracy, a famous track man who had won his H in a wonderful
-cross-country run, felt no distress--until he heard his companion gasp.
-
-“Jove! But that hill’s fierce!” he breathed explosively. “Do you mind
-resting a minute?”
-
-“Hardly,”--the colonel was just able to hold his voice steady--“I have
-a Filipino bullet in my leg somewhere which the X-ray has never been
-able to account for; and I’m not exactly a mountain goat!”
-
-“Why, of course, I’m a brute not to let you run up the drive in the
-machine. Not a rat watching us to-night, either; but I wanted you to
-see the place; and you seem so fit--”
-
-“You oughtn’t to give away your secrets to me, an outsider--”
-
-“You’re no outsider; I consider you the treasurer of the band,” laughed
-Tracy. They had somehow come to an unexpressed but perfectly understood
-footing of sympathy. The colonel even let the younger man help him up
-the last stiff clamber of the path. He forgot his first chill, as of
-a witness approaching a tragedy; there was a smile on his lips when
-the two of them passed into the _patio_. It lingered there as he stood
-in the flower-scented gloom. It was there as Tracy stumbled to a
-half-remembered push-button, wondering aloud what had become of Cary
-and Kito that they shouldn’t have answered his whistle; it was there,
-still, when Tracy slipped, and grumbled: “What sticky stuff has Kito
-spilled on this floor?”--and instantly flooded the court with light.
-Then--he saw the black, slimy pool and the long slide of Tracy’s nailed
-sole in it; and just to one side, almost pressing against his own foot,
-he saw a man in a gray suit huddled into the shape of a crooked U, with
-his arms limp at his side and his head of iron-gray fallen back askew.
-The light shone on the broad bald dome of the forehead. He had been
-stabbed between the shoulders, in the back; and one side of the gray
-coat was ugly to see.
-
-“Good God!” whispered Tracy, growing white. “It’s Keatcham! they’ve
-killed him! Oh, why didn’t I come back before!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-WHOSE FEET WERE SHOD WITH SILENCE
-
-
-“Get out your revolver,” ordered the colonel; “look sharp! there may be
-some one here.”
-
-But there was not a sign of life revealed by the search. Meanwhile,
-Winter was examining the body. His first thought was that Keatcham had
-tried to escape and had been struck down in his flight. Kito would not
-scruple at such a deed; nor for that matter, Mercer. But why leave the
-man thus? Why not dispose of the body--unless, indeed, the assassins
-had been interrupted. Anyhow, what a horrid mess this murder would make
-of the affair! and how was he to keep the women out of it! All at once,
-in the examination which he had been making (while a dozen gruesome
-possibilities tumbled over one another in his mind) he stopped; he put
-his ear to the man’s heart.
-
-“Isn’t he dead?” asked Tracy under his breath.
-
-“No, he is not dead, but I’m afraid he’ll never find it out,” returned
-the colonel, shrugging his shoulders. “However, any brandy handy? And
-get me some water.”
-
-“I know where there is some brandy--I’ll get it; there is some water in
-the fountain right--_Cary!_”
-
-“What’s the matter?” demanded Cary Mercer in one of the arcade doorways
-of the _patio_. “What’s happened? The devil! Who did this?” He strode
-up to the kneeling soldier.
-
-“You are in a position to know much better than I,” said the colonel
-dryly. “We came this moment; we found this.”
-
-“Cary, did _you_ do it?”--the young man laid his hand on Cary’s
-shoulder; his face was ashy but his voice rang full and clear. “If you
-did, I am sure you had a reason; but I want to know; we’re partners in
-this thing to the finish.”
-
-“Thank you, boy,” said Cary gently, “that’s good to hear. But I didn’t
-hurt him, Endy. Why should I? We’d got what we wanted.”
-
-“_Who did?_” asked the colonel.
-
-“I didn’t and Kito didn’t. He went away to see his only brother who is
-sick. He hasn’t got back. I don’t know who did it; but whoever stabbed
-him must have done it without warning him; for I didn’t hear a sound.
-I was in the library.”
-
-“He’s breathing a little, I think,” murmured the young man, who was
-sopping the gray mask of a face while Winter trickled brandy drop by
-drop into the sagging mouth, “and--look! somebody has tried to rob him;
-that’s a money belt!”
-
-The waistcoat was open and Winter could see, beneath, a money belt with
-buttoned pockets, which had been torn apart with such haste that one of
-the buttons had been wrenched off.
-
-“They seem to have been after money,” said he; “see! the belt is full
-of bills; there’s only one pocket empty.”
-
-“Perhaps he was interrupted,” explained Mercer. “Push the brandy,
-Colonel, he’s moving his eyelids, suh!”
-
-“We’ve got to do something to that hole in him, first,” said the
-colonel. “Is there any doctor--”
-
-“I daren’t send for one.”
-
-“Tony Arnold might know one we could trust,” suggested Tracy. “I can
-get him over the long distance.”
-
-“We want somebody _now_, this minute,” declared the colonel.
-
-“There’s Janet Smith,” said Mercer, “my sister-in-law; she’s Mrs.
-Winter’s companion; she used to be a trained nurse and a mighty good
-one; _she_ could be trusted.”
-
-Could she? And how the terms of his distrust had changed! He had
-fought against an answer in the affirmative this morning; now his
-heart was begging for it; he was cold with fear lest she wasn’t this
-conspirator’s confederate.
-
-“Send for them both,” said he with no sign of emotion.
-
-“I’ll call up Aunt Rebecca,” said Mercer. “Isn’t he reviving? No? Best
-not move him till we get the wound dressed, don’t you reckon, Colonel?”
-
-But the colonel was already making a rough tourniquet out of his
-handkerchief and a pencil to stanch the bleeding. The others obeyed
-his curt directions; and it was not until the still unconscious man
-was disposed in a more comfortable posture on the cushions which Tracy
-brought, that Winter sent the latter to the telephone; and then he
-addressed Mercer. He took a sealed package from an inner pocket and
-tendered it, saying: “You know who sent it. Whatever happens, you’re a
-Southern gentleman, and I look to you to see that she--they are kept
-out of this nasty mess--absolutely.”
-
-“Of course,” returned Mercer, with a trace of irritation; “what do you
-take me for? Now, hadn’t I better call Janet?”
-
-“But if this were to be discovered--”
-
-“_She_ wouldn’t have done anything; she is only nursing a wounded man
-whom she doesn’t know, at my request.”
-
-“Very well,” acquiesced the colonel, with a long sigh as he turned away.
-
-He sat down, cross-legged, like a Turk, on the flags beside the wounded
-man. Mercer was standing a little way off. It was to be observed that
-he had not touched Keatcham, nor even approached him close enough
-to reach him by an outstretched hand. Winter studied his face, his
-attitude--and suppressed the slightest of starts; Mercer had turned his
-arm to light another electric bulb and the action revealed some crimson
-spots on his cuff and a smear on his light trousers above the knee. The
-lamp was rather high and he was obliged to raise his arm, thus lifting
-the skirts of his coat which had previously hidden the stain. He did
-not seem aware that his action had made any disclosure. He was busy
-with the light. “That’ll be better,” said he; “I’ll go call up Sister
-Janet.”
-
-How had those stains come? Mercer professed just to have entered.
-Vainly Winter’s brain tried to labor through the crazy bewilderment of
-it all; Mercer spoke like an honest man--but look at his cuffs! How
-could any outside assassin enter that locked and guarded house?--yet,
-if Mercer had not lied, some one must have stolen in and struck
-Keatcham. Kito? But the Jap was out of the house--perhaps! And Janet
-Smith, what was she doing talking to Atkins? Had she given that reptile
-any clue? Could he--but it was his opportunity to rescue Keatcham, not
-to murder him--what a confounded maze!
-
-And what business had he, Rupert Winter, who had supposed himself to
-be an honorable man, who had sworn to support the Constitution and the
-laws of the United States, what business had _he_ to help law-breakers
-and murderers escape the just punishment of their deeds? He almost
-ground his teeth. Oh, well, there was one way out, and that was to
-resign his commission. He would do it this very night, he resolved;
-and he swore miserably at himself, at his venerable aunt who must be
-protected at such a sacrifice, at Atkins, at the feebly moaning wretch
-whom he had not ceased all this while to ply carefully with drops of
-brandy. “You everlasting man-eater, if you dare to die, I’ll _kill_
-you!” he snorted.
-
-Thereupon he went at the puzzle again. Before any answer could come to
-the telephone calls, a low, mournful, inhuman cry penetrated the thick
-walls. It was repeated thrice; on the third call, Tracy ran quickly
-through the _patio_ to a side door, barred and locked like all the
-entrances, released and swung it open and let in Kito. A few murmured
-words passed between them. The Jap uttered a startled exclamation. “But
-how can it to be? How? no one can get in! And who shall stab him? For
-_why_?”
-
-He examined the wounded man, after a gravely courteous salute to
-Winter; and frowned and sighed. “What did it?” said he; “did who
-stabbed, take it ’way, he must give _stlong_ pull!”
-
-“Whoever did it,” said the colonel, “must have put a knee on the man’s
-back and pulled a strong pull, as you say.” In speaking the words he
-felt a shiver, for he seemed to see that red smear above Mercer’s knee.
-
-He felt the shiver again when Mercer returned and he glanced at him;
-there was not a stain on his shining white cuffs; he had changed them;
-he had also changed his suit of clothes and his shoes. His eyes met the
-colonel’s; and Winter fancied there was a glint of defiance in them; he
-made no comment, for no doubt a plausible excuse for the fresh clothes
-was ready. Well, he (Winter) wouldn’t ask it. Poor devil! he had had
-provocation.
-
-For the next half-hour they were all busy with Keatcham.
-
-“He is better,” pronounced the Jap; “he will not live, maybe, but he
-will talk, he can say who hult him.”
-
-“If he can only do that!” cried Mercer. “It is _infernal_ to think any
-one can get in here and do such a thing!”
-
-“Rotten,” Tracy moaned.
-
-The colonel said nothing.
-
-They were all still working over Keatcham when a bell pealed. Tracy
-started; but Mercer looked a shade relieved. “They’ve come,” said he.
-
-“_They?_” repeated the colonel. He scrambled to his feet and gasped.
-
-Miss Smith was coming down the colonnade, but not Miss Smith alone.
-Aunt Rebecca walked beside her, serene, erect and bearing a small
-hand-bag. Miss Smith carried a larger bag; and Tracy had possessed
-himself of a dress-suit case.
-
-“Certainly, Bertie,” remarked his aunt in her softest tone, “I came
-with Janet. My generation believed in _les convenances_.”
-
-All the colonel could articulate was a feeble, “And Archie? and
-Millicent?”
-
-“Haley is staying in your room with Archie. Millicent had retired;
-if she asks for us in the morning we shall not be up. She has an
-appointment with Janet, but it isn’t until half-past eleven. Randall
-has her instructions.”
-
-“But--but--how did you get here?”
-
-Aunt Rebecca drew herself up. “I trust now, Bertie, you will admit
-that I am as fit as any of you to rough it. If there is one mode of
-transit I abominate, it is those loathsome, unsanitary, uncivil, joggly
-street-cars; we came as far as the corner in the _street-cars_, then we
-walked. Did we want to give the number to a cab-man, do you suppose?
-Bertie, have you such a thing as a match about you? I think Janet wants
-to heat a teaspoonful of water for a strychnine hypodermic.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-FROM MRS. MELVILLE’S POINT OF VIEW
-
-
- The Palace Hotel,
- San Francisco, March 24, 1906.
-
-My dear Husband:
-
-Although I sent you a postal yesterday, I am writing again to-day to
-try to keep you in touch with our _extraordinary series_ of events.
-Nothing has been heard from Archie except the letter--_if he wrote
-it_--which tells nothing except that his kidnappers use the same kind
-of writing paper as Miss Janet Smith. I grow more suspicious of her all
-the time. You ask (but of course you wrote before the recent mysterious
-and tragical occurrences) you ask do I like Miss Smith any better,
-now that I am thrown with her so closely. No, Melville, _I_ have not
-the _fatal credulity_ of the Winters! I distrust her _more_. She has,
-I admit, an engaging personality; there is a superficial amiability
-that would be dangerous to one not on her guard. But I am never off my
-guard with her. I’m sorry to say, however, that your brother seems
-deceived by her plausible ways. And, of course, our poor aunt is still
-her blind dupe. Aunt Rebecca has failed a good deal this last year;
-she is quite irritable with me, sometimes; and I suppose it is the
-insensibility of age, but she does not appear to realize the full
-horror of this kidnapping. Miss Smith actually seems to suffer more;
-she looks pale and haggard and has no appetite. I do not think it _all
-pretense_, either; I dare say much of it is _remorse_! The situation is
-dreadful. Sometimes I think Aunt Rebecca will not yield to the demands
-of these wretches who have our poor boy, and that he will be mutilated
-or murdered; sometimes I think that they have murdered him already and
-are writing forged letters to throw us off the track. You can imagine
-how my nerves are shaken! I have seen hardly anything of the city; and
-of course have not gone into society at all. Indeed, I have met only
-one pleasant person; that was the secretary of the great financier, Mr.
-Edwin Keatcham, who was here, next to us. The secretary is a pleasing
-person quite _comme it faut_ in appearance. I met him here in the court
-where he nearly knocked me over; and he apologized profusely--and
-really very nicely, using my name. That surprised me, but he explained
-that they had been on the train with us. Then I remembered him. His
-name is Horatio Atkins; and he is very polite. He is on a two weeks’
-vacation and came here to see Mr. Keatcham, not knowing he was gone. He
-was really most agreeable and so sympathetic about poor dear Archie. He
-agreed with me that such a nervous temperament as Archie’s suffers much
-more from unkindness. I could see, in spite of his assumed hopefulness,
-that he shared my fears. He has met quite a number of our friends. He
-may (through Mr. Keatcham) be a _most valuable_ acquaintance. Didn’t
-you tell me, once, that Keatcham was the leading benefactor of the
-university?
-
-He (Mr. Atkins) got his vacation on account of his health; and he is
-going to Southern California. I don’t wonder. I have never suffered
-more than in this land of sunshine! It is not so much the cold of
-the air as the humidity! Do pray be cautious about changing to your
-summer underwear. _Don’t do it!_ I nearly perished, in the bleak wind
-yesterday, when I tried to visit a few shops. Be sure and take the
-cough medicine _on the second shelf of our bath-room medicine closet_;
-don’t mistake _rheumatism liniment_ for it; they are both on the same
-shelf; you would better sort them out. You are _so_ absent-minded,
-Melville, I haven’t a peaceful day when I’m away from you; and do for
-Heaven’s sake try to bow to Mrs. Farrell and call her by her right
-name! You certainly have been to the president’s house often enough
-to know his wife on the street; and I don’t think that it was a good
-excuse which you gave to Professor Dale for calling “Good morning,
-Katy!” to Mrs. Dale (who was born a Schuyler and is _most_ punctilious)
-_that you mistook her for our cook_!
-
-I miss you very much. Give my love to all our friends and be sure to
-wear your galoshes (your _rubbers_, you know) when the campus is wet,
-whether it is raining or not.
-
- Your aff. wife,
- M. WINTER.
-
-
-THE SAME TO THE SAME
-
- The Palace Hotel, March 25, ten P. M.
-
-My dear Husband:
-
-What do you think has happened? I am almost too excited to write.
-_Archie is back!_ Yes, back safe and sound, and absolutely
-indifferent, to all appearances, to all our indescribable sufferings
-on his account! He walked into the parlor about six or a little after,
-grinning like an ape, as if to disappear from the face of the earth and
-come back to it were quite the usual thing. And when we questioned him,
-he professed to be on his word not to tell anything. And Bertie upheld
-him in this ridiculous position! However, I was told by the detective
-whom Bertie employed, rather a decent, vulgar, little man, that they
-(Bertie and he) had cornered the kidnappers and “called their bluff,”
-as he expressed it; but I’m inclined to think they got their ransom
-from our unfortunate, victimized aunt who is too proud to admit it, and
-that they probably managed it through Miss S--. I know they called up
-the room to know if the boy was back; and I puzzled them well, I fancy,
-by saying he _was_. I may have saved our poor aunt some money by that;
-but I can’t tell, of course. Melville, I am almost _sure_ that Miss J.
-S-- is at the bottom of it, whatever the mystery is. I am almost sure
-that, not content with blackmailing and plundering auntie, Miss S-- is
-now _making a dead set_ at poor, blind, simple-hearted Bertie! I have
-reasons which I haven’t time to enumerate. Bertie will hardly bear a
-word of criticism of her patiently; in fact, I have ceased to criticize
-her to him or to Aunt Rebecca--ah, it is a lonely, lonely lot to be
-clear-sighted; but _noblesse oblige_. But often during the last few
-days I have thought that Cassandra wasn’t enough pitied.
-
- Your aff. wife,
- M.
-
-
-THE SAME TO THE SAME
-
- Casa Fuerte, San Francisco, Cal.,
- Wednesday.
-
-Dear Husband:
-
-This heading may surprise you. But we are making a visit to Mr. Anthony
-Arnold (_the_ Arnold’s son) in his beautiful house in the suburbs of
-the city. It was far more convenient for me at the Palace where I
-found Mrs. Wigglesworth most attentive and congenial and found some
-_great bargains_; but you know I can not be false to my _Trust_. To
-watch Aunt Rebecca Winter (without seeming to watch, of course, for
-the aged always resent the care which they need) is my chief object in
-this trip; therefore when Mr. Arnold (whose father she knows, but the
-old gentleman is traveling in Europe with his married daughter and her
-family) when the young Arnold urged us all to come and spend a couple
-of weeks with him, I could not very well refuse. Though a stranger
-to me, he is not to Auntie or Bertie. The house is his own, left him
-by his mother, who died not very long ago. At first, I remained at
-the Palace with Bertie and Archie; Bertie seemed so disturbed at the
-idea of my going and Aunt Rebecca was very liberal, insisting that I
-was just as much her guest as before, it was only she who was running
-away; and the end of it was (she has such a compelling personality,
-you know) that she went with Randall and J. S. to Casa Fuerte (Strong
-House--and you would call it well-named could you see it; it is a
-massive structure!) while we others remained until Sunday. On account
-of what I have hinted in regard to the designs of a certain lady I was
-not sorry to have Bertie under another roof. He has a fortune of his
-own, you know, and a reputation as well. Wealth and position at one
-blow certainly would appeal to her, an obscure dependent probably of no
-family (it is not a romantic name), and Bertie is very well-bred and
-rather handsome with his black eyebrows and gray hair and aquiline
-nose. I have been very, very worried, but I feel relieved as to
-that. Melville, _she is flying at higher game_! In this house is a
-multimillionaire, in fact the fourth richest man in the United States,
-Edwin S. Keatcham. He is ill--probably with appendicitis which seems to
-be the common lot. I asked the doctor--of course, very delicately--and
-he said, “Well, not exactly, but--” and smiled very confidentially; and
-begged me not to mention Mr. Keatcham’s illness or even that he was
-in the house. “You know,” he said, “that when these great financiers
-sneeze, the stock-market shakes; so absolute secrecy, please, my dear
-madam.” Don’t mention it to a soul, will you? Of course I haven’t seen
-the invalid; but I’ve seen his valet, who is very English; and I have
-seen his nurse. Who do you suppose she is? Janet Smith! Yes; you know
-she has been a trained nurse. Was there ever a more artful creature!
-But Mr. K. is none of my affairs; he will have to save himself or be
-lost. Once she is his wife we are safe from that designing woman. I am
-quite willing to admit his danger and her fascination. Now, Melville,
-for once admit that I can be just to a woman whom I dislike.
-
-This house is sumptuous; I’ve a lovely bath-room and a beautiful huge
-closet with a window. It must have cost a mint of money. I have been
-told that Arnold _père_ made a present of it to his wife; he let
-the architect and her draw all the plans of it, but he insisted on
-attending to the construction himself; he said he was not going to
-have any contract work or “scamping,” such as I am reliably informed
-has been common in these towering new buildings in San Francisco; he
-picked out all the materials himself and inspected the inspector. It
-has what they call “reinforced concrete” and all the beams, etc., are
-steel and the lower story is enormously thick as to walls, in the
-genuine Mission style. He said he built for earthquakes. The house
-is all in the Spanish _hidalgo_ fashion. I wish you could see the
-bas-reliefs and the carved furniture with cane seats of the seventeenth
-century, _all genuine_; and the stamped leather and the iron grille
-work--_rejas_ they call it--all copied from famous Spanish models from
-Toledo; you know the ancient Spaniards were renowned for their _rejas_.
-The pictures are fine--all Spanish; I don’t know half the names of the
-artists, but they are all old and imposing and some of them wonderfully
-preserved. The electric lights are all in the shape of lanterns.
-The _patio_, as they call the court around which the house is built,
-reminded me of the court in Mrs. Gardiner’s palace in Boston, only
-it was not so crowded with _objets_ and the pillars are much thicker
-and the tropical plants and vines more luxuriant--on account of the
-climate, I suppose. It is all certainly very beautiful.
-
-There is a great arched gateway for carriages--which reminds me, do be
-sure to send the horses into the country to rest, one at a time; and
-have Erastus clean the stable properly while they are gone. You can
-keep one horse for golf; but don’t use the brougham ever; and why not
-send the surrey to be done over while I am gone? Is the piazza painted
-yet? How does the new cook do? Insist upon her cooking you nourishing
-food. You might have the Bridge Club of an evening--there are only the
-four of you--and she might, with Emily’s help, get you a nice repast of
-lobster à la Newburg, sandwiches and chicken salad; but be sure _you_
-don’t touch the lobster! You know what happened the last time; and I
-shan’t be there to put on mustard-plasters and give you Hunyadi water.
-If Erastus needs any more chamois skins Emily knows where they are,
-but admonish him to be careful with them; I never saw mortal man go
-through chamois skins the way he can; sometimes I think he gives them
-to the horses to eat!
-
- Good-by,
- Your aff. wife,
- M.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-“THE LIGHT THAT NEVER WAS”
-
-
-The changes which Mrs. Melville had accepted so philosophically,
-the metamorphosis of the tragic and lonely house of mystery into
-a luxurious country villa, the flinging open of the shutters, the
-marshaling of servants, the turning, one may say, of the lime-light on
-a rich man’s ordinary life--all this had occurred as swiftly and with
-as little warning as a scene shifts on the stage.
-
-Mrs. Rebecca Winter may have the credit for this _bouleversement_ of
-plans. By an astonishingly early hour, the next morning, she was awake
-and down-stairs, where Kito and Tracy were making coffee, toasting
-bread and admiring the oatmeal which had cooked, while they slept, in
-the Fireless Stove. Tracy had planned a surprise of brown bread, but
-through no fault of the Fireless, owing solely to his omitting what he
-called “the pick-me-up,” commonly known as soda--an accident, as he
-truly said, which might happen to any lady--the bread was “rather too
-adhesive.” The breakfast, notwithstanding, was a cheerful one, because
-Miss Smith reported the patient a shade better. She looked smiling,
-although rather heavy-eyed. Mercer and the colonel had taken turns
-sitting in the adjoining room to bring her ice or hot water or be of
-service outside.
-
-The colonel had suggested calling a doctor, but Aunt Rebecca had
-demurred: “Janet can do everything; it is just a question of his heart;
-and she has digitalis and nitroglycerin and strychnine, the whole
-outfit of whips. She has dressed the wound with antiseptics. To-morrow
-will be soon enough for the medical talent.” It was she, however,
-who, as soon as breakfast was over, took first Mercer and Tracy, then
-the colonel apart, and proposed calling up Keatcham’s confidential
-associates on the long-distance telephone. “Strike, but hear me,
-nephew,” she said languidly, smiling at his bewilderment. “Our only
-chance now is to exhaust trumps. Yesterday the game was won. Keatcham
-had surrendered, he had told his partners in the deal to make no fight
-on Tracy’s election; they could get what they wanted without the
-Midland; he advised them to cover their shorts and get ready for a bull
-market--”
-
-“How did he do all that when he had lost his private code book?”
-
-“How would _you_ do it? You would use the long distance telephone.
-We caught them at Seattle, where his men had gone for the meeting. I
-don’t understand why they needed me to suggest that. There the poor
-man was, as your Harvard stove agent calls it, rubbering about the
-library, trying to find _The Fortunes of Nigel_ in the edition Darley
-had illustrated; of course, it wasn’t there. He had lost it just before
-he came to the Palace, he thought. It seems his old cipher needs a
-particular book, that kind. No doubt in my mind that your theory is
-right and that Atkins stole it and perhaps thought he stole the key,
-but didn’t get it. He took a memorandum of ciphers which looked like
-a key. There Keatcham was, with millions hanging on his wires and his
-modern substitute for the medieval signet-ring that would enforce the
-message quite lost. What to do? Why, there was nothing to do but get
-another cipher! They made up a temporary one, right in that library,
-yesterday afternoon.”
-
-“But how could Mercer be sure Keatcham would not play a trick on him?
-Did he hear the conversation?”
-
-“Certainly not. He took Keatcham’s word. Whatever his faults, Keatcham
-has always kept his word. Mercer was sure he would keep it. He went out
-of the room. He was in the library when Keatcham was stabbed.”
-
-The colonel drew a long, difficult breath. “Then you don’t believe
-Mercer did it?”
-
-“I’m sure he didn’t. He didn’t hurt him. Why should he kill him after
-he had surrendered? He had nothing to gain and considerable to risk, if
-not to lose. We want that bull market.”
-
-“But who did then? Atkins? But he is trying to rescue him.”
-
-“Is he? How do we know? The rescue was only our supposition. I’m only
-certain none of our crowd did it.”
-
-“Kito?”
-
-“No, Kito keeps absolutely within his orders; he knew how things stood
-when he went away. Mercer saw him go. He couldn’t get in, either; he
-had to signal to be let in. They were as careful as that. Now, assuming
-they all are innocent, isn’t it the best plan to telephone to Seattle
-to Keatcham’s next friend there?”
-
-“He hasn’t any family, has he? His wife died and there were no
-children, I think.”
-
-“No, and if he ever had any brothers or sisters they died when
-they were little; his business associates are the only people Cary
-knows about. He is anxious to have word sent at once, because there
-are important things to do in Keatcham’s own interest; he came
-to California and he has employed Cary in a big Portland cement
-investment; Cary has been working all the time on it for him--I beg
-your pardon--” for the colonel had raised his hand with a little gasp.
-
-“Do you mean,” said he, “that Mercer has been acting as Keatcham’s
-agent, working in _his interest_ all the time he was holding him a
-prisoner and ready to kill him rather than let him go?”
-
-“Why not? Cary is a man of honor. This cement deal is a perfectly
-fair one which will give a fair price to the present owners and make
-a great business proposition. There are other schemes, too, very
-large ones, which need the man at the wheel. Now, I have talked with
-Cary and Endicott Tracy and my plan is to call up Warnebold, his next
-friend, who knows Mercer has been employed by Keatcham and knows his
-voice and knows he is a trusty man (for Mercer has done some inquiries
-for him and saved him once from buying a water-logged steel plant) to
-call _him_ up and--tell him the truth. We can say Mr. Keatcham was
-mysteriously stabbed; we can ask what is best to do. By that time we
-can report that we have the best medical assistance--young Arnold will
-get his family physician, who can be trusted. Warnebold will instruct
-Mercer, I reckon, to keep the fact of the assault a secret, not even
-mention that Mr. Keatcham is ill; and very likely he or some one else
-will come straight on here. Meanwhile, young Arnold can open the house,
-hire some servants who won’t talk--I can get them for him; we all say
-nothing of the magnate’s presence. And the bull market will come all
-right.”
-
-After a little reflection the colonel agreed that the bold course would
-be the safest. Thus it came about, with amazing rapidity, that the
-haunted house was opened; that sleek, smiling Chinamen whisked brooms
-and cleaning cloths at open windows; and Haley and Kito frankly told
-any curious inquirers who hailed them over the lawn and the flower-beds
-that young Mr. Arnold was coming home and going to have a house-party
-of friends. The servants had been carefully selected by Mrs. Winter’s
-powerful Chinese friend; they had no dread of white spooks, however
-they might cringe before yellow ones. Mrs. Winter and Randall left
-their hotel, after all the appropriate ceremonies, amid the lavish bows
-and smiles of liberally paid bell-boys and porters. They gave out that
-they were to visit friends; and the colonel, who remained, was to take
-charge of their mail; hence, with no appearance of secrecy, the trail
-took to water and was lost, since the motor-car which carried them was
-supplied by Birdsall and driven by a safe man of his own.
-
-Regarding the detective, Rupert Winter had had what he called “a stiff
-think;” he could not afford even the remote risk of his going with the
-picturesque assortment of information which he had obtained about Casa
-Fuerte and Mercer, into Atkins’ employ; therefore he hired him, still,
-himself. He made a partial but absolutely truthful statement of the
-case; he said frankly: “Birdsall, I’m not going to treat you fair, for
-I’m not going to tell you all I know, because--well, for one thing, I
-don’t feel sure how much I do know myself. But all I’m going to ask of
-you is to watch the house, day and night, without seeming to watch it.
-You will oblige Mr. Keatcham as well as me. There is a big game going
-on, but it isn’t what you thought. Mr. Keatcham’s best helpers are
-right in that house. Mercer and I and young Fireless and Arnold are
-doing our best to guard him, not hurt him. Now, there is big money for
-you if you will watch out for us.”
-
-Birdsall reflected a moment before he answered, but he did answer,
-screwing up his face: “I don’t like these jobs in the dark; but I like
-you, Colonel, and it’s a go.”
-
-Keatcham’s valet was next summoned from his vacation and became, in
-Tracy’s phrase, “a dandy sub-nurse.”
-
-The Tracys’ family physician came twice a day. He was known to be
-visiting one of the guests who had fallen ill. Mercer sent three
-or four telegrams a day to Seattle and to New York, to Keatcham’s
-associates. Several times he held a conversation of importance over
-the telephone with the man who acted as distributer of intelligence.
-Warnebold, himself, came on to San Francisco from Seattle, and was
-received with every courtesy. He questioned Kito, questioned Mercer,
-questioned the colonel. Tracy had effaced himself and was in Pasadena
-for a day or two.
-
-The colonel was the star witness (at least this was young Arnold’s
-verdict). His narrative was to the effect that he had gone out to see
-Mercer, who was a family connection; no, he was not alone, he had a
-young friend with him; confidentially, he would admit that the friend
-was Mr. Tracy’s son; and, while he could not be sure, he had reason
-to suspect that he, “young Tracy,” had been conducting some delicate
-negotiations with Mr. Keatcham. At this point the interlocutor nodded
-slightly; he was making the deductions expected and explaining to
-himself Keatcham’s astonishing communication over the telephone. So,
-he was surmising shrewdly, _that_ was the clue; the old man had been
-making some sort of a deal with Tracy through the son; well, they were
-protected, thanks to Keatcham’s orders. Likely as not they never would
-know all the reasons for this side-stepping.
-
-“I understand, then,” he said, as one who holds a clue but has no
-notion of letting it slip out of his own fingers, “you and young Tracy
-got here and you found Mr. Keatcham? How did you get in? Did Mr. Mercer
-let you in? How did it happen he didn’t discover Mr. Keatcham instead
-of you, or did you come in on the side?”
-
-Mrs. Winter who was in the room had a diversion ready, but it was not
-needed; the colonel answered unhesitatingly, with a frank smile: “No,
-we came in ourselves; young Tracy had a key.”
-
-“Oh, he _had_, had he?” returned Warnebold with a shrug of the
-shoulders.
-
-“He is a great friend of young Arnold’s; they were at Harvard together,
-belonged to the same societies.”
-
-“Yes, I understand; well--”
-
-The rest of the interview was clear sailing. Mrs. Winter’s presence was
-explained in her very own words. “Of course I was put out a good deal
-at first,” added the colonel, “by the women getting mixed up in it; but
-Miss Smith undoubtedly saved Mr. Keatcham’s life. I never saw any one
-who seemed to think of so many things to do. Half a dozen times, that
-first night, he seemed to be fading away; but every time she brought
-him back. I was anxious to have a doctor called in; but Mercer seemed
-opposed to making a stir--”
-
-“He knew his business thoroughly,” interjected Keatcham’s confidant,
-“he undoubtedly had his instructions to keep Keatcham’s presence here a
-secret.”
-
-“He _had_,” said Mrs. Winter; “besides, Miss Smith is his sister-in-law
-and he knew that she could be trusted to do everything possible. And,
-really, it didn’t look as if anything could help him. I hardly believed
-that he could live an hour when I saw him.”
-
-“Nor I,” the colonel corroborated.
-
-Warnebold, plainly impressed by Mrs. Winter’s grand air, assured
-them both that he felt that everything that could be done had been
-done; Miss Smith was quite wonderful; and he would admit (of course,
-confidentially) that Mr. Keatcham did have a heart trouble; Mr. Mercer
-had recalled one or two fainting fits; there was some congestion;
-and the doctor found a sad absence of reaction; he believed that
-there had been a--er--syncope of some sort before the stabbing; Mr.
-Keatcham himself, although he was still too weak to talk much, had no
-recollection of anything except a very great faintness. Mr. Mercer’s
-theory seemed to cover the ground.
-
-“Except as to who did the stabbing,” said the colonel.
-
-“Has Mr. Keatcham any bitter enemies?” asked Aunt Rebecca thoughtfully.
-
-“What man who has made a great fortune hasn’t?” demanded Warnebold with
-a saturnine wrinkle of the lips. “But our enemies don’t stab or shoot
-us, nowadays.”
-
-“They do out West,” said the colonel genially; “we’re crude.”
-
-“Are you in earnest?”
-
-“Entirely. I know a man, a mine superintendent, who got into a row with
-his miners because he discharged a foreman, one of the union lights,
-for stealing ore. In consequence he got a big strike on his hands,
-found a dynamite bomb under his front piazza, and was shot at twice.
-The second time he was too quick for them; he shot back and killed one
-of them. He thought it was time to put a stop to so much excitement, so
-he sent for the second assassin--”
-
-“And had him arrested?”
-
-“Oh, dear, no; he wasn’t in Massachusetts; I told you he wanted the
-thing stopped. No, he sent for him and told him that he had no special
-ill feeling toward _him_, but that the next time anything of the kind
-happened he had made arrangements to have not him, or any other thug
-who was doing the work, but the two men who were at the bottom of the
-whole business, killed within twenty-four hours. They took the hint and
-kind feeling now prevails.”
-
-Warnebold grunted; he declared it to be a beastly creepy situation; he
-said he never wanted to sit down without a wall against his back; and
-he intimated that the president of the United States was to blame for
-more than he realized. “I hope you have some one watching the house,”
-he fumed, “and that he--well, he doesn’t belong to the police force.”
-
-“No, he’s an honest mercenary,” said the colonel; “I’ll introduce him
-to you.”
-
-“And you haven’t found any method of entering the house?” fumed the
-financier.
-
-“No,” said Aunt Rebecca.
-
-“Yes,” said the colonel.
-
-He laughed as they both whirled round on him.
-
-“You speak first, my dear aunt,” he proposed politely; “I’ll explain
-later.”
-
-Mrs. Winter said that a most careful examination had been made not only
-by Mercer and the colonel together, but also by young Arnold. They
-found everything absolutely secure; all the windows were bolted and all
-the cellar gratings firm and impossible to open.
-
-“Now, you?” said Warnebold.
-
-“I only found out to-day,” apologized the colonel, “or I should have
-spoken of it. I got to thinking; and it occurred to me that in a house
-built, as I understood from Arnold, by a very original architect,
-there might be some queer features, such as secret passages. With that
-in my mind, I induced the young gentleman to hunt up the architect,
-as he lives in San Francisco. He not only showed us some very pretty
-secret passages about the house, but one that led into it. Shall I show
-it to you?”
-
-On their instantly expressed desire to see the hidden way, the colonel
-led them to the _patio_. He walked to the engaged column which once
-before had interested him; he pressed a concealed spring under the
-boldly carved eight-pointed flower; instantly, the entire side of the
-columns swung as a door might swing. As they peered into the dusky
-space below, the colonel, who had put down his arm, pressed an electric
-button and the white light flooded the shaft, revealing an ingenious
-ladder of cleats fitted into steel uprights.
-
-“Here,” said the colonel, “is a secret way from the _patio_ to the
-cellar. The cellar extends a little beyond the _patio_ and there is a
-way down from the yard to the cellar--I can quickly show you, if you
-like.”
-
-“No, thank you,” replied Warnebold, who was a man of full habit and
-older than the colonel, “I will take _your_ personal experience
-instead.”
-
-“Then if you will go out into the yard with me I will show you where
-a charming pergola ends in a vine-wreathed sun-dial of stone that you
-may tug at and not move; but press your foot on a certain stone, the
-whole dial swings round on a concealed turn-table such as they have in
-garages, you know. You will have no difficulty in finding the right
-stone, because an inscription runs round the dial: _Más vale tarde que
-nunca_; and the stone is directly opposite _nunca_. When you have moved
-away your dial you will see a gently inclining tunnel, high enough for
-a man to walk in without stooping, wide enough for two, and much better
-ventilated than the New York subway. That tunnel leads to a secret door
-opening directly into the cellar, so skilfully contrived that it looks
-like an air-shaft. This door is only a few feet from the shaft to the
-_patio_. We have found a bolt and put it on this entrance, but there
-wasn’t any before; nor did any one in the house know of the secret
-passage.”
-
-The colonel went on to say that on questioning the architect he averred
-that he had never mentioned the secret passage to his knowledge--except
-that very recently, only a few days before, at a dinner, he had barely
-alluded to it; and one of the gentlemen present, an Easterner, had
-asked him where he got a man to make such a contrivance--it must take
-skill. He had mentioned the name of the workman. The colonel had hunted
-up the artisan mentioned, only to find that he had left town to take a
-job somewhere; no one seemed to know where. Of course he had inquired
-of everybody. The name of the Easterner was Atkins.
-
-“Atkins,” cried Warnebold, at this turn of the narrative, “Keatcham’s
-secretary? Why, he’s the boldest and slyest scoundrel in the United
-States! He started a leak in Keatcham’s office that made him a couple
-of hundred thousands and lost us a million, and might have lost us more
-if Mercer hadn’t got on to him. Keatcham wouldn’t believe he had been
-done to the extent he was at first--you know the old man hates to own
-to any one’s getting the better of him; it’s the one streak of vanity
-I’ve ever been able to discover in him. Otherwise, he’s cold and keen
-as a razor on a frosty morning. He was convinced enough, however, to
-discharge Atkins; the next news I had, he was trying to send him to the
-pen. Gave us instructions how to get the evidence. No allusion to his
-past confidence in the fellow, simply the orders--as if we knew all
-the preliminaries. Wonderful man, Mr. Keatcham, Colonel Winter.”
-
-“Very,” agreed the colonel dryly.
-
-By this time the warrior and the man of finance were on easy terms.
-Warnebold remained three days. Before he left the patient had been
-pronounced out of danger and had revived enough to give some succinct
-business directions. Mercer had been sent to look out for the cement
-deal; and Keatcham appeared a little relieved and brighter when he was
-told that Mercer was on his way.
-
-“He will put it through if it can be put,” he had said weakly to
-Warnebold; “he’s moderately smart and perfectly honest.” Such words,
-Warnebold explained later to Mrs. Winter, coming from Keatcham might
-be regarded almost as extravagant commendation. “Your cousin’s fortune
-is made,” he pronounced solemnly; “he can get Atkins’ place, I make no
-doubt.”
-
-Mrs. Winter thought that Mercer was a very valuable man.
-
-“Only always so melancholy; I’ve been afraid he had something serious
-the matter with his digestion. It’s these abominable quick lunches that
-are ruining the health of all our steady young men. I don’t know but
-they are almost as bad as chorus girls and late suppers. Well, Mrs.
-Winter, I’m afraid we shall not have another chance at bridge until
-I see you in New York. But, anyhow, we stung the colonel once--and
-with Miss Smith playing her greatest game, too. Pity she can’t induce
-Mr. Keatcham to play; but he never touches a card, hardly ever takes
-anything to drink, doesn’t like smoking especially, takes a cigarette
-once in a while only, never plays the races or bets on the run of the
-vessel--positively such icy virtue gives an ordinary sinner the cramps!
-Very great man though, Mrs. Winter, and a man we are all proud to
-follow; he may be overbearing; and he doesn’t praise you too much, but
-somehow you always have the consciousness that he sees every bit of
-good work you do and is marking it up in your favor; and you won’t be
-the loser. There is no question he has a hold on his associates; but he
-certainly is not what I call a genial man.”
-
-Only on the day of his departure did Warnebold, in young Arnold’s
-language, “loosen up” enough to tell Arnold and the colonel a vital
-incident. The night of the attack a telegram was sent to Warnebold in
-Keatcham’s confidential cipher, directing the campaign against Tracy
-to be pushed hard, ordering the dumping of some big blocks of stock
-on the market and arranging for their dummy purchasers. The naming of
-Atkins as the man in charge was plausible enough, presuming there had
-been no knowledge of the break in his relations with Keatcham. The
-message was couched in Keatcham’s characteristic crisp phraseology.
-But for the receiver’s knowledge of the break and but for the previous
-long-distance conversation, it had reached its mark. The associates of
-Keatcham were puzzled. The hands were the hands of Esau but the voice
-was the voice of Jacob. There had been a hurried consultation into
-which the second long-distance telephone from San Francisco broke like
-a thunderclap. It decided the hearers to keep to their instructions and
-disregard the cipher despatch.
-
-“And didn’t you send any answer?” the colonel asked.
-
-“Oh, certainly; we had an address given, The Palace Hotel, Mr. John G.
-Makers. We wired Mr. Makers--in cipher. ‘Despatch received. Will attend
-to it,’ I signed. And I wired to the manager of the hotel to notice the
-man who took the despatch. It wasn’t a man, it was a lady.”
-
-“A lady?”
-
-“Yes, she had an order for Mr. Makers’ telegrams. Mr. Makers gave the
-order. Mr. Makers himself only stopped one night and went away in
-the morning and nobody seemed to remember him particularly; he was a
-nondescript sort of party.”
-
-“But the lady?” The colonel’s mouth felt dry.
-
-“The lady? She was tall, fine figure, well dressed, dark hair, the
-telegraph girl thought, but she didn’t pay any special attention. She
-had a very pleasant, musical voice.”
-
-“That doesn’t seem to be very definite,” remarked the colonel with a
-crooked smile.
-
-It didn’t look like a clue to Warnebold, either; but he was convinced
-of one thing, namely, that it would pay to watch the ex-secretary.
-
-“And,” chuckled he, “there’s a cheerful side to the affair. Atkins is
-loaded to the guards with short contracts; and the Midland is booming;
-if the rise continues, he can’t cover without losing about all he
-has. By the way, we got another wire later in the day demanding what
-we were about, what it all meant that we hadn’t obeyed instructions.
-Same address for answer. This time we thought we had laid a nice trap.
-But you can’t reckon on a hotel; somehow, before we got warning, Mr.
-Makers had telephoned for his despatch and got it.”
-
-“Where did he telephone from?”
-
-“From his room in the Palace.”
-
-“I thought he had given up his room?”
-
-“He had. But--somebody telephoned to the telegraph office from
-somewhere in the hotel and got Mr. Makers’ wire. You can get pretty
-much everything except a moderate bill out of a hotel.”
-
-“I see,” said the colonel and immediately in his heart compared
-himself to the immortal “blind man;” for his wits appeared to him to
-be tramping round futilely in a maze; no nearer the exit than when the
-tramp began.
-
-That night, after Warnebold had departed, leaving most effusive thanks
-and expressions of confidence, Winter was standing at his window
-absently looking at the garden faintly colored by the moonlight, while
-his mind was plying back and forth between half a dozen contradictions.
-
-He went over the night of the attack on Keatcham; he summoned every
-look, every motion of Janet Smith; in one phase of feeling he
-cudgeled himself for a wooden fool who had been absolutely brutal to
-a defenseless woman who trusted him; he hated himself for the way
-he would not see her when she looked toward him; no wonder at last
-she stiffened, and now she absolutely avoided him! But, in a swift
-revulsion against his own softness he was instantly laying on the
-blows as lustily because of his incredible, pig-headed credulity. How
-absolutely simple the thing was! She _cared_ for this scoundrel of an
-Atkins who had first betrayed his employer and then tried to murder
-him. Very likely they had been half engaged down there in Virginia; and
-he had crawled out of his engagement; it would be quite like the cur!
-Later he found that just such a distinguished, charming woman, who had
-family and friends, was what he wanted; it would be easy enough for
-him to warm up his old passion, curse him! Then, he had met her and
-run in a bunch of plausible lies that had convinced her that he had
-been a regular angel in plain clothes; hadn’t done a thing to Cary or
-to her. Atkins was such a smooth devil! Winter could just picture him
-whining to the girl, putting his life in her hands and all that rot;
-and making all kinds of a tool of her--why, the whole hand was on the
-board! So she was ready to throw them all overboard to save Atkins from
-getting his feet wet. That was why she looked so pale and haggard of a
-morning sometimes, in spite of that ready smile of hers; that was why
-her eyes were so wistful; she wasn’t a false woman and she sickened of
-her squalid part. She loved Aunt Rebecca and Archie--all the same, she
-would turn them both down for him; while as to Rupert Winter, late of
-the United States army, a worn-out, lame, elderly idiot who had flung
-away the profession he loved and every chance of a future career in
-order to have his hands free to keep her out of danger--where were
-there words blistering enough for such puppy-dog folly! At this point
-in his jealous imaginings the pain in him goaded him into motion; he
-began furiously pacing the room, although his lame leg, which he had
-been using remorselessly all day, was sending jabs and twists of agony
-through him. But after a little he halted again before the casement
-window.
-
-The wide, darkening view; the great, silent city with its myriad
-lights; the shining mist of the bay; the foot-hills with their
-sheer, straw-colored streaks through the forests and vineyards; the
-illimitable depths of star-sown, violet sky--all these touched his
-fevered mood with a sudden calm. His unrest was quieted, as one whose
-senses are cooled by a running stream.
-
-“You hot-headed Southerner!” he upbraided himself, “don’t get up in the
-air without any real proof!”
-
-Almost in the flitting of the words through his brain he saw her. The
-white gown, which was her constant wear in the sick-room, defined her
-figure clearly against a clump of Japan plum-trees. Their purplish
-red foliage rustled; and an unseen fountain beyond made a delicate
-tinkle of water splashing a marble basin. Her face was hidden; only the
-moonlight gently drew the oval of her cheek. She was standing still,
-except that one foot was groping back and forth as if trying to find
-something. But, as he looked, his face growing tender, she knelt on the
-sod and pulled something out of the ground. This something she seemed
-to dust off with her handkerchief--he could not see the object, but he
-could see the flutter of the handkerchief; and when she rose the white
-linen partly hid the thing in her hand. Only partly, because when she
-passed around the terrace wall the glow from an electric lantern, in an
-arch, fell full upon her and burnished a long, thin blade of steel.
-
-He looked down on her from his unlighted chamber; and suddenly she
-looked up straight at the windows of the room where she thought he was
-sleeping; and smiled a dim, amused, weary, tender smile. Then she sped
-by, erect and light of foot; and the deep shadow of the great gateway
-took her. All he could see was the moonlight on the bluish green lawn;
-and the white electric light on the gleaming rubber-trees and dusty
-palms.
-
-He sat down. He clasped his hands over his knee. He whistled softly a
-little Spanish air. He laughed very gently. “My dear little girl,” said
-he, “I am going to marry you. You may be swindled into helping a dozen
-murderers; but I am going to marry you!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-THE REAL EDWIN KEATCHAM
-
-
-One Sunday after Mrs. Melville Winter and Archie came to Casa
-Fuerte, Mr. Keatcham sent for the colonel. There was nothing
-unusual in such a summons. From the beginning of his illness he had
-shown a curious, inexpressive desire for the soldier’s company.
-He would have him sit in the room, although too weak to talk to
-him, supposing he wished to talk, which was not at all sure. “I
-like-to-see-him-just-sitting-there,” he faltered to his nurse,
-“can’t-he-read-or-play-solitaire-like-the-old-lady?”
-
-Sometimes Winter would be conscious that the feeble creature in the
-bed, with the bluish-white face, was staring at him. Whether the glassy
-eyes beheld his figure or went beyond him to unfinished colossal
-schemes that might change the fate of a continent, or drifted backward
-to the poverty-stricken home, the ferocious toil and the unending
-self-denial of Keatcham’s youth on the Pacific slope, the dim gaze
-gave no clue. All that was apparent was that it was always on Winter,
-as he curled his legs under his chair, wrote or knitted his brow over
-rows of playing-cards.
-
-At the very first, Keatcham’s mind had wandered; he used to shrink
-from imaginary people who were in the room; he would try to talk to
-them, distressing himself painfully, for he was so weak that his nurses
-turned his head on the pillow; he would feebly motion them away.
-In such aberrations he would sometimes appeal, in a changed, thin,
-childish voice, to the obscure, toil-worn pioneer woman who had died
-while he was a lad. “Mother, I _was_ a good boy; I always got up when
-you called me, didn’t I? I helped you iron when the other boys were
-playing--mother, please don’t let that old woman stay and cry here!” Or
-he would plead: “Mother, tell her, say, _you_ tell her I didn’t know
-her son would kill himself--I couldn’t tell--he was a damn coward,
-anyhow--excuse me, mama, I didn’t mean to swear, but they make me so
-awful mad!” There was a girl who came, sometimes, from whose presence
-he shrank; a girl he had never seen; nor, indeed, had he ever known
-in the flesh any of the shapes which haunted him. They had lived; but
-never had his eyes fallen on them. Nevertheless, their presence was
-as real to him as that of the people about him whom he could hear and
-touch and see. It did not take Winter’s imagination long to piece
-out the explanation of these apparitions: they were specters of the
-characters in those dramas of ruthless conquest which Mercer had culled
-out of newspaper “stories” and affidavits and court reports and forced
-upon Keatcham’s attention. Miss Smith helped him to the solution,
-although her own ignorance of Mercer’s method was puzzling. “How did
-he ever know old Mrs. Ferris?” she said. “He called her Ferris and
-he talks about her funny dress--she always did wear a queer little
-basque and full skirt after all the world went into blouses--but how
-did _he_ ever come across her? They had a place on the James that had
-been in the family a hundred years and had to lose it on account of the
-Tidewater; and Nelson Ferris blew his brains out.”
-
-“Don’t you know how?” asked the colonel. “Well, I’ll tell you my guess
-sometime. Who is the girl who seems to make him throw a fit so?”
-
-“I’m not sure; I imagine it is poor Mabel Ray; there were two of them,
-sisters; they made money out of their Tidewater stock and went to New
-York to visit some kin; and they got scared when the stock fell and the
-dividends stopped; and they sold out at a great loss. They never did
-come back; they had persuaded all their kin to invest; and the stopping
-of the dividends made it difficult for some of the poor ones--Mabel
-said she couldn’t face her old aunts. She went on the stage in New
-York. She was very pretty; she wasn’t very strong. Anyway, you can
-imagine the end of the story. I saw her in the park last winter when
-Mrs. Winter was in New York; she turned her face away--poor Mabel!”
-
-Through Janet Smith’s knowledge of her dead sister’s neighbors, Winter
-got a dozen pitiful records of the wreckage of the Tidewater. “Mighty
-interesting reading,” he thought grimly, “but hardly likely to make the
-man responsible for them stuck on himself!” Then he would look at the
-drawn face on the pillow and listen to the babblings of the boy who had
-had no childhood; and the frown would melt off his brow.
-
-He did not always talk to his mother when his mind wandered; several
-times he addressed an invisible presence as “Helen” and “Dear” with an
-accent of tenderness very strange on those inflexible lips. When he
-talked to this phantasm he was never angry or distressed; his turgid
-scowl cleared; the austere lines chiseling his cheeks and brow faded;
-he looked years younger. But for the most part, it was to no unreal
-creature that he turned, but to Colonel Rupert Winter. He would address
-him with punctilious civility, but as one who was under some obligation
-to assist him, saying, for instance, “Colonel Winter, I must beg you
-not to let those persons in the room again. They annoy me. But you
-needn’t let Mercer know that. Please attend to it yourself, and get
-them away. Miss Smith says you will. Explain to them that when I get up
-I will investigate their claims. I’m too sick now!”
-
-Conscious and free from fever, he was barely able to articulate, but
-when delirious fancies possessed him he could talk rapidly, in a good
-voice. Very soon it was clear that he was calmer for the colonel’s
-presence. Hence, the latter got into the habit of sitting in the
-room. He would request imaginary ruined and desperate beings to leave
-Keatcham in peace; he would gravely rise and close the door on their
-departure. He never was surprised nor at a loss; and his dramatic nerve
-never failed. Later, as the visions faded, a moody reserve wrapped the
-sick man. He lay motionless, evidently absorbed by thought. In one way
-he was what doctors call a very good patient. He obeyed all directions;
-he was not restless. But neither was he ever cheerful. Every day he
-asked for his pulse record and his temperature and his respiration.
-After a consultation with the doctor, Miss Smith gave them to him.
-
-“It is against the rules,” grumbled the doctor, “but I suppose each
-patient has to make his own rules.” On the same theory he permitted the
-colonel’s visits.
-
-Therefore, with no surprise, Winter received and obeyed the summons.
-Keatcham greeted him with his usual stiff courtesy.
-
-“The doctor says I can have the--papers--will you pick
-out--the--one--day after I was stabbed.”
-
-Miss Smith indicated a pile on a little table, placed ready at hand. “I
-kept them for him,” she said.
-
-“Read about--the Midland,” commanded the faint, indomitable voice.
-
-“Want the election and the newspaper sentiments?” asked the colonel;
-he gave it all, conscious the while of Janet Smith’s compassionate,
-perplexed, sorrowful eyes.
-
-“Don’t skip!” Keatcham managed to articulate after a pause.
-
-The colonel gave him a keen glance. “Want it straight, without a
-chaser?”
-
-Keatcham closed his eyes and nodded.
-
-The colonel read about the virtually unanimous election of Tracy; the
-astonishment of the outsiders among the supposed anti-Tracy element;
-the composed and impenetrable front of the men closest to Keatcham; the
-reticence and amiability of Tracy himself, in whose mien there could
-be detected no hint either of hostility or of added cordiality toward
-the men who had been expected “to drag his bleeding pride in the dust;”
-finally of the response of the stock-market in a phenomenal rise of
-Midland.
-
-Keatcham listened with his undecipherable mask of attention; there was
-not so much as the flicker of an eyelid or the twitch of a muscle. All
-he said was: “Now, read if there is anything about the endowment of the
-new fellowships in some medical schools for experimental research.”
-
-“Who gives the endowment?”
-
-“Anonymous. In memory of Maria Warren Keatcham and Helen Bradford
-Keatcham. Find anything?”
-
-The colonel found a great deal about it. The paper was full of this
-munificent gift, amounting to many millions of dollars and filling
-(with most carefully and wisely planned details) an almost absolute
-vacuum in the American scheme of education. The dignity and fame of the
-chairs and fellowships endowed were ample to tempt the best ability of
-the profession. The reader grew enthusiastic as he read.
-
-“Why, it’s immense! And we have always needed it!” he exclaimed.
-
-“There are some letters about it, there,”--Keatcham feebly motioned
-to a number of neatly opened, neatly assorted letters on a desk. “The
-doctor said I might have the letters read to me. Miss Smith got him to.
-For fear of exciting you, the doctors usually let you worry your head
-off because you don’t know about things. I’ve got to carry a few things
-through if it kills me. Don’t you see?”
-
-“I see,” said the colonel, “you shall.”
-
-The next time he saw the financier, although only a few days had
-elapsed, he was much stronger; he was able to breathe comfortably, he
-spoke with ease, in his ordinary voice; in fine, he looked his old self
-again, merely thinner and paler. Hardly was the colonel seated before
-he said without preface--Keatcham never made approaches to his subject,
-regarding conversational road-making as waste of brains for a busy man:
-
-“Colonel, Miss Smith hasn’t time to be my nurse and secretary both. I
-won’t have one sent from New York; will you help her out?”
-
-The colonel’s lips twitched; he was thinking that were Miss Smith
-working for Atkins, she couldn’t have a better chance to make a
-killing. “But I’ll bet my life she isn’t,” he added; “she may be trying
-to save his life, but she isn’t playing his game!”
-
-He said aloud: “I will, Mr. Keatcham, if you will let me do it as part
-of the obligation of the situation; and there is no bally rot about
-compensation.”
-
-“Very well,” said Keatcham. He did not hesitate; it was (as the colonel
-had already discovered) the rarest thing in the world for him to
-hesitate; he thought with astonishing rapidity; and he formulated his
-answer while his interlocutor talked; before the speech was over the
-answer was ready. Another trait of his had struck the soldier, namely,
-the laborious correctness of his speech; it was often formal and
-old-fashioned; Aunt Rebecca said that he talked like Daniel Webster’s
-speeches; but it had none of the homely and pungent savor one might
-expect from a man whose boyhood had scrambled through miners’ camps
-into a San Francisco stock office; who had never gone to school in his
-life by daylight; who had been mine superintendent, small speculator
-and small director in California until he became a big speculator and
-big railway controller in New York.
-
-“You might begin on the morning mail,” Keatcham continued. “Let me sort
-them first.” He merely glanced at the inscriptions on the envelopes,
-opening and taking out one which he read rather carelessly, frowning a
-little before he placed it to one side.
-
-A number of the letters concerned the endowments of the experimental
-chairs at the universities. Keatcham’s attention was not lightened by
-any ray of pleasure. Once he said: “That fellow has caught my idea,”
-and once: “That’s right,” but there was no animation in his voice, no
-interest in his pallid face. Stealing a furtive scrutiny of it, now and
-then, Rupert Winter was impressed with its mystical likeness to that of
-Cary Mercer. There was no physical similarity of color or feature; it
-was a likeness of the spirit rather than the flesh. The colonel’s eyes
-flashed.
-
-“I have it!” he exclaimed within, “I have it; they are fanatics, both
-of them; Keatcham’s a fanatic of finance and Mercer is a fanatic of
-another sort; but fanatics they both are, ready to go any length for
-their principles or their ambitions or their revenge! _J’ai trouvé le
-mot d’énigme_, as Aunt Becky would say--I wonder what she’ll say to
-this sudden psychological splurge of mine.”
-
-“The business hour is up,”--it was Miss Smith entering with a bowl on a
-white-covered tray; the sun glinted the lump of ice in the milk and the
-silver spoon was dazzling against the linen--“your biscuit and milk,
-Mr. Keatcham. Didn’t you have it when you were a boy?”
-
-“I did, Miss Janet,”--and Keatcham actually smiled. “I used to think
-crackers and milk the nicest thing in the world.”
-
-“That is because you never tasted corn pone and milk; but you are going
-to.”
-
-“When you make it for me. I’m glad you’re such a good cook. It’s one of
-your ways I like. My mother was a very good cook. She could make better
-dishes out of almost nothing than these mongrel chefs can make with
-the whole world.”
-
-“I reckon she could,” said Miss Smith; she was speaking sincerely.
-
-“When my father didn’t strike pay dirt, my mother would open her bakery
-and make pies for the miners; she could make bread with potato yeast or
-‘salt-emptins’--can you make salt-rising bread?”
-
-“I can--shall I make you some, to-morrow?”
-
-“I’d like it. My mother used to make more money than my father;
-sometimes when we children were low in clothes and dad owed a bigger
-lot of money than usual, we had a laundry at our house as well as a
-bakery. Yet, in spite of all the work, my mother found time to teach
-all of us; and she knew how to teach, too; for she was principal of
-a school when my father married her. She was a New Englander; so was
-he; but they went West. We’re forty-niners. I saw the place where our
-little cloth-and-board shack used to stand. After the big fire, you
-know. It burned us all up; we had saved a good deal and my mother had a
-nice bakery. She worked too hard; it killed her. Work and struggle and
-losing the children.”
-
-“They died?” said Miss Janet.
-
-“Diphtheria. They didn’t know anything about the disease then. We
-all had it; and my little sister and both my brothers died; but I’m
-tough. I lived. My mother fell into what they called a decline. I was
-making a little money then--I was sixteen; but I couldn’t keep her from
-working. Perhaps it made no difference; but it did make a difference
-her not having the--the right kind of food. Nobody knew anything about
-consumption then. I used to go out in the morning and be afraid I’d
-find her dead when I got back. One night I did.” He stopped abruptly,
-crimsoning up to his eyes--“I don’t know why I’m telling you all this.”
-
-“I call that tough,”--as the colonel blurted out the words, he was
-conscious of a sense of repetition. When had he said those very same
-words before, to whom? Of all people in the world, to Cary Mercer.
-“Mighty tough,” murmured he softly.
-
-“Yes,” said Keatcham, “it was.” He did not say anything more. Neither
-did the colonel. Keatcham obediently ate his milk and biscuit; and very
-shortly the colonel took his leave.
-
-The next morning after an uneventful hour of sorting, reading and
-answering letters for Miss Smith to copy on the traveling type-writer,
-Keatcham gave his new secretary a sharp sensation; he ordered in his
-quiet but peremptory fashion: “Now put that trash away; sit down; tell
-me all you know of Cary--real name is Cary Mercer, isn’t it?”
-
-The colonel said it was; he asked him if he wanted everything.
-
-“Everything. Straight. Without a chaser,” snapped Keatcham.
-
-The colonel gave it to him. He began with his own acquaintance; he told
-about Phil Mercer; he did not slur a detail; neither did he underscore
-one; Keatcham got the uncolored facts. He heard them impassively,
-making only one comment: “A great deal of damage would be saved in this
-world if youngsters could be shut up until they had sense enough not
-to fool with firearms.” When Winter came to Mercer’s own exposition of
-his motives and his design if successful in his raid on the kings of
-the market, Keatcham grunted; at the end he breathed a noiseless jet of
-a sigh. “You don’t think Mercer is at all”--he tapped the side of the
-head.
-
-“No more than you are.”
-
-“Or you?”
-
-“Oh, well,” the colonel jested, “we all have a prejudice in favor of
-our own sanity. What I meant was that Mercer is a bit of a fanatic; his
-hard luck has--well, prejudiced him--”
-
-Keatcham’s cold, firm lips straightened into his peculiar smile, which
-was rather of perception than of humor.
-
-One might say of him--Aunt Rebecca Winter did say of him--that he saw
-the incongruous, which makes up for humor, but he never enjoyed it;
-possibly it was only another factor in his contempt of mankind.
-
-“Colonel,” said Keatcham, “do you think Wall Street is a den of
-thieves?”
-
-“I do,” said the colonel promptly. “I should like to take a machine gun
-or two and clean you all out.”
-
-Keatcham did not smile; he blinked his eyes and nodded. “I presume a
-good many people share your opinion of us.”
-
-“Millions,” replied the colonel.
-
-Again Keatcham nodded. “I thought so,” said he. “Of course you are all
-off; Wall Street is as necessary to the commonwealth as the pores to
-your skin; they don’t make the poison in the system any more than the
-pores do; they only let it escape. And I suppose you think that big
-financiers who control the trusts and the railways and--”
-
-“Us,” the colonel struck in, “well?”
-
-“You think we are thieves and liars and murderers and despots?”
-
-“All of that,” said the colonel placidly; “also fools.”
-
-“You certainly don’t mince your words.”
-
-“You don’t want me to. What use would my opinion be in a one-thousandth
-attenuation? You’re no homeopath; and whatever else you may be, you’re
-no coward.”
-
-“Yet, you think I surrendered to Mercer? You think I did it because I
-was afraid he would kill me? I suppose he would have killed me if I
-hadn’t, eh?”
-
-“He can speak for himself about that; he seems--well, an earnest sort
-of man. But I don’t think you gave in because you were afraid, if that
-is what you mean. You are no more afraid than he was! You wanted to
-live, probably; you had big things on hand. The Midland was only a
-trump in the game; you could win the odd trick with something else; you
-let the Midland go.”
-
-“Pretty close,”--Keatcham really smiled--“but there is a good deal
-more of it. I was shut up with the results of my--my work. He did
-it very cleverly. I had nothing to distract me. There were the big
-type-written pages about the foolish people who had lost their money,
-in some cases really through my course, mostly because they got scared
-and let go and were wiped out when, if they had had confidence in me
-and held on, they would be very much better off, now. But they didn’t,
-and they were ruined and they starved and took their boys out of
-college and mortgaged their confounded homes that had been in their
-families ever since Adam; and the old people died of broken hearts
-and the girls went wrong and some of the idiotic quitters killed
-themselves--it was not the kind of crowd you would want shut up with
-you in the dark! I was shut up with them. He had some sort of way of
-switching off the lights from the outside. I never saw a face or heard
-a voice. I would have to sit there in the dark after he thought I had
-read enough to occupy my mind. It--was unpleasant. Perhaps you suppose
-that brought me round to his way of thinking?”
-
-The colonel meditated. “I’ll tell you honestly,” he said after a pause,
-“I was of that opinion, or something of the kind, until I talked your
-case over with my aunt--”
-
-“The old dame is not a fool; what did she say?”
-
-“She said no, he didn’t convert you; but he convinced you how other
-people looked at your methods. You couldn’t get round the fact that a
-majority of your countrymen think your type of financier is worse than
-smallpox, and more contagious.”
-
-“Oh, she put it that way, did she? I wish she would write a prospectus
-for me. Well, you think she was nearer right than you?”
-
-“I think _you_ do; I myself think it was a little of both. You’ve
-got a heart and a conscience originally, though they have got pretty
-well tanned out in the weather; you didn’t want to be sorry for those
-people, but you are. They have bothered you a lot; but it has bothered
-you more to think that instead of going down the ages as a colossal
-benefactor and empire builder, you are hung up on the hook to see
-where you’re at; and where you _will_ be if the people get thoroughly
-aroused. You all are building bigger balloons when it ought to be you
-for the cyclone cellar! But _you_ are different. You can see ahead. I
-give you credit for seeing.”
-
-“Have you ever considered,” said Keatcham slowly, “that in spite
-of the iniquitous greed of the men you are condemning, in spite of
-their oppression of the people, the prosperity of the country is
-unparalleled? How do you explain it?”
-
-“Crops,” said the colonel; “the crops were too big for you.”
-
-“You might give _us_ a little credit--your aunt does. She was here
-to-day; she is a manufacturer and she comprehended that the methods of
-business can not be revolutionized without somebody’s getting hurt.
-Yet, on the whole, the change might be immensely advantageous. Now,
-why, in a nutshell, do you condemn us?”
-
-“You’re after the opinion of the average man, are you?”
-
-“I suppose so, the high average.”
-
-The colonel crossed his legs and uncrossed them again; he looked
-straight into the other’s eyes; his own narrowed with thought.
-
-“I’ll tell you,” said he. “I don’t know much about the Street or
-high finance or industrial development. I’m a plain soldier; I’m
-not a manufacturer and I’m not a speculator. I understand perfectly
-that you can’t have great changes without somebody’s getting hurt in
-the shuffle. It is beyond me to decide whether the new industrial
-arrangements with the stock-jobber on top instead of the manufacturer
-will make for better or for worse--but I know this; it is against the
-fundamental law to do evil that good may come. And you fellows in Wall
-Street, when, to get rich quick, you lie about stocks in order to buy
-cheap and then lie another way to sell dear; when you make a panic out
-of whole cloth, as you did in 1903, because, having made about all you
-can out of things going up, you want to make all you can out of them
-going down; when you play foot-ball with great railway properties and
-insurance properties, because you are as willing to rob the dead as the
-living; when you do all that, and when your imitators, who haven’t so
-much brains or so much decency as you, when _they_ buy up legislatures
-and city councils; and _their_ imitators run the Black Hand business
-and hold people up who have money and are not strong enough, they
-think, to hunt them down--why, not being a philosopher but just a plain
-soldier, I call it bad, _rotten_ bad. What’s more, I can tell you the
-American people won’t stand for it.”
-
-“You think they can help themselves?”
-
-“I know they can. You fellows are big, but you won’t last over night
-if the American people get really aroused. And they are stirring in
-their sleep and kicking off the bed-clothes.”
-
-“Yet you ought to belong to the conservatives.”
-
-“I do. That’s why the situation is dangerous. You as an old San
-Franciscan ought to remember how conservative was that celebrated
-Vigilance Committee. It is when the long-suffering, pusillanimous,
-conservative element gets fighting mad that something is doing.”
-
-“Maybe,” muttered Keatcham thoughtfully. “I believe we can manage for
-you better than you can for yourselves; but when the brakes are broken
-good driving can’t stop the machine; all the chauffeur can do is to
-keep the middle of the road. I like to be beaten as little as any of
-them; but I’m not a fool. Winter, you are used to accomplishing things;
-what is your notion of the secret?”
-
-“Knowing when to stop exhausting trumps, I reckon--but you don’t play
-cards.”
-
-“It is the same old game whatever you play,” said the railway king.
-He did not pursue the discussion; his questions, Winter had found,
-invariably had a purpose, and that purpose was never argument. He lay
-back on the big leather cushions of the lounge, his long, lean fingers
-drumming on the table beside him and an odd smile playing about the
-corners of his mouth; his next speech dived into new waters. He said:
-“Have those men from New York got Atkins, yet?”
-
-“They couldn’t find him,” answered the colonel. “I have been having
-him shadowed, on my own idea--I think he stabbed you, though I have no
-proof of it; I take it you have proof of your matter.”
-
-“Plenty,” said Keatcham. “I was going to send him to the pen in
-self-defense. It isn’t safe for me to have it creep out that my
-secretary made a fortune selling my secrets. Besides, I don’t want to
-be killed. You say they can’t find him?”
-
-“Seems to have gone to Japan--”
-
-“Seems? What do you mean?”
-
-“I am not sure. He was booked for a steamer; and a man under his name,
-of his build and color, did actually sail on the boat,” announced the
-colonel blandly.
-
-“Hmn! He’s right here in San Francisco; read that note.”
-
-Winter read the note, written on Palace Hotel note-paper, in a sharp,
-scrawling, Italian hand. The contents were sufficiently startling.
-
- Dear friend Hoping this find you well. Why do you disregard a true
- Warning? We did write you afore once for say you give that money or
- we shal be unfortunately compel to kill you quick. No? You laff. God
- knows we got have that twenty-five thousan dol. Yes. And now because
- of such great expence it is fifty thousan you shall pay. We did not
- mean kill you dead only show you for sure there is no place so secret
- you can Hide no place so strong can defend you. Be Warn. You come
- with $50000.00 in $100 bills. You go or send Mr. Mercer to the Red
- Hat; ask for Louis. Say to Louis For the Black Hand. Louis will say
- For the Black Hand. You follow him. No harm will come to you. You
- will be forgive all heretobefores. Elseways you must die April 15-20.
- _This is sure_. You have felt our dagger the other is worse.
-
- You well wishing Fren,
- The Black Hand.
-
-“Sounds like Atkins pretending to be a Dago,” said the colonel dryly.
-“I could do better myself.”
-
-“Very likely,” said Keatcham.
-
-“Does he mean business? What’s he after?”
-
-“To get me out of the way. He knows he isn’t safe until I’m dead. Then
-he hasn’t been cleaned out, but he has lost a lot of money in this
-Midland business. The cipher he has is of no use to him, there, or in
-the other things which unluckily he knows about. With me dead and the
-cipher in his hands, he could have made millions; even without the
-cipher, if he knows I’m dead before the rest of the world, he ought to
-make at least a half-million. I think you will find that he has put
-everything he has on the chance. I told you he was slick. And unstable.
-What do you anticipate he will do? Straight, with no chaser, as you
-say.”
-
-“Well, straight with no chaser, I should say a bomb was the meanest
-trick in sight, so, naturally, he will choose a bomb.”
-
-“I agree with you. You say the house is patrolled?”
-
-“The whole place. But we’ll put on a bigger force; I’ll see Birdsall
-at once. Atkins would have to hire his explosive talent, wouldn’t he?”
-questioned the colonel.
-
-“Oh, he knows plenty of the under-world rascals; and besides, for a
-fellow of his habits, there is a big chance for loot. Mrs. Millicent
-Winter tells me that your aunt has valuable jewels with her. If she
-told me, she may have told other people, and Atkins may know. He will
-use other people, but he will come, too, in my opinion.”
-
-“I see,” said the colonel; “to make sure they don’t foozle the bomb.
-But he’ll have his alibi ready all right. Mr. Keatcham, did they send
-you a previous letter?”
-
-“Oh, dear no; that’s only part of the game; makes a better story. So is
-using the hotel paper; if it throws suspicion on anybody it would be
-your party; you see Atkins knew Mercer had a grudge against me as well
-as him. He was counting on that. I rather wonder that he didn’t fix up
-some proof for you to find.”
-
-“By Jove!” cried the colonel; “maybe he did.”
-
-“And you didn’t find it?”
-
-“Well, you see I was too busy with you; the others must have overlooked
-it. Hard on Atkins after he took so much trouble, wasn’t it?”
-
-“I told you he was too subtle. But it is not wise to underrate him, or
-bombs either; we must get the women and those boys out of the house.”
-
-“But how? You are not really acquainted with my aunt, Mrs. Rebecca
-Winter, I take it.”
-
-“You think she wouldn’t go if there was any chance of danger?”
-
-“You couldn’t fire her unless out of a cannon; but she would help get
-Archie away; Mrs. Melville and Miss Smith--”
-
-“Well--ur--Miss Smith, I am afraid, will not be easy to manage; you
-see, she knows--”
-
-“Knows? Did you tell her?” asked Colonel Winter anxiously.
-
-“Well, not exactly. As the children say, it told itself. There has been
-a kind of an attempt, already. A box came, marked from a man I know in
-New York, properly labeled with express company’s labels. Miss Smith
-opened it; I could see her, because she was in the bath-room with the
-door open. There was another box inside, wrapped in white tissue paper.
-Very neatly. She examined that box with singular care and then she drew
-some water in the lavatory basin, half opened the box and put the whole
-thing under water in the basin. Then I thought it was time for me and
-I asked her if it was a bomb. Do you know that girl had sense enough
-not to try to deceive me? She saw that I had seen every move she had
-made. She said merely that it was safe under water. It was an ingenious
-little affair which had an electrical arrangement for touching off a
-spark when the lid of the box would be lifted.”
-
-“Ah, yes. Thoughtful little plan to amuse an invalid by letting him
-open the box, himself, to see the nice surprises from New York. Very
-neat, indeed. What did you do with the box?”
-
-“Nothing, so far. It only came about an hour ago.”
-
-“Do you reckon some of the Black Hands are out on the street, rubbering
-to see if there are any signs of anything doing?”
-
-“Perhaps; you might let Birdsall keep a watch for anything like that.
-But they hear, somehow; there is a leak somewhere in our establishment.
-It is not your aunt; she can hold her tongue as well as use it; the
-boy, Archie, does not know anything to tell--”
-
-“He wouldn’t tell it if he did,” interrupted the colonel; and very
-concisely but with evident pride he gave Archie’s experience in the
-Chinese quarter.
-
-Keatcham’s comment took the listener’s breath away; so far afield was
-it and so unlike his experience of the man; it was: “Winter, a son like
-that would be a good deal of a comfort, wouldn’t he?”
-
-“Poor little chap!” said Winter. “He hasn’t any father to be proud of
-him--father and mother both dead.”
-
-Keatcham eyed Winter thoughtfully a moment, then he said: “You’ve been
-married and lost children, your aunt says. That must be hard. But--did
-you ever read that poem of James Whitcomb Riley’s to his friend whose
-child was dead? It’s true what he says--they were better off than he
-‘who had no child to die.’”
-
-Rupert was looking away from the speaker with the instinctive
-embarrassment of a man who surprises the deeper feelings of another.
-He could see out of the window the lovely April garden and Janet Smith
-amid the almond blossoms. Only her shining black head and her white
-shoulders and bodice rose above the pink clusters. She looked up and
-nodded, seeing him; her face was a little pale, but she was smiling.
-
-“I don’t know,” he said, “it’s hard enough either way for a man.”
-
-“I never lost any children”--Keatcham’s tone was dry, still, but it
-had not quite the former desiccated quality--“but I was married, for a
-little while. If it’s as bad to lose your children as it is to lose the
-hope of having them, it must be hard. You lost your wife, too?”
-
-“Yes,” said Rupert Winter.
-
-At this moment he became conscious that Keatcham was avoiding his gaze
-in the very manner of his avoiding of Keatcham’s a moment ago; and it
-gave him a bewildering sensation.
-
-“I wanted to marry my wife for seven years before we were married,”
-Keatcham continued in that carefully monotonous voice. “She was the
-daughter of the superintendent of the mine where I was working. I
-was only eighteen when I first saw her. I was twenty-five when we
-were married. She used to give me lessons; she was educated and
-accomplished. She did more than is easy telling, for me. Of course, her
-parents were opposed at first because they looked higher for her, but
-she brought them round by her patience and her sweetness and her faith
-in me. Six months after we were married, she had an accident which left
-her a helpless invalid in a wheeled chair, at the best; at the worst,
-suffering--you’ve known what it is to see anybody, whom you care for,
-in horrible pain and trying not to show it when you come near?”
-
-“I have,” said Winter; “merry hell, isn’t it?”
-
-“I have seen that expression,” said Keatcham; “I never recognized
-its peculiar appropriateness before. Yes, it is that. Yet, Winter,
-those two years she lived afterwards were the happiest of my whole
-life. She said, the last night she was with me, that they had been
-the happiest of hers.” The same flush which once before, when he had
-seemed moved, had crept up to his temples, burned his hollow cheeks.
-He was holding the edge of the table with the tips of his fingers and
-the blood settled about the nails with the pressure of his grip. There
-was an intense moment during which Winter vainly struggled to think of
-something to say and looked more of his sympathy than he was aware;
-then: “Cary Mercer needn’t think that he has had all the hard times in
-the world!” said Keatcham in his usual toneless voice, relaxing his
-hold and leaning back on his pillows. The color ebbed away gradually
-from his face.
-
-“I don’t wonder you didn’t marry again,” said Winter.
-
-“You would not wonder if you had known Helen. She always understood.
-Of course, now, at sixty-one, I could buy a pretty, innocent, young
-girl who would do as her parents bade her, and cry her eyes out before
-the wedding, or a handsome and brilliant society woman with plenty of
-matrimonial experience--but I don’t want them. I should have to explain
-myself to them; I don’t know how to explain myself; you see I can’t
-half do it--”
-
-“I reckon I understand a little.”
-
-“I guess you do. You are different, too. Well, let’s get down to
-business, think up some way of getting the women out of the house; and
-get your sleuths after Atkins. It is ‘we get him, or he gets us!’”
-
-The amateur secretary assented and prepared to go, for the valet was
-at the door, ready to relieve him; but opposite Keatcham, he paused a
-second, made a pretense of hunting for his hat, picked it up in his
-left hand and held out the right hand, saying, “Well, take care of
-yourself.”
-
-Keatcham nodded; he shook the hand with a good firm pressure. “Much
-obliged, Winter,” said he.
-
-“Well,” meditated the soldier as he went his way, “I never did think to
-take that financial bucaneer by the hand; but--it wasn’t the bucaneer,
-it was the real Edwin Keatcham.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-IN WHICH THE PUZZLE FALLS INTO PLACE
-
-
-While the colonel was trying to decipher his tragical puzzle, while
-Edwin Keatcham was busied with plans that affected empires and
-incidentally were to save and to extinguish some human lives, while
-Janet Smith had her own troubles, while Mrs. Rebecca Winter enjoyed
-a game more exciting and deadly than Penelope’s Web, Mrs. Millicent
-Winter and the younger people found the days full of joyous business.
-The household had fallen into normal ways of living. Although the
-secret patrol watched every rod of approach to the house, the espial
-was so unobtrusive that guests came and went, tradesmen rattled
-over the driveways; the policemen, themselves, slumbered by day and
-loitered majestically by night without the Casa Fuerte portals, never
-suspecting. Little Birdsall had his admirable points; they were now in
-evidence. To all outward seeming, a pleasant house-party was enjoying
-the lavish Californian hospitality of Casa Fuerte; and Black Care was
-bundled off to the closet with the family skeleton, according to the
-traditions of mannerly people. Arnold had opened his garage and his
-stables. There was bridge of an evening; and the billiard-balls clinked
-on the pool-table. Archie could now back the electric motor into almost
-any predicament. The new Chinese chef was a wonder and Tracy was
-initiating him into the possibilities of the Fireless, despite a modest
-shrinking on the part of the oriental artist who considered it to be a
-new kind of bomb.
-
-Millicent, encouraged by Arnold, had had Mrs. Wigglesworth and two
-errant Daughters, whose husbands were state regents for Melville’s
-university, to luncheon and to dinner; the versatile Kito donning a
-chauffeur’s livery and motoring them back to the city in the Limousine,
-on both occasions; all of which redounded to Millicent’s own proper
-glory and state.
-
-Indeed, about this time, Millicent was in high good humor with her
-world. Even Janet Smith was no longer politely obliterated as “the
-nurse,” but became “our dear Miss Janet”; and was presented with
-two of Mrs. Melville’s last year’s Christmas gifts which she could
-not contrive to use; therefore carried about for general decorative
-generosity. One was a sage-green linen handkerchief case, quite fresh,
-on which was etched, in brown silk, the humorous inscription: “WIPE
-ME BUT DO NOT SWIPE ME!” The other was a white celluloid brush-broom
-holder bedecked with azure forget-me-nots enframing a complicated
-monogram which might just as well stand for J. B. B. S. (Janet Byrd
-Brandon Smith) as for M. S. W. (Millicent Sears Winter) or any other
-alphabetical herd. These unpretending but (considering their source)
-distinguished gifts she bestowed in the kindest manner. Janet was no
-doubt grateful; she embroidered half a dozen luncheon napkins with Mrs.
-Melville’s monogram and crest, in sign thereof; and very prettily,
-she being a skilful needle-woman. On her part, Mrs. Mellville was so
-pleased that she remarked to her brother-in-law, shortly after, that
-she believed Cousin Angela’s sisters hadn’t been just to Miss Smith;
-she was a nice girl; and if she married (which is quite possible,
-insinuated Mrs. Melville archly), she meant to give a tea in her honor.
-
-“Now, that’s right decent of you, Millie,” cried the colonel; and he
-smiled gratefully after Mrs. Melville’s beautifully fitted back. Yet a
-scant five minutes before he had been pursuing that same charming back
-through the garden terraces, in a most unbrotherly frame, resolved to
-give his sister-in-law a “warning with a fog-horn.” The cause of said
-warning was his discovery of her acquaintance with Atkins. For days
-a bit of information had been blistering his mind. It came from the
-girl at the telegraph office at the Palace, not in a bee-line, but
-indirectly, through her chum, the girl who booked the theater tickets.
-It could not be analyzed properly because the telegraph girl was gone
-to Southern California. But before she went she told the theater girl
-that the lady who received Mr. Makers’ wires was one of Mrs. Winter’s
-party! This bit of information was like a live coal underfoot in the
-colonel’s mind; whenever he trod on it in his mental excursions he
-jumped.
-
-“Who else but Janet?” he demanded. But by degrees he became first
-doubtful, then daring. He had Birdsall fetch the telegraph girl back
-to San Francisco. A ten minutes’ interview assured him that it was his
-brother’s wife who had called for Mr. Makers’ messages, armed with Mr.
-Makers’ order.
-
-Aunt Rebecca was not nearly so vehement as he when he told her. She
-listened to his angry criticism with a lurking smile and a little shrug
-of her shoulders.
-
-“Of course she has butted in, as you tersely express it, in the
-language of this mannerless generation; Millicent always butts in. How
-did she get acquainted with this unpleasant, assassinating, poor white
-trash? My dear child, _she_ didn’t probably; he made an acquaintance
-with her. He pumped her and lied to her. We know he wanted to find
-out Mr. Keatcham’s abode; he may have got his clue from her; she knew
-young Arnold had been to see him. There’s no telling. I only know
-that in the interest of keeping a roof over our heads and having our
-heads whole instead of in pieces from explosives, I butted in a few
-days ago when somebody wanted Mrs. Melville Winter on the telephone.
-I answered it. The person asked if I was Mrs. Melville Winter; it
-was a strange man’s voice. I don’t believe in Christian Science or
-theosophy or psychics, but I do believe I felt in my bones that here
-was an occasion to be canny rather than conscientious. You know I
-can talk like Millicent--or anybody else; so I intoned through the
-telephone in her silken Anglican accents, ‘Do you want Mrs. Melville
-Winter or Aunt Rebecca, _Madam_ Winter?’ I hate to be called Madam
-Winter, and she knows it, but Millicent is catty, you know, and she
-always calls me Madam Winter behind my back. The fellow fell into the
-trap at once--recognized the voice, I dare say, and announced that
-it was Mr. Makers; Mr. Atkins, who had left for Japan, had not been
-able to pay his respects and say good-by; but he had left with him an
-embroidered Chinese kimono for Professor Winter, whom he had admired
-so much; and if it wouldn’t be too much trouble for her to pay a visit
-to her friend--one of those women she had to luncheon, who’s at the
-St. Francis--he would like to show her several left by Mr. Atkins, for
-her to select one. Then in the most casual way, he asked after Mr.
-Keatcham’s health. I believed he was improving; had had a very good
-night. I fancy it didn’t please him, but he made a good pretense. Then
-he went off into remarks about its being such a pity Mr. Atkins had
-left Mr. Keatcham; but he was so conscientious, a Southern gentleman
-I knew; yet he really thought a great deal still of Mr. Keatcham,
-who had many fine qualities; only on account of the unfortunate
-differences--Atkins was so proud and sensitive; he was anxious to hear,
-but not for the world would he have any one know that he had inquired;
-so would I be very careful not to let any one know he had asked. Of
-course I would be; I promised effusively; and said I quite understood.
-I think I _do_, too.”
-
-“They are keeping tab on us through Millicent,” fumed the colonel. “I
-dare say she gave it away that Arnold was visiting Keatcham at the
-hotel; and it wouldn’t take Atkins long to piece out a good deal more,
-especially if his spy overheard Tracy’s ’phone. Well, I shall warn
-Millicent--with a fog-horn!”
-
-The way he warned Millicent has been related. But from Millicent he
-deflected to another subject--the impulse of confession being strong
-upon him. He freed his mind about the stains on Cary Mercer’s cuffs;
-and, when at last he sought Millicent he was in his soul praising
-his aunt for a wise old woman. After justice was disarmed by his
-miscomprehension of Millicent’s words, he took out his cigarette case
-and began pacing the garden walks, smoking and humming a little
-Spanish love song, far older than the statehood of California.
-
- _La noche está serena, tranquilo el aquilon;
- Tu dulce centinella te guarda el corazon.
- Y en al as de los céfiros, que vagan par doquier,
- Volando van mis suplicas, á ti, bella mujer!
- Volando van mis suplicas, á ti, bella mujer!_
-
- _De un corazon que te ama, recibe el tierno amor;
- No aumentes mas la llama, piedad, á an trobador.
- Y si te mueve á lastima eterno padecer,
- Como te amo, amama, bellissima mujer!
- Como te amo, amama, bellissima mujer!_[B]
-
-The words belonged to the air which he had whistled a weary week ago.
-Young Tracy came along, and caught up the air, although he was innocent
-of Spanish; he had his mandolin on his arm; he proffered it to the
-colonel.
-
-“Miss Janet has been singing coon-songs to his nibs, who is really
-getting almost human,” he observed affably; “well, a little patience
-and interest will reveal new possibilities of the Fireless Stove! In
-man or metal. Shall we get under his nibs’ window and give him the
-_Bedouin Love Song_ and _I Picked Me a Lemon in the Garden of Love_ and
-the Sextette from _Lucia_ and other choice selections? He seemed to be
-sitting up and taking notice; let’s lift him above the sordid thoughts
-of Wall Street and his plans for busting other financiers.”
-
-The soldier gave this persiflage no answer; his own thoughts were far
-from gay. He stood drinking in the beauty of the April night. The air
-was wonderfully hushed and clear; and the play of the moonlight on
-the great heliotrope bushes and the rose-trees, which dangled their
-clusters of yellow and white over the stone parapets of the balconies,
-tinted the leafage and flickered delicately over the tracery of shadow
-on the gray walls. Not a cloud flecked the vast aërial landscape--only
-stars beyond stars, through unfathomable depths of dim violet, and
-beneath the stars a pale moon swimming low in the heavens; one could
-see it between the spandrels of the arches spanning the colonnade.
-
-“Looks like a prize night-scene on the stage, doesn’t it?” said Tracy.
-“Jolly good shadows--and aren’t these walls bulging out at the bottom
-bully? I used to know the right name for such architectural stunts
-when I was taking Fine Arts Four--dreadful to neglect your educational
-advantages and then forget all the little you didn’t neglect, ain’t it?
-I say, get on to those balconies--that isn’t the right word for the
-mission style, I guess; but never mind; aren’t they stunning? Do you
-see the ladies up there? Is that Archie sniggering? What do you think
-of the haunted house, _now_, Colonel?”
-
-Tracy’s gay eyes sought the other’s gaze to find it turn somber.
-Winter couldn’t have told why; but a sudden realization of the hideous
-peril dogging the warm, lighted, tenanted house, submerged him and
-suffocated him like a foul gas. Let their guards be vigilant as fear,
-let their wonderful new search-light flood rock and slope and dusky
-Chaparral bush; and peer as it might through the forest aisles beyond;
-yet--yet--who could tell!
-
-But he forced an equal smile in a second for the college boy; and
-chatted easily enough as they climbed up the stepped arches to the
-balcony and the little group looking seaward.
-
-Aunt Rebecca in black lace and jewels was tilting with the world in
-general and Millicent Winter in particular; she displayed her most
-cynical mood. She had demolished democracy; had planted herself firmly
-on the basic doctrine that the virtues cultivated by slavery far
-outnumber its inseparable vices; and that most people, if not all,
-need a master; had been picturesquely and inaccurately eloquent on the
-subject of dynamite (which she pronounced the logical fourth dimension
-of liberty, fraternity and equality); had put the yellow rich where
-they belonged; and the red anarchists mainly under the sod; and she
-had abolished the Fourth of July to the last sputter of fire-cracker;
-thence by easy transitions she had extolled American art (which
-American patrons were too ignorant to appreciate), deplored American
-music (“The trouble isn’t that it is _canned_,” says she, “but that it
-was spoiled before they canned it!”) and was now driving a chariot of
-fire through American literature; as for the Academics, they never said
-what they thought, but only what they thought they ought to think; and
-they always mistook anemia for refinement, as another school mistook
-yelling and perspiring for vigor.
-
-Just as Winter modestly entered the arena, no less a personage than
-Henry James was under the wheels. Janet Smith had modestly confessed to
-believing him a consummate artist; and Millicent in an orotund voice
-declared that he went deep, deep down into the mysteries of life.
-
-“I don’t deny it; he _ought_ to get down deep,” returned Aunt Rebecca
-in her gentlest, softest utterance; “he’s always boring.”
-
-Mrs. Melville’s suppressed agitation made her stays creak.
-
-“Do you really think that James is not a great artist?” she breathed.
-
-“I think he is not worth while.”
-
-“Wow!” cried Tracy. “Oh, I say--”
-
-“Aunt Rebecca; you can not mean--” this was Mrs. Melville, choking with
-horror.
-
-“His style,” repeated the unmoved iconoclast, “his style has the
-remains of great beauty; all his separate phrases, if you wish, are
-gems; and he is a literary lapidary; but his sentences are so subtle,
-so complex, so intricately compounded, and so discursive that I get a
-pain in the back of my neck before I find out what he _may_ mean; and
-then--I don’t agree with him! Now is it worth while to put in so much
-hard reading only to be irritated?”
-
-“I beg pardon,” Winter interposed, with masculine pusillanimity evading
-taking sides in the question at issue, “I thought we were going to have
-some music; why don’t you boys give us some college songs? Here is a
-mandolin.”
-
-Aunt Rebecca’s still luminous eyes went from the speaker to Janet
-Smith in the corner. She said something about hearing the music better
-from the other side of the balcony. Now (as Mrs. Millicent very truly
-explained) there was not a ha’pennyworth’s difference in favor of one
-side over the other; but she followed in the wake of her imperious aunt.
-
-The colonel drew nearer to Janet Smith; in order to sink his voice
-below disturbing the music-lovers he found it necessary to sit on a
-pile of cushions at her feet.
-
-“Did you know Mercer will be back to-night?” he began, a long way from
-his ultimate object. He noticed that leaning back in the shadow her
-ready smile had dropped from her face, which looked tired. “I want to
-tell you a little story about Mercer,” he continued; “may I? It won’t
-take long.”
-
-He was aware, and it gave him a twinge of pain to see it, that she
-sat up a little straighter, like one on guard; and oh, how tired her
-face was and how sweet! He told her of all his suspicions of her
-brother-in-law; of the blood-stains and the changing of clothes; she
-did not interrupt him by a question, hardly by a motion, until he told
-of the conversation with Keatcham and the note signed “The Black Hand.”
-At this her eyes lighted; she exclaimed impetuously: “Cary Mercer never
-_did_ send that letter!” She drew a deep intake of breath. “I don’t
-believe he touched Mr. Keatcham!”
-
-“Neither do I,” said the colonel, “but wait!” He went on to the theater
-girl’s report of the receiver of the telegrams. Her hands, which
-clasped her knee, fell apart; her lips parted and closed firmly.
-
-“Did I think it was you?” said he. “Why, yes, I confess I did fear it
-might be and that you might be trying to shield Atkins.”
-
-“I!” she exclaimed hotly; “that detestable villain!”
-
-“_Isn’t_ he?” cried the colonel. “But--well, I couldn’t tell how he
-might strike a lady,” he ended lamely.
-
-“I reckon he _would_ strike a lady if she were silly enough to marry
-him and he got tired of her. He is the kind of man who will persecute a
-girl to marry him, follow her around and importune her and flatter her
-and then, if he should prevail, never forgive her for the bother she
-has given him. Oh, I never _did_ like him; I’m afraid of him--awfully.”
-
-“Not you?”--the colonel’s voice was cheerful, as if he had not shivered
-over his own foreboding vision. “I’ve seen you in action already, you
-know.”
-
-“Not fighting bombs. I hate bombs. There are so many pieces to hit you.
-You can’t run away.”
-
-“Well, you’ll find them not so bad; besides, you _did_ fight one this
-very morning, and you were cool as peppermint!”
-
-“That was quite different; I had time to think, and the danger was more
-to me than to any one else; but to think of Mrs. Winter and Archie and
-y-- all of you; that scares me.”
-
-“Now, don’t let it get on your nerves,” he soothed--of course it is
-necessary to take a girl’s hand to soothe her when she is frightened.
-But Miss Smith calmly released her hand, only reddening a little; and
-she laughed. “Where--where were we at?” she asked in her unconscious
-Southern phraseology.
-
-“Somewhere around Atkins, I think,” said the colonel; he laughed in his
-turn,--he found it easy to laugh, now that he knew how she felt toward
-Atkins. “You see, after I talked with Keatcham I couldn’t make anything
-but Atkins out of the whole business. But there were those stained
-cuffs and his changing his clothes--”
-
-“Yes,” said she.
-
-“How explain? There was only one explanation: that was, that perhaps
-Mercer had discovered Keatcham before we did, unconsciously spotted
-his cuffs, been alarmed by our approach and hidden, lest it should be
-the murderers returning. He might have wanted a chance to draw his
-revolver. Say he did that way, he might foolishly pretend to enter
-for the first time. If he made that mistake and then discovered the
-condition of his cuffs and the spots on his knee, what would be his
-natural first impulse? Why, to change them, trusting that they hadn’t
-been noticed. Maybe, then, he would wash them out--”
-
-“No,” murmured Miss Smith meekly, with a little twinkle of her eye;
-“_I_ did that; he hid them. How ridiculous of me to get in such a
-fright! But you know how Cary hated Mr. Keatcham; and you--no, you
-don’t know the lengths that such a temperament as his will go. I did
-another silly thing: I found a dagger, one of those Moorish stilettoes
-that hang in the library; it was lying in the doorway. When no one
-was looking I hid it and carried it off. I stuck it in one of the
-flower-beds; I stuck it in the ferns; I have stuck that wretched thing
-all over this yard. I didn’t dare carry it back and put it in the empty
-place with the others because some one might have noticed the place.
-And I didn’t dare say anything to Cary; I was right miserable.”
-
-“So was I,” said the colonel, “thinking you were trying to protect the
-murderer. But do you know what I had sense to do?”
-
-“Go to Mrs. Winter? Oh, I _wanted_ to!”
-
-“Exactly; and do you know what that dead game sport said to me? She
-said she found those washed and ironed cuffs and the trousers neatly
-cleaned with milka--what’s milka?--and the milka cleaned the spots so
-much cleaner than the rest that she had her own suspicions started. But
-says she, ‘Not being a plumb idiot, I went straight to Cary and he told
-me the whole story--’”
-
-“Which was like _your_ story?”
-
-“Very near. And you see it would be _like_ Atkins to leave
-incriminating testimony round loose. That is, incriminating testimony
-against Mercer and Tracy. The dagger, Tracy remembers, was not in the
-library; it was in the _patio_. Right to hand. Atkins must have got in
-and found Mr. Keatcham on the floor in a faint. Whether he meant to
-make a bargain with him or to kill him, perhaps we shall never know;
-but when he saw him helpless before him he believed his chance was come
-to kill him and get the cipher key, removing his enemy and making his
-fortune at a blow, as the French say. _Voilà tout!_”
-
-“Do you think”--her voice sank lower; she glanced over her
-shoulder--“do you reckon _Atkins_ had anything to do with that train
-robbery? Was it a mere pretext to give a chance to murder Mr. Keatcham,
-fixing the blame on ordinary bandits?”
-
-“By Jove! it might be.”
-
-“I don’t suppose we shall ever know. But, Colonel Winter, do you mind
-explaining to me just what Brother Cary’s scheme with Mr. Keatcham was?
-Mrs. Winter told me you would.”
-
-“She told _me_,” mused the colonel, “that you didn’t know anything
-about this big game which has netted them millions. They’ve closed
-out their deals and have the cash. No paper profits for Auntie! She
-said that she would not risk your being mixed up in it; so kept you
-absolutely in the dark. I’m there, too. Didn’t you know Mercer had
-kidnapped Archie?”
-
-“No; I didn’t know he was with Mr. Keatcham at the hotel. It would have
-saved me a heap of suffering; but she didn’t dare let me know for fear,
-if anything should happen, I would be mixed up in it. It was out of
-kindness, Colonel Winter, truly it was. Afterward when she saw that I
-was worried she gave me hints that I need not worry, Archie was quite
-safe.”
-
-“And the note-paper?”
-
-“I suppose she gave it to them,” answered Miss Smith.
-
-“And the voice I heard in the telephone?” He explained how firmly she
-had halted the conversation the time Archie would have reassured him.
-“You weren’t there, of course?” said he.
-
-“No, I was down-stairs in the ladies’ entrance of the court in
-the hotel; I had come in a little while before, having carried
-an advertisement to the paper; I wonder why she--maybe it was to
-communicate with them without risking a letter.”
-
-“But how did _your_ voice get into my ’phone?” he asked.
-
-She looked puzzled only a second, then laughed as he had not heard her
-laugh in San Francisco--a natural, musical, merry peal, a girlish laugh
-that made his heart bound.
-
-“Why, of course,” said she, “it is so easy! There was a reporter who
-insisted on interviewing Mrs. Winter about her jewelry; and I was
-shooing him away. Somehow the wires must have crossed.”
-
-“Do you remember--this is very, very pretty, don’t you think? Just like
-a puzzle falling into place. Do you remember coming here on the day
-Archie was returned?”
-
-“I surely do; my head was swimming, for Mrs. Winter sent me and I began
-then to suspect. She told me Brother Cary was in danger; of course I
-wanted to do anything to help him; and I carried a note to him. I
-didn’t go in, merely gave the note and saw him.”
-
-“_I_ saw you.”
-
-“You? How?”
-
-“Birdsall and I; we were here, in the _patio_; we, my dear Miss Janet,
-were the Danger! You had on a brown checked silk dress and you were
-holding a wire clipper in your hand.”
-
-“Yes, sir. I saw it on the grass and picked it up.”
-
-She laughed a little; but directly her cheeks reddened. “What must you
-have thought of me!” she murmured under her breath; and bit the lip
-that would have quivered.
-
-“I should like to tell you--_dear_,” he answered, “if you will--O Lord,
-forgive young men for living! If they are not all coming back to ask me
-to sing! But, Janet, dear, let me say it in Spanish--yes, _yes_ if you
-really won’t be bored; throw me that mandolin.”
-
-Aunt Rebecca leaned back in the arm-chair, faintly smiling, while the
-old, old words that thousands of lovers have thrilled with pain and
-hopes and dreams beyond their own power of speech and offered to their
-sweethearts, rose, winged by the eternal longing:
-
- “_Y si te mueve á lastima mi eterno padecer,
- Como te amo, amame, bellissima mujer!
- Como te amo, amame, bellissima mujer!_”
-
-“And what does it mean in English, Bertie?” said Mrs. Melville. “Can’t
-you translate it?”
-
-“Shall I?” said the colonel, his voice was careless enough, but not so
-the eyes which looked up at Janet Smith.
-
-“Not to-night, please,” said she. “I--I think Mr. Keatcham is expecting
-me to read to him a little. Good night. Thank you, Colonel Winter.”
-
-She was on her feet as she spoke; and Winter did not try to detain her;
-he had held her hand; and he had felt its shy pressure and caught a
-fleeting, frightened, very beautiful glance. His dark face paled with
-the intensity of his emotion.
-
-Janet moved away, quietly and lightly, with no break in her composure;
-but as she passed Mrs. Winter she bent and kissed her. And when Archie
-would have run after her a delicate jeweled hand was laid on his arm.
-“Not to-night, laddie; I want you to help me down the steps.”
-
-With her hand on the boy’s shoulder she came up to Rupert, and inclined
-her handsome head in Janet’s direction. “I think, by rights, that kiss
-belonged to you, _mon enfant_,” said she.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-CASA FUERTE
-
-
-Winter would have said that he was too old a man to stay awake all
-night, when he had a normal temperature; yet he saw the stars come
-out and the stars fade on that fateful April night. He entered his
-room at the hour when midnight brushes the pale skirts of dawn and
-misguided cocks are vociferating their existence to an indifferent
-world. Before he came there had been a long council with Mercer and
-his aunt. Mercer, who had been successful in his mission, had barely
-seen his chief for a moment before a gentle but imperious nurse ordered
-him away. Winter caught a queer, abrupt laugh from the financier. The
-latter beckoned to him. “See you are as obedient as I am when your time
-comes,” he chuckled; and he chuckled again when both the soldier and
-Miss Smith blushed over his awkward jocoseness. Yet, the next moment
-he extended his hand with his formal, other-generation courtesy and
-took Miss Janet’s shapely, firm fingers in his own lean and nervous
-grasp. “Allow me to offer you both my sincere congratulations,” began
-he, and halted, his eyes, which seemed so incurious but were so keen,
-traveling from the woman’s confusion to the man’s. “I beg your pardon;
-I understood--Archie who was here, gave me to understand--and I heard
-you singing; you will hardly believe it, but years ago _I_ sang that to
-my wife.”
-
-“So far as I am concerned, it _is_ settled,” said the colonel steadily.
-
-“We are all,” Keatcham continued, no longer with any trace of
-embarrassment, as he touched the hand which he still held with his
-own other hand, “we are all, as you know, my dear young lady, in
-considerable personal peril; I regret that it should be on my account;
-but it really is not my fault; it is because I will not relax my
-pursuit of a great scoundrel who is dangerous to all decent people. But
-being in such danger, I think you will be glad afterward if you are
-generously frank, and give up something of the sex’s prerogative to
-keep a lover on the anxious seat. Excuse me if--if I presume on my age
-and my privileges as a patient.”
-
-Janet lifted her sweet eyes and sent one glance as fleeting and light
-as the flash of a bird’s wing. “I--I--reckon it is settled,” murmured
-she; but immediately she was the nurse again. “Mr. Keatcham, you are
-staying awake much too late. Here is Colvin, who will see to anything
-you want. Good night.”
-
-It was then that Mr. Keatcham had taken the colonel’s breath away by
-kissing Janet’s hand; after which he shook hands with the colonel with
-a strange new cordiality, and watched them both go away together with a
-look on his gaunt face unlike any known to Colvin.
-
-Only three minutes in the hall, with the moon through the arched
-window; and his arm about her and the fragrance of her loosened hair
-against his cheek and her voice stirring his heartstrings with an
-exquisite pang. Only time for the immemorial questions of love: “Are
-you sure, dear, it is really _I?_” and “When did you first--” To this
-last she had answered with her half-humorous, adorable little lilt of
-a laugh. “Oh, I reckon it was--a--little--all along, ever since I read
-about your saving that poor little Filipino boy, like Archie; the one
-who was your servant in Manila, and going hungry for him on the march
-and jumping into the rapids to save him--when you were lame, too--”
-
-Here the colonel burst in with a groan: “Oh, that monstrous newspaper
-liar! The ‘dear little Filipino boy’ was a married man; and I didn’t go
-hungry for him, and I didn’t jump into the river to save him. It wasn’t
-more than wading depth--I only swore at him for an idiot and told him
-to _walk_ out when he tipped over his boat and was floundering about.
-And he _did_! He was the limit as a liar--”
-
-To his relief, the most sensible as well as the most lovable woman in
-the world had burst into a delicious fit of laughter; and returned:
-“Oh, well, you _would_ have jumped in and saved him if the water had
-been deep; it wasn’t _your_ fault it was shallow!” And just at this
-point Mercer and Aunt Rebecca must needs come with a most unusual
-premonitory racket, and Janet had fled.
-
-Afterward had come the council. All the coil had been unraveled.
-Birdsall appeared in person, as sleek, smiling and complacent over his
-blunders as ever. One of his first sentences was a declaration of trust
-in Miss Smith.
-
-“I certainly went off at half-cock there,” said he amiably; “and just
-because she was so awful nice I felt obliged to suspect her; but I’ve
-got the real dog that killed the sheep this time; it’s sure the real
-Red Wull!” It appeared that he had, of a verity, been usefully busy.
-He had secured the mechanic who had given Atkins a plan of the secret
-passages of Casa Fuerte. He had found the policeman who had arrested
-Tracy (he swore because he was going too fast) and the magistrate
-who had fined him; and not only that, he had captured the policeman,
-a genuine officer, not a criminal in disguise, who had been Atkins’
-instrument in kidnapping Archie. This man, whom Birdsall knew how to
-terrify completely, had confessed that it was purely by chance that
-Atkins had seen the boy, left outside in the motor-car. Atkins, so
-he said, had pretended that the boy was a tool of some enemies of
-Keatcham’s, whose secretary he was, trading, not for the only time, on
-his past position. In reality, Birdsall had come to believe Atkins knew
-that Keatcham was employing Mercer in his place.
-
-“Why, he knew the old gentleman was just off quietly with Mr. Mercer
-and some friends; knew they were all friendly, just as well as you
-or me,” declared Birdsall. He had seen Archie on the train, for, as
-the colonel remembered, he had been in the Winters’ car on the night
-of the robbery. Somehow, also, Atkins had found out about Archie’s
-disappearance from the hotel.
-
-“I can’t absolutely put my finger on his information,” said Birdsall;
-“but I _suspect_ Mrs. Melville Winter; I know she was talking to him,
-for one of my men saw her. The lady meant no harm, but she’s one of the
-kind that is always slamming the detectives and being took in by the
-rascals.”
-
-He argued that Mrs. Winter and Miss Smith knew where the boy was; for
-some reason they had let him go and were pretending not to know where
-he was. “Ain’t that so?” the detective appealed to Aunt Rebecca, who
-merely smiled, saying: “You’re a wonder, Mr. Birdsall!” According to
-Birdsall’s theory, Atkins was puzzled by Archie’s part in the affair.
-But he believed could he find the boy’s present hosts he would find
-Edwin Keatcham. It would not be the first time Keatcham had hidden
-himself, the better to spin his web for the trapping of his rivals.
-That Mercer was with his employer the ex-secretary had no manner of
-doubt, any more than he doubted that Mercer’s scheme had been to
-oust him and to build his own fortunes on Atkins’ ruin. He knew both
-Tracy and young Arnold very well by sight. When he couldn’t frighten
-Archie into telling anything, probably he went back to his first plan
-of shadowing the Winter party at the Palace. He must have seen Tracy
-here. He penetrated his disguise. (“He’s as sharp as the devil, I tell
-you, Colonel.”) He either followed him himself or had him followed;
-and he heard about the telephone. (“Somebody harking in the next room,
-most likely.”) Knowing Tracy’s intimacy with Arnold it was not hard
-for so clever and subtle a mind as Atkins’ to jump to the conclusion
-and test it in the nearest telephone book. (“At least that is how _I_
-figure it out, Colonel.”) Birdsall had traced the clever mechanic who
-was interrogated by the Eastern gentleman about to build; this man
-had given the lavish and inquisitive Easterner a plan of the secret
-passages--to use in his own future residence. Whether Atkins went alone
-or in company to the Casa Fuerte the detective could only surmise. He
-couldn’t tell whether his object would be mere blackmail, or robbery
-of the cipher, or assassination. Perhaps he found the insensible man
-in the _patio_ and was tempted by the grisly opportunity; victim and
-weapon both absolutely to his hand; for it was established that the
-dagger had been shown Tracy by Mercer as a curio, and left on the
-stone bench.
-
-Perhaps he had not found the dagger, but had his own means to make
-an end of his enemy and his own terror. Birdsall believed that he
-had accomplices, or at least one accomplice, with him. He conceived
-that they had lain in ambush watching until they saw Kito go away.
-Then an entry had been made. “Most like,” Birdsall concluded, “he
-jest flung that dagger away for you folks to find and suspect the
-domestics, say Kito, ’cause he was away.” But this was not all that
-Birdsall had to report. He had traced Atkins to the haunts of certain
-unsavory Italians; he had struck the trail, in fine. To be sure, it ran
-underground and was lost in the brick-walled and slimy-timbered cellars
-of Chinatown which harbored every sin and crime known to civilization
-or to savagery. What matter? By grace of his aunt’s powerful friend
-they could track the wolves even through those noisome burrows.
-
-“Yes,” sighed the colonel, stretching out his arms, with a resonant
-breath of relief, “we’re out of the maze; all we have to do now is to
-keep from being killed. Which isn’t such a plain proposition in ’Frisco
-as in Massachusetts! But I reckon we can tackle it! And then--then, my
-darling, I shall dare be happy!”
-
-He found himself leaning on his window-sill and staring like a boy on
-the landscape, lost in the lovely hallucinations of moonlight. It was
-no scene that he knew, it was a vision of old Spain; and by and by from
-yonder turret the princess, with violets in her loosened hair and her
-soft cheek like satin and snow, would lean and look.
-
- _Y si te mueve á lastima mi eterno padecer.
- Como te amo, amame, bellissima mujer!_
-
-“Ah, no, little girl,” he muttered with a shake of the head, “I like
-it better to have you a plain, American gentlewoman, as Aunt Becky
-would say, who could send me to battle with a nice little quivery
-smile--_sweetheart_! Oh, I’m not good enough for you, my dear, my
-dear.” He felt an immense humility as he contrasted his own lot with
-the loneliness of Keatcham and Mercer and the multitude of solitaries
-in the world, who had lost, or sadder still, had never possessed, the
-divine dream that is the only reality of the soul. As such thoughts
-moved his heart, suddenly in the full tide of hope and thankfulness,
-it stood still, chilled, as if by the glimpse of an iceberg in summer
-seas. Yet how absurd; it was only that he had recalled his stoical
-aunt’s most unexpected touch of superstition. Quite in jest he had
-asked her if she felt any presentiments or queer things in her bones
-to-night. He expected to be answered that Janet had driven every other
-anxiety out of her mind; and how was she to break it to Millicent?--or
-with some such caustic repartee. Instead, she had replied testily:
-“Yes, I _do_, Bertie. I feel--horrid! I feel as if something out of the
-common awful were going to happen. It isn’t exactly Atkins, either. Do
-you reckon it could be the _I Suey When_, that bamboo-shoots mess we
-had for dinner?”
-
-Although they spent a good twenty minutes after that, joking over
-superstitions, and he had repeated to her some of Tracy’s and Arnold’s
-most ingenious “spooky stunts,” to make the neighborhood keep its
-distance from Casa Fuerte, and they had laughed freely, she as heartily
-as he, nevertheless he divined that her smile was a pretense. Suddenly,
-an unruly tremor shook his own firm spirits. Looking out on the stepped
-and lanterned arches of the wing, he was conscious of the same tragic
-endowment of the darkened pile, which had oppressed him that night,
-weeks before, when he had stood outside on the crest of the hill;
-and the would-be murderers might have been skulking in the shadows of
-the pepper-trees. He tried vainly to shake off this distempered mood.
-Although he might succeed for a moment in a lover’s absorption, it
-would come again, insidiously, seeping through his happiness like a
-fume. After futile attempts to sleep he rose, and still at the bidding
-of his uncanny and tormenting impulse he took his bath and dressed
-himself for the day. By this time the ashen tints of dawn were in his
-chamber and on the fields outside. He stood looking at the unloveliest
-aspect of nature, a landscape on the sunless side, before the east
-is red. The air felt lifeless; there were no depths in the pale sky;
-the azure was a flat tint, opaque and thin, like a poor water-color.
-While he gazed the motionless trees, live-oaks and olives and palms,
-were shaken as by a mighty wind; the pepper plumes tossed and streamed
-and tangled like a banner; the great elms along the avenue bent over
-in a breaking strain. Yet the silken cord of the Holland window-shade
-did not so much as swing. There was not a wing’s breath of air. But
-gradually the earth and cloud vibrated with a strange grinding noise
-which has been described a hundred times, but never adequately; a
-sickening crepitation, as of the rocks in the hills scraping and
-splintering. Before the mind could question the sound, there succeeded
-an anarchy of uproar. In it was jumbled the crash of trees and
-buildings, the splintering crackle of glass, the boom of huge chimneys
-falling and of vast explosions, the hiss of steam, the hurling of
-timbers and bricks and masses of stone or sand, and the awful rush of
-frantic water escaping from engine or main.
-
-“’Quake, sure’s you’re born!” said the colonel softly.
-
-Now that his invisible peril was real, was upon him, his spirits leaped
-up to meet it. He looked coolly about him, noting in his single glance
-that the house was standing absolutely stanch, neither reeling nor
-shivering; and that the chimney just opposite his eye had not misplaced
-a brick. In the same instant he caught up his revolver and ran at his
-best pace from the room. The hall was firm under his hurrying feet. As
-he passed the great arched opening on the western balcony he saw an
-awful sight. Diagonally across from Casa Fuerte was the great house of
-the California magnate who did not worry his contractor with demands
-for Colonial honesty of workmanship as well as Colonial architecture.
-The stately mansion with its beautiful piazzas and delicate harmony of
-pillar and pediment, shone white and placid on the eye for a second;
-then rocked in ghastly wise and collapsed like a house of cards.
-Simultaneously a torchlike flame streamed into the air. A woeful din of
-human anguish pierced the inanimate tumult of wreck and crash.
-
-“Bully for Casa Fuerte!” cried the soldier, who now was making a
-frenzied speed to the other side of the house. He cast a single glance
-toward the door which he knew belonged to Janet’s room; and he thought
-of the boy, but he ran first to his old aunt. He didn’t need to go the
-whole way. She came out of her door, Janet and Archie at her side.
-They were all perfectly calm, although in very light and semi-oriental
-attire. Archie plainly had just plunged out of bed. His eyes were
-dancing with excitement.
-
-“This house is a dandy, ain’t it, Uncle Bertie?” he exclaimed. “Mr.
-Arnold told me all about the way his father built it; he said it
-wouldn’t bat its eye for an earthquake. It didn’t either; but that
-house opposite is just kindling-wood! Say! here’s Cousin Cary;
-and--look, Uncle Bertie, Mr. Keatcham has got up and he’s all dressed.
-Hullo, Colvin! Don’t be scared. It’s only a ’quake!” Colvin grinned a
-sickly grin and stammered, “Yes, sir, quite so, sir.” Not an earthquake
-could shake Colvin out of his manners.
-
-“Are you able to do this, Mr. Keatcham?” young Arnold called
-breathlessly, plunging into the _patio_ to which they had all
-instinctively gravitated. Keatcham laughed a short, grunting laugh.
-“Don’t you understand, this is no little every-day ’quake? Look out! Is
-there a way you can look and not see a spout of flame? I’ve got to go
-down-town. Are the machines all right?”
-
-“We must find Randall; the poor soul has a mortal terror of ’quakes--”
-Aunt Rebecca’s well-bred accents were unruffled; she appeared a thought
-stimulated, nothing more; danger always acted as tonic on Winter
-nerves--“Archie, you go put your clothes on this minute, honey. And I
-suppose we ought to look up Millicent.”
-
-The colonel, however, had barely set foot on the threshold when Mrs.
-Melville appeared, propelling Randall, whom she had rescued from the
-maid’s closet where she was cowering behind her neat frocks, momently
-expecting death, but decently ready for it in gown and shoes. Mrs.
-Melville herself, in the disorder of the shock, had merely added her
-best Paris hat and a skeleton bustle to her dainty nightgear. She had
-not forgotten her kimono; she had only forgotten to don it; and it
-draggled over her free arm. But her dignity was intact. The instant she
-beheld her kindred she demanded of them, as if they were responsible,
-whether _this_ was a sample of the Californian climate. Keatcham
-blushed and fled with Colvin and the giggling Arnold and Archie, who
-were too polite to giggle.
-
-Mrs. Winter put on her eye-glasses. “Millicent,” said she in the
-gentlest of tones, “your bustle is on crooked.”
-
-One wild glance at the merciless mirror in the carved pier-glass did
-Mrs. Melville give, and, then, without a word, she fled.
-
-“Randall,” said Mrs. Winter, “you look very nice; come and help me
-dress. There will most likely be some more shocks.”
-
-Randall, trembling in every limb, but instinctively assuming a composed
-mien, followed the undaunted old lady.
-
-The colonel was going in another direction, having heard a telephone
-bell. He was most anxious to put himself into communication with
-Birdsall, because not even during the earthquake had he forgotten an
-uglier peril; and it had occurred to him that Atkins was of a temper
-not to be frightened by the convulsions of order; but rather to make
-his account of it. Nor did the message through the telephone tend to
-reassure him.
-
-The man at the other end of the telephone was Birdsall. No telling how
-long the telephone service would keep up, he reported; wires were down
-around the corner; worse, the water mains were spouting; and from where
-he stood since he felt the first shock he had counted thirty-six fires.
-Ten of them were down in the quarter where some of his men had homes;
-and a field-glass had shown that the houses were all tossed about
-there; he couldn’t keep his men steady; it seemed inhuman to ask them
-to stay when their wives and children might be dying; of course it was
-his damn luck to have all married men from down there.
-
-“Well, I reckon you will have to let them go; but watch out,” begged
-the colonel, “for you know the men we are after will take advantage of
-general disorder to get in their dirty work. Now is the most dangerous
-time.”
-
-Birdsall knew it; he had had intimations that some men were trying to
-sneak up the hill; they had been turned back. They pretended to be
-some wandering railway workers; but Birdsall distrusted them. He--No
-use to ring! Vain to tap the carriage of the receiver! The telephone
-was dead, jarred out of existence somewhere beyond their ken.
-
-By this time the cold sunlight of the woefulest day that San Francisco
-had ever seen was spread over the earth. The city was spotted with
-blood-red spouts of flames. The ruin of the earthquake had hardly been
-visible from their distance, although it was ugly enough and of real
-importance; but, even in the brief space which they in Casa Fuerte
-had waited before they should set forth, fires had enkindled in all
-directions, most dreadful to see; nor did there seem to be any check
-upon them.
-
-Tracy had waked the domestic staff, and, dazed but stoical, they were
-getting breakfast. But Keatcham could not wait; he was in a cold fury
-of haste to get to the town.
-
-He had consented to wait for his breakfast under Miss Smith’s
-representation that it would be ready at once and her assurance that he
-couldn’t work through the day without it.
-
-“Happily, Archie,” explained Tracy, whose unquenchable college
-levity no earthquake could affect, “happily my domestic jewel has
-been stocked up with rice and oatmeal, two of the most nutritious of
-foods; and Miss Janet is making coffee on her traveling coffee pot for
-the Boss. That’s alcohol, and independent of gas-mains. Lucky; for
-the gas-range is out of action, and we have to try charcoal. Notice
-one interesting thing, Archie? Old Keatcham, whom we were fighting
-tooth and nail three weeks ago, is now bossing us as ruthlessly as a
-foot-ball coach; and Cousin Cary is taking his slack talk as meek as
-a freshman. Great old boy, Keatcham! And--oh, I say! has any one gone
-to the rescue of the Rogerses? I saw Kito speeding over that way from
-the garage and Haley hiking after him. I hope the nine small yellow
-domestics are not burned at the stake with Rogers; the bally fire-trap
-is blazing like a tar-barrel!”
-
-As it happened, the colonel had despatched a small party to their
-neighbor’s aid. Haley and Kito were not among them; they were to guard
-the garage which was too vital a point in their household economy to
-leave unprotected. Nevertheless, Haley and Kito did both run away,
-leaving a Mexican helper to watch; and when they returned they were
-breathless and Haley’s face was covered with blood. He was carefully
-carrying something covered with a carriage-robe in his hand.
-
-“I’ve the honor to report, sir,” Haley mumbled, stiff and straight in
-his military posture, a very grimy and blood-stained hand at salute,
-“I’ve the honor to report, sor, that Private Kito and me discovered two
-sushpicious characters making up the hillside by the sekrut road. We
-purshooed thim, sor, and whin they wu’dn’t halt we fired on thim, sor,
-ixploding this here bum which wint off whin the hindmost man tumbled.”
-
-Kito smilingly flung aside the carriage-robe, disclosing the still
-smoking shell of an ingenious round bomb, very similar to those used in
-fireworks.
-
-The colonel examined it closely; it was an ugly bit of dynamite craft.
-
-“Any casualties, Sergeant?” the colonel asked grimly.
-
-“Yes, sor. The man wid the bum was kilt be the ixplosion; the other
-man was hit by Private Kito and wounded in the shoulder but escaped. I
-mesilf have a confusion on me right arrum, me ankle is sprained; and
-ivery tooth in me head is in me pockit! That’s all.”
-
-“Report to Miss Smith at the hospital, Sergeant. Any further report?”
-
-“I wu’d like to riccommind Private Kito for honorable minshun for
-gallanthry.”
-
-“I shall certainly remember him; and you also, Sergeant, in any report
-that I may make. Look after the garage, Kito.”
-
-Kito bowed and retired, beaming, while Haley hobbled into the house.
-The consequences of the attack made on the garage did not appear at
-once. One was that young Arnold had already brought the touring-car
-into the _patio_ in the absence of Haley and Kito. Another was that
-he and Tracy and Kito all repaired to the scene of the explosion to
-examine the dead man’s body. They returned almost immediately, but for
-a few moments there was no one of the house in the court. The colonel
-went to Keatcham in a final effort to dissuade him from going into
-the city until after he himself had gone to the Presidio and returned
-with a guard. He represented as forcibly as he could the danger of
-Keatcham’s appearance during a time of such tumult and lawlessness.
-
-“We are down to the primeval passions now,” he pleaded. “Do you suppose
-if it had been Haley instead of that dago out there who was killed
-that we could have punished the murderer? Not unless we did it with
-our own hands. They are maybe lying in wait at the first street-corner
-now. If you will only wait--”
-
-Keatcham chopped off his sentence without ceremony, not irritably, but
-with the brusquerie of one whose time is too precious for dilatory
-amenities.
-
-“Will the _fire_ wait?” he demanded. “Will the thieves and toughs and
-ruffians whom we have to crush before they realize their strength,
-will _they_ wait? This is _my_ town, Winter, the only town I care a
-rap for; and I propose to help save it. I can. Danger? Of course there
-is danger; there is danger in every battle; but do you keep out of
-battles where you belong because you may get killed? This is my affair;
-if I get killed it is in the way of business, and I can’t help it! No,
-Arnold, I won’t have your father’s son mixed up in my fights; you can’t
-go.”
-
-“Somebody has to run the machine, sir,” insinuated young Arnold with a
-coaxing smile; “and I fancy I shouldn’t be my father’s son if I didn’t
-look after my guest--not very long; he’d cut me out. Tracy is going,
-too, he’s armed--”
-
-“You are not both going,” said the colonel; “somebody with a head on
-him must stay here to guard the ladies.”
-
-He would have detailed both Tracy and Mercer; but Mercer could really
-help Keatcham better than any one in any business arrangements which
-might need to be made. And Keatcham plainly wished his company. Had
-not the situation been so grimly serious Winter could have laughed
-at the grotesque reversal of their conditions; Tracy and Arnold did
-laugh; they were all taking their orders from the man who had been
-their defeated prisoner a little while back. Mercer alone kept his
-melancholy poise; he had obtained the aim of years; he was not sure but
-his revenge was subtler and completer than he had dared to hope. Being
-a zealot he was possessed by his dreams. Suppose he had converted this
-relentless and tremendous power to his own way of faith; what mightn’t
-he hope to accomplish? Meanwhile, so far as the business in hand was
-concerned, he believed in Keatcham and in Keatcham’s methods of help;
-he bowed to the innate power of the man; and he was as simply obedient
-and loyal as Kito would have been to his feudal lord.
-
-In a very brief time all the arrangements were made; the four men went
-into the _patio_ to enter the touring-car. They walked up to the
-empty machine. The colonel stepped into the front seat of the machine.
-Something in the noise of the engine which was panting and straining
-against its control, some tiny sibilant undertone which any other ear
-would have missed, warned his; he bent quickly. A dark object gyrated
-above the heads of the other two just mounting the long step; it landed
-with a prodigious splash in the fountain, flying into a multitude of
-sputtering atoms and hurling a great column of water high up in air.
-Unheeding its shrieking clamor, the soldier sprang over the side of
-the car, darted through the great arched doorway out upon the terrace
-toward a clump of rubber-trees. He fired; again he fired.
-
-In every catastrophe the spectators’ minds lose some parts of the
-action. There are blanks to be supplied by no one. Every one of the
-men and women present on that fatal morning had a different story.
-Colvin was packing; he could only remember the deafening roar and
-the shouting; and when he got down-stairs and saw--he turned deadly
-sick; his chief impression is the backs of people and the way their
-hands would shake. Janet Smith, inside, dressing Haley’s wounds, was
-first warned by the tumult and cries; she as well as Archie and Haley
-who were with her could see nothing until they got outside. All Mrs.
-Melville saw was the glistening back of the car and Mercer stepping
-into the car and instantly lurching backward. The explosion seemed
-to her simultaneous with Mercer’s entering the car. But Mrs. Rebecca
-Winter, who perhaps had the coolest head of all, and who was standing
-on the dais of the arcade exactly opposite the car, distinctly saw
-Keatcham with an amazing exertion of vigor for a man just risen from a
-sick-bed, and with a kind of whirling motion, literally hurl Mercer out
-of the car. She is sure of this because of one homely little detail,
-sickening in its very homeliness. As he clutched Mercer Keatcham’s
-soft gray hat dropped off and the light burnished the bald dome of his
-head. In the space of that glance she heard a crackle and a roar and
-Kito screamed in Japanese, running in from the carriage side. She can
-not tell whether Tracy or Arnold reached the mangled creature on the
-pavement first. Arnold only remembers how the carriage-robe flapped in
-Tracy’s shaking hands before he flung it over the man. Tracy’s fair
-skin was a streaky, bluish white, and his under jaw kept moving up and
-down like that of a fish out of water, while he gasped, never uttering
-a sound.
-
-Young Arnold was trembling so that his hands shook when he would have
-raised the wounded man. Mercer alone was composed although deathly
-pale. He had the presence of mind to throw the harmless fragments of
-the bomb into the fountain and to examine the interior of the car lest
-there should be more of destruction hidden therein. Then he approached
-the heap on the flags; but Keatcham was able to motion him away, saying
-in his old voice, not softened in the least: “Don’t you do that! I’m
-all in. No use. They got me. But it won’t do them any good; you boys
-know that will you witnessed; it gives a fifty thousand for the arrest
-and conviction or the killing of Atkins; his own cutthroats will betray
-him for that. But--where’s Winter? You damn careless fools didn’t let
-_him_ get hurt?”
-
-“Shure, sor, he didn’t let himsilf git hurted,” Haley blurted out; he
-had run in after Miss Smith, brandy bottle in hand; “’tis the murdering
-dagoes is gettin’ hurted off there behind the big rubber-trees; I kin
-see the dead legs of thim, this minnit. ’Tis a grand cool shot the
-colonel is, sor.”
-
-“Bring him in, let them go; they were only tools,” panted Keatcham
-weakly; but the brandy revived him; and his lips curled in a faint
-smile as Janet Smith struck a match to heat the teaspoonful of water
-for her hypodermic. “Make it good and strong, give me time to say
-something to Mercer and Winter--there he comes; good runners those boys
-are!”
-
-[Illustration: He kept death at bay by the sheer force of his will.
-Page 368]
-
-Tracy and Arnold, acting on a common unspoken impulse, had dashed after
-Winter and were pushing him forward between them. Keatcham was nearly
-spent, but he rallied to say the words in his mind. He kept death at
-bay by the sheer force of his will. When Winter knelt down beside him,
-with a poignant memory of another time in the same place when he had
-knelt beside a seemingly dying man, and gently touched the unmarred
-right hand lying on the carriage-robe, he could still form a smile
-with his stiff lips and mutter: “Only thing about me isn’t in tatters;
-of course you touched it and didn’t try to lift me where I’m all in
-pieces. You always understood. Listen! You, too, Mercer. Winter knows
-the things I’m bound to have go through. I’ve explained them to him.
-You’ll be my executors and trustees? A hundred thousand a year; not too
-big a salary for the work--you can do it. It’s a bigger job than the
-army one, Winter. Warnebold will look after the other end. He’s narrow
-but he is straight. I’ve made it worth his while. Some loose ends--it
-can’t be helped now. Maybe you’ll find out there are more difficulties
-in administering a big fortune than you fancied; and that it isn’t the
-easiest thing in the world helping fools who can’t ... help themselves.
-There are all those Tidewater idiots ... made me read about ... you’ll
-have to attend to them, Mercer ... old woman in the queer clothes ...
-chorus girl ... those old ladies who had one egg between them for
-breakfast ... you’ll see to them all?”
-
-“Yes,” said Mercer, looking down on the shrunken features with a look
-of pain and bewilderment. “Yes, suh, I’ll do my best.”
-
-“And--we’re even?”
-
-“I reckon I am obliged to call it so, suh,” returned Mercer with a
-long, gasping sigh, “but--my Lord! you’d better have let _me_ go!”
-
-“Very likely,” said Keatcham dryly, “the city needs me. Well, Winter,
-you must look after that. I’ve been thinking why a man throws his life
-away as I did; he _has_ to, unless he’s a poltroon. He can’t count
-whether he’s more useful than the one he saves ... he has simply _got_
-to save him ... you were a good deal right, Winter, about not doing the
-evil thing to get the good. No, it’s a bad time for me to be taken; but
-it’s an honorable discharge.... Helen will be glad ... you know I’m not
-a pig, Winter ... do what I tried to do ... where’s my kind nurse?”
-Janet was trying by almost imperceptible movements to edge a pillow
-under his shoulders; he was past turning his head, but his eyes moved
-toward her. “I’ve left you ... a wedding gift ... if I lived ... given
-to you; but made it safe, anyhow. Mercer?”
-
-His voice had grown so feeble and came in such gasps from his torn
-and laboring chest that Mercer bent close to his lips to hear the
-struggling sentences. “Mercer,” he whispered, “I want ... just ... to
-tell you ... _you didn’t convert me_!”
-
-Thus, having made amends to his own will, having also, let us humbly
-hope, made amends to that greater and wiser Will which is of more
-merciful and wider vision that our weakness can comprehend, Edwin
-Keatcham very willingly closed his eyes on earth.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-EXTRACT FROM A LETTER
-
-
-From Mrs. Rebecca Winter to Mrs. John S. G. Winslow,
-
- Fairport, Iowa.
-
- * * * * *
-
-And it was delightful to discover that you were so distressed about
-me. I must be getting a trifle maudlin in my old age, for I have had a
-lump in my throat every time I have thought of Johnny and you actually
-starting out to find me; I am thankful my telegram (Please, Peggy, do
-not call it a _wire_ again--to me! I loathe these verbal indolences)
-reached you at Omaha in time to stop you.
-
-Really, we have not had hardships. Thanks to Israel Putnam Arnold!
-I have a very admiring gratitude for that man! In these days of
-degeneracy he builded a stanch enduring house. With union labor, too! I
-don’t see how he contrived to do it. Generally, when they build houses
-here, they scamp the underpinning and weaken the joists and paint over
-the dirt instead of washing it off; and otherwise deserve to be killed.
-The unfortunate man opposite had just that kind of house, which tumbled
-down and burned up, at once; but, alas! it killed some of the people in
-it, not the guilty masons and carpenters.
-
-Our chimneys have been inspected and we are now legally as well as
-actually sound; but we did not suffer. We cooked out on the sidewalk,
-and supplemented our cooking with young Tracy’s stove.
-
-I told you of Janet’s engagement. Confidentially, my dear Peggy, I
-am a bit responsible. They met by chance on the train; and I assure
-you, although chance might have parted us, I did not let it. I clung
-to Nephew Bertie. I’m sure he wondered why. I knew better than to let
-him suspect. But a success you can’t share is like a rose without a
-smell. So I confess to you, _I_ have made this match. But when you see
-Millicent she will tell you that _she_ helped things along. She has
-abused Janet like a pickpocket; but now, since she has discovered Janet
-didn’t draw the Daughters’ caricature of her, she regards her as one of
-the gems of the century.
-
-We are recovering from the terrible events of which we wrote. It
-is certainly a relief that Atkins is killed. He was one of the two
-scoundrels who sneaked into the _patio_ and put the bombs into the
-automobile. Bertie shot him. You have no doubt heard all about Mr.
-Keatcham’s death. He was killed by the man whose wickedness he had
-unconsciously fostered. He did not know it, but I make no doubt his
-swollen fortune and the unscrupulous daring of its acquiring had a
-great influence in corrupting his secretary.
-
-And his corruption was his master’s undoing. I must say I sympathize
-with young Tracy, who said last night: “I feel as if I had been put
-to soak in crime! That bomb was the limit. In future, me for common
-or garden virtue; it may be tame but I prefer tameness to delirium
-tremens!”
-
-I used to think that I should like to match my wits against a
-first-class criminal intellect; God forgive me for the wish! I have
-been matching wits for the last month; and never putting on my shoes
-without looking in them for a baby bomblet or feeling a twinge of
-indigestion without darkly suspecting the cook--who is really the
-best creature in the world, sent Mr. Arnold by a good Chinese friend
-of mine. (I had a chance to do a good turn to my friend, by the way,
-during the earthquake and thus repay some of his to me.)
-
-Archie is well and cheerful. Isn’t it like the Winter temperament
-to lose its melancholy in such horrors as we have seen? Archie is
-distinctly happier since he came to California. As for Janet and
-Rupert--oh, well, my dear, you and Johnny _know_! The house has been
-full of people, and we have had several friends of our own for a day
-or two. I got a recipe for a delicious tea-cake from Mrs. Wigglesworth
-of Boston. She didn’t save anything but her furs and her kimono and a
-bridge set, besides what she had on; she packed her trunk with great
-care and nobody would take it down-stairs. Of course she saved her bag
-of jewels, which reminds me that poor Mr. Keatcham left Janet some
-pearls--that is, the money for them. He was very much attached to her.
-
-We buried him on the crest of the hill; later, when more settled times
-shall come, he may take another and last journey to that huge mausoleum
-where his wife and mother are buried. Poor things! it is to be hoped
-they had no taste living or else that they can’t see now how hideous
-and flamboyant is their last costly resting place. But if Keatcham
-hadn’t a taste for the fine arts he had compensating qualities. I shall
-never forget the night of his burial. It was a “wonderful great night
-of stars,” as Stevenson says. A poor little tired-out clergyman, in a
-bedraggled surplice, who had been reading prayers over people for the
-last ten hours and was fit to drop, hurried through the service; and
-the town the dead man loved was flaming miles beyond miles. About the
-grave was none of his blood, none of his ancient friends, but the men
-I believe he would have chosen--men who had fought him and then had
-fought for him faithfully. They were haggard and spent with fighting
-the fire; and they went from his burial back to days and nights of
-desperate effort. He had fought and lost and yet did not lose at the
-last, but won, snatching victory out of defeat as he was wont to do
-all his life. The heavy burdens which have dropped from his shoulders
-these others whom he chose will carry, maybe more humbly, perhaps not
-so capably, but quite as courageously. And it is singular how his
-influence persists, how it touches Kito and Haley, as well as the
-others.
-
-“Shure,” said honest Haley (whose wit you are likely to sample in the
-near future, for he has elected to be the Rupert Winters’ chauffeur;
-they don’t know it yet, but they _will_ when it is time); “shure,” says
-he, “whin thot man so mashed up there ye cudn’t move him for fear ye’d
-lose the main parrt of him, whin _he_ was thinkin’ of the town and
-nothin’ else, I hadn’t the heart to be complainin’ for the loss of a
-few teeth and a few limps about me! An’ I fair wu’ked like the divil.
-So did Kito, who’s a dacint Jap gintleman and no haythin at all.”
-
-Poor Keatcham, he had no childhood and his wife died too soon to
-revive the fragrance of his youth; but I can’t help but think he had
-a reticent, awkward, shy sort of heart somewhere about him. Well, he
-was what Millicent would call “a compelling personality.” I use plain
-language and I call him a great man. He won the lion’s share because
-he was the lion. And yet, poor Lion, his share was a lonely life and a
-tragic death.
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-
-[A] Of course, no allusions are made to any real M. 20139.
-
-[B] So still and calm the night is,
- The very winds asleep,
- My heart’s so tender sentinel
- His watch and ward doth keep.
- And on the wings of zephyrs soft
- That wander how they will,
- To thee, O woman fair, to thee
- My prayers go fluttering still.
-
- Oh, take the heart’s love to thy heart
- Of one that doth adore!
- Have pity, add not to the flame
- That burns thy troubadour!
- And if compassion stirs thy breast
- For my eternal woe,
- Oh, as I love thee, loveliest
- Of women, love me so!
-
-
-
-TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
-
-
- Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.
-
- Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
-
- Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.
-
- Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LION'S SHARE ***
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the
-United States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for an eBook, except by following
-the terms of the trademark license, including paying royalties for use
-of the Project Gutenberg trademark. If you do not charge anything for
-copies of this eBook, complying with the trademark license is very
-easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose such as creation
-of derivative works, reports, performances and research. Project
-Gutenberg eBooks may be modified and printed and given away--you may
-do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks not protected
-by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the trademark
-license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country other than the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- 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.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm website
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that:
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the manager of
-the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the Foundation as set
-forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non-profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's business office is located at 809 North 1500 West,
-Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up
-to date contact information can be found at the Foundation's website
-and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without
-widespread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine-readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our website which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This website includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/old/old/68875-h/68875-h.htm b/old/old/68875-h/68875-h.htm
deleted file mode 100644
index de641f3..0000000
--- a/old/old/68875-h/68875-h.htm
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,11775 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE html>
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
-<head>
- <meta charset="UTF-8" />
- <title>
- The lion’s share, by Octave Thanet—A Project Gutenberg eBook
- </title>
- <link rel="icon" href="images/cover.jpg" type="image/x-cover" />
- <style> /* <![CDATA[ */
-
-body {
- margin-left: 10%;
- margin-right: 10%;
-}
-
- h1,h2 {
- text-align: center;
- clear: both;
-}
-
-p {
- margin-top: .51em;
- text-align: justify;
- margin-bottom: .49em;
-}
-
-hr {
- width: 33%;
- margin-top: 2em;
- margin-bottom: 2em;
- margin-left: 33.5%;
- margin-right: 33.5%;
- clear: both;
-}
-
-hr.tb {width: 45%; margin-left: 27.5%; margin-right: 27.5%;}
-hr.chap {width: 65%; margin-left: 17.5%; margin-right: 17.5%;}
-@media print { hr.chap {display: none; visibility: hidden;} }
-
-div.chapter {page-break-before: always;}
-h2.nobreak {page-break-before: avoid;}
-
-table {
- margin-left: auto;
- margin-right: auto;
-}
-
-.tdr {text-align: right;}
-
-.pagenum {
- position: absolute;
- left: 92%;
- font-size: smaller;
- text-align: right;
- font-style: normal;
- font-weight: normal;
- font-variant: normal;
- text-indent: 0;
-}
-
-.blockquot {
- margin-left: 17.5%;
- margin-right: 17.5%;
-}
-
-.x-ebookmaker .blockquot {
- margin-left: 7.5%;
- margin-right: 7.5%;
-}
-
-.indentright {margin-right: 8em;}
-.indentright2 {margin-right: 4em;}
-.center {text-align: center;}
-
-.right {text-align: right;}
-
-.smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
-
-.allsmcap {font-variant: small-caps; text-transform: lowercase;}
-
-.ph1 {text-align: center; font-size: large; font-weight: bold;}
-.ph2 {text-align: center; font-size: xx-large; font-weight: bold;}
-
-div.titlepage {text-align: center; page-break-before: always; page-break-after: always;}
-div.titlepage p {text-align: center; font-weight: bold; line-height: 1.5; margin-top: 2em;}
-
-
-.xxlarge {font-size: 175%;}
-
-.large {font-size: 125%;}
-
-.caption {font-weight: bold; text-align: center;}
-
-.x-ebookmaker .hide {display: none; visibility: hidden;}
-
-.figcenter {
- margin: auto;
- text-align: center;
- page-break-inside: avoid;
- max-width: 100%;
-}
-
-.footnote {margin-left: 35%; margin-right: 0%; font-size: 0.9em;}
-
-.footnote .label {position: absolute; right: 63%; text-align: right;}
-
-.fnanchor {
- vertical-align: super;
- font-size: .8em;
- text-decoration:
- none;
-}
-
-.poetry-container {text-align: center;}
-.poetry-container2 {text-align: left;}
-.poetry {display: inline-block; text-align: left;}
-.poetry .verse {text-indent: -2.5em; padding-left: 3em;}
-.poetry .stanza {margin: 1em auto;}
-.poetry .indent {text-indent: 1.5em;}
-.poetry .center {text-align: center;}
-@media print { .poetry {display: block;} }
-.x-ebookmaker .poetry {display: block;}
-
-.transnote {background-color: #E6E6FA;
- color: black;
- font-size:smaller;
- margin-left: 17.5%;
- margin-right: 17.5%;
- padding: 1em;
- margin-bottom: 1em;
- font-family:sans-serif, serif; }
-
- /* ]]> */ </style>
-</head>
-<body>
-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The lion&#039;s share, by Octave Thanet</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. 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.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The lion&#039;s share</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Octave Thanet</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Illustrator: Edmund Marion (E. M.) Ashe</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: August 30, 2022 [eBook #68875]</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: 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 THE LION&#039;S SHARE ***</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter hide"><img src="images/coversmall.jpg" width="450" alt="" /></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<h1>THE LION’S SHARE</h1>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_frontis.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">“Yes,” he said quietly, “you are right, it is blood.” Page <a href="#Page_99">99</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_title.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-<p><span class="xxlarge">THE LION’S SHARE</span></p>
-
-<p><i>By</i><br />
-
-<span class="large">OCTAVE THANET</span><br />
-
-Author of<br />
-The Man of the Hour, Stories of a Western Town<br />
-The Missionary Sheriff<br />
-A Book of True Lovers, etc.</p>
-
-<p>With Illustrations by<br />
-
-E. M. ASHE</p>
-
-<p>INDIANAPOLIS<br />
-THE BOBBS-MERRILL COMPANY<br />
-PUBLISHERS</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Copyright 1907</span><br />
-
-<span class="smcap">The Bobbs-Merrill Company</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">October</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">ROBERT DRUMMOND COMPANY, PRINTERS, NEW YORK</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr"><small>CHAPTER</small></td><td class="tdr" colspan="2"><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">I</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Man with the Moles</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_1"> 1</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">II</td><td> <span class="smcap">Aunt Rebecca</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_25"> 25</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">III</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Train Robbers</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_46"> 46</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">IV</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Vanishing of Archie</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_70"> 70</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">V</td><td> <span class="smcap">Blind Clues</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_83"> 83</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VI</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Voice in the Telephone</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_100"> 100</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VII</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Haunted House</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_118"> 118</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VIII</td><td> <span class="smcap">Face to Face</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_138"> 138</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">IX</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Agent of the Fireless Stove</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_152"> 152</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">X</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Smoldering Embers</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_171"> 171</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XI</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Charm of Jade</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_195"> 195</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XII</td><td> <span class="smcap">A Blow</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_212"> 212</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XIII</td><td> <span class="smcap">Whose Feet Were Shod with Silence</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_245"> 245</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XIV</td><td> <span class="smcap">From Mrs. Melville’s Point of View</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_254"> 254</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XV</td><td> “<span class="smcap">The Light That Never was</span>”</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_265"> 265</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XVI</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Real Edwin Keatcham</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_290"> 290</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XVII</td><td> <span class="smcap">In Which the Puzzle Falls Into Place</span> &#160; &#160; </td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_321"> 321</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XVIII</td><td> <span class="smcap">Casa Fuerte</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_343"> 343</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XIX</td><td> <span class="smcap">Extract from a Letter</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_371"> 371</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse"><i>Serene, indifferent to fate,</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Thou sittest by the Western gate,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Thou seest the white seas fold their tents,</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Oh, warder of two continents.</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Thou drawest all things small and great</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>To thee beside the Western gate.</i></div>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[1]</span>
-
-<p class="ph2">THE LION’S SHARE</p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER I<br />
-
-<small>THE MAN WITH THE MOLES</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>The first time that Colonel Rupert Winter saw
-Cary Mercer was under circumstances calculated
-to fix the incident firmly in his memory. In the
-year 1903, home from the Philippines on furlough,
-and preparing to return to a task big
-enough to attract him in spite of its exile and
-hardships, he had visited the son of a friend at
-Harvard. They were walking through the corridors
-of one of the private dormitories where the
-boy roomed. Rather grimly the soldier’s eyes
-were noting marble wainscoting and tiled floors,
-and contrasting this academic environment with
-his own at West Point. A caustic comment rose
-to his lips, but it was not uttered, for he heard the
-sharp bark of a pistol, followed by a thud, and a
-crackle as of breaking glass.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you fellows amuse yourselves shooting up<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[2]</span>
-the dormitory?” said he. The boy halted; he had
-gone white.</p>
-
-<p>“It came from Mercer’s room!” he cried, and
-ran across the corridor to a door with the usual
-labeling of two visiting cards. The door was not
-locked. Entering, they passed into a vestibule,
-thence through another door which stood open.
-For many a day after the colonel could see just
-how the slender young figure looked, the shoulders
-in a huddle on the study table, one arm
-swinging nerveless; beside him, on the floor,
-a revolver and a broken glass bottle. The latter
-must have made the crackling sound. Some dark
-red liquid, soaking the open sheets of a newspaper,
-filled the room with the pungent odor of alcohol.
-Only the top of the lad’s head showed—a curly,
-silky, dark brown head; but even before the colonel
-lifted it he had seen a few thick drops matting
-the brown curls. He laid the head back gently
-and his hand slipped to the boy’s wrist.</p>
-
-<p>“No use, Ralph,” he said in the subdued tones
-that the voice takes unconsciously in the presence
-of death.</p>
-
-<p>“And Endy was going to help him,” almost
-sobbed Ralph. “He told me he would. Oh, <i>why</i>
-couldn’t he have trusted his friends!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[3]</span>The colonel was looking at the newspaper—“Was
-it money?” said he; for a glance at the
-dabbled sheet had brought him the headings of
-the stock quotations: “Another Sharp Break in
-Stocks. New Low Records.” It <i>had</i> been money.
-Later, after what needed to be done was over,
-after doctors and officers of the law were gone,
-Colonel Winter heard the wretched story. A
-young, reckless, fatally attractive Southerner,
-rich friends, college societies, joyous times; nothing
-really wicked or vicious, only a surrender to
-youth and friendship and pleasure, and then the
-day of reckoning—duns, college warnings, the
-menace of black disgrace. The young fellow was
-an orphan, with no near kindred save one brother
-much older than he. The brother was reputed to
-be rich, according to Southern standards, and
-young Mercer, who had just come into a modest
-patrimony of his own, invested in his brother’s
-ventures. As to the character of these ventures,
-whether flimsy or substantial, the colonel’s informants
-were absolutely ignorant. All they knew
-of the elder Mercer was that he was often in New
-York and had “a lot to do with Wall Street.” He
-wasn’t a broker; no, he was trying to raise money
-to hang on to some big properties that he had;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[4]</span>
-and the stocks seemed to be going at remarkable
-rates just now, the bottom dropping out of the
-market. If a certain stock of the Mercers’—they
-didn’t know the name—could be kept above
-twenty-seven he would pull through. Colonel
-Winter made no comment, but he remembered
-that when he had studied the morning’s stock-market
-pages for himself, he had noted “bad
-slump in the Southern steels,” and “Tidewater
-on the toboggan slide; off three to four points,
-declining from twenty-seven and a fraction to
-twenty-three.”</p>
-
-<p>“Another victim of the Wall Street pirates,”
-was the colonel’s silent judgment on the tragedy.
-“Lucky for her his mother’s dead.”</p>
-
-<p>The next morning he had returned and had
-gone to his young friend’s rooms.</p>
-
-<p>The boy was still full of the horror of the day
-before. Mercer’s brother was in Cambridge, he
-said—arrived that morning from New York.
-“Endy is going to fetch him round to get him out
-of the reporters’ way sometime this evening;
-maybe there’s something I can do”—this in explanation
-of his declining to dine with the colonel.
-As the two entered the rooms, Winter was a little
-in advance, and caught the first glimpse of a man<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[5]</span>
-sitting in a big mission arm-chair, his head sunk
-on his breast. So absorbed was this man in his
-own distempered musings that the new-comers’
-approach did not arouse him. He sat with knitted
-brows and clenched hands, staring into vacancy;
-his rigid and pallid features set in a ghastly intensity
-of thought. There was suffering in the
-look; but there was more: the colonel, who had
-been living among the serpent passions of the
-Orient, knew deadly anger when he saw it; it was
-branded on the face before him. Involuntarily he
-fell back; he felt as if he had blundered in on a
-naked soul. Noiselessly he slipped out of the
-range of vision. He spoke loudly, halting to ask
-some question about the rooms; this made a moment’s
-pause.</p>
-
-<p>It was sufficient; in the study they found a
-quiet, calm, although rather haggard-looking man,
-who greeted Winter’s companion courteously,
-with a Southern accent, and a very good manner.
-He was presented to the colonel as Mr. Mercer.
-He would have excused himself, professing that
-he was just going, but the colonel took the words
-out of his mouth: “Ralph, here, has a cigar for
-me—that is all I came for; see you at the Touraine,
-Ralph, to-morrow for luncheon, then.” He<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[6]</span>
-did not see the man again; neither did he see
-Ralph, although he made good, so far as in him
-lay, his fiction of an engagement at the Touraine.
-But Ralph could not come; and Winter had
-lunched, instead, with an old friend at his club,
-and had watched, through a stately Georgian window,
-the shifting greenery of the Common in an
-east wind.</p>
-
-<p>All through the luncheon the soldier’s mind
-kept swerving from the talk in hand to Cary
-Mercer’s face. Yet he never expected to see it
-again. Three years later he did see it; and this
-second encounter, of which, by the way, Mercer
-was unconscious, was the beginning of an absorbing
-chapter in his life. A short space of time that
-chapter occupied; yet into it crowded mystery,
-peril, a wonderful and awful spectacle, the keenest
-happiness and the cruelest anxiety. Let his days
-be ever so many, the series of events which followed
-Mercer’s reappearance will not be blurred
-by succeeding experiences; their vivid and haunting
-pictures will burn through commoner and
-later happenings as an electric torch flares through
-layers of mist.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing, however, could promise adventure
-less than the dull and chilly late March evening<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[7]</span>
-when the chapter began. Nor could any one be
-less on the lookout for adventure, or even interest,
-than was Rupert Winter. In truth, he was
-listless and depressed.</p>
-
-<p>When he alighted from his cab in the great
-court of the Rock Island Station he found Haley,
-his old orderly, with a hand on the door-hasp.
-Haley’s military stoicism of demeanor could not
-quite conceal a certain agitation—at least not
-from the colonel’s shrewd eye, used to catch the
-moods of his soldiers. He strangled a kind of
-sigh. “Doesn’t like it much more than I,” thought
-Rupert Winter. “This is mighty kind of you,
-Haley,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sor,” answered Haley, saluting. The
-colonel grinned feebly. Haley, busy repelling a
-youthful porter, did not notice the grin; he strode
-ahead with the colonel’s world-scarred hand-luggage,
-found an empty settee beside one of the
-square-tiled columns of the waiting-room and disposed
-his burden on the iron-railed seat next the
-corner one, which he reserved for the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“The train ain’t in yet, Colonel,” said he. “I’ll
-be telling you—”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Haley,” interrupted the colonel, whose lip
-twitched a little; and he looked aside; “best say<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[8]</span>
-good-by now; don’t wait. The fact is, I’m thinking
-of too many things you and I have gone
-through together.” He held out his hand; Haley,
-with a stony expression, gazed past it and saluted,
-while he repeated: “Yes, sor; I’ll be back to take
-the bags whin the train’s made up.” Whereupon
-he wheeled and made off with speed.</p>
-
-<p>“Just the same damned obstinate way he’s always
-had,” chuckled the colonel to himself.
-Nevertheless, something ached in his throat as he
-frowned and winked.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, get a brace on you, you played-out old
-sport!” he muttered. “The game’s on the last four
-cards and you haven’t established your suit; you’ll
-have to sit back and watch the other fellows
-play!” But his dreary thoughts persisted. Rupert
-was a colonel in the regular army of the
-United States. He had been brevetted a brigadier-general
-after the Spanish War, and had commanded,
-not only a brigade, but a division at one
-critical time in the Philippines; but for reasons
-probably known to the little knot of politicians
-who “hung it up,” although incomprehensible to
-most Americans, Congress had failed to pass the
-bill giving the wearers of brevet titles the right to
-keep their hard-won and empty honors; wherefore<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span>
-General Winter had declined to Colonel
-Winter.</p>
-
-<p>He had more substantial troubles, including a
-wound which would probably make him limp
-through life and possibly retire him from service
-at fifty. It had given him a six months’ sick leave
-(which he had not wanted), and after spending
-a month on the Atlantic coast, he was going for
-the spring to the Pacific. Haley, whose own term
-of service had expired, had not reënlisted, but had
-followed him, Mrs. Haley and the baby uncomplainingly
-bringing up the rear. It was not fair
-to Haley nor to Mrs. Haley, the colonel felt. He
-had told Haley so; he had found a good situation
-for the man, and he had added the deed for a little
-house in the suburbs of Chicago.</p>
-
-<p>If Haley wouldn’t reënlist—there never was a
-better soldier since he had downed a foolish young
-hankering for wild times and whisky—if he
-wouldn’t go back to the army, where he belonged,
-let him settle down, take up the honest carpenter’s
-trade that he had abandoned, be a good citizen
-and marry little Nora to some classmate in the
-high school, who might make a fortune and build
-her a Colonial mansion, should the Colonial still
-obtain in the twentieth century.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span>The colonel had spread a grand prospect before
-Haley, who listened unresponsively, a dumb pain
-in his wide blue Irish eyes. The colonel hated it;
-but, somehow, he hated worse the limp look of
-Haley’s back as he watched it dwindle down
-Michigan Avenue.</p>
-
-<p>However, Mrs. Haley had been more satisfactory,
-if none the less bewildering. She seemed
-very grateful over the house and the three hundred
-dollars for its furnishing. A birthday present,
-he had termed it, with a flicker of humor
-because the day was his own birthday. His fiftieth
-birthday it happened to be, and it occurred to him
-that a man ought to do something a little notable
-on such an anniversary. This rounding of the
-half-century had attributes apart; it was no mere
-annual birthday; it marked the last vanishing flutter
-of the gilded draperies of youth; the withering
-of the garlands; the fading tinkle of the light
-music of hope. It should mark a man’s solid
-achievements. Once, not so long ago, Winter had
-believed that his fiftieth birthday would see wide
-and beneficent and far-reaching results in the
-province where he ruled. That dream was shattered.
-He was generous of nature, and he could
-have been content to behold another reap the fields<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span>
-which he had sown and tilled; it was the harvest,
-whether his or another’s, for which he worked;
-but his had been the bitter office to have to stand
-aside, with no right to protest, and see his work
-go to waste because his successor had a feeble
-brain and a pusillanimous caution in place of
-his own dogged will. For all these reasons, as
-well as others, the colonel found no zest in his
-fiftieth birthday; and his reverie drifted dismally
-from one somber reflection to another until it
-brought up at the latest wound to his heart—his
-favorite brother’s death.</p>
-
-<p>There had been three Winter brothers—Rupert,
-Melville and Thomas. During the past year
-both Thomas Winter and his wife had died, leaving
-one child, a boy of fourteen, named Archibald
-after his father’s uncle. Rupert Winter and the
-boy’s great-aunt, the widow of the great-uncle for
-whom he had been named, were appointed joint
-guardians of the young Archie. To-night, in his
-jaded mood, he was assailed by reproaches because
-he had not seen more of his ward. Why, he hadn’t
-so much as looked the little chap up when he
-passed through Fairport—merely had sent him a
-letter and some truck from the Philippines; nice
-guardian <i>he</i> was! By a natural enough transition,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span>
-his thoughts swerved to his own brief and not altogether
-happy married life. He thought of the
-graves in Arizona where he had left his wife and
-his two children, and his heart felt heavy. To
-escape musings which grew drearier every second,
-he cast his eyes about the motley crowd
-shuffling over the tiled floors or resting in the
-massive dark oaken seats. And it was then that
-he saw Cary Mercer. At first he did not recognize
-the face. He only gazed indifferently at two
-well-dressed men who sat some paces away from
-him in the shadow of a great tiled column similar
-to his own. There was this difference, it happened:
-the mission lantern with its electric bulbs
-above the two men was flashing brightly, and by
-some accident that above the colonel was dark.
-He could see the men, himself in the shadow.</p>
-
-<p>The men were rather striking in appearance;
-they were evidently gentlemen; the taller one was
-young, well set-up, clean-shaven and quietly but
-most correctly dressed. His light brown hair
-showed a slight curl in its closely clipped locks;
-his gray-blue eyes had long lashes of brown
-darker than his hair; his teeth were very white,
-and there was a dimple in his cheek, plain when
-he smiled. Had his nose been straight he would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span>
-have been as handsome as a Greek god, but the
-nose was only an ordinary American nose, rather
-too broad at the base; moreover, his jaw was a
-little too square for classic lines. Nevertheless, he
-was good to look upon, as well as strong and clean
-and wholesome, and when his gray-blue eyes
-strayed about the room the dimple dented his
-cheek and his white teeth gleamed in a kind of
-merry good-nature pleasant to see. But it was the
-other man who held the colonel’s eye. This man
-was double the young man’s age, or near that; he
-was shorter, although still of fair stature, and
-slim of build. His face was oval in contour and
-delicate of feature. Although he wore no glasses,
-his brow had the far pucker of a near-sighted man.
-There was a mole on his cheek-bone and another
-just below his ear. Both were small, rather than
-large, and in no sense disfiguring; but the colonel
-noted them absently, being in the habit of photographing
-a man in a glance. The face had beauty,
-distinction even, yet about it hung some association,
-sinister as a poison label.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, where,” said the colonel to himself,
-“<i>where</i> have I seen that man?” Almost instantly
-the clue came to him. “By Jove, it’s the brother!”
-he exclaimed. Three years ago, and he had almost<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span>
-forgotten; but here was Cary Mercer—the name
-came to him after a little groping—here he was
-again; but who was the pleasant youngster with
-him? And what were they discussing with so little
-apparent and so much real earnestness?</p>
-
-<p>One of the colonel’s physical gifts was an extraordinary
-acuteness of hearing. It passed the
-mark of a faculty and became a marvel. Part of
-this uncanny power was really due, not to hearing
-alone, but to an alliance with another sense,
-because Winter had learned the lip language in
-his youth; he heard with his eyes as well as his
-ears. This combination had made an unintentional
-and embarrassed eavesdropper out of an
-honest gentleman a number of times. To set off
-such evil tricks it had saved his life once on the
-plains and had rescued his whole command another
-time in the Philippines. While he studied
-the two faces a sentence from the younger man
-gripped his attention. It was: “I don’t mind the
-risk, but I hate taking such an old woman’s
-money.”</p>
-
-<p>“She has a heap,” answered the other man
-carelessly; “besides—” He added something with
-averted head and in too low a voice to reach the
-listener unassisted. But it was convincing, evidently,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span>
-since the young man’s face grew both
-grave and stern. He nodded, muttering: “Oh, I
-understand; I wasn’t backing water; I know we
-have lost the right to be squeamish. But I say,
-old chap, how long since Mrs. Winter has seen
-you? Would she recognize you?”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel, who had been about to abandon
-his espionage as unbecoming a soldier and a gentleman,
-stowed away all his scruples at the mention
-of the name. He pricked up his ears and
-sharpened his eyes, but was careful lest they
-should catch his glance. The next sentence, owing
-to the speaker’s position, was inaudible and invisible;
-but he clearly caught the young man’s
-response:</p>
-
-<p>“You’re sure they’ll be on this train?”</p>
-
-<p>And he saw the interlocutor’s head nod.</p>
-
-<p>“The boy’s with them?”</p>
-
-<p>An inaudible reply, but another nod.</p>
-
-<p>“And you’re sure of Miss Smith?”</p>
-
-<p>This time the other’s profile was toward the
-listener, who heard the reply, “Plumb sure. I
-wish I were as sure of some other things. Have
-we settled everything? It is better not to be seen
-together.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I think you’ve put me wise on the main<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span>
-points. By the way, what <i>is</i> the penalty for kidnapping?”</p>
-
-<p>Again an averted head and hiatus, followed by
-the younger man’s sparkling smile and exclamation:
-“Wow! Riskier than foot-ball—and even
-more fun!” Something further he added, but his
-arms hid his mouth as he thrust them into his
-greatcoat, preparing to move away. He went
-alone; and the other, after a moment’s gloomy
-meditation, gathered up coat and bag and followed.
-During that moment of arrested decision,
-however, his features had dropped into sinister
-lines which the colonel remembered.</p>
-
-<p>“Dangerous customer, or I miss my guess,”
-mused the soldier, who knew the passions of men.
-“I wonder—they couldn’t mean my Aunt Rebecca?
-She’s old; she has millions of money—but
-she’s not on this train. And there’s no Miss
-Smith in our deck. I’m so used to plotting I go
-off on fake hikes! Probably I’m getting old and
-dotty. Mercer, poor fellow, may have his brain
-turned and be an anarchist or a bomb-thrower or
-a dirty kidnapper for revenge; but that boy’s a
-decent chap; I’ve licked too many second lieutenants
-into shape not to know something of youngsters.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_016fp.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">“By the way what <i>is</i> the penalty for kidnapping?” Page <a href="#Page_16">16</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span>He pushed the idea away; or, rather, his own
-problems pushed it out of his mind, which went
-back to his ward and his single living brother.
-Melville had no children, only his wife’s daughters,
-who were both married—Melville having
-married a widow with a family, an estate and a
-mind of her own. Melville was a professor in a
-state university, a mild, learned man whom nature
-intended for science but whom his wife was determined
-to make into the president of the university.</p>
-
-<p>“Even money which will win,” chuckled Rupert
-Winter to himself. “Millicent hasn’t much
-tact; but she has the perseverance of the saints.
-<i>She</i> married Mel; he doesn’t know, but she surely
-did. And she bosses him now. Well, I suppose
-Mel likes to be bossed; he never had any strenuous
-opinions except about the canals of Mars—<i>Valgame
-dios</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>With a gasp the colonel sprang to his feet.
-There before him, in the flesh, was his sister-in-law.
-Her stately figure, her Roman profile, her
-gracefully gesticulating hand, which indicated the
-colonel’s position to her heavily laden attendant,
-a lad in blue—these he knew by heart just as he
-knew that her toilet for the journey would be in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[18]</span>
-the latest mode, and that she would have the latest
-fashion of gait and mien. Millicent studied such
-things.</p>
-
-<p>She waved her luggage into place—an excellent
-place—in the same breath dismissing the porter
-and instructing him when he must return.
-Then, but not until then, did she turn graciously
-to her brother-in-law.</p>
-
-<p>“I hoped that I should find you, Bertie,” she
-said in a voice of such creamy richness that it was
-hard to credit the speaker with only three short
-trips to England. “Melville said you were to take
-this train; and I was <i>so</i> delighted, <i>so</i> relieved! I
-am in a most harassing predicament, my dear
-Bertie.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s bad,” murmured the colonel with
-sympathetic solicitude: “what’s the trouble?
-Couldn’t you get a section?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have my reservations, but I don’t know
-whether I shall go to-night.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe I’m stupid, Millicent, but I confess I
-don’t know what you mean.”</p>
-
-<p>“Really, there’s no reason why you should,
-Bertie. That’s why I was so anxious to see you—in
-time, so that I might explain to you—might
-put you on your guard.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[19]</span>“Yes?” the colonel submitted; he never hurried
-a woman.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going to visit dear Amy—you remember
-she was married two years ago and lives in Pasadena;
-she has a dear little baby and the loveliest
-home! It’s charming. And she was so delighted
-with your wedding gift, it was <i>so</i> original. Amy
-never did care for costly things; these simple,
-unique gifts always pleased her. Of course, my
-main object is to see the dear child, but I shall not
-go to-night <i>unless</i> Aunt Rebecca Winter is on the
-train. If for any reason she waits over until to-morrow
-I shall wait also.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah,” sighed the colonel very softly, not stirring
-a muscle of his politely attentive face; “and
-does Aunt Rebecca expect to go on the train?”</p>
-
-<p>“They told me at the Pullman office that she
-had the drawing-room, the state-room and two
-sections. Of course, she has her maid with her
-and Archie—”</p>
-
-<p>“Does <i>he</i> go, too?” the colonel asked, his eyes
-narrowing a little.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, she’s taking him to California; he doesn’t
-seem well enough, she thinks, to go to school, so
-he is to have a tutor out there. I’m a little afraid
-Aunt Rebecca mollycoddles the boy.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[20]</span>“Aunt Rebecca never struck me as a molly-coddler.
-I always considered her a tolerably
-cynical old Spartan. But do you mean there is
-any doubt of their going? Awfully good of you
-to wait to see if they don’t go, but I’m sure Aunt
-Rebecca wouldn’t want you to sacrifice your section—”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Melville lifted a shapely hand in a Delsartian
-gesture of arrest; her smiling words were
-the last the colonel had expected. “Hush, dear
-Bertie; Aunt Rebecca doesn’t <i>know</i> I am going.
-I don’t want her to know until we are on the
-train.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I see, a surprise?” But he did <i>not</i> see;
-and, with a quiet intentness, he watched the color
-raddle Mrs. Melville’s smooth cheeks.</p>
-
-<p>“Hardly,” returned the lady. “The truth is,
-Bertie, Melville and I are worried about Aunt Rebecca.
-She, we fear, has fallen under the influence
-of a most plausible adventuress; I suppose
-you have heard of her companion, Miss Smith?”</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t say I have exactly,” said the colonel
-placidly, but his eyes narrowed again. “Who is
-the lady?”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought—I am <i>sure</i> Melville must have
-written you. But— Oh, yes, he wrote yesterday<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[21]</span>
-to Boston. Well, Bertie, Miss Smith is a Southerner;
-she says she is a South Carolinian, but
-Aunt Rebecca picked her up in Washington,
-where she was with a kind of cousin of ours who
-was half crazy. Miss Smith took care of her and
-she died”—she fixed a darkling eye on the soldier—“she
-<i>died</i> and she left Miss Smith money.”</p>
-
-<p>“Much?”</p>
-
-<p>“A few thousands. That is how Aunt Rebecca
-met her, and she pulled the wool over auntie’s
-eyes, and they came back together. She’s awfully
-clever.”</p>
-
-<p>“Young? Pretty?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dear, no. And she’s nearer forty than
-thirty. Just the designing age for a woman when
-she’s still wanting to marry some one but beginning
-to be afraid that she can’t. Then such creatures
-always try to get <i>money</i>. If they can’t
-marry it, and there’s no man to set their caps for,
-they try to wheedle it out of some poor fool
-woman!” Millicent was in earnest, there was no
-doubt of that; the sure sign was her unconscious
-return to the direct expressions of her early life
-in the Middle West.</p>
-
-<p>“And you think Miss Smith is trying to influence
-Aunt Rebecca?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[22]</span>“Of course she is; and Aunt Rebecca is eighty,
-Rupert. And often while people of her age show
-no other sign of weakening intellect, they are not
-well regulated in their affections; they take fancies
-to people and get doting and clinging. She is
-getting to depend on Miss Smith. Really, that
-woman has more influence with her than all the
-rest of us together. She won’t hear a word against
-her. Why! when I tried to suggest how little we
-knew about Miss Smith and that it would be better
-not to trust her <i>too</i> entirely, she positively <i>resented</i>
-it. Of course I used tact, too. I was so
-hurt, so surprised!” Mrs. Millicent was plainly
-aggrieved.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel, who had his own opinion of the
-tact of his brother’s wife, was not so surprised;
-but he made an inarticulate sound which might
-pass for sympathy.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve been worried a good deal,” pursued
-Mrs. Melville, “about the way Aunt Rebecca has
-acted. She wouldn’t stay in Fairport, where we
-could have some influence over her. She was
-always going south or going to the sea-shore or going
-<i>somewhere</i>. Sometimes I suspect Miss Smith
-made her, to keep her away from <i>us</i>, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, as long as I have known Aunt Rebecca—anyhow,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[23]</span>
-ever since Uncle Archibald died—she
-has been restless and flying about.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not as she is now. And then she only had her
-maid—”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, Randall; she’s faithful as they make
-’em. What does <i>she</i> say about Miss Smith?”</p>
-
-<p>“Bertie, she’s won over Randall. Randall
-swears by her. Oh, she’s <i>deep</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>“Seems to be. But—excuse me—what’s your
-game, Millicent? How do you mean to protect
-our aged kinswoman and, incidentally, of course,
-the Winter fortune?”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall watch, Bertie; I shall be on my guard
-every waking hour. That deluded old woman is
-in more danger, perhaps, than you dream.”</p>
-
-<p>“As how?”</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Smith”—her voice sank portentously—“<i>was
-a trained nurse</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>“What harm does that do—unless you think
-she would know too much about poisons?” The
-colonel laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s no laughing matter, Bertie. Rebecca is so
-rich and this other woman is so poor, and, in my
-estimation, so ambitious. I make no insinuations,
-I only say she needs watching.”</p>
-
-<p>“You may be right about that,” said the colonel<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[24]</span>
-thoughtfully. “There is Haley and the boy for
-your bags!”</p>
-
-<p>The boy picked up the big dress-suit case, the
-smaller dress-suit case and the hat case, he
-grabbed the bundle of cloaks, the case of umbrellas,
-and the lizard-skin bag. Dubiously he
-eyed the colonel’s luggage, as he tried to disengage
-a finger.</p>
-
-<p>“Niver moind, young feller,” called Haley, peremptorily
-whisking away the nearest piece, “I’ll
-help you a bit with yours, instead; you’ve a load,
-sure!”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Melville explained in an undertone: “I
-take all the hand-luggage I possibly can; the over-weight
-charges are wicked!”</p>
-
-<p>“Haley, they won’t let you inside without a
-ticket,” objected the colonel. But Haley, unheeding,
-strode on ahead of the staggering youth.</p>
-
-<p>“I have an English bath-tub, locked, of course,
-and packed with things, but he has put <i>that</i> in the
-car,” said Mrs. Melville.</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly,” said the colonel absently; he was
-thinking: Mrs. Winter, the boy, Miss Smith—how
-ridiculously complete! Decidedly <i>something</i>
-will bear watching.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[25]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER II<br />
-
-<small>AUNT REBECCA</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>No sooner was Mrs. Melville ushered into her
-section than the colonel went through the train.
-He was not so suspicious as he told himself he
-might have been, with such a dovetailing of circumstances
-into his accidentally captured information;
-he couldn’t yet read villainy on that college
-lad’s frank face. But no reason, therefore, to neglect
-precautions. “Hope the best of men and prepare
-for the worst,” was the old campaigner’s
-motto.</p>
-
-<p>A walk through the cars showed him no signs
-of the two men. It was a tolerably complete inspection,
-too. There was only one drawing-room
-or state-room of which he did not manage to get
-a glimpse—the closed room being the property of
-a very great financial magnate, whose private car
-was waiting for him in Denver. His door was
-fast, and the click of the type-writer announced
-the tireless industry of our rulers.</p>
-
-<p>But if he did not find the college boy or the man<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[26]</span>
-with the moles he did get a surprise for his walk;
-namely, the sight of the family of Haley, and
-Haley himself beside their trig, battered luggage,
-in a section of the car next his own. Mrs.
-Haley turned a guilty red, while Haley essayed a
-stolid demeanor.</p>
-
-<p>“What does this mean?” demanded the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“Haley felt he would <i>have</i> to go with you, Colonel,”
-replied Mrs. Haley, who had timid, wide,
-blue eyes and the voice of a bird, but a courage
-under her panic, as birds have, too, when their
-nests are in peril. “We’ve rinted the house to a
-good man with grown-up children, and Haley can
-get a job if you won’t want him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yis, sor,” mumbled Haley. He was standing
-at attention, as was his wife, the toddling Nora
-being held in the posture of respect on the plush
-seat.</p>
-
-<p>“And I suppose you took the furniture money
-to buy tickets?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yis, sor.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you’re bound to go with me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yis, sor,” said Haley.</p>
-
-<p>“You ought to be ashamed of yourself, Sergeant,”
-said the colonel; but he was glad at the
-heart of him for this mutinous loyalty.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[27]</span>“Yis, sor,” said Haley.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, since you are here, I engage you from
-to-day, you understand.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yis, sor,” said Haley. Mrs. Haley whimpered
-a blessing; but the only change in the soldier was
-that his military stolidity became natural and real
-instead of forced.</p>
-
-<p>“Sit down on this seat over here with me and
-I’ll tell you what I want. You fraud, letting me
-say good-by to you—”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t want to take the liberty, sor, but you
-<i>made</i> me shake hands. I was afraid you’d catch
-on, sor. ’Tis a weight off me moind, sor.”</p>
-
-<p>“I dare say. You always have your way with
-me, you old mule. Now listen; I want you to be
-on the watch for two men”—thereupon the colonel
-described his men, laying special stress on the
-moles on the face of one, and the other’s dimple.</p>
-
-<p>Having set Haley his tasks, he went back to his
-car in better spirits.</p>
-
-<p>By this time the train was moving. He had
-seen his kinswoman and her party enter; and he
-found the object of Mrs. Melville’s darksome
-warnings sitting with a slender lad in the main
-body of the car. Aunt Rebecca was in the drawing-room,
-her maid with her. Mrs. Melville, who<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[28]</span>
-had already revealed her presence, sat across the
-aisle. She presented the colonel at once.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Smith did not look formidable; she looked
-“nice,” thought the colonel. She was of medium
-height; she was obviously plump, although well
-proportioned; her presence had an effect of radiant
-cleanliness, her eyes were so luminous and her
-teeth so fine and her white shirt-waist so immaculate.
-There was about her a certain soft illumination
-of cheerfulness, and at the same time a restful
-repose; she moved in a leisurely fashion and
-she sat perfectly still. “I never saw any one who
-looked less of an adventuress,” Winter was thinking,
-as he bowed. Then swiftly his glance went
-to the lad, a pale young fellow with hazel eyes and
-a long slim hand which felt cold.</p>
-
-<p>The boy made a little inarticulate sound in his
-throat and blushed when Colonel Winter addressed
-him. But he looked the brighter for the
-blush. It was not a plain face; rather an interesting
-one in spite of its listlessness and its sickly
-pallor; its oval was purely cut, the delicate mouth
-was closed firmly enough, and the hazel eyes with
-their long lashes would be beautiful were they not
-so veiled.</p>
-
-<p>“He has the Winter mouth, at least,” noted the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[29]</span>
-colonel. He felt a novel throb at his heart. Had
-his own boy lived, the baby that died when it was
-born, he would be only a year older than Archie.
-At least, this boy was of his own blood. Without
-father or mother, but <i>not</i> alone in the world; and,
-if any danger menaced, not without defenders.
-The depression which had enveloped him lifted
-as mist before the sun, burned away by the mere
-thought of possible difficulties. “We will see if
-any one swindles you out of your share,” said
-Rupert Winter, compressing the Winter mouth
-more firmly, “or if those gentlemanly kidnappers
-mean you.”</p>
-
-<p>His ebbing suspicion of the boy’s companion
-revived; he would be on his guard, all right.</p>
-
-<p>“Aunt Rebecca wants to see you,” Mrs. Melville
-suggested. “She is in the drawing-room with
-her solitaire.”</p>
-
-<p>“Still playing Penelope’s Web?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, she always comes back to it. But she
-plays bridge, too; Rupert, I hear your game is a
-wonder. Archie’s been learning, so he could play
-with you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good for Archie!”—he shot a glance and a
-smile at the lad’s reddening face—“we’ll have a
-game.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[30]</span>“Lord, I wish he didn’t look quite so ladylike,”
-he was grumbling within, as he dutifully made his
-way to his aunt’s presence.</p>
-
-<p>The electric lights flooded the flimsy railway
-table on which were spread rows of small-sized
-cards. An elderly lady of quality was musing
-over the pasteboard rows. A lady of quality—that
-was distinctly the phrase to catch one’s fancy
-at the first glimpse of Mrs. Winter. Not an aged
-lady, either, for even at eighty that elegantly
-moulded, slim figure, that abundance of silvery
-hair—parted in the middle and growing thickly on
-each side in nature’s own fashion, which art can
-not counterfeit, as well as softly puffed and
-massed above—that exquisitely colored and textured
-skin, strangely smooth for her years, with
-tiny wrinkles of humor, to be sure, about the eyes,
-but with cheeks and skin unmarred; that fine,
-firmly carved profile, those black eyebrows and
-lashes and still brilliant dark eyes; most of all that
-erect, alert, dainty carriage, gave no impression
-of age; but they all, and their accessories of toilet
-and manner, and a little prim touch of an older,
-more reticent day in both dress and bearing, recalled
-the last century phrase.</p>
-
-<p>A soft gray bunch of chinchilla fur lay where<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[31]</span>
-she had slipped it on her soft gray skirts; one
-hand rested in the fur—her left hand—and on the
-third finger were the only rings which she wore, a
-band of gold, worn by sixty years, and a wonderful
-ruby, wherein (at least such was Rupert’s
-phantasy) a writhing flame was held captive by
-its guard of diamond icicles. The same rings admired
-by her nephew ever since he was a cadet—just
-the same smiling, inscrutable, high-bred, unchanging
-old dame!</p>
-
-<p>“Good evening, Aunt Rebecca; not a day
-older!” said the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“Good evening, Bertie,” returned the lady, extending
-a hand over the cards; “excuse my not
-rising to greet you; I might joggle the cards. Of
-course I’m not a day older; I don’t dare to grow
-older at my age! Sit down. I’m extremely glad
-to see you; I’ve a heap to talk to you about. Do
-you mind if I run this game through first?”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel didn’t mind. He raised the proffered
-hand to his lips; such homage seemed quite
-the most natural act in the world with Mrs. Winter.
-And he unobtrusively edged his own lean and
-wiry person into the vacant seat opposite her.</p>
-
-<p>“How far are you going?” said she, after a few
-moves of the cards.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[32]</span>“My ticket says Los Angeles; but it had to say
-something, so I chose Los Angeles for luck; I’m
-an irresponsible tramp now, you know; and I may
-drop off almost anywhere. You are for southern
-California, aren’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Eventually; but we shall stop at San Francisco
-for two or three weeks.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mind if I stop off with you? I want
-to get acquainted with my ward,” said the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a good idea, Bertie.”</p>
-
-<p>“He seems rather out of sorts; you aren’t worried
-about—well, tuberculosis or that sort of
-thing?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am worried about just that sort of thing;
-although the doctor says nothing organic at all is
-the matter with him; but he is too melancholy for
-a boy; he needs rousing; losing his father and
-mother in one year, you know, and he was devoted
-to them. I can’t quite make him out, Bertie; he
-hasn’t the Winter temperament. I suppose he has
-a legal right to his mother’s nature; but it is very
-annoying. It makes him so much harder to understand—not
-that she wasn’t a good woman who
-made Tom happy; but she wasn’t a Winter.
-However, Janet has brightened him up considerably—you’ve<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[33]</span>
-seen Janet—Miss Smith? What do
-you think of her?”</p>
-
-<p>Winter said honestly that she was very nice-looking
-and that she looked right capable; he fell
-into the idiom of his youth sometimes when with
-a Southerner.</p>
-
-<p>“She is,” said Aunt Rebecca.</p>
-
-<p>“Where did you find her?” asked the colonel
-carelessly, inspecting the cards.</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Rebecca smiled. “I thought Millicent
-would have given you all the particulars. She was
-nurse, secretary, companion and diet cook to
-Cousin Angela Nelson; when <i>she</i> died I got her.
-Lucky for me.”</p>
-
-<p>“So I should judge,” commented the colonel
-politely.</p>
-
-<p>“I presume Millicent has told you that she is an
-adventuress and after my money and a heap more
-stuff. If she hasn’t she will. Get a notion once in
-Millicent’s head and a surgical operation is necessary
-to dislodge it! Janet is the only mortal person
-who could live with poor Cousin Angela, who
-had enough real diseases to kill her and enough
-imaginary ones to kill anybody who lived with
-her! Janet made her comfortable, would not
-stand everything on earth from her—though she<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[34]</span>
-did stand a heap—and really cared for her. When
-she died Cousin Angela left her some money; not
-very much, but a few thousands. She would have
-left her more, but Janet wouldn’t let her. She left
-some to some old servants, who surely deserved it
-for living with <i>her</i>, some to charities and the rest
-to her sisters, who hadn’t put a foot inside the
-house for fifteen years, but naturally resented her
-not giving them everything. I reckon they filled
-Millicent up with their notions.” She pushed the
-outspread cards together.</p>
-
-<p>“You had several moves left,” said the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“Four. But then, I was finished. Bertie, you
-play bridge, of course; and I used to hear of your
-whist triumphs; how did you happen to take to
-whist?”</p>
-
-<p>“To fill up the time, I reckon. I began it years
-ago. Now a soldier’s life is a great deal more
-varied, because a man will be shifted around and
-get a show of the different kinds of service. And
-there are the exams, and the Philippines—oh,
-plenty of diversions. But in the old days a man in
-the line was billed for an awfully stupid time. I
-didn’t care to take to drink; and I couldn’t read as
-you do if I’d had books, which I hadn’t, so I took
-to playing cards. I played skat and poker and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[35]</span>
-whist, and of late years I’ve played bridge. Millicent
-plays?”</p>
-
-<p>“Millicent is a celebrated player. She was a
-great duplicate-whist player, you know. To see
-Millicent in her glory, one should play duplicate
-with her. I’m only a chump player; my sole object
-is to win tricks.”</p>
-
-<p>“What else should it be?”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Rebecca smiled upon him. “To give information
-to your partner. The main object of
-the celebrated American-leads system is signaling
-information to your partner. Incidentally, one
-tells the adversaries, as well as one’s partner,
-which, however, doesn’t count really as much as
-you might think; for most people don’t notice
-what their partners play <i>very</i> much, and don’t
-notice what their adversaries play at all. Millicent
-is always so busy indicating things to her partner
-and watching for his signals and his indications
-that you can run a cross ruff in on her without her
-suspecting. She asked me once if she didn’t play
-an intelligible game, and I told her she did; a babe
-in arms could understand it. She didn’t seem
-quite pleased.”</p>
-
-<p>“How about Archie? Can he play a good
-game?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[36]</span>“Very fair for a boy of fourteen; he was fond
-of whist until his troubles came,” said Mrs. Winter,
-with a faint clouding of her keen gaze.
-“Since then he hasn’t taken much interest in anything.
-Janet has brightened him up more than
-any one; and when he heard you were coming
-that did rouse him. You are one of his heroes.
-He’s that sort of a boy,” she added, with a tinge
-of impatience in her soft Southern voice. As if
-to divert her thoughts, she began deftly moving
-the cards before her. Her hands showed the blue
-veins more prominently than they show in young
-hands. This was their only surrender to time;
-they were shapely and white, and the slim fingers
-were as straight as when the beaux of Fairfax
-County would have ridden all day for a chance to
-kiss them.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel watched the great ruby wink and
-glow. The ruby was a part of his memories of
-his aunt; she had always worn it. He remembered
-it, when she used to come and visit him at
-the hotel at West Point, dazzling impartially officers,
-professors, cadets and hotel waiters. Was
-that almost forty years ago? Well, thirty-four,
-anyhow! She had been very good, very generous
-to all the young Winters, then. Indeed, although<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[37]</span>
-she never quite forgave him for not marrying the
-wife of her selecting, she had always been kind
-and generous to Rupert; yet, somehow, while he
-had admired and found a humorous joy in his
-Aunt Rebecca, he wondered if he had ever loved
-her. She was both beautiful and brilliant when
-she was young, a Southern belle, a Northern society
-leader; her life was full of conquests; her
-footsteps, which had wandered over the world,
-had left a phosphorescent wake of admiration.
-She had always been a personage. She was a
-power in Washington after the war; they had
-found her uniquely delightful in royal courts long
-before Americans were the fashion; she had been
-of importance in New York, and they had loved
-her epigrams in Boston; now, in her old age, she
-held a veritable little court of her own in the provincial
-Western city which had been her husband’s
-home. He went to Congress from Fairport;
-he had made a fortune there, and when he
-died, many years ago, in Egypt, back to his Western
-home, with dogged determination and lavish
-expenditures of both money and wit, his widow
-had brought him to rest. The most intense and
-solemn experience of a woman she had missed,
-for no children had come to them, but her husband<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[38]</span>
-had been her lover so long as he lived, and
-she had loved him. She had known great men;
-she had lived through wonderful events; and
-often her hand had been on those secret levers
-which move vast forces. She had been in tragedies,
-if an inviolable coolness of head, perhaps of
-heart, had shielded her from being of them. The
-husband of her youth, the nearest of her blood, the
-friends of her middle life—all had gone into the
-dark; yet here she sat, with her smooth skin and
-her still lustrous eyes and her fragrant hands,
-keenly smiling over her solitaire. The colonel
-wondered if he could ever reconcile himself with
-such philosophy to his own narrowed and emptied
-life; she was older than he, yet she could still
-find a zest in existence. All the great passions
-gone; all the big interests; and still her clever
-mind was working, happy, possibly, in its mere
-exercise, disdaining the stake, she who had had
-every success. What a vitality! He looked at
-her, puzzling. Her complexity bewildered him,
-he not being of a complex nature himself. As he
-looked, suddenly he found himself questioning
-why her face, in its revival of youthful smoothness
-and tint, recalled some other face, recently
-studied by him—a face that had worn an absolutely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[39]</span>
-different expression; having the same delicate
-aquiline nose, the same oval contour, the
-same wide brows—who? who? queried the colonel.
-Then he nodded. Of course; it was the man
-with the moles, the brother. He looked enough
-like Mrs. Winter to be her kinsman. At once he
-put his guess to the test. “Aunt Becky,” said he,
-“have you any kin I don’t know about?”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon not. I’m an awfully kinless old
-party,” said she serenely. “I was a Winter, born
-as well as married, and so you and Mel and Archie
-are double kin to me. I was an only child, so I
-haven’t anything closer than third or fourth
-cousins, down in Virginia and Boston.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you, by chance, any cousin, near or far,
-named Mercer?”</p>
-
-<p>Resting her finger-tips on the cards, Aunt Rebecca
-seemed to let her mind search amid Virginian
-and Massachusetts genealogical tables.
-“Why, certainly,” she answered after a pause,
-“there was General Philemon Mercer—Confederate
-army, you know—and his son, Sam Nelson;
-Phil was my own cousin and Sam Nelson my second,
-and Sam Nelson’s sons would be my third,
-wouldn’t they? Phil and Sam are both dead, and
-Winnie Lee, the daughter, is dead, and poor Phil—the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[40]</span>
-grandson, you know—poor boy, <i>he</i> shot
-himself while at Harvard; but his brother Cary is
-alive.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Never saw him but once or twice. He has
-very good manners.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is he rich?”</p>
-
-<p>“He was, but after he had spent his youth
-working with incredible industry and a great deal
-of ability to build up a steel business and had put
-it into a little combination—not a big trust, just
-a genuine corporation—some of the financial
-princes wanted it for a club—to knock down bigger
-game, I reckon—and proceeded to cheapen
-the stock in order to control it. Cary held on desperately,
-bought more than he could hold, mortgaged
-everything else; but they were too big for
-him to fight. It was in 1903, you know, when
-they had an alleged financial panic, and scared the
-banks. Cary went to the wall, and Phil with him,
-and poor Phil killed himself. Afterward Cary’s
-wife died; he surely did have a mean time. And,
-to tell you the truth, Bertie, I think there has been
-a little kink in Cary’s mind ever since.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you hold any of Cary’s stock?” He was
-piecing his puzzle together.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[41]</span>“Yes, but my stock was all paid for, and I held
-on to it; now it is over par and paying dividends.
-Oh, the property was all right, had it been kept
-in honest hands and run for itself. The trouble
-with Cary was that in order to keep control of the
-property he bought a lot of shares on margins,
-and when they began to run downhill, he was
-obliged to borrow money on his actual holdings
-to protect his fictitious ones. The stock went so
-low that he was wiped out. He wouldn’t take my
-advice earlier in the game; and I knew that it
-would only be losing money to lend it to him,
-later—still, sometimes I have been rather sorry
-I didn’t. Would I better try the spade, Bertie, or
-the diamond?”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel advised the spade. He wondered
-whether he should repeat to his aunt the few
-sentences which he had overheard from Mercer
-and his companion; but a belief that old age worries
-easily, added to his natural man’s disinclination
-to attack the feminine nerves, tipped the
-scales against frankness. So, instead, he began to
-talk about Archie; what was he like? was he fond
-of athletics? or was he a bookish lad? Aunt Rebecca
-reported that he had liked riding and golf;
-but he was not very rugged, and since his father’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[42]</span>
-death he had seemed listless to a degree. “But
-he is better now,” she added with a trace of eagerness
-quite foreign to her usual manner. “Janet
-Smith has roused him up; and what do you suppose
-she has done? But really, you are the cause.”</p>
-
-<p>“I?” queried the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“Just you. Archie, Janet argued, is the kind of
-nature that must have some one to be devoted to.”</p>
-
-<p>“And has he taken a fancy to her? Or to you?”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Rebecca’s eyes dulled a little and her delicate
-lips were twisted by a smile which had more
-wistfulness than humor in it. “I’m not a lovable
-person; anyhow, he does not love easily. We are
-on terms of the highest respect, even admiration,
-but we haven’t got so far as friendship, far less
-comradeship. Janet is different. But I don’t mean
-Janet; she has grown absurdly fond of him; and
-I think he’s fond of her; but what she did was to
-make him fond of you. You, General Rupert
-Winter; why, that boy could pass an examination
-on your exploits and not miss a question. Janet
-and he have a scrap-book with every printed word
-about you, I do believe. And she has been amazingly
-shrewd. We didn’t know how to get the
-youngster back to his sports while he was out of
-school; and, in fact, an old woman like me is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[43]</span>
-rather bewildered by such a young creature, anyhow;
-but Janet rode with him; <i>you</i> are a remarkable
-rider; I helped there, because I remembered
-some anecdotes about you at West Point—”</p>
-
-<p>“But, my dear Aunt—”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t interrupt, Bertie, it’s a distinctly American
-habit. And we read in the papers that you
-had learned that Japanese trick fighting—jiu-jitsu—and
-were a wonder—”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not, I assure you; that beast of a newspaper
-man—”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind, if you are not a wonder, you’ll
-have to be; you can take lessons in Los Angeles;
-there are quantities of Japs there. Why, even in
-Chicago, Janet picked up one, and we imported
-him, and Archie took lessons, and practises every
-day. There’s a book in my bag, in the rack there,
-a very interesting book; Janet and I have both
-read it so we could talk to Archie. You would
-better skim it over a little if you really aren’t an
-expert, enough so you can <i>talk</i> jiu-jitsu, anyhow;
-we can’t be destroying Archie’s ideals until he
-gets a better appetite.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, upon my word!” breathed the colonel.
-“Do you expect me to be a fake hero? I never
-took more than two lessons in my life. That reporter<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[44]</span>
-interviewed my teacher, who was killed in
-the Japanese War, by the way; he went to the
-army after my second lesson. He didn’t know any
-English beyond ‘yes’ and ‘if you please’; and he
-used them both on the reporter, who let his own
-fancy go up like a balloon. Well, where is the
-book?”</p>
-
-<p>He found it easily; and with a couple of volumes
-of another kidney, over which he grinned.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>The Hound of the Baskervilles</i> and <i>The
-Leavenworth Case</i>! I’ve read them, too,” he said;
-“they’re great! And do you still like detective
-stories? You would have made a grand sleuth
-yourself, Aunt Becky.” Again he had half a mind
-to speak of the occurrence at the station; again
-he checked the impulse. “I remember,” he added,
-“that you used to hold strenuous opinions.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean my thinking that the reason crimes
-escape discovery is not that criminals are so
-bright, but that detectives in general are so
-particularly stupid? Oh, yes, I think that still.
-So does Sir Conan Doyle. And I have often
-wished I could measure my own wits, once, with
-a really <i>fine</i> criminal intellect. It would be worth
-the risk.”</p>
-
-<p>“God forbid!” said the colonel hastily.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[45]</span>There came a tap on the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Millicent!” groaned Aunt Rebecca. “I know
-the creaking of her stays. No, don’t stay, Bertie;
-go and get Janet and a rescue bridge party as
-quick as you can!”</p>
-
-<p>“The original and only Aunt Rebecca,” thought
-the colonel at the door, smiling. But, somehow,
-the handsome old dame never had seemed so
-nearly human to him before.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[46]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER III<br />
-
-<small>THE TRAIN ROBBERS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>When the colonel awoke next morning the
-train was running smoothly over the Iowa prairies,
-while low hills and brick factory chimneys
-announced Council Bluffs. The landscape was
-wide and monotonous; a sweep of illimitable cornfields
-in their winter disarray, or bleakly fresh
-from the plow, all painted with a palette holding
-only drabs and browns; here and there a dab of
-red in a barn or of white in windmill or house;
-but these livelier tints so scattered that they were
-no more than pin spots on the picture. The very
-sky was as dimly colored as the earth, lighter,
-yet of no brighter hue than the fog which smoked
-up from the ground. Later in the spring this same
-landscape would be of a delicate and charming
-beauty; in summer or autumn it would make the
-beholder’s pulses throb with its glorious fertility;
-but on a blurred March morning it was as dreary
-as the reveries of an aging man who has failed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[47]</span>Nevertheless, Rupert Winter’s first conscious
-sensation was not depression, only a little tingle
-of interest and excitement, such as stings pleasantly
-one who rises to a prospect of conflict in
-which he has the confidence of his own strength.
-“By Jove!” he wondered, “whatever makes me
-feel so kiddish?”</p>
-
-<p>His first impulse was to peep through his curtains
-into the car. It wore its early morning aspect
-of muffled berths and stuffy curtains, among
-which Miss Smith’s trig, carefully finished presence
-in a fresh white shirt-waist, attended by the
-pleasant whiffs of cologne water, gave the beholder
-a certain refreshing surprise. One hand
-(white and firm and beautifully cared for) held
-a wicker bottle, source of the pleasant whiffs;
-her sleek back braids were coiled about her comely
-head, and the hair grew very prettily in a blunted
-point on the creamy nape of her neck. It was
-really dark brown hair, but it looked black against
-the whiteness of her skin. She had very capable-looking
-shoulders, the colonel noted, and a flat
-back; perhaps she wasn’t pretty, but in a long
-while he had not seen a more attractive-looking
-woman. She made him think of a Bonne Celine
-rose, somehow. He could hear her talking to some<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[48]</span>
-one behind the berth’s curtains. Could those doleful
-moans emerge from Archie? Could a Winter
-boy be whimpering about the jar of the train in
-that fashion? Immediately he was aware that the
-sufferer was Randall, for Miss Smith spoke:
-“Drink the tea, and lie down again, I’ll attend to
-Mrs. Winter. Don’t you worry!”</p>
-
-<p>“Getting solid with Randall,” commented the
-colonel. “Which is she—kind-hearted, or an accomplished
-villainess? Well, it’s interesting, anyhow.”</p>
-
-<p>By the time he had made his toilet the train
-was slacking speed ready to halt in Council
-Bluffs, and all his suspicions rushed on deck
-again at the sight of Miss Smith and Archie
-walking outside.</p>
-
-<p>He joined them, and he had to admit that Miss
-Smith looked as pleased as Archie at his appearance.
-Nor did she send a single furtive glance,
-slanting or backward, while they walked in the
-crisp, clean air. Once the train had started and
-Miss Smith was in the drawing-room, breakfasting
-with Mrs. Winter and Archie, he politely attended
-Mrs. Millicent through the morning meal
-in the dining-car. It was so good a meal that he
-naturally, although illogically, thought better of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[49]</span>
-Miss Smith’s prospects of innocence; and cheerily
-he sought Haley. He found him in the smoking
-compartment of the observation-car, having for
-companions no less personages than the magnate
-and a distinguished-looking New Englander, who,
-Rupert Winter made no doubt, was a Harvard
-professor of rank and renown among his learned
-kind. He knew the earmarks of the species. The
-New Englander’s pencil was flying over a little
-improvised pad of telegraph blanks, while he
-listened with absorbed interest to Haley’s rich
-Irish tones. There was a little sidewise lunge of
-Haley’s mouth, a faint twinkle of Haley’s frank
-and simple eyes which the colonel appraised at
-very nearly their real value. He knew that it
-isn’t in Irish-American nature to perceive a wide-open
-ear and not put something worth hearing
-into it. Besides, his sharp ears had brought
-him a key to the discourse, a sorrowful remark of
-the sergeant’s as he entered: “Yes, sor, thim
-wather torchures is <i>terrible</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>He glanced suspiciously from one of Haley’s
-audience to the other. The newspaper cartoonist
-had pictured on all kinds of bodies of preying
-creatures, whether of the earth or air, the high
-brows, the round head, the delicate features, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[50]</span>
-thin cheeks, the straight line of the mouth, and
-the mild, inexpressive eyes of the man before
-him. He had been extolled as a far-sighted benefactor
-of the world, and execrated picturesquely
-as the king of pirates who would scuttle the business
-of his country without a qualm.</p>
-
-<p>Winter, amid his own questionings and problems,
-could not help a scrutiny of a man whose
-power was greater than that of medieval kings.
-He sat consuming a cigarette, more between his
-fingers than his lips; and glancing under drooping
-eyelids from questioner to narrator. At the
-colonel’s entrance he looked up, as did Haley,
-who rose to his feet with an unconscious salute.
-“I’d be glad to spake wid youse a minnit, if I
-might, General,” said Haley, “about where I put
-your dress-shute case, sor.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel, of course, did not expect any remarks
-about a suit case when he got Haley by
-himself at the observation end of the car; but
-what he did get was of sufficient import to drive
-out of his mind a curt lecture about blackening the
-reputation of the army with lies about the Philippines.
-Haley had told him that he had seen the
-man with the two moles on his face jump out of
-his own car at Council Bluffs. He had simply<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[51]</span>
-stood on the platform, looking to right and left
-for a moment; then he had swung himself back
-on the car. Haley had watched him walk down
-the aisle and enter the drawing-room. He did
-not come out; Haley had found out that the drawing-room
-belonged to Edwin S. Keatcham, “the
-big railroad man, sor.”</p>
-
-<p>“It doesn’t seem likely that <i>he</i> would be an accomplice
-of a kidnapper,” mused the colonel.
-“The man might have gone in there while he was
-out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, he might, sor; ’twas mesilf thinking that
-same; and I wint beyant to the observation-car,
-and there the ould gintleman was smoking.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you stopped to tell yarns to that other
-gentleman instead of getting back and following—”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sor, I beg your pardon, sor; I was kaping
-me eyes open and on him; for himsilf was in the
-observation-car where you are now, sor, until we
-come in, and thin he walked back, careless like, to
-his own car. Will I be afther following him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; don’t lose him.”</p>
-
-<p>They did not lose him; they both saw him enter
-the drawing-room and almost immediately come
-out and sit down in one of the open sections.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[52]</span>“See if you can’t find out from the conductor
-where he is going,” the colonel proposed to Haley;
-and he frowned over his thoughts for a bad
-quarter of an hour at the window. The precipitate
-of all this mental ferment was a determination
-to stick close to the boy, saying nothing.
-He hoped that when they stopped over night at
-Salt Lake City, according to Aunt Rebecca’s plan,
-they might shake off the “brother’s” company.
-The day passed uneventfully. He played bridge
-with Mrs. Millicent and Miss Smith and Archie,
-while Aunt Rebecca kept up her French with one
-of Bentzon’s novels.</p>
-
-<p>Afterward she said grimly to him: “I think
-you must have been converted out in the Philippines;
-you never so much as winced, that last
-hand; no, you sat there smiling over your ruin
-as sweetly as if you enjoyed it.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel smiled again. “Ah, but, you see,
-I did enjoy it; didn’t you notice the hand? No?
-Well, it was worth watching. It was the rubber
-game; they were twenty-four and we were twenty-six
-and we were on the seventh round; Miss
-Smith had made it hearts. She sat on my left,
-dummy on my right. Millicent had the lead. She
-had four little spades, a little club, the queen of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[53]</span>
-hearts and a trey; dummy had the queen, the ten
-and the nine of spades, it had the king of hearts
-and three clubs with the jack at the top. I had
-a lovely diamond suit which I hadn’t had a chance
-to touch, top sequence, ace, king, queen; I had
-the jack of trumps and the jack of spades; and
-the queen and a little club. I hadn’t a lead, you
-understand; Millicent had taken five tricks and
-they had taken one; they needed six to win the
-game, we needed two; see? Well, Millicent hadn’t
-any diamonds to lead me, and unhappily she didn’t
-think to lead trumps through dummy, which
-would have made a world of difference. She led
-a club; dummy put on the jack. I knew Miss
-Smith had the ace and one low heart; no clubs,
-a lot of low diamonds, and she might or might
-not have a spade. I figured that she had the ace
-and a little one; if she would trump in with the
-little one, as ninety-nine out of a hundred women
-would have done, her ace and her partner’s king
-would fall together; or, at worst, he would have
-to trump her diamond lead, after she had led out
-her king of spades, and lead spades, which I could
-trump and bring in all my diamonds. Do you take
-in the situation?”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean that Janet had the king of spades<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[54]</span>
-alone, the ace and the little trump and four worthless
-diamonds? I see. It is a chance for the grand
-<i>coup</i>; I reckon she played it.”</p>
-
-<p>“She <i>did</i>!” cried the colonel with unction.
-“She slapped that ace on the trick, she modestly
-led her king of spades, gathered in my jack, then
-‘she stole, she stole my child away,’ my little jack
-of trumps; it fell on dummy’s king, and dummy
-led out his spades and I had to see that whole
-diamond suit slaughtered. They made their six
-tricks, the game and the rubber; and I wanted to
-clap my hands over the neatness of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“She is a good player,” agreed Aunt Rebecca,
-“and a very pleasant person. You remember the
-epitaph, don’t you, Bertie? ‘She was so pleasant.’
-Yet Janet has had a heap of trouble; but, after
-all, happiness is not a condition but a temperament;
-I suppose Janet has the temperament. She’s
-a good loser, too; and she never takes advantage
-of the rules.”</p>
-
-<p>“She certainly loves a straight game,” reflected
-the colonel. “I confess I don’t like the kind of
-woman that is always grabbing a trick if some
-one plays out of the wrong hand.”</p>
-
-<p>He said something of the kind to Millicent,
-obtaining but scant sympathy in that quarter.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[55]</span>“She’s deep, Bertie; I told you that,” was the
-only reply, “but I’m watching. I have reason for
-my feeling.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe you have been misinformed,” ventured
-her brother-in-law with proper meekness.</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all,” retorted she sharply. “I happen
-to know that she worked against me with the
-Daughters.”</p>
-
-<p>“Daughters,” the colonel repeated inanely,
-“your daughters?”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly not! The Daughters of the Revolution.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a mighty fine society, that; did a lot during
-the Spanish War. And you are the state
-president, aren’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Rupert,” returned Mrs. Melville with
-dignity, “I am no longer state regent. By methods
-that would shame the most hardened men politicians
-I was defeated; why! didn’t you read about
-it?”</p>
-
-<p>“You know I only came back from the Philippines
-in February.”</p>
-
-<p>“It was in all the Chicago papers. I was interviewed
-myself. I assure you the other candidates
-(there were two) tried the very <i>lowest</i>
-political methods. Melville said it was scandalous.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[56]</span>
-There were at least three luncheons given against
-me. It wasn’t the congress, it was the lobby
-defeated me. And their methods! I would not
-believe that gentlewoman could stoop to such infamy
-of misrepresentation.” The colonel chewed
-his mustache; he felt for that reporter of the
-Chicago paper; he was evidently getting a phonographic
-record now; he made an inarticulate
-rumble of sympathy in his throat which was as
-the clucking of the driver to the mettled horse.
-Mrs. Melville gesticulated with Delsartian grace,
-as she poured forth her woes.</p>
-
-<p>“They accused me of a domineering spirit;
-they said I was trying to set up a machine. <i>I!</i>
-I worked for them, many a time, half the night,
-at my desk; never was a letter unanswered; I did
-half the work of the corresponding secretary; yet
-at the crucial moment <i>she betrayed me</i>! I learned
-more in those two days of the petty jealousy, the
-pitiless malevolence of <i>some</i> women than I had
-known all my life before; but at the same time,
-to the faithful band of friends”—the colonel had
-the sensation of listening to the record again—“whose
-fidelity was proof against ridicule and
-cruel misrepresentation, I return a gratitude that
-will never wane. Rupert”—she turned herself in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[57]</span>
-the seat and waved the open palm of her hand in
-a graceful and dramatic gesture, “—those women
-not only stooped to malignant falsehoods, they
-not only trampled parliamentary law underfoot,
-but they circulated through the hall a cartoon
-called the <i>Making of the Slate</i>. Of course, we
-had our quarters at a hotel, and after the evening
-meeting, after I had retired, in fact, a bell-boy
-brought me a message; it was necessary to
-have a meeting at once, to decide for the secretaryship,
-as we had found out Mrs. Ellennere
-was false. The ladies in the adjoining rooms and
-the others of us on the board who were loyal came
-into my chamber. Rupert, will you believe it,
-those women, had a grotesque picture of <i>us</i>, with
-faces cut out of the newspapers—of course, all our
-pictures were in the papers—and they had the
-audacity and the meanness to picture me in—in
-the garments of night!”</p>
-
-<p>“That was pretty tough. But where does Miss
-Smith come in?”</p>
-
-<p>“She was at the convention. She is a Daughter.
-I’ve always said we are too lax in our admissions.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who drew the picture?”</p>
-
-<p>“It may not be Miss Smith, but—she does<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[58]</span>
-draw. I’m <i>sure</i> that she worked against me; she
-covered up her footprints so that I have no proof;
-but I suspect her. She’s deep, Bertie, she’s deep.
-But she can’t hoodwink <i>me</i>. I’ll find her out.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel experienced the embarrassment
-that is the portion of a rash man trying to defend
-one woman against another; he retreated because
-he perceived defense was in vain; but he did not
-feel his growing opinion of Miss Smith’s innocence
-menaced by Mrs. Melville’s convictions.</p>
-
-<p>She played too square a game for a kidnapper—and
-Smith was the commonest of names. No,
-there must be some explanation; Rupert Winter
-had lived too long not to distrust the plausible
-surface clue. “It is the improbable that always
-happens, and the impossible most of the time,”
-Aunt Rebecca had said once. He quite agreed
-with her whimsical phrase.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing happened to arouse his suspicions that
-day. Haley reported that Cary Mercer was going
-on to San Francisco. The conductor did not
-know his name; he seemed to know Mr. Keatcham
-and was with him in his drawing-room most of
-the time. Had the great man a secretary with
-him? Yes, he seemed to have, a little fellow who
-had not much to say for himself, and jumped<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[59]</span>
-whenever his boss spoke to him. There was also
-a valet, an Englishman, who did not respond
-properly to conversational overtures. They were
-all going to get off at Denver.</p>
-
-<p>Haley was not misinformed, as the colonel
-perceived with his own eyes—and he saw Cary
-Mercer bow in parting to the great man, who
-requited the low salute with a gruff nod. Here
-was an opportunity for a nearer glimpse of Mercer,
-possibly for that explanation in which Winter
-still had a lurking hope. He caught Mercer just
-in the car doorway, and politely greeted him:
-“Mr. Mercer, I think? You may not remember
-me, Colonel Winter. I met you in Cambridge,
-three years ago—”</p>
-
-<p>It seemed a brutal thing to do, to recall a meeting
-under such circumstances; but if Mercer could
-give the explanation he would excuse him; it was
-better than suspecting an innocent man. But
-there was no opportunity for explanation. Mercer
-turned a blank and coldly suspicious face
-toward him. “I beg pahdon,” he said in his Southern
-way, “I think you have made a mistake in
-the person.”</p>
-
-<p>“And are you <i>not</i> Mr. Cary Mercer?” The
-colonel felt the disagreeable resemblance of his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[60]</span>
-own speeches to those made in newspaper stories
-by the gentleman who wishes his old friend to
-change a fifty-dollar bill or to engage in an amusing
-game with a thimble. Mercer saw it as well
-as he. “Try some one from the country,” he remarked
-with an unpleasant smile, brushing past,
-while the color mounted to the colonel’s tanned
-cheek. “The <i>next</i> time you meet me,” Rupert
-Winter vowed, “you’ll know me.”</p>
-
-<p>A new porter had come on at Denver; a light
-brown, chubby, bald man with a face that radiated
-friendliness. He was filled with the desire for
-conversation, and he had worked on the road for
-eight years, hence could supplement <i>Over the
-Range</i> and the other guide-books with personal
-gossip. He showed marked deference to the
-colonel, which that unassuming and direct man
-could not quite fathom, until Archie enlightened
-him. Archie smiled, a queer, chewed-up smile
-which the colonel hailed with:</p>
-
-<p>“Why are you making fun of me, young
-man?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s Lewis, the porter; he follows you round
-and listens to you in such an awestruck way.”</p>
-
-<p>“But why?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Sergeant Haley told him about you;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[61]</span>
-and I told him a <i>little</i>, and he says he wishes
-you’d been on the train when they had the hold-ups.
-This is an awful road for hold-ups, he says.
-He’s been at five hold-ups.”</p>
-
-<p>“And what does he advise?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he says, hold up your hands and they
-won’t hurt you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I reckon his advice is sound,” laughed
-the colonel. “See you follow it, Archie.”</p>
-
-<p>“Shall <i>you</i> hold up your hands, Uncle Bertie?”
-asked Archie.</p>
-
-<p>“Much the wisest course; these fellows shoot.”</p>
-
-<p>Archie looked disappointed. “I suppose so,”
-he sighed. “I’m afraid I’d want to, if they were
-pointing pistols at me. Lewis was on the train
-once when a man showed fight. He wouldn’t put
-up his hands, and the bandit plugged him, like a
-flash; he fell crosswise over the seat and the blood
-spurted across Lewis’ wrist; he said it was like a
-hot jet of water.”</p>
-
-<p>The homely and bizarre horror of the picture
-had evidently struck home to Archie; he half
-shivered.</p>
-
-<p>“Too much imagination,” grumbled the colonel
-to himself. “A Winter ought to take to fighting
-like a duck to water!” He betook himself<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[62]</span>
-to Miss Smith; and he was uneasily conscious
-that he was going to her for consoling. But he
-felt better after a little talk about Archie with
-her. Plainly she thought Archie had plenty of
-spirit; although, of course, he hadn’t told her
-about the bandits. The negro was “kidding” the
-passengers; and women shouldn’t be disturbed by
-such nonsense. The colonel had old-fashioned
-views of guarding his womankind from the harsh
-ways of the world. Curious, he reflected, what
-sense Miss Smith seemed to have; and how she
-understood things. He felt better acquainted with
-her than a year’s garrison intercourse would have
-made him with any other woman he knew.</p>
-
-<p>That afternoon, they two sat watching the
-fantastic cliffs which took grotesque semblance
-of ruined castles crowning their barren hillsides;
-or of deserted amphitheaters left by some vanished
-race to crumble. They had talked of many
-things. She had told him of the sleepy old South
-Carolinian town where she was born, and the plantation
-and the distant cousin who was like her
-mother, and the hospital where she had been
-taught, and the married sister who had died.
-Such a narrow, laborious, innocent existence as
-she described! How cheerfully, too, she had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[63]</span>
-shouldered her burdens! They talked of the
-South and of the Philippines; a little they talked
-of Archie and his sorrow and of the eternal
-problems that have troubled the soul of man since
-first death entered the world. As they talked, the
-colonel’s suspicions faded into grotesque shadows.
-“Millicent is ridiculous,” quoth he. Then he fell
-to wondering whether there had been a romance
-in Miss Smith’s past life. “Such a handsome
-woman would look high,” he sighed. Only twenty-four
-hours ago he had called Miss Smith “nice-looking,”
-with careless criticism. He was quite
-unconscious of his change of view. That night
-he felt lonely, of a sudden; the old wound in his
-heart ached; his future looked as bleak as the
-mountain-walled plains through which he was
-speeding. After a long time the train stopped
-with a jar and rattle, ending in a sudden shock.
-He raised the curtain to catch the flash of the
-electric lights at Glenwood. Out of the deep
-defile they glittered like diamonds in a pool of
-water. Why should he think of Miss Smith’s
-eyes? With an impatient sigh, he pulled down
-the curtain and turned over to sleep.</p>
-
-<p>His thoughts drifted, floated, were submerged
-in a wavering procession of pictures; he was back<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[64]</span>
-in the Philippines; they had surprised the fort;
-how could that be when he was on guard? But
-they were there— He sat up in his berth. Instinctively
-he slipped the revolver out of his bag
-and held it in one hand, as he peeped through the
-crevice of the curtains. There was no motion, no
-sound of moving; but heads were emerging between
-the curtains in every direction; and Archie
-was standing, his hands shaking above his tumbled
-brown head and pale face. A man in a soft
-hat held two revolvers while another man was
-pounding on the drawing-room door, gruffly
-commanding those inside to come out. “No, we
-shall not come out,” responded Aunt Rebecca’s
-composed, well-bred accents, her neat enunciation
-not disturbed by a quiver. “If you want to
-kill an old woman, you will have to break down
-the door.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let them alone, Shay, it takes too long; let’s
-finish here, first,” called the man with the revolver;
-“they’ll come soon enough when we want
-them. Here, young feller, fish out! Nobody’ll
-get hurt if you keep quiet; if you don’t you’ll get
-a dose like the man in number six, two years ago.
-Hustle, young feller!”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel was eying every motion, every<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[65]</span>
-shifting from one foot to the other. Let them once
-get by Archie—</p>
-
-<p>The boy handed over his pocket-book.</p>
-
-<p>“Now your watch,” commanded the brigand;
-“take it, Shay!”</p>
-
-<p>“Won’t you please let me keep that watch?”
-faltered Archie; “that was papa’s watch.”</p>
-
-<p>The childish name from the tall lad made the
-robber laugh. “And mama’s little pet wants to
-keep it, does he? Well, he can’t. Get a move on
-you!”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel had the sensation of an electric
-shock; as the second robber grabbed at the fob
-in the boy’s belt, Archie struck him with the edge
-of his open hand so swiftly and so fiercely under
-the jaw that he reeled back against his companion.
-The colonel’s surprise did not disturb the automatic
-aim of an old fighter of the plains; his revolver
-barked; and he sprang out, on the man he
-shot. “Get back in the berths, all of you,” he
-shouted; “give me a chance to shoot!”</p>
-
-<p>The voice of the porter, whose hands had been
-turning up the lights not quite steadily, now
-pealed out with camp-meeting power, “Dat’s it;
-give de colonel a chance to do some killing!”</p>
-
-<p>Both bandits were sprawling on the floor of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[66]</span>
-the aisle, one limp and moaning; but the other
-got one hand up to shoot; only to have Archie
-kick the revolver out of it, while at the same instant
-an umbrella handle fell with a wicked whack
-on the man’s shoulder. The New England professor
-was out of his berth. He had been a baseball
-man in his own college days; his bat was a
-frail one, but he hit with a will; and a groan told
-of his success. Nevertheless, the fellow scrambled
-to his feet. Mrs. Melville was also out of her
-berth, thanks to which circumstance he was able
-to escape; as the colonel (who had grappled with
-the other man and prevented his rising) must
-needs have shot through his sister-in-law to hit
-the fleeing form.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_066fp.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">Miss Smith was sitting beside Archie, holding the watch. Page <a href="#Page_67">67</a></p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter?” demanded Mrs. Melville,
-while the New Englander used an expression
-which, no doubt, as a good church-member,
-he regretted, later, and the colonel thundered:
-“All the women back into their berths. Don’t
-anybody shoot! You, professor, look after that
-fellow on the floor.” He was obeyed; instinctively,
-the master of the hour is obeyed. The porter
-came forward and helped the New Englander
-bind the prostrate outlaw, with two silk handkerchiefs
-and a pair of pajamas, guard mount<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[67]</span>
-being supplied by three men in very startling costumes;
-and a kind of seraglio audience behind the
-curtains of the berth being enacted by all the
-women in the car, only excepting Aunt Rebecca
-and Miss Smith. Aunt Rebecca, in her admirable
-traveling costume of a soft gray silk wrapper,
-looked as undisturbed as if midnight alarms were
-an every-night feature of journeys. Miss Smith’s
-black hair was loosely knotted; and her face
-looked pale, while her dark eyes shone. They all
-heard the colonel’s revolver; they all saw the two
-men who had met him at the car door spring off
-the platform into the dark. The robbers had
-horses waiting. The colonel got one shot; he saw
-the man fall over his horse’s neck; but the horse
-galloped on; and the night, beyond the little splash
-of light, swallowed them completely.</p>
-
-<p>After the conductor and the engineer had both
-consulted him, and the express messenger had appeared,
-armed to the teeth, a little too late for
-the fray, but not too late for lucid argument, Winter
-made his way back to the car. Miss Smith
-was sitting beside Archie; she was holding the
-watch, which had played so important a part in
-the battle, up under the electric light to examine
-an inscription. The loose black sleeves of her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[68]</span>
-blouse fell back, revealing her arms; they were
-white and softly rounded. She looked up; and the
-soldier felt the sudden rush of an emotion that he
-had not known for years; it caught at his throat
-almost like an invisible hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Archie,” he said foolishly, “good for
-jiu-jitsu!”</p>
-
-<p>Archie flushed up to his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Why didn’t you obey orders, young man,
-and hold up your hands?” said Colonel Rupert
-Winter. “You’re as bad as poor Haley, who is
-nearly weeping that he had no chance, but only
-broke away from Mrs. Haley in time to see the
-robbers make off.”</p>
-
-<p>“I—I did at first; but I got so mad I forgot,”
-stammered Archie happily. “Afterward you were
-my superior officer and I had to do what you
-said.”</p>
-
-<p>All the while he chaffed the boy, he was watching
-for that beautiful look in Janet Smith’s eyes;
-and wondering when he could get her off by herself
-to brag to her of the boy’s courage. When
-his chance at a few words did come he chuckled:
-“Regular fool Winter! I knew he would act in
-just that absurd, reckless way.” Then he caught
-the look he wanted; it surely was a lovely, womanly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[69]</span>
-look; and it meant—what in thunder <i>did</i> it
-mean? As he puzzled, his pulses gave the same
-unaccountable, smothering leap; and he felt as the
-boy of twenty had felt, coming back from his first
-battle to his first love.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[70]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IV<br />
-
-<small>THE VANISHING OF ARCHIE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>“In my opinion,” said Aunt Rebecca, critically
-eying her new drawing-room on the train to San
-Francisco; “the object of our legal methods seems
-to be to defend the criminal. And a very efficient
-means to this end is to make it so uncomfortable
-and costly and inconvenient for any witness of
-a crime that he runs away rather than endure
-it. Here we have had to stay over so long in Salt
-Lake we nearly lost our drawing-room. But never
-mind, you got your man committed. Did you find
-out anything about his gang?”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel shook his head. “No, he’s a tough
-country boy; he has the rural distrust of lawyers
-and of sweat-boxes. He does absolutely nothing
-but groan and swear, pretending his wound hurts
-him. But I’ve a notion there are bigger people
-back of him. It’s most awfully good of you,
-Aunt Rebecca, to stick to me this way.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course, I stick to you; I’m too old to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[71]</span>
-fickle. Did you ever know a Winter who wouldn’t
-stand by his friends? I belong to the old régime,
-Bertie; we had our faults—glaring ones, I dare
-say—but if we condoned sin too readily, we never
-condoned meanness; such a trick as that upstart
-Keatcham is doing would have been impossible to
-my contemporaries. You saw the morning papers;
-you know he means to eat up the Midland?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I know,” mused the colonel; “and turn
-Tracy, the president, down—the one who gave
-him his start on his bucaneering career. Tracy
-declines to be his tool, being, I understand, a
-very decent sort of man, who has always run
-his road for his stock-holders and not for the
-stock-market. A capital crime, that, in these days.
-So Keatcham has, somehow, by one trick or
-another, got enough directors since Baneleigh
-died to give him the control; though he couldn’t
-get enough of the stock; and now he means to
-grab the road to use for himself. Poor Tracy,
-who loves the road as a child, they say, will have
-to stand by and see it turned into a Wall Street
-foot-ball; and the equipment run down as fast
-as its reputation. I think I’m sorry for Tracy. Besides,
-it’s a bad lookout, the power of such fellows;
-men who are not captains of industry, not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[72]</span>
-a little bit; only inspired gamblers. Yet they are
-running the country. I wonder where is the class
-that will save us.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know. I don’t admire the present century,
-Bertie. We had people of quality in my day;
-we have only people of culture in this. I confess
-I prefer the quality. They had robuster nerves
-and really asked less of people, although they
-may have appeared to ask more. <i>We</i> used to be
-contented with respect from our inferiors and
-courtesy from our equals—”</p>
-
-<p>“And what from your betters, Aunt Rebecca?”
-drawled the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“We had no betters, Rupert; we were the best.
-I think partly it was our assurance of our position,
-which nobody else doubted any more than
-we, that kept us so mannerly. Nowadays, nobody
-has a real position. He may have wealth
-and a servile following, who expect to make something
-out of him, but he hasn’t position. The
-newspapers can make fun of him. The common
-people watch him drive by and never think of
-removing their caps. Nobody takes him seriously
-except his toadies and himself. And as for the
-sentiments of reverence and loyalty, very useful
-sentiments in running a world, they seem to have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[73]</span>
-clean disappeared, except”—she smiled a half-reluctant
-smile—“except with youngsters like
-Archie, who would find it agreeable to be chopped
-into bits for <i>you</i>, and the women who have not
-lived in the world, like Janet, who makes a heroine
-out of <i>me</i>—upon my word, Bertie, <i>je t’ai fait
-rougir</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all,” said the colonel; “an illusion of
-the sunset; but what do you mean when you say
-people of quality required less than people of culture?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, simply this; all <i>we</i> demanded was deference;
-but your cultivated gang wants admiration
-and submission, and will not let us possess our
-secret souls, even, in peace. And, then, the quality
-despised no one, but the cultivated despise every
-one. Ah, well—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">‘Those good old times are past and gone,</div>
-<div class="indent">I sigh for them in vain,—’</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Janet, I wish Archie would fish his mandolin out
-and you would sing to me; I like to hear the songs
-of my youth. Not rag-time, or coon-songs, but
-dear old Foster’s melodies; <i>Old Kentucky Home</i>,
-and <i>Massa’s in the Col’, Col’ Ground</i>, and <i>Nellie
-Was a Lady</i>—what makes that so sad, I wonder?—‘Nellie<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[74]</span>
-was a lady, las’ night she died;’ it’s
-all in that single line; I think it is because it
-represents the pathetic idealization of love; Nellie
-was that black lover’s ideal of all that was lovely,
-and she was dead. Is the orchestra ready—and
-the choir? Yes, shut the door; we are for art’s
-sake only, not for the applause of the cold world
-in the car.”</p>
-
-<p>Afterward, when he was angry over his own
-folly, his own blind, dogged, trustfulness against
-all the odds of evidence, Rupert Winter laid his
-weakness to that hour; to a woman’s sweet, untrained,
-tender voice singing the simple melodies
-of his youth. They sang one song after another
-while the sun sank lower and stained the western
-sky. Through the snow-sheds they could catch
-glimpses of a wild and strange nature; austere,
-yet not repelling; vistas of foot-hills bathed in the
-evening glow; rank on rank of firs, tall, straight,
-beautiful, not wind-tortured and maimed, like the
-woeful dwarfs of Colorado; and wonderful snow-capped
-mountain peaks, with violet shadows and
-glinting streaks of silver. Snow everywhere: on
-the hillsides; on the close thatch of the firs; on the
-ice-locked rivers; snow freshly fallen, softly tinted,
-infinitely, awesomely pure.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[75]</span>Presently they came out into a lumber country
-where the mills huddled in the hollows, over the
-streams. Huge fires were blazing on the river-banks.
-Their tawny red glare dyed the snow for
-a long distance, making entrancing tints of rose
-and yellow; and the dark green of the pines,
-against this background, looked strangely fresh.
-And then, without warning, they plunged into
-the dimness of another long wooden tunnel and
-emerged into lovely spring. The trees were in
-leaf, and not alone the trees; the undulating swells
-of pasture land and roadside by the mountains
-were covered with a tender verdure; and there
-were innumerable vines and low glossy shrubs
-with faintly colored flowers.</p>
-
-<p>“This is like the South,” said Miss Smith.</p>
-
-<p>Archie was devouring the scene. “Doesn’t it
-just somehow make you feel as if you couldn’t
-breathe, Miss Janet?” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you troubled with the high altitude?”
-asked Millicent anxiously; “I have prepared a
-little vial of spirits of ammonia; I’ll fetch it for
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel had some ado to rescue Archie;
-but he was aided by the porter, who was now passing
-through the car proclaiming: “You all have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[76]</span>
-seen Dutch Flat Mr. Bret Hahte wrote ’bout; nex’
-station is Shady Run; and eve’ybody look and
-see the greates’ scenic ’traction of dis or any
-odder railroad, Cape Hohn!”</p>
-
-<p>Instantly, Mrs. Melville fished her guide-book
-and began to read:</p>
-
-<p>“‘There are few mountain passes more famous
-than that known to the world as Cape Horn. The
-approach to it is picturesque, the north fork of
-the American River raging and foaming in its
-rocky bed, fifteen hundred feet below and parallel
-with the track—’”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mind, Millicent, if we look instead
-of listen?” Aunt Rebecca interrupted, and Mrs.
-Melville lapsed into an injured muteness.</p>
-
-<p>Truly, Cape Horn has a poignant grandeur
-that strikes speech from the lips. One can not
-look down that sheer height to the luminous ghost
-of a river below, without a thrill. If to pass along
-the cliff is a shivering experience, what must the
-actual execution of that stupendous bit of engineering
-have been to the workmen who hewed
-the road out of the rock, suspended over the
-abyss! Their dangling black figures seem to
-sway still as one swings around the curve.</p>
-
-<p>Our travelers sat in silence, until the “Cape”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[77]</span>
-was passed and again they could see their road-bed
-on the side. Then Mrs. Melville made a polite
-excuse for departure; she had promised a
-“Daughter” whom she had met at various “biennials”
-that she would have a little talk with her.
-Thus she escaped. They did not miss her. Hardly
-speaking, the four sat in the dimly lighted, tiny
-room, while mountains and fields and star-sown
-skies drifted by. Unconsciously, Archie drew
-closer to his uncle, and the older man threw an
-arm about the young shoulders. He looked up to
-meet Janet’s eyes shining and sweet, in the flash
-of a passing station light. Mrs. Winter smiled,
-her wise old smile.</p>
-
-<p>With the next morning came another shift of
-scene; they were in the fertile valleys of California.
-At every turn the landscape became more
-softly tinted, more gracious. Aunt Rebecca was
-in the best of humor and announced herself as
-having the journey of her life. The golden green
-of the grain fields, the towering palms, the pepper-trees
-with their fascinating grace, the round tops
-of the live-oaks, the gloss of the orange groves,
-the calla-lily hedges and the heliotrope and geranium
-trees which climbed to the second story of
-the stucco houses, filled her with the enthusiasm<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[78]</span>
-of a child. She drank in the cries of the enterprising
-young liar who cried “Fresh figs,” months
-out of season, and she ate fruit, withered in cold
-storage, with a trustful zest. No less than three
-books about the flora of California came out of
-her bag. A certain vine called the Bougainvillea,
-she was trying to find, if only the cars
-would not go so fast; as for poinsettias, she certainly
-should raise her own for Christmas. She
-was learned in gardens and she discoursed with
-Miss Smith on the different kinds of trumpet-vine,
-and whether the white jasmine trailing
-among the gaudy clusters was of the same family
-as that jasmine which they knew in the pine forests.
-But she disparaged the roses; they looked
-shop-worn. The colonel watched her in amazement.</p>
-
-<p>“Bertie, I make you think of that little dwarf
-of Dickens’, don’t I?” she cried. “Miss Muffins,
-Muggins? what <i>was</i> her name? You are expecting
-me to exclaim, ‘Ain’t I volatile?’ Thank
-Heaven, I am. I could always take an interest in
-trifles. It has been my salvation to cultivate an
-interest in trifles, Bertie; there are a great many
-more trifles than crises in life. Where has Janet
-gone? Oh, to give the porter the collodion for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[79]</span>
-his cut thumb. People with troubles, big or little,
-are always making straight for Janet. Bertie,
-have you made your mind up about her?”</p>
-
-<p>“Only that she is charming,” replied the colonel.
-He did not change color, but he was uneasily
-conscious that he winced, and that the shrewd old
-critic of life and manners perceived it. But she
-was mercifully blind to all appearance; she went
-on with the little frown of the solver of a psychological
-enigma. “Yes, Janet is charming; and
-why? She is the stillest creature. Have you noticed?
-Yet you never have the sense that she
-hasn’t answered you. She’s the best listener in the
-world; and there’s one thing about her unusual
-in most listeners—her eyes never grow vacant.”</p>
-
-<p>Rupert had noticed; he called himself a doddering
-old donkey silently, because he had assumed
-that there was anything personal in the interest
-of those eyes when he had spoken. Of
-course not; it was her way with every one, even
-Millicent, no doubt. His aunt’s next words were
-lost, but a sentence caught his ear directly: “For
-all she’s so gentle, she has plenty of spirit. Bertie,
-did I ever tell you about the time our precious
-cousin threw our great-great-grandfather’s gold
-snuff-box at her? No? It was funny. She flew<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[80]</span>
-into one of her towering rages, and shrieking,
-‘Take <i>that</i>!’ hurled the snuff-box at Janet. Janet
-wasn’t used to having things thrown at her. She
-caught the box, then she rang the bell. ‘Thank
-you very much,’ says Janet; and when old Aunt
-Phrosie came, she handed the snuff-box to her,
-saying it had just been given to her as a present.
-But she sent it that same day to one of the sisters.
-There was never anything else thrown at her, I
-can tell you.”</p>
-
-<p>They found a wonderful sunset on the bay when
-San Francisco was reached. Still in her golden
-humor, as they rattled over the cobblestones of
-the picturesque streets to the Palace Hotel, Mrs.
-Winter told anecdotes of Robert Louis Stevenson,
-obtained from a friend who had known his
-mother. Mrs. Winter had chosen the Palace in
-preference to the St. Francis, to Mrs. Melville’s
-high disgust.</p>
-
-<p>“She thinks it more typical,” sneered Millicent;
-“myself, I prefer cleanliness and comfort to
-types.”</p>
-
-<p>Their rooms were waiting for them and two
-bell-boys ushered Mrs. Winter into her suite.
-Randall was lodged on the same floor, and Mrs.
-Melville, who was to spend a few days with her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[81]</span>
-aunt on the latter’s invitation, was on a lower
-floor. The colonel had begged to have Archie
-next to him; and he examined the quarters with
-approbation. His own room was the last of the
-suite; to the right hand, between his room and
-Archie’s, was their bath; then the parlor of Mrs.
-Winter’s suite next her room and bath, and last,
-to the right, Miss Smith’s room.</p>
-
-<p>Archie was sitting by the window looking
-out on the street; only the oval of his soft boyish
-cheek showed. The colonel went by him to the
-parlor beyond, where he encountered his aunt,
-her hands full of gay postal cards.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Souvenirs de voyage</i>,” she answered his
-glance; “I am going to post them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t I take them for you?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, thanks, I want the exercise.”</p>
-
-<p>“May I go with you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed, no. My dear Bertie, I’m only aged,
-I’m not infirm.”</p>
-
-<p>“You will <i>never</i> be aged,” responded the colonel
-gallantly. He turned away and walked along
-the arcade which looked down into the great court
-of the hotel. Millicent was approaching him; Millicent
-in something of a temper. Her room was
-hideously draughty and she could not get any one,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[82]</span>
-although she had rung and telephoned to the office
-and tried every device which was effectual in
-a well-conducted hotel; but this, she concluded
-bitterly, was not well-conducted; it was only
-typical.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s a lovely fire in Aunt Rebecca’s parlor,”
-soothed the colonel; “come in there.”</p>
-
-<p>Afterward it seemed to him that this whole interview
-with Millicent could not have occupied
-more than four minutes; that it was not more than
-seven minutes since he had seen Archie’s shapely
-curly head against the curtain fall of the window.</p>
-
-<p>But when he opened the door, Miss Smith
-came toward them. “Is Archie with Aunt Rebecca?”
-said she.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel answered that he had left him in
-the parlor; perhaps he had stepped into his own
-room.</p>
-
-<p>But neither in Archie’s nor the colonel’s nor in
-any room of the party could they find the boy.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[83]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER V<br />
-
-<small>BLIND CLUES</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>“But this is preposterous,” cried Mrs. Melville,
-“you <i>must</i> have seen him had he come out of the
-room; you were directly in front of the doors all
-the time.”</p>
-
-<p>“I was,” admitted the colonel; “can—can the
-boy be hiding to scare us?” He spoke to Miss
-Smith. She had grown pale; he did not know
-that his own color had turned. Millicent stared
-from one to the other.</p>
-
-<p>“How ridiculous!” she exclaimed; “of course
-not; but he must be somewhere; let <i>me</i> look!”</p>
-
-<p>Look as they might through all the staring,
-empty rooms, there was no vestige of the boy. He
-was as clean vanished as if he had fallen out of
-the closed and locked windows. The colonel examined
-them all; had there been one open, he
-would have peered outside, frightened as he had
-never been when death was at his elbow. But it
-certainly wasn’t possible to jump through a window,
-and not only shut, but lock it after one.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[84]</span>Under every bed, in every closet, he prowled;
-he was searching still when Mrs. Winter returned.
-By this time Mrs. Melville was agitated,
-and, naturally, irritated as well. “I think it is unpardonable
-in Archie to sneak out in this fashion,”
-she complained.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose the boy wanted to see the town a
-bit,” observed Aunt Rebecca placidly. “Rupert,
-come in and sit down; he will be back in a moment;
-smoke a cigar, if your nerves need calming.”</p>
-
-<p>Rupert felt as if he were a boy of ten, called
-back to common sense out of imaginary horrors
-of the dark.</p>
-
-<p>“But, if he wanted to go out, why did he leave
-his hat and coat behind him?” asked Miss Smith.</p>
-
-<p>“He may be only exploring the hotel,” said
-Mrs. Winter. “Don’t be so restless, Bertie; sit
-down.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel’s eye was furtively photographing
-every article of furniture in the room; it lingered
-longest on Mrs. Winter’s wardrobe-trunk, which
-was standing in her room. Randall had been despatched
-for a hot-water bottle in lieu of one
-which had sprung a leak on the train; so the trunk
-stood, its door ajar.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[85]</span>“Maybe he is doing the Genevra stunt in there—is
-that what you are thinking?” she jeered.
-“Well, go and look.”</p>
-
-<p>Light as her tone was, she was not unaffected
-by the contagion of anxiety about her; after a moment,
-while Rupert was looking at the wardrobe-trunk,
-and even profanely exploring the swathed
-gowns held in rigid safety by bands of rubber,
-she moved about the rooms herself.</p>
-
-<p>“There isn’t room for a mouse in that box,”
-growled the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course not,” said his aunt languidly, sinking
-into the easiest chair; “but your mind is easier.
-Archie will come back for dinner; don’t worry.”</p>
-
-<p>“How could he get by <i>me</i>?” retorted the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps he went into one of the neighboring
-rooms,” Miss Smith suggested. “Shall I go out
-and rap on the door of the next room on the left?”
-On the right the last room of the party was a
-corner room.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, you <i>might</i>,” acquiesced Aunt Rebecca;
-but Mrs. Melville cut the ends of her words.</p>
-
-<p>“Pray let me go, Aunt Rebecca,” she begged,
-suiting the action to the words, and was out of
-the door almost ahead of her sentence.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[86]</span>The others waited; they were silent; little flecks
-of color raddled Mrs. Winter’s cheeks. They
-could hear Millicent’s knock reverberating. There
-was no answer. “Telephone to the adjacent
-rooms,” proposed the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll telephone,” said Mrs. Winter, and rang
-up the number of the next room. There was no
-response; but when she called the number of the
-room adjoining, she seemed to get an answer, for
-she announced her name. “Have you seen a
-young lad?” she continued, after an apology for
-disturbing them. “He belongs to our party; has
-he by chance got into your room? and is he
-there?” In a second she put down the receiver
-with a heightened color, saying, “They might be
-a little civiler in their answers, if it <i>is</i> Mr. Keatcham’s
-suite.”</p>
-
-<p>“What did the beggar say?” bristled the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“Only that it was Mr. Keatcham’s suite—Mr.
-E. S. Keatcham—as if <i>that</i> put getting into it
-quite out of the question. Some underling, I presume.”</p>
-
-<p>“There is the unoccupied room between. That
-is not accounted for. But it shall be. I will find
-out who is in there.” Rupert rose as he spoke,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[87]</span>
-pricked by the craving for action of a man accustomed
-to quick decision. He heard his aunt
-brusquely repelling Millicent’s proposal of the police,
-as he left the room. Indeed, she called him
-back to exact a promise that he would not make
-Archie’s disappearance public. “We want to find
-him,” was her grim addendum; “and we can’t
-have the police and the newspapers hindering us.”</p>
-
-<p>In the office, he found external courtesy and a
-rather perfunctory sympathy, based on a suppressed,
-but perfectly visible conviction that the
-boy had stolen out for a glimpse of the city, and
-would be back shortly.</p>
-
-<p>The manager had no objection to telling Colonel
-Winter, whom he knew slightly, that the occupant
-of the next room was a New England lady
-of the highest respectability, Mrs. Winthrop
-Wigglesworth. If the young fellow didn’t turn
-up for dinner, he should be glad to ask Mrs. Wigglesworth
-to let Mrs. Winter examine her room;
-but he rather thought they would be seeing young
-Winter before then—oh, his hat? They usually
-carried caps in their pockets; and as to coats—boys
-never thought of their coats.</p>
-
-<p>The manager’s cheeriness did not especially uplift
-the colonel. He warmed it over dutifully,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[88]</span>
-however, for his womankind’s benefit. Miss
-Smith had gone out; why, he was not told, and
-did not venture to ask. Mrs. Melville kept making
-cautious signals to him behind his aunt’s back;
-otherwise she was preserving the mien of sympathetic
-solemnity which she was used to show at
-funerals and first visits of condolence and congratulation
-to divorced friends. Mrs. Winter, as
-usual, wore an inscrutable composure. She was
-still firmly opposed to calling in the aid of the police.</p>
-
-<p>Did she object to his making a few inquiries
-among the hotel bell-boys, the elevator boy and
-the people in the restaurant or in the office?</p>
-
-<p>Not at all, if he would be cautious.</p>
-
-<p>So he sallied out, and, in the midst of his fruitless
-inquisition, Millicent appeared.</p>
-
-<p>Forcing a civil smile, he awaited her pleasure.
-“Go on, don’t mind me,” said she mournfully;
-“you will feel better to have done everything in
-your power.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I shall not discover anything?”</p>
-
-<p>“I fear not. Has it not occurred to you that he
-has been kidnapped?”</p>
-
-<p>“Hmn!” said the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“And did you notice how perturbed Miss Smith<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[89]</span>
-seemed? She was quite pale; her agitation was
-quite noticeable.”</p>
-
-<p>“She is tremendously fond of Archie.”</p>
-
-<p>“Or—she knows more than she will say.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, what rot!” sputtered the colonel; then he
-begged her pardon.</p>
-
-<p>“Wait,” he counseled, and his man’s resistance
-to appearances had its effect, as masculine immobility
-always has, on the feminine effervescence
-before him. “Wait,” was his word, “at least until
-we give the boy a chance to turn up; if he has
-slipped by us, he is taking a little <i>pasear</i> on his
-own account; lads do get restless sometimes if
-they are held too steadily in the leash, especially—if
-you will excuse me—by, well, by ladies.”</p>
-
-<p>“If he has frightened us out of our wits—well,
-I don’t know what oughtn’t to be done to him!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh well, let us wait and hear <i>his</i> story,” repeated
-the soldier.</p>
-
-<p>But the last streaks of red faded out of the
-west; a chill fog smoked up from the darkening
-hills, and Archie had not come. At eight, Mrs.
-Winter ordered dinner to be served in their
-rooms. Miss Smith had not returned. The colonel
-attempted a military cheerfulness, which his
-aunt told him bluntly, later in the evening, reminded<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[90]</span>
-her of a physician’s manner in critical
-cases where the patient’s mind must be kept absolutely
-quiet.</p>
-
-<p>But she ate more than he at dinner; although
-her own record was not a very good one. Millicent
-avowed that she was too worried to eat, but
-she was tempted by the strawberries and carp,
-and wondered were the California fowls really
-so poor; and gave the sample the benefit of impartial
-and fair examination, in the end making
-a very fair meal.</p>
-
-<p>It is not to be supposed that Winter had been
-idle; before dinner he had put a guard in the hall
-and had seen Haley, who reported that his wife
-and child had gone to a kinswoman in Santa Barbara.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure the woman has a fine house intirely, and
-she’s fair crazy over the baby that’s named afther
-her, for she’s a widdy woman with never a child
-excipt wan that’s in hivin, a little gurrl; and she
-wudn’t let us rist ’til she’d got the cratur’. Nor
-I wasn’t objictin’, for I’m thinking there’ll be
-something doin’ and the wimin is onconvanient,
-thim times.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel admitted that he shared Haley’s
-opinion. He questioned the man minutely about<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[91]</span>
-Mercer’s conduct on the train. It was absolutely
-commonplace. If he had any connection (as the
-colonel had suspected) with the bandits, he made
-no sign. He sent no telegrams; he wrote no letters;
-he made no acquaintances, smoking his
-solitary cigar over a newspaper. Indeed, absolutely
-the only matter of note (if that were one)
-was that he read so many newspapers—buying
-every different journal vended. At San Francisco
-he got into a cab and Haley heard him give
-the order: “To the St. Francis.” Having his
-wife and child with him, the sergeant couldn’t
-follow; but he went around to the St. Francis
-later, and inquired for Mr. Mercer, for whom he
-had a letter (as was indeed the case—the colonel
-having provided him with one), but no such name
-appeared on the register. Invited to leave the letter
-to await the gentleman’s arrival, Haley said
-that he was instructed to give it to the gentleman
-himself; therefore, he took it away with him.
-He had carried it to all the other hotels or boarding-places
-in San Francisco which he could find,
-aided greatly thereto by a friend of his, formerly
-in “the old —th,” a sergeant, now stationed at the
-Presidio. Thanks to him, Haley could say definitely
-that Mercer was not at any of the hotels<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[92]</span>
-or more prominent boarding-houses in the city, at
-least under his own name.</p>
-
-<p>“And you haven’t seen him since he got into
-the cab at the station?” the colonel summed up.</p>
-
-<p>Haley’s reply was unexpected: “Yes, sor, I
-seen him this day, in the marning, in this same
-hotel.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where?”</p>
-
-<p>“Drinking coffee at a table in th’ coort. He
-wint out, havin’ paid the man, not a-signin’, an’
-he guv the waiter enough to make him say,
-‘Thank ye, sor,’ but not enough to make him
-smile and stay round to pull aff the chair. I follied
-him to the dure, but he got into an autymobile—”</p>
-
-<p>“Get the number?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yis, sor. Number—here ’tis, sor, I wrote it
-down to make sure.” He passed over to the colonel
-an old envelope on which was written a number.
-<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a>“M. 20139,” read the colonel, carefully noting
-down the number in his own memorandum-book.
-And he reflected, “That is a Massachusetts
-number—humph!”</p>
-
-<p>Haley’s information ended there. He heard of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[93]</span>
-Archie’s disappearance with his usual stolid mien,
-but his hands slowly clenched. The colonel continued:</p>
-
-<p>“You are to find out, if you can, by scraping
-acquaintance with the carriage men, if that auto—you
-have written a description, I see, as well
-as the number—find out if that auto left this hotel
-this afternoon between six and seven o’clock.
-Find out who were in it. Find out where it is
-kept and who owns it. Get H. Birdsall, Merchants’
-Exchange Building, to send a man to help
-you. Wait, I’ve a card ready for you to give him
-from me; he has sent me men before. Report by
-telephone as soon as you know anything. If I’m
-not here, speak Spanish and have them write it
-down. Be back here to-night by ten, if you can,
-yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>Haley dismissed, and his own appetite for dinner
-effectually dispelled by his report, Winter
-joined his aunt. Should he tell her his suspicions
-and their ground? Wasn’t he morally obliged,
-now, to tell her? She was co-guardian with him
-of the boy, who, he had no doubt, had been spirited
-away by Mercer and his accomplice; and
-hadn’t she a right to any information on the matter
-in his possession?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[94]</span>Reluctantly he admitted that she did have such
-a right; and, he admitted further, being a man
-who never cheated at solitaire, that his object in
-keeping the talk of the two men from her had
-not been so much the desire to guard her nerves
-(which he knew perfectly well were of a robuster
-fiber than those of most women twenty or forty
-years younger than she); no, he admitted it
-grimly, he had not so much spared his aunt as
-Janet Smith; he could not bear to direct suspicion
-toward her. But how could he keep silent longer?
-Kicking this question about in his mind, he
-spoiled the flavor of his after-dinner cigar, although
-his aunt graciously bade him smoke it in
-her parlor.</p>
-
-<p>And still Miss Smith had not returned; really,
-it was only fair to her to have her present when
-he told his story to his aunt; no, he was <i>not</i> grabbing
-at any excuse for delay; if he could watch
-that girl’s face while he told his story he would—well,
-he would have his mind settled one way or
-another.</p>
-
-<p>Here the telephone bell rang; the manager informed
-Colonel Winter that Mrs. Wigglesworth
-had returned.</p>
-
-<p>“Wigglesworth? what an extraordinary name!”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[95]</span>
-cried Millicent when the colonel shared his information.</p>
-
-<p>“Good old New England name; I know some
-extremely nice Wigglesworths in Boston,” Mrs.
-Winter amended with a touch of hauteur; and, at
-this moment, there came a knock at the door.</p>
-
-<p>There is all the difference in the world between
-knocks; a knock as often as not conveys a most
-unintentional hint in regard to the character of
-the one behind the knuckles; and often, also, the
-mood of the knocker is reflected in the sound
-which he makes. Were there truth in this, one
-would judge that the person who knocked at this
-moment must be a woman, for the knock was not
-loud, but almost timidly gentle; one might even
-guess that she was agitated, for the tapping was
-in a hurried, uneven measure.</p>
-
-<p>“I believe it is Mrs. Wigglesworth herself,” declared
-Aunt Rebecca. “Bertie, I’m going into the
-other room; she will talk more freely to you. She
-would want to spare my nerves. That is the
-nuisance of being old. Now open the door.”</p>
-
-<p>She was half-way across the threshold before
-she finished, and the colonel’s fingers on the door-knob
-waited only for the closing of her door to
-turn to admit the lady in waiting.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[96]</span>A lady she was beyond doubt, and any one who
-had traveled would have been sure that she was a
-lady from Massachusetts. She wore that little
-close bonnet which certain elderly Boston gentlewomen
-can neither be driven nor allured to abandon;
-her rich and quiet black silken gown might
-have been made any year within the last five, and
-her furs would have graced a princess. She had
-beautiful gray hair and a soft complexion and
-wore glasses. Equally evident to the observer was
-the fact of her suppressed agitation.</p>
-
-<p>She waved aside the colonel’s proffered chair,
-introducing herself in a musical, almost tremulous
-voice with the crisp enunciation of her section of
-the country. “I am Mrs. Wigglesworth; I understand,
-Colonel Winter—you?—y-yes, no, thank
-you, I will not sit. I—I understood Mrs. Winter—ah,
-your aunt, is an elderly woman.”</p>
-
-<p>“This is my sister-in-law, Mrs. Melville Winter,”
-explained the colonel. “My aunt is elderly
-in years, but in nothing else.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Wigglesworth smiled a faint smile; the
-colonel could see a tremble of the hand that was
-unconsciously drawing her fur collar more tightly
-about her throat. “How very nice—yes, to be
-sure,” she faltered. “But you will understand that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[97]</span>
-I did not wish to alarm her. I heard that you
-wanted to speak to me, and that the little boy was
-lost.”</p>
-
-<p>“Or stolen,” Mrs. Melville said crisply.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel, in a few words, displayed the situation.
-He had prevailed upon his visitor to sit
-down, and while he spoke he noticed that her
-hands held each other tightly, although she appeared
-perfectly composed and did not interrupt.
-She answered his questions directly and quietly.
-She had been away taking tea with a friend; she
-had remained to dine. Her maid had gone out
-earlier to spend the day and night with a sister in
-the city; so the room was empty between six and
-seven o’clock.</p>
-
-<p>“The chambermaid wasn’t there, then?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think so. She usually does the room
-and brings the towels for the bath in the morning.
-But I asked her, to make sure, and she says that
-she was not there since morning. She seems a
-good girl; I think she didn’t—but I have found
-something. At least I am af—I may have found
-something. I thought I might see Mrs. Winter’s
-niece about it”—she glanced toward Millicent,
-who said, “Certainly,” at a venture; and looked
-frightened.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[98]</span>“And you found—?” said the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“Only this. I went to my rooms, turned on the
-light and was taking off my gloves before I untied
-my bonnet. One of my rings fell on the floor.
-It went under a rug, and I at once remarked that
-it was a different place for the rug to the one
-where it had been before. Before, it was in front
-of the dresser, a very natural place, but now it is
-on the carpet to one side, a place where there
-seemed no reason for its presence. These details
-seem trivial, but—”</p>
-
-<p>“I can see they are not,” said the colonel.
-“Pray proceed, Madam. The ring had rolled under
-the rug!”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Wigglesworth gave him a grateful nod.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, it had. And when I removed the rug I
-saw it; but as I bent to pick it up I saw something
-else. In one place there was a stain, as large as
-the palm of my hand, a little pool of—it looks
-like blood.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Melville uttered an exclamation of horror.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel’s face stiffened; but there was no
-change in his polite attention.</p>
-
-<p>“May we be permitted to see this—ah, stain?”
-said he.</p>
-
-<p>The three stepped through the corridor to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[99]</span>
-outside door, and went into the chamber. The
-rug was flung to one side, and there on the gray
-velvet nap of the carpet was an irregular, sprawling
-stain about which were spattered other stains,
-some crimson, some almost black.</p>
-
-<p>Millicent recoiled, shuddering. The colonel
-knelt down and examined the stains. “Yes,” he
-said very quietly, “you are right, it is blood.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a tap on the door, which was opened
-immediately without waiting for a permission.
-Millicent, rigid with fright, could only stare helplessly
-at the erect figure, the composed, pale face
-and the brilliant, imperious eyes of her aunt.</p>
-
-<p>“What did you say, Bertie?” said Rebecca Winter.
-“I think I have a right to the whole truth.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[100]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VI<br />
-
-<small>THE VOICE IN THE TELEPHONE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Well, Bertie?” Mrs. Winter had gone back to
-her parlor in the most docile manner in the world.
-Her submission struck Rupert on the heart; it was
-as if she were stunned, he felt.</p>
-
-<p>He was sitting opposite her, his slender, rather
-short figure looking shrunken in the huge, ugly,
-upholstered easy-chair; he kept an almost constrained
-attitude of military erectness, of which
-he was conscious, himself; and at which he smiled
-forlornly, recalling the same pose in Haley whenever
-the sergeant was disconcerted.</p>
-
-<p>“But, first,” pursued his aunt, “who was that
-red-headed bell-boy with whom you exchanged
-signals in the hall?”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel suppressed a whistle. “Aunt
-Becky, you’re a wonder! Did you notice? And
-he simply shut the palm of his hand! Why, it’s
-this way: I was convinced that Archie must be
-on the premises; he <i>couldn’t</i> get off. So I telephoned<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[101]</span>
-a detective that I know here, a private
-agency, <i>not</i> the police, to send me a sure man to
-watch. He is made up as a bell-boy (with the
-hotel manager’s consent, of course); either I, or
-Millicent, or that boy has kept an eye on the
-Keatcham doors and the next room ever since I
-found Archie was gone. No one has gone out
-without our seeing him. If any suspicious person
-goes out, we have it arranged to detain him long
-enough for me to get a good look. I can tell you
-exactly who left the room.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is you who are the wonder, Bertie,” said
-Aunt Rebecca, a little wearily, but smiling. “Who
-has gone out?”</p>
-
-<p>“At seven Mr. Keatcham’s secretary went down
-to the office and ordered dinner, very carefully.
-I didn’t see him, but my sleuth did. He had the
-secretary and the valet of the Keatcham party
-pointed out to him; he saw them. They had one
-visitor, young Arnold, <i>the</i> Arnold’s son—”</p>
-
-<p>“The one who has all the orange groves and
-railways? Yes, I knew his father.”</p>
-
-<p>“That one; he only came a few moments since.
-Mr. Keatcham and his secretary dined together,
-and Keatcham’s own man waited on them; but
-the waiter for this floor brought up the dishes. At<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[102]</span>
-nine the dishes were brought out and my man
-helped Keatcham’s valet to pile them a little farther
-down the corridor in the hall.”</p>
-
-<p>These items the colonel was reading out of his
-little red book.</p>
-
-<p>“You have put all that down. Do you think it
-means anything?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have put everything down. One can’t weed
-until there is a crop of information, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“True,” murmured Aunt Rebecca, nodding her
-head thoughtfully. “Well, did anything else happen?”</p>
-
-<p>“The secretary posted a lot of letters in the
-shute. They are all smoking now. Yes—” he
-was on his feet and at the door in almost a single
-motion. There had been just the slightest tattoo
-on the panel. When the door was opened the
-colonel could hear the rattle of the elevator. He
-was too late to catch it, but he could see the inmates.
-Three gentlemen stood in the car. One was
-Keatcham, the other two had their backs to Winter.
-One seemed to be supporting Keatcham, who
-looked pale. He saw the colonel and darted at
-him a single glance in which was something
-like a poignant appeal; what, it was too brief for
-the receiver to decide, for in the space of an eye-blink<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[103]</span>
-a shoulder of the other man intervened,
-and simultaneously the elevator car began to
-sink.</p>
-
-<p>There was need to decide instantly who should
-follow, who stay on guard. Rupert bade the boy
-go down by the stairs, while, with a kind of bulldog
-instinct, he clung to the rooms. The lad was
-to fetch the manager and the keys of the Keatcham
-suite.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Rupert paced back and forth before
-the closed doors, whence there penetrated the
-rustle of packing and a murmur of voices. Presently
-Keatcham’s valet opened the farther door.
-He spoke to some one inside. “Yes, sir,” he said,
-“the porter hought to be ’ere now.”</p>
-
-<p>The porter was there; at least he was coming
-down the corridor which led to the elevator, trundling
-his truck before him. He entered the rooms
-and busied himself about the luggage.</p>
-
-<p>Doggedly the colonel stuck to his guard until
-the valet and another man, a clean-shaven, fresh-faced
-young man whom the watcher had never
-seen before, came out of the room. The valet
-superintended the taking of two trunks, accepting
-tickets and checks from the porter with a thoroughly
-Anglican suspicion and thoroughness of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[104]</span>
-inspection, while the young man stood tapping his
-immaculate trousers-leg with the stick of his admirably
-slender umbrella.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s all right, Colvin,” he broke in impatiently;
-“three tickets to Los Angeles, drawing-room, one
-lower berth, one section, checks for two trunks;
-come on!”</p>
-
-<p>Very methodically the man called Colvin
-stowed away his green and red slips, first in an
-envelope, then in his pocket-book, finally buttoning
-an inside pocket over all. He was the image
-of a rather stupid, conscientious English serving
-creature. Carefully he counted out a liberal but
-not lavish tip for the porter, and watched that
-functionary depart. Last of all, he locked the
-door.</p>
-
-<p>With extreme courtesy of manner Winter approached
-the young man.</p>
-
-<p>“Pardon me,” said he. “I am Colonel Winter;
-my aunt, Mrs. Winter, has the rooms near yours,
-and she finds that she needs another room or two.
-Are you leaving yours?”</p>
-
-<p>“These are Mr. Keatcham’s rooms, not mine,”
-the young man responded politely. “<i>He</i> is leaving
-them.”</p>
-
-<p>“When you give up your keys, would you mind<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[105]</span>
-asking the clerk to send them up to me?” pursued
-the colonel. “Room three twenty-seven.”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly,” replied the young man, “or would
-you like to look at them a moment now?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why—if it wouldn’t detain you,” hesitated
-Winter; he was hardly prepared for the offer of
-admittance.</p>
-
-<p>“Get the elevator and hold it a minute, Colvin,”
-said the young man, and he instantly fitted the key
-to the door, which he flung open.</p>
-
-<p>“Excuse me,” said he, as they stood in the
-room, “but aren’t you the Colonel Winter who
-held that mountain pass to let the other fellows
-get off, after your ammunition was exhausted?”</p>
-
-<p>“I seem to recall some such episode, only it
-sounds rather gaudy the way you put it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I read about you in the papers; you swam a
-river with Funston; did all kinds of stunts—”</p>
-
-<p>“Or the newspaper reporter did. You don’t
-happen to know anything about the price of these
-rooms, I suppose?”</p>
-
-<p>The young man did not know, but he showed
-the colonel through all the rooms with vast civility.
-He seemed quite indifferent to the colonel’s
-interest in closets, baths and wardrobes; he only
-wanted to talk about the Philippines.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[106]</span>The colonel, who always shied like a mettled
-horse from the flutter of his own laurels, grew
-red with discomfort and rattled the door-knobs.</p>
-
-<p>“There the suite ends,” said the young man.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, we don’t want it all, only a room or two,”
-Colonel Winter demurred. “Any one of these
-rooms would do. Well, I will not detain you. The
-elevator boy will be tired, and Mr. Keatcham will
-grow impatient.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all; he will have gone. I—I’m so very
-glad to have met you, Colonel—”</p>
-
-<p>In this manner, with mutual civilities, they
-parted, the young man escorting the colonel to his
-own door, which the latter was forced to enter by
-the sheer demands of the situation.</p>
-
-<p>But hardly had the door closed than he popped
-out again. The young man was swinging round
-the corner next the elevator.</p>
-
-<p>“Is he an innocent bystander or what?” puzzled
-the soldier. He resumed his march up and down
-the corridor. The next room to the Keatcham
-suite was evidently held by an agent of the Fireless
-Cooking Stove, since one of his samples had
-strayed into the hall and was mutely proclaiming
-its own exceeding worth in very black letters on
-a very white placard.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[107]</span>“If the young man and the valet are straight
-goods, the key will come up reasonably soon from
-the office,” thought the watcher.</p>
-
-<p>Sure enough, the keys, in the hands of Winter’s
-own spy, appeared before he had waited three
-minutes. He reported that the old gentleman got
-into a cab with his secretary and the valet, and the
-other gentlemen took another cab. The secretary
-paid the bill. Had he gone sooner than expected?
-No; he had engaged the rooms until Thursday
-night; this was Thursday night.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel asked about the next room, which
-was directly on the cross corridor leading to the
-elevator. The detective had been instructed to
-watch it. How long had the Fireless Cooking
-Stove man had it? There was no meat for suspicion
-in the answer. The stove man had come
-the day before the Keatcham party. He was a
-perfectly commonplace, good-looking young man,
-representing the Peerless Fireless Cooking Stove
-with much picturesque eloquence; he had sold a
-lot of stoves to people in the hotel, and he tried
-without much success to tackle “old Keatcham”;
-he had attacked even the sleuth himself. “He
-gave me a mighty good cigar, too,” chuckled the
-red-headed one.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[108]</span>“Hmn, you got it now?”</p>
-
-<p>“Only the memory,” the boy grinned.</p>
-
-<p>“You ought to have kept it, Birdsall would tell
-you; you are watching every one in these rooms.
-Did it have a necktie? And did you throw that
-away?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir, I kept that; after I got to smoking, I
-just thought I’d keep it.”</p>
-
-<p>When he took the tiny scrap of paper from his
-pocket-book the colonel eyed it grimly. “‘<i>A de
-Villar y Villar</i>,’” he read, with a slight ironic
-inflection. “Decidedly our young Fireless Stove
-promoter smokes good cigars!”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe Mr. Keatcham gave it to him. He was
-in there.”</p>
-
-<p>“Was he? Oh, yes, trying to sell his stove—but
-not succeeding?”</p>
-
-<p>“He said he was trying to get past the valet
-and the secretary; he thought if he could only get
-at the old man and demonstrate his stove he could
-make the sale. He could cook all right, that
-feller.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel made no comment, and presently
-betook himself to his aunt. She was waiting for
-him in the parlor, playing solitaire. Through the
-open door the white bed that ought to have been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[109]</span>
-Archie’s was gleaming faintly. The colonel’s
-brows met.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Bertie? Did you find anything?” Mrs.
-Winter inquired smoothly.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid not; but here is the report.” He
-gave it to her, even down to the cigar wrapper.</p>
-
-<p>“It doesn’t seem likely that Mr. Keatcham has
-anything to do with it,” said she. “He, no doubt,
-has stolen many a little railway, but a little boy
-is too small game.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t suspect Keatcham; but I wish I
-had caught the elevator to-night. He looked at
-me in a mighty queer way.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you recognize his secretary as any one
-whom you ever saw before?” asked Mrs. Winter.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t say,” was the answer, given with a
-little hesitation. “I’m not sure.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think I quite understand you, Bertie;
-better make a clean breast of all you know. I’m
-getting a little worried myself.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel reached across the cards and tapped
-his aunt’s arm affectionately. He felt the warmest
-impulse toward sympathy for her that he had
-ever known; it glistened in his eyes. Mrs. Winter’s
-cheeks slowly crimsoned; she turned her
-head, exclaiming, did she hear a noise; but the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[110]</span>
-colonel’s keen ears had not been warned. “Poor
-woman,” he thought, “she is worried to death,
-but she will not admit it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now, Bertie,” said Mrs. Winter calmly, but
-her elbow fell on her cards and spoiled a very
-promising game of Penelope’s Web, “now, Bertie,
-<i>what</i> are you keeping back?”</p>
-
-<p>Then, at last, the colonel told her of his experience
-in Chicago. She heard him quite without
-comment, and he could detect no shift of emotion
-in her demeanor of absorbed but perfectly calm
-attention, unless a certain tension of attitude and
-feature (as if, he phrased it, she were “holding
-herself in”) might be so considered. And he was
-not sure of this. When he came to the words
-which stuck in his throat, the sentence about Miss
-Smith, she smiled frankly, almost laughed.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of the recital—and the colonel had
-not omitted a word or a look in his memory—she
-merely said: “Then you think Cary Mercer has
-kidnapped Archie, and the nice-looking Harvard
-boy is helping him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you think it looks that way, yourself?”</p>
-
-<p>She answered that question by another one:
-“But you don’t think, do you, that Janet is the
-Miss Smith mentioned?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[111]</span>His reply came after an almost imperceptible
-hesitation: “No!”</p>
-
-<p>Again she smiled. “That is because you know
-Janet; if you didn’t know her you would think
-the chances were in favor of their meaning her?
-Naturally! Well, I know Cary a little. I knew
-his father <i>well</i>. I don’t believe he would harm a
-hair of Archie’s head. He isn’t a cruel fellow—at
-least not toward women and children. I’ve a notion
-that what he calls his wrongs have upset his
-wits a bit, and he might turn the screws on the
-Wall Street crowd that ruined him. That is, if
-he had a chance; but he is poor; he would need
-millions to get even a chance for a blow at them.
-But a child, a lad who looks like his brother—no,
-you may be sure he wouldn’t hurt Archie! He
-<i>couldn’t</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>“But—the name, Winter; it is not such a common
-name; and the words about a lady of—of—”
-The polite soldier hesitated.</p>
-
-<p>“An old woman, do you mean?” said Aunt Rebecca,
-with a little curving of her still unwrinkled
-upper lip.</p>
-
-<p>“It sounds so complete,” submitted her nephew.</p>
-
-<p>“Therefore distrust it,” she argued dryly.
-“Gaboriau’s great detective and Conan Doyle’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[112]</span>
-both have that same maxim—not to pick out easy
-answers.”</p>
-
-<p>Winter smiled in his own turn. “Still, sometimes
-the easy answers are right. Now, here is
-the situation: I hear this conversation at the
-depot. I find one of the men on the same train
-with me. He, presumably, if he <i>is</i> Cary Mercer,
-and I don’t think I can be mistaken in his identity—”</p>
-
-<p>“Unless another man is making up as Cary!”</p>
-
-<p>“It may seem conceited, but I don’t think I
-could be fooled. This man had every expression
-of the other’s, and I was too struck by the—I may
-almost call it malignant—look he had, not to recognize
-him. No, it <i>was</i> Mercer; he would certainly
-recognize you, and he would know who I
-am; he would not be called upon to snub me as a
-possible confidence man.”</p>
-
-<p>“That rankles yet, Bertie?”</p>
-
-<p>He made a grimace and nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“But,” he insisted, “isn’t it so? If he is up to
-some mischief, any mischief—doesn’t care to have
-his kin meet him—that is the way he would act,
-don’t you think?”</p>
-
-<p>“He might be up to mischief, yet have no designs
-on his kin.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[113]</span>“He might,” said the colonel musingly. A
-thought which he did not confide to the shrewd
-old woman had just flipped his mind. But he
-went on with his plea.</p>
-
-<p>“He avoids you; he avoids me. He is seen going
-into Keatcham’s drawing-room; that means
-some sort of an acquaintance with Keatcham,
-enough to talk to him, anyway. How much, I
-can’t say. Then comes the attack by the robbers;
-he is in another car, so there is no call for him to
-do anything; there is no light whatever on
-whether he had anything to do with the robbery.</p>
-
-<p>“Then we come here. Keatcham has the room
-next but one. Archie goes into his own room; we
-see him go; I am outside, directly outside; it is
-simply impossible for him to go out into the hall
-without my seeing him; besides, I found the doors
-outside all locked except the one to the right where
-we entered your suite; then we may assume that
-he could not go out. He could not climb out of
-locked windows on the third floor down a sheer
-descent of some forty or fifty feet. Your last
-room to the right, Miss Smith’s bedroom, is a
-corner room; besides, she was in it; that excludes
-every exit except that to the left. We find Mrs.
-Wigglesworth was absent, and there were evidences<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[114]</span>
-of—an—an attack of some kind carefully
-hidden, afterward. But there is no sign of the
-boy. I watch the rooms. If he is hidden somewhere
-in Keatcham’s rooms, the chances are, after
-Keatcham goes, they will try to take him off. I
-don’t think it probable that Keatcham knows anything
-about the kidnapping; in fact, it is wildly
-<i>im</i>probable. Well, Keatcham goes; immediately
-I get into the room. The valet and the young man
-visiting Keatcham, young Arnold, let me in without
-the slightest demur. Either they know nothing
-of the boy or somehow they have got him
-away, else they would not let me in so easily.
-Maybe they are ignorant and the boy is gone,
-both. We go to the rooms very soon after; there
-is not the smallest trace of Archie.”</p>
-
-<p>“How did he get out?”</p>
-
-<p>“They must have outwitted me, somehow,” the
-colonel sighed, “and it looks as if he went voluntarily;
-there was no possible carrying away by
-force. And there was no odor of chloroform
-about; that is very penetrating; it would get into
-the halls. They must have persuaded him to go—but
-how?”</p>
-
-<p>“If they have kidnapped him,” said Mrs. Winter,
-“they will send me some word, and if they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[115]</span>
-have persuaded him to run away, plainly he must
-be able to walk, and that—mess in Mrs. Wigglesworth’s
-room doesn’t mean anything bad.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course not,” said the colonel firmly.</p>
-
-<p>Then, in as casual a tone as he could command:
-“By the way, where is Miss Smith? She is back,
-isn’t she?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, a long time ago,” said Mrs. Winter. “I
-sent her to bed.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been frank with you. You will reciprocate
-and tell me why, for what, you sent her out?”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Winter made not the least evasion. She
-answered frankly: “I sent her with a carefully
-worded advertisement—but you needn’t tell Millicent,
-who has also gone to bed, thank Heaven—I
-sent her with a carefully worded advertisement to
-all the papers. This is the advertisement. It will
-reach the kidnappers, and it will not reach any
-one else. See.” She handed him a slip of paper
-from her card-case. He read:</p>
-
-<p>“To the holders of Archie W: Communicate
-with R. S. W., same address as before, and you
-will hear of something to your advantage. Perfectly
-safe.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel read it thoughtfully, a little puzzled.
-Before he had time to speak, his quick ears<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[116]</span>
-caught the sharp ring of his room telephone bell.
-He excused himself to answer it. His room was
-the last of the suite, but he shut the door on his
-way to the telephone.</p>
-
-<p>He expected Haley; nor was he disappointed.
-Haley reported—in Spanish—that he had traced
-the automobile; it was the property of young Mr.
-Arnold, son of the rich Mr. Arnold. Young Arnold
-had been at Harvard last year, and he took
-out a Massachusetts license; he had a California
-one, too. Should he (Haley) look up young Arnold?
-And should he come to report that night?</p>
-
-<p>The colonel thought he could wait till morning,
-and, a little comforted, hung up the receiver.
-Barely was it out of his hand when the bell
-shrilled again, sharply, vehemently. Winter put
-the tube to his ear.</p>
-
-<p>“Does any one want Colonel Winter, Palace
-Hotel?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>A sweet, eager, boyish voice called back: “Uncle
-Bertie! Uncle Bertie, don’t you worry; I’m
-all right!”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Archie!</i>” cried the colonel. “<i>Where are you?</i>”</p>
-
-<p>But there was no answer. He called again, and
-a second time; he told the lad that they were
-dreadfully anxious about him. He got no response<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[117]</span>
-from the boy; but another voice, a woman’s
-voice, said, with cold distinctness, as if to
-some one in the room: “No, don’t let him; it is
-impossible!” Then a dead wall of silence and Central’s
-impassive ignorance. He could get nothing.</p>
-
-<p>Rupert Winter stood a moment, frowning and
-thinking deeply. Directly, with a shrug of the
-shoulders, he walked out of his own outside door,
-locking it, and went straight to Miss Smith’s.</p>
-
-<p>He knocked, at first very gently, then more
-vigorously. But there was no answer. He went
-away from the door, but he did not reënter his
-room. He did not bear to his aunt the news which,
-with all its meagerness and irritating incompleteness,
-had been an enormous relief to him. He
-simply waited in the corridor. Five minutes, ten
-minutes passed; then he heard the elevator whir,
-and, standing with his hand on the knob of his
-open door, he saw his aunt’s companion, dressed
-for the street, step out and speed down the corridor
-to her own door.</p>
-
-<p>The other voice—the woman’s voice—had been
-Janet Smith’s.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[118]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VII<br />
-
-<small>THE HAUNTED HOUSE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>A mud-splashed automobile runabout containing
-two men was turning off Van Ness Avenue
-down a narrower and shadier side street in the
-afternoon of the Sunday following the disappearance
-of Archie Winter. One of the occupants
-seemed to be an invalid whom the brilliant March
-sunshine had not tempted out of his heavy wrappings
-and cap; the other was a short, thick-set,
-corduroy-jacketed chauffeur. One marked the
-runabout at a glance as a hardly used livery motor-car;
-but a moment’s inspection might have
-shown that it was running with admirable smoothness
-and quiet. The chauffeur wore goggles,
-hence his eyes were shielded, but he turned a
-broad smile upon the pallid cheeks and sharpened
-profile beside him.</p>
-
-<p>“Colonel, as a health-seeker who can’t keep
-warm enough, you’re great!” he cried. “Lord,
-but you look the part!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[119]</span>“If I can’t shed some of these confounded
-mufflers soon,” growled the pale sufferer addressed,
-“I’ll get so red with heat it will come
-through my beautiful powder. I hope those fellows
-won’t see us, for they will be on to us, all
-right.”</p>
-
-<p>“Our own mothers wouldn’t be on to us in these
-rigs,” the chauffeur replied cheerily; he seemed to
-be in a hopeful mood; “and let us once get into
-the house, and surprise ’em, and there’ll be something
-drop. But I haven’t really had a chance to
-tell you the latest—having to pick you up at a
-drug store this way. Now, let’s sum things up!
-You think the boy got out through Keatcham’s
-apartment? Or Mrs. Wigglesworth’s?”</p>
-
-<p>“How else?” said the colonel, “he can’t fly,
-and if he could, he couldn’t fly out and then lock
-the windows from the inside.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see”—the chauffeur appeared thoughtful—“and
-the Wigglesworth door was locked. You
-think that Keatcham is in it, someway?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not Keatcham,” said the colonel. “There
-was another man in the car—Atkins they called
-him, though he has disappeared. But Mercer remains.
-His secretary and that valet of his; I
-think the secretary is Cary Mercer. The boy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[120]</span>
-might have slipped out in those few moments we
-were hunting for him inside. Afterward, either
-Mrs. Melville Winter or I was on guard until
-your man came. He might go to the Fireless
-Stove man, slip out of his rooms, and round the
-corner to the elevator in a couple of seconds.
-Then, of course, I might see their rooms—”</p>
-
-<p>“Provided, that is, the Fireless Stove drummer
-is in the plot, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“The Fireless Stove drummer who smokes <i>Villar
-y Villar</i> cigars? He is in it, I think, Birdsall.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ll assume that. Next thing: you get
-the telephone call. And you say the voice sounded
-chipper; didn’t look like he was being hurt or
-bothered anyway, did it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all. Besides, you know the letter Miss
-Smith got this morning?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think I’d like another peek at that; will you
-drive her a minute, while I look at the letter
-again?” The instant his hands were free Birdsall
-pulled out the envelope from his leather-rimmed
-pocket.</p>
-
-<p>It was rectangular in shape and smaller than
-the ordinary business envelope. The paper was
-linen of a common diamond pattern, having no
-engraved heading. The detective ran his eyes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[121]</span>
-down the few lines written in an unformed boyish
-hand. There was neither date nor place; only
-these words:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Dear Miss Janet</span>—Don’t you or auntie be woried about
-me because I am well and safe and having a good time. I
-had the nose bleed that is why I spoted the carpet. Tell
-Auntie to please pay for it out of my next week’s allowance.
-Be sure and don’t wory.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="indentright">Your aff. friend,</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Archibald Page Winter</span>.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“You’re sure this is the boy’s writing?” was
-the detective’s comment.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure. And his spelling, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” said Birdsall, watching the colonel’s
-keen, aquiline profile as he spoke, “now you notice
-there’s no heading or mark on the paper;
-and the water-mark is only O. K. E., Mass., 1904.
-And that amounts to nothing; those folks sell all
-over the country. But you notice that it is not
-the ordinary business paper; it looks rather ladylike
-than commercial, doesn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel admitted that it did look so.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, assuming that this letter was sent with
-the connivance of the kidnappers, it looks as if
-our young gentleman wasn’t in any particular
-danger of having a hard time. To me, it looks<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[122]</span>
-pretty certain he must have skipped himself;
-tolled along someway, maybe, but not making
-any resistance. Now, is there anybody that you
-know who has enough influence over him for that?
-How about the lady’s maid?”</p>
-
-<p>“Randall has been a faithful servant for twenty
-years, a middle-aged, serious-minded, decent
-woman. Out of the question.”</p>
-
-<p>“This Miss Smith, your aunt’s companion, who
-is she? Do you know?”</p>
-
-<p>“A South Carolinian; good family; she has
-lived with my aunt as secretary and companion
-for a year; my aunt is very fond of her.”</p>
-
-<p>“That all you know? Well <i>I</i> have found out
-a little more; she used to live with a Mrs. James
-S. Hastings, a rich Washington woman. The
-lady’s only son fell in love with her; <i>somehow</i>
-the marriage was broken off.”</p>
-
-<p>“What was his name?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lawrence. They call him Larry. He went to
-Manila. Maybe you’ve met him there.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I knew him; I don’t believe he ever was
-accepted by her.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know. I have only had two days on
-her biography. Later, she went to Johns Hopkins
-Hospital. One of the doctors was very attentive<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[123]</span>
-to her—but it did not come to anything. She
-didn’t graduate. Don’t know why. Then she
-went to live with Miss Angela Nelson, who died
-and left her money, away from her own family.
-There was talk of breaking the will; but it wasn’t
-done. Then she came to Mrs. Winter.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel was silent; there was nothing discreditable
-in these details. He had known before
-that Janet Smith was poor; that she had been
-thrown on the world early; that she must earn
-her own livelihood; yet, somehow, as Birdsall
-marshaled the facts, there was an insidious, malarious
-hint of the adventuress, bandied from place
-to place, hawking her attractions about, wheedling,
-charming for hire, entrapping imbecile
-young cubs—Larry Hastings wasn’t more than
-twenty-two—somehow he felt a revolt against
-the picture and against the man submitting it—and,
-confound Millicent!</p>
-
-<p>The detective changed the manner of his questions
-a little. “I suppose your aunt is pretty advanced
-in years, though she is as well preserved
-an old lady as I have ever met, and as
-shrewd. Say, wouldn’t she be likely to leave the
-boy a lot of money?”</p>
-
-<p>“I dare say.” The colonel was conscious of an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[124]</span>
-intemperate impulse to kick Birdsall, who had
-been such a useful fellow in the Philippines.</p>
-
-<p>“If anything was to happen to him, who would
-get the money?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Mrs. Melville and I are next of kin,”
-returned the colonel dryly. “Do you suspect <i>us</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>“I did look up Mrs. Melville,” answered the
-unabashed detective, “but I guess she’s straight
-goods all right. But say, how about Miss Smith?”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel stared, then he laughed. “Birdsall,”
-said he, “there’s somewhat too much mention
-of ladies’ names to suit my Virginian taste.
-But if you mean to imply that Miss Smith is going
-to kill Archie to get my aunt’s money, I can tell
-you you are <i>’way off!</i> Your imagination is too
-active for your profession. You ought to hire
-out to the yellow journals.”</p>
-
-<p>His employer’s satire did not even flick the
-dust off Birdsall’s complacency; he grinned cheerfully.
-“Oh, I’m not so bad as <i>that</i>; I don’t suppose
-she did kill the boy; I think he’s alive, all
-right. But say, Colonel, I’ll give it to you straight;
-I do think the señora coaxed the boy off. You
-admit, don’t you, he went off. Well, then he was
-coaxed, somehow. Now, who’s got influence
-enough to coax him? You cross out the maid;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[125]</span>
-so do I. You cross out Mrs. Melville Winter; so
-do I. I guess we both cross out the old lady.
-Well, there’s you and the señora left. I don’t
-suspect <i>you</i>, General.”</p>
-
-<p>“Really? I don’t see why. I stand to make
-more than anybody else, if you are digging up
-motives. And how about the chambermaid?”</p>
-
-<p>Birdsall flashed a glance of reproach on his
-companion. “Now, Colonel, do you think I ain’t
-looked <i>her</i> up? First thing. Nothing in it. Decent
-Vermont girl, three years in the hotel. Came
-for her lungs. She ain’t in it. But let’s get back
-to Miss Smith. Did you know she is Cary
-Mercer’s sister-in-law?”</p>
-
-<p>He delivered his shot in a casual way, and the
-colonel took it stonily; nevertheless, it went to
-the mark. Birdsall continued. “Now, question is,
-<i>was</i> Mercer the secretary? You didn’t see the man
-in the elevator, except his back. Had he two
-moles?”</p>
-
-<p>“I couldn’t see. He had different clothes;
-but still there was something like Mercer about
-the shoulders.”</p>
-
-<p>“Burney didn’t get a chance to take a snapshot,
-but he did snap the stove man. Here it is. Pull
-that book out of my pocket.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[126]</span>Obeying, the colonel lifted a couple of small
-prints which he scrutinized intently, at the end,
-admitting, “Yes, it is he all right. Now do you
-know what <i>I</i> think?”</p>
-
-<p>Birdsall couldn’t form an idea.</p>
-
-<p>“I think the Keatcham party is in it; and I
-think they are after bigger game than Archie.
-Maybe the train robbers were a part of the
-scheme—although I’m not so sure of that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, the robbers were in it all right. But now
-come to Miss Smith; where does she come in?
-Or are you as sure of her as Mercer was in Chicago?”</p>
-
-<p>If he had expected to get a spark out of the
-Winter tinder by this scraping stroke, he was
-mistaken; the soldier did not even move his brooding
-gaze fixed on the hills beyond the house
-roofs; and he answered in a level tone: “Did you
-get <i>that</i> story from my aunt, or was it Mrs. Melville?
-I’m pretty certain you got your biography
-from that quarter. My aunt might have told her.”</p>
-
-<p>“That would be betraying a lady’s confidence.
-I’m only a detective, whose business is to pry,
-but I never go back on the ladies. And I think,
-same’s you, that the lady in question is a real
-nice, high-toned lady; but I can’t disregard the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[127]</span>
-evidence. I never give out my system, but I’ve
-got one, all the same. Look here, see this paper?”—he
-had replaced the envelope in his pocket;
-he pulled it out again; or rather, so the colonel
-fancied, until Birdsall turned the envelope over,
-revealing it to be blank. “There’s a sheet of
-paper inside; take it out. Look at the water-mark,
-look at the pattern; then compare it with this
-letter”—handing the colonel the original envelope.
-“Same exactly, ain’t they?”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel, who had studied the two sheets
-of paper silently, nodded as silently; and he had
-a premonition of Birdsall’s next sentence before
-it came. “Well, Mrs. Melville Winter, this morning,
-took me to Miss Smith’s desk, where we
-found this and a lot more like it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You seem to be right in thinking the paper
-widely distributed,” observed the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“And you don’t think that suspicious?”</p>
-
-<p>“I should think it more suspicious if the paper
-were not out on her desk. If she is such a deep
-one as you seem to think, she would hide such an
-incriminating bit of evidence.”</p>
-
-<p>“She didn’t know we suspected her. Of course,
-you haven’t shadowed her a little bit?”</p>
-
-<p>“There is a limit to detective duty in the case<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[128]</span>
-of a gentleman,” returned the colonel haughtily.
-“I have not.”</p>
-
-<p>Little Birdsall sighed; then in a propitiatory
-tone: “Well, of course, we both think there are
-other people in the job; I don’t know exactly what
-you mean by bigger game, but I can make a stagger
-at it. Now, say, did you get any answer when
-you wrote to Keatcham himself?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said the colonel grimly, “I heard. You
-know the sort of letter I wrote; telling him of our
-dreadful anxiety and about the lad’s being an
-orphan; don’t you think it was the sort of letter a
-decent man would answer, no matter how busy
-he might be?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure. Didn’t you get an answer?”</p>
-
-<p>“I did.” The colonel extricated himself from
-his wrappings enough to find a pale blue envelope,
-which he handed to Birdsall, at the same time
-taking the motor handle. “You see; type-written,
-very polite, chilly sort of letter, kind to make a
-man hot under the collar and swear at Keatcham’s
-heartlessness. Mr. Keatcham unable to answer,
-having been ill since he left San Francisco. Did
-not see anything of any boy. Probably boy ran
-away. Has no information of any kind to afford.
-And the writer is very sincerely mine. The minute<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[129]</span>
-I read it I was sure Mercer wrote it; and he
-wrote it to make me so disgusted with Keatcham
-I wouldn’t pursue the subject with him. Just the
-same way he snubbed my aunt; and, for that matter,
-just the way he tried to snub me on the train.
-But he missed his mark; I wired every hotel in
-Santa Barbara and every one in Los Angeles;
-and Keatcham isn’t there and hasn’t been there.
-He has a big bunch of mail at Santa Barbara
-waiting for him, forwarded from Los Angeles,
-but he hasn’t shown himself.”</p>
-
-<p>Birdsall shot a glance of cordial admiration
-at the colonel. “You’re all there, General,” he
-cried with unquenchable familiarity. “I’ve been
-trying to call up the Keatcham outfit, and <i>I</i>
-couldn’t get a line, either. They haven’t used the
-tickets they bought—their reservations went
-empty to Los Angeles. Now, what do you make
-out of that?”</p>
-
-<p>“I make out that Archie is only part of their
-game,” replied the soldier. “Now see, Birdsall,
-you are not going to get a couple of rich young
-college fellows to do just plain kidnapping and
-scaring women out of their money—”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord, General,” interrupted Birdsall, “those
-college guys don’t turn a hair at kidnapping;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[130]</span>
-they regularly steal the president of the freshman
-class, and the things they do at their hazing bees
-and initiations would make an Apache Indian sit
-up and take notice. I tell you, General, they’re
-the limit for deviltry.”</p>
-
-<p>“Some kinds. Not that kind; it’s too dirty.
-Arnold was one of the cleanest foot-ball players
-at Harvard. And I don’t know anything about
-human nature if that other youngster isn’t decent.
-But Mercer—<i>es un loco</i>; you can look out for
-anything from him. Now, see the combination.
-Arnold was at Harvard! I have traced the motor-car
-they used to him; and then, if you add that
-his father is away safe in Europe and he has an
-empty house, off to one side, with a quantity of
-space around it and the reputation of being
-haunted, why—”</p>
-
-<p>“It looks good to me. And I understand my
-men have got around it on the quiet all right.
-How’s your man Haley got on, hiring out to the
-Jap in charge?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well enough; the Jap took him on to mow,
-but either Mr. Caretaker doesn’t know anything
-or he won’t tell. He’s bubbling over with conversation
-about the flowers and the country and the
-Philippines, where he used to be; but he only<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[131]</span>
-knows that the honorable family are all away
-and he is to shun the house. Aren’t we almost
-there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Just around the corner. I guess when you
-see it you’ll think it’s just the <i>patio</i> a spook of
-taste would freeze to.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Why</i> is it haunted?”</p>
-
-<p>“Now you have me. I ain’t on to such dream
-stuff. Gimme five cards. Mrs. Arnold died off in
-Europe, so ’tain’t her; and the house has only
-been built two years; but the neighbors have seen
-lights and heard groans and a pick chopping at
-the stones. Some folks say the land belonged
-to an old miner and he died before he could tell
-where he’d buried his <i>mazuma</i>; so he is taking a
-little <i>buscar</i> after it. There’s the house, General.”</p>
-
-<p>The street climbed a gentle hill, and on its
-crest a large house, in mission style, looked over
-a pleasant land. Its position on a corner and the
-unusual size of the grounds about it gave the mansion
-an effect of space. Of almost rawly recent
-erection though it was, the kindly climate had so
-fostered the growth of the pines, acacias and live-oaks,
-the eucalypti and the orange-trees, which
-made a rich blur of color on the hillside, had so
-lavishly tended the creeping ivies and Bougainvilleas<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[132]</span>
-which masked the rounded lantern arches
-of the stern gray façade, and so sumptuously blazoned
-the flower-beds in the garden on the one
-hand, yet, on the other, had so cunningly dulled
-the greenish gray of the cobblestones from California
-arroyos in chimney and foundation, and
-had so softly streaked the marble of the garden
-statues and the plaster of walls and mansion with
-tiny filaments of lichens or faint green moss, that
-the beholder might fancy the house to be the ancient
-home of some Spanish hidalgo, handed down
-with an hereditary curse, through generations, to
-the last of his race. One was tempted to such a
-flutter of fancy because of the impression given
-by the mansion. A sullen reticence hung about the
-place. The windows, for the most part, were
-heavily shuttered. Not a pane of glass flashed
-back at the sunlight; even those casements not
-shuttered turned blank dark green shades, like
-bandaged eyes, on the court and the beautiful terraces
-and the lovely sweep of hillsides where the
-wonderful shadows swayed and melted.</p>
-
-<p>The bent figure of a man raking, distorted by
-the perspective, was visible just beyond the high
-pillars of the gateway. He paid no attention to
-the motions of the motor-car, nor did he answer<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[133]</span>
-a hail until it was repeated. Then he approached
-the car. Birdsall was in the roadway trying to
-unlock the gate. The man, whose Japanese features
-were quite distinguishable, bowed; he explained
-that the honorable owners were not at
-home; his insignificant self was the only keeper
-of the grounds. He spoke sufficiently good English
-with the accompaniment of a deprecatory,
-amiable smile. Birdsall, in turn, told him that his
-own companion was a very great gentleman from
-the East who belonged to a society of vast power
-which was investigating spectral appearances, and
-that he had come thousands of miles to see the
-ghost.</p>
-
-<p>The Japanese extended both hands, while the
-appeal of his smile deepened. “Too bad, velly,”
-he murmured, “but not leally any g’lost, no, nev’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you believe in the ghost?” asked Colonel
-Winter.</p>
-
-<p>“No, me Clistian boy, no believe not’ing.”</p>
-
-<p>“All the samee,” said the colonel, laboriously
-swinging himself from his vantage-ground of the
-motor seat to the flat top of the wall, thence dropping
-to the greensward below, “allee samee, like
-go in house hunt ghost.” He crackled a bank-note
-in the palm of the slim brown hand, smiling and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[134]</span>
-nodding as if to break the force of his brusque action.
-Meanwhile, Birdsall had safely shut off his
-engine before he placed himself beside the others
-with an agility hardly to be expected of his rotund
-build.</p>
-
-<p>As for the caretaker, whether because he perceived
-himself outnumbered, or because he was
-really void of suspicion, he accepted the money
-with outward gratitude and proffered his guidance
-through the garden and the orchards. He
-slipped into the rôle of cicerone with no atom of
-resistance; he was voluble; he was gracious; he
-was artlessly delighted with his señors. In spite
-of this flood of suavity, however, there seemed to
-be no possibility of persuading him to admit them
-to the house.</p>
-
-<p>Assured of this, the two fell back for a second,
-time for the merest eyeflash from the detective
-to the soldier, who at once limped briskly up to
-the Jap, saying: “We are very much obliged to
-you; this is a beautiful house, beautiful gardens;
-but we want to see the ghost; and if you can give
-me young Mr. Arnold’s address I will see him—or
-write, and we can come back.”</p>
-
-<p>The gardener, with many apologies and smiles,
-did not know Mr. Arnold’s honorable address, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[135]</span>
-he drew out a soiled card, explaining that it bore
-the name of the gentleman in charge of the property.
-Birdsall, peering over the Jap’s shoulders,
-added that it was the card of a well-known legal
-firm.</p>
-
-<p>“Then,” said the colonel with deliberation, “we
-will thank you again for your courtesy, and—what’s
-that?”</p>
-
-<p>The Jap turned; they all started at the barking
-detonation of some explosion; while they gazed
-about them there came another booming sound,
-and they could see smoke pouring from the chimney
-and leaking through the window joints of a
-room in the rear of the house. Like a hare, not
-breaking his wind by a single cry, the Jap sped
-toward the court. The others were hard on his
-heels, though the colonel limped and showed signs
-of distress by the time they reached the great iron
-door.</p>
-
-<p>The Jap pulled out a key; he turned it and
-swung the door barely wide enough to enter, calling
-on them to stay out; he would tell them if he
-needed them.</p>
-
-<p>“Augustly stay; maybe honolable t’ieves!” he
-cried.</p>
-
-<p>But the detective had interposed a stalwart leg<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[136]</span>
-and shoulder. Instantly the door swung open; he
-acted as if he had lost his wits with excitement.
-“You’re burning up! Lord! you’re burning!
-<i>Fire!</i> <i>Fire!</i>” he bawled, and rushed boldly into the
-room.</p>
-
-<p>Winter followed him, also calling aloud in a
-strident voice. And it was to be observed, being
-such an unusual preparation for a conflagration,
-that he had drawn a heavy revolver and ran with
-it in his hand. Before he jumped out of the car
-he had discarded his thick top-coat and all his
-wrappings.</p>
-
-<p>An observer, also (had there been one near),
-would have taken note of a robust Irishman, who
-had been weeding the flower-beds, and would have
-seen him straighten at the first peal of the explosion,
-stare wildly at the chimneys before any
-distinct smoke was to be seen, then run swiftly
-and climb up to a low chimney on a wing of the
-house, watering-pot in hand. He would have seen
-him empty his inadequate fire extinguisher and
-rapidly descend the ladder, while the smoke volleyed
-forth, as if defying his puny efforts; later,
-he would have seen the watering-pot bearer pursue
-the others into the house, emitting noble yells
-of “Fire!” and “Help!”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_136fp.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">The detective had interposed a stalwart leg and shoulder. Page <a href="#Page_135">135</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[137]</span>Further, this same observer, had he been an intimate
-friend of Sergeant Dennis Haley, certainly
-would have recognized that resourceful man of
-war in the amateur fireman.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[138]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VIII<br />
-
-<small>FACE TO FACE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>When the two men got into the house the dim
-rooms made them stumble for a moment after
-the brilliant sunshine of the outer skies; but in
-a second Birdsall’s groping hand had found an
-electric push-button and the room was flooded
-with light. They were in a small office off the
-kitchen, apparently. Smoke of a peculiarly pungent
-odor and eye-smarting character blurred all
-the surroundings; but during the moment the Jap
-halted to explore its cause the others perceived two
-doors and made for them. One was locked, but
-the other must have been free to open, since Haley,
-with his watering-can, bounded through it
-while they were tugging at the other. Almost immediately,
-however, Haley was back again shouting
-and pointing down the dark passage.</p>
-
-<p>“The fire’s <i>there</i>,” screamed the detective. “I
-can smell smoke! The smoke comes through the
-keyhole!” But while the Jap fitted a key in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[139]</span>
-lock and swung back the door, and Haley, who
-had paused to replenish his watering-can at a convenient
-faucet, darted after the other two, the
-colonel stood listening with every auditory nerve
-strained to catch some sound. He yelled “Fire!
-help!” at the top of his voice, but not moving a
-muscle. “Too far off,” he muttered, then he
-yelled again and threw a heavy chair as if he had
-stumbled against it. Another pause; he got down
-on his knees to put his ear to the floor. Directly
-he rose; he did not speak, but the words that he
-said to himself were only: “Just possible. Some
-one down cellar; but not under here.” Meanwhile
-he was hurrying in pursuit of the others as swiftly
-as his stiff knee would allow. He found them in
-a side hall with tiled or brick floor, gathered about
-a water-soaked heap of charred red paper.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis terrible!” announced Haley, “a bum for
-sure! a dinnermite bum!”—fishing out something
-like a tin tomato can from the sodden mass.</p>
-
-<p>“Anyhow, <i>there</i> goes the real thing,” observed
-the colonel coolly, as a formidable explosion
-jarred the air.</p>
-
-<p>“If you blow us up, I kill you flist!” hissed the
-Jap, and his knife flashed.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Chito, Chito!</i>” soothed the colonel, lifting his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[140]</span>
-revolver almost carelessly. Simultaneously two
-brawny arms pinioned the Jap’s own arms at his
-sides.</p>
-
-<p>“Shure, Mister Samurai, ’tis the ongrateful
-chap youse is,” expostulated Haley. “I hate to
-reshtrain ye, but if ye thry any jehujits on me
-’twill be sahanara wid youse mighty quick.”</p>
-
-<p>“No understan’,” murmured the Jap plaintively.
-“Why you hult me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Come, put out the fire first,” said the colonel;
-“you know the house, you go ahead.”</p>
-
-<p>The Jap darted on ahead so swiftly that they
-had some ado to follow; which seemed necessary,
-since he might have clashed a bolt on them at any
-turn. The colonel’s stiff leg kept him in the rear,
-but Haley was never a hand’s-breadth behind the
-runner.</p>
-
-<p>They found smoke in two places, but they easily
-extinguished the tiny flames. In both cases the
-bombs turned out to be no more dangerous than
-a common kind of fireworks yielding a suffocating
-smoke in an inclosure, but doing no especial damage
-on safe and fire-proof ground, like a hearth.
-They were quickly extinguished. In their search
-they passed from one luxurious room to another,
-the Jap leading, until he finally halted in a spacious<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[141]</span>
-library hung in Spanish leather, with ancient,
-richly carved Spanish tables and entrancing
-Spanish chairs of turned wood and age-mellowed
-cane, and bookcases sumptuously tempting a
-book-lover. But the colonel cared only for the soul
-of a book, not its body; the richest and clearest of
-black letter or the daintiest of tooling had left
-him cold; moreover, every fiber in him was strung
-by his quest; and Haley, naturally, was immune;
-strangely enough, it was the cheerful, vulgar little
-detective who gave a glance, rapid but full of admiration,
-at the shelves and pile of missals on the
-table, incongruously jostled by magazines of the
-day.</p>
-
-<p>Winter faced the Jap, who was sheathed again
-in his bland and impassive politeness. “Where is
-Mr. Mercer?” said he.</p>
-
-<p>The Jap waved his hands in an eloquent oriental
-gesture. He assured the honorable questioner
-that he did not know any Mr. Mercer.
-There was no one in the house.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel had seated himself in a priceless
-arm-chair in Cordova stamped leather; he no
-longer looked like an invalid. “Show your star,
-please,” he commanded Birdsall, and the latter silently
-flung back the lapel of his coat.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[142]</span>“I ought to tell you,” continued Rupert Winter,
-“that the game is up. It would do no good
-for you to run that poisoned bit of steel of yours
-into me or into any of us; we have only to stay
-here a little too long and the police of San Francisco
-will be down on you—oh, I know all about
-what sort they are, but we have money to spend
-as well as you. You take the note I shall write to
-Mr. Mercer, or whatever you choose to call him,
-and bring his answer. We stay here until he
-comes.”</p>
-
-<p>Having thus spoken in an even, gentle voice, he
-scribbled a few words on a piece of paper which
-he took out of his note-book. This he proffered to
-the Jap.</p>
-
-<p>On his part, the latter kept his self-respect; he
-abated no jot of his assurance that they were alone
-in the house; he insinuated his suspicion that they
-were there for no honest purpose; finally he was
-willing to search the house if they would stay
-where they were.</p>
-
-<p>“I am not often mistaken in people,” was the
-colonel’s rather oblique answer, “and I think you
-are a gentleman who might kill me if you had a
-chance, but would not break his word to me. If
-you will promise to play fair with us, do no harm<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[143]</span>
-to my nephew, take this letter and bring me an answer—if
-you find any one—on your word of
-honor as a Japanese soldier and gentleman, you
-may go; we will not signal the police. Is it a
-bargain?”</p>
-
-<p>The Jap gravely assented, still in the language
-of the East, “saving his face” by the declaration
-of the absence of his principals. And he went off
-as gracefully and courteously as if only the highest
-civilities had passed between them.</p>
-
-<p>“Won’t he try some skin game on us?” the detective
-questioned; but Winter only motioned toward
-the telephone desk. “Listen at it,” he said,
-“you can tell if the wires are cut; and he knows
-your men are outside hiding, somewhere; he
-doesn’t know how many. You see, we have the
-advantage of them there; to be safe they don’t
-dare to let many people into their secret. <i>We</i> can
-have a whole gang. We haven’t many, but they
-may <i>think</i> we have.”</p>
-
-<p>Birdsall, who had lifted the receiver to his ear,
-laid it down with an appeased nod. Immediately
-he proceeded to satisfy his professional conscience
-by a search in every nook and cranny of the apartment.
-But no result appeared important enough to
-justify the production of his red morocco note-book<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[144]</span>
-and his fountain-pen. He had paused in disgust
-when the colonel sat up suddenly, erect in his
-chair; his keener ears had caught some sound
-which made him dart to all the windows in succession.
-He called Haley (whom he had posted
-outside to guard the door) and despatched him
-across the hall to reconnoiter. “I am sure it was
-the sound of wheels,” he explained, “but Haley
-will be too late; we are on the wrong side of the
-house.”</p>
-
-<p>As he spoke the buzz of an electric bell jarred
-their ears. “Somebody is coming in the front
-door,” hazarded Birdsall.</p>
-
-<p>“Evidently,” returned the colonel dryly. “How
-can our absent friends get in otherwise—at least
-how can they let us understand they have come
-in? I think we are going to have the pleasure of
-an interview with the elusive Mr. Mercer.”</p>
-
-<p>They waited. The colonel motioned Birdsall to
-a seat by the table, within breathing distance of
-the telephone. He himself fluttered the loose
-journals and magazines, his ironic smile creasing
-his cheek. “Our Japanese friend reads the newspapers,”
-he remarked. “Here are to-day’s papers;
-yes, <i>Examiner</i> and <i>Chronicle</i>, unfolded and
-smoked over. Cigar, too, not cigarette, for here<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[145]</span>
-is a stump—decidedly our cherry-blossom friends
-are getting civilized!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, there is somebody <i>in</i> here all right,”
-grunted Birdsall. “Say, Colonel, you are sure
-Mrs. Winter has had no answer to her ad? No
-kind of notice about sending money?”</p>
-
-<p>“I haven’t seen her for a few hours, but I saw
-Mrs. Melville Winter; she was positive no word
-had come. She thought my aunt was more worried
-than she would admit, and Miss Smith looked
-pale, although she seemed hopeful.”</p>
-
-<p>“She didn’t really want to give me the letter, I
-thought,” said the detective. The colonel gave
-him no reply save a black look. A silence fell. A
-footfall outside broke it, a firm, in nowise
-stealthy footfall. Birdsall slipped his hand inside
-his coat. The colonel rose and bowed gravely to
-Cary Mercer.</p>
-
-<p>On his part, Mercer was not in the least flurried;
-he looked at the two men, not with the arrogant
-suspicion which had stung Winter on the
-train, but with the melancholy courtesy of his
-bearing at Cambridge, three years before.</p>
-
-<p>“This, I think, is Colonel Winter?” he said, returning
-the bow, but not extending his hand,
-which hung down, slack and empty at his side.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[146]</span>“I am glad you recognized me this time, Mr.
-Mercer.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am sorry that I did not recognize you before,”
-answered Mercer. “Will you gentlemen be
-seated? I am not the owner of the house nor his
-son; I am not even a friend, only a casual acquaintance
-of the young man, but I seem to be
-rather in the position of host, so will you be
-seated, and may I offer you some Scotch and
-Shasta—Mr.—ah—”</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Horatio Birdsall, of the Birdsall and
-Gwen Detective Agency,” interposed Winter.
-Birdsall bowed. Mercer bowed. “Excuse me if
-I decline for us both; our time is limited—no,
-thank you, not a cigar, either. Now, Mr. Mercer,
-to come to the point, I want my nephew. I understand
-he is in this house.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are quite mistaken,” Mercer responded
-with unshaken calm. “He is not.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where is he, then?”</p>
-
-<p>“I do not know, Colonel Winter. What I
-should recommend is for you to go back to the
-Palace, and if you do not find him there—why,
-come and shoot us up again!” His eye strayed
-for a second to the blackened, reeking mass on
-the great stone hearth.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[147]</span>“Have you sent him home? Is that what you
-mean to imply?”</p>
-
-<p>“I imply nothing, Colonel; I don’t dare to with
-such strenuous fighters as you gentlemen; only
-go and see, and if you do find the young gentleman
-has had no ill treatment, no scare—only a
-little adventure such as boys like, I hope you will
-come out here, or wherever I may be, and have
-that cigar you are refusing.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel was frankly puzzled. He couldn’t
-quite focus his wits on this bravado which had
-nothing of the bravo about it, in fact had a tinge
-of wistfulness in its quiet. One would have said
-the man regretted his compulsory attitude of antagonism;
-that he wanted peace.</p>
-
-<p>Mercer smiled faintly. “You ought to know
-by this time when a man is lying, Colonel,” he
-continued, “but I will go further. I may have
-done plenty of wrong things in my life, some
-things, maybe, which the law might call a crime;
-but I have never done anything which would debar
-me from passing my word of honor as a gentleman;
-nor any one else from taking it. I give
-you my word of honor that I have meant and I
-do mean no slightest harm to Archie Winter; and
-that, while I do not <i>know</i> where he is at this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[148]</span>
-speaking, I believe you will find him safe under
-your aunt’s protection when you get back to the
-Palace.”</p>
-
-<p>“Call up the Palace Hotel, Mr. Birdsall,” was
-the colonel’s reply. “Mr. Mercer, I do not distrust
-that you are speaking exactly, but you know
-your Shakespeare; and there are promises which
-keep their word to the ear but break it to the
-sense.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t wonder at your mistake; but you are
-mistaken, suh.”</p>
-
-<p>Birdsall was phlegmatically ringing up Mrs.
-Winter, having the usual experience of the rash
-person who intrudes his paltry needs on the complex
-workings of a great hotel system.</p>
-
-<p>“No, I don’t know the number, I haven’t the
-book here, but <i>you</i> know, Palace Hotel. Well
-give me Information, then—Busy? Well, give
-me another Information, then—yes, I want the
-Palace Hotel—P-a-l-a-c-e—yes, yes, Palace Hotel;
-yes, certainly. Yes? Mrs. Archibald Winter.
-Yes—line busy? Well, hold on until it is disengaged.
-Say, Miss Furber, that you? This is
-Birdsall and Gwen. Yes. Give me Mrs. Winter,
-will you, 337? This Mrs. Winter? Oh! When
-will she be back? Is Mrs. Melville Winter in?<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[149]</span>
-Well, Miss Smith in? She’s gone, too? Has Master
-Archibald got back, yet, to the hotel? Hasn’t?
-Thank you—eh?” in answer to the colonel’s interruption.
-“What say, Colonel?”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell her to call up this number,”—the colonel
-read it out of the telephone book—“when Master
-Archie does get back, will you? I am afraid, Mr.
-Mercer, that you will have to allow us to trespass
-on your hospitality for a little longer.”</p>
-
-<p>He suspected that Mercer was annoyed, although
-he answered lightly enough: “As you
-please, Colonel Winter. I am sure you will hear
-very soon. Now, there is another matter, your
-machine; I understand you left it outside. Will
-you ring for Kito, Colonel? Under the circumstances
-you may prefer to do your own ringing.
-I will ask him to attend to the car.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel made proper acknowledgments.
-He was thinking that had Mercer cared to confiscate
-the motor, he would have done it without
-ringing; on the other hand, did he desire some
-special intercourse with his retainer, wherein, under
-their very noses, he could issue his orders—well,
-possibly they might get a whiff of the secret
-themselves were he allowed to try. At present the
-game baffled him. Therefore he nodded at Birdsall’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[150]</span>
-puckered face behind Mercer’s shoulder.
-And he rang the bell.</p>
-
-<p>The Jap answered it with suspicious alacrity.</p>
-
-<p>“Kito,” said Mercer, “will you attend to General
-Winter’s car? Bring it up to the court.”</p>
-
-<p>Absolutely harmless, to all appearances, but
-Birdsall, from his safe position behind master and
-man, looked shrewd suspicion at the soldier.</p>
-
-<p>“Shall your man in the hall go with him?”
-asked Mercer.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel shook his head. “No,” he said
-quietly, “we have other men outside if he needs
-help. Call Skid, please.” But when Birdsall attempted
-to get Central there was no response.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel merely shrugged his shoulders, although
-Birdsall frowned with vexation. “What a
-pity!” said Winter softly. “Now the fellows will
-come when the time is up; we can’t call them off.”</p>
-
-<p>Mercer smiled faintly. “There are two more
-telephones in the house,” he observed. “You can
-call off your dogs easily any time you wish. Also
-you can hear from the Palace. Will you come up-stairs
-with me? I assure you I have not the least
-intention to harm you or the honest sergeant.”</p>
-
-<p>“You take the first trick, Mercer,” said the colonel.
-“I supposed the bell was your signal to have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[151]</span>
-the wires cut. But about going; no, I think we
-will stay here. There is a door out on the court
-which, if you will open—thank you. A charming
-prospect! Excuse me if I send Haley out there;
-and may I go myself?”</p>
-
-<p>Anticipating the answer, he stepped under the
-low mission lintel into a fairy-like Californian
-court or <i>patio</i> of pepper-trees and palms and a
-moss-grown fountain. There was the usual colonnade
-with a stone seat running round the wall.
-Mercer, smiling, motioned to one of them. “I
-wish I could convince you, Colonel, that you are
-in no need of that plaything in your hand, and
-that you are going to dine with your boy—isn’t
-he a fine fellow?”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel did not note either his admission
-that he had seen Archie, nor a curious warming
-of his tone; he had stiffened and grown rigid like
-a man who receives a blow which he will not
-admit. He stole a glance at the detective and met
-an atrocious smirk of complacency. They both
-had caught a glimpse of a figure flitting into a
-door of the court. They both had seen a woman’s
-profile and a hand holding a little steel tool which
-had ends like an alligator’s nose. And both men
-had recognized Miss Smith.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[152]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IX<br />
-
-<small>THE AGENT OF THE FIRELESS STOVE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>The time was two hours later. Rupert Winter
-was sitting on one of the stone benches of the
-colonnade about the <i>patio</i>. The court was suffused
-with the golden glow presaging sunset.
-Warm afternoon shadows lay along the flags;
-wavering silhouettes of leafage or plant; blurred
-reflections from the bold has-reliefs of Spanish
-warriors and Spanish priests sculptured between
-the spandrels of the arches. Winter’s dull eyes
-hardly noted them: the exotic luxuriance of foliage,
-the Spanish armor and Spanish cowls were
-all too common to a denizen of a Spanish colony
-in the tropics, to distract his thoughts from his
-own ugly problem. He had been having it out
-with himself, as he phrased it. And there had
-been moments during those two hours, when he
-had ground his teeth and clenched his fists because
-of the futile and furious pain in him.</p>
-
-<p>When he recognized Janet Smith, by that same<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[153]</span>
-illuminating flash he recognized that this woman
-who had been tricking him was the woman that
-he loved. He believed that he had said his last
-word to love, but love, after seeming to accept the
-curt dismissal, was lightly riding his heart again.
-“Fooled a second time,” he thought with inexpressible
-bitterness, recalling his unhappy married
-life and the pretty, weak creature who had
-caused him such humiliation. Yet with her
-there had been no real wrong-doing, only absolute
-lack of discretion and a childish craving for gaiety
-and adulation. Poor child! what a woeful ending
-for it all! The baby, the little boy who was
-their only living child, to die of a sudden access
-of an apparently trifling attack of croup, while
-the mother was dancing at a post ball! He was
-East, taking his examination for promotion. The
-frantic drive home in the chill of the dawn had
-given her a cold which her shock and grief left her
-no strength to resist—she was always a frail little
-creature, poor butterfly!—and she followed her
-baby inside of a month. Had she lived, her husband
-might have found it hard to forgive her, for
-already a sore heart was turning to the child for
-comfort; but she was dead, and he did not let his
-thoughts misuse her memory. Now—here was another,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[154]</span>
-so different but just as false. Then, he
-brought himself up with a jerk; he would be fair;
-he would look at things as they were; many a man
-had been fooled by the dummy. He would not
-jump at conclusions because they were cruel, any
-more than he would because they were kind.
-There was such a thing, he knew well, as credulous
-suspicion; it did more harm than credulous
-trust. Meanwhile, he had his detail. He was to
-find Archie; therefore, he waited. They were in
-the house; it were only folly to give up their advantage
-under the stress of any of Mercer’s plausible
-lurings to the outside.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, by degrees, he became convinced
-that Mercer, certainly to some extent, was sincere
-in his profession of belief in Archie’s absence and
-safety. This, in spite of hearing several times that
-Archie was not returned. Mercer did all the
-speaking, but he allowed Birdsall to hold the receiver
-and take the message from Mrs. Winter.</p>
-
-<p>The telephone was in an adjoining room, but
-by shifting his position a number of times the
-colonel was able to catch a murmur of the conversation.
-He heard Mercer’s voice distinctly. He
-had turned away and was following the detective
-out of the room. “I don’t understand it any more<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[155]</span>
-than you do, Mr. Birdsall,” he said; “you won’t
-believe me, suh, but I am right worried.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I believe you,” purred the detective
-so softly that the colonel knew he did not believe
-any more than Mercer suspected. “Of course I
-believe you; but I don’t know what to do. It ain’t
-on the map. I guess it’s up to you to throw a
-little light. I’ve called the boys off twice already
-and told ’em to wait an hour or a half-hour longer.
-I got to see the colonel.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can trust my intuitions, or I can trust the
-circumstantial evidence,” thought the colonel. He
-jumped up and began to pace the court.</p>
-
-<p>“Seems to be like a game of bridge before one
-can see the dummy,” he complained; and as so
-often happens in the crises of life, a trivial illustration
-struck a wavering mind with the force of
-an argument. His thoughts reverted whimsically
-to the card-table; how many times had he hesitated
-over the first lead between evenly balanced
-suits of four; and how often had he regretted or
-won, depending solely upon whether his card instinct
-had been denied or obeyed! It might be instinct,
-this much-discussed “card instinct,” or it
-might be a summing up of logical deductions so
-swift that the obscure steps were lost, and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[156]</span>
-reasoner was unconscious of his own logical processes.
-“Now,” groaned Rupert Winter, “I am up
-against it. She <i>looks</i> like a good woman; she
-<i>seems</i> like a good woman; but I have only my
-impressions and Aunt Rebecca’s against the apparent
-facts in the case. Well, Aunt Rebecca is a
-shrewd one!” He sat down and thought harder.
-Finally he rose, smiling. He had threshed out his
-problem; and his conclusion, inaudibly but very
-distinctly uttered to himself, was: “Me for my
-own impressions! If that girl is in with this gang,
-either what they are after isn’t so bad—or they
-have made her believe it isn’t bad.”</p>
-
-<p>He looked idly about him at the arched doorway
-of the outer court. It was carved with a favorite
-mission design of eight-pointed flowers
-with vase-like fluting below. There was a tiny
-crack in one of the flowers, the tiniest crack in
-the world. He looked at it without seeing it, or
-seeing it with only the outer half of his senses,
-but—he could not have told how—into his effort
-to pierce his own tangle there crept a sudden interest,
-a sudden keenness of scrutiny of this minute,
-insignificant crack in the stone. He became aware
-that the crack was singularly regular, preserving
-the form of the flower and the fluting beneath.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[157]</span>
-Kito, the Japanese, who was sitting at the far
-end of the court, conversing in amity with Haley,
-just here rose and came to this particular pillar.
-The Irishman sat alone, rimmed by the sunset
-gold, little spangles of motes drifting about him;
-for the merest second Winter’s glance lingered
-on him ere it went to the Jap, who passed him,
-courteously saluting.</p>
-
-<p>After he had passed, the colonel looked again
-at the column and the crack—it was not there.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Chito, chito!</i>” muttered the colonel. Carelessly
-he approached the column and took the
-same posture as the Jap. Unobtrusively his fingers
-strayed over the stone. He scratched the
-surface; not stone, but cement. He tapped cautiously,
-keeping his hand well hidden by his body;
-no hollow sound rewarded him; but all at once
-his groping fingers touched a little round object
-under the bold point of an eight-pointed flower.
-He didn’t dare press on it; instead he resumed his
-cautious tapping. It seemed to him that the sound
-had changed. He glanced about him. Save for
-Haley he was alone in the <i>patio</i>. He pressed on
-the round white knob, and what he had half expected
-happened: a segment of the column
-swung on inner hinges, disclosing the hollow<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[158]</span>
-center of the engaged columns on either side.
-He looked down. Nothing but darkness was visible,
-but while he stood, tensely holding his breath,
-his abnormally sensitive auricular nerve caught
-distinctly the staccato breath of that kind of sigh
-which is like a groan, and a voice said more wearily
-than angrily: “Oh, damn it all!”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Almost simultaneously, he heard the faint footfalls
-of the men within; he must replace his
-movable flower. The column was intact, and he
-was bending his frowning brows on the stylobate
-of another when Birdsall and Mercer entered
-together, Mercer, with a shrug of his shoulders at
-the detective’s dogged suspicion, preceding the
-latter.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said the colonel, “did you get my
-aunt?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, suh, I got your aunt herself,” responded
-Mercer, with his Virginian survival of the formal
-civility of an earlier generation. “Yes, suh; but
-I regret to say Archie is not there.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where is he?” The soldier’s voice was curt.</p>
-
-<p>“Honestly,” declared Mercer, “I wish I knew,
-suh, I certainly <i>do</i>. But—” Mercer’s jaw fell;
-he turned sharply at the soft whir of an electric<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[159]</span>
-stanhope gently entering the <i>patio</i> through the
-great arched gateway. It stopped abreast of the
-group, and its only occupant, a handsome young
-man, jumped nimbly out of the vehicle. He greeted
-them with a polite removal of his cap, a bow,
-and a flashing smile which made the circuit of
-the beholders. Birdsall and the colonel recognized
-the traveling enthusiast of the Fireless
-Stove.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel took matters into his own hands.</p>
-
-<p>“I think you’re the young gentleman who took
-my nephew away,” said he. “Will you kindly
-tell us where he is?”</p>
-
-<p>“And don’t get giddy, young gentleman,”
-Birdsall chimed in, “because we know perfectly
-well that you are <i>not</i> the agent of the Peerless
-Fireless Stove.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got one here on trial, and I’ve come back
-to see if they like it,” explained the young man,
-in silken accents, but with a dancing gleam of the
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“We are going to keep it,” said Mercer.
-“Kito,” calling the unseen Jap, “fetch that Fireless
-Stove this gentleman left us, and show it to
-this gentleman here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, cut it out!” Birdsall waved him off.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[160]</span>
-“It’s only ten minutes before our fellows will
-come. You can put the police court wise with
-all that. Try it on <i>them</i>; it don’t go with us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where is the boy?” said the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell him, if you know,” said Mercer. “This
-gentleman,” he explained, “left a stove with us
-to test. He was here about it this morning, and we
-gave Archie to <i>him</i> to take to the Palace Hotel.”</p>
-
-<p>“And he is there now,” said the young man.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you leave him there?” asked the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, <i>did</i> you?” insisted Mercer.</p>
-
-<p>The young man looked from Mercer to the
-other two men. There was no visible appeal to
-the Southerner, but Winter felt sure of two
-things: one, that the new-comer was Mercer’s
-confederate whom he was striving to shield by
-pretending to disavow; the other, that for some
-reason Mercer was as anxious for the answer as
-were they.</p>
-
-<p>“Why-y,” hesitated the stove promoter, “you
-see, Mr.—ah, gentlemen, you see, I was told to
-take the boy to the Palace Hotel, and I set out to
-do it. We weren’t going at more than an eight-mile-an-hour
-clip, yet some foozler of a cop
-arrested us for speeding. It was perfectly ridiculous,
-and I tried to shake him, but it was no use.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[161]</span>
-They carried us off to a police court and stuck
-me for ten dollars. Meanwhile my machine and
-my passenger were outside. When I got outside
-I couldn’t find them. I skirmished around, and
-finally did get the machine. I’d taken the precaution
-to fix it so it couldn’t be run before I
-left it—took the key out, you know—it must
-have been trundled off by hand somewhere!—but
-I couldn’t find the boy. Naturally, I was a
-bit worried; but after I had looked up the force
-and the neighborhood, it occurred to me to ’phone
-to the Palace. I did, and I was told he was there.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who told you?” The question came simultaneously
-out of three throats.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Mrs. Winter—that’s what she called
-herself.”</p>
-
-<p>“But not three minutes ago Mrs. Winter told
-me that he wasn’t there,” remarked Mercer coldly.
-“<i>When</i> did you telephone?”</p>
-
-<p>“It was at least fifteen minutes ago,” the young
-man said dolefully. “I say, wouldn’t you better
-call them up again? There may be some explanation.
-I shouldn’t have come back without the kid
-if I hadn’t been <i>sure</i> he was safe.”</p>
-
-<p>“Was it Mrs. Melville or Mrs. Winter you
-got?” This came from the colonel. “Did she by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[162]</span>
-chance have an English accent, or was it Southern?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no, not Southern,” protested the young
-man. “Yes, I should say it was English—or trying
-to be.”</p>
-
-<p>“It would be exactly like Millicent,” thought
-the colonel wrathfully, “to try to fool the kidnappers,
-who had apparently lost Archie, by pretending
-he was at the hotel!”</p>
-
-<p>He made no comment aloud, but he nodded assent
-to Mercer’s proposal to telephone; and then
-he walked up to the stove man.</p>
-
-<p>“The game is up,” he said quietly. “We have
-a lot of men waiting outside. If we signal, they
-will come any minute; if we don’t signal, they
-will come in ten minutes. Give us a chance to
-be merciful to you. This is no kind of a scrape
-for your father’s son—or for Arnold’s.”</p>
-
-<p>Shot without range though it was, Winter
-was sure that it went home under all the young
-fellow’s assumed bewilderment. He continued,
-looking kindly at him:</p>
-
-<p>“You look now, I’ll wager, about as you used to
-look in the office when you called on the dean—by
-invitation—and were wondering just where
-the inquiry was going to light!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[163]</span>The dimple showed in the young man’s cheek.
-“I admit,” he replied, “that I didn’t take advantage
-as I should of my university opportunities.
-Probably that is why I have to earn a strenuous
-livelihood boosting the Only Peerless Fireless
-Stove. By the way, have <i>you</i> ever seen the Fireless
-in action? Just the thing for the army! Fills
-a long-felt want. I should be very pleased to
-demonstrate. We have a stove here.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel grinned responsively. “You do it
-very well,” said he. “Can’t you let me into the
-game?”</p>
-
-<p>There was the slightest waver in the promoter’s
-glance, although he smiled brilliantly as he
-answered: “I’ll take it into consideration, but—will
-you excuse me? I want to speak to Mr. Mercer
-about the stove.”</p>
-
-<p>The moment he had removed his affable young
-presence Birdsall approached his employer. It
-had been a difficult quarter of an hour with the
-detective. Vague instinct warned him not to touch
-the subject of Miss Smith; he felt in no way assured
-about anything else. The result had been
-that he had fidgeted in silence. But the accumulated
-flood could no longer be held.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve found out one thing,” exploded Birdsall,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[164]</span>
-puffing in the haste of his utterance. “The boy
-is on the premises.”</p>
-
-<p>“Think so?” was all the colonel’s answer.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sure of it. Say, I overheard Mercer talking
-down a speaking-tube.”</p>
-
-<p>“What did he say?”</p>
-
-<p>“Talked French, damn him! But say, what’s
-<i>gorge</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>“Throat.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s <i>cupillo gorge</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure he wasn’t talking of a carriage, or did
-he say <i>je le couperai la gorge</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe. I wouldn’t swear to it. I don’t <i>parlez
-français</i> a little bit.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you hear any other noises? Where were
-they?”</p>
-
-<p>Birdsall thought he had heard other noises,
-and that they were down cellar. “And anyhow,
-Colonel, I’m dead-to-rights sure those guys are
-giving us hot stuff to get us out of the house.
-I’m for getting our men in now and rushing the
-house. It’s me for the cellar.”</p>
-
-<p>While the colonel was rolling Birdsall’s information
-around in his mind, he heard the echo of
-steps on the flagging which preceded Mercer and
-the other man.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[165]</span>There was that in the bearing and the look of
-them that made the watcher, used to the signs of
-decision on men’s faces, instantly sure that their
-whole course of plans and action was changed.</p>
-
-<p>Mercer spoke first and in a low tone to the
-colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“I have no right,” said he, “to ask so much
-trust from you, but will you trust me enough
-to step aside with this young man and me for a
-moment only—out of ear-shot? I give you my
-word of honor I mean no slightest harm to you.
-I want to be frank. I will go alone if you desire.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel eyed him intently for the briefest
-space. “I’ll trust you,” said he. Then: “I think
-you have the key to this queer mix-up. At your
-service. And let your friend come, too. He is an
-ingenuous sort, and he amuses me.”</p>
-
-<p>Birdsall looked distinctly sullen over the request
-to wait, intimating quite frankly that his
-employer was walking into a trap. “I won’t
-stand here more than fifteen minutes,” he grumbled.
-“I’ve given those fellows <i>poco tiente</i> long
-enough.” But the colonel insisted on twenty minutes,
-and reluctantly Birdsall acquiesced.</p>
-
-<p>Mercer conducted the others to the library.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[166]</span>
-When they were seated he began in his composed,
-melancholy fashion:</p>
-
-<p>“I earnestly beg of you to listen to me, and
-to believe me, for your nephew’s sake. I am going
-to tell you the absolute truth. It is the only
-way now. When you came, we handed him over
-to this gentleman, exactly as we have said. I do
-not know why he should have been stopped. I
-do not know why he left the machine—”</p>
-
-<p>“Might he not have been <i>carried</i> away?” said
-Winter.</p>
-
-<p>“He might; but I don’t know what motive—”</p>
-
-<p>“What motive had <i>you</i>? You kidnapped him!”</p>
-
-<p>“Not exactly. We had no intention of harming
-him. He came accidentally into the room between
-Mrs. Winter’s and Mr. Keatcham’s suites.
-Standing in that room, trying to stanch the bleeding
-of a sudden hemorrhage of the nose, he overheard
-me and my friend—”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>You?</i>” asked the colonel laconically of the
-young Harvard man.</p>
-
-<p>“I,” smilingly confessed the latter. “I am
-ready to own up. You are a decent fellow, and
-you are shrewd. You ought to be on our side,
-not fighting us. I tell you, you don’t want to have
-the boy turn up safe and sound any more than I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[167]</span>
-do. Mr. Mercer was talking to me, and the kid
-overheard. We heard him and went into the
-room—”</p>
-
-<p>“How?”</p>
-
-<p>“Knocked on the door and he opened it. And
-we jumped on him. It was life and death for us
-not to be blown on; so, as we didn’t wish to kill
-the kid, and as we didn’t know the youngster well
-enough to trust him <i>then</i>—although we might,
-for he is game and the whitest chap!—but we
-didn’t know—why, we just told him he would
-have to stay with us a while until our rush was
-over. That was all we meant; and we let him
-’phone you.”</p>
-
-<p>“How about his great-aunt—the cruel anxiety—”</p>
-
-<p>“Anxiety nothing!” began the other man, but
-a glance from Mercer cut him short.</p>
-
-<p>The Southerner took the word in his slow, gentle
-voice. “I tried to reassure our aunt, Colonel
-Winter. I think I succeeded. She telephoned and
-I told her it was all right. As for Archie,
-after we talked with him, he was willing enough
-to go. He stole out with my friend inside of
-five minutes, while you all were searching your
-rooms. It was <i>he</i> insisted on calling you up, lest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[168]</span>
-you should be worried. He said you were right
-afraid of kidnappers, and you would be sending
-the police after us. You can call Mrs. Winter up
-and find out if I am not telling you the exact
-facts.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well, I <i>will</i>,” said Winter. They met
-the sullen detective at the door. Cary Mercer,
-with his mirthless smile, led the way. Mercer
-rang up the hotel for Winter, himself. To the
-colonel’s vast relief Aunt Rebecca answered the
-call.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Est-ce que c’est vous-même, mon neveu?</i>”
-said she dryly.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Mais oui, ma tante.</i> Why are you speaking
-so formally in foreign tongues? Is Millicent on
-deck?”</p>
-
-<p>“In her room,” came the answer, still in
-French. “Well, you have got us in a pretty mess.
-Where is my boy?”</p>
-
-<p>“I only wish I knew! Tell me now, though, is
-Mercer’s story straight?”</p>
-
-<p>“Absolutely. You may trust him.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s his real game, then? The one he was
-afraid Archie would expose?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ask him.”</p>
-
-<p>“But <i>you</i> are in it, aren’t you?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[169]</span>“Enough to ask that you abandon the chase—immediately!
-Unless you wish to ruin me!”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll have to speak plainer. I’ve been kept
-in the dark as long as I can stand in this matter.”</p>
-
-<p>But before he could finish the sentence.
-“<i>Pas ici, pas maintenant—c’est trop de péril</i>,”
-she cried, and she must have gone, for he could
-get no more from her. When he rang again,
-Randall responded:</p>
-
-<p>“Mrs. Winter says, sir, will you please come
-up here as quick as you can. She’s gone out. She
-thought she caught sight of Mr. Archie on the
-street.”</p>
-
-<p>To the colonel’s demand, “Where, how did
-she see him?” he obtained no answer, and on his
-vicious pealing of the bell there came, eventually,
-mellow Anglican accents which asked: “Yes?
-Whom do you wish to see?” It is an evidence of
-the undisciplined nature of the sex that the soldier
-made a face and—hung up the receiver.</p>
-
-<p>He found himself—although this to a really
-open mind is no excuse—in a muddle of conflicting
-impulses. He was on edge to get into the
-street for the search after the boy; he was clutched
-in a vise by his conviction that the clue to Archie’s
-whereabouts lay in Mercer’s hands, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[170]</span>
-that the Southerner meant no harm to the lad.
-And all the while he could feel Birdsall tugging
-at the leash.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s on the cards,” he grumbled, with a wry
-face, “quite on the cards that he may bolt in spite
-of me, and do some foolish stunt of his own that
-will make a most awful muddle.”</p>
-
-<p>Not nearly so composed as he looked, therefore,
-he turned to Mercer. However, his ammunition
-was ready, and to Mercer’s inquiry, was he satisfied?
-he replied calmly: “Well, not entirely. If
-Archie isn’t in the house, <i>who</i> is it whose throat
-you wish to cut? Who is hidden here?”</p>
-
-<p>It could not have been an unexpected question
-or Mercer hardly had answered so readily: “You
-know who it is,” said he. “It is Mr. Keatcham.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[171]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER X<br />
-
-<small>THE SMOLDERING EMBERS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>If Mercer’s avowal surprised the colonel, there
-was no trace of such emotion in his face or his
-manner. “I rather thought it might be,” he said.
-“And our young friend who is promoting Fireless
-Stoves with the solemn energy he learned doing
-Dicky stunts?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Endicott Tracy.” Mercer had the manner
-of a ceremonious introduction. Tracy flavored
-the customary murmur of pleasure with his radiant
-smile.</p>
-
-<p>“Pleased, I am sure,” said the colonel in turn,
-bowing. “Your father, I suppose, is the president
-of the Midland; and Mr. Keatcham will, I suppose,
-not be able to prevent his reëlection to-morrow.
-Is that the game?”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Tracy’s son admitted that it might be.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, very clever,” said the colonel, “very.
-Any side-show, for example?”</p>
-
-<p>“I did not go into this for money.” Mercer’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[172]</span>
-level gaze did not relax, and he kept his dreary
-eyes unflinchingly on Winter’s. A peculiar look
-in the eyes recalled some tragic and alien memory,
-just what, Rupert could not capture; it flitted
-hazily through his thoughts ere the next words
-drove it off. “Nevertheless, it is true that if we
-win out I shall have enough to pay back to all
-the people who trusted me the money they lost
-when they were frightened into selling their stock
-in the Tidewater, and your aunt and Mr. Tracy
-stand to make money.”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you expect to make it?”</p>
-
-<p>“The M. and S. stock is away down because
-of rumors Keatcham is likely to control it. When
-it is settled it is not to be looted by him, the stock
-will rise—we are sure of the ten points; we may
-make twenty—”</p>
-
-<p>“And my aunt has financed your scheme, has
-she?—paid all your expenses?”</p>
-
-<p>The Harvard man laughed out. “Our <i>expenses</i>?
-Oh, yes, she has grub-staked us, all
-right; but she has done a good deal more—she
-has furnished more than half a million to us for
-our gamble.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel considered; then: “But why did
-you keep him here so long beforehand?” said he.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[173]</span>“It was not long beforehand,” said Mercer.
-“The meeting was adjourned for a day—we
-don’t know why—we fancy that his partners suspect
-something. It is called for to-morrow, in
-spite of their efforts to have it put off a week.
-But we want more; we want to induce Keatcham
-to vote his own stock for us, and to call off his
-dogs himself.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you can’t force him to do it?”</p>
-
-<p>“We shall force him, easily enough,” returned
-Mercer, “but we don’t trust him. We want his
-private code book to be sure he is playing fair.
-In fact, we have to have it, because nothing gets
-any attention that isn’t, so to speak, properly introduced.”</p>
-
-<p>“And he will not give it to you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Says he has lost it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps he <i>has</i>,” mused the soldier. “But
-now, all this is not my concern, except that I
-have no right, as a soldier, even passively to aid
-in breaking the laws. It is my duty to rescue and
-free Mr. Keatcham.”</p>
-
-<p>But before he could speak further Mercer lifted
-a hand in apologetic interruption. Would Colonel
-Winter excuse him, but he must ask Mr. Tracy
-to go back to the <i>patio</i> and have an eye on the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[174]</span>
-detective. Endicott only exchanged a single
-glance before he obeyed. Mercer’s eyes followed
-him. “It was not to be helped,” he said, half to
-himself, “but I have been sorry more than once
-that I had to take him into this.”</p>
-
-<p>Winter looked at him, more puzzled than he
-wanted to admit to himself; indeed, he was rather
-glad to have the next word come from Mercer.</p>
-
-<p>“I have a few things I want to say to you;
-they go easier when we are alone—but won’t you
-sit down?” When the colonel had seated himself
-he went on: “I’d like to explain things a bit.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d like to have you,” answered the soldier.
-“I think you have the clue to Archie’s whereabouts
-and don’t recognize it yourself; so put me
-wise, as the slang goes.”</p>
-
-<p>Then, without preface, in brief, nervous sentences,
-spoken hardly with a quiver of a muscle
-or a wavering cadence of the voice, yet nevertheless
-instinct with a deadly earnestness, Mercer
-began to talk. He told of his struggling youth
-on the drained plantation, mortgaged so that after
-the interest was paid there was barely enough to
-get the meagerest living for his mother and sister
-and little brother; of his accidental discovery of
-iron ore on the place; of his working as a common<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[175]</span>
-laborer in the steel mills; of his being “rooster,”
-“strand-boy,” “rougher,” “heater,” “roller,”
-during three years while he was waiting for his
-chance; of his heart-draining toil; of his solitary
-studies.</p>
-
-<p>“I never was the kind of fellow to make
-friends,” he said, in his soft, monotonous voice,
-“so I expect I was the fonder of my own kin.
-I’d a mighty good mother, sir, and sister; and
-there was Phil—my little brother. We were right
-happy all together on the old place that’s been
-in our family for a hundred years, and it was all
-we asked to stay there; but it had every dollar
-of mortgage it could stand, and the soil all worn-out,
-needing all kinds of things; and I wish you
-could have seen the makeshifts we had for machines!
-I was blacksmith and carpenter and
-painter—just sixteen, and not an especially
-bright chap, but mighty willing to work; and my
-mother and Sis and I—we did a heap. When I
-stumbled on the ore I couldn’t be sure, but I
-wrote to Aunt Rebecca Winter. She sent a man
-down. He looked up things. It would take a heap
-of money to work the mines, but it might be a
-big thing. She paid off the mortgage and took
-another. First to last, she’s been mighty kind to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[176]</span>
-us. She would have done more had we let her.
-So I went to Pittsburgh and learned my trade,
-and I made enough to pay interest, and the people
-at home got a fairly good living. When I was
-twenty-one I was back home, and got a company
-started and put up a mill. You know how those
-things have to creep up. But there was ore, all
-right, and I understood my business and taught
-the hands. We’d a right sweet little mill. Well,
-I don’t want to take up your time, suh. Those
-next ten or twelve years were right hard work,
-but they were happy, too. We prospered; we
-helped the whole county prosper. We paid Aunt
-Becky. We were in good shape. We went
-through ’93 paying our dividends just as regular,
-and making them, too, though we didn’t much
-more—it was close sailing. But we were honest;
-we made a mighty good article; and everybody
-trusted us. Then came the craze for mergers,
-and a number of us got together. Still we weren’t
-very big, but we were big enough to be listed.
-I didn’t want it, but some of the men thought it
-was a terrible fine thing to be ‘Iron Kings.’ That
-was how. Keatcham was looking over the country
-for fish for his net; he somehow heard that here
-was a heap of good ore and new mills. The first<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[177]</span>
-intimation we had was his secretary coming as a
-Northern invalid—why, he stayed at our house
-because we were so sorry for him, the hotel being
-in new hands and not right comfortable. He
-seemed so interested in our mills, and bought
-some stock, and sent presents to Phil and my
-mother after he went.”</p>
-
-<p>“That was Keatcham’s private secretary, you
-say?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, suh, Atkins. You met him on the train—as
-sleek and deadly a little scoundrel as ever
-got rich quick. Oh, he’s deep. Well, suh, you
-know the usual process. Convinced of the value
-of the property, Keatcham and one or two others
-set out to buy it. They got little blocks of it
-here and there. Then Atkins wrote me in confidence
-that some men were after the controlling
-interest and meant to squeeze us all out—offered
-to lend me money to buy—of course, on a margin.
-And I was plumb idiot enough to be tolled
-into his trap! I, who had never speculated with
-a dollar before, I didn’t borrow <i>his</i> money, but I
-took all I could raise myself, and I bought
-enough to be sure I could control the next election.
-Then—the slump came, and after the slump
-the long, slow crumbling. I controlled the election<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[178]</span>
-all right, of course, but before the next one
-came I was ruined, and Keatcham put his own
-men in. I went desperately to New York. I
-didn’t know how to fight those fellows; it was a
-new game. I didn’t find Atkins. Maybe because
-that wasn’t his name when I had known him. I
-was so sure that the property was good—as if
-that mattered! As if anything mattered with
-these gamblers who play with loaded dice and
-dope the horses they bet against! Phil had all
-his property in the mills; we all had. We mortgaged
-the house; we had to, to protect our stock.
-You know how the fight ended, and what happened
-at Cambridge. That isn’t all. My wife—”
-He stood a little straighter, and the light went
-out of his eyes. “I told you I don’t make friends
-easily, and I am not the kind of man women take
-to; all the same, the loveliest girl in the South
-loved me ever since I jumped over the mill-dam
-to save her rag doll, once, when she was visiting
-her aunt near us. I’d married, when we seemed
-prosperous. Now, understand me, I don’t say
-it was my ruin and Phil’s death that killed her
-and the baby; she had pneumonia, and it may be
-that seeing that paper by accident didn’t turn the
-scale; but I do say that she had her last hours<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[179]</span>
-embittered by it. That’s enough for me. When
-I got home with—with Phil, she was dead.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tough,” said the colonel. He began to revise
-his impressions of Mercer.</p>
-
-<p>“Wasn’t it?” the other asked, with a simplicity
-of appeal that affected the listener more than anything
-he had heard. He jumped out of his chair
-and began pacing the room, talking more rapidly.
-“You’re a <i>man</i>; you know what I wanted to do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Kill somebody, I suppose. <i>I</i> should.”</p>
-
-<p>“Just that. I ran Atkins to cover after a while
-through Endicott Tracy. That boy is one of the
-noblest fellows that ever lived; yes, suh. He was
-going to help poor Phil, Phil’s room-mate had
-told him. All those boys—look a-here, Colonel
-Winter, if ever anybody talks to you about Harvard
-fellows being indifferent—”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall tell him he can’t get under the American
-surface. A Harvard boy will do anything on
-earth for his friends.”</p>
-
-<p>“They were mighty good to me. It was Endy
-found out about Atkins, just from my description
-of him. I found out about Keatcham for myself.
-And you are quite right—for a little while
-I wanted to kill them both. Looked like I just
-naturally <i>had</i> to kill them! But there was my<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[180]</span>
-mother. There was nobody to take care of her
-but Sis and me, and a trial for murder is terribly
-expensive. Of course, anybody can get off
-who has got money and can spend it; but it takes
-such an awful heap of money. And we were all
-ruined together, for what little was left was all
-in the company, and that promptly stopped paying
-dividends. I couldn’t risk it. I had to wait. I
-had to go to work to support my mother, to pay
-Sis and her back, don’t you see? We came here.
-I got a job, a well-paid one, too, through Endy’s
-father, reporting on the condition of the mills—a
-kind of examiner. And the job was for
-Keatcham.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why did you take it? I know, though. You
-did it to familiarize him with your appearance,
-so that he would not be warned when your
-chance came.”</p>
-
-<p>“How did you know that?”</p>
-
-<p>“A man I knew in the Philippines—a Filipino—was
-wronged by a white man, who took his
-wife and threw her aside when he tired of her.
-The girl killed herself. Her husband watched
-his chance for a year, found it at last—thanks
-to that very fact that his victim wasn’t on guard
-against him—and sent his knife home. He’d<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[181]</span>
-been that fellow’s servant. I picked the dead man
-up. That Filipino looked as you looked a minute
-ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“What became of the Filipino?” inquired his
-listener.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel had not told the story quite without
-intention. He argued subconsciously, that
-if Mercer were a good sort under all, he would
-have a movement of sympathy for a more cruelly
-wronged man than he; if not, he would drive
-ahead to his purpose, whatever that might be.
-His keen eyes looked a little more gentle as he
-answered: “He poisoned himself. The best way
-out, I reckon. I should hate to have had him
-shot after I knew the story. But there was really
-no option. But I’m interrupting you. You did
-your work well and won Keatcham’s confidence?”</p>
-
-<p>“He isn’t a very confiding man. I didn’t see
-him often. My dealings were with Atkins. He
-didn’t know that I had found him out; he thought
-that he had only to explain his two names, and
-expected gratitude for his warning, as he called
-it. He is slimy; but I was able to repay a little
-of my score with him. I was employed by more
-than Keatcham, and I saw a good many industrial
-back-yards. Just by chance, I came on a clue, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[182]</span>
-Endy Tracy and I worked it up together. Atkins
-was selling information to Keatcham’s enemies.
-We did not make out a complete case, but enough
-of one to make Keatcham suspect him, and at
-the right time. But that happened later—you see,
-I don’t know how to tell a story even with so
-much at stake.” He pulled out his handkerchief,
-and Winter caught the gleam of the beads on his
-sallow forehead. “It was this way,” he went on.
-“At first I was only looking about for a safe
-chance to kill him, and to kill that snake of an
-Atkins; but then it grew on me; it was all too
-easy a punishment—just a quick death, when his
-victims had years of misery. I wanted him to
-wade through the hell <i>I</i> had to wade through.
-I wanted him to know <i>why</i> he was condemned.
-Then it was I began to collect just the cases I
-knew about—just one little section of the horrible
-swath of agony and humiliation and poverty and
-sin he and his crowd had made—the one I knew
-every foot of, because I’d gone over it every night
-I wasn’t so dead tired I <i>had</i> to sleep. God! do you
-know what it is to have the people who used to
-be running out of their houses just to say howdy
-to you, curse you for a swindler or a fool or
-turn out of one street and down the other not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[183]</span>
-to pass you? Did <i>you</i> ever have a little woman
-who used to give you frosted cake when you were
-a boy push her crape veil off her gray hair and
-hand you the envelope with her stock, with your
-handwriting on the envelope, and beg you—trying
-so hard not to cry, ’twas worse than if she
-had—beg you to lend her just half her interest
-money—<i>and you couldn’t do it</i>? Did you—never
-mind. I said I waded through hell. I <i>did!</i> Not I
-alone—that was the worst—all the people that had
-trusted me! And just that some rich men should
-be richer. Why should <i>they</i> have the lion’s share?
-The lion’s share belongs to the lion. <i>They</i> are
-nothing but jackals. They’re meaner than jackals,
-for the jackals take what the lion leaves, and
-these fellows steal the lion’s meat away from
-him. We made honest money; we paid honest
-wages; folks had more paint on their houses
-and more meat in their storehouses, and wore better
-clothes Sunday, and there were more school-houses
-and fewer saloons, and the negroes were
-learning a trade instead of loafing. The whole
-county was the better off for our prosperity, and
-there isn’t a mill in the outfit—and I know what
-I’m talking about—there isn’t a shop or a mine
-that’s as well run or makes as big an output now<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[184]</span>
-as it did when the old crowd was in. You find
-it that way everywhere; and that’s what is going
-to break things down. We saw to all the little
-affairs; they were <i>our</i> affairs, don’t you know?
-But Keatcham’s new men draw their salaries and
-let things slide. Yet Keatcham is a great manager
-if he would only take the time; only he’s too busy
-stealing to develop his businesses; there’s more
-money in stealing a railway than in building one
-up. Oh, he isn’t a fool; if I could once get him
-where he would <i>have</i> to listen, I know I could
-make him understand. He’s pretty cold-blooded,
-and he doesn’t realize. He only sees straight
-ahead, not all round, like all these superhumanly
-clever thieves; they have mighty stupid streaks.
-Well, I’ve got him now, and it is kill or cure for
-him. He can’t make a riffle. I knew I couldn’t
-do anything alone; I had to wait. I had to have
-stronger men than I am to help. By and by they
-tried their jackal business on a real lion—on
-Tracy. They wanted to steal <i>his</i> road. I got on
-to them first. I see a heap of people in a heap of
-different businesses—the little people who talk.
-They notice all right, but they can see only their
-own little patch. I was the fellow riding round
-and seeing the township. I pieced together the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[185]</span>
-plot and I told Endy Tracy. He wouldn’t believe
-me at first, because his father had given Keatcham
-his first start and done a hundred things for him.
-To be sure, his father has been obliged as an honest
-man to oppose Keatcham lately, but Keatcham
-couldn’t mean to burn him out that way. But he
-soon found that was precisely what Keatcham
-did mean. Then he was glad enough to help me
-save his father. The old man doesn’t know a
-thing; we don’t mean he ever shall know. We let
-him put up the best sort of a fight a man can with
-his hands tied while the other fellow is free. <i>My</i>
-hands are free, too. I don’t respect the damned
-imbecile laws that let me be plundered any more
-than they do; and since my poor mother died last
-summer I am not afraid of anything; they <i>are</i>;
-that’s where I have the choice of weapons. I tell
-you, suh, <i>nobody</i> is big enough to oppress a desperate
-man! Keatcham had one advantage—he
-had unlimited money. But Aunt Rebecca helped
-us out there. Colonel, I want you to know I didn’t
-ask her for more than the bare grub-stake; it was
-she herself that planned our stock deal.”</p>
-
-<p>“She is a dead game sport,” the colonel
-chuckled. “I believe you.”</p>
-
-<p>“And I hope you don’t allow that I was willing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[186]</span>
-to have her mix herself in our risks. She would
-come; she said she wanted to see the fun—”</p>
-
-<p>“I believe you again,” the colonel assured him,
-and he remembered the odd sentence which his
-aunt had used the first night of their journey,
-when she expressed her hankering to match her
-wits against those of a first-class criminal.</p>
-
-<p>“We didn’t reckon on your turning up, or the
-complication with Archie. I wish to God we’d
-taken the boy’s own word! But, now you know
-all about it, will you keep your hands off? That’s
-all we ask.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,”—the colonel examined his finger-nails,
-rubbing his hands softly, the back of one over the
-palm of the other—“well, you haven’t quite told
-me all. Don’t, unless you are prepared to have it
-used against you, as the policemen say <i>before</i> the
-sweat-box. What did you do to Keatcham to get
-him to go with you so like Mary’s little lamb?”</p>
-
-<p>“I learned of a little device that looks like a
-tiny currycomb and is so flat and small you can
-bind it on a man’s arm just over an artery. Just
-press on the spring and give the least scratch, and
-the man falls down in convulsions. I showed him
-a rat I had had fetched me, and killed it like a
-flash. He had his choice of walking out quietly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[187]</span>
-with me—I had my hand on his arm—or dropping
-down dead. He went quietly enough.”</p>
-
-<p>“That was the meaning of his look at me, was
-it?” Winter thought. He said only: “Did Endicott
-Tracy know about that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course not,” Mercer denied. “Do you
-reckon I want to mix the boy up in this more than
-I have? And Arnold only knew I was trying
-some kind of bluff game.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will lay odds, though,” the colonel ventured
-in his gentlest tone, “that Mr. Samurai, as Haley
-calls him, knew more. But when did you get rid
-of Atkins?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Keatcham discharged him at Denver. I
-met Mr. Keatcham here; it was arranged on the
-train. We had it planned out. If that plan had
-failed I had another.”</p>
-
-<p>“Neat. Very neat. And then you became the
-secretary?”</p>
-
-<p>Mercer flushed in an unexpected fashion. “Certainly
-not!” he said with emphasis. “Do you think
-I would take his wages and not do the work faithfully?
-No, suh. I assumed to be his secretary in
-the office; that gave me a chance to arrange everything.
-But I did it to oblige him. I never touched
-a cent of his money. I paid, in fact, for our board<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[188]</span>
-out of our own money. It would have burned my
-fingers, suh!”</p>
-
-<p>“And the valet? Was he in your plot? Don’t
-answer if you—”</p>
-
-<p>“He was not, suh,” replied Cary Mercer. “He
-is a right worthy fellow, and he thought, after he
-had seen to the tickets—which he did very carefully—and
-given them to me, he could go off on
-the little vacation which came to him by his master
-through me.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a little bit evasive. However, I haven’t
-the right to ask you to give away your partners,
-anyhow.” He was peering at Mercer’s face behind
-his glasses, but the pallid, tired features returned
-him no clue to the thoughts in the head
-above them. “What have you done with Mr.
-Keatcham?” he concluded suddenly.</p>
-
-<p>The question brought no change of expression,
-and Mercer answered readily: “I put him off by
-himself, where he sees no one and hears nothing.
-I read a good deal about prisons and the most
-effectual way of taming men, and solitary confinement
-is recommended by all the authorities.
-His meals are handed to him by—by a mechanical
-device. He has electric light some of the time,
-turned on from the outside. He has a comfortable<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[189]</span>
-room and his own shower-bath. He has comfortable
-meals. And he is supplied with reading.”</p>
-
-<p>“Reading?” repeated the colonel, his surprise
-in his voice.</p>
-
-<p>For the first time he saw Mercer smile, but it
-was hardly a pleasant smile. “Yes, suh, reading,”
-he said. “I have had type-written copies made of
-all the cases which I discovered in regard to his
-stealing our company. I reasoned that when he
-would get absolutely tired of himself and his own
-thoughts he would just naturally be <i>obliged</i> to
-read, and that would be ready for him. He tore
-up one copy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hmn—I can’t say I wonder. What did you
-do?”</p>
-
-<p>“I sent him another. I expected he would do
-that way. After a while he will go back to it, because
-it will draw him. He’ll hate it, but he will
-want to know them all. I know his nature, you
-see.”</p>
-
-<p>“What are you going to do with him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Let him go, after he does what we want and
-promises never to molest any of us.”</p>
-
-<p>“But can you trust him?”</p>
-
-<p>“He never breaks his word,” replied Mercer
-indifferently, “and besides, he knows he will be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[190]</span>
-killed if he should. He isn’t given to being scared,
-but he’s scared of me, all right.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you want him to do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Promise to be a decenter man and to let Mr.
-Tracy alone in future; meanwhile, to send a wire
-in his secret code saying he has changed his mind.
-It will not surprise his crowd. He never confides
-in them, and he expects them to obey blindly anything
-in that code language. I reckon other telegrams
-are just for show, and they don’t notice
-them much.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel took a turn around the room to
-pack away this information in an orderly fashion
-in his mind. Mercer waited patiently; he had said
-truly that he was used to waiting. Perhaps he
-supposed that Winter was trying the case in his
-own mind; but in reality Rupert was seeking only
-one clue, as little diverted from his purpose as a
-bloodhound. He began to understand the man
-whose fixed purpose had his own quality, but
-sharpened by wrong and suffering. This man had
-not harmed Archie; as much as his warped and
-fevered soul could feel softer emotions, he was
-kindly intentioned toward the lad. Who had carried
-him away, then? Or was he off on his own
-account, really, this time? Or suppose Atkins,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[191]</span>
-the missing secretary discharged at Denver, coming
-back for another appeal to his employer, finding
-Keatcham gone, but, let one say, stumbling
-on some trace of mystery in his departure; suppose
-him to consider the chance of his having his
-past condoned and a rosy future given him if his
-suspicions should prove true and <i>he</i> should release
-the captive—wouldn’t such a prospect spur on a
-man who was as cunning as he was unprincipled?
-Mightn’t he have watched all possible clues, and
-mightn’t he have heard about Archie and plotted
-to capture the child, thinking he would be easily
-pumped? That would presuppose that Atkins
-knew that Archie was at the Arnolds’ or—no, he
-might only have seen the boy on the street; he
-knew him by sight; the colonel remembered that
-several times Archie had been with him in Keatcham’s
-car. It was worth considering, anyhow. He
-spoke out of his thoughts: “Do you think Keatcham
-could have told the truth, and that code of
-his be lost or stolen? Why couldn’t Atkins have
-stolen it? He had the chance, and he isn’t hampered
-by principle, you say.”</p>
-
-<p>Mercer frowned; it was plain the possibility
-had its argument for him. “He might,” he conceded,
-“but I doubt it. Why hasn’t he done something<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[192]</span>
-with it? He hasn’t. They wouldn’t have
-postponed that meeting if he had wired his proxy
-and his directions in the code. He’d have voted
-his employer’s stock. He’s got too much at stake.
-I happen to know he thought it a sure tip to sell
-short, and he has put almost all he has on it. You
-see, Keatcham was banking on that; he knew it.
-He thought Atkins wouldn’t dare give any of his
-secrets away or go against him in this deal, because
-they were in the same boat.”</p>
-
-<p>“Still, I reckon I’ll have to see Keatcham.”</p>
-
-<p>Mercer shook his head, gently but with decision.
-“I hate to refuse you, Colonel, but unless
-you promise not to interfere, it is impossible. But
-I’ll gladly go with you to see if we can find any
-trace of Archie. I’ll risk that much. And if you
-will promise—”</p>
-
-<p>“Such a promise would be impossible to an officer
-and a gentleman,” the colonel urged lightly,
-smiling. “Besides, don’t you see I have all the
-cards? I have only to call in my men. I’d hate to
-do it, but if you force me, you would have no
-chance resisting.”</p>
-
-<p>“We shouldn’t resist, Colonel, no, suh; your
-force is overwhelming. But it would do no good;
-you couldn’t find him.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[193]</span>“We could try; and we may be better sleuths
-than you imagine.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then it would be the worse for him; for if you
-find him, you will find him dead.”</p>
-
-<p>There was something so chilling in his level
-tones that Winter broke out sharply: “Are you
-fooling with me? Have you been such an incredible
-madman as to kill him already?”</p>
-
-<p>Mercer’s faint smile made the colonel feel boyish
-and impetuous. “Of course not, suh,” he answered.
-“I told you he was alive, myself. I reckoned
-you knew when a man is lying and when he
-is telling the solemn truth. You <i>know</i> I have told
-you the truth and treated you on the square. But,
-just the same, if you try to take that man away,
-you’ll only have his dead body. He can’t do any
-more harm then, and a dead man can’t vote.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel, who had taken out his cigarette case,
-opened it and meditatively fingered the rubber
-band. “Do you reckon,” he suggested, in his
-most amiable voice, “do you reckon young Arnold
-and Endicott Tracy will stand for such frills
-in warfare as assassination?”</p>
-
-<p>“I do not, suh,” replied Mercer gravely, and as
-he spoke he pushed back the heavy tapestry hiding
-a window opposite the colonel’s head, “but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[194]</span>
-they can both prove an alibi. Mr. Arnold is in
-Pasadena, and there goes Mr. Tracy now in his
-machine—to try to find Archie. Do you see?”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel saw. He inclined his head, at the
-same time proffering his case.</p>
-
-<p>“I rather think, Mr. Mercer, that I was wrong.
-<i>You</i> have the last trump.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[195]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XI<br />
-
-<small>THE CHARM OF JADE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>It was no false lure to distract pursuit, that hurried
-sentence of Randall’s which had met the colonel’s
-angry appeal for information. The woman
-was not only repeating Mrs. Winter’s message;
-the message itself described a fact. As she stood
-at her room telephone, Aunt Rebecca had happened
-to glance at Randall, supplementing the perfunctory
-dusting of the hotel maid with her own
-sanitary, dampened, clean cloth; Randall’s eyes
-suddenly glazed and bulged in such startling transformation
-that, instead of questioning her, Mrs.
-Winter stepped swiftly to the window where she
-was at work, to seek the cause of her agitation.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Lord! Oh, Mrs. Winter!” gasped Randall.
-“Ain’t <i>that</i> Master Archie?”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Winter saw for herself; the face at a cab
-window, the waving of a slim hand—Archie’s
-face, Archie’s hand. Brief as was the Space of his
-passing (for the two horses in the cab were trotting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[196]</span>
-smartly), she was sure of both. “Give me my
-bonnet,” she commanded, “<i>any</i> bonnet, <i>any</i>
-gloves! And my bag with some money!”</p>
-
-<p>It was as she flung through the door that she
-threw her message to the colonel back exactly as
-Randall had submitted it. Miss Smith was coming
-along the loggia. “Don’t stop me!” said Mrs.
-Winter sternly. “I’ve seen Archie; I’m after
-him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Stop!” cried Miss Smith—but it was to the
-elevator boy who was whizzing below them in his
-cage, not to her employer; and she boarded the
-elevator with the older woman. “I’ll go with
-you,” she said. There was no vibration in her
-even tones, although a bright red flickered up in
-her cheek.</p>
-
-<p>But Rebecca Winter caught savagely at her
-breath, which was coming fast. “It is not with
-the running; you needn’t think it, Janet,” she
-panted sharply, in a second. “It was the sight of
-his face—so suddenly; I never expected <i>any</i> face
-would make my heart pump like that again. All
-of which shows”—she was speaking quite naturally
-and placidly again—“that women may grow
-too old for men to make fools of them, but never
-for children. Come; it was a shabby sort of hack<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[197]</span>
-he was in, drawn by two horses with auburn tails.
-Here’s the office floor.”</p>
-
-<p>Not a word did Janet Smith say; she was not a
-woman of words in any case. Moreover, the pace
-which Mrs. Winter struck was too rapid for comments
-or questions; it swept them both past the
-palm-shaded <i>patio</i> into the side hall, out on the
-noisy, dazzling, swaying street. Looking before
-her, Miss Smith could see the dusty body of a
-hack a block away. Mrs. Winter had stepped up
-to a huge crimson motor-car, in the front seat of
-which lounged the chauffeur, his forehead and
-eyes hunched under his leather visor. The machine
-was puffing, with the engine working, ready
-to leap forward at a touch of the lever.</p>
-
-<p>“Twenty dollars an hour if you let me get in
-now!” said Mrs. Winter, lightly mounting by his
-side as she spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“Hey, me? what!” gurgled the chauffeur,
-plucked out of a half-doze. “Oh, say, beg your
-pardon, lady, but this is hired, it belongs—”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t care to whom it belongs, I have to have
-it,” announced Mrs. Winter calmly. “Whoever
-hired it can get another. I’ll make it all right.
-You start on and catch that hack with the auburn-tailed
-horses—”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[198]</span>“<i>I’ll</i> make it right with your fare!” Miss Smith
-cut in before the chauffeur could answer. “It’s a
-case of kidnapping. You catch that cab!” She
-was standing on the curb, and even as she spoke
-an elderly man and his wife came out of a shop.
-They stared from her to the automobile, and in
-their gaze was a proprietary irritation. This was
-instantly transfused by a more vivid emotion. The
-woman looked shocked and compassionate. “Oh,
-pa!” she gasped, “did you hear <i>that</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>The man was a country banker from Iowa. He
-had a very quick, keen eye; it flashed. “Case of
-kidnapping, hey?” snapped he, instantly grasping
-the character of the speakers and jumping at the
-situation. “Take the auto, Madam. Get a move
-on you, Mr. Chauffeur!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I’m moving, all right,” called the chauffeur,
-as he skilfully dived his lower wheels under
-the projecting load of a great wagon and obliquely
-bumped over the edge of a street-car fender, pursued
-by the motorman’s curses. “I see ’em, lady;
-I see the red tails; I’ll catch ’em!”</p>
-
-<p>His boast most likely had been made good
-(since for another block they bore straight on
-their course) but for an orange-wagon which had
-been overturned. There was a rush of pursuit of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[199]</span>
-the golden balls from the sidewalk; a policeman
-came to the rescue of traffic and ordered everything
-to halt until the cart was righted. The boys
-and girls in the street chased back to the sidewalk.
-The episode took barely a couple of minutes, but
-on the edge of the last minute the cab turned a
-corner. The motor-car turned the same corner,
-but saw no guiding oriflamme of waving red
-horsehair. The cross street next was equally bare.
-They were obliged to explore two adjacent highways
-before they came upon the hack again. This
-time it was in distant perspective, foreshortened to
-a blur of black and a swish of red. And even as
-they caught sight of it the horses swung round
-into profile and turned another corner. In the
-turn a man wearing a black derby hat stuck his
-arm and head out of the window in order to give
-some direction to the driver. Then he turned half
-around. It was almost as if he looked back at his
-pursuers; yet this, Mrs. Winter argued, hardly
-could be, since he had not expected pursuit, and
-anyhow, the chances were he could not know her
-by sight.</p>
-
-<p>It was a mean street, narrow and noisome, but
-full of shipping traffic and barred by tramways—a
-heartbreaking street for a chase. The chauffeur<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[200]</span>
-was a master of his art; he jumped his great craft
-at every vacant arm’s-length; he steered it through
-incredibly narrow lanes; he progressed sometimes
-by luffs, like a boat under sail when the forward
-passage must be reached in such indirect fashion;
-but the crowd of ungainly vehicles, loaded dizzily
-above his head, made the superior speed of the
-motor of no avail. In spite of him they could see
-the red tails lessening. Again and yet again, the
-hack turned; again, but each time with a loss, the
-motor struck its trail. By now the street was
-changed; the dingy two-story buildings lining it
-were brightened by gold-leaf and vermilion; oriental
-arms and garbs and embroidery spangled
-the windows and oriental faces looked inscrutably
-out of doorways. There rose the blended odors
-of spice, sandalwood and uncleanliness that announce
-the East, reeking up out of gratings and
-puffing out of shops.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah,” said Mrs. Winter softly to herself, “Chinese
-quarter, is it? Well.” Her eyes changed;
-they softened in a fashion that would have amazed
-one who only knew the surface of Mrs. Winter,
-the eccentric society potentate. She looked past
-the squalid, garish scene, past the shining sand-hills
-and the redwood trees, beyond into a stranger<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[201]</span>
-landscape glowing under a blinder glare of sun.
-Half mechanically she lifted a tiny gold chain that
-had slipped down her throat under the gray gown.
-Raising the yellow thread and the carven jade
-ornament depending therefrom, she let it lie outside
-amid the white lace and chiffon.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re making good now,” called the chauffeur.
-“Will I run alongside and hail ’em, or
-what?”</p>
-
-<p>She told him quietly to run alongside. But her
-lips twitched, and when she put up her hand to
-press them still, she smiled to discover that the
-hand was bare. She had forgotten to pull on her
-glove. She began to pull it on now.</p>
-
-<p>“The road is narrow,” said she. “Run ahead
-of the hack and block its way. You can do it
-without hitting the horses, can’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I guess,” returned the chauffeur, instantly
-accomplishing the manœuver in fine style.</p>
-
-<p>But he missed his deserved commendation; indeed,
-he forgot it himself; because, as he looked
-back at the horses rearing on the sudden check
-and tossing their auburn manes, then ran his scrutiny
-behind them to the hack, he perceived no life
-in it; and when his own passenger jumped with
-amazing nimbleness from her seat and flung the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[202]</span>
-crazy door wide open, she recoiled, exclaiming:
-“Where are they? Where did you leave them?”</p>
-
-<p>“Leave who?” queried the hackman. “Say,
-what you stoppin’ me fur? Runnin’ into me with
-your devil-wagon! <i>Say!</i>”—then his wrath trailed
-into an inarticulate mutter as he appreciated better
-the evident quality of the gentlewoman before
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“You may be mixed up in a penitentiary offense,
-my man,” said she placidly. “It is a case
-of kidnapping. Where did you leave that boy
-who was in the cab? If you give us information
-that will find him, there’s five dollars; if you fool
-us—well, I have your number. Where did you
-leave the boy?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, there was a cop with ’im—a cop and
-a gentleman. Ain’t you got hold of the wrong
-party, lady?”</p>
-
-<p>“A brown-haired boy in a gray suit with a blue
-cravat—you know he was in your cab. And how
-do you know it was a real policeman?”</p>
-
-<p>“Or he wasn’t helping on the deviltry if it
-was?” sneered the chauffeur, who had now become
-a full-fledged partizan. “Ain’t you lived in
-this burg long enough to find out how to make a
-little <i>mazuma</i> on the side? You’re too good for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[203]</span>
-’Frisco. Heaven is your home, my Christian
-friend.”</p>
-
-<p>“Cut it out!” retorted the man. “I guess I
-know how to find my way round as well as the
-next man—”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly you do,” soothed Mrs. Winter, who
-was fingering a crisp new five-dollar bank-note,
-“and you are no kidnapper, either; you made no
-bargain with those men—”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure I didn’t,” agreed the hackman, “nor I
-ain’t standin’ for kidnapping, neither. Why, I got
-kids of my own, and my woman she’d broom me
-outer the house if I was to do them games. Say,
-I’ll tell you all I knows. They got off, them three,
-at that there corner, and I was to drive fast ’s I
-could three blocks ahead and then git home any
-old way. And that’s God’s truth, I—”</p>
-
-<p>“You didn’t see where they went?” Mrs. Winter
-was quietly insistent.</p>
-
-<p>“No, I didn’t. I guess I was a dumb fool not
-ter notice, but they paid me well, and I’d a bad
-thirst, and I was hiking to a place I know for
-beer; and that’s—”</p>
-
-<p>“Did the boy seem willing?”</p>
-
-<p>“He didn’t do no kicking as I seen.”</p>
-
-<p>A few more questions revealed that the man<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[204]</span>
-had unpacked his full kit of information. He had
-never seen either of the men before. The gentleman—yes,
-he was sure he was a gentleman; he
-wasn’t no swell confidence guy; he was the regular
-thing—gentleman engaged him to take a party
-to the Chinese quarter; he’d tell where to stop;
-didn’t need a guide; only wanted to make a few
-purchases, he said, and he knew where the things
-was; yes, ma’am, that was all; only down there
-on Market Street, or maybe—why, somewhere
-near by—he stuck his head out and told him to
-turn the corner, and then he kept telling him to
-turn corners, until finally he told him to stop and
-they got out.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Winter gave the man the bank-note, counseling
-him to keep his eyes open for the two men
-and the boy, and to report to her at the Palace
-Hotel, giving his number, should he see either
-man or boy. It would be very well worth his
-while.</p>
-
-<p>The chauffeur did not interrupt, but he shook
-his head over the departing hack. “He’d ought to
-have known it wan’t on the square, but these hack
-drivers ain’t got good sense even when they’re, so
-to speak, sober, which ain’t often,” he soliloquized.
-“Well, lady, if they’ve took to the Chinese<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[205]</span>
-quarter, we’d better be looking up a Chink
-to help us, I guess. I know a fairly decent one—”</p>
-
-<p>“I think I know a better,” interrupted Mrs.
-Winter, with a faint smile. She had detected a
-suppressed pity in the man’s regard. “Motor
-slowly along the street. There is a shop, if I can
-find it, where there ought to be a man—”</p>
-
-<p>“Man you know? Say, lady, I guess I better go
-in with you, if you don’t mind—”</p>
-
-<p>“No; stay in your car. You don’t know how
-safe I am. Not only my gray hair protects me,
-but I have only to say a few words and any of
-these men will fight for me if necessary. But this
-is in confidence—just between us, you understand.
-You are not to repeat it, ever.”</p>
-
-<p>She looked at him with a frank smile, and involuntarily
-his hand went up to his cap. “What
-you say goes, lady. But jest remember I’m right
-here, spark going all the time, ready to throw her
-wide open when you step in; and”—his voice
-sank—“I ain’t absolutely unprepared for a scrap,
-either.”</p>
-
-<p>“I understand,” said she, looking at him
-keenly, and a few moments later she stepped
-briskly into the shop before which he halted with
-a little lightening of the heart because of this uncouth<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[206]</span>
-knight of the lever. The shop itself was
-like any one of a score on the street, crowded
-with oriental objects, bizarre carvings of ivory
-and jade, daggers and strings of cash, swords,
-gorgeous embroidered robes of silk and gold in a
-huddle over a counter or swinging and gleaming
-in the dusky background, squat little green and
-brown gods with puffy eyelids, smiling inscrutably
-amid shoes and fans and Chinese lanterns of glass
-and bronze, glittering with beads—in all these,
-like the score about it; yet the clean windows and
-a certain order within gave it a touch out of the
-common. A man and a boy served the shop, both
-in the American dress, with their pigtails tucked
-under visorless caps. Both greeted her in the
-serene oriental fashion, bowing and smiling, their
-obsequious courtesy showing no smallest sign of
-the surprise which the sight of an unattended
-woman must have given them.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, Mrs. Winter was aware that both,
-under their lowered eyelids, took cognizance of
-that soft-carven disk of jade among the laces on
-her breast. She asked the man if he had seen a lad
-and an older man, or it might be two older men,
-one a policeman, come into that or any other
-neighboring shop. She explained that the lad was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[207]</span>
-her grand-nephew and was lost (she eschewed the
-harsher word, for she had no desire to set afloat a
-rumor which might bring the police upon her).
-She named a sum large enough to kindle a sudden
-gleam in the boy’s eyes, as the reward awaiting
-the lucky man who might put her on the right
-track. But her words struck no responsive spark
-from the Chinaman’s veiled gaze. In perfect
-English and a very soft voice he avowed ignorance
-and sympathy with the same breath.</p>
-
-<p>And all the while she could feel his glance slant
-down at the jade ornament.</p>
-
-<p>“Send the boy to look in the shop next door,”
-said she. As she spoke she raised the charm between
-her thumb and first two fingers, looking at
-him directly. Her tone was that of command, not
-request. He frowned very slightly, making an almost
-imperceptible gesture, to which she returned
-a single Chinese phrase, spoken so low that had
-he not expected the words they had been indistinguishable
-to his ear. Instantly he addressed the
-boy rapidly in their own language. The boy went
-out. The master of the shop returned to Mrs.
-Winter. His manner had utterly changed; the
-tradesman’s perfunctory deference was displaced
-by an almost eager humility of bearing. He would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[208]</span>
-have her sit—there were a few cane-seated American
-arm-chairs, in grotesque contrast to all their
-accompaniments—he prostrated himself before
-her; he put himself at her service; still to her
-trained eye there was a corner of his mind where
-incredulity wrestled with a stronger emotion.</p>
-
-<p>“Do not fear,” she said gently. “It is really my
-own, and he gave it to me himself, almost thirty
-years ago. He was hardly thirty years old himself
-then. You see, my husband had been so fortunate
-as to do him a kindness. It was he who
-had it first. When he died it came to me, and now
-for the second time in my life I am using it. I
-knew you belonged. I saw the sign. Will you
-help me find my boy?”</p>
-
-<p>“Did your ladyship know <i>he</i> is he’e, in San
-Flancisco?”</p>
-
-<p>If she had not already dissipated any doubt in
-his mind, her evident relief blew the last shred
-away now. “Haven’t you such a thing as a telephone
-somewhere?” cried Rebecca Winter. “Time
-is precious. Can’t you speak to him—have him
-come here?”</p>
-
-<p>It appeared that there was a telephone, and in
-a moment she was put into communication by the
-shopkeeper. He stood in an attitude of deep respect<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[209]</span>
-while she talked. He heard with unsmiling
-attention her first Chinese words; he listened as
-she returned to English, speaking very quietly,
-but with a controlled earnestness, explaining that
-she was Archibald Winter’s widow, giving dates
-and places, in nowise alluding to the service which
-had won the charm about her neck. Yet as he listened,
-insensibly the Chinaman grew certain that
-she had spoken the truth. Presently she turned to
-him. “He wishes to speak to you,” she said, and
-went back to the shop. She sighed as one sighs
-from whose heart a great burden rolls. “To find
-him here, and still grateful!” she was thinking.
-“What wonderful good fortune!”</p>
-
-<p>She sat down, and her face grew dreamy. She
-was no longer thinking of Archie. Her vision was
-on another face, another scene, a time of peril,
-when almost against her reason her instinctive
-woman’s recoil of pity for a fellow-creature in
-danger of unthinkable torture had been so intense
-that she had more than acquiesced in her husband’s
-plan of risking both their lives to save him;
-she had impelled him to it; she had overcome his
-terror of the risks on her account. “It is only
-death we have to fear, at worst,” she had argued.
-“We have the means to escape in a second, both<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[210]</span>
-of us, from anything else; and if we run away
-and leave this poor wretch, who hasn’t done anything
-but love his country, just as we love ours,
-and be too civilized for his trifling, ornery, pusillanimous
-country-people to understand, to get
-slashed to pieces by their horrible ling-ling—whatever
-they call it—Archibald Winter, don’t
-you reckon we shall have nightmares as long as
-we live?”</p>
-
-<p>Thirty years ago—yet it seemed like yesterday.
-Distinctly she could hear her husband’s voice; it
-had not come back to her with such reality for
-years; it was more real than the cries of the street
-outside; and her heart was beating faster for his
-words: “Becky, there never was a woman like
-you! You could make a dead man hop up and
-fight, bless you!”</p>
-
-<p>“Your ladyship”—it was the shopkeeper back
-again; he had lived in England, and he offered
-the most respectful western title of his knowledge—“your
-ladyship may be chee’ful. All will be
-done of the best. The young gentleman will be
-back fo’ to-night. If your ladyship will now letu’n
-to the hotel.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_211fp.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">It took only a moment to transfer a passenger. Page <a href="#Page_211">211</a></p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Winter bowed slightly; she was quite her
-self-possessed self again. “I will go certainly,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[211]</span>
-she said, “but I shall hope to see you, also, to-night;
-and meanwhile, will you accept, as a token
-from a friend who trusts you, <i>this</i>?” She took a
-little gem-encrusted watch from her fob and
-handed it to him. Her manner was that of a
-queen who rewards her general. And she left
-him bowing low. She entered the motor-car. It
-was no longer a lone motor. Another car steamed
-and snorted near by, in which sat the amiable
-banker from Iowa, his wife and Janet Smith.</p>
-
-<p>It took only a moment to transfer a passenger,
-to explain that she hoped to find the boy who had
-been lost—no, she would not use such a strenuous
-word as kidnapped—and would they complete
-their kindness by not mentioning the affair to any
-one? One hated so to get into the papers. And
-would they let her see them again to thank them?
-Then, as she sank back on the cushions, she remarked,
-as much to the expectant chauffeur as to
-Janet: “Yes, I think it is all right. I think we
-shall see Archie to-night.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[212]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XII<br />
-
-<small>A BLOW</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>There was no one but Mrs. Winter to welcome
-the colonel when, jaded, warm and dusty, he
-tapped on Aunt Rebecca’s parlor door. Mrs. Millicent
-was bristling with a sense of injury; one
-couldn’t touch her conversationally without risk
-of a scratch. The colonel put up the shield of his
-unsuitable appearance, his fatigue and his deplorable
-need of a bath, and escaped into his own
-apartment. But he made his toilet with reckless
-haste. All the time he was questioning his recent
-experience, trying to sort over his theories, which
-had been plunged into confusion by Mercer’s confession.
-“I suppose,” he reflected, “that I had no
-right to give Mercer that hint at the door.” The
-hint had been given just as they parted. It was
-in a single sentence:</p>
-
-<p>“By the way, Mercer, if that pillar in the <i>patio</i>
-is of importance in your combination, you would
-better keep an eye on it; it has a trick of cracking.”</p>
-
-<p>“The devil it has!” grunted Mercer. Then he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[213]</span>
-thanked him, with a kind of reluctant admiration
-in his tone.</p>
-
-<p>“You are sure you don’t object to my detective’s
-staying?” questioned the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“No, suh; prefer to have him. You told him to
-have his men in and overhaul the house?”</p>
-
-<p>“I did. I warned you I should have to. You
-promise there shall be no racket? But I—I think
-I’ll take Haley.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you. That’s right kind of you, suh.
-Good-by, suh.”</p>
-
-<p>This had been the manner of their parting—assuredly
-a singular one, after the sinister suspicions
-and the violent promises which the soldier had
-made himself in regard to this very man. After
-leaving, he had motored into town, down to
-the police courts, to discover no records of the
-arrest and no trace of Archie. Thence, discouraged,
-perplexed and more worried than he liked
-to admit, he had repaired to the hotel. His aunt
-was gone, Miss Smith was gone, and Randall
-could only relate how Mrs. Winter “had flewed
-like a bird, sir, into a big red motor-car and gone
-off, and then Miss Smith and a lady and gentleman
-had got into a white car and gone off in the
-same direction.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[214]</span>He was meditating on his next step, when Birdsall
-was announced below. The detective looked
-as warm and as tired as the colonel had felt an
-hour before. Rupert was not eager to see him,
-but neither was he anxious for the tête-à-tête with
-Millicent which awaited him in the parlor. Between
-the two he chose Birdsall.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” he greeted him, “did you find any trace
-of the boy?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I did,” growled Birdsall. “They
-didn’t try to hide ’im. They had him lodged in a
-dandy room with his own bath. Of course, he
-left his tooth-brush. They’d got him some automobile
-togs, too, and he’d left some leggings when
-he packed, and a letter begun on a pad to Miss
-Smith—‘Dear Miss Janet,’ it begins, ‘I am having
-a bully time. I can steer the machine, only I
-can’t back’—that’s all. Say, the young dog has
-been having it fat while we were in the frying-pan
-for fear somebody was bothering him.”</p>
-
-<p>“But he is not in the house now?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, nor nothing else.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Nobody</i> hidden away? Where did the groans
-you heard come from?” queried the colonel
-politely.</p>
-
-<p>Birdsall flushed. “I do believe that slick deceiver<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[215]</span>
-you call Mercer put up a game on us out
-of meanness—just to git me guessing.”</p>
-
-<p>“That sort of thing looks more like the college
-boys.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say, it might have been. This thing is giving
-me nervous prostration. Say, why didn’t you see
-the thing out with me?”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel shamelessly told the truth to deceive.
-“I was called here. I was told that Mrs.
-Winter, my aunt, had seen Archie in the street.”</p>
-
-<p>“She was just getting out of a machine as I
-came up. Miss Smith was with her, and they had
-their hands full of candy boxes. They were
-laughing. I made sure the boy had been found.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not to my knowledge,” said the colonel. But
-in some excitement he walked into the parlor.
-The ladies had arrived; they stood in the center
-of the room while Randall took away the boxes.</p>
-
-<p>“Candy for Archie,” explained Aunt Rebecca,
-and these were the first words to reach Rupert
-Winter’s ears. “I expect him to dinner.”</p>
-
-<p>“Aunt Rebecca,” proclaimed Millicent, “I never
-have been one to complain, but there <i>are</i> limits to
-human endurance. I am a modern person, a civilized
-Episcopalian, accustomed to a regular and
-well-ordered life, and for the last few days I seem<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[216]</span>
-to have been living in a kind of medieval mystery,
-with kidnappers, and blood-stains, and, for anything
-I know, somebody ready to stick a knife into
-any one of us any time! You people may enjoy
-this sort of thing—<i>you seem to</i>—but I don’t.
-And I tell you frankly that I am going to apply
-to the police, not to any private detective inquiry
-office, as like as not in league with the criminals”—thus
-ungratefully did Mrs. Millicent slur the
-motives of her only truly interested auditor—“but
-<i>real</i> policemen. I shall apply—”</p>
-
-<p>She did not tell where she should apply, the
-words being snapped out of her mouth by the
-sharp tinkle of the telephone bell.</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Rebecca responded to the call. “Send him
-up,” was her answer to the inaudible questioner.</p>
-
-<p>She laid down the receiver. Then she put it
-back. Then she stood up, her silver head in the
-air, her erect little figure held motionless.</p>
-
-<p>Janet Smith’s dark eyes sought hers; her lips
-parted only to close firmly again.</p>
-
-<p>Even the detective perceived the electric intensity
-of the moment, and Rupert shut his fists
-tight, with a quickened beating of the heart; but
-emotional vibrations did not disturb Mrs. Melville
-Winter’s poise. She continued her plaint.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[217]</span>“This present situation is unbearable, unprecedented
-and un—un—unexpected,” she declaimed,
-rather groping for a climax which escaped her.
-Aunt Rebecca raised her hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Would you be so very kind, Millicent,” said
-she, “as to wait a moment? I am trying to listen.”</p>
-
-<p>Like a response to her words, the knob of the
-door was turned, the door swung, and Archie entered
-the room, smiling his odd little chewed-up
-smile.</p>
-
-<p>Janet uttered a faint cry and took a single step,
-but, as if recognizing a superior right, hung back
-while the boy put his arm about his great-aunt’s
-waist and rather bashfully kissed her cheek.</p>
-
-<p>She received the salute with entire composure,
-except for a tiny splash of red which crept up to
-each cheek-bone. “Is it really you, Archie?” said
-she. “You are a little late for dinner day before
-yesterday, but quite in time for to-day. Sit down
-and tell us where you have been.”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite so!” exclaimed Mrs. Millicent. “Good
-heavens! Do you know how we have suffered?
-<i>Where</i> have you been? <i>Why</i> did you run away?”</p>
-
-<p>But Archie, who had surrendered one-half of
-him to be hugged by Miss Smith and the other to
-be clapped on the shoulder by his uncle, seemed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[218]</span>
-to think a vaguely polite “How-de-do, Aunt Millicent;
-I’m sorry to have worried you!” to be answer
-enough. Only when the question was repeated
-by Mrs. Winter herself did he reply: “I’m
-awfully sorry, Aunt Rebecca, but I’ve promised
-not to say anything about it. But, truly, I didn’t
-mean to bother you.”</p>
-
-<p>Millicent exploded in an access of indignation:
-“And do you mean that you expect us to accept
-such a ridiculous promise—after all we have been
-through?”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite so,” remarked Aunt Rebecca, with a
-precise echo of her niece’s most Anglican utterance—the
-gift of mimicry had been one of Mrs.
-Winter’s most admired and distrusted social gifts
-from her youth.</p>
-
-<p>Rupert Winter hastened to distract Millicent’s
-attention by saying decisively: “If the boy has
-promised, that ends it; he can’t break his parole.
-Anyhow, they don’t seem to have hurt you, old
-son?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, they treated me dandy, those fellows,”
-said Archie. “Miss Janet, I know how to run an
-electric motor-car, except backing.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll bet you do,” muttered the detective.</p>
-
-<p>Here the colonel came to the boy’s relief a second<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[219]</span>
-time and drew Birdsall aside. “Best let me
-pump the chap a little. You get down-stairs and
-see how he got here, who brought him. They’ll
-get clean away. It is late for that as it is. You
-can report to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>It was the colonel, also, who eliminated Mrs.
-Millicent by the masterly stratagem of suggesting
-that she pass the news to Mrs. Wigglesworth. He
-artfully added that it would require tact to let the
-lady from Boston understand that the lad had
-been found without in any way gratifying her
-natural curiosity in regard to the manner of finding
-or the cause of disappearance. “I’ll have to
-leave <i>that</i> to you,” he concluded. “Maybe you can
-see a way out; I confess my hands are in the air.”</p>
-
-<p>Millicent thus relegated to the ambassador’s
-shelf, the colonel slipped comfortably into his pet
-arm-chair facing his nephew on the lounge between
-Aunt Rebecca and Miss Smith. Miss Smith
-looked frankly, charmingly happy. Aunt Rebecca
-looked rather tired.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course,” remarked he, “I understand, old
-man, that you have promised secrecy to—well, to
-the Fireless Stove gang, as we’ll call them; but the
-<i>other</i> kidnappers, the crowd that held up your car
-and then switched you off on a side track while<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[220]</span>
-young Fireless was detained—they haven’t any
-hold on you?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir,” said Archie; “but—you see, that
-strange gentleman and Aunt Millicent—I was
-scared lest I’d give something away.”</p>
-
-<p>“They’re not here now. All friends here. Suppose
-you make a clean breast of your second kidnapping.
-It may be important you should.”</p>
-
-<p>Nothing loath, Archie told his story. Left outside
-while Tracy went into the office with a policeman,
-to whom he gave his assumed name, he
-remained for hardly two minutes before a gentleman
-and a “cop” came up to him, and the latter
-ordered him to descend from the machine—but
-not until they had found it impossible to move
-the vehicle. When they did discover that the key
-was out and gone, the man in citizen’s clothes
-hailed a cab and the officer curtly informed Archie
-that Gardiner (Tracy’s traveling name) had been
-taken to another court and he was to follow. He
-didn’t suspect anything beyond a collision with
-the speed regulations of the city, but had he seen
-a chance to dive under his escort’s arm the boy
-would have taken it. Such chance was not afforded
-him, and all he was able to do was to lean
-out suddenly as they passed the Palace and to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[221]</span>
-wave at Randall. “I wanted them to stop and let
-me get some one to pay my fine,” said Archie,
-“but they said I was only a witness. They
-wouldn’t let me stop; they run down the curtain—at
-least so far as it would run. It was like all
-those hack curtains, you know—all out of order.”</p>
-
-<p>“Archie,” the colonel interjected here, “was one
-of the men a little fellow, clean-shaven, with a
-round black head, blue eyes—one of his eyes
-winks a little faster than the other?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir. How did you know?”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t know; I guessed. Well, get on; they
-wanted to pump you when they got you safely out
-of sight?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” Archie said, “they put me into the
-sweat-box, all right.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you tell them anything?” asked Mrs. Winter.</p>
-
-<p>Archie looked at her reproachfully. Did she
-think that he had gone to boarding-school for
-nothing? He explained that, being a stranger in
-the town, he could not tell anything about where
-he’d been. There was an agent at the house trying
-to sell stoves, and they let him take him off back
-to the hotel. The man seemed to know all about
-who he (Archie) was, and about his having gone<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[222]</span>
-away. The men asked him an awful lot of questions
-about how he was taken away. He said he
-didn’t know, and he’d promised not to tell. He
-couldn’t tell. They said he would have to go to
-jail if he didn’t tell, because the men who had him
-were such bad men. But he didn’t tell.</p>
-
-<p>“Did they try to frighten you—to make you
-tell?” said Mrs. Winter.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, they bluffed a little,” returned Archie carelessly,
-yet the keen eyes on him—eyes both
-worldly-wise and shrewd—noted that the lad’s
-color shifted and he winced the least in the world
-over some remembrance.</p>
-
-<p>“But they didn’t hurt you? They didn’t burn
-you or cut you or twist your arms, or try any
-other of their playful ways?” Mrs. Winter demanded;
-and Janet began feeling the boy’s arms,
-breathing more quickly. The colonel only looked.</p>
-
-<p>“No, they didn’t do a thing. I knew they
-wouldn’t, too,” Archie assured her earnestly. “I
-told them if they did anything, Uncle Rupert and
-you would make them pay.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you weren’t frightened, away from every
-one—in that hideous quarter?” cried Miss Smith.
-“Oh, my dear!” She choked.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, maybe I was a little scared. I kept thinking<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[223]</span>
-of a rotten yarn of Kipling’s; something happened
-to <i>him</i>, down in the underground quarter,
-in just such a hot, nasty-smelling hole, I guess, as
-I was in; you remember, Miss Janet, about the
-game of cards and the Mexican stabbing a Chink
-for cheating, and how Kipling jumped up and ran
-for his life, never looked around; and don’t you
-remember that nasty bit, how he felt sure they
-had dealt with the greaser their own way and he’d
-never get up to the light again—”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been remembering that story all this afternoon,”
-answered Miss Smith with a shudder.</p>
-
-<p>“Agreeable little tale,” said Aunt Rebecca
-dryly. “Archie, you must have had a right nasty
-quarter of an hour; what stopped it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, a Chink came and called the little man
-off; and there was a lot of talking which I couldn’t
-hear, and the cop was swearing; I think they
-didn’t like it. But, in a minute the Chinaman—he
-was an awful nice little feller—he came up to
-me and took me out, led me all sorts of ways, not
-a bit like the way I came in, and got me out to
-the street. The other fellows were very polite;
-they told me that they were my friends and only
-wanted to find a clue to my kidnappers; and the
-burning holes in me was only a joke to give me<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[224]</span>
-an excuse to break my word under compulsion—why,
-<i>they</i> wouldn’t hurt me for the world! I
-pretended to be fooled, and said it was all right,
-and looked pleasant; but—I’d like to scare them
-the same way, once, all the same.”</p>
-
-<p>The boy caught at his lip which was trembling,
-and ended with a shaky laugh. Miss Smith
-clenched the fist by her side; but she dropped the
-arm near Archie, and said in a matter-of-fact,
-sprightly tone: “Archie, you really ought to go
-dress—and wash for dinner; excuse me for mentioning
-it, but you have no idea how grimy you
-are.”</p>
-
-<p>The commonplace turn of thought did its errand.
-Archie, who had been bracing himself anew
-against the horror which he remembered, dropped
-back into his familiar habits and jumped up consciously.
-“It’s the dust, motoring,” he offered
-bashfully. “I ought to have washed before I came
-up. Well, that’s all; we came straight here. Now,
-may I go take a bath?”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Rebecca was fingering a curious jade
-locket on her neck. She watched the boy run to
-the open door.</p>
-
-<p>“I wish you’d go into your room, Colonel,”
-said Miss Smith, “and see that nothing happens<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[225]</span>
-to him. It’s silly, but I am expecting to see him
-vanish again!”</p>
-
-<p>The sentence affected the colonel unpleasantly;
-why need she be posing before him, as if that first
-disappearance had had any real fright in it? Of
-course she didn’t know yet (although Aunt Rebecca
-might have told her—she <i>ought</i> to have told
-her and stopped this unnecessary deceit) that
-he was on to the game; but—he didn’t like it.
-Unconsciously, his inward criticism made his tone
-drier as he replied with a little bow that he imagined
-Archie was quite safe, now, and he would
-ask to be excused, as he had to attend to something
-before dinner.</p>
-
-<p>Was it his fancy that her face changed and her
-eyes looked wistful? It must have been. He
-walked stiffly away. Hardly had he entered his
-room and turned his mind on the changed situation
-before the telephone apprised him that a
-gentleman, Mr. Gardiner, who represented the
-Fireless Cook Stove, said that he had an appointment
-with Colonel Winter to explain the stove;
-should he be sent up?</p>
-
-<p>Directly, Endicott Tracy entered, smiling.
-“Where’s the kid? I know he’s back,” were his
-first words; and he explained that he had been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[226]</span>
-hunting the kidnappers to no purpose. “Except
-that I learned enough to know they put up a job
-with the justice, all right; I got next to that game
-without any Machiavellian exertions. But they
-got away. Who is it? Any of Keatcham’s gang?”</p>
-
-<p>“Atkins,” said the colonel concisely.</p>
-
-<p>Tracy whistled and apologized. “It’s a blow,”
-he confessed. “That little wretch! He has brains
-to burn and not an ounce of conscience. You
-know he has been mousing round at the hotels
-after Keatcham’s mail—”</p>
-
-<p>“He didn’t get it?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Cary had covered that point. Cary has
-thought this all out very carefully, but Atkins
-has got on to the fact that Cary was here in this
-hotel with Keatcham. But he doesn’t know where
-we come in; whether Keatcham’s gang is just
-lying low for some game of its own, or whether
-<i>we’ve</i> got him. At least, I don’t believe he
-knows.”</p>
-
-<p>“You ought not to be talking so freely to me;
-I haven’t promised you anything, you know,”
-warned the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“But you’ve got your nephew back all right;
-we have been on the square with <i>you</i>; why should
-you butt in? I know you won’t.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[227]</span>“I don’t seem to have a fair call to,” observed
-the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“And I think the old boy is going to give in;
-he has made signals of distress, to my thinking.
-Wanted his mail; and wanted to write; and informed
-Cary—he saw him for the first time to-day—that
-he had bigger things on deck than the
-Midland; and wanted to get at them. We’re
-going to win out all right.”</p>
-
-<p>“Unless Atkins gets at him to-night,” the
-colonel suggested. “You oughtn’t to have come
-here, Gardiner. Don’t go home, now. Wait until
-later, and let me rig you up in another lot of togs
-and give you my own motor-car. Better.”</p>
-
-<p>Tracy was more than impressed by the proposal;
-he was plainly grateful. He entered with
-enthusiasm into the soldier’s masquerade—Tracy
-had always had a weakness for theatricals and
-some of his Hasty Pudding <i>Portraits of Unknown
-People We Know</i> had won him fame at Cambridge.
-Ten minutes later, there sat opposite the
-colonel a florid-faced, mustached, western commercial
-traveler whose plaided tweeds, being an
-ill-advised venture of Haley’s which the colonel
-had taken off his hands and found no subject of
-charity quite obnoxious enough to deserve them,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[228]</span>
-naturally did not fit the present wearer, but suited
-his inane complacence of bearing and might pass
-for a bad case of ready-made purchase.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” said the adviser, “I’ll notify Haley
-to have my own hired motor ready for you and
-you can slip out and take it after you’ve had
-something to eat. Here’s the restaurant card.
-Haley will be there. Leave it at the drug store
-on Van Ness Street—Haley will give you the
-number—and get home as unobtrusively as possible.
-You can peel off these togs in the motor
-if necessary. You’ve your own underneath except
-your coat. Wrap that in a newspaper and
-carry it. I don’t know that Atkins has any one
-on guard at the hotel, but I think it more than
-likely he suspects some connection between our
-party and Keatcham’s. But first, tell me about
-Atkins; what do you know about him? It’s an
-American name.”</p>
-
-<p>“America can take all the glory of him, I fancy,”
-said Tracy. “He’s been Keatcham’s secretary for
-six years. He seems awfully mild and useful and
-timid. He’s not a bit timid. He’s full of resource;
-he’s sidled suggestions into Keatcham’s ear and
-has been gradually working to make himself absolutely
-necessary. I think he aimed at a partnership;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[229]</span>
-but Keatcham wouldn’t stand for it. I
-think it was in revenge that he sold out some of
-Keatcham’s secrets. Cary got on to that and has a
-score of his own to settle with him, besides. I
-don’t know how he managed, but he showed him
-up; and Keatcham gave him the sack in his own
-cold-blooded way. I know him only casually.
-But my cousin, Ralph Schuyler, went to prep.
-school with him, so I got his character straight
-off the bat. His father was a patent-medicine
-man from Mississippi, who made a fair pile, a
-couple of hundred thousand which looked good
-to that section, you know. I don’t know anything
-about his people except that his father made the
-‘Celebrated Atkins’ Ague Busters’; and that Atkins
-was ashamed of his people and shook his
-married sisters who came to see him, in rather
-a brutal fashion; but I know a thing or two about
-him; he was one of those bounders who curry
-favor with the faculty and the popular boys and
-never break rules apparently, but go off and have
-sly little bats by themselves. He never was popular,
-yet, somehow, he got into things; he knew
-where to lend money; and he was simply sickeningly
-clever; in math. he was a wonder. Ralph
-hated him. For one thing, he caught him in a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[230]</span>
-dirty lie. Atkins hated him back and contrived to
-prevent his being elected class president, and when
-he couldn’t prevent Ralph’s making his senior society
-the happy thought struck Atkins to get on
-the initiation committee. They had a cheery little
-branding game to make the fellows quite sure they
-belonged, you know, and he rammed his cigar
-stump into Ralph’s arm so that Ralph had blood-poisoning
-and a narrow squeak for his life. You
-see that I’m not prepossessed in the fellow’s favor.
-He’s got too vivid an imagination for me!”</p>
-
-<p>“Seems to have,” acquiesced the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“I think, you know”—Tracy made an effort
-to be just—“I think Atkins was rather soured.
-Some of the fellows made fun of the ‘Ague Busters’;
-he had a notion that the reason it was
-such uphill work for him in the school, was his
-father’s trade. No doubt he did get nasty licks,
-at first; and he’s revengeful. He hasn’t got on
-in society outside, either—this he lays to his not
-being a university man. You see his father lost
-some of his money and put him to work instead
-of in college. He was willing enough at the time—I
-think he wanted to get married—but afterward,
-when he was getting a good salary and piling
-up money on his tips, he began to think that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[231]</span>
-he had lost more than he had bargained for.
-Altogether, he’s soured. Now, what he wants
-is to make a thundering big strike and to pull
-out of Wall Street, buy what he calls ‘a seat
-on the James’ and set-up for a Southern gentleman.
-He’s trying to marry a Southern girl, they
-say, who is kin to the Carters and the Byrds and
-the Lees and the Carys—why, <i>you</i> know her,
-she’s Mrs. Winter’s secretary.”</p>
-
-<p>“Does—does she care for him?” The colonel
-suddenly felt his mouth parched; he was savagely
-conscious of his mounting color. What a fiendish
-trick of fate! he had never dreamed of this!
-Well, whether she cared for him or not, the man
-was a brute; he shouldn’t get her. That was one
-certainty in the colonel’s mind.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Cary vows she doesn’t, that it was only
-a girlish bit of nonsense up in Virginia, that time
-he was prospecting, you know. But I don’t feel
-so safe. She’s too nice for such a cur. But you
-know what women are; the nicest of them seem
-to be awfully queer about men. There’s no betting
-on them.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid not,” remarked the colonel lightly.
-But he put his fingers inside his collar and
-loosened it, as if he felt choked.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[232]</span>Because he had a dozen questions quarreling
-for precedence in his head, he asked not one.
-He only inquired regarding the situation; discovering
-that both Mercer and Tracy were equally
-in the dark with himself as to Atkins’ plans, Atkins’
-store of information, Atkins’ resources.
-How he could have waylaid Tracy and the boy
-without knowing whence they came was puzzling;
-it was quite as puzzling, however, assuming
-that he did know their whereabouts, to decide
-why he was so keen to interrogate the boy. In
-fact, it was, as Tracy said, “too much like Professor
-Santa Anna’s description of a German definition
-of metaphysics, ‘A blind man hunting in a
-dark room for a black cat that isn’t there.’”</p>
-
-<p>“In any event, you would better keep away
-from <i>me</i>,” was the colonel’s summing up of the
-situation; “I don’t want to be inhospitable, but
-the sooner you are off, and out of the hotel, the
-safer for your speculation.”</p>
-
-<p>“Friends will please accept the intimation,”
-said Tracy good-humoredly. “Very well, it’s
-twenty-three for me. I’m hoping you’ll see your
-way clear to run over as soon as the old man has
-surrendered; I’m going to invite him to make us
-a proper visit, then, and see the country. I’m always<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[233]</span>
-for letting the conquered keep their side-arms.”</p>
-
-<p>He went away smiling his flashing smile, and
-turned it up at the hotel as he walked out; the
-colonel made no sign of recognition from the
-window whence he observed him. Instead, he
-drew back quickly, frowning; it might be a mere
-accident that only a hand’s-breadth of space from
-the young Harvard man was a dapper little shape
-in evening clothes, a man still young, with a
-round black head; if so, it was an accident not to
-the colonel’s liking.</p>
-
-<p>“Damn you!” whispered Rupert Winter very
-softly. “What is your little game?”</p>
-
-<p>At once he descended, having telephoned Haley
-to meet him at the court. When he entered
-and sent his glance rapidly among the little tables,
-by this time filled with diners, he experienced a
-disagreeable surprise. It did not come from the
-sight of Sergeant Haley in his Sunday civilian
-clothes, stolidly reading the <i>Call</i>; it came from a
-vision of Atkins standing, bowing, animatedly
-talking with Janet Smith.</p>
-
-<p>Instead of approaching Haley, Winter fell back
-and scribbled a few words on a page of his note-book,
-while safely shielded by a great palm. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[234]</span>
-note he despatched to Haley, who promptly
-joined him. While they stood, talking on apparently
-indifferent subjects, Miss Smith passed
-them. Whether because he was become suspicious
-or because she had come upon him suddenly, she
-colored slightly. But she smiled as she saluted
-him and spoke in her usual tranquil tone. “You
-are going to dine with us, aren’t you, Colonel?”
-said she. “I think dinner is just about to be
-served.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel would be with them directly.</p>
-
-<p>Haley’s eyes followed her; he had returned her
-nod and inquiry for his wife and little Nora with
-a military salute and the assurance that they were
-both wonderfully well and pleased with the country.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, ain’t it remarkable the way that lady do
-keep names in her mind?” cried he. “An’ don’t
-she walk foine and straight? Oi’ve been always
-towld thim Southern ladies had the gran’ way
-wid ’em; Oi see now ’tis thrue.” The unusual
-richness of Haley’s brogue was a sure sign of feeling.
-The colonel only looked grim. After he had
-taken Haley to a safe nook for his confidence, a
-nook where there were neither ears nor eyes to
-be feared, he would have made his way up-stairs;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[235]</span>
-but half-way down the office he was hailed by
-the manager. The manager was glad to hear that
-the young gentleman was safely back. He let the
-faint radiance of an intelligent, respectfully tactful
-smile illumine his words and intimate that
-his listener would have no awkward questions to
-parry from him. The colonel felt an ungrateful
-wrath, a reprehensible snare of temper which did
-not show in his confidentially lowered voice, as he
-replied: “Mighty lucky, too, we are; the boy’s all
-right; but San Francisco is no place for an innocent
-kid even to take the safest-looking walk.
-What sort of a police system have you, anyhow?”</p>
-
-<p>The manager shook his head. “I’m not bragging
-about it; nor about the Chinese quarter,
-either. I confess I’ve felt particularly uncomfortable,
-myself, the last day. Well—if you’ll excuse
-the advice—least said, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel nodded. He proffered his cigar-case;
-the manager complimented its contents, as
-he selected a cigar; and both gentlemen bowed.
-A wandering, homesick Frenchman, who viewed
-their parting, felt refreshed as by a breath from
-his own land of admirable manners. Meanwhile,
-the colonel was fuming within: “Confound his
-insinuating curiosity! but I reckon I headed him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[236]</span>
-off. And who would have thought,” he wondered
-forlornly, “that I could be going to dine with the
-boy safe and sound and be feeling so like a
-whipped hound!”</p>
-
-<p>But none of this showed during the dinner at
-which Millicent was in high good humor, having
-obtained information about most astounding bargains
-in the Chinese quarter from Mrs. Wigglesworth.
-Her good humor extended even to Miss
-Smith, who received it without enthusiasm, albeit
-courteously; and who readily consented to be her
-companion for the morning sally on the distressed
-Orientals, whose difficulties with the customs had
-reduced them to the necessity of sales at any cost.
-Aunt Rebecca listened with an absent smile, while
-Archie laughed at every feeblest joke of his uncle
-in a boyish interest so little like his former apathy
-that often Miss Smith’s eyes brightened and half
-timidly sought the uncle’s, as if calling his attention
-to the change. Only a few hours back, his
-would have brightened gratefully in answer;
-now, he avoided her glances. Yet somehow, his
-heart felt heavier when they ceased. For his part,
-he was thankful to have his aunt request his company
-in a little promenade around the “loggia,” as
-she termed it, overlooking the great court.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[237]</span>She took him aside to tell him her afternoon
-experience, and to ask his opinion of the enigmatical
-appearance of Atkins. He was strongly tempted,
-in return, to question her frankly about Miss
-Smith, to tell her of seeing the latter with Atkins
-only that evening. He knew that it was the
-sensible thing to do—but he simply could not do
-it. To frame his suspicions past or present of
-the woman he loved; to discuss the chances of
-her affection for a man loathsomely unworthy of
-her; worse, to balance the possibilities of her
-turning betrayer in her turn and chancing any
-damage to her benefactress and her kinsman for
-this fellow’s sake—no, it was beyond him. He
-had intended to discuss his aunt’s part in the
-waylaying of Keatcham, with calmness and with
-the deference due her, but unsparingly; he meant
-to show her the legal if not moral obliquity of
-her course, to point out to her the pitfalls besetting
-it, to warn her how hideous might be the consequences
-of a misstep. Somehow, however, his
-miserable new anxiety about Miss Smith had disturbed
-all his calculations and upset his wits; and
-he could not rally any of the poignant phrases
-which he had prepared. All he was able to say
-was something about the rashness of the business;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[238]</span>
-it was like the Filipinos with their bows and arrows
-fighting machine-guns.</p>
-
-<p>“Or David with his ridiculous little sling going
-against Goliath,” added she. “Very well put,
-Bertie; only the good advice comes too late; the
-question now is, how to get out with a whole
-skin. Surprising as it may be, I expect to—with
-your help.”</p>
-
-<p>“Honored, I’m sure,” growled Bertie.</p>
-
-<p>“There is one thing I meant to ask you—I
-haven’t, but I shall now. Instead of making it
-impossible for me to sleep to-night, as you virtuously
-intended in order to clear your conscience
-before you tried to pull me out of the trap I’ve
-set for myself, suppose you do me a favor, right
-now.”</p>
-
-<p>“You put it so well, you make me ashamed of
-my moral sense, Aunt Becky; what is it you
-want?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, nothing unbefitting a soldier and a gentleman,
-dear boy; just this: Cary has to have some
-money. I meant to give it to Stoves, but you
-hustled him off in such a rush that I didn’t get
-at him. You know where he is, don’t you? You
-haven’t sent him straight back?”</p>
-
-<p>“I can find him, I reckon.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[239]</span>“Then I’ll give <i>you</i> the money, at once.”</p>
-
-<p>How weak a thing is man! Here was an eminently
-cool-headed, reasonable man of affairs
-who knew that paws which had escaped from the
-fire unsinged had no excuse to venture back for
-other people’s chestnuts; he had expressed himself
-clearly to this effect to young Tracy; now,
-behold him as unable to resist the temptation of a
-conflict and the chance to baffle Atkins as if he
-were a hot-headed boy in plain shoulder-straps!</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll do better for you, Aunt Rebecca,” said he.
-“I’ll not only take Fireless the money, I’ll go with
-him to the house. I can make a sneak from here;
-and Atkins is safely down-stairs at this moment.
-He may be shadowing Fireless; if he is, perhaps
-I can throw him off the track.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus it befell that not an hour later Rupert
-Winter was guiding the shabby and noisy runabout
-a second time toward the haunted house.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing doin’,” said the joyous apprentice
-to crime; “I called old Cary up and got a furious
-slating for doing it; but he said there wasn’t a
-watch-dog in sight; and the old man had surrendered.
-He was going to let him into the
-library on parole.”</p>
-
-<p>“You need a guardian,” growled the colonel;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[240]</span>
-“where did you telephone? <i>Not</i> in the drug
-store?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dear, no, not in such a public place; I’ve
-a shrinking nature that never did intrude its
-private, personal affairs on the curious world.
-I used the ’phone of that nice quiet little restaurant
-where they gave me a lovely meal but were
-so long preparing it, I used up all the literature
-in sight, which was the <i>Ladies’ Home Journal</i> and
-a tract on the virtues of Knox’s Gelatine. When
-I couldn’t think of anything else to do I routed
-out Cary—I’d smoked all my cigarettes and all
-my cigars but one which I was keeping for after
-dinner. And Cary rowed me good and plenty.
-There wasn’t a soul in the room.”</p>
-
-<p>“Has any one followed you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a man, woman or child, not even a yellow
-dog. I kept looking round, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“It was a dreadfully risky thing to do; you
-don’t deserve to escape; but perhaps you did.
-Atkins may have come to the Palace for some
-other purpose and never have noticed you.”</p>
-
-<p>“My own father wouldn’t have got on to me
-in that dinky rig.”</p>
-
-<p>Winter was not so easy in his mind. But he
-hoped for the best, since there was nothing else<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[241]</span>
-for him to do. They were in sight of the house
-now, which loomed against the dim horizon,
-darker, grimmer than ever. Where the upper
-stories were pierced with semicircular arches, the
-star-sown sky shone through with an extraordinary
-effect of depth and mystery. All the lighter
-features of the architecture, carving on pediment
-or lintel or archivolt, delicate iron tracery of
-<i>rejas</i>, relief of arcature and colonnade—all these
-the dusk blurred if it did not obliterate; the great
-dark bulk of the house with its massive buttresses,
-its pyramidal copings and receding upper stories,
-was the more boldly silhouetted on the violet sky;
-yet because of the very flatness of the picture, the
-very lack of shadow and projection, it seemed unsubstantial,
-hardly more of reality than the giant
-shadow it cast upon the hillside. Electric lights
-wavered and bristled dazzling beams on either
-side of the street; not a gleam, red, white or yellow,
-leaked through the shuttered windows of
-the house. In its blackness, its silence, its determined
-isolation it renewed, but with a greater
-force, the first sinister thrill which the sight of
-it had given the man who came to rifle it of its
-secrets.</p>
-
-<p>“Lonesome-looking old shanty, isn’t it?” said<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[242]</span>
-the Harvard boy; “seems almost indecorous to
-speak out loud. Here’s where we <i>cache</i> the car
-and make a gentle detour by aid of the shrubbery
-up the arroyo to the north side of the <i>patio</i>. See?”</p>
-
-<p>He directed the colonel’s course through an
-almost imperceptible opening in the hedge along
-sharp turns and oblique and narrow ways into a
-small vacant space where the vines covered an
-adobe hut. Jumping out, Tracy unlocked the door
-of this tiny building so that the colonel could
-run the car inside; and after Winter had emerged
-again, he re-locked the door. As there was no
-window, the purpose of the hut was effectually
-concealed.</p>
-
-<p>“Very neat,” the colonel approved; whereat
-Tracy flashed his smile at him in the moonlight
-and owned with ingenuous pride that he himself
-was the contriver of this reticent garage.</p>
-
-<p>From this point he took the lead. Neither
-spoke. They toiled up the hill, in this part of the
-grounds less of the nature of a hill than of an
-arroyo or ravine through which rocks had thrust
-their rugged sides and over which spiked semi-tropical
-cacti had sprawled, and purple and white
-flowered vines had made their own untended
-tangle. Before they reached the level the colonel<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[243]</span>
-was breathing hard, every breath a stab. Tracy, a
-famous track man who had won his H in a wonderful
-cross-country run, felt no distress—until
-he heard his companion gasp.</p>
-
-<p>“Jove! But that hill’s fierce!” he breathed explosively.
-“Do you mind resting a minute?”</p>
-
-<p>“Hardly,”—the colonel was just able to hold
-his voice steady—“I have a Filipino bullet in my
-leg somewhere which the X-ray has never been
-able to account for; and I’m not exactly a mountain
-goat!”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, of course, I’m a brute not to let you run
-up the drive in the machine. Not a rat watching
-us to-night, either; but I wanted you to see the
-place; and you seem so fit—”</p>
-
-<p>“You oughtn’t to give away your secrets to
-me, an outsider—”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re no outsider; I consider you the treasurer
-of the band,” laughed Tracy. They had
-somehow come to an unexpressed but perfectly
-understood footing of sympathy. The colonel
-even let the younger man help him up the last
-stiff clamber of the path. He forgot his first chill,
-as of a witness approaching a tragedy; there was
-a smile on his lips when the two of them passed
-into the <i>patio</i>. It lingered there as he stood in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[244]</span>
-flower-scented gloom. It was there as Tracy stumbled
-to a half-remembered push-button, wondering
-aloud what had become of Cary and Kito that
-they shouldn’t have answered his whistle; it was
-there, still, when Tracy slipped, and grumbled:
-“What sticky stuff has Kito spilled on this floor?”—and
-instantly flooded the court with light.
-Then—he saw the black, slimy pool and the long
-slide of Tracy’s nailed sole in it; and just to
-one side, almost pressing against his own foot, he
-saw a man in a gray suit huddled into the shape
-of a crooked U, with his arms limp at his side
-and his head of iron-gray fallen back askew.
-The light shone on the broad bald dome of the
-forehead. He had been stabbed between the shoulders,
-in the back; and one side of the gray coat
-was ugly to see.</p>
-
-<p>“Good God!” whispered Tracy, growing white.
-“It’s Keatcham! they’ve killed him! Oh, why
-didn’t I come back before!”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[245]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIII<br />
-
-<small>WHOSE FEET WERE SHOD WITH SILENCE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Get out your revolver,” ordered the colonel;
-“look sharp! there may be some one here.”</p>
-
-<p>But there was not a sign of life revealed by
-the search. Meanwhile, Winter was examining
-the body. His first thought was that Keatcham
-had tried to escape and had been struck down in
-his flight. Kito would not scruple at such a deed;
-nor for that matter, Mercer. But why leave the
-man thus? Why not dispose of the body—unless,
-indeed, the assassins had been interrupted. Anyhow,
-what a horrid mess this murder would make
-of the affair! and how was he to keep the women
-out of it! All at once, in the examination which
-he had been making (while a dozen gruesome
-possibilities tumbled over one another in his
-mind) he stopped; he put his ear to the man’s
-heart.</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t he dead?” asked Tracy under his breath.</p>
-
-<p>“No, he is not dead, but I’m afraid he’ll never<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[246]</span>
-find it out,” returned the colonel, shrugging his
-shoulders. “However, any brandy handy? And
-get me some water.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know where there is some brandy—I’ll get
-it; there is some water in the fountain right—<i>Cary!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter?” demanded Cary Mercer
-in one of the arcade doorways of the <i>patio</i>.
-“What’s happened? The devil! Who did this?”
-He strode up to the kneeling soldier.</p>
-
-<p>“You are in a position to know much better
-than I,” said the colonel dryly. “We came this
-moment; we found this.”</p>
-
-<p>“Cary, did <i>you</i> do it?”—the young man laid his
-hand on Cary’s shoulder; his face was ashy but
-his voice rang full and clear. “If you did, I am
-sure you had a reason; but I want to know;
-we’re partners in this thing to the finish.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, boy,” said Cary gently, “that’s
-good to hear. But I didn’t hurt him, Endy. Why
-should I? We’d got what we wanted.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Who did?</i>” asked the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t and Kito didn’t. He went away to
-see his only brother who is sick. He hasn’t got
-back. I don’t know who did it; but whoever
-stabbed him must have done it without warning<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[247]</span>
-him; for I didn’t hear a sound. I was in the
-library.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s breathing a little, I think,” murmured
-the young man, who was sopping the gray mask
-of a face while Winter trickled brandy drop by
-drop into the sagging mouth, “and—look! somebody
-has tried to rob him; that’s a money belt!”</p>
-
-<p>The waistcoat was open and Winter could see,
-beneath, a money belt with buttoned pockets,
-which had been torn apart with such haste that
-one of the buttons had been wrenched off.</p>
-
-<p>“They seem to have been after money,” said
-he; “see! the belt is full of bills; there’s only one
-pocket empty.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps he was interrupted,” explained Mercer.
-“Push the brandy, Colonel, he’s moving his
-eyelids, suh!”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve got to do something to that hole in
-him, first,” said the colonel. “Is there any doctor—”</p>
-
-<p>“I daren’t send for one.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tony Arnold might know one we could trust,”
-suggested Tracy. “I can get him over the long
-distance.”</p>
-
-<p>“We want somebody <i>now</i>, this minute,” declared
-the colonel.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[248]</span>“There’s Janet Smith,” said Mercer, “my sister-in-law;
-she’s Mrs. Winter’s companion; she
-used to be a trained nurse and a mighty good one;
-<i>she</i> could be trusted.”</p>
-
-<p>Could she? And how the terms of his distrust
-had changed! He had fought against an answer
-in the affirmative this morning; now his heart
-was begging for it; he was cold with fear lest
-she wasn’t this conspirator’s confederate.</p>
-
-<p>“Send for them both,” said he with no sign of
-emotion.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll call up Aunt Rebecca,” said Mercer.
-“Isn’t he reviving? No? Best not move him till
-we get the wound dressed, don’t you reckon,
-Colonel?”</p>
-
-<p>But the colonel was already making a rough
-tourniquet out of his handkerchief and a pencil
-to stanch the bleeding. The others obeyed his curt
-directions; and it was not until the still unconscious
-man was disposed in a more comfortable
-posture on the cushions which Tracy brought,
-that Winter sent the latter to the telephone; and
-then he addressed Mercer. He took a sealed package
-from an inner pocket and tendered it, saying:
-“You know who sent it. Whatever happens,
-you’re a Southern gentleman, and I look to you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[249]</span>
-to see that she—they are kept out of this nasty
-mess—absolutely.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course,” returned Mercer, with a trace
-of irritation; “what do you take me for? Now,
-hadn’t I better call Janet?”</p>
-
-<p>“But if this were to be discovered—”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>She</i> wouldn’t have done anything; she is only
-nursing a wounded man whom she doesn’t know,
-at my request.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” acquiesced the colonel, with a
-long sigh as he turned away.</p>
-
-<p>He sat down, cross-legged, like a Turk, on the
-flags beside the wounded man. Mercer was standing
-a little way off. It was to be observed that
-he had not touched Keatcham, nor even approached
-him close enough to reach him by an
-outstretched hand. Winter studied his face, his
-attitude—and suppressed the slightest of starts;
-Mercer had turned his arm to light another electric
-bulb and the action revealed some crimson
-spots on his cuff and a smear on his light trousers
-above the knee. The lamp was rather high and
-he was obliged to raise his arm, thus lifting the
-skirts of his coat which had previously hidden
-the stain. He did not seem aware that his action
-had made any disclosure. He was busy with the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[250]</span>
-light. “That’ll be better,” said he; “I’ll go call up
-Sister Janet.”</p>
-
-<p>How had those stains come? Mercer professed
-just to have entered. Vainly Winter’s brain tried
-to labor through the crazy bewilderment of it all;
-Mercer spoke like an honest man—but look at his
-cuffs! How could any outside assassin enter that
-locked and guarded house?—yet, if Mercer had
-not lied, some one must have stolen in and struck
-Keatcham. Kito? But the Jap was out of the
-house—perhaps! And Janet Smith, what was she
-doing talking to Atkins? Had she given that reptile
-any clue? Could he—but it was his opportunity
-to rescue Keatcham, not to murder him—what
-a confounded maze!</p>
-
-<p>And what business had he, Rupert Winter, who
-had supposed himself to be an honorable man,
-who had sworn to support the Constitution and
-the laws of the United States, what business had
-<i>he</i> to help law-breakers and murderers escape the
-just punishment of their deeds? He almost
-ground his teeth. Oh, well, there was one way out,
-and that was to resign his commission. He would
-do it this very night, he resolved; and he swore
-miserably at himself, at his venerable aunt who
-must be protected at such a sacrifice, at Atkins,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[251]</span>
-at the feebly moaning wretch whom he had not
-ceased all this while to ply carefully with drops of
-brandy. “You everlasting man-eater, if you dare
-to die, I’ll <i>kill</i> you!” he snorted.</p>
-
-<p>Thereupon he went at the puzzle again. Before
-any answer could come to the telephone calls, a
-low, mournful, inhuman cry penetrated the thick
-walls. It was repeated thrice; on the third call,
-Tracy ran quickly through the <i>patio</i> to a side
-door, barred and locked like all the entrances,
-released and swung it open and let in Kito. A
-few murmured words passed between them. The
-Jap uttered a startled exclamation. “But how can
-it to be? How? no one can get in! And who
-shall stab him? For <i>why</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>He examined the wounded man, after a gravely
-courteous salute to Winter; and frowned and
-sighed. “What did it?” said he; “did who
-stabbed, take it ’way, he must give <i>stlong</i> pull!”</p>
-
-<p>“Whoever did it,” said the colonel, “must have
-put a knee on the man’s back and pulled a strong
-pull, as you say.” In speaking the words he felt a
-shiver, for he seemed to see that red smear above
-Mercer’s knee.</p>
-
-<p>He felt the shiver again when Mercer returned
-and he glanced at him; there was not a stain on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[252]</span>
-his shining white cuffs; he had changed them;
-he had also changed his suit of clothes and his
-shoes. His eyes met the colonel’s; and Winter
-fancied there was a glint of defiance in them; he
-made no comment, for no doubt a plausible excuse
-for the fresh clothes was ready. Well, he
-(Winter) wouldn’t ask it. Poor devil! he had had
-provocation.</p>
-
-<p>For the next half-hour they were all busy with
-Keatcham.</p>
-
-<p>“He is better,” pronounced the Jap; “he will
-not live, maybe, but he will talk, he can say who
-hult him.”</p>
-
-<p>“If he can only do that!” cried Mercer. “It
-is <i>infernal</i> to think any one can get in here and do
-such a thing!”</p>
-
-<p>“Rotten,” Tracy moaned.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>They were all still working over Keatcham
-when a bell pealed. Tracy started; but Mercer
-looked a shade relieved. “They’ve come,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>They?</i>” repeated the colonel. He scrambled to
-his feet and gasped.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Smith was coming down the colonnade,
-but not Miss Smith alone. Aunt Rebecca walked
-beside her, serene, erect and bearing a small hand-bag.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[253]</span>
-Miss Smith carried a larger bag; and Tracy
-had possessed himself of a dress-suit case.</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly, Bertie,” remarked his aunt in her
-softest tone, “I came with Janet. My generation
-believed in <i>les convenances</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>All the colonel could articulate was a feeble,
-“And Archie? and Millicent?”</p>
-
-<p>“Haley is staying in your room with Archie.
-Millicent had retired; if she asks for us in the
-morning we shall not be up. She has an appointment
-with Janet, but it isn’t until half-past eleven.
-Randall has her instructions.”</p>
-
-<p>“But—but—how did you get here?”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Rebecca drew herself up. “I trust now,
-Bertie, you will admit that I am as fit as any of
-you to rough it. If there is one mode of transit
-I abominate, it is those loathsome, unsanitary,
-uncivil, joggly street-cars; we came as far as the
-corner in the <i>street-cars</i>, then we walked. Did we
-want to give the number to a cab-man, do you
-suppose? Bertie, have you such a thing as a match
-about you? I think Janet wants to heat a teaspoonful
-of water for a strychnine hypodermic.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[254]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIV<br />
-
-<small>FROM MRS. MELVILLE’S POINT OF VIEW</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="indentright">The Palace Hotel,</span><br />
-San Francisco, March 24, 1906.</p>
-
-<p>My dear Husband:</p>
-
-<p>Although I sent you a postal yesterday, I am
-writing again to-day to try to keep you in touch
-with our <i>extraordinary series</i> of events. Nothing
-has been heard from Archie except the letter—<i>if
-he wrote it</i>—which tells nothing except that
-his kidnappers use the same kind of writing paper
-as Miss Janet Smith. I grow more suspicious of
-her all the time. You ask (but of course you
-wrote before the recent mysterious and tragical
-occurrences) you ask do I like Miss Smith any
-better, now that I am thrown with her so closely.
-No, Melville, <i>I</i> have not the <i>fatal credulity</i> of the
-Winters! I distrust her <i>more</i>. She has, I admit,
-an engaging personality; there is a superficial
-amiability that would be dangerous to one not on
-her guard. But I am never off my guard with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[255]</span>
-her. I’m sorry to say, however, that your brother
-seems deceived by her plausible ways. And, of
-course, our poor aunt is still her blind dupe.
-Aunt Rebecca has failed a good deal this last year;
-she is quite irritable with me, sometimes; and I
-suppose it is the insensibility of age, but she does
-not appear to realize the full horror of this kidnapping.
-Miss Smith actually seems to suffer
-more; she looks pale and haggard and has no
-appetite. I do not think it <i>all pretense</i>, either; I
-dare say much of it is <i>remorse</i>! The situation is
-dreadful. Sometimes I think Aunt Rebecca will
-not yield to the demands of these wretches who
-have our poor boy, and that he will be mutilated
-or murdered; sometimes I think that they have
-murdered him already and are writing forged letters
-to throw us off the track. You can imagine
-how my nerves are shaken! I have seen hardly
-anything of the city; and of course have not gone
-into society at all. Indeed, I have met only one
-pleasant person; that was the secretary of the great
-financier, Mr. Edwin Keatcham, who was here,
-next to us. The secretary is a pleasing person
-quite <i>comme it faut</i> in appearance. I met him here
-in the court where he nearly knocked me over;
-and he apologized profusely—and really very<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[256]</span>
-nicely, using my name. That surprised me, but
-he explained that they had been on the train with
-us. Then I remembered him. His name is Horatio
-Atkins; and he is very polite. He is on a two
-weeks’ vacation and came here to see Mr.
-Keatcham, not knowing he was gone. He was
-really most agreeable and so sympathetic about
-poor dear Archie. He agreed with me that such a
-nervous temperament as Archie’s suffers much
-more from unkindness. I could see, in spite of
-his assumed hopefulness, that he shared my fears.
-He has met quite a number of our friends. He
-may (through Mr. Keatcham) be a <i>most valuable</i>
-acquaintance. Didn’t you tell me, once, that
-Keatcham was the leading benefactor of the university?</p>
-
-<p>He (Mr. Atkins) got his vacation on account
-of his health; and he is going to Southern California.
-I don’t wonder. I have never suffered
-more than in this land of sunshine! It is not so
-much the cold of the air as the humidity! Do
-pray be cautious about changing to your summer
-underwear. <i>Don’t do it!</i> I nearly perished, in the
-bleak wind yesterday, when I tried to visit a few
-shops. Be sure and take the cough medicine <i>on
-the second shelf of our bath-room medicine closet</i>;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[257]</span>
-don’t mistake <i>rheumatism liniment</i> for it; they
-are both on the same shelf; you would better
-sort them out. You are <i>so</i> absent-minded, Melville,
-I haven’t a peaceful day when I’m away
-from you; and do for Heaven’s sake try to bow
-to Mrs. Farrell and call her by her right name!
-You certainly have been to the president’s house
-often enough to know his wife on the street; and
-I don’t think that it was a good excuse which
-you gave to Professor Dale for calling “Good
-morning, Katy!” to Mrs. Dale (who was born a
-Schuyler and is <i>most</i> punctilious) <i>that you mistook
-her for our cook</i>!</p>
-
-<p>I miss you very much. Give my love to all
-our friends and be sure to wear your galoshes
-(your <i>rubbers</i>, you know) when the campus is
-wet, whether it is raining or not.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="indentright2">Your aff. wife,</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">M. Winter.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">THE SAME TO THE SAME</p>
-
-<p class="right">The Palace Hotel, March 25, ten <span class="allsmcap">P. M.</span></p>
-
-<p>My dear Husband:</p>
-
-<p>What do you think has happened? I am almost
-too excited to write. <i>Archie is back!</i> Yes, back<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[258]</span>
-safe and sound, and absolutely indifferent, to
-all appearances, to all our indescribable sufferings
-on his account! He walked into the
-parlor about six or a little after, grinning like
-an ape, as if to disappear from the face of the
-earth and come back to it were quite the usual
-thing. And when we questioned him, he professed
-to be on his word not to tell anything. And Bertie
-upheld him in this ridiculous position! However,
-I was told by the detective whom Bertie
-employed, rather a decent, vulgar, little man, that
-they (Bertie and he) had cornered the kidnappers
-and “called their bluff,” as he expressed it;
-but I’m inclined to think they got their ransom
-from our unfortunate, victimized aunt who is too
-proud to admit it, and that they probably managed
-it through Miss S—. I know they called up the
-room to know if the boy was back; and I puzzled
-them well, I fancy, by saying he <i>was</i>. I may have
-saved our poor aunt some money by that; but I
-can’t tell, of course. Melville, I am almost <i>sure</i>
-that Miss J. S— is at the bottom of it, whatever
-the mystery is. I am almost sure that, not content
-with blackmailing and plundering auntie, Miss
-S— is now <i>making a dead set</i> at poor, blind, simple-hearted
-Bertie! I have reasons which I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[259]</span>
-haven’t time to enumerate. Bertie will hardly
-bear a word of criticism of her patiently; in fact,
-I have ceased to criticize her to him or to Aunt
-Rebecca—ah, it is a lonely, lonely lot to be clear-sighted;
-but <i>noblesse oblige</i>. But often during the
-last few days I have thought that Cassandra
-wasn’t enough pitied.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="indentright2">Your aff. wife,</span><br />
-M.</p>
-
-<p class="center">THE SAME TO THE SAME</p>
-
-<p class="right">Casa Fuerte, San Francisco, Cal.,<br />
-Wednesday. &#160; &#160;</p>
-
-<p>Dear Husband:</p>
-
-<p>This heading may surprise you. But we are
-making a visit to Mr. Anthony Arnold (<i>the</i>
-Arnold’s son) in his beautiful house in the suburbs
-of the city. It was far more convenient
-for me at the Palace where I found Mrs. Wigglesworth
-most attentive and congenial and
-found some <i>great bargains</i>; but you know I can
-not be false to my <i>Trust</i>. To watch Aunt Rebecca
-Winter (without seeming to watch, of course, for
-the aged always resent the care which they need)
-is my chief object in this trip; therefore when Mr.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[260]</span>
-Arnold (whose father she knows, but the old gentleman
-is traveling in Europe with his married
-daughter and her family) when the young Arnold
-urged us all to come and spend a couple of
-weeks with him, I could not very well refuse.
-Though a stranger to me, he is not to Auntie or
-Bertie. The house is his own, left him by his
-mother, who died not very long ago. At first, I
-remained at the Palace with Bertie and Archie;
-Bertie seemed so disturbed at the idea of my going
-and Aunt Rebecca was very liberal, insisting that
-I was just as much her guest as before, it was
-only she who was running away; and the end of
-it was (she has such a compelling personality,
-you know) that she went with Randall and J. S.
-to Casa Fuerte (Strong House—and you would
-call it well-named could you see it; it is a massive
-structure!) while we others remained until Sunday.
-On account of what I have hinted in regard
-to the designs of a certain lady I was not sorry
-to have Bertie under another roof. He has a fortune
-of his own, you know, and a reputation as
-well. Wealth and position at one blow certainly
-would appeal to her, an obscure dependent probably
-of no family (it is not a romantic name), and
-Bertie is very well-bred and rather handsome with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[261]</span>
-his black eyebrows and gray hair and aquiline
-nose. I have been very, very worried, but I feel
-relieved as to that. Melville, <i>she is flying at higher
-game</i>! In this house is a multimillionaire, in fact
-the fourth richest man in the United States, Edwin
-S. Keatcham. He is ill—probably with appendicitis
-which seems to be the common lot. I
-asked the doctor—of course, very delicately—and
-he said, “Well, not exactly, but—” and smiled
-very confidentially; and begged me not to mention
-Mr. Keatcham’s illness or even that he was in the
-house. “You know,” he said, “that when these
-great financiers sneeze, the stock-market shakes;
-so absolute secrecy, please, my dear madam.”
-Don’t mention it to a soul, will you? Of course
-I haven’t seen the invalid; but I’ve seen his valet,
-who is very English; and I have seen his nurse.
-Who do you suppose she is? Janet Smith! Yes;
-you know she has been a trained nurse. Was there
-ever a more artful creature! But Mr. K. is none
-of my affairs; he will have to save himself or be
-lost. Once she is his wife we are safe from that
-designing woman. I am quite willing to admit his
-danger and her fascination. Now, Melville, for
-once admit that I can be just to a woman whom I
-dislike.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[262]</span>This house is sumptuous; I’ve a lovely bath-room
-and a beautiful huge closet with a window.
-It must have cost a mint of money. I have been
-told that Arnold <i>père</i> made a present of it to his
-wife; he let the architect and her draw all the
-plans of it, but he insisted on attending to the
-construction himself; he said he was not going to
-have any contract work or “scamping,” such as I
-am reliably informed has been common in these
-towering new buildings in San Francisco; he
-picked out all the materials himself and inspected
-the inspector. It has what they call “reinforced
-concrete” and all the beams, etc., are steel and the
-lower story is enormously thick as to walls, in the
-genuine Mission style. He said he built for earthquakes.
-The house is all in the Spanish <i>hidalgo</i>
-fashion. I wish you could see the bas-reliefs and
-the carved furniture with cane seats of the seventeenth
-century, <i>all genuine</i>; and the stamped
-leather and the iron grille work—<i>rejas</i> they call it—all
-copied from famous Spanish models from
-Toledo; you know the ancient Spaniards were renowned
-for their <i>rejas</i>. The pictures are fine—all
-Spanish; I don’t know half the names of the
-artists, but they are all old and imposing and some
-of them wonderfully preserved. The electric<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[263]</span>
-lights are all in the shape of lanterns. The <i>patio</i>,
-as they call the court around which the house is
-built, reminded me of the court in Mrs. Gardiner’s
-palace in Boston, only it was not so crowded with
-<i>objets</i> and the pillars are much thicker and the
-tropical plants and vines more luxuriant—on account
-of the climate, I suppose. It is all certainly
-very beautiful.</p>
-
-<p>There is a great arched gateway for carriages—which
-reminds me, do be sure to send the horses
-into the country to rest, one at a time; and have
-Erastus clean the stable properly while they are
-gone. You can keep one horse for golf; but don’t
-use the brougham ever; and why not send the surrey
-to be done over while I am gone? Is the
-piazza painted yet? How does the new cook do?
-Insist upon her cooking you nourishing food.
-You might have the Bridge Club of an evening—there
-are only the four of you—and she might,
-with Emily’s help, get you a nice repast of lobster
-à la Newburg, sandwiches and chicken salad; but
-be sure <i>you</i> don’t touch the lobster! You know
-what happened the last time; and I shan’t be there
-to put on mustard-plasters and give you Hunyadi
-water. If Erastus needs any more chamois skins
-Emily knows where they are, but admonish him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[264]</span>
-to be careful with them; I never saw mortal man
-go through chamois skins the way he can; sometimes
-I think he gives them to the horses to eat!</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="indentright">Good-by,</span><br />
-<span class="indentright2">Your aff. wife,</span><br />
-M.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[265]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XV<br />
-
-<small>“THE LIGHT THAT NEVER WAS”</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>The changes which Mrs. Melville had accepted
-so philosophically, the metamorphosis of the tragic
-and lonely house of mystery into a luxurious
-country villa, the flinging open of the shutters, the
-marshaling of servants, the turning, one may say,
-of the lime-light on a rich man’s ordinary life—all
-this had occurred as swiftly and with as little
-warning as a scene shifts on the stage.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Rebecca Winter may have the credit for
-this <i>bouleversement</i> of plans. By an astonishingly
-early hour, the next morning, she was awake and
-down-stairs, where Kito and Tracy were making
-coffee, toasting bread and admiring the oatmeal
-which had cooked, while they slept, in the Fireless
-Stove. Tracy had planned a surprise of brown
-bread, but through no fault of the Fireless, owing
-solely to his omitting what he called “the pick-me-up,”
-commonly known as soda—an accident,
-as he truly said, which might happen to any lady—the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[266]</span>
-bread was “rather too adhesive.” The
-breakfast, notwithstanding, was a cheerful one,
-because Miss Smith reported the patient a shade
-better. She looked smiling, although rather heavy-eyed.
-Mercer and the colonel had taken turns sitting
-in the adjoining room to bring her ice or hot
-water or be of service outside.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel had suggested calling a doctor, but
-Aunt Rebecca had demurred: “Janet can do
-everything; it is just a question of his heart; and
-she has digitalis and nitroglycerin and strychnine,
-the whole outfit of whips. She has dressed the
-wound with antiseptics. To-morrow will be soon
-enough for the medical talent.” It was she, however,
-who, as soon as breakfast was over, took first
-Mercer and Tracy, then the colonel apart, and
-proposed calling up Keatcham’s confidential associates
-on the long-distance telephone. “Strike,
-but hear me, nephew,” she said languidly, smiling
-at his bewilderment. “Our only chance now is to
-exhaust trumps. Yesterday the game was won.
-Keatcham had surrendered, he had told his partners
-in the deal to make no fight on Tracy’s election;
-they could get what they wanted without
-the Midland; he advised them to cover their shorts
-and get ready for a bull market—”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[267]</span>“How did he do all that when he had lost his
-private code book?”</p>
-
-<p>“How would <i>you</i> do it? You would use the
-long distance telephone. We caught them at Seattle,
-where his men had gone for the meeting.
-I don’t understand why they needed me to suggest
-that. There the poor man was, as your
-Harvard stove agent calls it, rubbering about the
-library, trying to find <i>The Fortunes of Nigel</i> in
-the edition Darley had illustrated; of course, it
-wasn’t there. He had lost it just before he came
-to the Palace, he thought. It seems his old cipher
-needs a particular book, that kind. No doubt in
-my mind that your theory is right and that Atkins
-stole it and perhaps thought he stole the key, but
-didn’t get it. He took a memorandum of ciphers
-which looked like a key. There Keatcham was,
-with millions hanging on his wires and his modern
-substitute for the medieval signet-ring that
-would enforce the message quite lost. What to
-do? Why, there was nothing to do but get another
-cipher! They made up a temporary one,
-right in that library, yesterday afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p>“But how could Mercer be sure Keatcham
-would not play a trick on him? Did he hear the
-conversation?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[268]</span>“Certainly not. He took Keatcham’s word.
-Whatever his faults, Keatcham has always kept
-his word. Mercer was sure he would keep it. He
-went out of the room. He was in the library when
-Keatcham was stabbed.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel drew a long, difficult breath.
-“Then you don’t believe Mercer did it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sure he didn’t. He didn’t hurt him. Why
-should he kill him after he had surrendered? He
-had nothing to gain and considerable to risk, if
-not to lose. We want that bull market.”</p>
-
-<p>“But who did then? Atkins? But he is trying
-to rescue him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is he? How do we know? The rescue was
-only our supposition. I’m only certain none of
-our crowd did it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Kito?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Kito keeps absolutely within his orders;
-he knew how things stood when he went away.
-Mercer saw him go. He couldn’t get in, either;
-he had to signal to be let in. They were as careful
-as that. Now, assuming they all are innocent, isn’t
-it the best plan to telephone to Seattle to Keatcham’s
-next friend there?”</p>
-
-<p>“He hasn’t any family, has he? His wife died
-and there were no children, I think.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[269]</span>“No, and if he ever had any brothers or sisters
-they died when they were little; his business associates
-are the only people Cary knows about.
-He is anxious to have word sent at once, because
-there are important things to do in Keatcham’s
-own interest; he came to California and he has
-employed Cary in a big Portland cement investment;
-Cary has been working all the time on it
-for him—I beg your pardon—” for the colonel
-had raised his hand with a little gasp.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mean,” said he, “that Mercer has been
-acting as Keatcham’s agent, working in <i>his interest</i>
-all the time he was holding him a prisoner and
-ready to kill him rather than let him go?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not? Cary is a man of honor. This cement
-deal is a perfectly fair one which will give
-a fair price to the present owners and make a
-great business proposition. There are other
-schemes, too, very large ones, which need the man
-at the wheel. Now, I have talked with Cary and
-Endicott Tracy and my plan is to call up Warnebold,
-his next friend, who knows Mercer has been
-employed by Keatcham and knows his voice and
-knows he is a trusty man (for Mercer has done
-some inquiries for him and saved him once from
-buying a water-logged steel plant) to call <i>him</i><span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[270]</span>
-up and—tell him the truth. We can say Mr.
-Keatcham was mysteriously stabbed; we can ask
-what is best to do. By that time we can report
-that we have the best medical assistance—young
-Arnold will get his family physician, who can be
-trusted. Warnebold will instruct Mercer, I
-reckon, to keep the fact of the assault a secret, not
-even mention that Mr. Keatcham is ill; and very
-likely he or some one else will come straight on
-here. Meanwhile, young Arnold can open the
-house, hire some servants who won’t talk—I can
-get them for him; we all say nothing of the magnate’s
-presence. And the bull market will come
-all right.”</p>
-
-<p>After a little reflection the colonel agreed that
-the bold course would be the safest. Thus it came
-about, with amazing rapidity, that the haunted
-house was opened; that sleek, smiling Chinamen
-whisked brooms and cleaning cloths at open windows;
-and Haley and Kito frankly told any curious
-inquirers who hailed them over the lawn and
-the flower-beds that young Mr. Arnold was coming
-home and going to have a house-party of
-friends. The servants had been carefully selected
-by Mrs. Winter’s powerful Chinese friend; they
-had no dread of white spooks, however they might<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[271]</span>
-cringe before yellow ones. Mrs. Winter and Randall
-left their hotel, after all the appropriate ceremonies,
-amid the lavish bows and smiles of
-liberally paid bell-boys and porters. They gave
-out that they were to visit friends; and the colonel,
-who remained, was to take charge of their mail;
-hence, with no appearance of secrecy, the trail
-took to water and was lost, since the motor-car
-which carried them was supplied by Birdsall and
-driven by a safe man of his own.</p>
-
-<p>Regarding the detective, Rupert Winter had
-had what he called “a stiff think;” he could not
-afford even the remote risk of his going with the
-picturesque assortment of information which he
-had obtained about Casa Fuerte and Mercer, into
-Atkins’ employ; therefore he hired him, still, himself.
-He made a partial but absolutely truthful
-statement of the case; he said frankly: “Birdsall,
-I’m not going to treat you fair, for I’m not going
-to tell you all I know, because—well, for one
-thing, I don’t feel sure how much I do know myself.
-But all I’m going to ask of you is to watch
-the house, day and night, without seeming to
-watch it. You will oblige Mr. Keatcham as well
-as me. There is a big game going on, but it isn’t
-what you thought. Mr. Keatcham’s best helpers<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[272]</span>
-are right in that house. Mercer and I and young
-Fireless and Arnold are doing our best to guard
-him, not hurt him. Now, there is big money for
-you if you will watch out for us.”</p>
-
-<p>Birdsall reflected a moment before he answered,
-but he did answer, screwing up his face: “I don’t
-like these jobs in the dark; but I like you, Colonel,
-and it’s a go.”</p>
-
-<p>Keatcham’s valet was next summoned from his
-vacation and became, in Tracy’s phrase, “a dandy
-sub-nurse.”</p>
-
-<p>The Tracys’ family physician came twice a day.
-He was known to be visiting one of the guests
-who had fallen ill. Mercer sent three or four telegrams
-a day to Seattle and to New York, to
-Keatcham’s associates. Several times he held a
-conversation of importance over the telephone
-with the man who acted as distributer of intelligence.
-Warnebold, himself, came on to San Francisco
-from Seattle, and was received with every
-courtesy. He questioned Kito, questioned Mercer,
-questioned the colonel. Tracy had effaced
-himself and was in Pasadena for a day or two.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel was the star witness (at least this
-was young Arnold’s verdict). His narrative was
-to the effect that he had gone out to see Mercer,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[273]</span>
-who was a family connection; no, he was not
-alone, he had a young friend with him; confidentially,
-he would admit that the friend was Mr.
-Tracy’s son; and, while he could not be sure, he
-had reason to suspect that he, “young Tracy,”
-had been conducting some delicate negotiations
-with Mr. Keatcham. At this point the interlocutor
-nodded slightly; he was making the deductions
-expected and explaining to himself Keatcham’s
-astonishing communication over the telephone.
-So, he was surmising shrewdly, <i>that</i> was the clue;
-the old man had been making some sort of a deal
-with Tracy through the son; well, they were protected,
-thanks to Keatcham’s orders. Likely as not
-they never would know all the reasons for this
-side-stepping.</p>
-
-<p>“I understand, then,” he said, as one who holds
-a clue but has no notion of letting it slip out of his
-own fingers, “you and young Tracy got here and
-you found Mr. Keatcham? How did you get in?
-Did Mr. Mercer let you in? How did it happen he
-didn’t discover Mr. Keatcham instead of you, or
-did you come in on the side?”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Winter who was in the room had a diversion
-ready, but it was not needed; the colonel
-answered unhesitatingly, with a frank smile:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[274]</span>
-“No, we came in ourselves; young Tracy had a
-key.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he <i>had</i>, had he?” returned Warnebold
-with a shrug of the shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>“He is a great friend of young Arnold’s; they
-were at Harvard together, belonged to the same
-societies.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I understand; well—”</p>
-
-<p>The rest of the interview was clear sailing.
-Mrs. Winter’s presence was explained in her very
-own words. “Of course I was put out a good deal
-at first,” added the colonel, “by the women getting
-mixed up in it; but Miss Smith undoubtedly saved
-Mr. Keatcham’s life. I never saw any one who
-seemed to think of so many things to do. Half a
-dozen times, that first night, he seemed to be fading
-away; but every time she brought him back.
-I was anxious to have a doctor called in; but
-Mercer seemed opposed to making a stir—”</p>
-
-<p>“He knew his business thoroughly,” interjected
-Keatcham’s confidant, “he undoubtedly had his
-instructions to keep Keatcham’s presence here
-a secret.”</p>
-
-<p>“He <i>had</i>,” said Mrs. Winter; “besides, Miss
-Smith is his sister-in-law and he knew that she
-could be trusted to do everything possible. And,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[275]</span>
-really, it didn’t look as if anything could help
-him. I hardly believed that he could live an hour
-when I saw him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nor I,” the colonel corroborated.</p>
-
-<p>Warnebold, plainly impressed by Mrs. Winter’s
-grand air, assured them both that he felt that
-everything that could be done had been done;
-Miss Smith was quite wonderful; and he would
-admit (of course, confidentially) that Mr. Keatcham
-did have a heart trouble; Mr. Mercer had recalled
-one or two fainting fits; there was some
-congestion; and the doctor found a sad absence of
-reaction; he believed that there had been a—er—syncope
-of some sort before the stabbing; Mr.
-Keatcham himself, although he was still too weak
-to talk much, had no recollection of anything except
-a very great faintness. Mr. Mercer’s theory
-seemed to cover the ground.</p>
-
-<p>“Except as to who did the stabbing,” said the
-colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“Has Mr. Keatcham any bitter enemies?”
-asked Aunt Rebecca thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p>“What man who has made a great fortune
-hasn’t?” demanded Warnebold with a saturnine
-wrinkle of the lips. “But our enemies don’t stab
-or shoot us, nowadays.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[276]</span>“They do out West,” said the colonel genially;
-“we’re crude.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you in earnest?”</p>
-
-<p>“Entirely. I know a man, a mine superintendent,
-who got into a row with his miners because
-he discharged a foreman, one of the union lights,
-for stealing ore. In consequence he got a big
-strike on his hands, found a dynamite bomb under
-his front piazza, and was shot at twice. The
-second time he was too quick for them; he shot
-back and killed one of them. He thought it was
-time to put a stop to so much excitement, so he
-sent for the second assassin—”</p>
-
-<p>“And had him arrested?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dear, no; he wasn’t in Massachusetts; I
-told you he wanted the thing stopped. No, he sent
-for him and told him that he had no special ill
-feeling toward <i>him</i>, but that the next time anything
-of the kind happened he had made arrangements
-to have not him, or any other thug who
-was doing the work, but the two men who were at
-the bottom of the whole business, killed within
-twenty-four hours. They took the hint and kind
-feeling now prevails.”</p>
-
-<p>Warnebold grunted; he declared it to be a
-beastly creepy situation; he said he never wanted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[277]</span>
-to sit down without a wall against his back; and
-he intimated that the president of the United
-States was to blame for more than he realized. “I
-hope you have some one watching the house,” he
-fumed, “and that he—well, he doesn’t belong to
-the police force.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, he’s an honest mercenary,” said the colonel;
-“I’ll introduce him to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you haven’t found any method of entering
-the house?” fumed the financier.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Aunt Rebecca.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>He laughed as they both whirled round on him.</p>
-
-<p>“You speak first, my dear aunt,” he proposed politely;
-“I’ll explain later.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Winter said that a most careful examination
-had been made not only by Mercer and the
-colonel together, but also by young Arnold. They
-found everything absolutely secure; all the windows
-were bolted and all the cellar gratings firm
-and impossible to open.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, you?” said Warnebold.</p>
-
-<p>“I only found out to-day,” apologized the colonel,
-“or I should have spoken of it. I got to
-thinking; and it occurred to me that in a house
-built, as I understood from Arnold, by a very<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[278]</span>
-original architect, there might be some queer features,
-such as secret passages. With that in my
-mind, I induced the young gentleman to hunt up
-the architect, as he lives in San Francisco. He not
-only showed us some very pretty secret passages
-about the house, but one that led into it. Shall I
-show it to you?”</p>
-
-<p>On their instantly expressed desire to see the
-hidden way, the colonel led them to the <i>patio</i>.
-He walked to the engaged column which once
-before had interested him; he pressed a concealed
-spring under the boldly carved eight-pointed
-flower; instantly, the entire side of the columns
-swung as a door might swing. As they peered
-into the dusky space below, the colonel, who had
-put down his arm, pressed an electric button and
-the white light flooded the shaft, revealing an ingenious
-ladder of cleats fitted into steel uprights.</p>
-
-<p>“Here,” said the colonel, “is a secret way from
-the <i>patio</i> to the cellar. The cellar extends a little
-beyond the <i>patio</i> and there is a way down from the
-yard to the cellar—I can quickly show you, if you
-like.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, thank you,” replied Warnebold, who was
-a man of full habit and older than the colonel, “I
-will take <i>your</i> personal experience instead.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[279]</span>“Then if you will go out into the yard with me
-I will show you where a charming pergola ends
-in a vine-wreathed sun-dial of stone that you
-may tug at and not move; but press your foot on
-a certain stone, the whole dial swings round on a
-concealed turn-table such as they have in garages,
-you know. You will have no difficulty in finding
-the right stone, because an inscription runs round
-the dial: <i>Más vale tarde que nunca</i>; and the stone
-is directly opposite <i>nunca</i>. When you have moved
-away your dial you will see a gently inclining tunnel,
-high enough for a man to walk in without
-stooping, wide enough for two, and much better
-ventilated than the New York subway. That tunnel
-leads to a secret door opening directly into the
-cellar, so skilfully contrived that it looks like an
-air-shaft. This door is only a few feet from the
-shaft to the <i>patio</i>. We have found a bolt and put
-it on this entrance, but there wasn’t any before;
-nor did any one in the house know of the secret
-passage.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel went on to say that on questioning
-the architect he averred that he had never mentioned
-the secret passage to his knowledge—except
-that very recently, only a few days before,
-at a dinner, he had barely alluded to it; and one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[280]</span>
-of the gentlemen present, an Easterner, had asked
-him where he got a man to make such a contrivance—it
-must take skill. He had mentioned the
-name of the workman. The colonel had hunted
-up the artisan mentioned, only to find that he had
-left town to take a job somewhere; no one seemed
-to know where. Of course he had inquired of
-everybody. The name of the Easterner was Atkins.</p>
-
-<p>“Atkins,” cried Warnebold, at this turn of the
-narrative, “Keatcham’s secretary? Why, he’s the
-boldest and slyest scoundrel in the United States!
-He started a leak in Keatcham’s office that made
-him a couple of hundred thousands and lost us a
-million, and might have lost us more if Mercer
-hadn’t got on to him. Keatcham wouldn’t believe
-he had been done to the extent he was at first—you
-know the old man hates to own to any one’s
-getting the better of him; it’s the one streak of
-vanity I’ve ever been able to discover in him.
-Otherwise, he’s cold and keen as a razor on a
-frosty morning. He was convinced enough, however,
-to discharge Atkins; the next news I had,
-he was trying to send him to the pen. Gave us
-instructions how to get the evidence. No allusion
-to his past confidence in the fellow, simply the orders—as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[281]</span>
-if we knew all the preliminaries. Wonderful
-man, Mr. Keatcham, Colonel Winter.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very,” agreed the colonel dryly.</p>
-
-<p>By this time the warrior and the man of finance
-were on easy terms. Warnebold remained three
-days. Before he left the patient had been pronounced
-out of danger and had revived enough to
-give some succinct business directions. Mercer
-had been sent to look out for the cement deal;
-and Keatcham appeared a little relieved and
-brighter when he was told that Mercer was on
-his way.</p>
-
-<p>“He will put it through if it can be put,” he
-had said weakly to Warnebold; “he’s moderately
-smart and perfectly honest.” Such words, Warnebold
-explained later to Mrs. Winter, coming from
-Keatcham might be regarded almost as extravagant
-commendation. “Your cousin’s fortune is
-made,” he pronounced solemnly; “he can get Atkins’
-place, I make no doubt.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Winter thought that Mercer was a very
-valuable man.</p>
-
-<p>“Only always so melancholy; I’ve been afraid
-he had something serious the matter with his digestion.
-It’s these abominable quick lunches that
-are ruining the health of all our steady young<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[282]</span>
-men. I don’t know but they are almost as bad
-as chorus girls and late suppers. Well, Mrs. Winter,
-I’m afraid we shall not have another chance
-at bridge until I see you in New York. But, anyhow,
-we stung the colonel once—and with Miss
-Smith playing her greatest game, too. Pity she
-can’t induce Mr. Keatcham to play; but he never
-touches a card, hardly ever takes anything to
-drink, doesn’t like smoking especially, takes a cigarette
-once in a while only, never plays the races or
-bets on the run of the vessel—positively such icy
-virtue gives an ordinary sinner the cramps! Very
-great man though, Mrs. Winter, and a man we
-are all proud to follow; he may be overbearing;
-and he doesn’t praise you too much, but somehow
-you always have the consciousness that he sees
-every bit of good work you do and is marking it
-up in your favor; and you won’t be the loser.
-There is no question he has a hold on his associates;
-but he certainly is not what I call a genial
-man.”</p>
-
-<p>Only on the day of his departure did Warnebold,
-in young Arnold’s language, “loosen up”
-enough to tell Arnold and the colonel a vital incident.
-The night of the attack a telegram was
-sent to Warnebold in Keatcham’s confidential<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[283]</span>
-cipher, directing the campaign against Tracy to
-be pushed hard, ordering the dumping of some big
-blocks of stock on the market and arranging for
-their dummy purchasers. The naming of Atkins
-as the man in charge was plausible enough, presuming
-there had been no knowledge of the break
-in his relations with Keatcham. The message was
-couched in Keatcham’s characteristic crisp phraseology.
-But for the receiver’s knowledge of the
-break and but for the previous long-distance conversation,
-it had reached its mark. The associates
-of Keatcham were puzzled. The hands were the
-hands of Esau but the voice was the voice of
-Jacob. There had been a hurried consultation into
-which the second long-distance telephone from
-San Francisco broke like a thunderclap. It decided
-the hearers to keep to their instructions and
-disregard the cipher despatch.</p>
-
-<p>“And didn’t you send any answer?” the colonel
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, certainly; we had an address given, The
-Palace Hotel, Mr. John G. Makers. We wired
-Mr. Makers—in cipher. ‘Despatch received. Will
-attend to it,’ I signed. And I wired to the manager
-of the hotel to notice the man who took the
-despatch. It wasn’t a man, it was a lady.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[284]</span>“A lady?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, she had an order for Mr. Makers’ telegrams.
-Mr. Makers gave the order. Mr. Makers
-himself only stopped one night and went away in
-the morning and nobody seemed to remember him
-particularly; he was a nondescript sort of party.”</p>
-
-<p>“But the lady?” The colonel’s mouth felt dry.</p>
-
-<p>“The lady? She was tall, fine figure, well
-dressed, dark hair, the telegraph girl thought, but
-she didn’t pay any special attention. She had a
-very pleasant, musical voice.”</p>
-
-<p>“That doesn’t seem to be very definite,” remarked
-the colonel with a crooked smile.</p>
-
-<p>It didn’t look like a clue to Warnebold, either;
-but he was convinced of one thing, namely, that
-it would pay to watch the ex-secretary.</p>
-
-<p>“And,” chuckled he, “there’s a cheerful side to
-the affair. Atkins is loaded to the guards with
-short contracts; and the Midland is booming; if
-the rise continues, he can’t cover without losing
-about all he has. By the way, we got another wire
-later in the day demanding what we were about,
-what it all meant that we hadn’t obeyed instructions.
-Same address for answer. This time we
-thought we had laid a nice trap. But you can’t
-reckon on a hotel; somehow, before we got warning,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[285]</span>
-Mr. Makers had telephoned for his despatch
-and got it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where did he telephone from?”</p>
-
-<p>“From his room in the Palace.”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought he had given up his room?”</p>
-
-<p>“He had. But—somebody telephoned to the
-telegraph office from somewhere in the hotel and
-got Mr. Makers’ wire. You can get pretty much
-everything except a moderate bill out of a hotel.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see,” said the colonel and immediately in his
-heart compared himself to the immortal “blind
-man;” for his wits appeared to him to be tramping
-round futilely in a maze; no nearer the exit
-than when the tramp began.</p>
-
-<p>That night, after Warnebold had departed,
-leaving most effusive thanks and expressions of
-confidence, Winter was standing at his window
-absently looking at the garden faintly colored by
-the moonlight, while his mind was plying back
-and forth between half a dozen contradictions.</p>
-
-<p>He went over the night of the attack on Keatcham;
-he summoned every look, every motion of
-Janet Smith; in one phase of feeling he cudgeled
-himself for a wooden fool who had been absolutely
-brutal to a defenseless woman who trusted
-him; he hated himself for the way he would not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[286]</span>
-see her when she looked toward him; no wonder
-at last she stiffened, and now she absolutely
-avoided him! But, in a swift revulsion against
-his own softness he was instantly laying on the
-blows as lustily because of his incredible, pig-headed
-credulity. How absolutely simple the
-thing was! She <i>cared</i> for this scoundrel of an Atkins
-who had first betrayed his employer and then
-tried to murder him. Very likely they had been
-half engaged down there in Virginia; and he had
-crawled out of his engagement; it would be quite
-like the cur! Later he found that just such a distinguished,
-charming woman, who had family
-and friends, was what he wanted; it would be easy
-enough for him to warm up his old passion, curse
-him! Then, he had met her and run in a bunch
-of plausible lies that had convinced her that he
-had been a regular angel in plain clothes; hadn’t
-done a thing to Cary or to her. Atkins was such
-a smooth devil! Winter could just picture him
-whining to the girl, putting his life in her hands
-and all that rot; and making all kinds of a tool of
-her—why, the whole hand was on the board! So
-she was ready to throw them all overboard to
-save Atkins from getting his feet wet. That was
-why she looked so pale and haggard of a morning<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[287]</span>
-sometimes, in spite of that ready smile of hers;
-that was why her eyes were so wistful; she wasn’t
-a false woman and she sickened of her squalid
-part. She loved Aunt Rebecca and Archie—all
-the same, she would turn them both down for
-him; while as to Rupert Winter, late of the United
-States army, a worn-out, lame, elderly idiot who
-had flung away the profession he loved and every
-chance of a future career in order to have his
-hands free to keep her out of danger—where were
-there words blistering enough for such puppy-dog
-folly! At this point in his jealous imaginings the
-pain in him goaded him into motion; he began
-furiously pacing the room, although his lame leg,
-which he had been using remorselessly all day,
-was sending jabs and twists of agony through
-him. But after a little he halted again before the
-casement window.</p>
-
-<p>The wide, darkening view; the great, silent city
-with its myriad lights; the shining mist of the
-bay; the foot-hills with their sheer, straw-colored
-streaks through the forests and vineyards; the illimitable
-depths of star-sown, violet sky—all these
-touched his fevered mood with a sudden calm.
-His unrest was quieted, as one whose senses are
-cooled by a running stream.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[288]</span>“You hot-headed Southerner!” he upbraided
-himself, “don’t get up in the air without any real
-proof!”</p>
-
-<p>Almost in the flitting of the words through his
-brain he saw her. The white gown, which was her
-constant wear in the sick-room, defined her figure
-clearly against a clump of Japan plum-trees.
-Their purplish red foliage rustled; and an unseen
-fountain beyond made a delicate tinkle of water
-splashing a marble basin. Her face was hidden;
-only the moonlight gently drew the oval of her
-cheek. She was standing still, except that one foot
-was groping back and forth as if trying to find
-something. But, as he looked, his face growing
-tender, she knelt on the sod and pulled something
-out of the ground. This something she seemed to
-dust off with her handkerchief—he could not see
-the object, but he could see the flutter of the handkerchief;
-and when she rose the white linen partly
-hid the thing in her hand. Only partly, because
-when she passed around the terrace wall the glow
-from an electric lantern, in an arch, fell full upon
-her and burnished a long, thin blade of steel.</p>
-
-<p>He looked down on her from his unlighted
-chamber; and suddenly she looked up straight at
-the windows of the room where she thought he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[289]</span>
-was sleeping; and smiled a dim, amused, weary,
-tender smile. Then she sped by, erect and light of
-foot; and the deep shadow of the great gateway
-took her. All he could see was the moonlight on
-the bluish green lawn; and the white electric light
-on the gleaming rubber-trees and dusty palms.</p>
-
-<p>He sat down. He clasped his hands over his
-knee. He whistled softly a little Spanish air. He
-laughed very gently. “My dear little girl,” said
-he, “I am going to marry you. You may be swindled
-into helping a dozen murderers; but I am
-going to marry you!”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[290]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XVI<br />
-
-<small>THE REAL EDWIN KEATCHAM</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>One Sunday after Mrs. Melville Winter and
-Archie came to Casa Fuerte, Mr. Keatcham sent
-for the colonel. There was nothing unusual in
-such a summons. From the beginning of his illness
-he had shown a curious, inexpressive desire
-for the soldier’s company. He would have him
-sit in the room, although too weak to talk to him,
-supposing he wished to talk, which was not at all
-sure. “I like-to-see-him-just-sitting-there,” he faltered
-to his nurse, “can’t-he-read-or-play-solitaire-like-the-old-lady?”</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes Winter would be conscious that the
-feeble creature in the bed, with the bluish-white
-face, was staring at him. Whether the glassy eyes
-beheld his figure or went beyond him to unfinished
-colossal schemes that might change the fate of a
-continent, or drifted backward to the poverty-stricken
-home, the ferocious toil and the unending
-self-denial of Keatcham’s youth on the Pacific<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[291]</span>
-slope, the dim gaze gave no clue. All that was
-apparent was that it was always on Winter, as he
-curled his legs under his chair, wrote or knitted
-his brow over rows of playing-cards.</p>
-
-<p>At the very first, Keatcham’s mind had wandered;
-he used to shrink from imaginary people
-who were in the room; he would try to talk to
-them, distressing himself painfully, for he was so
-weak that his nurses turned his head on the pillow;
-he would feebly motion them away. In such aberrations
-he would sometimes appeal, in a changed,
-thin, childish voice, to the obscure, toil-worn
-pioneer woman who had died while he was a lad.
-“Mother, I <i>was</i> a good boy; I always got up when
-you called me, didn’t I? I helped you iron when
-the other boys were playing—mother, please don’t
-let that old woman stay and cry here!” Or he
-would plead: “Mother, tell her, say, <i>you</i> tell her
-I didn’t know her son would kill himself—I
-couldn’t tell—he was a damn coward, anyhow—excuse
-me, mama, I didn’t mean to swear, but
-they make me so awful mad!” There was a girl
-who came, sometimes, from whose presence he
-shrank; a girl he had never seen; nor, indeed, had
-he ever known in the flesh any of the shapes
-which haunted him. They had lived; but never<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[292]</span>
-had his eyes fallen on them. Nevertheless, their
-presence was as real to him as that of the people
-about him whom he could hear and touch and see.
-It did not take Winter’s imagination long to piece
-out the explanation of these apparitions: they
-were specters of the characters in those dramas
-of ruthless conquest which Mercer had culled out
-of newspaper “stories” and affidavits and court
-reports and forced upon Keatcham’s attention.
-Miss Smith helped him to the solution, although
-her own ignorance of Mercer’s method was puzzling.
-“How did he ever know old Mrs. Ferris?”
-she said. “He called her Ferris and he talks about
-her funny dress—she always did wear a queer little
-basque and full skirt after all the world went
-into blouses—but how did <i>he</i> ever come across
-her? They had a place on the James that had
-been in the family a hundred years and had to
-lose it on account of the Tidewater; and Nelson
-Ferris blew his brains out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you know how?” asked the colonel.
-“Well, I’ll tell you my guess sometime. Who is
-the girl who seems to make him throw a fit so?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not sure; I imagine it is poor Mabel Ray;
-there were two of them, sisters; they made money
-out of their Tidewater stock and went to New<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[293]</span>
-York to visit some kin; and they got scared when
-the stock fell and the dividends stopped; and they
-sold out at a great loss. They never did come
-back; they had persuaded all their kin to invest;
-and the stopping of the dividends made it difficult
-for some of the poor ones—Mabel said she
-couldn’t face her old aunts. She went on the stage
-in New York. She was very pretty; she wasn’t
-very strong. Anyway, you can imagine the end
-of the story. I saw her in the park last winter
-when Mrs. Winter was in New York; she turned
-her face away—poor Mabel!”</p>
-
-<p>Through Janet Smith’s knowledge of her dead
-sister’s neighbors, Winter got a dozen pitiful records
-of the wreckage of the Tidewater. “Mighty
-interesting reading,” he thought grimly, “but
-hardly likely to make the man responsible for
-them stuck on himself!” Then he would look at
-the drawn face on the pillow and listen to the babblings
-of the boy who had had no childhood; and
-the frown would melt off his brow.</p>
-
-<p>He did not always talk to his mother when his
-mind wandered; several times he addressed an invisible
-presence as “Helen” and “Dear” with an
-accent of tenderness very strange on those inflexible
-lips. When he talked to this phantasm he was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[294]</span>
-never angry or distressed; his turgid scowl
-cleared; the austere lines chiseling his cheeks and
-brow faded; he looked years younger. But for
-the most part, it was to no unreal creature that he
-turned, but to Colonel Rupert Winter. He would
-address him with punctilious civility, but as one
-who was under some obligation to assist him, saying,
-for instance, “Colonel Winter, I must beg
-you not to let those persons in the room again.
-They annoy me. But you needn’t let Mercer know
-that. Please attend to it yourself, and get them
-away. Miss Smith says you will. Explain to them
-that when I get up I will investigate their claims.
-I’m too sick now!”</p>
-
-<p>Conscious and free from fever, he was barely
-able to articulate, but when delirious fancies possessed
-him he could talk rapidly, in a good voice.
-Very soon it was clear that he was calmer for the
-colonel’s presence. Hence, the latter got into the
-habit of sitting in the room. He would request
-imaginary ruined and desperate beings to leave
-Keatcham in peace; he would gravely rise and
-close the door on their departure. He never was
-surprised nor at a loss; and his dramatic nerve
-never failed. Later, as the visions faded, a moody
-reserve wrapped the sick man. He lay motionless,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[295]</span>
-evidently absorbed by thought. In one way he
-was what doctors call a very good patient. He
-obeyed all directions; he was not restless. But
-neither was he ever cheerful. Every day he asked
-for his pulse record and his temperature and his
-respiration. After a consultation with the doctor,
-Miss Smith gave them to him.</p>
-
-<p>“It is against the rules,” grumbled the doctor,
-“but I suppose each patient has to make his own
-rules.” On the same theory he permitted the colonel’s
-visits.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, with no surprise, Winter received
-and obeyed the summons. Keatcham greeted him
-with his usual stiff courtesy.</p>
-
-<p>“The doctor says I can have the—papers—will
-you pick out—the—one—day after I was
-stabbed.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Smith indicated a pile on a little table,
-placed ready at hand. “I kept them for him,” she
-said.</p>
-
-<p>“Read about—the Midland,” commanded the
-faint, indomitable voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Want the election and the newspaper sentiments?”
-asked the colonel; he gave it all, conscious
-the while of Janet Smith’s compassionate,
-perplexed, sorrowful eyes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[296]</span>“Don’t skip!” Keatcham managed to articulate
-after a pause.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel gave him a keen glance. “Want it
-straight, without a chaser?”</p>
-
-<p>Keatcham closed his eyes and nodded.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel read about the virtually unanimous
-election of Tracy; the astonishment of the outsiders
-among the supposed anti-Tracy element;
-the composed and impenetrable front of the men
-closest to Keatcham; the reticence and amiability
-of Tracy himself, in whose mien there could be
-detected no hint either of hostility or of added
-cordiality toward the men who had been expected
-“to drag his bleeding pride in the dust;” finally of
-the response of the stock-market in a phenomenal
-rise of Midland.</p>
-
-<p>Keatcham listened with his undecipherable
-mask of attention; there was not so much as the
-flicker of an eyelid or the twitch of a muscle. All
-he said was: “Now, read if there is anything
-about the endowment of the new fellowships in
-some medical schools for experimental research.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who gives the endowment?”</p>
-
-<p>“Anonymous. In memory of Maria Warren
-Keatcham and Helen Bradford Keatcham. Find
-anything?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[297]</span>The colonel found a great deal about it. The
-paper was full of this munificent gift, amounting
-to many millions of dollars and filling (with
-most carefully and wisely planned details) an
-almost absolute vacuum in the American scheme
-of education. The dignity and fame of the chairs
-and fellowships endowed were ample to tempt the
-best ability of the profession. The reader grew enthusiastic
-as he read.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, it’s immense! And we have always
-needed it!” he exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>“There are some letters about it, there,”—Keatcham
-feebly motioned to a number of neatly
-opened, neatly assorted letters on a desk. “The
-doctor said I might have the letters read to me.
-Miss Smith got him to. For fear of exciting you,
-the doctors usually let you worry your head off
-because you don’t know about things. I’ve got to
-carry a few things through if it kills me. Don’t
-you see?”</p>
-
-<p>“I see,” said the colonel, “you shall.”</p>
-
-<p>The next time he saw the financier, although
-only a few days had elapsed, he was much
-stronger; he was able to breathe comfortably, he
-spoke with ease, in his ordinary voice; in fine, he
-looked his old self again, merely thinner and paler.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[298]</span>
-Hardly was the colonel seated before he said
-without preface—Keatcham never made approaches
-to his subject, regarding conversational
-road-making as waste of brains for a busy man:</p>
-
-<p>“Colonel, Miss Smith hasn’t time to be my
-nurse and secretary both. I won’t have one sent
-from New York; will you help her out?”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel’s lips twitched; he was thinking
-that were Miss Smith working for Atkins, she
-couldn’t have a better chance to make a killing.
-“But I’ll bet my life she isn’t,” he added; “she
-may be trying to save his life, but she isn’t playing
-his game!”</p>
-
-<p>He said aloud: “I will, Mr. Keatcham, if you
-will let me do it as part of the obligation of the
-situation; and there is no bally rot about compensation.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” said Keatcham. He did not hesitate;
-it was (as the colonel had already discovered)
-the rarest thing in the world for him to
-hesitate; he thought with astonishing rapidity;
-and he formulated his answer while his interlocutor
-talked; before the speech was over the answer
-was ready. Another trait of his had struck the
-soldier, namely, the laborious correctness of his
-speech; it was often formal and old-fashioned;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">[299]</span>
-Aunt Rebecca said that he talked like Daniel
-Webster’s speeches; but it had none of the homely
-and pungent savor one might expect from a man
-whose boyhood had scrambled through miners’
-camps into a San Francisco stock office; who had
-never gone to school in his life by daylight; who
-had been mine superintendent, small speculator
-and small director in California until he became
-a big speculator and big railway controller in
-New York.</p>
-
-<p>“You might begin on the morning mail,”
-Keatcham continued. “Let me sort them first.”
-He merely glanced at the inscriptions on the envelopes,
-opening and taking out one which he read
-rather carelessly, frowning a little before he
-placed it to one side.</p>
-
-<p>A number of the letters concerned the endowments
-of the experimental chairs at the universities.
-Keatcham’s attention was not lightened by
-any ray of pleasure. Once he said: “That fellow
-has caught my idea,” and once: “That’s right,”
-but there was no animation in his voice, no interest
-in his pallid face. Stealing a furtive scrutiny
-of it, now and then, Rupert Winter was impressed
-with its mystical likeness to that of Cary Mercer.
-There was no physical similarity of color or feature;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">[300]</span>
-it was a likeness of the spirit rather than the
-flesh. The colonel’s eyes flashed.</p>
-
-<p>“I have it!” he exclaimed within, “I have it;
-they are fanatics, both of them; Keatcham’s a
-fanatic of finance and Mercer is a fanatic of another
-sort; but fanatics they both are, ready to go
-any length for their principles or their ambitions
-or their revenge! <i>J’ai trouvé le mot d’énigme</i>,
-as Aunt Becky would say—I wonder what
-she’ll say to this sudden psychological splurge of
-mine.”</p>
-
-<p>“The business hour is up,”—it was Miss Smith
-entering with a bowl on a white-covered tray; the
-sun glinted the lump of ice in the milk and the
-silver spoon was dazzling against the linen—“your
-biscuit and milk, Mr. Keatcham. Didn’t
-you have it when you were a boy?”</p>
-
-<p>“I did, Miss Janet,”—and Keatcham actually
-smiled. “I used to think crackers and milk the
-nicest thing in the world.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is because you never tasted corn pone
-and milk; but you are going to.”</p>
-
-<p>“When you make it for me. I’m glad you’re
-such a good cook. It’s one of your ways I like.
-My mother was a very good cook. She could
-make better dishes out of almost nothing than<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">[301]</span>
-these mongrel chefs can make with the whole
-world.”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon she could,” said Miss Smith; she was
-speaking sincerely.</p>
-
-<p>“When my father didn’t strike pay dirt, my
-mother would open her bakery and make pies for
-the miners; she could make bread with potato
-yeast or ‘salt-emptins’—can you make salt-rising
-bread?”</p>
-
-<p>“I can—shall I make you some, to-morrow?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d like it. My mother used to make more
-money than my father; sometimes when we children
-were low in clothes and dad owed a bigger
-lot of money than usual, we had a laundry at our
-house as well as a bakery. Yet, in spite of all the
-work, my mother found time to teach all of us;
-and she knew how to teach, too; for she was principal
-of a school when my father married her.
-She was a New Englander; so was he; but they
-went West. We’re forty-niners. I saw the place
-where our little cloth-and-board shack used to
-stand. After the big fire, you know. It burned us
-all up; we had saved a good deal and my mother
-had a nice bakery. She worked too hard; it killed
-her. Work and struggle and losing the children.”</p>
-
-<p>“They died?” said Miss Janet.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">[302]</span>“Diphtheria. They didn’t know anything about
-the disease then. We all had it; and my little sister
-and both my brothers died; but I’m tough.
-I lived. My mother fell into what they called a
-decline. I was making a little money then—I was
-sixteen; but I couldn’t keep her from working.
-Perhaps it made no difference; but it did make a
-difference her not having the—the right kind of
-food. Nobody knew anything about consumption
-then. I used to go out in the morning and be
-afraid I’d find her dead when I got back. One
-night I did.” He stopped abruptly, crimsoning up
-to his eyes—“I don’t know why I’m telling you
-all this.”</p>
-
-<p>“I call that tough,”—as the colonel blurted out
-the words, he was conscious of a sense of repetition.
-When had he said those very same words
-before, to whom? Of all people in the world, to
-Cary Mercer. “Mighty tough,” murmured he
-softly.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Keatcham, “it was.” He did not
-say anything more. Neither did the colonel.
-Keatcham obediently ate his milk and biscuit;
-and very shortly the colonel took his leave.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning after an uneventful hour of
-sorting, reading and answering letters for Miss<span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">[303]</span>
-Smith to copy on the traveling type-writer,
-Keatcham gave his new secretary a sharp sensation;
-he ordered in his quiet but peremptory
-fashion: “Now put that trash away; sit down;
-tell me all you know of Cary—real name is Cary
-Mercer, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel said it was; he asked him if he
-wanted everything.</p>
-
-<p>“Everything. Straight. Without a chaser,”
-snapped Keatcham.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel gave it to him. He began with
-his own acquaintance; he told about Phil Mercer;
-he did not slur a detail; neither did he underscore
-one; Keatcham got the uncolored facts. He heard
-them impassively, making only one comment:
-“A great deal of damage would be saved in this
-world if youngsters could be shut up until they
-had sense enough not to fool with firearms.”
-When Winter came to Mercer’s own exposition
-of his motives and his design if successful in his
-raid on the kings of the market, Keatcham grunted;
-at the end he breathed a noiseless jet of a
-sigh. “You don’t think Mercer is at all”—he
-tapped the side of the head.</p>
-
-<p>“No more than you are.”</p>
-
-<p>“Or you?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">[304]</span>“Oh, well,” the colonel jested, “we all have a
-prejudice in favor of our own sanity. What I
-meant was that Mercer is a bit of a fanatic; his
-hard luck has—well, prejudiced him—”</p>
-
-<p>Keatcham’s cold, firm lips straightened into his
-peculiar smile, which was rather of perception
-than of humor.</p>
-
-<p>One might say of him—Aunt Rebecca Winter
-did say of him—that he saw the incongruous,
-which makes up for humor, but he never enjoyed
-it; possibly it was only another factor in his contempt
-of mankind.</p>
-
-<p>“Colonel,” said Keatcham, “do you think Wall
-Street is a den of thieves?”</p>
-
-<p>“I do,” said the colonel promptly. “I should
-like to take a machine gun or two and clean you
-all out.”</p>
-
-<p>Keatcham did not smile; he blinked his eyes
-and nodded. “I presume a good many people
-share your opinion of us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Millions,” replied the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>Again Keatcham nodded. “I thought so,” said
-he. “Of course you are all off; Wall Street is as
-necessary to the commonwealth as the pores to
-your skin; they don’t make the poison in the system
-any more than the pores do; they only let it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">[305]</span>
-escape. And I suppose you think that big financiers
-who control the trusts and the railways
-and—”</p>
-
-<p>“Us,” the colonel struck in, “well?”</p>
-
-<p>“You think we are thieves and liars and murderers
-and despots?”</p>
-
-<p>“All of that,” said the colonel placidly; “also
-fools.”</p>
-
-<p>“You certainly don’t mince your words.”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t want me to. What use would my
-opinion be in a one-thousandth attenuation?
-You’re no homeopath; and whatever else you may
-be, you’re no coward.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yet, you think I surrendered to Mercer? You
-think I did it because I was afraid he would
-kill me? I suppose he would have killed me if I
-hadn’t, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“He can speak for himself about that; he
-seems—well, an earnest sort of man. But I don’t
-think you gave in because you were afraid, if that
-is what you mean. You are no more afraid than he
-was! You wanted to live, probably; you had big
-things on hand. The Midland was only a trump
-in the game; you could win the odd trick with
-something else; you let the Midland go.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pretty close,”—Keatcham really smiled—“but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">[306]</span>
-there is a good deal more of it. I was shut up with
-the results of my—my work. He did it very
-cleverly. I had nothing to distract me. There
-were the big type-written pages about the foolish
-people who had lost their money, in some cases
-really through my course, mostly because they
-got scared and let go and were wiped out when,
-if they had had confidence in me and held on, they
-would be very much better off, now. But they
-didn’t, and they were ruined and they starved and
-took their boys out of college and mortgaged their
-confounded homes that had been in their families
-ever since Adam; and the old people died of
-broken hearts and the girls went wrong and some
-of the idiotic quitters killed themselves—it was
-not the kind of crowd you would want shut up
-with you in the dark! I was shut up with them.
-He had some sort of way of switching off the
-lights from the outside. I never saw a face or
-heard a voice. I would have to sit there in the
-dark after he thought I had read enough to
-occupy my mind. It—was unpleasant. Perhaps
-you suppose that brought me round to his way of
-thinking?”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel meditated. “I’ll tell you honestly,”
-he said after a pause, “I was of that opinion, or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">[307]</span>
-something of the kind, until I talked your case
-over with my aunt—”</p>
-
-<p>“The old dame is not a fool; what did she say?”</p>
-
-<p>“She said no, he didn’t convert you; but he
-convinced you how other people looked at your
-methods. You couldn’t get round the fact that a
-majority of your countrymen think your type of
-financier is worse than smallpox, and more contagious.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, she put it that way, did she? I wish she
-would write a prospectus for me. Well, you
-think she was nearer right than you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think <i>you</i> do; I myself think it was a little
-of both. You’ve got a heart and a conscience
-originally, though they have got pretty well
-tanned out in the weather; you didn’t want to be
-sorry for those people, but you are. They have
-bothered you a lot; but it has bothered you more
-to think that instead of going down the ages as a
-colossal benefactor and empire builder, you are
-hung up on the hook to see where you’re at;
-and where you <i>will</i> be if the people get thoroughly
-aroused. You all are building bigger balloons
-when it ought to be you for the cyclone cellar!
-But <i>you</i> are different. You can see ahead. I give
-you credit for seeing.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">[308]</span>“Have you ever considered,” said Keatcham
-slowly, “that in spite of the iniquitous greed of
-the men you are condemning, in spite of their
-oppression of the people, the prosperity of the
-country is unparalleled? How do you explain it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Crops,” said the colonel; “the crops were too
-big for you.”</p>
-
-<p>“You might give <i>us</i> a little credit—your aunt
-does. She was here to-day; she is a manufacturer
-and she comprehended that the methods of business
-can not be revolutionized without somebody’s
-getting hurt. Yet, on the whole, the change
-might be immensely advantageous. Now, why,
-in a nutshell, do you condemn us?”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re after the opinion of the average man,
-are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose so, the high average.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel crossed his legs and uncrossed
-them again; he looked straight into the other’s
-eyes; his own narrowed with thought.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll tell you,” said he. “I don’t know much
-about the Street or high finance or industrial development.
-I’m a plain soldier; I’m not a manufacturer
-and I’m not a speculator. I understand
-perfectly that you can’t have great changes without
-somebody’s getting hurt in the shuffle. It<span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">[309]</span>
-is beyond me to decide whether the new industrial
-arrangements with the stock-jobber on top
-instead of the manufacturer will make for better
-or for worse—but I know this; it is against the
-fundamental law to do evil that good may come.
-And you fellows in Wall Street, when, to get rich
-quick, you lie about stocks in order to buy
-cheap and then lie another way to sell dear; when
-you make a panic out of whole cloth, as you did
-in 1903, because, having made about all you can
-out of things going up, you want to make all you
-can out of them going down; when you play foot-ball
-with great railway properties and insurance
-properties, because you are as willing to rob the
-dead as the living; when you do all that, and
-when your imitators, who haven’t so much brains
-or so much decency as you, when <i>they</i> buy up
-legislatures and city councils; and <i>their</i> imitators
-run the Black Hand business and hold people up
-who have money and are not strong enough,
-they think, to hunt them down—why, not being
-a philosopher but just a plain soldier, I call it bad,
-<i>rotten</i> bad. What’s more, I can tell you the American
-people won’t stand for it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You think they can help themselves?”</p>
-
-<p>“I know they can. You fellows are big, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">[310]</span>
-you won’t last over night if the American people
-get really aroused. And they are stirring in their
-sleep and kicking off the bed-clothes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yet you ought to belong to the conservatives.”</p>
-
-<p>“I do. That’s why the situation is dangerous.
-You as an old San Franciscan ought to remember
-how conservative was that celebrated Vigilance
-Committee. It is when the long-suffering, pusillanimous,
-conservative element gets fighting mad
-that something is doing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe,” muttered Keatcham thoughtfully. “I
-believe we can manage for you better than you
-can for yourselves; but when the brakes are
-broken good driving can’t stop the machine; all
-the chauffeur can do is to keep the middle of the
-road. I like to be beaten as little as any of them;
-but I’m not a fool. Winter, you are used to accomplishing
-things; what is your notion of the
-secret?”</p>
-
-<p>“Knowing when to stop exhausting trumps, I
-reckon—but you don’t play cards.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is the same old game whatever you play,”
-said the railway king. He did not pursue the
-discussion; his questions, Winter had found, invariably
-had a purpose, and that purpose was
-never argument. He lay back on the big leather<span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">[311]</span>
-cushions of the lounge, his long, lean fingers
-drumming on the table beside him and an odd
-smile playing about the corners of his mouth;
-his next speech dived into new waters. He said:
-“Have those men from New York got Atkins,
-yet?”</p>
-
-<p>“They couldn’t find him,” answered the colonel.
-“I have been having him shadowed, on my
-own idea—I think he stabbed you, though I have
-no proof of it; I take it you have proof of your
-matter.”</p>
-
-<p>“Plenty,” said Keatcham. “I was going to
-send him to the pen in self-defense. It isn’t safe
-for me to have it creep out that my secretary
-made a fortune selling my secrets. Besides, I
-don’t want to be killed. You say they can’t find
-him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Seems to have gone to Japan—”</p>
-
-<p>“Seems? What do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am not sure. He was booked for a steamer;
-and a man under his name, of his build and color,
-did actually sail on the boat,” announced the
-colonel blandly.</p>
-
-<p>“Hmn! He’s right here in San Francisco; read
-that note.”</p>
-
-<p>Winter read the note, written on Palace Hotel<span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">[312]</span>
-note-paper, in a sharp, scrawling, Italian hand.
-The contents were sufficiently startling.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Dear friend Hoping this find you well. Why do you
-disregard a true Warning? We did write you afore once
-for say you give that money or we shal be unfortunately
-compel to kill you quick. No? You laff. God knows we got
-have that twenty-five thousan dol. Yes. And now because
-of such great expence it is fifty thousan you shall pay. We
-did not mean kill you dead only show you for sure there
-is no place so secret you can Hide no place so strong can
-defend you. Be Warn. You come with $50000.00 in $100
-bills. You go or send Mr. Mercer to the Red Hat; ask
-for Louis. Say to Louis For the Black Hand. Louis will
-say For the Black Hand. You follow him. No harm will
-come to you. You will be forgive all heretobefores. Elseways
-you must die April 15-20. <i>This is sure</i>. You have
-felt our dagger the other is worse.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="indentright2">You well wishing Fren,</span><br />
-The Black Hand.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Sounds like Atkins pretending to be a Dago,”
-said the colonel dryly. “I could do better myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very likely,” said Keatcham.</p>
-
-<p>“Does he mean business? What’s he after?”</p>
-
-<p>“To get me out of the way. He knows he isn’t
-safe until I’m dead. Then he hasn’t been cleaned
-out, but he has lost a lot of money in this Midland
-business. The cipher he has is of no use to him,
-there, or in the other things which unluckily he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">[313]</span>
-knows about. With me dead and the cipher in his
-hands, he could have made millions; even without
-the cipher, if he knows I’m dead before the rest of
-the world, he ought to make at least a half-million.
-I think you will find that he has put everything
-he has on the chance. I told you he was
-slick. And unstable. What do you anticipate he
-will do? Straight, with no chaser, as you say.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, straight with no chaser, I should say a
-bomb was the meanest trick in sight, so, naturally,
-he will choose a bomb.”</p>
-
-<p>“I agree with you. You say the house is
-patrolled?”</p>
-
-<p>“The whole place. But we’ll put on a bigger
-force; I’ll see Birdsall at once. Atkins would
-have to hire his explosive talent, wouldn’t he?”
-questioned the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he knows plenty of the under-world rascals;
-and besides, for a fellow of his habits, there
-is a big chance for loot. Mrs. Millicent Winter
-tells me that your aunt has valuable jewels with
-her. If she told me, she may have told other people,
-and Atkins may know. He will use other
-people, but he will come, too, in my opinion.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see,” said the colonel; “to make sure they
-don’t foozle the bomb. But he’ll have his alibi<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">[314]</span>
-ready all right. Mr. Keatcham, did they send
-you a previous letter?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dear no; that’s only part of the game;
-makes a better story. So is using the hotel paper;
-if it throws suspicion on anybody it would be
-your party; you see Atkins knew Mercer had a
-grudge against me as well as him. He was counting
-on that. I rather wonder that he didn’t fix
-up some proof for you to find.”</p>
-
-<p>“By Jove!” cried the colonel; “maybe he did.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you didn’t find it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you see I was too busy with you; the
-others must have overlooked it. Hard on Atkins
-after he took so much trouble, wasn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I told you he was too subtle. But it is not
-wise to underrate him, or bombs either; we must
-get the women and those boys out of the house.”</p>
-
-<p>“But how? You are not really acquainted with
-my aunt, Mrs. Rebecca Winter, I take it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You think she wouldn’t go if there was any
-chance of danger?”</p>
-
-<p>“You couldn’t fire her unless out of a cannon;
-but she would help get Archie away; Mrs. Melville
-and Miss Smith—”</p>
-
-<p>“Well—ur—Miss Smith, I am afraid, will not
-be easy to manage; you see, she knows—”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">[315]</span>“Knows? Did you tell her?” asked Colonel
-Winter anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, not exactly. As the children say, it told
-itself. There has been a kind of an attempt, already.
-A box came, marked from a man I know
-in New York, properly labeled with express company’s
-labels. Miss Smith opened it; I could see
-her, because she was in the bath-room with the
-door open. There was another box inside,
-wrapped in white tissue paper. Very neatly. She
-examined that box with singular care and then
-she drew some water in the lavatory basin, half
-opened the box and put the whole thing under
-water in the basin. Then I thought it was time
-for me and I asked her if it was a bomb. Do you
-know that girl had sense enough not to try to
-deceive me? She saw that I had seen every move
-she had made. She said merely that it was safe
-under water. It was an ingenious little affair
-which had an electrical arrangement for touching
-off a spark when the lid of the box would be
-lifted.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, yes. Thoughtful little plan to amuse an
-invalid by letting him open the box, himself, to
-see the nice surprises from New York. Very
-neat, indeed. What did you do with the box?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">[316]</span>“Nothing, so far. It only came about an hour
-ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you reckon some of the Black Hands are
-out on the street, rubbering to see if there are any
-signs of anything doing?”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps; you might let Birdsall keep a watch
-for anything like that. But they hear, somehow;
-there is a leak somewhere in our establishment.
-It is not your aunt; she can hold her tongue as
-well as use it; the boy, Archie, does not know
-anything to tell—”</p>
-
-<p>“He wouldn’t tell it if he did,” interrupted
-the colonel; and very concisely but with evident
-pride he gave Archie’s experience in the Chinese
-quarter.</p>
-
-<p>Keatcham’s comment took the listener’s breath
-away; so far afield was it and so unlike his experience
-of the man; it was: “Winter, a son like
-that would be a good deal of a comfort, wouldn’t
-he?”</p>
-
-<p>“Poor little chap!” said Winter. “He hasn’t
-any father to be proud of him—father and mother
-both dead.”</p>
-
-<p>Keatcham eyed Winter thoughtfully a moment,
-then he said: “You’ve been married and lost
-children, your aunt says. That must be hard.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">[317]</span>
-But—did you ever read that poem of James
-Whitcomb Riley’s to his friend whose child was
-dead? It’s true what he says—they were better
-off than he ‘who had no child to die.’”</p>
-
-<p>Rupert was looking away from the speaker
-with the instinctive embarrassment of a man who
-surprises the deeper feelings of another. He
-could see out of the window the lovely April garden
-and Janet Smith amid the almond blossoms.
-Only her shining black head and her white shoulders
-and bodice rose above the pink clusters.
-She looked up and nodded, seeing him; her face
-was a little pale, but she was smiling.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,” he said, “it’s hard enough
-either way for a man.”</p>
-
-<p>“I never lost any children”—Keatcham’s tone
-was dry, still, but it had not quite the former
-desiccated quality—“but I was married, for a
-little while. If it’s as bad to lose your children
-as it is to lose the hope of having them, it must
-be hard. You lost your wife, too?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Rupert Winter.</p>
-
-<p>At this moment he became conscious that
-Keatcham was avoiding his gaze in the very
-manner of his avoiding of Keatcham’s a moment
-ago; and it gave him a bewildering sensation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">[318]</span>“I wanted to marry my wife for seven years
-before we were married,” Keatcham continued
-in that carefully monotonous voice. “She was the
-daughter of the superintendent of the mine where
-I was working. I was only eighteen when I first
-saw her. I was twenty-five when we were married.
-She used to give me lessons; she was educated
-and accomplished. She did more than is
-easy telling, for me. Of course, her parents were
-opposed at first because they looked higher for her,
-but she brought them round by her patience and
-her sweetness and her faith in me. Six months
-after we were married, she had an accident which
-left her a helpless invalid in a wheeled chair, at
-the best; at the worst, suffering—you’ve known
-what it is to see anybody, whom you care for, in
-horrible pain and trying not to show it when you
-come near?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have,” said Winter; “merry hell, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have seen that expression,” said Keatcham;
-“I never recognized its peculiar appropriateness
-before. Yes, it is that. Yet, Winter, those two
-years she lived afterwards were the happiest of
-my whole life. She said, the last night she was
-with me, that they had been the happiest of hers.”
-The same flush which once before, when he had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">[319]</span>
-seemed moved, had crept up to his temples, burned
-his hollow cheeks. He was holding the edge of
-the table with the tips of his fingers and the blood
-settled about the nails with the pressure of his
-grip. There was an intense moment during which
-Winter vainly struggled to think of something to
-say and looked more of his sympathy than he was
-aware; then: “Cary Mercer needn’t think that he
-has had all the hard times in the world!” said
-Keatcham in his usual toneless voice, relaxing
-his hold and leaning back on his pillows. The
-color ebbed away gradually from his face.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t wonder you didn’t marry again,” said
-Winter.</p>
-
-<p>“You would not wonder if you had known
-Helen. She always understood. Of course, now,
-at sixty-one, I could buy a pretty, innocent, young
-girl who would do as her parents bade her, and
-cry her eyes out before the wedding, or a handsome
-and brilliant society woman with plenty of
-matrimonial experience—but I don’t want them.
-I should have to explain myself to them; I don’t
-know how to explain myself; you see I can’t half
-do it—”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon I understand a little.”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess you do. You are different, too. Well,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">[320]</span>
-let’s get down to business, think up some way of
-getting the women out of the house; and get your
-sleuths after Atkins. It is ‘we get him, or he gets
-us!’”</p>
-
-<p>The amateur secretary assented and prepared
-to go, for the valet was at the door, ready to relieve
-him; but opposite Keatcham, he paused a
-second, made a pretense of hunting for his hat,
-picked it up in his left hand and held out the
-right hand, saying, “Well, take care of yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>Keatcham nodded; he shook the hand with a
-good firm pressure. “Much obliged, Winter,”
-said he.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” meditated the soldier as he went his
-way, “I never did think to take that financial
-bucaneer by the hand; but—it wasn’t the bucaneer,
-it was the real Edwin Keatcham.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">[321]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XVII<br />
-
-<small>IN WHICH THE PUZZLE FALLS INTO PLACE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>While the colonel was trying to decipher his
-tragical puzzle, while Edwin Keatcham was
-busied with plans that affected empires and incidentally
-were to save and to extinguish some
-human lives, while Janet Smith had her own
-troubles, while Mrs. Rebecca Winter enjoyed
-a game more exciting and deadly than Penelope’s
-Web, Mrs. Millicent Winter and the younger people
-found the days full of joyous business. The
-household had fallen into normal ways of living.
-Although the secret patrol watched every rod
-of approach to the house, the espial was so unobtrusive
-that guests came and went, tradesmen
-rattled over the driveways; the policemen, themselves,
-slumbered by day and loitered majestically
-by night without the Casa Fuerte portals, never
-suspecting. Little Birdsall had his admirable
-points; they were now in evidence. To all outward<span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">[322]</span>
-seeming, a pleasant house-party was enjoying
-the lavish Californian hospitality of Casa
-Fuerte; and Black Care was bundled off to the
-closet with the family skeleton, according to the
-traditions of mannerly people. Arnold had opened
-his garage and his stables. There was bridge of
-an evening; and the billiard-balls clinked on the
-pool-table. Archie could now back the electric
-motor into almost any predicament. The new
-Chinese chef was a wonder and Tracy was initiating
-him into the possibilities of the Fireless, despite
-a modest shrinking on the part of the oriental
-artist who considered it to be a new kind of
-bomb.</p>
-
-<p>Millicent, encouraged by Arnold, had had Mrs.
-Wigglesworth and two errant Daughters, whose
-husbands were state regents for Melville’s university,
-to luncheon and to dinner; the versatile
-Kito donning a chauffeur’s livery and motoring
-them back to the city in the Limousine, on both
-occasions; all of which redounded to Millicent’s
-own proper glory and state.</p>
-
-<p>Indeed, about this time, Millicent was in high
-good humor with her world. Even Janet Smith
-was no longer politely obliterated as “the nurse,”
-but became “our dear Miss Janet”; and was presented<span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">[323]</span>
-with two of Mrs. Melville’s last year’s
-Christmas gifts which she could not contrive
-to use; therefore carried about for general decorative
-generosity. One was a sage-green linen
-handkerchief case, quite fresh, on which was
-etched, in brown silk, the humorous inscription:
-“<span class="allsmcap">WIPE ME BUT DO NOT SWIPE ME</span>!” The other
-was a white celluloid brush-broom holder bedecked
-with azure forget-me-nots enframing a
-complicated monogram which might just as well
-stand for J. B. B. S. (Janet Byrd Brandon
-Smith) as for M. S. W. (Millicent Sears Winter)
-or any other alphabetical herd. These unpretending
-but (considering their source) distinguished
-gifts she bestowed in the kindest manner. Janet
-was no doubt grateful; she embroidered half a
-dozen luncheon napkins with Mrs. Melville’s monogram
-and crest, in sign thereof; and very prettily,
-she being a skilful needle-woman. On her
-part, Mrs. Mellville was so pleased that she remarked
-to her brother-in-law, shortly after, that
-she believed Cousin Angela’s sisters hadn’t been
-just to Miss Smith; she was a nice girl; and if
-she married (which is quite possible, insinuated
-Mrs. Melville archly), she meant to give a tea in
-her honor.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">[324]</span>“Now, that’s right decent of you, Millie,” cried
-the colonel; and he smiled gratefully after Mrs.
-Melville’s beautifully fitted back. Yet a scant five
-minutes before he had been pursuing that same
-charming back through the garden terraces, in
-a most unbrotherly frame, resolved to give his sister-in-law
-a “warning with a fog-horn.” The cause
-of said warning was his discovery of her acquaintance
-with Atkins. For days a bit of information
-had been blistering his mind. It came from the
-girl at the telegraph office at the Palace, not in a
-bee-line, but indirectly, through her chum, the
-girl who booked the theater tickets. It could not
-be analyzed properly because the telegraph girl
-was gone to Southern California. But before she
-went she told the theater girl that the lady who
-received Mr. Makers’ wires was one of Mrs.
-Winter’s party! This bit of information was like
-a live coal underfoot in the colonel’s mind; whenever
-he trod on it in his mental excursions he
-jumped.</p>
-
-<p>“Who else but Janet?” he demanded. But by
-degrees he became first doubtful, then daring. He
-had Birdsall fetch the telegraph girl back to San
-Francisco. A ten minutes’ interview assured him
-that it was his brother’s wife who had called for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">[325]</span>
-Mr. Makers’ messages, armed with Mr. Makers’
-order.</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Rebecca was not nearly so vehement as he
-when he told her. She listened to his angry criticism
-with a lurking smile and a little shrug of
-her shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course she has butted in, as you tersely
-express it, in the language of this mannerless generation;
-Millicent always butts in. How did she
-get acquainted with this unpleasant, assassinating,
-poor white trash? My dear child, <i>she</i> didn’t
-probably; he made an acquaintance with her. He
-pumped her and lied to her. We know he wanted
-to find out Mr. Keatcham’s abode; he may have
-got his clue from her; she knew young Arnold
-had been to see him. There’s no telling. I only
-know that in the interest of keeping a roof over
-our heads and having our heads whole instead
-of in pieces from explosives, I butted in a few
-days ago when somebody wanted Mrs. Melville
-Winter on the telephone. I answered it. The person
-asked if I was Mrs. Melville Winter; it was
-a strange man’s voice. I don’t believe in Christian
-Science or theosophy or psychics, but I do believe
-I felt in my bones that here was an occasion
-to be canny rather than conscientious. You know<span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">[326]</span>
-I can talk like Millicent—or anybody else; so I
-intoned through the telephone in her silken
-Anglican accents, ‘Do you want Mrs. Melville
-Winter or Aunt Rebecca, <i>Madam</i> Winter?’ I
-hate to be called Madam Winter, and she knows
-it, but Millicent is catty, you know, and she
-always calls me Madam Winter behind my back.
-The fellow fell into the trap at once—recognized
-the voice, I dare say, and announced that it was
-Mr. Makers; Mr. Atkins, who had left for Japan,
-had not been able to pay his respects and say good-by;
-but he had left with him an embroidered
-Chinese kimono for Professor Winter, whom he
-had admired so much; and if it wouldn’t be too
-much trouble for her to pay a visit to her friend—one
-of those women she had to luncheon, who’s
-at the St. Francis—he would like to show her
-several left by Mr. Atkins, for her to select one.
-Then in the most casual way, he asked after Mr.
-Keatcham’s health. I believed he was improving;
-had had a very good night. I fancy it didn’t
-please him, but he made a good pretense. Then
-he went off into remarks about its being such a
-pity Mr. Atkins had left Mr. Keatcham; but
-he was so conscientious, a Southern gentleman I
-knew; yet he really thought a great deal still of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">[327]</span>
-Mr. Keatcham, who had many fine qualities; only
-on account of the unfortunate differences—Atkins
-was so proud and sensitive; he was anxious
-to hear, but not for the world would he have
-any one know that he had inquired; so would I
-be very careful not to let any one know he had
-asked. Of course I would be; I promised effusively;
-and said I quite understood. I think I
-<i>do</i>, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“They are keeping tab on us through Millicent,”
-fumed the colonel. “I dare say she gave
-it away that Arnold was visiting Keatcham at
-the hotel; and it wouldn’t take Atkins long to
-piece out a good deal more, especially if his spy
-overheard Tracy’s ’phone. Well, I shall warn
-Millicent—with a fog-horn!”</p>
-
-<p>The way he warned Millicent has been related.
-But from Millicent he deflected to another subject—the
-impulse of confession being strong upon
-him. He freed his mind about the stains on Cary
-Mercer’s cuffs; and, when at last he sought Millicent
-he was in his soul praising his aunt for a
-wise old woman. After justice was disarmed by
-his miscomprehension of Millicent’s words, he
-took out his cigarette case and began pacing the
-garden walks, smoking and humming a little<span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">[328]</span>
-Spanish love song, far older than the statehood of
-California.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse"><i>La noche está serena, tranquilo el aquilon;</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Tu dulce centinella te guarda el corazon.</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Y en al as de los céfiros, que vagan par doquier,</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Volando van mis suplicas, á ti, bella mujer!</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Volando van mis suplicas, á ti, bella mujer!</i></div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse"><i>De un corazon que te ama, recibe el tierno amor;</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>No aumentes mas la llama, piedad, á an trobador.</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Y si te mueve á lastima eterno padecer,</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Como te amo, amama, bellissima mujer!</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Como te amo, amama, bellissima mujer!</i><a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[B]</a></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_329">[329]</span>The words belonged to the air which he had
-whistled a weary week ago. Young Tracy came
-along, and caught up the air, although he was
-innocent of Spanish; he had his mandolin on his
-arm; he proffered it to the colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Janet has been singing coon-songs to his
-nibs, who is really getting almost human,” he
-observed affably; “well, a little patience and interest
-will reveal new possibilities of the Fireless
-Stove! In man or metal. Shall we get under
-his nibs’ window and give him the <i>Bedouin Love
-Song</i> and <i>I Picked Me a Lemon in the Garden of
-Love</i> and the Sextette from <i>Lucia</i> and other
-choice selections? He seemed to be sitting up and
-taking notice; let’s lift him above the sordid
-thoughts of Wall Street and his plans for busting
-other financiers.”</p>
-
-<p>The soldier gave this persiflage no answer; his
-own thoughts were far from gay. He stood drinking
-in the beauty of the April night. The air was
-wonderfully hushed and clear; and the play of
-the moonlight on the great heliotrope bushes and
-the rose-trees, which dangled their clusters of
-yellow and white over the stone parapets of the
-balconies, tinted the leafage and flickered delicately
-over the tracery of shadow on the gray<span class="pagenum" id="Page_330">[330]</span>
-walls. Not a cloud flecked the vast aërial landscape—only
-stars beyond stars, through unfathomable
-depths of dim violet, and beneath the
-stars a pale moon swimming low in the heavens;
-one could see it between the spandrels of the
-arches spanning the colonnade.</p>
-
-<p>“Looks like a prize night-scene on the stage,
-doesn’t it?” said Tracy. “Jolly good shadows—and
-aren’t these walls bulging out at the bottom
-bully? I used to know the right name for such
-architectural stunts when I was taking Fine Arts
-Four—dreadful to neglect your educational advantages
-and then forget all the little you didn’t
-neglect, ain’t it? I say, get on to those balconies—that
-isn’t the right word for the mission style,
-I guess; but never mind; aren’t they stunning?
-Do you see the ladies up there? Is that Archie
-sniggering? What do you think of the haunted
-house, <i>now</i>, Colonel?”</p>
-
-<p>Tracy’s gay eyes sought the other’s gaze to find
-it turn somber. Winter couldn’t have told why;
-but a sudden realization of the hideous peril
-dogging the warm, lighted, tenanted house, submerged
-him and suffocated him like a foul gas.
-Let their guards be vigilant as fear, let their
-wonderful new search-light flood rock and slope<span class="pagenum" id="Page_331">[331]</span>
-and dusky Chaparral bush; and peer as it might
-through the forest aisles beyond; yet—yet—who
-could tell!</p>
-
-<p>But he forced an equal smile in a second for
-the college boy; and chatted easily enough as
-they climbed up the stepped arches to the balcony
-and the little group looking seaward.</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Rebecca in black lace and jewels was
-tilting with the world in general and Millicent
-Winter in particular; she displayed her most
-cynical mood. She had demolished democracy;
-had planted herself firmly on the basic doctrine
-that the virtues cultivated by slavery far outnumber
-its inseparable vices; and that most people,
-if not all, need a master; had been picturesquely
-and inaccurately eloquent on the subject of dynamite
-(which she pronounced the logical fourth
-dimension of liberty, fraternity and equality); had
-put the yellow rich where they belonged; and the
-red anarchists mainly under the sod; and she had
-abolished the Fourth of July to the last sputter
-of fire-cracker; thence by easy transitions she
-had extolled American art (which American patrons
-were too ignorant to appreciate), deplored
-American music (“The trouble isn’t that it is
-<i>canned</i>,” says she, “but that it was spoiled before<span class="pagenum" id="Page_332">[332]</span>
-they canned it!”) and was now driving a chariot
-of fire through American literature; as for the
-Academics, they never said what they thought,
-but only what they thought they ought to think;
-and they always mistook anemia for refinement,
-as another school mistook yelling and perspiring
-for vigor.</p>
-
-<p>Just as Winter modestly entered the arena, no
-less a personage than Henry James was under the
-wheels. Janet Smith had modestly confessed to
-believing him a consummate artist; and Millicent
-in an orotund voice declared that he went deep,
-deep down into the mysteries of life.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t deny it; he <i>ought</i> to get down deep,”
-returned Aunt Rebecca in her gentlest, softest
-utterance; “he’s always boring.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Melville’s suppressed agitation made her
-stays creak.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you really think that James is not a great
-artist?” she breathed.</p>
-
-<p>“I think he is not worth while.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wow!” cried Tracy. “Oh, I say—”</p>
-
-<p>“Aunt Rebecca; you can not mean—” this was
-Mrs. Melville, choking with horror.</p>
-
-<p>“His style,” repeated the unmoved iconoclast,
-“his style has the remains of great beauty; all his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_333">[333]</span>
-separate phrases, if you wish, are gems; and he is
-a literary lapidary; but his sentences are so subtle,
-so complex, so intricately compounded, and so
-discursive that I get a pain in the back of my neck
-before I find out what he <i>may</i> mean; and then—I
-don’t agree with him! Now is it worth while to
-put in so much hard reading only to be irritated?”</p>
-
-<p>“I beg pardon,” Winter interposed, with masculine
-pusillanimity evading taking sides in the
-question at issue, “I thought we were going to
-have some music; why don’t you boys give us
-some college songs? Here is a mandolin.”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Rebecca’s still luminous eyes went from
-the speaker to Janet Smith in the corner. She
-said something about hearing the music better
-from the other side of the balcony. Now (as Mrs.
-Millicent very truly explained) there was not a
-ha’pennyworth’s difference in favor of one side
-over the other; but she followed in the wake of
-her imperious aunt.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel drew nearer to Janet Smith; in
-order to sink his voice below disturbing the music-lovers
-he found it necessary to sit on a pile of
-cushions at her feet.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you know Mercer will be back to-night?”
-he began, a long way from his ultimate object.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_334">[334]</span>
-He noticed that leaning back in the shadow her
-ready smile had dropped from her face, which
-looked tired. “I want to tell you a little story
-about Mercer,” he continued; “may I? It won’t
-take long.”</p>
-
-<p>He was aware, and it gave him a twinge of
-pain to see it, that she sat up a little straighter,
-like one on guard; and oh, how tired her face was
-and how sweet! He told her of all his suspicions
-of her brother-in-law; of the blood-stains and the
-changing of clothes; she did not interrupt him by
-a question, hardly by a motion, until he told of the
-conversation with Keatcham and the note signed
-“The Black Hand.” At this her eyes lighted; she
-exclaimed impetuously: “Cary Mercer never <i>did</i>
-send that letter!” She drew a deep intake of
-breath. “I don’t believe he touched Mr. Keatcham!”</p>
-
-<p>“Neither do I,” said the colonel, “but wait!”
-He went on to the theater girl’s report of the receiver
-of the telegrams. Her hands, which clasped
-her knee, fell apart; her lips parted and closed
-firmly.</p>
-
-<p>“Did I think it was you?” said he. “Why, yes,
-I confess I did fear it might be and that you might
-be trying to shield Atkins.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_335">[335]</span>“I!” she exclaimed hotly; “that detestable villain!”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Isn’t</i> he?” cried the colonel. “But—well, I
-couldn’t tell how he might strike a lady,” he ended
-lamely.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon he <i>would</i> strike a lady if she were
-silly enough to marry him and he got tired of her.
-He is the kind of man who will persecute a girl
-to marry him, follow her around and importune
-her and flatter her and then, if he should prevail,
-never forgive her for the bother she has given
-him. Oh, I never <i>did</i> like him; I’m afraid of him—awfully.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not you?”—the colonel’s voice was cheerful,
-as if he had not shivered over his own foreboding
-vision. “I’ve seen you in action already, you
-know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not fighting bombs. I hate bombs. There are
-so many pieces to hit you. You can’t run away.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you’ll find them not so bad; besides, you
-<i>did</i> fight one this very morning, and you were
-cool as peppermint!”</p>
-
-<p>“That was quite different; I had time to think,
-and the danger was more to me than to any one
-else; but to think of Mrs. Winter and Archie and
-y—all of you; that scares me.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">[336]</span>“Now, don’t let it get on your nerves,” he
-soothed—of course it is necessary to take a girl’s
-hand to soothe her when she is frightened. But
-Miss Smith calmly released her hand, only reddening
-a little; and she laughed. “Where—where
-were we at?” she asked in her unconscious Southern
-phraseology.</p>
-
-<p>“Somewhere around Atkins, I think,” said the
-colonel; he laughed in his turn,—he found it easy
-to laugh, now that he knew how she felt toward
-Atkins. “You see, after I talked with Keatcham
-I couldn’t make anything but Atkins out of the
-whole business. But there were those stained cuffs
-and his changing his clothes—”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said she.</p>
-
-<p>“How explain? There was only one explanation:
-that was, that perhaps Mercer had discovered
-Keatcham before we did, unconsciously
-spotted his cuffs, been alarmed by our approach
-and hidden, lest it should be the murderers returning.
-He might have wanted a chance to draw
-his revolver. Say he did that way, he might foolishly
-pretend to enter for the first time. If he
-made that mistake and then discovered the condition
-of his cuffs and the spots on his knee, what
-would be his natural first impulse? Why, to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">[337]</span>
-change them, trusting that they hadn’t been noticed.
-Maybe, then, he would wash them out—”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” murmured Miss Smith meekly, with
-a little twinkle of her eye; “<i>I</i> did that; he hid
-them. How ridiculous of me to get in such a
-fright! But you know how Cary hated Mr.
-Keatcham; and you—no, you don’t know the
-lengths that such a temperament as his will go.
-I did another silly thing: I found a dagger, one
-of those Moorish stilettoes that hang in the library;
-it was lying in the doorway. When no
-one was looking I hid it and carried it off. I
-stuck it in one of the flower-beds; I stuck it in
-the ferns; I have stuck that wretched thing all
-over this yard. I didn’t dare carry it back and
-put it in the empty place with the others because
-some one might have noticed the place. And I
-didn’t dare say anything to Cary; I was right
-miserable.”</p>
-
-<p>“So was I,” said the colonel, “thinking you
-were trying to protect the murderer. But do you
-know what I had sense to do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Go to Mrs. Winter? Oh, I <i>wanted</i> to!”</p>
-
-<p>“Exactly; and do you know what that dead
-game sport said to me? She said she found those
-washed and ironed cuffs and the trousers neatly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_338">[338]</span>
-cleaned with milka—what’s milka?—and the
-milka cleaned the spots so much cleaner than the
-rest that she had her own suspicions started. But
-says she, ‘Not being a plumb idiot, I went straight
-to Cary and he told me the whole story—’”</p>
-
-<p>“Which was like <i>your</i> story?”</p>
-
-<p>“Very near. And you see it would be <i>like</i> Atkins
-to leave incriminating testimony round loose.
-That is, incriminating testimony against Mercer
-and Tracy. The dagger, Tracy remembers, was
-not in the library; it was in the <i>patio</i>. Right to
-hand. Atkins must have got in and found Mr.
-Keatcham on the floor in a faint. Whether he
-meant to make a bargain with him or to kill him,
-perhaps we shall never know; but when he saw
-him helpless before him he believed his chance
-was come to kill him and get the cipher key, removing
-his enemy and making his fortune at a
-blow, as the French say. <i>Voilà tout!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think”—her voice sank lower; she
-glanced over her shoulder—“do you reckon <i>Atkins</i>
-had anything to do with that train robbery?
-Was it a mere pretext to give a chance to murder
-Mr. Keatcham, fixing the blame on ordinary bandits?”</p>
-
-<p>“By Jove! it might be.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">[339]</span>“I don’t suppose we shall ever know. But,
-Colonel Winter, do you mind explaining to me
-just what Brother Cary’s scheme with Mr.
-Keatcham was? Mrs. Winter told me you
-would.”</p>
-
-<p>“She told <i>me</i>,” mused the colonel, “that you
-didn’t know anything about this big game which
-has netted them millions. They’ve closed out their
-deals and have the cash. No paper profits for
-Auntie! She said that she would not risk your
-being mixed up in it; so kept you absolutely in
-the dark. I’m there, too. Didn’t you know Mercer
-had kidnapped Archie?”</p>
-
-<p>“No; I didn’t know he was with Mr. Keatcham
-at the hotel. It would have saved me a heap of
-suffering; but she didn’t dare let me know for
-fear, if anything should happen, I would be mixed
-up in it. It was out of kindness, Colonel Winter,
-truly it was. Afterward when she saw that I was
-worried she gave me hints that I need not worry,
-Archie was quite safe.”</p>
-
-<p>“And the note-paper?”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose she gave it to them,” answered Miss
-Smith.</p>
-
-<p>“And the voice I heard in the telephone?” He
-explained how firmly she had halted the conversation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">[340]</span>
-the time Archie would have reassured him.
-“You weren’t there, of course?” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“No, I was down-stairs in the ladies’ entrance
-of the court in the hotel; I had come in a little
-while before, having carried an advertisement to
-the paper; I wonder why she—maybe it was to
-communicate with them without risking a letter.”</p>
-
-<p>“But how did <i>your</i> voice get into my ’phone?”
-he asked.</p>
-
-<p>She looked puzzled only a second, then laughed
-as he had not heard her laugh in San Francisco—a
-natural, musical, merry peal, a girlish laugh that
-made his heart bound.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, of course,” said she, “it is so easy!
-There was a reporter who insisted on interviewing
-Mrs. Winter about her jewelry; and I was
-shooing him away. Somehow the wires must have
-crossed.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you remember—this is very, very pretty,
-don’t you think? Just like a puzzle falling into
-place. Do you remember coming here on the day
-Archie was returned?”</p>
-
-<p>“I surely do; my head was swimming, for Mrs.
-Winter sent me and I began then to suspect. She
-told me Brother Cary was in danger; of course I
-wanted to do anything to help him; and I carried<span class="pagenum" id="Page_341">[341]</span>
-a note to him. I didn’t go in, merely gave the note
-and saw him.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>I</i> saw you.”</p>
-
-<p>“You? How?”</p>
-
-<p>“Birdsall and I; we were here, in the <i>patio</i>;
-we, my dear Miss Janet, were the Danger! You
-had on a brown checked silk dress and you were
-holding a wire clipper in your hand.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir. I saw it on the grass and picked it
-up.”</p>
-
-<p>She laughed a little; but directly her cheeks reddened.
-“What must you have thought of me!”
-she murmured under her breath; and bit the lip
-that would have quivered.</p>
-
-<p>“I should like to tell you—<i>dear</i>,” he answered,
-“if you will—O Lord, forgive young men for living!
-If they are not all coming back to ask me to
-sing! But, Janet, dear, let me say it in Spanish—yes,
-<i>yes</i> if you really won’t be bored; throw me
-that mandolin.”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Rebecca leaned back in the arm-chair,
-faintly smiling, while the old, old words that
-thousands of lovers have thrilled with pain and
-hopes and dreams beyond their own power of
-speech and offered to their sweethearts, rose,
-winged by the eternal longing:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_342">[342]</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“<i>Y si te mueve á lastima mi eterno padecer,</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Como te amo, amame, bellissima mujer!</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Como te amo, amame, bellissima mujer!</i>”</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>“And what does it mean in English, Bertie?”
-said Mrs. Melville. “Can’t you translate it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Shall I?” said the colonel, his voice was careless
-enough, but not so the eyes which looked up
-at Janet Smith.</p>
-
-<p>“Not to-night, please,” said she. “I—I think
-Mr. Keatcham is expecting me to read to him a
-little. Good night. Thank you, Colonel Winter.”</p>
-
-<p>She was on her feet as she spoke; and Winter
-did not try to detain her; he had held her hand;
-and he had felt its shy pressure and caught a
-fleeting, frightened, very beautiful glance. His
-dark face paled with the intensity of his emotion.</p>
-
-<p>Janet moved away, quietly and lightly, with
-no break in her composure; but as she passed Mrs.
-Winter she bent and kissed her. And when Archie
-would have run after her a delicate jeweled
-hand was laid on his arm. “Not to-night, laddie;
-I want you to help me down the steps.”</p>
-
-<p>With her hand on the boy’s shoulder she came
-up to Rupert, and inclined her handsome head in
-Janet’s direction. “I think, by rights, that kiss
-belonged to you, <i>mon enfant</i>,” said she.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_343">[343]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XVIII<br />
-
-<small>CASA FUERTE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Winter would have said that he was too old a
-man to stay awake all night, when he had a normal
-temperature; yet he saw the stars come out
-and the stars fade on that fateful April night. He
-entered his room at the hour when midnight
-brushes the pale skirts of dawn and misguided
-cocks are vociferating their existence to an indifferent
-world. Before he came there had been a
-long council with Mercer and his aunt. Mercer,
-who had been successful in his mission, had barely
-seen his chief for a moment before a gentle but
-imperious nurse ordered him away. Winter
-caught a queer, abrupt laugh from the financier.
-The latter beckoned to him. “See you are as obedient
-as I am when your time comes,” he
-chuckled; and he chuckled again when both the
-soldier and Miss Smith blushed over his awkward
-jocoseness. Yet, the next moment he extended
-his hand with his formal, other-generation courtesy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_344">[344]</span>
-and took Miss Janet’s shapely, firm fingers
-in his own lean and nervous grasp. “Allow me to
-offer you both my sincere congratulations,” began
-he, and halted, his eyes, which seemed so
-incurious but were so keen, traveling from the
-woman’s confusion to the man’s. “I beg your
-pardon; I understood—Archie who was here,
-gave me to understand—and I heard you singing;
-you will hardly believe it, but years ago <i>I</i>
-sang that to my wife.”</p>
-
-<p>“So far as I am concerned, it <i>is</i> settled,” said
-the colonel steadily.</p>
-
-<p>“We are all,” Keatcham continued, no longer
-with any trace of embarrassment, as he touched
-the hand which he still held with his own other
-hand, “we are all, as you know, my dear young
-lady, in considerable personal peril; I regret that
-it should be on my account; but it really is not my
-fault; it is because I will not relax my pursuit of
-a great scoundrel who is dangerous to all decent
-people. But being in such danger, I think you will
-be glad afterward if you are generously frank,
-and give up something of the sex’s prerogative
-to keep a lover on the anxious seat. Excuse me if—if
-I presume on my age and my privileges as a
-patient.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_345">[345]</span>Janet lifted her sweet eyes and sent one glance
-as fleeting and light as the flash of a bird’s wing.
-“I—I—reckon it is settled,” murmured she; but
-immediately she was the nurse again. “Mr.
-Keatcham, you are staying awake much too late.
-Here is Colvin, who will see to anything you
-want. Good night.”</p>
-
-<p>It was then that Mr. Keatcham had taken the
-colonel’s breath away by kissing Janet’s hand;
-after which he shook hands with the colonel with
-a strange new cordiality, and watched them both
-go away together with a look on his gaunt face
-unlike any known to Colvin.</p>
-
-<p>Only three minutes in the hall, with the moon
-through the arched window; and his arm about
-her and the fragrance of her loosened hair against
-his cheek and her voice stirring his heartstrings
-with an exquisite pang. Only time for the immemorial
-questions of love: “Are you sure, dear,
-it is really <i>I?</i>” and “When did you first—” To
-this last she had answered with her half-humorous,
-adorable little lilt of a laugh. “Oh, I reckon
-it was—a—little—all along, ever since I read
-about your saving that poor little Filipino boy,
-like Archie; the one who was your servant in
-Manila, and going hungry for him on the march<span class="pagenum" id="Page_346">[346]</span>
-and jumping into the rapids to save him—when
-you were lame, too—”</p>
-
-<p>Here the colonel burst in with a groan: “Oh,
-that monstrous newspaper liar! The ‘dear little
-Filipino boy’ was a married man; and I didn’t
-go hungry for him, and I didn’t jump into the
-river to save him. It wasn’t more than wading
-depth—I only swore at him for an idiot and told
-him to <i>walk</i> out when he tipped over his boat and
-was floundering about. And he <i>did</i>! He was the
-limit as a liar—”</p>
-
-<p>To his relief, the most sensible as well as the
-most lovable woman in the world had burst into
-a delicious fit of laughter; and returned: “Oh,
-well, you <i>would</i> have jumped in and saved him
-if the water had been deep; it wasn’t <i>your</i> fault
-it was shallow!” And just at this point Mercer
-and Aunt Rebecca must needs come with a most
-unusual premonitory racket, and Janet had fled.</p>
-
-<p>Afterward had come the council. All the coil
-had been unraveled. Birdsall appeared in person,
-as sleek, smiling and complacent over his blunders
-as ever. One of his first sentences was a declaration
-of trust in Miss Smith.</p>
-
-<p>“I certainly went off at half-cock there,” said
-he amiably; “and just because she was so awful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_347">[347]</span>
-nice I felt obliged to suspect her; but I’ve got the
-real dog that killed the sheep this time; it’s sure
-the real Red Wull!” It appeared that he had, of
-a verity, been usefully busy. He had secured the
-mechanic who had given Atkins a plan of the
-secret passages of Casa Fuerte. He had found
-the policeman who had arrested Tracy (he swore
-because he was going too fast) and the magistrate
-who had fined him; and not only that, he had captured
-the policeman, a genuine officer, not a criminal
-in disguise, who had been Atkins’ instrument
-in kidnapping Archie. This man, whom Birdsall
-knew how to terrify completely, had confessed
-that it was purely by chance that Atkins had seen
-the boy, left outside in the motor-car. Atkins, so
-he said, had pretended that the boy was a tool of
-some enemies of Keatcham’s, whose secretary he
-was, trading, not for the only time, on his past
-position. In reality, Birdsall had come to believe
-Atkins knew that Keatcham was employing Mercer
-in his place.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, he knew the old gentleman was just off
-quietly with Mr. Mercer and some friends; knew
-they were all friendly, just as well as you or me,”
-declared Birdsall. He had seen Archie on the
-train, for, as the colonel remembered, he had been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_348">[348]</span>
-in the Winters’ car on the night of the robbery.
-Somehow, also, Atkins had found out about
-Archie’s disappearance from the hotel.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t absolutely put my finger on his information,”
-said Birdsall; “but I <i>suspect</i> Mrs.
-Melville Winter; I know she was talking to him,
-for one of my men saw her. The lady meant no
-harm, but she’s one of the kind that is always
-slamming the detectives and being took in by the
-rascals.”</p>
-
-<p>He argued that Mrs. Winter and Miss Smith
-knew where the boy was; for some reason they
-had let him go and were pretending not to know
-where he was. “Ain’t that so?” the detective appealed
-to Aunt Rebecca, who merely smiled, saying:
-“You’re a wonder, Mr. Birdsall!” According
-to Birdsall’s theory, Atkins was puzzled by Archie’s
-part in the affair. But he believed could he
-find the boy’s present hosts he would find Edwin
-Keatcham. It would not be the first time Keatcham
-had hidden himself, the better to spin his web
-for the trapping of his rivals. That Mercer was
-with his employer the ex-secretary had no manner
-of doubt, any more than he doubted that Mercer’s
-scheme had been to oust him and to build his own
-fortunes on Atkins’ ruin. He knew both Tracy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_349">[349]</span>
-and young Arnold very well by sight. When he
-couldn’t frighten Archie into telling anything,
-probably he went back to his first plan of shadowing
-the Winter party at the Palace. He must have
-seen Tracy here. He penetrated his disguise.
-(“He’s as sharp as the devil, I tell you, Colonel.”)
-He either followed him himself or had him followed;
-and he heard about the telephone. (“Somebody
-harking in the next room, most likely.”)
-Knowing Tracy’s intimacy with Arnold it was not
-hard for so clever and subtle a mind as Atkins’ to
-jump to the conclusion and test it in the nearest
-telephone book. (“At least that is how <i>I</i> figure it
-out, Colonel.”) Birdsall had traced the clever mechanic
-who was interrogated by the Eastern gentleman
-about to build; this man had given the lavish
-and inquisitive Easterner a plan of the secret
-passages—to use in his own future residence.
-Whether Atkins went alone or in company to the
-Casa Fuerte the detective could only surmise. He
-couldn’t tell whether his object would be mere
-blackmail, or robbery of the cipher, or assassination.
-Perhaps he found the insensible man in the
-<i>patio</i> and was tempted by the grisly opportunity;
-victim and weapon both absolutely to his hand;
-for it was established that the dagger had been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_350">[350]</span>
-shown Tracy by Mercer as a curio, and left on
-the stone bench.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps he had not found the dagger, but had
-his own means to make an end of his enemy and
-his own terror. Birdsall believed that he had accomplices,
-or at least one accomplice, with him.
-He conceived that they had lain in ambush watching
-until they saw Kito go away. Then an entry
-had been made. “Most like,” Birdsall concluded,
-“he jest flung that dagger away for you folks to
-find and suspect the domestics, say Kito, ’cause
-he was away.” But this was not all that Birdsall
-had to report. He had traced Atkins to the haunts
-of certain unsavory Italians; he had struck the
-trail, in fine. To be sure, it ran underground and
-was lost in the brick-walled and slimy-timbered
-cellars of Chinatown which harbored every sin
-and crime known to civilization or to savagery.
-What matter? By grace of his aunt’s powerful
-friend they could track the wolves even through
-those noisome burrows.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” sighed the colonel, stretching out his
-arms, with a resonant breath of relief, “we’re out
-of the maze; all we have to do now is to keep
-from being killed. Which isn’t such a plain proposition
-in ’Frisco as in Massachusetts! But I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_351">[351]</span>
-reckon we can tackle it! And then—then, my
-darling, I shall dare be happy!”</p>
-
-<p>He found himself leaning on his window-sill
-and staring like a boy on the landscape, lost in the
-lovely hallucinations of moonlight. It was no
-scene that he knew, it was a vision of old Spain;
-and by and by from yonder turret the princess,
-with violets in her loosened hair and her soft
-cheek like satin and snow, would lean and look.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse"><i>Y si te mueve á lastima mi eterno padecer.</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Como te amo, amame, bellissima mujer!</i></div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>“Ah, no, little girl,” he muttered with a shake
-of the head, “I like it better to have you a plain,
-American gentlewoman, as Aunt Becky would
-say, who could send me to battle with a nice little
-quivery smile—<i>sweetheart</i>! Oh, I’m not good
-enough for you, my dear, my dear.” He felt an
-immense humility as he contrasted his own lot
-with the loneliness of Keatcham and Mercer and
-the multitude of solitaries in the world, who had
-lost, or sadder still, had never possessed, the divine
-dream that is the only reality of the soul. As
-such thoughts moved his heart, suddenly in the
-full tide of hope and thankfulness, it stood still,
-chilled, as if by the glimpse of an iceberg in summer<span class="pagenum" id="Page_352">[352]</span>
-seas. Yet how absurd; it was only that he
-had recalled his stoical aunt’s most unexpected
-touch of superstition. Quite in jest he had asked
-her if she felt any presentiments or queer things
-in her bones to-night. He expected to be answered
-that Janet had driven every other anxiety out of
-her mind; and how was she to break it to Millicent?—or
-with some such caustic repartee. Instead,
-she had replied testily: “Yes, I <i>do</i>, Bertie.
-I feel—horrid! I feel as if something out of the
-common awful were going to happen. It isn’t exactly
-Atkins, either. Do you reckon it could be
-the <i>I Suey When</i>, that bamboo-shoots mess we
-had for dinner?”</p>
-
-<p>Although they spent a good twenty minutes
-after that, joking over superstitions, and he had
-repeated to her some of Tracy’s and Arnold’s most
-ingenious “spooky stunts,” to make the neighborhood
-keep its distance from Casa Fuerte, and they
-had laughed freely, she as heartily as he, nevertheless
-he divined that her smile was a pretense.
-Suddenly, an unruly tremor shook his own firm
-spirits. Looking out on the stepped and lanterned
-arches of the wing, he was conscious of the same
-tragic endowment of the darkened pile, which had
-oppressed him that night, weeks before, when he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_353">[353]</span>
-had stood outside on the crest of the hill; and
-the would-be murderers might have been skulking
-in the shadows of the pepper-trees. He tried
-vainly to shake off this distempered mood. Although
-he might succeed for a moment in a lover’s
-absorption, it would come again, insidiously, seeping
-through his happiness like a fume. After futile
-attempts to sleep he rose, and still at the bidding
-of his uncanny and tormenting impulse he took his
-bath and dressed himself for the day. By this
-time the ashen tints of dawn were in his chamber
-and on the fields outside. He stood looking at
-the unloveliest aspect of nature, a landscape on the
-sunless side, before the east is red. The air felt
-lifeless; there were no depths in the pale sky; the
-azure was a flat tint, opaque and thin, like a poor
-water-color. While he gazed the motionless trees,
-live-oaks and olives and palms, were shaken as by
-a mighty wind; the pepper plumes tossed and
-streamed and tangled like a banner; the great elms
-along the avenue bent over in a breaking strain.
-Yet the silken cord of the Holland window-shade
-did not so much as swing. There was not a wing’s
-breath of air. But gradually the earth and cloud
-vibrated with a strange grinding noise which has
-been described a hundred times, but never adequately;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_354">[354]</span>
-a sickening crepitation, as of the rocks in
-the hills scraping and splintering. Before the
-mind could question the sound, there succeeded
-an anarchy of uproar. In it was jumbled the crash
-of trees and buildings, the splintering crackle of
-glass, the boom of huge chimneys falling and of
-vast explosions, the hiss of steam, the hurling of
-timbers and bricks and masses of stone or sand,
-and the awful rush of frantic water escaping from
-engine or main.</p>
-
-<p>“’Quake, sure’s you’re born!” said the colonel
-softly.</p>
-
-<p>Now that his invisible peril was real, was upon
-him, his spirits leaped up to meet it. He looked
-coolly about him, noting in his single glance that
-the house was standing absolutely stanch, neither
-reeling nor shivering; and that the chimney just
-opposite his eye had not misplaced a brick. In
-the same instant he caught up his revolver and
-ran at his best pace from the room. The hall was
-firm under his hurrying feet. As he passed the
-great arched opening on the western balcony he
-saw an awful sight. Diagonally across from Casa
-Fuerte was the great house of the California magnate
-who did not worry his contractor with demands
-for Colonial honesty of workmanship as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_355">[355]</span>
-well as Colonial architecture. The stately mansion
-with its beautiful piazzas and delicate harmony
-of pillar and pediment, shone white and
-placid on the eye for a second; then rocked in
-ghastly wise and collapsed like a house of cards.
-Simultaneously a torchlike flame streamed into
-the air. A woeful din of human anguish pierced
-the inanimate tumult of wreck and crash.</p>
-
-<p>“Bully for Casa Fuerte!” cried the soldier, who
-now was making a frenzied speed to the other
-side of the house. He cast a single glance toward
-the door which he knew belonged to Janet’s room;
-and he thought of the boy, but he ran first to his
-old aunt. He didn’t need to go the whole way. She
-came out of her door, Janet and Archie at her
-side. They were all perfectly calm, although in
-very light and semi-oriental attire. Archie plainly
-had just plunged out of bed. His eyes were dancing
-with excitement.</p>
-
-<p>“This house is a dandy, ain’t it, Uncle Bertie?”
-he exclaimed. “Mr. Arnold told me all about the
-way his father built it; he said it wouldn’t bat its
-eye for an earthquake. It didn’t either; but that
-house opposite is just kindling-wood! Say! here’s
-Cousin Cary; and—look, Uncle Bertie, Mr.
-Keatcham has got up and he’s all dressed. Hullo,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_356">[356]</span>
-Colvin! Don’t be scared. It’s only a ’quake!”
-Colvin grinned a sickly grin and stammered,
-“Yes, sir, quite so, sir.” Not an earthquake could
-shake Colvin out of his manners.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you able to do this, Mr. Keatcham?”
-young Arnold called breathlessly, plunging into
-the <i>patio</i> to which they had all instinctively gravitated.
-Keatcham laughed a short, grunting laugh.
-“Don’t you understand, this is no little every-day
-’quake? Look out! Is there a way you can look
-and not see a spout of flame? I’ve got to go
-down-town. Are the machines all right?”</p>
-
-<p>“We must find Randall; the poor soul has a
-mortal terror of ’quakes—” Aunt Rebecca’s well-bred
-accents were unruffled; she appeared a
-thought stimulated, nothing more; danger always
-acted as tonic on Winter nerves—“Archie, you
-go put your clothes on this minute, honey. And
-I suppose we ought to look up Millicent.”</p>
-
-<p>The colonel, however, had barely set foot on
-the threshold when Mrs. Melville appeared, propelling
-Randall, whom she had rescued from the
-maid’s closet where she was cowering behind
-her neat frocks, momently expecting death,
-but decently ready for it in gown and shoes. Mrs.
-Melville herself, in the disorder of the shock, had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_357">[357]</span>
-merely added her best Paris hat and a skeleton
-bustle to her dainty nightgear. She had not forgotten
-her kimono; she had only forgotten to don
-it; and it draggled over her free arm. But her
-dignity was intact. The instant she beheld her
-kindred she demanded of them, as if they were
-responsible, whether <i>this</i> was a sample of the
-Californian climate. Keatcham blushed and fled
-with Colvin and the giggling Arnold and Archie,
-who were too polite to giggle.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Winter put on her eye-glasses. “Millicent,”
-said she in the gentlest of tones, “your
-bustle is on crooked.”</p>
-
-<p>One wild glance at the merciless mirror in the
-carved pier-glass did Mrs. Melville give, and,
-then, without a word, she fled.</p>
-
-<p>“Randall,” said Mrs. Winter, “you look very
-nice; come and help me dress. There will most
-likely be some more shocks.”</p>
-
-<p>Randall, trembling in every limb, but instinctively
-assuming a composed mien, followed the
-undaunted old lady.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel was going in another direction,
-having heard a telephone bell. He was most anxious
-to put himself into communication with Birdsall,
-because not even during the earthquake had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_358">[358]</span>
-he forgotten an uglier peril; and it had occurred
-to him that Atkins was of a temper not to be
-frightened by the convulsions of order; but rather
-to make his account of it. Nor did the message
-through the telephone tend to reassure him.</p>
-
-<p>The man at the other end of the telephone was
-Birdsall. No telling how long the telephone service
-would keep up, he reported; wires were down
-around the corner; worse, the water mains were
-spouting; and from where he stood since he felt
-the first shock he had counted thirty-six fires.
-Ten of them were down in the quarter where some
-of his men had homes; and a field-glass had shown
-that the houses were all tossed about there; he
-couldn’t keep his men steady; it seemed inhuman
-to ask them to stay when their wives and children
-might be dying; of course it was his damn
-luck to have all married men from down there.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I reckon you will have to let them go;
-but watch out,” begged the colonel, “for you
-know the men we are after will take advantage
-of general disorder to get in their dirty work.
-Now is the most dangerous time.”</p>
-
-<p>Birdsall knew it; he had had intimations that
-some men were trying to sneak up the hill; they
-had been turned back. They pretended to be some<span class="pagenum" id="Page_359">[359]</span>
-wandering railway workers; but Birdsall distrusted
-them. He—No use to ring! Vain to tap
-the carriage of the receiver! The telephone was
-dead, jarred out of existence somewhere beyond
-their ken.</p>
-
-<p>By this time the cold sunlight of the woefulest
-day that San Francisco had ever seen was spread
-over the earth. The city was spotted with blood-red
-spouts of flames. The ruin of the earthquake
-had hardly been visible from their distance, although
-it was ugly enough and of real importance;
-but, even in the brief space which they in
-Casa Fuerte had waited before they should set
-forth, fires had enkindled in all directions, most
-dreadful to see; nor did there seem to be any
-check upon them.</p>
-
-<p>Tracy had waked the domestic staff, and, dazed
-but stoical, they were getting breakfast. But
-Keatcham could not wait; he was in a cold fury
-of haste to get to the town.</p>
-
-<p>He had consented to wait for his breakfast under
-Miss Smith’s representation that it would be
-ready at once and her assurance that he couldn’t
-work through the day without it.</p>
-
-<p>“Happily, Archie,” explained Tracy, whose unquenchable
-college levity no earthquake could affect,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_360">[360]</span>
-“happily my domestic jewel has been stocked
-up with rice and oatmeal, two of the most nutritious
-of foods; and Miss Janet is making coffee
-on her traveling coffee pot for the Boss. That’s
-alcohol, and independent of gas-mains. Lucky;
-for the gas-range is out of action, and we have to
-try charcoal. Notice one interesting thing, Archie?
-Old Keatcham, whom we were fighting
-tooth and nail three weeks ago, is now bossing
-us as ruthlessly as a foot-ball coach; and Cousin
-Cary is taking his slack talk as meek as a freshman.
-Great old boy, Keatcham! And—oh, I say!
-has any one gone to the rescue of the Rogerses?
-I saw Kito speeding over that way from the garage
-and Haley hiking after him. I hope the nine
-small yellow domestics are not burned at the stake
-with Rogers; the bally fire-trap is blazing like a
-tar-barrel!”</p>
-
-<p>As it happened, the colonel had despatched a
-small party to their neighbor’s aid. Haley and
-Kito were not among them; they were to guard
-the garage which was too vital a point in their
-household economy to leave unprotected. Nevertheless,
-Haley and Kito did both run away, leaving
-a Mexican helper to watch; and when they
-returned they were breathless and Haley’s face<span class="pagenum" id="Page_361">[361]</span>
-was covered with blood. He was carefully carrying
-something covered with a carriage-robe in his
-hand.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve the honor to report, sir,” Haley mumbled,
-stiff and straight in his military posture, a very
-grimy and blood-stained hand at salute, “I’ve the
-honor to report, sor, that Private Kito and me
-discovered two sushpicious characters making up
-the hillside by the sekrut road. We purshooed
-thim, sor, and whin they wu’dn’t halt we fired on
-thim, sor, ixploding this here bum which wint
-off whin the hindmost man tumbled.”</p>
-
-<p>Kito smilingly flung aside the carriage-robe,
-disclosing the still smoking shell of an ingenious
-round bomb, very similar to those used in fireworks.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel examined it closely; it was an
-ugly bit of dynamite craft.</p>
-
-<p>“Any casualties, Sergeant?” the colonel asked
-grimly.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sor. The man wid the bum was kilt be
-the ixplosion; the other man was hit by Private
-Kito and wounded in the shoulder but escaped. I
-mesilf have a confusion on me right arrum, me
-ankle is sprained; and ivery tooth in me head is
-in me pockit! That’s all.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_362">[362]</span>“Report to Miss Smith at the hospital, Sergeant.
-Any further report?”</p>
-
-<p>“I wu’d like to riccommind Private Kito for
-honorable minshun for gallanthry.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall certainly remember him; and you also,
-Sergeant, in any report that I may make. Look
-after the garage, Kito.”</p>
-
-<p>Kito bowed and retired, beaming, while Haley
-hobbled into the house. The consequences of the
-attack made on the garage did not appear at once.
-One was that young Arnold had already brought
-the touring-car into the <i>patio</i> in the absence of
-Haley and Kito. Another was that he and Tracy
-and Kito all repaired to the scene of the explosion
-to examine the dead man’s body. They returned
-almost immediately, but for a few moments there
-was no one of the house in the court. The colonel
-went to Keatcham in a final effort to dissuade him
-from going into the city until after he himself had
-gone to the Presidio and returned with a guard.
-He represented as forcibly as he could the danger
-of Keatcham’s appearance during a time of such
-tumult and lawlessness.</p>
-
-<p>“We are down to the primeval passions now,”
-he pleaded. “Do you suppose if it had been Haley
-instead of that dago out there who was killed that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_363">[363]</span>
-we could have punished the murderer? Not unless
-we did it with our own hands. They are
-maybe lying in wait at the first street-corner now.
-If you will only wait—”</p>
-
-<p>Keatcham chopped off his sentence without
-ceremony, not irritably, but with the brusquerie
-of one whose time is too precious for dilatory
-amenities.</p>
-
-<p>“Will the <i>fire</i> wait?” he demanded. “Will the
-thieves and toughs and ruffians whom we have to
-crush before they realize their strength, will <i>they</i>
-wait? This is <i>my</i> town, Winter, the only town I
-care a rap for; and I propose to help save it. I
-can. Danger? Of course there is danger; there
-is danger in every battle; but do you keep out of
-battles where you belong because you may get
-killed? This is my affair; if I get killed it is in
-the way of business, and I can’t help it! No, Arnold,
-I won’t have your father’s son mixed up in
-my fights; you can’t go.”</p>
-
-<p>“Somebody has to run the machine, sir,” insinuated
-young Arnold with a coaxing smile;
-“and I fancy I shouldn’t be my father’s son if I
-didn’t look after my guest—not very long; he’d
-cut me out. Tracy is going, too, he’s armed—”</p>
-
-<p>“You are not both going,” said the colonel;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_364">[364]</span>
-“somebody with a head on him must stay here to
-guard the ladies.”</p>
-
-<p>He would have detailed both Tracy and Mercer;
-but Mercer could really help Keatcham better
-than any one in any business arrangements which
-might need to be made. And Keatcham plainly
-wished his company. Had not the situation been
-so grimly serious Winter could have laughed at
-the grotesque reversal of their conditions; Tracy
-and Arnold did laugh; they were all taking their
-orders from the man who had been their defeated
-prisoner a little while back. Mercer alone kept
-his melancholy poise; he had obtained the aim of
-years; he was not sure but his revenge was subtler
-and completer than he had dared to hope. Being
-a zealot he was possessed by his dreams. Suppose
-he had converted this relentless and tremendous
-power to his own way of faith; what mightn’t he
-hope to accomplish? Meanwhile, so far as the
-business in hand was concerned, he believed in
-Keatcham and in Keatcham’s methods of help; he
-bowed to the innate power of the man; and he
-was as simply obedient and loyal as Kito would
-have been to his feudal lord.</p>
-
-<p>In a very brief time all the arrangements were
-made; the four men went into the <i>patio</i> to enter<span class="pagenum" id="Page_365">[365]</span>
-the touring-car. They walked up to the empty
-machine. The colonel stepped into the front seat
-of the machine. Something in the noise of the
-engine which was panting and straining against
-its control, some tiny sibilant undertone which any
-other ear would have missed, warned his; he bent
-quickly. A dark object gyrated above the heads
-of the other two just mounting the long step; it
-landed with a prodigious splash in the fountain,
-flying into a multitude of sputtering atoms and
-hurling a great column of water high up in air.
-Unheeding its shrieking clamor, the soldier
-sprang over the side of the car, darted through
-the great arched doorway out upon the terrace
-toward a clump of rubber-trees. He fired; again
-he fired.</p>
-
-<p>In every catastrophe the spectators’ minds lose
-some parts of the action. There are blanks to be
-supplied by no one. Every one of the men and
-women present on that fatal morning had a different
-story. Colvin was packing; he could only
-remember the deafening roar and the shouting;
-and when he got down-stairs and saw—he turned
-deadly sick; his chief impression is the backs of
-people and the way their hands would shake.
-Janet Smith, inside, dressing Haley’s wounds,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_366">[366]</span>
-was first warned by the tumult and cries; she as
-well as Archie and Haley who were with her
-could see nothing until they got outside. All
-Mrs. Melville saw was the glistening back of the
-car and Mercer stepping into the car and instantly
-lurching backward. The explosion seemed to her
-simultaneous with Mercer’s entering the car. But
-Mrs. Rebecca Winter, who perhaps had the coolest
-head of all, and who was standing on the dais
-of the arcade exactly opposite the car, distinctly
-saw Keatcham with an amazing exertion of vigor
-for a man just risen from a sick-bed, and with a
-kind of whirling motion, literally hurl Mercer out
-of the car. She is sure of this because of one
-homely little detail, sickening in its very homeliness.
-As he clutched Mercer Keatcham’s soft
-gray hat dropped off and the light burnished the
-bald dome of his head. In the space of that glance
-she heard a crackle and a roar and Kito screamed
-in Japanese, running in from the carriage side.
-She can not tell whether Tracy or Arnold reached
-the mangled creature on the pavement first. Arnold
-only remembers how the carriage-robe
-flapped in Tracy’s shaking hands before he flung
-it over the man. Tracy’s fair skin was a streaky,
-bluish white, and his under jaw kept moving up<span class="pagenum" id="Page_367">[367]</span>
-and down like that of a fish out of water, while
-he gasped, never uttering a sound.</p>
-
-<p>Young Arnold was trembling so that his hands
-shook when he would have raised the wounded
-man. Mercer alone was composed although
-deathly pale. He had the presence of mind to
-throw the harmless fragments of the bomb into
-the fountain and to examine the interior of the
-car lest there should be more of destruction hidden
-therein. Then he approached the heap on the
-flags; but Keatcham was able to motion him
-away, saying in his old voice, not softened in the
-least: “Don’t you do that! I’m all in. No use.
-They got me. But it won’t do them any good;
-you boys know that will you witnessed; it gives a
-fifty thousand for the arrest and conviction or the
-killing of Atkins; his own cutthroats will betray
-him for that. But—where’s Winter? You damn
-careless fools didn’t let <i>him</i> get hurt?”</p>
-
-<p>“Shure, sor, he didn’t let himsilf git hurted,”
-Haley blurted out; he had run in after Miss
-Smith, brandy bottle in hand; “’tis the murdering
-dagoes is gettin’ hurted off there behind the big
-rubber-trees; I kin see the dead legs of thim, this
-minnit. ’Tis a grand cool shot the colonel is, sor.”</p>
-
-<p>“Bring him in, let them go; they were only<span class="pagenum" id="Page_368">[368]</span>
-tools,” panted Keatcham weakly; but the brandy
-revived him; and his lips curled in a faint smile
-as Janet Smith struck a match to heat the teaspoonful
-of water for her hypodermic. “Make it
-good and strong, give me time to say something
-to Mercer and Winter—there he comes; good
-runners those boys are!”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_368fp.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">He kept death at bay by the sheer force of his will. Page <a href="#Page_368">368</a></p>
-
-<p>Tracy and Arnold, acting on a common unspoken
-impulse, had dashed after Winter and
-were pushing him forward between them. Keatcham
-was nearly spent, but he rallied to say the
-words in his mind. He kept death at bay by the
-sheer force of his will. When Winter knelt down
-beside him, with a poignant memory of another
-time in the same place when he had knelt beside
-a seemingly dying man, and gently touched the
-unmarred right hand lying on the carriage-robe,
-he could still form a smile with his stiff lips and
-mutter: “Only thing about me isn’t in tatters;
-of course you touched it and didn’t try to lift me
-where I’m all in pieces. You always understood.
-Listen! You, too, Mercer. Winter knows the
-things I’m bound to have go through. I’ve explained
-them to him. You’ll be my executors and
-trustees? A hundred thousand a year; not too
-big a salary for the work—you can do it. It’s a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_369">[369]</span>
-bigger job than the army one, Winter. Warnebold
-will look after the other end. He’s narrow
-but he is straight. I’ve made it worth his while.
-Some loose ends—it can’t be helped now. Maybe
-you’ll find out there are more difficulties in administering
-a big fortune than you fancied; and
-that it isn’t the easiest thing in the world helping
-fools who can’t ... help themselves. There
-are all those Tidewater idiots ... made me
-read about ... you’ll have to attend to them,
-Mercer ... old woman in the queer clothes
-... chorus girl ... those old ladies who
-had one egg between them for breakfast ...
-you’ll see to them all?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Mercer, looking down on the
-shrunken features with a look of pain and bewilderment.
-“Yes, suh, I’ll do my best.”</p>
-
-<p>“And—we’re even?”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon I am obliged to call it so, suh,” returned
-Mercer with a long, gasping sigh, “but—my
-Lord! you’d better have let <i>me</i> go!”</p>
-
-<p>“Very likely,” said Keatcham dryly, “the city
-needs me. Well, Winter, you must look after
-that. I’ve been thinking why a man throws his
-life away as I did; he <i>has</i> to, unless he’s a poltroon.
-He can’t count whether he’s more useful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_370">[370]</span>
-than the one he saves ... he has simply <i>got</i>
-to save him ... you were a good deal right,
-Winter, about not doing the evil thing to get the
-good. No, it’s a bad time for me to be taken; but
-it’s an honorable discharge.... Helen will
-be glad ... you know I’m not a pig, Winter
-... do what I tried to do ... where’s my
-kind nurse?” Janet was trying by almost imperceptible
-movements to edge a pillow under his
-shoulders; he was past turning his head, but his
-eyes moved toward her. “I’ve left you ... a
-wedding gift ... if I lived ... given to
-you; but made it safe, anyhow. Mercer?”</p>
-
-<p>His voice had grown so feeble and came in such
-gasps from his torn and laboring chest that Mercer
-bent close to his lips to hear the struggling
-sentences. “Mercer,” he whispered, “I want ...
-just ... to tell you ... <i>you didn’t convert
-me</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>Thus, having made amends to his own will,
-having also, let us humbly hope, made amends
-to that greater and wiser Will which is of more
-merciful and wider vision that our weakness can
-comprehend, Edwin Keatcham very willingly
-closed his eyes on earth.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_371">[371]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIX<br />
-
-<small>EXTRACT FROM A LETTER</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>From Mrs. Rebecca Winter to Mrs. John S. G.
-Winslow,</p>
-
-<p class="right">Fairport, Iowa.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>And it was delightful to discover that you were
-so distressed about me. I must be getting a trifle
-maudlin in my old age, for I have had a lump in
-my throat every time I have thought of Johnny
-and you actually starting out to find me; I am
-thankful my telegram (Please, Peggy, do not
-call it a <i>wire</i> again—to me! I loathe these verbal
-indolences) reached you at Omaha in time to stop
-you.</p>
-
-<p>Really, we have not had hardships. Thanks to
-Israel Putnam Arnold! I have a very admiring
-gratitude for that man! In these days of degeneracy
-he builded a stanch enduring house. With
-union labor, too! I don’t see how he contrived to
-do it. Generally, when they build houses here,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_372">[372]</span>
-they scamp the underpinning and weaken the
-joists and paint over the dirt instead of washing
-it off; and otherwise deserve to be killed. The unfortunate
-man opposite had just that kind of
-house, which tumbled down and burned up, at
-once; but, alas! it killed some of the people in it,
-not the guilty masons and carpenters.</p>
-
-<p>Our chimneys have been inspected and we are
-now legally as well as actually sound; but we did
-not suffer. We cooked out on the sidewalk, and
-supplemented our cooking with young Tracy’s
-stove.</p>
-
-<p>I told you of Janet’s engagement. Confidentially,
-my dear Peggy, I am a bit responsible.
-They met by chance on the train; and I assure
-you, although chance might have parted us, I did
-not let it. I clung to Nephew Bertie. I’m sure he
-wondered why. I knew better than to let him
-suspect. But a success you can’t share is like a
-rose without a smell. So I confess to you, <i>I</i> have
-made this match. But when you see Millicent she
-will tell you that <i>she</i> helped things along. She
-has abused Janet like a pickpocket; but now, since
-she has discovered Janet didn’t draw the Daughters’
-caricature of her, she regards her as one of
-the gems of the century.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_373">[373]</span>We are recovering from the terrible events of
-which we wrote. It is certainly a relief that Atkins
-is killed. He was one of the two scoundrels
-who sneaked into the <i>patio</i> and put the bombs
-into the automobile. Bertie shot him. You have
-no doubt heard all about Mr. Keatcham’s death.
-He was killed by the man whose wickedness he
-had unconsciously fostered. He did not know it,
-but I make no doubt his swollen fortune and the
-unscrupulous daring of its acquiring had a great
-influence in corrupting his secretary.</p>
-
-<p>And his corruption was his master’s undoing.
-I must say I sympathize with young Tracy, who
-said last night: “I feel as if I had been put to soak
-in crime! That bomb was the limit. In future,
-me for common or garden virtue; it may be tame
-but I prefer tameness to delirium tremens!”</p>
-
-<p>I used to think that I should like to match my
-wits against a first-class criminal intellect; God
-forgive me for the wish! I have been matching
-wits for the last month; and never putting on my
-shoes without looking in them for a baby bomblet
-or feeling a twinge of indigestion without darkly
-suspecting the cook—who is really the best creature
-in the world, sent Mr. Arnold by a good
-Chinese friend of mine. (I had a chance to do a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_374">[374]</span>
-good turn to my friend, by the way, during the
-earthquake and thus repay some of his to me.)</p>
-
-<p>Archie is well and cheerful. Isn’t it like the
-Winter temperament to lose its melancholy in
-such horrors as we have seen? Archie is distinctly
-happier since he came to California. As
-for Janet and Rupert—oh, well, my dear, you
-and Johnny <i>know</i>! The house has been full of
-people, and we have had several friends of our
-own for a day or two. I got a recipe for a delicious
-tea-cake from Mrs. Wigglesworth of Boston.
-She didn’t save anything but her furs and
-her kimono and a bridge set, besides what she
-had on; she packed her trunk with great care and
-nobody would take it down-stairs. Of course she
-saved her bag of jewels, which reminds me that
-poor Mr. Keatcham left Janet some pearls—that
-is, the money for them. He was very much attached
-to her.</p>
-
-<p>We buried him on the crest of the hill; later,
-when more settled times shall come, he may take
-another and last journey to that huge mausoleum
-where his wife and mother are buried. Poor
-things! it is to be hoped they had no taste living
-or else that they can’t see now how hideous and
-flamboyant is their last costly resting place. But<span class="pagenum" id="Page_375">[375]</span>
-if Keatcham hadn’t a taste for the fine arts he had
-compensating qualities. I shall never forget the
-night of his burial. It was a “wonderful great
-night of stars,” as Stevenson says. A poor little
-tired-out clergyman, in a bedraggled surplice,
-who had been reading prayers over people for the
-last ten hours and was fit to drop, hurried through
-the service; and the town the dead man loved was
-flaming miles beyond miles. About the grave was
-none of his blood, none of his ancient friends, but
-the men I believe he would have chosen—men
-who had fought him and then had fought for him
-faithfully. They were haggard and spent with
-fighting the fire; and they went from his burial
-back to days and nights of desperate effort. He
-had fought and lost and yet did not lose at the
-last, but won, snatching victory out of defeat as
-he was wont to do all his life. The heavy burdens
-which have dropped from his shoulders these
-others whom he chose will carry, maybe more
-humbly, perhaps not so capably, but quite as courageously.
-And it is singular how his influence persists,
-how it touches Kito and Haley, as well as
-the others.</p>
-
-<p>“Shure,” said honest Haley (whose wit you are
-likely to sample in the near future, for he has<span class="pagenum" id="Page_376">[376]</span>
-elected to be the Rupert Winters’ chauffeur; they
-don’t know it yet, but they <i>will</i> when it is time);
-“shure,” says he, “whin thot man so mashed up
-there ye cudn’t move him for fear ye’d lose the
-main parrt of him, whin <i>he</i> was thinkin’ of the
-town and nothin’ else, I hadn’t the heart to be
-complainin’ for the loss of a few teeth and a few
-limps about me! An’ I fair wu’ked like the divil.
-So did Kito, who’s a dacint Jap gintleman and no
-haythin at all.”</p>
-
-<p>Poor Keatcham, he had no childhood and his
-wife died too soon to revive the fragrance of his
-youth; but I can’t help but think he had a reticent,
-awkward, shy sort of heart somewhere about him.
-Well, he was what Millicent would call “a compelling
-personality.” I use plain language and I
-call him a great man. He won the lion’s share because
-he was the lion. And yet, poor Lion, his
-share was a lonely life and a tragic death.</p>
-
-<p class="center">THE END</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1">FOOTNOTES:</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[A]</a> Of course, no allusions are made to any real M. 20139.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[B]</a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container2">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">So still and calm the night is,</div>
-<div class="indent">The very winds asleep,</div>
-<div class="verse">My heart’s so tender sentinel</div>
-<div class="indent">His watch and ward doth keep.</div>
-<div class="verse">And on the wings of zephyrs soft</div>
-<div class="indent">That wander how they will,</div>
-<div class="indent">To thee, O woman fair, to thee</div>
-<div class="indent">My prayers go fluttering still.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Oh, take the heart’s love to thy heart</div>
-<div class="indent">Of one that doth adore!</div>
-<div class="verse">Have pity, add not to the flame</div>
-<div class="indent">That burns thy troubadour!</div>
-<div class="verse">And if compassion stirs thy breast</div>
-<div class="indent">For my eternal woe,</div>
-<div class="indent">Oh, as I love thee, loveliest</div>
-<div class="indent">Of women, love me so!</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-</div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="transnote">
-<p class="ph1">TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:</p>
-
-<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
-
-<p>Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.</p>
-
-<p>Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.</p>
-</div></div>
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LION&#039;S SHARE ***</div>
-<div style='text-align:left'>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Updated editions will replace the previous one&#8212;the old editions will
-be renamed.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG&#8482;
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for an eBook, except by following
-the terms of the trademark license, including paying royalties for use
-of the Project Gutenberg trademark. If you do not charge anything for
-copies of this eBook, complying with the trademark license is very
-easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose such as creation
-of derivative works, reports, performances and research. Project
-Gutenberg eBooks may be modified and printed and given away&#8212;you may
-do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks not protected
-by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the trademark
-license, especially commercial redistribution.
-</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:1em; font-size:1.1em; text-align:center'>START: FULL LICENSE</div>
-<div style='text-align:center;font-size:0.9em'>THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE</div>
-<div style='text-align:center;font-size:0.9em'>PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-To protect the Project Gutenberg&#8482; mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase &#8220;Project
-Gutenberg&#8221;), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person
-or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.B. &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation (&#8220;the
-Foundation&#8221; or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg&#8482; mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg&#8482; work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country other than the United States.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg&#8482; work (any work
-on which the phrase &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; appears, or with which the
-phrase &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-</div>
-
-<blockquote>
- <div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
- other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
- whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
- of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
- at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. 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.
- </div>
-</blockquote>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase &#8220;Project
-Gutenberg&#8221; associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg&#8482; License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg&#8482;.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; License.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg&#8482; work in a format
-other than &#8220;Plain Vanilla ASCII&#8221; or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg&#8482; website
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original &#8220;Plain
-Vanilla ASCII&#8221; or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg&#8482; works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-provided that:
-</div>
-
-<div style='margin-left:0.7em;'>
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &#8226; You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg&#8482; works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg&#8482; trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, &#8220;Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation.&#8221;
- </div>
-
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &#8226; You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg&#8482;
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
- works.
- </div>
-
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &#8226; You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
- </div>
-
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &#8226; You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg&#8482; works.
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the manager of
-the Project Gutenberg&#8482; trademark. Contact the Foundation as set
-forth in Section 3 below.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain &#8220;Defects,&#8221; such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the &#8220;Right
-of Replacement or Refund&#8221; described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you &#8216;AS-IS&#8217;, WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg&#8482; work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg&#8482; work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg&#8482;&#8217;s
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg&#8482; collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg&#8482; and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at www.gutenberg.org.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non-profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation&#8217;s EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state&#8217;s laws.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-The Foundation&#8217;s business office is located at 809 North 1500 West,
-Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up
-to date contact information can be found at the Foundation&#8217;s website
-and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; depends upon and cannot survive without widespread
-public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine-readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular state
-visit <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/donate/">www.gutenberg.org/donate</a>.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Please check the Project Gutenberg web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg&#8482; eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Most people start at our website which has the main PG search
-facility: <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This website includes information about Project Gutenberg&#8482;,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-</div>
-
-</div>
-</body>
-</html>
diff --git a/old/old/68875-h/images/cover.jpg b/old/old/68875-h/images/cover.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 8cc4b35..0000000
--- a/old/old/68875-h/images/cover.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/old/68875-h/images/coversmall.jpg b/old/old/68875-h/images/coversmall.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index ed12bef..0000000
--- a/old/old/68875-h/images/coversmall.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/old/68875-h/images/i_016fp.jpg b/old/old/68875-h/images/i_016fp.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 9931adf..0000000
--- a/old/old/68875-h/images/i_016fp.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/old/68875-h/images/i_066fp.jpg b/old/old/68875-h/images/i_066fp.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index f490b7c..0000000
--- a/old/old/68875-h/images/i_066fp.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/old/68875-h/images/i_136fp.jpg b/old/old/68875-h/images/i_136fp.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index e514f09..0000000
--- a/old/old/68875-h/images/i_136fp.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/old/68875-h/images/i_211fp.jpg b/old/old/68875-h/images/i_211fp.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index e3ebc68..0000000
--- a/old/old/68875-h/images/i_211fp.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/old/68875-h/images/i_368fp.jpg b/old/old/68875-h/images/i_368fp.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index e8211bc..0000000
--- a/old/old/68875-h/images/i_368fp.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/old/68875-h/images/i_frontis.jpg b/old/old/68875-h/images/i_frontis.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index e5e7c40..0000000
--- a/old/old/68875-h/images/i_frontis.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/old/68875-h/images/i_title.jpg b/old/old/68875-h/images/i_title.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index a2200f8..0000000
--- a/old/old/68875-h/images/i_title.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ