[Illustration: The Burglar]




The Burglar and the Blizzard

_A CHRISTMAS STORY_

BY ALICE DUER MILLER


AUTHOR OF “THE BLUE ARCH,” ETC.

WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY
CHARLOTTE HARDING

Hearst’s International Library Co., Inc.


1914




[Illustration]


Contents

 Chapter I
 Chapter II
 Chapter III
 Chapter IV
 Chapter V
 Chapter VI
 Chapter VII




ILLUSTRATIONS




 The Burglar
 “It was a young lady who disposed of the silver”
 “Good God,” he cried, “what a night you have had”
 He let McVay out of the closet
 She was dressed in his sister’s sables—ready for departure
 “Please move a little back, Holland,” he said, “I want to get nearer the fire”
 “My dear fellow—pray allow me”
 “I have here a slight token, in honor of the day”




The Burglar and the Blizzard




I


Geoffrey Holland stood up and for the second time surveyed the
restaurant in search of other members of his party, two fingers in the
pocket of his waistcoat, as if they had just relinquished his watch. He
was tall enough to be conspicuous and well bred enough to be
indifferent to the fact, good looking, in a bronzed, blond clean-shaven
way, and branded in the popular imagination as a young and active
millionaire.

At a neighbouring table a man lent forward and whispered to the other
men and women with him:

“Do you know who that is?—that is young Holland.”

“What, that boy! He doesn’t look as if he were out of school.”

“No,” said one of the women, elaborating the comment, “he does not look
old enough to order a dinner, let alone managing mines.”

“Oh, I guess he can order a dinner all right,” said the first man. “He
is older than he looks. He must be twenty-six.”

“What do you suppose he does with all that money?”

The first thing he did with it, at the moment, was to purchase an
evening paper, for just then he snapped his fingers at a boy, who
promptly ran to get him one.

“Well, one thing he does,” answered the man who had first given
information, “he has an apartment in this building, up stairs, and I
bet that costs him a pretty penny.”

In the meantime Holland had opened his paper, scanned the head lines,
and was about to turn to the stock quotations when a paragraph of
interest caught his eye. So marked was the gesture with which he raised
it to his eyes that his admirers at the next table noticed it, and
speculated on the subject of the paragraph.

It was headed: “Millionaires’ Summer Homes Looted,” and said further:

“Hillsborough, December 21st. The fourth in a series of daring
robberies which have been taking place in this neighbourhood during the
past month occurred last night when the residence of C. B. Vaughan of
New York was entered and valuable wines and bric-a-brac removed. The
robbery was not discovered until this morning when a shutter was
observed unfastened on the second story. On entering the watchman found
the house had been carefully gone over, and although only a few objects
seem to be missing, these are of the greatest value. The thief
apparently had plenty of time, and probably occupied the whole night in
his search. This is the more remarkable because the watchman asserts
that he spent at least an hour on the piazza during the night. How the
thief effected an entrance by the second story is not clear. During the
past five weeks the houses of L. G. Innes, T. Wilson and Abraham
Marheim have been entered in a manner almost precisely similar. There
was a report yesterday that some of the Marheim silver had been
discovered with a dealer in Boston, but that he could not identify the
person from whom he bought them further than that she was a young lady
to whom they might very well have belonged. The fact that it was a
young lady who disposed of them to him suggests that the goods must
have changed hands several times. The Marheim family is abroad, and the
servants....”

Here a waiter touched his elbow.

“Mr. and Mrs. Vaughan have come, sir,” he said.

“Send up to my apartment and tell Mrs. May we are sitting down to
dinner,” returned Holland promptly, and advanced to meet the prosperous
looking couple approaching.

“I’m afraid we are late,” said the lady, “but can you blame us? Have
you heard? We have been telegraphing to Hillsborough all the afternoon
to find out what has gone.”

“You are not late. My sister has not come down yet. I was just reading
about your robbery. Have you lost anything of value?”

“Oh, I suppose so,” said Mrs. Vaughan cheerfully, sitting down and
beginning to draw off her gloves. “We had a Van Dyke etching, and some
enamels that have gone certainly, and Charlie feels awfully about his
wine.”

“Yes,” said Mr. Vaughan gloomily. “I tell you he is going to have a
happy time with that champagne. It is the best I ever tasted.”

“Upon my word,” said Geoffrey, “they are a nice lot of countrymen up
there. Four robberies and not so much as a clue.”

“_You_ need not be afraid,” said Mrs. Vaughan rather spitefully. “In
spite of all your treasures, I don’t believe any thief would take the
trouble to climb to the top of your mountain.”

Holland’s selection of a distant hilltop for his large place pleased no
true Hillsboroughite. As an eligible bachelor he was inaccessible, and
as a property-holder he was too far away to increase the value of
Hillsborough real-estate by his wonderful lawns and gardens.

Mrs. Vaughan’s irritation did not appear to disturb Geoffrey, for he
laughed very amiably, and replied that he could only hope that the
thief was as poor a pedestrian as she seemed to imagine as he should
not like to lose any of his things; and he added that in his opinion
Vaughan ought to be starting for Hillsborough at once.

“Pooh,” said that gentleman, “I can’t go with the market in this
condition,—would lose more than the whole house is worth.”

“You would go duck-shooting in a minute,” said Holland, “and this would
be a good deal better sport.”

Mr. Vaughan ignored this remark. “The thing to do,” he said, “is to
offer a reward, a big enough reward to attract some first-class
detective.”

“All right,” said Geoffrey readily, “I’ll join you. Those other fellows
ought to be willing to put up a thousand apiece,—that will be five
thousand. Is that enough? We can have it in the papers to-morrow. What
shall I say? Five thousand dollars reward will be paid for information
leading to the conviction—and so on. I’ll go and telephone now,” and
with a promptness which surprised Mr. Vaughan, he was gone.

When he came back his sister was in her place and they were all
discussing the burglary with interest. Mrs. May, who was somewhat older
than her brother, had some of the more agreeable qualities of a gossip,
that is to say she had imagination and a good memory for detail.

“For my part,” she was saying, “I have the greatest respect and
admiration for him. Do you know he could not find anything worth taking
at the Wilsons’,—after all his trouble. I have often sat in that
drawing-room myself, and wondered if they should offer me anything in
it as a present, whether I could find something that would not actually
disgrace me. I never could. He evidently felt the same way. The Wilsons
make a great to-do about the house having been entered, and tell you
how he must have been frightened away,—frightened away by the
hideousness of their things! Those woolly paintings on wood, and the
black satin parasol that turns out to be an umbrella stand.”

“My dear Florence,” said her brother mildly, “how can a black satin
parasol be an umbrella-stand?”

“Exactly, Geof, how can it? That is what you say all through the
Wilsons’ house. How can it be! However it is not really black satin,
only painted to resemble it. The waste paper baskets look like trunks
of trees, and the match boxes like old shoes. Nothing in the house is
really what it looks like, except the beds; they look uncomfortable,
and some one who had stayed there told me that they were.”

“Dear Florence,” said Mrs. Vaughan, “is it not like her kindness of
heart—it runs in the family—to try and make my burglary into a
compliment, but really though it is flattering to be robbed by a
connoisseur I could forego the honour. You see you have taken away my
last hope that my very best escaped his attention.”

“No, indeed, the best is all he cared for. Honestly, Jane, haven’t you
an admiration for a man of so much taste and ability? Just think, he
has entered four houses and there is not the slightest trace of him.”

“There must be _traces_ of him,” said Geoffrey. “The Inness house was
entered after that snow storm in the early part of the month. There
must have been footprints.”

“Of course,” said Mr. Vaughan, “that is what makes me think that the
watchmen are in it. It’s probably a combination of two or three of
them.”

“Well, that lets Geoffrey out,” said the irrepressible Florence. “No
one would take his watchman into any combination,—he is a thousand and
two and feeble for his age. However, there is no use in discussing the
possibility, for it is not a combination of watchmen, begging your
pardon, Mr. Vaughan. It is lonely genius, a slim, dark figure in a
slouch hat. That is the way I imagine him. Do you really suppose that a
watchman would take six pair of Mrs. Inness’ best linen sheets,
embroidered in her initials, the monogram so thick that it scratches
your nose; and a beautiful light blue silk coverlet,—all just out from
Paris. I saw them when she first had them.”

“What,” said Geoffrey, addressing the other male intellect present, “do
you make of the young woman who disposed of some of the Marheim silver
in Boston?”


[Illustration: “It was a young lady who disposed of the silver”]


But it was Mrs. May who answered: “She is of course the lady of his
love—a lady doubtless of high social position in Boston. There was a
book about something like that once. He is just waiting to make one
more grand coup, rob the bank or something and then the world will be
startled by the news of their elopement. They will go and live
somewhere luxuriously in the south Pacific, and travellers will bring
home strange stories of their happiness and charm. Perhaps, though, he
would turn pirate. That would suit his style.”

“I hope,” said Holland, “that he won’t take a fancy to rob the
Hillsborough Bank, for I consider it public spirited to keep quite a
little money there. You begin to make me nervous.”

“No bank robbery would make _me_ nervous,” replied his sister, “that is
the comfort of being insignificant. I have not enough money in any bank
to know the difference, and as for my humble dwelling in Hillsborough,
who would take the trouble to rifle it when Geoffrey’s palace is within
an easy walk. Besides, I haven’t anything worth the attention of a
respectable burglar like this one.”

“Thank you,” said Geoffrey, “I’m sorry I spent so much time choosing
your Christmas present a year ago.”

“Oh, of course, Geof dear, that wonderful old silver is valuable, but
it is put away where I defy any burglar to find it. There is only my
sable coat, and I am going to send for that as soon as I have time to
have it cut over.”

“In my opinion,” said Mr. Vaughan, “the man is no longer in the
neighbourhood. He would scarcely dare try a fifth attempt while the
whole country was so aroused. You see Hillsborough has always been an
attractive place to thieves. It is such an easy place to get away
from,—three railroads within reach. A man would be pretty sure to be
able to catch a passing freight train on one of them at almost any
time, to say nothing of the increased difficulty of tracing him.”

“I don’t suppose he will ever be caught,” said Florence. “When he has
got all he wants he will simply melt away and be forgotten. If he were
caught—”

Here she was interrupted by the waiter who laid a telegram at her
plate. It had come to her brother’s apartment, and been sent down.

“Who is telegraphing me,” she said, as she tore it open. “I hope Jack
has not been breaking himself.”

Opening it, she read:

“Your house was entered about five o’clock this afternoon. Tea-set and
sable coat missing.”




II


The next evening at seven o’clock, Holland stepped out of the train on
the Hillsborough station. He wore a long fur-coat, for the morning had
been bitterly cold in New York, and though the snow was now falling in
small close flakes, the temperature had not risen appreciably, and a
wild wind was blowing.

He looked about for the figure of McFarlane, for he had telegraphed the
old man to meet him at the train with a trap, but there was no one to
be seen. The station, which in summer on the arrival of the express was
a busy scene with well dressed women and well-kept horses, was now
utterly deserted except for one native who had charge of the mails.

“Hullo, Harris,” Geoffrey sung out. “Is McFarlane here for me?”

“Ain’t seen him. Guess it’s too stormy for the old man,” Harris replied
dropping the mail bag into his wagon.

“Then you’ve got to drive me out.”

“What, all the way to your place? No, sir, I guess it is too stormy for
me, too.”

But Geoffrey at last, by the promise of three times what the trip was
worth, induced Harris to change his mind. He stepped into the mail
cart, and having stopped at the post-office to leave the bag, and at
the stable to change the cart for a sleigh, they finally set out on
their five-mile drive.

“Guess you come up to see about Mr. May’s house being robbed?” Harris
hazarded before they had gone far.

“You’re a nice lot, aren’t you?” returned Geoffrey. “Five robberies and
not a motion to catch the thief!”

“Oh, I dunno, I dunno, there is a big reward out to-day,” said Harris,
divided between pride in the notoriety and shame at the lawlessness of
his native town.

“Yes, but not by any of you.”

“Well, the boys did talk some of a vigilance committee, if any more
houses was robbed.”

“They are going to wait for him to make up his half dozen.”

“Well, to tell the truth,” said Harris, “it seems like he only went for
you city folks, and I guess the boys thought you could better afford to
lose a few things than they could to lose their sleep. That’s about the
size of it.”

Geoffrey could not but laugh. “That’s a fine spirited way to look at
it, I must say.”

“Well,” returned Harris, who appeared to have need of the monosyllable
in order to collect and arrange his ideas. “’Tain’t lack of sand
exactly, either, for most of the fellows about here thinks it is a
woman.”

“A woman?” cried Geoffrey, remembering the lady in Boston.

“Yes, _sir_,” said Harris, “a young woman. Look at the things took.
What burglar would want sheets and a lady’s coat? Besides just before
the first one happened, Will Brown, he was driving along up your way
and a young woman, pretty as a picter, Will said, slips out of the wood
and asks for a lift. Well, Will takes her some two miles, and when they
got to that piece of woods at the back of your place she says of a
sudden that she guesses she wants exercise, and will walk the rest of
the way, and out she gets, and no one has seen her since. Seems kinder
strange, no house but yours within six miles, and you away.”

“It would have seemed quite as strange if I had been at home,” returned
Geoffrey, amused at his imputation.

“Well,” Harris went on imperturbably, “you can’t tell the rights of
them stories. Will Brown, he’s a liar, just like all the Browns; still
this time he seemed to think he was telling the truth. Looks like we
were going to have a blizzard, don’t it?”

When they reached the McFarlane cottage, Mrs. McFarlane appeared
bobbing on the threshold. She was an old Scotch woman and covered all
occasions with courtesy. It appeared that Holland’s telegram had been
duly telephoned from the office, but that her husband was down with
rheumatism, the second gardener dismissed, and the “boy” allowed to go
home to spend Christmas, so that there had been no one to send.
Geoffrey suggested that she might have telephoned to the local
livery-stable, and she was at once so overcome at her own stupidity
that she could do nothing but bob and murmur, until Geoffrey sent her
away to get him something to eat.

It was about ten o’clock, when he determined to take a turn about his
house. The next day he intended removing all valuables to the vaults of
the Hillsborough bank.

It was a long walk from the cottage, and Geoffrey, as he trudged up
hill against the wind, was surprised to find how much snow had already
fallen. He had expected to return to New York the next day, but now a
fair prospect of being stalled on the way presented itself. It took him
so much longer to reach the house than he had supposed, that he
abandoned all idea of entering it. It stood before him grimly like a
mountain of grey stone, its face plastered with snow. He walked round
it, feeling each door and window to be sure of the fastenings. Once
past the corner, the house sheltered him from the wind. He was
conscious of that exhilaration snow storms so often bring, while at the
same time the atmosphere of desolation that surrounds all shut up
houses, even one’s own, took hold of him. Unconsciously he stopped and
felt in his pocket for his revolver, and at the same moment, faintly,
in the interior of the house, he heard a clock strike.

The sound was not perhaps alarming in itself, yet it sounded ominously
in Geoffrey’s ears. He recognised, or thought he recognised, the bell.
It was that of an old French clock he had bought, and had never had put
in order. He had never been able to make it go, but once touching it
inadvertently he had aroused in it a breath of life so that it had
struck one,—this same sweet piercing note. Who, he wondered, was
touching it now?

Geoffrey was one of those who act best and naturally without delay. Now
he hesitated not at all. He had the keys of the house in his pocket,
and he moved quickly toward a side door which he remembered swung
silently on its hinges. It was not so much that he believed that there
was any one in the house—perhaps to the most apprehensive a burglar
comes as a surprise—but he felt he had too good grounds for suspicion
to fail to investigate.

He unlocked the door without a sound. As he stepped within, doubt was
put an end to by the patch of white light that, streaming out of the
library door, fell across the passageway before him. He stooped down
and took off his boots, and then cautiously approached the open door
and looked in, knowing that darkness and preparation were in his
favour.

His caution was unnecessary, for his entrance had not been heard. The
Hillsborough theory of the femininity of the burglar instantly fell to
the ground. A man of medium size was standing before one of the
bookcases with his elbow resting near the clock; he was holding a
volume in his hands with the careful ease of a book fancier. The man’s
back was turned so that a sandy head and a strongly built figure were
all Geoffrey could make out. Had it not been for a glimpse of a mask on
his face, he might have been a student at work.

So intent did he appear that Geoffrey could not resist the temptation
to make his entrance dramatic. Creeping almost to the other’s elbow,
revolver in hand, he said gently:

“Fond of reading?”

The man, naturally startled, made a surprisingly quick movement toward
his own revolver, and had it knocked out of his hand with a benumbing
blow. Geoffrey secured the weapon, and seeing the man’s retreat, may be
excused for supposing the struggle over.

He underestimated his adversary’s resources, for the burglar,
retreating with a look of surrender, came within reach of the electric
light, turned it off, and fled in the total darkness that followed.
Geoffrey sprang to the switch, but the few seconds that his fingers
were fumbling for it told against him. When he turned it on the room
was empty. The door by which the thief had gone opened on the main hall
and not on the passageway, so that Geoffrey still had time to secure
the outer door. Next he lit the chandelier in the hall, but its
illumination told nothing. It was Geoffrey’s own sharp ears that told
him of light footsteps beyond the turn of the stairs. Here Holland
recognised at once that the burglar had a great advantage. The flight
of stairs from the hall reached the upper story at a point very near
where the back stairs came up, while they descended to widely different
places in the lower story, so that the burglar, looking down, could
choose his flight of stairs as soon as he saw his pursuer committed to
the other, and thus reach the lower hall with several seconds to spare.
Fortunately, however, Geoffrey remembered that there was a door at the
foot of the back stairs. With incredible quickness he turned off the
light again, threw his boots upstairs in the ingenious hope that the
sound would give the effect of his own ascent, dashed round and locked
the door at the foot of the stairs and then at the top of his speed ran
up the front stairs and down the back. The result was somewhat as he
expected. The burglar had reached the door at the foot of the stairs,
and finding it locked was half way up again when he and Geoffrey met.
The impetus of Geoffrey’s descent carried the man backward. They both
landed against the locked door with a force that burst it open.
Geoffrey, on top and armed, had little difficulty in securing his
bruised foe, and marching him back to the library where he now took the
precaution of locking all the doors.

Geoffrey, who had felt himself tingling with excitement and the natural
love of the chase, now had time to wonder what he was going to do with
his capture. He thought of the darkness, the storm, the absence of the
two undermen, and the helplessness of the McFarlanes. Then he
remembered the telephone, which, fortunately, stood in a closet off the
library.

He turned to the burglar. “Stand with your face to the wall and your
hands up,” he said; “and if I see you move I’d just as lief shoot you
as look at you,” with which warning he approached the telephone and,
still keeping an eye on the other, rang up central. There was no
answer. He rang again,—six, seven times he repeated the process
unavailingly. He tried the private wire to the McFarlane cottage with
no better result.

At this point the burglar spoke.

“Oh, what the devil!” he said mildly; “I can’t stand here with my hands
over my head all night.”

“You’ll stand there,” replied Geoffrey with some temper, “until I’m
ready for you to move.”

“And when will that be?”

“When this fool of a Central answers.”

“Oh, not as long as that, I hope,” said the burglar, “because, to tell
the truth, I always cut the telephone wires before I enter a house.”

There was a pause in which it was well Geoffrey did not see the artless
smile of satisfaction which wreathed the burglar’s face. At length
Geoffrey said:

“In that case you might as well sit down, for we seem likely to stay
here until morning.” He calculated that by that time, Mrs. McFarlane,
alarmed at his absence, would send some one to look for him,—some one
who could be used as a messenger to fetch the constable.

To this suggestion the burglar appeared to acquiesce, for he sank at
once into an armchair—an armchair toward which Holland himself was
making his way, knowing it to be the most comfortable for an all-night
session. Feeling the absurdity of making any point of the matter,
however, he contented himself with the sofa.

“Take off your mask,” he said as he sat down.

“So I will, thank you,” said the burglar as if he had been asked to
remove his hat, and with his left hand he slipped it off. The face that
met Geoffrey’s interested gaze was thin, yet ruddy, and tanned by
exposure so that his very light brilliant eyes flared oddly in so dark
a surrounding. Above, his sandy hair, which had receded somewhat from
his forehead, curled up from his temples like a baby’s. His upper lip
was long and with a pleasant mouth gave his face an expression of
humour. His hands were ugly, but small.

They sat for some time without moving, the burglar engaged in bandaging
the cut on his right hand with obvious indifference to Holland’s
presence, Geoffrey meanwhile studying him carefully. The process of
bandaging over, the man reached out his hand toward the bookcase and,
selecting a volume of Sterne, settled back comfortably in his chair.
Holland stared at him an instant in wonder, and then attempted to
follow his example. But his attention to his book was much less
concentrated than that of his captive, whose expression soon showed him
to be completely absorbed.

They must have sat thus for an hour, before the burglar began to show
signs of restlessness. He asked if it were still snowing, and looked
distinctly disturbed on being told it was. At last he broke the silence
again.

“You don’t remember me, do you?” he said.

Geoffrey slowly raised his eyes without moving—his revolver was
drooping in his right hand. He ran his mind over his criminal
acquaintance unsuccessfully, and repeated:

“Remember you?”

“Yes, we were at school together for a time.”

Geoffrey stared, and then exclaimed spontaneously:

“You used to be able to wag your ears.”

“Can still.”

“Why, you are Skinny McVay.”

The man nodded. Neither was without a sense of humour, and yet saw
nothing comic in these untender reminiscences.

“I remember the masters all hated you,” said Geoffrey, “but you were
straight enough then, weren’t you?”

Again the man nodded. “I took to this sort of thing a month or so ago.”

After a moment Geoffrey said:

“Did not I hear you were in the navy?”

“No,” said McVay. “I was at Annapolis for a few months. I had an idea I
should like the navy, but Heavens above! I could not stand the Academy.
They threw me out. It seems I had broken every rule they had ever made.
It was worse than State’s prison.”

“Are you in a position to judge?” asked Geoffrey coolly.

“No,” said McVay, as if he nevertheless had information on the subject.

“Well, you will be soon,” said Holland, not sorry for an opportunity to
point out that his heart was not softened by recollections of his
school days. But McVay appeared to ignore this intimation.

“Yes,” he said ruminatively; “I’ve done a lot of things in my time.”

“Well, I don’t want to hear about them,” said Geoffrey, who had no
intention of being drawn into an intimate interchange. The burglar
looked more surprised than angered at this shortness, and only said:

“Would you have any objection to my putting a match to that fire?”

“No,” said Geoffrey, and McVay, with wonderful dexterity, managed to
start a cheering blaze with his left hand.

For a few minutes Geoffrey’s determined attention to his book
discouraged his companion, but presently rapping the pages of Tristram
Shandy with the back of his hand, he exclaimed:

“Sterne! Ah, there was a man! Something of my own type, too, it
sometimes strikes me. Capable, you know, really a genius, but so
unfortunately different from other people. Ordinary standards meant
nothing to him—too original—sees life from another standpoint,
entirely. That’s me! I—”

“Sit down,” roared Geoffrey.

“Oh, it’s nothing, nothing,” said McVay, “only I talk better on my
feet.”

“Well, you wouldn’t talk as well with a bullet in you.”

McVay sank back again in his chair. “Yes,” he said, “that’s me. Why,
Holland, I have no doubt you would be surprised if you knew the number
of things that I can do—that I am really proficient in. Anything with
the hands,” he waved his fingers supplely in the air, “is no trouble to
me at all. I have at once a natural skill that most people take a
lifetime to acquire.”

“I’m told there’s work for all where you are going.”

McVay looked a trifle puzzled for an instant, but never allowing
himself to remain at a loss, he said:

“Work! Do you really mean to say that you believe in a utilitarian
Heaven, where we are going to work with our hands? For my part—”

“I had reference to the penitentiary,” said Geoffrey.

“Oh, yes, of course, the penitentiary. There are some wonderful men in
the penitentiary. You don’t admit that, I suppose, with your
conventional ideas; but to me they are just as admirable as any other
great creative artist,—sculptor or financier. I see you don’t quite get
that. You are hemmed in by conventional standards, and your
possessions, and all the things to which you attach such great
importance.”

“I don’t attach so much importance that I steal them from other
people,” said Geoffrey.

“Philistine, Holland, philistine! Is not any one who has anything
stealing from some one or other? Of course. But I see you don’t catch
the idea. Well, I dare say I would not either in your place—rather
think I would not. My sister is just the same way. Sweet girl, witty in
her own way, but philistine. She is so good as to be my companion,
apparently on equal terms, in many ways my superior, but it would be
impossible for me even to mention these ideas to her,—ideas which are
of the greatest interest to me.”

“I wonder,” said Geoffrey, “how much of all this rubbish you believe?”

McVay smiled with great sweetness. “I wonder myself, Holland. Still it
is undeniably amusing, and the main thing is that I enjoy life,—a hard
life too in many ways. Fate has dealt me some sad blows. Look at such a
coincidence as your turning up to-night, of all nights in the year.”

“It was scarcely a coincidence. I came—”

“Oh, I know, I know. You came to see after your sister’s things, but
still, if you look at it a little more carefully, you will see that it
_was_ a coincidence that you should be by nature a man of prompt
action. Nine men out of ten in your place—still, I’m not depressed. You
cannot say, Holland, that I behave or talk like a man who has ten years
of hard labour before him, can you? I dare say you have never been
thrown with a person who showed less anxiety. Yet as a matter of fact,
there is something preying on my mind. Something entirely aside from
anything you could imagine.”

“You don’t tell me!” said Geoffrey, who did not know whether to be most
amused or infuriated by his companion’s conversation.

“I am about to tell you,” said McVay graciously, “I am very seriously
worried about my sister. In fact I don’t see that there is any getting
away from it; you will have to let me go out for an hour or so and get
her.”

“Let you do _what_?”

“Get my sister. She’s living in a little hut in your woods, and I am
actually afraid she will be snowed up.”

“It seems highly probable.”

“Well, then, I must go and get her.”

Geoffrey stared at him a moment, and then said: “You must be crazy.”

“Maybe I am,” answered McVay, as if the suggestion were not without an
amusing side. “Maybe I am, but that is not the point. Think of a girl,
Holland, alone, all night, in such a storm. Now, I put it to you: it is
not a position in which you would leave your sister, is it?”

Geoffrey began a sentence and finding it inadequate, contented himself
with a laugh.

“There you see,” said McVay. “It’s out of the question. The place is
draughty, too, though there is a stove. Do you remember the house at
all? You would be surprised to see how nicely I’ve fixed it up for
her.”

“No doubt I should,” replied Holland, thinking of the Vaughan and
Marheim valuables.

“It is surprisingly livable, but it _is_ draughty,” McVay went on. “The
truth is I ought to have gone south, as I meant to do last week. But
one cannot foresee everything. The winters have been open until
Christmas so often lately. However, I made a mistake and I am perfectly
willing to rectify it. If you have no objection, I’ll go and bring her
back here.”

“If you have any respect for your skin you won’t move from that chair.”

“Oh, the devil, Holland, don’t be so—” he hesitated for the right word,
not wishing to be unjust,—“so obtuse. Listen to that wind! It’s cold
here. Think what it must be in that shanty.”

“Very unpleasant, I should think.”

“More than that, more than that,—suffering, I have no doubt. Why, she
might freeze to death if anything went wrong with the fire. It is not
safe. It’s a distinct risk to leave her. Let alone that a storm like
this would scare any girl alone in a place like that, there is some
danger to her life. Don’t you see that?”

“Yes, I see,” returned Geoffrey, “but you ought to have thought of that
before you came burgling in a blizzard.”

“Thought of it! Of course I thought of it. But I had no idea whatever
of being caught, with old McFarlane laid up and the two boys away, it
did seem about the safest job yet.”

There was a pause, for Geoffrey evidently had no intention of even
arguing the matter, and presently McVay continued:

“Now you know you would feel badly to-morrow morning if anything went
wrong with her, and you knew you could have helped it!”

“Helped it!” said Geoffrey. “What do you mean? Let you loose on the
county for the sake of a story no sane man would believe?”

“Well,” returned McVay judicially, “perhaps you could not do that,
but,” he added brightly, “you could go yourself.”

“Yes,” said Geoffrey, “I _could_—”

“Then I think you ought to be getting along.”

“Upon my word, McVay,” said Holland, “you are something of a humorist,
aren’t you?”

McVay again looked puzzled, but rose to the occasion.

“Oh, hardly that,” he said. “Every now and then I have a way of putting
things,—a way of my own. I find often I am able to amuse people, but if
you are cheerful yourself, you make other people so. I was just
thinking that it must be a great thing for men who have been in prison
for years to have some one come in with a new point of view.”

“I’m sure you will be an addition to prison life. It’s an ill wind, you
know.”

“It’s an ill wind for my sister, literally enough. Come, Holland, you
certainly can trust me. Do be starting.”

“Why, what do you take me for?” said the exasperated Geoffrey. “Do you
really suppose that I am going, looking for a den of your accomplices
in order to give you a chance to escape?”

“‘Accomplices!’” exclaimed McVay; and for the first time a shade of
anger crossed his brow; “‘_accomplices’_! I have no accomplices.
Anything I do I think I am able to do alone. Still,” he added putting
aside his annoyance, “if you feel nervous about leaving me I’d just as
lief give you my word of honour to stay here until you come back.”

“Your _what_?”

McVay made a slight gesture of his shoulders, as if he were being a
good deal tried. “Oh, anything you like,” he said. “I suppose you could
lock me up in a closet.”

“I don’t think we need trouble to arrange the details,” said Geoffrey
drily. “But I’ll tell you what I will do. After I get you safely in
jail to-morrow, I’ll get a trap and go and look up this hut.”

“It may be too late then.”

“It may,” said Geoffrey, and continued to read.

Yet he had no further satisfaction in his book. He knew that the
burglar kept casting meditative glances at him as if in wonder at such
brutality, and in truth, his own mind was not entirely at ease. If by
any chance the story were true,—if there was a woman at his doors
freezing to death, how could he sit enjoying the fire? But, on the
other hand, could any one have a more evident motive for deception than
his informant? What better opportunity for escape could be arranged? It
was so evident, so impudent as to be almost convincing. What more
likely for instance, than that the hut was a regular rendezvous for
criminals and tramps, that by going he would be walking into the
veriest trap? Yet again there was the report confirmed by Harris’s
story that a woman was in some way connected with these robberies. The
wind whistled round the house with a suggestion of difficulty, of
combat with the elements, of actual danger, perhaps, that suddenly gave
Geoffrey a new view of delay. Had it not something the air of
cowardice, or at least of laziness? He found his eyes had read the same
page three times, while his brain was busy devising means by which
McVay could be secured in his absence—if he went.

At length he rose suddenly to his feet.

“I’ll go,” he said, “but before I go, I’ll tie you up so safely that,
if I don’t come back, you’ll starve to death before you’ll be able to
get out or make any one hear you. On these terms do you still want me
to go?”

“Oh, yes, I want you to go,” said McVay, “only for goodness sake be
careful. If you should feel any temptation to lie down and go to sleep
don’t yield to it; they say it’s fatal. The great thing is to keep on
walking—”

“Oh, shut up,” said Geoffrey. In view of the possibility that he was
going to meet death at the hands of his fluent companion’s accomplices
he found this friendly advice unbearable.

“This hut, I take it,” he said, “is an old woodcutter’s shanty in the
north woods?”

“Yes, something over a mile and a half north of here.”

“I know the place,” said Geoffrey, “now come along, and we’ll see how I
can fix you up until I come back.”

He had in mind a heavy upstairs cedar-closet. It had been designed by a
thoughtful architect for the storing of summer wearing apparel, and was
strongly built. It had besides the advantage of having a door that
opened in and so was difficult to break open from the inside. Here,
having removed a complete burglar’s outfit from his pockets, Geoffrey
disposed McVay, being met with a readiness on McVay’s part that seemed
to prove either that he was sincere in his belief in Holland’s safe
return, or else was perfectly confident of being able to open the door
as soon as Geoffrey’s back was turned.

“But he’ll find himself mistaken,” Geoffrey murmured as, having locked
the door, he turned away. At this instant a faint knocking was audible,
and, gathering that McVay had some final instructions to give, Geoffrey
again opened the door.

“By the way,” said the burglar, and for the first time a certain
constraint, amounting almost to embarrassment, was discernible in his
manner, “my sister has no idea about—it would be a great shock to
her—in fact, you understand, she has not discovered exactly how our
money comes to us.”

“Do you expect me to believe that?” asked Geoffrey.

“I grant it does not sound likely,” returned McVay, “and indeed would
not be possible with any other man than myself. But I hit upon a pretty
good yarn,—worked out well everyway. I told her—”

“I don’t want to hear your infernal lies.”

“But it might be convenient for you to know. I told her,” McVay
chuckled, “that I was employed as night watchman at Drake’s paper mill.
That of course kept me out all night, and—”

“She must think night watchmen get good wages.”

“That was just it. I told her Drake was an old friend of mine, and just
wanted an excuse to give me an allowance until he found me a better
job. You see I just lost a nice job in a bank—”

“I suppose it would be indiscreet to inquire why?”

“Well, we won’t discuss it,” said McVay with an agreeable smile. “Of
course she could understand that such an inferior position as a
watchman’s had to be kept a profound secret, hence our remote mode of
life, and the fact that I don’t allow a butcher or baker to come near
us. I tell her that if it were known that I had held such a poor
position, it would interfere with my getting a better. So, if you
should happen to find that you have to explain to her why I am detained
here—”

“_If_ I should explain to her,” said Geoffrey. “What do you suppose I
am going to do?”

“Well, I suppose you will find it necessary,” said McVay. “Indeed, as a
matter of fact, I would much rather have you do it than do it myself.
Still, you might bear in mind to tell her as gently as possible. If she
were your own sister—”

“Oh, go to the devil,” said Geoffrey, and slammed the door.




III


Geoffrey was born with a love of adventure, and his dislike to his
present expedition arose not from fear, but from a consciousness that
if he did run into a den of thieves he would think himself such an ass
to have come. Indeed, there seemed a fair chance that he might think
this even if nothing worse happened than that the hut proved empty, for
he would have had a long walk for nothing better than to provide McVay
with an opportunity to escape. He did not see exactly how McVay could
get out, but he was aware that few people would think it wise to leave
a burglar locked in a closet in an empty house with some hours of
leisure at his disposal.

The first glimmering of dawn was visible as he stepped off the piazza;
the wind was blowing fiercely and the snow still falling. He had not
gone a hundred yards before he knew that the expedition was to be more
difficult than he had imagined. To make headway against the wind was a
constant struggle, and he seemed to slip back in the snow at every
step. Still the natural obstinacy of his nature was aroused, and as his
attention was more and more engaged with the endeavor to make his way,
he had less time to think of the probable futility of his proceeding.

Long before he sighted the hut, he was wet to the waist, not only
because he had been in half a dozen drifts, but because the snow had
penetrated every crevice of his clothing.

The hut was a forlorn little spot upon the landscape, a patch of grey
on the stretch of forest and snow. A shutter blowing in the wind gave
an impression of desertion, for how could any one, however wretched,
sit idle under that recurrent bang?

Drawing his revolver, Geoffrey approached the door. He had no intention
of giving a possible enemy an opportunity to prepare himself, and so
did not knock, but, putting his shoulder against the door, shoved
mightily. The hinges broke from the rotten wood at once, and he
stumbled in.

The pale light of the early winter morning showed a depressing
interior, for the window was not the only opening. There was a great
gap in the roof where, earlier in the night, the chimney had fallen,
and now its bricks littered the floor, already well covered with snow.
Some attempt must have been made, as McVay had boasted, of “fixing it
up”; there were books in the shelves on the walls, and a black iron
stove on which the snow now lay fearlessly. As Geoffrey took in the
situation, something in a huge chair, which he had taken for a heap of
rugs, stirred and moved, and finally rose, betraying itself to be a
woman. Geoffrey had been prepared to find a den of thieves, or nothing
at all, or even a girl, as McVay had said. He told himself he would be
surprised at nothing, yet found himself astounded, overwhelmed at the
sight of a beautiful face.

The girl must have been beautiful so to triumph over her surroundings,
for all sorts of strange garments were huddled about her, and over all
a silk coverlet originally tied like a shawl under her chin, had
slipped sideways, and fell like a Hussar’s jacket from one shoulder.
Her hair stood like a dark halo about her little face, making it seem
smaller and younger, almost too small for the magnificent eyes that lit
it. Geoffrey, tolerably well versed in feminine attractions, said to
himself that he had never seen such blue eyes.

And suddenly while he looked at her and her desperate plight, pity
became in him a sort of fury of protection, the awakening of the
masculine instinct toward beauty in distress. It was a feeling that the
other women he had admired—well-fed, well-clothed, well-cared-for young
creatures—had always signally failed to arouse. He had seen it in other
men, had seen their hearts wrung because an able-bodied girl must take
a trolley car instead of her father’s carriage, but he had thought
himself hard, perhaps, unchivalrous; but now he knew better. Now he
knew what it was to feel personally outraged at a woman’s discomfort.

“Good God!” he cried, “what a night you have had. How wicked, how
abominable, how criminal—”


[Illustration: “Good god,” he cried “what a night you have had”]


“It has been a dreadful night,” said the girl, “but it is nobody’s
fault.”

“Of course it is somebody’s fault,” answered Geoffrey. “It must be. Do
you mean to tell me no one is to blame when I have been sitting all
night with my feet on the fender, and you—”

“Certainly,” said she with an extraordinarily wide, sweet smile, “I
could wish we might have changed places.”

“I wish to Heaven we might,” returned Geoffrey, and meant it. Never
before had he yearned to bear the sufferings of another. He had often
seen that it was advisable, suitable just that he should, but burningly
to want to was a new experience.

“Thank you,” said the girl, “but I’m afraid there is nothing to be
done.”

“Nothing to be done!” He dropped on his knees before the black monster
of a stove, “Do you suppose I’m here to do nothing?”

“You are here, I think, for shelter from the storm.”

It had not occurred to him before that she looked upon him as a chance
wanderer.

“That shows your ignorance of the situation. I am here to rescue you. I
left my fireside for no other reason. As I came along I said at every
blast, ‘that poor, poor girl.’ I set out to bring you to safety. I
begin to think I was born for no other reason.”

She smiled rather wearily, “Your coming at all is so strange that I
could almost believe you.”

“You may thoroughly believe me, more easily perhaps when I tell you I
did not particularly want to come. I started out at dawn very cross and
cold because I did not know what I was going to find....”

“But I thought you said you did know that you were going to rescue a
girl?”

“A girl, yes. But what’s a mere girl? How many thousand girls have I
seen in my life? Is that a thought to turn a man’s head? What I did not
know was that I was going to find _you_.”

“The fire will never burn with the chimney strewn on the floor,” she
said mildly.

“Well, I’ve said it, you see,” he answered, “and you won’t forget it,
even if you do change the subject.” He turned his attention to the
fire. Where is the man, worthy of the name to whom the business of fire
building is not serious?

Presently seeing he needed help she dropped to her knees beside him and
tried to shove a piece of wood into place. In the process her numbed
fingers touched his, and he instantly dropped everything to catch her
hand in both of his.

“Your hands are as cold as ice,” he said, holding them tightly, and
thanking Fate that this bounty had fallen to his lot.

She withdrew them. “You are too conscientious,” she said. “That is not
part of the duty of a rescue party.”

“It is, it is,” said Geoffrey violently. “It is the merest humanity.”

“Humanity?”

“To me, of course, if you will pin me down.”

“Oh, there is no reason for the rescued to be humane.”

“They ought to be grateful.”

“They are.”

“_Gratefuller_ then. Is it nothing that I have taken all the trouble to
be born and grow up and live just to come here for you?”

“Perhaps I could be gratefuller if there were any prospect of a fire.”

“Oh, curse the fire,” said Geoffrey rising from his knees. “Who minds
about it?”

“I mind very much.”

“Well, you mustn’t. You must not mind about anything, because it sets
up too strong a reaction in me. There’s no telling what I might not do
under the stress. Come away from this dreadful place. The fires will
burn in my house, and that is where we are going.”

“I can’t do that,” she said, looking very grave.

“You can’t do anything else.”

“I must wait for my brother. He’s out somewhere in this storm, and if
he comes back and finds me gone—”

“Oh, your brother,” said Geoffrey, “I forgot all about him. He’s at my
house already. He sent me for you.”

“Oh,” said she, sighing with relief, and then added maliciously: “then
my plight was not revealed to you in a vision?”

“The vision is with me now.”

She had to perfection, the art of allowing her mind to drift away when
she thought it advisable.

“And so you took poor Billy in?” she said.

Geoffrey coughed. “Well, in a sense,” he answered.

She rose. “We’ll go at once,” she said. “Is it far?”

“Not very, but it is going to be hard work.”

He felt more practical. His delight had slipped from him at the
realisation of her relationship to McVay. For a moment he felt
depressed, then as he saw her struggling to undo the knot that held the
comforter about her, he forgot everything but the pleasure of doing her
a service. And in the midst of this joy, the coverlet slid to the
ground and revealed her clad from head to foot in his sister’s sables.

There was a pause.

“What are you looking at?” she asked.

“That is a nice warm coat you have on.”

“Isn’t it?” She rubbed her cheek against the high collar with a
tenderness trying to any masculine onlooker. “It saved my life.”

It was on the tip of Geoffrey’s tongue to ask if he was not entitled to
a similar claim on her consideration, but he suppressed it. Was it
possible that she did not know that the garments she wore were stolen?
Could any sane woman really believe that sable coats fell naturally to
the lot of night watchmen? Her manner was candour itself, but how
should it not be? What more inevitable than that she should make an
effort to deceive a casual stranger? She had the most evident motives
for behaving exactly as she did. Just so, however, he had reasoned
about McVay, and yet McVay had been sincere. There had been a girl in
distress exactly as he had said. It was contrary to all reason, but it
was true. Might not the girl be true too? Was it not possible, he asked
himself, and answered that it was more than possible, it was the truth.
He chose to believe in her, and turned his anger against McVay, who
could drag her through such a mire. He felt the tragedy of a
high-minded woman tricked out in stolen finery, and remembered with a
pang that he himself was hurrying on the moment of disillusion.

“I wonder,” she said, “if I could take some things with me. Is it
impossible for me to carry a bag?”

“Yes, but not for me.”

“It would be only this.” She held up a small Russia leather affair
legibly marked with Mrs. Inness’ initials.

“I will take it,” said Geoffrey. His faith was sorely tried.

She moved about collecting things and packing, and presently remarked:

“But if Billy is all right, why didn’t he come for me himself?”

“Oh, because—” Geoffrey hesitated an instant, and her fears interpreted
the pause.

“He’s hurt. You are keeping it from me. You are deceiving me.”

“I would scorn to deceive you,” said Geoffrey with passion, and looked
at her to find some answer to the reverse question which he did not put
into words.

She did not appear to understand. “Then why didn’t he come?” she asked.

“He had been out in the storm already. I thought it was my turn.”

“I think you must be stronger than Billy.” She cast a reflective glance
at his shoulders, and he was ashamed to find himself inordinately
flattered.

“He is really safe at your house?”

“I hope so, I did my best,” he returned grimly.

She looked at him gravely. “You have been very kind to a stranger,” she
said.

And at this point Geoffrey made the fatal mistake of his dealing with
her. It did not occur to him that he was going to shield McVay, but he
thought a more advantageous time could be found for telling her the
truth, in case of course she did not know it already. He felt that he
himself would be better able to deal a cold blow when she was warm and
sheltered. No man, he said to himself, could be disagreeable to a girl
who had no one to depend on but himself. So he said:

“He was not exactly a stranger to me. We were at school together.”

“Oh, another of Billy’s friends. I never knew such a person for
discovering friends at the most opportune times. He never wants
anything but what a friend turns up. Did you find him wandering about,
or did he come and demand admittance?”

“Why, neither exactly. I was not in the house at the time. He felt he
knew me well enough to walk in.”

“He never told me he had a friend in the neighbourhood.”

“We have not met since we were at school.”

“He had not seen you since he was at school, and yet he felt he knew
you well enough to walk in on you!”

“Yes, he just walked in, and then I would not let him go.”

“Men are so queer!” she exclaimed with a little laugh that had a spice
of admiration in it, under which Geoffrey writhed. He was sailing under
such false colours as her brother’s benefactor.

“We ought to be starting,” he said.

She looked round the room. “I hate to leave all these nice things,” she
said. “Billy is so fond of them. There is some wine that some one gave
him that he says is really priceless.”

“Leave it,” said Geoffrey shortly.

“One would think you were a teetotaller from that tone. I wonder if I
could not take one bottle as a surprise to Billy. He would like to
contribute something to your hospitality, I am sure. Besides, if I
leave it, it may be stolen.”

“Yes, it may be stolen.” He looked down into her face.

“Then—”

“I ask you as a favour to leave it behind.”

Nothing could have been more charming than her manner of yielding,
sweet and quick like a caress. It made him feel how pitiful sordid it
all was.

They started immediately, started with a certain gaiety. Geoffrey chose
to remember only that they were together through a hard adventure, and
that it was his part to smooth her way. The bond of difficulties to
overcome united them. They felt the intimacy of a single absorbing
interest. They had nothing to think of but accomplishing their task,—of
that and of each other. As far as they could see were snow and black
trunks of trees. They scarcely remembered that any one but themselves
existed.

Now justly he could admire something besides her beauty. Her courage
warmed his heart. Yet with all her spirit she made no attempt to assert
her independence. She turned to him at every point. He guided her past
the scenes of his own disasters and saved her from the mistakes he had
already made.

But only for a little while did they move forward in this delightful
exhilaration. Before they had gone far she grew silent, and when she
did answer him spoke less spontaneously. She asked for neither help nor
encouragement, but plunged along as steadily as she was able. Her
skirts, however, wet and heavy, hampered her desperately, and the
exertion of walking through the thick snow began to tell. Geoffrey made
her stop every now and then for a breathing spell, but at length she
stopped of herself.

“Have we done half yet?” she asked.

“Just about,” he answered, stretching truth in order to encourage her.
But he saw at once that he had failed,—that she had had a hope that
they were nearer their destination—that she began to doubt her own
powers. Presently she moved forward again in silence.

He began to be alarmed lest they should never reach his house, yet took
comfort in the thought, as he looked at her, that whatever strength she
had, she would use to the end. No hysterical despair would exhaust her
beforehand. She would not fail through lack of determination. Whether
or not she were the confederate of a thief she was a brave woman, yes,
and a beautiful one, he thought, looking down upon her in the glare of
the snow.

Presently he held out his hand in silence, and she as silently took it.
This was to Geoffrey the explanation of his whole life. This was what
men were made for.

Once as they stood resting the wind, which fortunately had been at
their backs the entire trip, hurled her against him, where she remained
an instant, too weak to move. It was he who set her gently on her feet
again.

The latter part of the journey she made almost wholly by his help, and
when they stood before the piazza, she could not have managed the
little step had he not virtually lifted her up. He took her directly to
the library and laid her on the sofa. The fire, owing to the absence of
McVay, had gone out. It took Geoffrey some time with his benumbed hands
to build a blaze. When he turned toward her again she was sleeping like
a child.

The sight was too much for his own weariness, and reflecting that McVay
was either gone or still safe, he stretched himself on the hearth-rug
and was soon asleep also.




IV


It was after two o’clock in the afternoon when he awoke. He must have
slept three hours. He looked at the sofa and saw the girl still
sleeping peacefully. He almost wished that she would never awake to all
the dreadful surprises that the house held for her. Her eye-lashes
curved long and dark on her cheek. Geoffrey turned away quickly.

He had awakened with a sudden disagreeable conviction that people have
been known to smother to death in closets. He stole quietly from the
library and ran up stairs with not a little anxiety. Indeed so great
was his dread that he would have been really relieved to see the closet
door standing open as an immediate proof that it did not hide a corpse.
It was, however, locked as he had left it. But as he hastened to undo
it, a voice from within reassured him:


[Illustration: He let McVay out of the closet]


“Well, where have you been all this time?”

“You may be thankful I’m back at all. It did not look like it, at one
time.”

“Where is Cecilia?”

“Down stairs asleep.”

McVay gave a little giggle. “Ah,” he said, “I bet you have had the
devil of a time. I bet you wished once or twice that you had let me be
the one to go.”

“It wasn’t child’s play.”

“Child’s play! I rather think not. These things are all well enough
among men, but women!” he waved his hand; “so sensitive, so
cloistered!”

“Your sister behaved nobly,” said Geoffrey severely.

“Bound to, Holland, bound to. Still it must have been a shock.”

“It was a hard trip for any woman.”

McVay looked up. “Oh,” he said, “I wasn’t speaking of the trip. I meant
about me. What did she say?”

“She did not say anything. She went to sleep.”

“She did not say anything when you told her I was booked for the
penitentiary?”

“Oh,” said Geoffrey, and there was a slight pause. Then he added: “Why
should I tell her what she must know.”

“I tell you she knows nothing about my—profession.”

“Your _profession_!”

“Hasn’t a notion of it.”

“What, with my sister’s coat on her back, and the Innes’ bag in her
hand?”

“No!” McVay drew a step nearer. “You see I told her that I had found a
second-hand store where I could get things for nothing.” He chuckled,
and Geoffrey withdrew with a look of repulsion that evidently
disappointed the other.

“That was a good idea, wasn’t it?” he asked with a faint appeal in his
voice. “She thought it was likely, anyhow.”

“She must be very gullable,” said Geoffrey brutally.

“Or else,” said McVay with a conscious smile, “I must be a pretty good
dissembler.”

At this acute instance of fatuity Geoffrey, if he had followed his
impulse, would have flung McVay back in the closet and locked the door.
Instead, he said:

“Come down stairs. I want to look up something to eat.”

“Thank you,” said the burglar, “it would be a good idea.”

“You need not thank me,” said Geoffrey. “I don’t take you with me for
the pleasure of your company, but because I don’t dare let you out of
my sight.”

McVay, as was his habit when anything unpleasant was said, chose to
ignore this speech.

“You know,” he said, as they went down stairs, “I suppose that most men
shut up in a closet for all those hours would take it as a hardship,
but, to me it was a positive rest. I really in a way enjoyed it. It is
one of my theories that every one ought to have resources within. Now I
dare say you were quite anxious about me.”

“I never thought of you at all,” said Geoffrey. “After I got in I went
to sleep for three hours.”

McVay looked at him once or twice, in surprise. Then he said with
dignity: “Asleep? Well, really, Holland, I don’t think that was very
considerate.”

“Don’t talk so loud,” said Geoffrey, “you’ll wake your sister.”

Geoffrey had always been in the habit of going on shooting trips at
short notice, and so it was his rule to keep a supply of canned
eatables in the house to be ready whenever the whim took him. On these
he now depended, and was not a little annoyed to find the kitchen store
room where they were kept securely locked.

This difficulty, however, McVay made light of. He asked for his tools
and on being given them set to work on the door.

“Have you ever noticed,” he said, “the heavy handed way in which some
men use tools? Look at my touch,—so light, yet so accurate. I take no
credit to myself. I was born so. It’s a very fortunate thing to be
naturally dexterous.”

“It would have been more fortunate for you if you had been a little
less so.”

“Oh, I don’t know about that, Holland. I might have starved to death
years ago.”

“I wish to God you had,” said Geoffrey.

McVay shook his head faintly in deprecation of such violence, but
otherwise preferred to pass the remark by, and they soon set to work
heating soup and smoked beef. When all was ready and spread in the
dining-room—this was McVay’s suggestion; he said food was unappetising
unless it were nicely served—Geoffrey said:

“Go and see if your sister is awake, and if she is,” he added firmly,
“I’ll give you a few minutes alone with her, so that you can explain
the situation fully.”

McVay nodded and slipped into the library. Geoffrey shut the door
behind him, and sat down on a bench in the hall from which he could
command both doors.

If he entertained the doubts of her innocence which he continually told
himself no sane man could help entertaining, he found himself strangely
nervous. He felt as if he were waiting outside an operating room. He
thought of her as he had seen her asleep, of the curve of her
eye-lashes on her cheek, of her raising those lashes, awaking to be met
with McVay’s revelations. Even if she were guilty, Geoffrey found it in
his heart to pity her waking to learn that her brother was a prisoner.
How unfortunate, too, would be her own position,—the guest, if only for
a few hours, of a man who was concerned only to lodge her brother in
jail.

His heart gave a distinct thump when the library door opened and they
came out together. His eyes turned to her face at once, and found it
unperturbed. Didn’t she care, or had she always known?

McVay caught his arm when she had passed them by, and whispered glibly:

“Thought it was better to wait until she had had something to eat—shock
on an empty stomach, so bad—so hard to bear.”

Geoffrey shook his arm free. “You infernal coward,” he whispered back.

“Well, I like that,” retorted McVay, “you didn’t tell her yourself when
you had the chance.”

“It wasn’t my affair. I did not tell her because—”

“Oh, I know,” McVay interrupted with a chuckle. “I’ve been knowing why
for the last ten minutes.”

They followed her into the dining-room.

It was not a sumptuous repast to which they sat down, but Geoffrey
asked nothing better. He was sitting opposite to her,—a position
evidently decreed him by Fate from the beginning of time. He could look
at her, and now and then, in spite of her delicious reluctance, could
force her to meet his eyes. When this happened, nothing was ever more
apparent than that, for both of them, a momentous event had occurred.

She was almost completely silent, and as for him, his responses to the
general conversation which McVay kept attempting to set up, were so
entirely mechanical that he was scarcely aware of them himself.

It was she who suddenly remembered that it was Christmas day.

“And _this_ is our Christmas dinner,” observed McVay regretfully.

“Oh, no,” returned the girl, “this is luncheon. I’ll cook your dinner.
You’ll see.”

There was a pause. Geoffrey looked at McVay. The moment for
disillusioning her had manifestly come. Wherever they might next meet
it would not be at his dinner table. A hateful vision of a criminal
court rose before him.

“Miss McVay,” he said gravely, indifferent to the signals of warning
which the other man was directing toward him; “we shall not be here at
dinner. Your brother will tell you my reasons for wishing to start down
the mountain.”

“Now?”

“At once.”

She coloured slowly and deeply,—the only evidence of anger. “I do not
need any other reason than your wish that we should go,” she said,
rising. “I should thank you for having borne with us so long.”

“Upon my word, Holland, it is madness to start as late as this,” said
McVay. “It will be dark in an hour.”

She turned on her brother quickly: “Please say no more about the
matter, Billy,” she said. “We will start at once.”

“You won’t start if it means certainly freezing to death,” he
remonstrated.

She flashed a glance at Geoffrey, who had also risen and was trying to
compel the truth from McVay by a stern, steady glance.

“I _would_,” she answered and shut the door behind her.

McVay sprang up and was about to follow her when Geoffrey stopped him.
“One moment,” he said, “you are quite right. It is too late to start
to-night. We must stay here until to-morrow. But if we are to spend a
night here without your sister’s being told—”

“My dear Holland, think of her position, if we did tell her!”

“I grant that the information had better be withheld until just as we
are starting, but in that case I must—”

“I know what you are going to ask,—my word of honour not to escape. I
give it, I give it willingly.”

“I’m not going to ask for anything at all,” said Geoffrey. “I’m going
to tell you one or two things, and I advise you to pay attention. We
won’t have any nonsense at all. Remember I am armed, and I am a quick
man with a gun. There may be some quicker, but not in the East, and it
wasn’t in the East I got my training. You will always keep in front of
me where I can see you plainly, and you will never, under any
circumstances come nearer than six feet to me. If you should ever come
nearer than that or take a sudden step in my direction, I’d shoot you
just as sure as I stand here.”

McVay looked distinctly crestfallen. “Oh, come, Holland,” he said,
“isn’t that the least little bit exaggerated? You would not shoot me
before my own sister?”

“I would not like to, but there are things I should dislike even more,
and having you escape is one of them.”

The other thought it over. “The trouble is,” he explained, “that I am
impulsive. You must have noticed it. I get carried away. You know how I
am. I’m not at all sure that I shall remember.”

“I advise you to try, for this is the only warning you will get.”

“I cannot believe, Holland, that you would really shoot me in cold
blood in the presence of my own sister.”

“You had better behave as if you believed it.”

“I don’t like this arrangement,” McVay broke out peevishly. “Suppose,
for the sake of argument, that I did forget,—that I put my hand on your
shoulder—a very natural gesture.”

“I should shoot instantly.”

“But fancy the shock to Cecilia.”

“Not more of a shock, perhaps, than discovering that you are a thief.
And another thing, it may be very gay and amusing to be forever fooling
about the subject, but I advise you against it. It does not amuse me.”

“Oh, be honest, Holland, it does, it must amuse you. It is essentially
amusing.”

“It won’t amuse her, or you either when she finds out that you are not
only a thief but that you have been able to find amusement in deceiving
her.”

Again McVay’s gaiety seemed momentarily dashed. “Very true,” he said,
“I had not thought of that. But then,” he added more brightly, “who can
tell if it will actually fall to my lot to tell her. Things happen so
strangely. It may turn out that that is _your_ part.”

“It may,” said Geoffrey, “but only because I have had to shoot after
all.” With which he opened the door and they returned to the library.




V


Cecilia was not in the library, and McVay, without comment on her
absence, turned at once to his book.

“If you won’t think me impolite, Holland, I’ll go on with my Sterne.
Conversation is always a great temptation to me, but I have so little
opportunity to read that I feel I ought not to neglect it,—especially
as your books are so unusual.”

He settled himself to Tristram Shandy with appreciation, but Geoffrey
could not read. He sat, indeed, with a book open on his knee, but his
eyes were fixed on the carpet. The knowledge of the girl’s presence in
his house distracted him like a lantern swung before his eyes. He gave
himself up to steeping himself in his emotion, which, in some
situations, is the nearest thing possible to thinking.

Geoffrey’s success with women had been conspicuous, as was natural for
he was good looking, rich and apparently susceptible. As a matter of
fact, however, his susceptibility was purely superficial, and for this
very reason he was not afraid to give it full sway. The deeply
susceptible man learns to be cautious, to distrust his feelings, but
Geoffrey had always too truly recognised his fundamental indifference
to have any reason to distrust himself. He had never been in love. Like
Ferdinand he, “for different virtues had liked many women,” although in
his case it had not always been necessarily virtues that had attracted
him. But there were certain women who had always appealed to him for
some conspicuous quality, or characteristic, who for one reason or
another pleased him, to which one side or another of his nature
responded. He had often thought that if he could make up a composite
woman of all of them he might be in great danger of falling in love.
But now he was aware that his whole nature responded to the attraction
of the girl upstairs, as a dog answers instinctively to the call of its
master. He could say to himself that she was this or that,—brave and
beautiful, but he knew that such qualities were but an insignificant
part of the total effect. His reason could find causes enough to
approve her, but something more important had gone ahead, and made
straight the paths of his reason, something which transcended it, and
which in case of a divergence between the two, his reason could never
overcome.

For, of course, the realisation of McVay and all his presence implied
fell coolly upon his exaltation. By no means had Geoffrey said to
himself in so many words that he was in love,—far less had anything so
definite as marriage crossed his mind. He was too much in love to be so
practical. He only knew that McVay’s mere existence was a contamination
and a tragedy.

He had been sitting thus for some time, when he heard her step on the
stairs. He rose and met her in the hall, whence he could still keep his
eye on McVay’s studious figure in the library.

She was dressed in her sables ready for departure.


[Illustration: She Was Dressed In His Sister’s Sables—ready For
Departure]


They looked at each other a moment in silence, he appealingly, she,
with a cold blankness that seemed to say that not even a look could
make her take further notice of him as a living being.

“Have you really been thinking that I wanted to turn you out?” he said,
with directness.

“I have not been thinking about the matter at all,” she answered,
turning her head a little aside from his direct gaze. “But I do think
so of course. After all why should you not wish it?”

“You think me likely to want anything that would part us—that is the
way my manner strikes you?” He was surprised to find his voice not
absolutely steady.

She favoured him with a short stare from under her lids. “You seem to
forget that I have your own word that you insisted on our going.
Possibly you have changed your mind, but I have made mine up.” She made
a motion as if to pass in, and go on toward the library.

“I have changed so completely since I saw you,” said Geoffrey, “that I
scarcely recognise life in this—this ecstasy. That is the only change.
Am I likely to turn you out when I have been waiting all my life for
you to come?”

It had been with her own dream, her own credulity with which she had
been fighting quite as much as with Holland, and the charm began to
work once again. She said very coolly:

“You are very kind, but as you said, we ought to be starting,—or have
you forgotten saying that?”

“Be just. You knew I was going too. You knew I urged our going
because—”

“Well, why?” Her look was still from half-shut lids, but the lines of
her mouth had softened by not a little.

“There is a danger of being snowed up here. Now I appreciate that there
would be greater danger in starting out so late. And,—and equally
desperate for me, whatever we do.”

“Desperate?”

“If you only want an opportunity to think so meanly of me,—to hate me,
as your look said.”

“I do not hate you.”

“You are very eager to be rid of my company.”

“I did not understand.”

“You are going to stay?”

“Until we can go safely.”

“Not longer?”

As this was a question obviously impossible to answer directly she
said, “We are under sufficiently large obligations to you already.”

And Geoffrey, about to answer, looked up and saw McVay was observing
them with satisfaction, so that words froze on his lips.

Here was the whole bitterness of the situation concentrated. To be
observed at all in a moment of genuine emotion was bad enough, but to
be observed by one who so plainly hoped to profit, was unbearable.
Never, said Geoffrey to himself, at that glance of triumph from McVay’s
clear little eyes, never should any influence lead him to let a thief
slip through his fingers.

He realised too, for the first time, that he could not hope for another
word alone with Cecilia. McVay must always be present. It was a hideous
sort of revenge that every waking minute must be spent in the man’s
company. Geoffrey had not appreciated the full meaning of his
instructions to McVay to keep always in sight. Not a word or a look
could be exchanged without McVay’s seeing and rejoicing.

Yet, in spite of his irritation, he could not but admire the sort of
affectionate swagger with which McVay rose to greet her, as if the
brother of so tender a creature must remember his responsibility.

“Well, my dear,” he said sitting down beside her on the sofa, “feel
better? Really a terrible experience. Holland has just been telling me
about it—saying how well you behaved,” (Geoffrey favoured him with a
scowl behind her back), “a perfect heroine,—so he says.”

“Mr. Holland is very kind,” said the girl.

“Kind!” cried McVay enthusiastically. “Kind! I should rather think he
was. Why, I could give you instances of his kindness—”

“You need not trouble,” said Geoffrey.

McVay smiled at his sister as much as to say: What did I tell you?...
so modest, so unassuming.

To Geoffrey this sort of thing was unspeakably painful. He was willing
enough to meet McVay in a grim interchange over his strange combination
of facility and crime, of doom and triviality. But when it became any
question of playing upon Cecilia’s unconsciousness of the situation, he
writhed. Yet, a little discernment would have shown him how natural,
how encouraging from his own point of view her unconsciousness was. To
fall in love thoroughly is sufficiently disconcerting. Which of us
needs to be told that it is an absorbing process, that life looks
different, and that all past experiences must be reviewed in the light
of this unexpected illumination. And if this is true of the more usual
forms of the great passion, what is to be said of a girl who, in a
single day, sees and loves a rescuer, a handsome powerful young
creature, who comes to her with all the attributes of a soldier and a
prince, who comes not only to save and protect, but as host and
dispenser of all comfort and beauty.

It was not to be wondered at that she was dazzled and aware of one
fact, one personality, that far from being able to draw shrewd
conclusions from the little happenings going on before her, she was but
dimly aware of the existence of her brother, of the world, of anything
but Geoffrey.

Presently she said, as if trying to call up the picture:

“And this is where you sat all night?” And if the thought was
interesting to her, it was not on account of her brother’s share in it.

“Yes,” returned McVay, springing lightly to his feet. “Here we sat
discussing plans for your safety.” He took a step toward the pair at
the fire, and then remembering, stopped. “Please move a little back,
Holland,” he said, “I want to get nearer the fire. I’m cold.”


[Illustration: “Please move a little back, Holland,” he said, “I want
to get nearer the fire”]


“You can go to the fire,” said Geoffrey, with a gesture of permission.

“Of course you can,” said the girl, “Mr. Holland is not in your way,
Billy.”

But Billy continued to eye his host. “Oh, no, you don’t,” he said
warily. “Not unless you move back. Do move, there’s a good fellow.” And
Geoffrey laughed and moved, somewhat to the girl’s mystification. She
forgot to wonder, however, in pursuing the more wonderful train of
thought which had already been occupying her. Suppose that their plans
for her relief had been decided differently, suppose her brother had
come for her instead of the magnificent stranger, with what different
eyes she might now be looking on life—this ecstasy as Holland had
defined it. Curious to know by what accident she had been so blessed,
she asked:

“Why was it, Billy, that you did not come after me yourself?”

“Just what I said to him,” replied McVay eagerly. “If I said once, I
said a dozen times: ‘Holland, it is my duty and pleasure, it is my
_right_ to go,’ but ...” McVay shrugged his shoulders, “when he once
gets an idea into his head, it takes a gimlet to get it out.”

“Upon my word, Billy,” the girl said indignantly, “I don’t think you
ought to talk like that even in fun. You know perfectly well that Mr.
Holland only insisted on going because he thought he was better able to
bear the physical strain.”

“Physical strain!” exclaimed McVay colouring to the roots of his sandy
hair, from pure annoyance; “I don’t know what you mean,... Holland is,
of course, a larger man than I, but not stronger.... Oh, well, as far
as mere brute force goes, perhaps, but in the matter of bearing
physical strain, you betray the most absurd ignorance. It is well known
scientifically that medium-sized men like myself, when their muscles
are at all developed (and you know my muscles), are better fitted for
endurance than any of these over-grown giants.”

“Then,” said she calmly, “if you knew you were better fitted I can’t
see why you did not go.”

“You are not quite fair to your brother,” said Geoffrey interrupting,
for McVay looked as if he would explode in another moment under the
sense of injustice. “He did propose going himself, but I would not let
him; I—I made it a personal matter.”

“Very personal,” replied McVay with feeling. “I’ll just explain how it
was. Last night, as soon as I realised how bad the storm was, I made up
my mind that I had better attempt to enter the house. I succeeded after
some trouble, came to this room, turned on the light—a spooky thing; an
empty house, picked up a book, had quite forgotten my position, the
world, everything, when a voice at my elbow said: ‘Fond of reading?’ I
was never more surprised in my life. I felt distinctly caught,—an
interloper. And to make matters worse, I saw that Holland did not at
once recognise me. I made every effort to leave, but he would not hear
of such a thing. He made it perfectly plain in fact that it was his
wish to keep me. I yielded. That, I think, Holland, is a pretty
accurate account of the night’s proceeding, isn’t it?”

Geoffrey did not answer. His soul rebelled at the farce, and at McVay’s
irrepressible enjoyment of his own abilities. As Holland met the
twinkling joy of those small blue eyes, he wondered if he would not be
doing mankind a favour by putting a bullet into McVay before the dawn
of another day. Unconscious of this possibility, McVay continued to his
sister:

“Well, it has all been a painful experience for you, my dear ... a long
and dangerous adventure for a woman, but you were at least warmly clad.
A handsome coat, is it not, Holland?”

“Very,” said Geoffrey chillingly.

“Now that coat,” McVay went on unchilled, “was a real bargain. I may
say I paid nothing for it,—little more than the trouble of taking it
home. Although from another point of view, its price was pretty
high....”

“Really, Billy, I don’t think Mr. Holland is interested in our
bargains.”

“In _some_, he is.”

“Yes, indeed,” said Geoffrey, eyeing McVay with a warning glance, “I
think I know of just about a dozen people who will want a
circumstantial account of all of them.”

“Now there, Holland, there is one of your philistine
words,—circumstantial! It takes all poetry, all imagination out of a
subject. Do you know, the only connotation—(are you familiar with that
word?)—the only suggestion it has for me is a _jury_?”

He scored distinctly. Geoffrey had nothing to say in reply.

It was McVay himself, who, disliking a pause, observed that it was
almost time to begin on the preparation of the Christmas dinner. They
all rose as if glad of a break. As they passed out of the door,
Geoffrey laid his hand on McVay’s arm.

“Why do you deliberately try to exasperate me?” he said.

McVay smiled. “Why do little boys lay their tongues to lamp-posts in
freezing weather? Don’t I amuse you? Be candid.”

“No.”

McVay looked regretful. “As I remembered you, Holland, as a boy, you
had more sense of humour,” he said gently.




VI


In the kitchen McVay made it evident that his talents were for
organisation rather than for hard labour. He drew a chair near the
wall, and tilting back at his ease, watched Geoffrey and Cecilia at
work. Geoffrey, engaged in lighting the range-fire, looked up at her as
she moved about filling the kettle and washing out pots and pans, and
thought that he and she presented the aspect of a young couple of the
labouring class with no further ambition than to keep a roof over their
heads. He almost had it in his heart to wish that they were.

She proved herself infinitely more capable than the two men had been,
discovering tins of butter and soup and sardines, a package of hominy,
apples and potatoes in the cellar, and an old box of wedding cake,
which, with a burning brandy sauce, she declared would serve very well
for plum-pudding.

Manual labour was such a novelty to Geoffrey that he soon forgot even
his irritation against McVay and the triangular intercourse was more
friendly than before, until marred by an unfortunate incident.

He was standing in the middle of the kitchen with a steaming pot in
each hand, when McVay, without warning, advanced toward him,
handkerchief in hand, exclaiming:

“My dear fellow, such a smut on your forehead, pray allow me—”


[Illustration: “My dear fellow—pray allow me”]


“Look out,” roared Geoffrey, realising how easily in another second his
revolver might be taken from him. The tone was alarming, and McVay
sprang back ten feet. “I was afraid of burning you with the soup,”
Geoffrey explained politely.

“I own you made me jump,” said McVay.

The girl said nothing, and Geoffrey feared the incident had made an
unfortunate impression on her.

It appeared to be completely forgotten, however, when they presently
sat down to their Christmas dinner, of which they all expressed
themselves as inordinately proud. There was canned soup, and sardines
and toasted biscuits, canned corned beef, potatoes and fried hominy,
bacon and a potato salad, a bottle of champagne, and finally the
wedding cake.

Now to say that by the time dessert was put on table McVay was drunk
would be to do him a gross injustice. All the more genial side of this
nature, however, was distinctly emphasised. The better part of a quart
of champagne had not produced any signs of intoxication; his eye was
clear, his speech perfect, and he was more than usually aware of his
own powers, confident of appreciation.

As he finished his share of cake, he rose to his feet, and leaning the
tips of his fingers on the table, addressed Geoffrey.

“My dear Holland,” he said, “I will not wish you a Merry Christmas, for
it has already been as merry as it has lain within my poor capacity to
make it. Let me, however, express my own gratitude to you for this
delightful occasion. You have referred to the fare as meagre, to our
position as constrained, but believe me, I am not exaggerating when I
say that I so little agree with you that I am confident that, during
many of the remaining years of my life I shall look back to this
Christmas as one of unusual luxury and freedom. It is, perhaps, the
warm glow of friendship that gilds all small discomforts, for in
situations like ours characters are tested, and yours, Holland,” he
paused impressively, “has stood the test.”

Geoffrey bowed gratefully, and McVay continued:

“I have here a slight token in honour of the day. It is of little
pecuniary value, but between us, Holland, pecuniary value is no longer
mentioned. I feel that it will be recommended to you more than mere
worth could recommend it by the fact that it is peculiarly my own,—my
own as few human possessions can be said to be. I offer it,” he said,
drawing from his pocket a square flat little package, “with best wishes
for a happy New Year.”


[Illustration: “I Have Here A Slight Token, In Honor Of The Day”]


The idea that McVay was going to give him a present had never crossed
Geoffrey’s mind, and now it struck him as so characteristic, so
perfectly in keeping with McVay’s consuming desire to triumph in minor
matters, that he was able to smile pleasantly and receive it
appropriately. He exchanged a glance of real appreciation with the
donor, and received a grave bow in return.

Cecilia smiled, too, “I don’t know exactly why you should think Mr.
Holland wants your picture, Billy,” she said.

“It may be of the greatest service to him,” said McVay.

The girl turned to Geoffrey. “I can’t make a speech like Billy’s,” she
said, “but I have a small present for you which I hope you won’t
despise because it is not new. I mean I have worn it myself for some
time, and I hope _you_ will now, in remembrance of the time when you
sheltered the houseless.” She held out on her pink palm a flat gold
pencil with a single topaz set in the top.

The thing was of some value and Geoffrey, looking up, caught McVay’s
eye in which danced such a delicious merriment that Geoffrey’s
half-formed question was answered. McVay was undergoing such paroxysms
of delight at the idea that Geoffrey was about to become a receiver of
stolen goods that he could not well conceal it. And instinctively
Geoffrey drew back his hand. The next moment he realised that he must
at once accept the gift with decent gratitude, whatever he might choose
to do with it afterward, but unfortunately the girl had noticed his
hesitation.

She said nothing whatsoever, but she closed her hand on the pencil,
rose from the table, and left them to dispose of the remains of the
feast as best they could.

McVay, as if he had observed nothing, threw himself at once into the
part of a waiter, tucked a napkin round his waist, flung another over
his arm and began to clear the table.

“Wait a moment,” said Geoffrey, who had not followed his example; “I
have something to say to you. I see you are in possession of my
sentiments in regard to your sister.... I think her a wonder,—that’s
all it is necessary for you to know.”

“Quite naturally, Holland. She is, she is.”

“I won’t discuss that with you. The point is that you seem to be under
the impression that this will do you some good. Well, it won’t. You
stand just where you did before. You go to jail when the snow melts.
Then I settle my affairs.”

McVay’s face fell. “Really, Holland,” he said, “I don’t see how, if you
are fond of a woman you can want ...”

“... to spare her such a brother as you. Think it over.”

“There are worse brothers than I,” replied McVay, “how many men would
have sacrificed what I have sacrificed in order to keep her
comfortably.”

“Not many, I hope.”

“She is extraordinarily fond of me.”

“Perhaps. You see she has not any one else to be fond of.”

“We can scarcely say that _now_,” returned McVay encouragingly.

“I won’t discuss it with you.”

“You can’t mean to tell me that you are in love with my sister and mean
to send me to state’s prison?”

“I mean exactly that.”

“Why, she’d never forgive you.”

Geoffrey thought this so probable that he had no answer to give and
presently McVay, who had been grumbling over the matter to himself,
asked: “Are you serious, Holland?”

“What do you suppose I am?” Geoffrey roared, and McVay, shaking his
head went on with the work of clearing the table. He was very silent
and abstracted and for the first time seemed to realise his position.
When they had put away the last plate, Geoffrey said:

“Now come to the library. I am going to give you a pipe, confound you.”

“A pipe! Why?”

“Because I want to give your sister something, and I think she would be
more apt to take it.”

“I’m afraid she is rather offended by the way you treated her little
gift. As a matter of fact I was the person to be offended, for I had
given her the pencil. A pretty little thing, singularly like one which
you may have seen Mrs.—”

“Don’t tell me where you took it from. I don’t want to know. Come and
get your pipe and mind you are grateful.”

“A pipe,” observed McVay thoughtfully. “I think I’ll take that large
meerschaum on the mantelpiece.”

Geoffrey laughed. “I think you won’t,” he answered. “The best pipe I
own! No, indeed, you’ll take a horrid little one that won’t draw. It
will be just the thing for you.”

“No,” said McVay, “no. You must give me the big one. Otherwise I shall
make it appear that you promised the other to me, and turned mean at
the last moment. And I can do it, Holland.” His little eyes gleamed at
the thought. “I shall say, ‘My dear fellow, I’m glad you changed your
mind about the meerschaum; it was as you say, too handsome for a man in
my position.’ That will make her mad if anything will. You know she is
not quite satisfied with the way you treat me, as it is.”

This was quite true, and Geoffrey, remembering that the object of the
gift was to please the girl, reluctantly agreed to part with his
favourite pipe. The affair went off well. McVay affected to hesitate
over accepting so handsome an offering, and Geoffrey pressed it upon
him with a good grace.

As far as his present to the girl was concerned, he found himself less
and less willing to make it in McVay’s presence, and more and more
unable to think of any way of getting rid of him except murder or the
cedar-closet. His anxiety was rendered more acute by the fact that once
or twice he could not help suspecting that Cecilia, in spite of her
anger, would have been glad of a few words alone with him, also.

Before very long she suggested that McVay should take her hat and coat
upstairs for her.

“Certainly I will,” cried Billy, springing up with alacrity, and was at
the door before Holland’s warning shout “_McVay_” stopped him.

“Let me take it up for your sister,” he said warningly.

“Oh, not at all. Let _me_,” replied McVay courteously.

“Couldn’t hear of it,” returned Geoffrey.

By this time they were both outside of the door, and Geoffrey closed it
with a snap.

“You would, would you?” he said angrily.

“Now, Holland,” said McVay as one who intends to introduce reason into
an irrational confusion, “this is exactly a case in point. I am by
nature a gallant man. I forgot all about your instructions.”

“I wonder?” said Geoffrey.

“It was instinctive to do my sister the little favour she asked. Yes,
and I doubt if I should have acted differently if your pistol had been
at my head. She asked me. That was enough.”

“I’ve warned you once.”

“Holland, I think,—you’ll excuse my telling you,—that you have a very
unfortunate manner at times.”

They went upstairs together and were descending when Geoffrey stopped,
with his eyes on the grand piano which stood in the hall below them.

“Can you play?” he said.

McVay brightened at once. He had been looking a little glum since his
last speech. “Yes,” he answered, “I can. Well, I’m not a professional,
you understand, but for an amateur I am supposed to have as much
technique and a good deal more sentiment than most.”

“I don’t care _how_ you play,” said Holland. “There is a piano. Sit
down and play, and _don’t stop_.”

“No, Holland, no,” said the other with unusual firmness; “that I will
not do. No artist would. Ask any one. It is impossible to play in
public without practice. I have not touched the instrument for over a
year.”

“You can do all the practising you like here and now. You can play
finger exercises for all I care. All I insist is that you should make a
noise so that I’ll know you are there.”

“Well,” said McVay yielding, “you must remember to make allowances. Not
the best musician could sit down after a year ... however, I dare say
it will come back to me quicker than to most people. You must make
allowances for my lack of practice.”

“There is only one thing I won’t make allowances for, and that is your
moving from that music stool.”

He opened the piano, and McVay sat down waving his fingers to loosen
the joints. He sat with his head on one side, as if waiting to discover
which of the great composers was about to inspire him. Then he dropped
lightly upon the notes, lifting his chin, as if surprised to find that
an air of Schubert’s was growing under his fingers. Geoffrey was
astonished to find that he really was, as he said, something of an
artist. He waited until he was fairly started and then returned to the
library.

“Is that Billy?” said the girl. “It must be a great pleasure to him to
have a piano again. He is so fond of music.”

“He was not as eager to play as I to have him,” said Geoffrey.

He came back quietly, and stood looking down at her for a moment. Then
he said, stretching out his hand:

“I want my Christmas present.”

“I have none to give you.”

“You had.”

“I’ve changed my mind.”

“Why?”

For the first time she looked at him. “Mr. Holland,” she said, “you
must think me singularly unobservant. Do you suppose I don’t see that
you dislike my brother. You refused the pencil—you did refuse it
plainly enough—because Billy had given it to me. I will not offer it to
you again. I know that Billy sometimes does rub people up the wrong
way, but I should think any one of any discernment could see that his
faults are only faults of manner.”

She said this almost appealingly, and Geoffrey unable to agree, turned
with something like a groan, and resting his elbows on the mantelpiece,
covered his face with his hands.

“Do you suppose that he does not see how you feel toward him? Are you
by any chance assuming that he bears with your manner on account of his
own comfort? You might at least be generous or acute enough to see that
it is only for my sake that he exercises so much self-control. He does
not want to make my position here more unendurable by quarrelling with
you. It makes me furious to see what you force him to put up with, the
way you speak to him, and look at him, as if he were your slave, or a
disobedient dog. His self-control is wonderful. I admire him more than
I can say.”

“And is my self-control nothing?” he asked, without moving his hands
from his face.

“Yours? I don’t see any exercise of yours. Circumstances have put us at
your mercy, you are rich and fortunate, and as insolent as you choose
to be. Self-control? I don’t see any evidence of it.”

“No?” he said, and turning, looked at her with a violence that might
have set her on the right track. Under his eyes she looked down and
probably in the instant forgot all that she had been saying and
feeling, for when he added: “I love you,” her hands moved toward his,
and she made no resistance when he took her in his arms.




VII


McVay was left so long at the piano that he finally resorted to a
series of discords in order to recall himself to Holland’s mind. His
existence, if he had only realised the fact, was so completely
forgotten that he might have made his escape with a good half hour to
spare before either of the others appreciated that the music had
ceased. Not knowing this, however, he did not dare stop his playing for
an instant, until sheer physical fatigue interfered. It was at this
point that the discords began, and brought Geoffrey into the hall.

The disposal of McVay for the night was a question to which Geoffrey
had given a great deal of thought. The cedar closet presented itself as
a safe prison, but in the face of McVay’s repeated assertions that the
air had barely sufficed to support him during his former occupancy, it
looked like murder to insist. Geoffrey finally, when bed-time came,
locked him in a dressing-room off his own room. The window—the room was
on the third floor—gave on empty space, and against the only door he
placed his own bed, so that escape seemed tolerably difficult.

And to all other precautions, Geoffrey added his own wakefulness,
although toward morning weariness triumphed over excitement and he fell
asleep.

He was waked by an insistent knocking at his door, and he heard his
name called by Cecilia. He sprang up and found her standing in the
hall. She was wrapped in her sable coat, but shivering from cold or
fear.

“There is some one getting into the house. I heard a window open and
steps on the piazza, below my room. What can it be?”

Geoffrey flung himself past her. The instinct of the hunter joined to
the obstinacy of his nature maddened him at the notion of McVay’s
escape. On the opposite side of the house there was a piazza and on the
roof of this a neighbouring window opened. He threw it back and climbed
out.

The snow had stopped, and the moon was shining, paling a little before
the approaching dawn. Geoffrey could see a figure stealing quickly
across the snow. There was no question of its identity. His revolver,
which he had snatched from under his pillow and brought with him, he at
once levelled on the vanishing form; his finger was on the trigger,
when he felt a hand on his arm.

Leaning out of the window behind him the girl caught his arm. “Don’t
fire,” she said. “Don’t you see it is Billy?”

There was a pause—the fraction of a second, but momentous, for Geoffrey
realised that all his threats to McVay had been idle, that with that
touch on his arm he could not shoot.

Nevertheless he raised his voice and shouted thunderously: “McVay!”

The figure turned, hesitated, saw, perhaps, the gleam of the moon on
steel and began to retrace his steps.

Steadily with the revolver still upon him he moved back to the house.
Under the piazza he stopped and waved his hand.

“I’m afraid they got away from us, Holland. I did my best.”

“There _was_ a burglar then!” said the girl in the little whisper of
recent fright.

“By Heaven, he shall not trouble you,” returned Holland with more
earnestness than seemed to be required. Then he left her and went down
to meet McVay.

“You were just about half a second ahead of a bullet,” he remarked,
ushering him into the hall. To be caught and brought back is so
ignominious a position that Geoffrey looked to see even McVay at a
disadvantage, but looked in vain. The aspect worn was a particularly
self-satisfied one.

“I was aware I took a risk,” he answered; “I took it gladly for my
sister’s sake.”

“For your sister’s sake?”

“Yes, and yours. Be honest, Holland, what could be so great a relief to
you as to find I had disappeared. You are too narrow-minded, too
honourable, you would say, to connive at it, but you would be delighted
to know that you need not prosecute me.”

“If I shot you, I should be saved the trouble of prosecuting.”

“But at what a cost! I refer to my sister’s regard. No, no, the thing,
if you had only been quick enough to see it, was for me to escape. It
was a risk, of course, but a risk I gladly took for my sister’s sake. I
would take longer ones for her.”

“Do you mean that?”

“Of course.”

“Then take this revolver and go out and shoot yourself.”

McVay looked very thoughtful. Then, he said gravely, “No, no, Holland.
To take a risk is one thing,—to kill myself quite another. I have
always had a strong prejudice against suicide. I think it a cowardly
action. And it would be no help to you. She would not believe that I
had committed suicide. She knows my views on the subject, and could
imagine no motive. No, that would not do at all. I’m surprised at the
suggestion. It is against my principles.”

“Your principles!” Geoffrey sneered. Nevertheless, he was not a little
altered in opinion. It had been something of a shock to him to find
that he could not shoot at the critical instant. It had shaken his
faith in himself. He began to doubt if he would be capable of sending
the man to state’s prison when Cecilia besought his pity. His own
limitations faced him. He was not the relentless judge he had supposed
himself. Yet on the other hand, the remembrance of Vaughan and the
other men he was representing held him to his idea of justice. “Sit
down,” he said suddenly turning to McVay, “and write me out a list of
everything you have stolen in this neighbourhood and where it is and
how it may be obtained. Yes, I know it is difficult, but you had better
try to do it for on the completeness of your list depends your only
chance of avoiding the law. If I can return all properly, perhaps—I
have a mine in Mexico, a hell on earth, where you can go if you prefer
it to penal servitude. There won’t be much difference, except for the
publicity of a trial. I’ve a man there who, when I give him his orders,
would infinitely rather shoot you than take any risk of your getting
away. Which will you have?”

“Can you ask, Holland? Which will be easier for my sister?”

“Sit down and write your list, then.”

“An interesting occupation, mining,” observed McVay as he opened the
portfolio. After this for a long time nothing was heard but the soft
noise of the pencil and an occasional comment from the writer:

“A rare piece that. I parted with it absurdly low, but the dealer was a
connoisseur—appealed to my artistic side.”

Things had gone on thus for perhaps an hour when a step sounded outside
and the door bell rang. Both men jumped to their feet.

“My God, Holland,” said McVay, “if that is the police, keep your wits
about you or we are lost.”

It was a revelation to Geoffrey to find how completely, as his alarm
showed, he had cast in his interests with McVay’s. He stepped forward
in silence and opened the door.

Not the police, but a man in plain clothes was standing there.

“I’m glad to see you safe, Mr. Holland,” he said. “There has been great
anxiety felt for your safety. I am a detective working on the Vaughan
and Marheim cases. I got word to come and look you up as you did not
get back to the gardener’s cottage the night before last.”

“The snow detained me,” said Geoffrey slowly.

“Come in, come in, friend,” said McVay briskly. “You must be cold.”

It speaks well for the professional eye that the detective, after
studying McVay for an instant, asked:

“I did not catch this gentleman’s name. Who is he?”

There was a barely perceptible pause. Then Geoffrey answered coolly:
“That is the man you are after.”

“Are you crazy, Holland?” shouted McVay.

“What, the Vaughan burglar? You caught him without assistance?” Envy
and admiration struggled on the detective’s countenance. “I must
congratulate you, sir.”

Geoffrey allowed himself the luxury of a groan. “You needn’t,” he said;
“I am no subject for congratulation. I can’t even prosecute him,
confound him, for several reasons. We were at school together, and I
can take no steps in the matter.”

“But I can,” said the detective; “indeed it is my duty to.”

“No,” said Geoffrey, “nor can you. This man cannot be sent to prison.
Yes, I know, it is compounding a felony. Well, sit down, and we’ll
compound it.”

“I could not agree to anything of the kind,” said the detective.

“I don’t see exactly what you can do about it.” Geoffrey was deliberate
and very polite. “For reasons which I can’t explain, but which you
would appreciate, leave me no choice. I have to save this man from
jail. If you intend to work against me, I shall simply let him escape
at once. Don’t draw your revolver, please. I prefer to be the only
person with a weapon in my hand. He has made a list of all the things
he has stolen, and I shall see that they are returned to their owners
at any cost. Will you undertake to get him safely to a mine I own in
Mexico? Once there he can’t get away. It is forty-five miles from a
railway. If you accomplish this, I will give you ten thousand to make
up for the reward you didn’t get,—five thousand down, and five thousand
at the end of a year.”

“I don’t know what to say,” said the man. “It sounds like a bribe.”

“It is,” said Geoffrey coolly.

“I never received such a proposition,” returned the man.

“That scheme won’t do, Holland,” put in McVay. “Can’t you see it lays
you open to blackmail?”

“From you?” said Geoffrey. “I had thought of that, but you can’t
blackmail me at La Santa Anna, and if you get away and come close
enough to blackmail me, I’ll put you in prison without a moment’s
hesitation. I shall be in a position by that time to take care of the
feelings of the other people concerned.”

“You don’t understand me,” answered McVay; “I meant blackmail from this
man.”

“Oh,” said Geoffrey civilly, “I am convinced he is not a blackmailer.
And besides, he won’t get his second five thousand for a year, and as I
was saying to you, after a year I don’t so much mind having the whole
thing known. My reputation will stand it, I think, if yours and his
will.”

“I’m no blackmailer,” said this detective. “If I accept, I’ll be on the
square.”

“If you do, let me offer you a piece of advice,” observed Geoffrey,
“and that is not to take your eye off that man for a single instant. He
is a slippery customer, and you run a fair chance of not seeing my
money at all, if you give him the smallest loophole.”

The detective considered McVay carefully from head to foot. Then he
said gravely:

“Is there any way of getting to this place of yours by water? I don’t
see my way to taking this customer in a Pullman car. If he chooses to
slip overboard from a boat, why no one would be any the worse, unless
maybe the sharks.”

“Very true,” agreed Geoffrey amiably. “Fortunately you can get a
steamer in New York.”

It soon became apparent that the detective failed to see any good
reason for declining so advantageous an offer as Geoffrey’s, and they
were presently deep in the discussion of their plans, McVay meanwhile
studying the map with unfeigned interest in the situation of his future
residence.

Cecilia, fortunately, gave them plenty of time for their arrangements,
for she had fallen asleep again, after the alarm of the early morning,
and the men must have been talking for two hours when she appeared at
the library door.

She cast a look of surprise at the addition to their party and Geoffrey
saw with a sort of paralysis that she was inclined to set him down as
the burglar whose footsteps she had heard in the night. To prevent any
betrayal of this opinion, Geoffrey advanced a few steps to meet her,
although as he did so, he realised that he had nothing to answer when
she asked, as of course she did ask: “Who is that?”

A sort of desperation, the cowardice that will sometimes attack the
brave took hold of Geoffrey. He looked at her hopelessly and would
perhaps in another instant have told her the truth, had not McVay, not
the least disconcerted, taken the lead.

“This, Cecilia,” he said exuberantly, laying his hand on the
detective’s shoulder, “is my old friend Picklebody,—Henderson
Picklebody. You have heard his name often enough, and he, yours, too.
Eh, Henderson, in the old Machita days?”

The detective, whose name was George P. Cook, was so taken up with his
surprise at the apparition of a beautiful woman that he scarcely heard
McVay. He began to guess something of the motives that led Holland to
shield this offender against the law, nor had he ever found it unwise
to yield to the whims of young millionaires.

Cecilia, who was too gentle or too politic to betray the fact that she
heard the interesting name of Picklebody for the first time, remarked
in a tone as cheerful as she could make it:

“I suppose that if Mr. Picklebody could get in we can get out now.”

“Can and will,” rejoined McVay beamingly. “Hen comes as he has always
come to his friends, as a rescuer.”

“I seem to require a great deal of rescuing,” said the girl, looking up
at the monopolist in the art who had so far said nothing.

“Ah, but you don’t understand, my dear,” went on McVay ruthlessly
cutting into the look which the lovers were exchanging; “You don’t yet
understand how fortunate we are in our friends. Henderson did not, it
is true, come to find me. It was the greatest coincidence his meeting
me here. It seems that he and Holland are both interested in a mine in
Mexico, and what do you think?” McVay paused and rubbed his hands;
“Really, we have the kindest friends; they have been arranging between
them to offer me a job down there. What do you think of that?”

Cecilia who had been trying to imagine any future after they left the
shelter of the grey stone house, would have answered if she had been
thoroughly candid that she thought Mexico was a terribly long distance
away, but she only observed:

“How very kind of them. I am sure we shall like Mexico.”

“There, there, do you hear that? ‘We.’ Gentlemen,” cried McVay,
throwing up his hands, “I cannot leave my sister alone,—deserted.
Consider it all off.”

“Oh, I wasn’t to go?” asked Cecilia, looking up with more enthusiasm.

“My dear,” replied McVay, “I must own that I was base enough to
consider a plan that would separate us. The mine, it seems, is no place
for ladies. But we will think no more about it. I see by your manner
that your feelings...”

“Dear Billy,” said the girl gently, “you must not give it up. You know
that I can always go to the Lees, until—until I get a position. And
nothing is so important as that you should have work that is
satisfactory to you. Of course you must accept.”

“Did you ever hear anything so noble?” asked McVay. “Yes, I suppose I
ought to accept. So they both tell me. I must go, mustn’t I, Hen?”

“Well, it looks like it would be better for you if you did,” replied
the detective, who had fortunately his legitimate share of American
humour.

“There is another point, Cecilia,” McVay went on, “if I do accept, I
shall have to leave at once. When did you say, Hen?”

“Train to New York this afternoon,—steamer sails to-morrow.”

“Oh, dear. That’s very sudden,” said Cecilia.

“At a word from you, dear, I’ll give it up,” remarked McVay.

“No, no, of course not. I should never forgive myself. You must go.
Perhaps it is all the better that I did not know beforehand. It saves
me just that amount.”

“We’ve no time to lose,” remarked McVay briskly, “if we are going to
try for that afternoon train. I suppose we can get a sleigh at the
gardener’s, Holland, if we can struggle as far as that. Well, well, we
must hurry off.”

It was McVay who urged on the preparations for departure, hurrying his
sister, flitting about the house at such a rate that the detective, who
was of a solider build, found it hard to keep up with.

Nor was it only physical agility that McVay required of the unfortunate
man. Having overheard Geoffrey telling him that he was not to betray
the real state of things before Miss McVay, under penalty of losing his
money, McVay took special delight in making him look like a fool,
calling upon him to remember happenings which existed only in McVay’s
own fertile brain.

“What, Hen,” he would cry suddenly, “was the name of that pretty black
haired girl you were so sweet on,—you know, the daughter of the
canal-boat man.”

The detective, looking very much alarmed, would of course reply that he
did not know what McVay was talking about.

“There, there,” McVay would reply soothingly patting him on the
shoulder, “I’m not going into the story of the pink blanket. You can
always trust to my discretion. But I would like just to remember her
name. It was so peculiar,—a name I never heard before.”

The detective, who had been respectably married since he was twenty,
found himself unable to remember any female names and finally in agony
suggested “Mary.”

“Mary, my dear fellow, no; that was your friend the paper-girl. There
is nothing very unusual about Mary, is there, Holland? No, the name I
was trying to think of was Ethelberta. Now you remember, don’t you?”

“No, I don’t,” said the detective crossly, casting an appealing look at
Geoffrey.

“How sad that is,” said McVay philosophically. “You don’t even remember
her name, and at one time—well, well.”

Or again, he would exclaim brightly, studying the detective’s
countenance.

“Ah, Henderson, I see the mark of Sweeney’s bullet has entirely gone. I
was afraid it would leave a scar. Tell my sister that yarn. I think it
would interest her.”

“Yes, do, Mr. Picklebody,” said the girl politely and McVay, when he
had sufficiently tortured his victim, would at length launch out into a
story himself. Miserable as the detective was under this sort of
treatment, it soon appeared that McVay’s ease and facility had made an
impression on him, and that he looked at his prisoner with a sort of
wondering admiration.

“Now, Holland, are we all ready? Cecilia, have you got your little
bag?” he began when they were about to depart. “Holland, my dear
fellow, don’t think me interfering if I ask whether you have looked to
all the doors and windows? Tramps and thieves are so apt to break into
shut-up houses, and it would be such a pity if anything happened to any
of your pretty things. Ah, what an expanse of snow. Beautiful, isn’t
it? You may talk about your tropical scenery, Hen, but we shan’t see
anything finer than this the world over. What a contrast the south will
be though, eh, old man?” and, drawing the detective’s arm through his,
leaning heavily upon him meanwhile, McVay moved forward, talking
volubly.

Cecilia and Geoffrey hesitated a moment looking up at the house that
had seen such momentous changes in their lives.

“When we come back, it will be spring,” said Geoffrey softly.

“Oh,” said the girl in rather a shaky voice, “you like me well enough
to ask me to stay again?”

“Well enough,” said Geoffrey, “to ask you to stay forever.”