THE LION’S SHARE

[Illustration: “Yes,” he said quietly, “you are right, it is blood.”
Page 99]




  THE LION’S SHARE

  _By_
  OCTAVE THANET

  Author of
  The Man of the Hour, Stories of a Western Town
  The Missionary Sheriff
  A Book of True Lovers, etc.

  With Illustrations by
  E. M. ASHE

  INDIANAPOLIS
  THE BOBBS-MERRILL COMPANY
  PUBLISHERS




  COPYRIGHT 1907
  THE BOBBS-MERRILL COMPANY

  OCTOBER

  ROBERT DRUMMOND COMPANY, PRINTERS, NEW YORK




CONTENTS


  CHAPTER                                        PAGE

      I THE MAN WITH THE MOLES                      1

     II AUNT REBECCA                               25

    III THE TRAIN ROBBERS                          46

     IV THE VANISHING OF ARCHIE                    70

      V BLIND CLUES                                83

     VI THE VOICE IN THE TELEPHONE                100

    VII THE HAUNTED HOUSE                         118

   VIII FACE TO FACE                              138

     IX THE AGENT OF THE FIRELESS STOVE           152

      X THE SMOLDERING EMBERS                     171

     XI THE CHARM OF JADE                         195

    XII A BLOW                                    212

   XIII WHOSE FEET WERE SHOD WITH SILENCE         245

    XIV FROM MRS. MELVILLE’S POINT OF VIEW        254

     XV “THE LIGHT THAT NEVER WAS”                265

    XVI THE REAL EDWIN KEATCHAM                   290

   XVII IN WHICH THE PUZZLE FALLS INTO PLACE      321

  XVIII CASA FUERTE                               343

    XIX EXTRACT FROM A LETTER                     371




  _Serene, indifferent to fate,
    Thou sittest by the Western gate,
  Thou seest the white seas fold their tents,
    Oh, warder of two continents.
  Thou drawest all things small and great
    To thee beside the Western gate._




THE LION’S SHARE




CHAPTER I

THE MAN WITH THE MOLES


The first time that Colonel Rupert Winter saw Cary Mercer was under
circumstances calculated to fix the incident firmly in his memory. In
the year 1903, home from the Philippines on furlough, and preparing to
return to a task big enough to attract him in spite of its exile and
hardships, he had visited the son of a friend at Harvard. They were
walking through the corridors of one of the private dormitories where
the boy roomed. Rather grimly the soldier’s eyes were noting marble
wainscoting and tiled floors, and contrasting this academic environment
with his own at West Point. A caustic comment rose to his lips, but it
was not uttered, for he heard the sharp bark of a pistol, followed by a
thud, and a crackle as of breaking glass.

“Do you fellows amuse yourselves shooting up the dormitory?” said he.
The boy halted; he had gone white.

“It came from Mercer’s room!” he cried, and ran across the corridor to
a door with the usual labeling of two visiting cards. The door was not
locked. Entering, they passed into a vestibule, thence through another
door which stood open. For many a day after the colonel could see just
how the slender young figure looked, the shoulders in a huddle on the
study table, one arm swinging nerveless; beside him, on the floor,
a revolver and a broken glass bottle. The latter must have made the
crackling sound. Some dark red liquid, soaking the open sheets of a
newspaper, filled the room with the pungent odor of alcohol. Only the
top of the lad’s head showed--a curly, silky, dark brown head; but even
before the colonel lifted it he had seen a few thick drops matting the
brown curls. He laid the head back gently and his hand slipped to the
boy’s wrist.

“No use, Ralph,” he said in the subdued tones that the voice takes
unconsciously in the presence of death.

“And Endy was going to help him,” almost sobbed Ralph. “He told me he
would. Oh, _why_ couldn’t he have trusted his friends!”

The colonel was looking at the newspaper--“Was it money?” said he;
for a glance at the dabbled sheet had brought him the headings of the
stock quotations: “Another Sharp Break in Stocks. New Low Records.”
It _had_ been money. Later, after what needed to be done was over,
after doctors and officers of the law were gone, Colonel Winter heard
the wretched story. A young, reckless, fatally attractive Southerner,
rich friends, college societies, joyous times; nothing really wicked
or vicious, only a surrender to youth and friendship and pleasure, and
then the day of reckoning--duns, college warnings, the menace of black
disgrace. The young fellow was an orphan, with no near kindred save
one brother much older than he. The brother was reputed to be rich,
according to Southern standards, and young Mercer, who had just come
into a modest patrimony of his own, invested in his brother’s ventures.
As to the character of these ventures, whether flimsy or substantial,
the colonel’s informants were absolutely ignorant. All they knew of the
elder Mercer was that he was often in New York and had “a lot to do
with Wall Street.” He wasn’t a broker; no, he was trying to raise money
to hang on to some big properties that he had; and the stocks seemed
to be going at remarkable rates just now, the bottom dropping out of
the market. If a certain stock of the Mercers’--they didn’t know the
name--could be kept above twenty-seven he would pull through. Colonel
Winter made no comment, but he remembered that when he had studied
the morning’s stock-market pages for himself, he had noted “bad slump
in the Southern steels,” and “Tidewater on the toboggan slide; off
three to four points, declining from twenty-seven and a fraction to
twenty-three.”

“Another victim of the Wall Street pirates,” was the colonel’s silent
judgment on the tragedy. “Lucky for her his mother’s dead.”

The next morning he had returned and had gone to his young friend’s
rooms.

The boy was still full of the horror of the day before. Mercer’s
brother was in Cambridge, he said--arrived that morning from New York.
“Endy is going to fetch him round to get him out of the reporters’
way sometime this evening; maybe there’s something I can do”--this
in explanation of his declining to dine with the colonel. As the two
entered the rooms, Winter was a little in advance, and caught the first
glimpse of a man sitting in a big mission arm-chair, his head sunk on
his breast. So absorbed was this man in his own distempered musings
that the new-comers’ approach did not arouse him. He sat with knitted
brows and clenched hands, staring into vacancy; his rigid and pallid
features set in a ghastly intensity of thought. There was suffering in
the look; but there was more: the colonel, who had been living among
the serpent passions of the Orient, knew deadly anger when he saw it;
it was branded on the face before him. Involuntarily he fell back; he
felt as if he had blundered in on a naked soul. Noiselessly he slipped
out of the range of vision. He spoke loudly, halting to ask some
question about the rooms; this made a moment’s pause.

It was sufficient; in the study they found a quiet, calm, although
rather haggard-looking man, who greeted Winter’s companion courteously,
with a Southern accent, and a very good manner. He was presented to the
colonel as Mr. Mercer. He would have excused himself, professing that
he was just going, but the colonel took the words out of his mouth:
“Ralph, here, has a cigar for me--that is all I came for; see you at
the Touraine, Ralph, to-morrow for luncheon, then.” He did not see
the man again; neither did he see Ralph, although he made good, so far
as in him lay, his fiction of an engagement at the Touraine. But Ralph
could not come; and Winter had lunched, instead, with an old friend
at his club, and had watched, through a stately Georgian window, the
shifting greenery of the Common in an east wind.

All through the luncheon the soldier’s mind kept swerving from the talk
in hand to Cary Mercer’s face. Yet he never expected to see it again.
Three years later he did see it; and this second encounter, of which,
by the way, Mercer was unconscious, was the beginning of an absorbing
chapter in his life. A short space of time that chapter occupied; yet
into it crowded mystery, peril, a wonderful and awful spectacle, the
keenest happiness and the cruelest anxiety. Let his days be ever so
many, the series of events which followed Mercer’s reappearance will
not be blurred by succeeding experiences; their vivid and haunting
pictures will burn through commoner and later happenings as an electric
torch flares through layers of mist.

Nothing, however, could promise adventure less than the dull and chilly
late March evening when the chapter began. Nor could any one be less
on the lookout for adventure, or even interest, than was Rupert Winter.
In truth, he was listless and depressed.

When he alighted from his cab in the great court of the Rock Island
Station he found Haley, his old orderly, with a hand on the door-hasp.
Haley’s military stoicism of demeanor could not quite conceal a certain
agitation--at least not from the colonel’s shrewd eye, used to catch
the moods of his soldiers. He strangled a kind of sigh. “Doesn’t like
it much more than I,” thought Rupert Winter. “This is mighty kind of
you, Haley,” he said.

“Yes, sor,” answered Haley, saluting. The colonel grinned feebly.
Haley, busy repelling a youthful porter, did not notice the grin; he
strode ahead with the colonel’s world-scarred hand-luggage, found an
empty settee beside one of the square-tiled columns of the waiting-room
and disposed his burden on the iron-railed seat next the corner one,
which he reserved for the colonel.

“The train ain’t in yet, Colonel,” said he. “I’ll be telling you--”

“No, Haley,” interrupted the colonel, whose lip twitched a little; and
he looked aside; “best say good-by now; don’t wait. The fact is, I’m
thinking of too many things you and I have gone through together.” He
held out his hand; Haley, with a stony expression, gazed past it and
saluted, while he repeated: “Yes, sor; I’ll be back to take the bags
whin the train’s made up.” Whereupon he wheeled and made off with speed.

“Just the same damned obstinate way he’s always had,” chuckled the
colonel to himself. Nevertheless, something ached in his throat as he
frowned and winked.

“Oh, get a brace on you, you played-out old sport!” he muttered. “The
game’s on the last four cards and you haven’t established your suit;
you’ll have to sit back and watch the other fellows play!” But his
dreary thoughts persisted. Rupert was a colonel in the regular army
of the United States. He had been brevetted a brigadier-general after
the Spanish War, and had commanded, not only a brigade, but a division
at one critical time in the Philippines; but for reasons probably
known to the little knot of politicians who “hung it up,” although
incomprehensible to most Americans, Congress had failed to pass the
bill giving the wearers of brevet titles the right to keep their
hard-won and empty honors; wherefore General Winter had declined to
Colonel Winter.

He had more substantial troubles, including a wound which would
probably make him limp through life and possibly retire him from
service at fifty. It had given him a six months’ sick leave (which he
had not wanted), and after spending a month on the Atlantic coast,
he was going for the spring to the Pacific. Haley, whose own term of
service had expired, had not reënlisted, but had followed him, Mrs.
Haley and the baby uncomplainingly bringing up the rear. It was not
fair to Haley nor to Mrs. Haley, the colonel felt. He had told Haley
so; he had found a good situation for the man, and he had added the
deed for a little house in the suburbs of Chicago.

If Haley wouldn’t reënlist--there never was a better soldier since he
had downed a foolish young hankering for wild times and whisky--if he
wouldn’t go back to the army, where he belonged, let him settle down,
take up the honest carpenter’s trade that he had abandoned, be a good
citizen and marry little Nora to some classmate in the high school,
who might make a fortune and build her a Colonial mansion, should the
Colonial still obtain in the twentieth century.

The colonel had spread a grand prospect before Haley, who listened
unresponsively, a dumb pain in his wide blue Irish eyes. The colonel
hated it; but, somehow, he hated worse the limp look of Haley’s back as
he watched it dwindle down Michigan Avenue.

However, Mrs. Haley had been more satisfactory, if none the less
bewildering. She seemed very grateful over the house and the three
hundred dollars for its furnishing. A birthday present, he had termed
it, with a flicker of humor because the day was his own birthday. His
fiftieth birthday it happened to be, and it occurred to him that a
man ought to do something a little notable on such an anniversary.
This rounding of the half-century had attributes apart; it was no mere
annual birthday; it marked the last vanishing flutter of the gilded
draperies of youth; the withering of the garlands; the fading tinkle
of the light music of hope. It should mark a man’s solid achievements.
Once, not so long ago, Winter had believed that his fiftieth birthday
would see wide and beneficent and far-reaching results in the province
where he ruled. That dream was shattered. He was generous of nature,
and he could have been content to behold another reap the fields which
he had sown and tilled; it was the harvest, whether his or another’s,
for which he worked; but his had been the bitter office to have to
stand aside, with no right to protest, and see his work go to waste
because his successor had a feeble brain and a pusillanimous caution in
place of his own dogged will. For all these reasons, as well as others,
the colonel found no zest in his fiftieth birthday; and his reverie
drifted dismally from one somber reflection to another until it brought
up at the latest wound to his heart--his favorite brother’s death.

There had been three Winter brothers--Rupert, Melville and Thomas.
During the past year both Thomas Winter and his wife had died, leaving
one child, a boy of fourteen, named Archibald after his father’s uncle.
Rupert Winter and the boy’s great-aunt, the widow of the great-uncle
for whom he had been named, were appointed joint guardians of the young
Archie. To-night, in his jaded mood, he was assailed by reproaches
because he had not seen more of his ward. Why, he hadn’t so much as
looked the little chap up when he passed through Fairport--merely had
sent him a letter and some truck from the Philippines; nice guardian
_he_ was! By a natural enough transition, his thoughts swerved to his
own brief and not altogether happy married life. He thought of the
graves in Arizona where he had left his wife and his two children,
and his heart felt heavy. To escape musings which grew drearier every
second, he cast his eyes about the motley crowd shuffling over the
tiled floors or resting in the massive dark oaken seats. And it was
then that he saw Cary Mercer. At first he did not recognize the face.
He only gazed indifferently at two well-dressed men who sat some paces
away from him in the shadow of a great tiled column similar to his own.
There was this difference, it happened: the mission lantern with its
electric bulbs above the two men was flashing brightly, and by some
accident that above the colonel was dark. He could see the men, himself
in the shadow.

The men were rather striking in appearance; they were evidently
gentlemen; the taller one was young, well set-up, clean-shaven and
quietly but most correctly dressed. His light brown hair showed a
slight curl in its closely clipped locks; his gray-blue eyes had long
lashes of brown darker than his hair; his teeth were very white, and
there was a dimple in his cheek, plain when he smiled. Had his nose
been straight he would have been as handsome as a Greek god, but
the nose was only an ordinary American nose, rather too broad at the
base; moreover, his jaw was a little too square for classic lines.
Nevertheless, he was good to look upon, as well as strong and clean
and wholesome, and when his gray-blue eyes strayed about the room the
dimple dented his cheek and his white teeth gleamed in a kind of merry
good-nature pleasant to see. But it was the other man who held the
colonel’s eye. This man was double the young man’s age, or near that;
he was shorter, although still of fair stature, and slim of build. His
face was oval in contour and delicate of feature. Although he wore no
glasses, his brow had the far pucker of a near-sighted man. There was
a mole on his cheek-bone and another just below his ear. Both were
small, rather than large, and in no sense disfiguring; but the colonel
noted them absently, being in the habit of photographing a man in a
glance. The face had beauty, distinction even, yet about it hung some
association, sinister as a poison label.

“Now, where,” said the colonel to himself, “_where_ have I seen that
man?” Almost instantly the clue came to him. “By Jove, it’s the
brother!” he exclaimed. Three years ago, and he had almost forgotten;
but here was Cary Mercer--the name came to him after a little
groping--here he was again; but who was the pleasant youngster with
him? And what were they discussing with so little apparent and so much
real earnestness?

One of the colonel’s physical gifts was an extraordinary acuteness of
hearing. It passed the mark of a faculty and became a marvel. Part
of this uncanny power was really due, not to hearing alone, but to
an alliance with another sense, because Winter had learned the lip
language in his youth; he heard with his eyes as well as his ears. This
combination had made an unintentional and embarrassed eavesdropper out
of an honest gentleman a number of times. To set off such evil tricks
it had saved his life once on the plains and had rescued his whole
command another time in the Philippines. While he studied the two faces
a sentence from the younger man gripped his attention. It was: “I don’t
mind the risk, but I hate taking such an old woman’s money.”

“She has a heap,” answered the other man carelessly; “besides--” He
added something with averted head and in too low a voice to reach the
listener unassisted. But it was convincing, evidently, since the young
man’s face grew both grave and stern. He nodded, muttering: “Oh, I
understand; I wasn’t backing water; I know we have lost the right to
be squeamish. But I say, old chap, how long since Mrs. Winter has seen
you? Would she recognize you?”

The colonel, who had been about to abandon his espionage as unbecoming
a soldier and a gentleman, stowed away all his scruples at the mention
of the name. He pricked up his ears and sharpened his eyes, but was
careful lest they should catch his glance. The next sentence, owing to
the speaker’s position, was inaudible and invisible; but he clearly
caught the young man’s response:

“You’re sure they’ll be on this train?”

And he saw the interlocutor’s head nod.

“The boy’s with them?”

An inaudible reply, but another nod.

“And you’re sure of Miss Smith?”

This time the other’s profile was toward the listener, who heard the
reply, “Plumb sure. I wish I were as sure of some other things. Have we
settled everything? It is better not to be seen together.”

“Yes, I think you’ve put me wise on the main points. By the way, what
_is_ the penalty for kidnapping?”

Again an averted head and hiatus, followed by the younger man’s
sparkling smile and exclamation: “Wow! Riskier than foot-ball--and even
more fun!” Something further he added, but his arms hid his mouth as he
thrust them into his greatcoat, preparing to move away. He went alone;
and the other, after a moment’s gloomy meditation, gathered up coat and
bag and followed. During that moment of arrested decision, however, his
features had dropped into sinister lines which the colonel remembered.

“Dangerous customer, or I miss my guess,” mused the soldier, who knew
the passions of men. “I wonder--they couldn’t mean my Aunt Rebecca?
She’s old; she has millions of money--but she’s not on this train.
And there’s no Miss Smith in our deck. I’m so used to plotting I go
off on fake hikes! Probably I’m getting old and dotty. Mercer, poor
fellow, may have his brain turned and be an anarchist or a bomb-thrower
or a dirty kidnapper for revenge; but that boy’s a decent chap; I’ve
licked too many second lieutenants into shape not to know something of
youngsters.”

[Illustration: “By the way what _is_ the penalty for kidnapping?” Page
16]

He pushed the idea away; or, rather, his own problems pushed it out of
his mind, which went back to his ward and his single living brother.
Melville had no children, only his wife’s daughters, who were both
married--Melville having married a widow with a family, an estate and
a mind of her own. Melville was a professor in a state university, a
mild, learned man whom nature intended for science but whom his wife
was determined to make into the president of the university.

“Even money which will win,” chuckled Rupert Winter to himself.
“Millicent hasn’t much tact; but she has the perseverance of the
saints. _She_ married Mel; he doesn’t know, but she surely did. And she
bosses him now. Well, I suppose Mel likes to be bossed; he never had
any strenuous opinions except about the canals of Mars--_Valgame dios_!”

With a gasp the colonel sprang to his feet. There before him, in the
flesh, was his sister-in-law. Her stately figure, her Roman profile,
her gracefully gesticulating hand, which indicated the colonel’s
position to her heavily laden attendant, a lad in blue--these he knew
by heart just as he knew that her toilet for the journey would be in
the latest mode, and that she would have the latest fashion of gait and
mien. Millicent studied such things.

She waved her luggage into place--an excellent place--in the same
breath dismissing the porter and instructing him when he must return.
Then, but not until then, did she turn graciously to her brother-in-law.

“I hoped that I should find you, Bertie,” she said in a voice of such
creamy richness that it was hard to credit the speaker with only three
short trips to England. “Melville said you were to take this train;
and I was _so_ delighted, _so_ relieved! I am in a most harassing
predicament, my dear Bertie.”

“That’s bad,” murmured the colonel with sympathetic solicitude: “what’s
the trouble? Couldn’t you get a section?”

“I have my reservations, but I don’t know whether I shall go to-night.”

“Maybe I’m stupid, Millicent, but I confess I don’t know what you mean.”

“Really, there’s no reason why you should, Bertie. That’s why I was so
anxious to see you--in time, so that I might explain to you--might put
you on your guard.”

“Yes?” the colonel submitted; he never hurried a woman.

“I’m going to visit dear Amy--you remember she was married two years
ago and lives in Pasadena; she has a dear little baby and the loveliest
home! It’s charming. And she was so delighted with your wedding gift,
it was _so_ original. Amy never did care for costly things; these
simple, unique gifts always pleased her. Of course, my main object
is to see the dear child, but I shall not go to-night _unless_ Aunt
Rebecca Winter is on the train. If for any reason she waits over until
to-morrow I shall wait also.”

“Ah,” sighed the colonel very softly, not stirring a muscle of his
politely attentive face; “and does Aunt Rebecca expect to go on the
train?”

“They told me at the Pullman office that she had the drawing-room, the
state-room and two sections. Of course, she has her maid with her and
Archie--”

“Does _he_ go, too?” the colonel asked, his eyes narrowing a little.

“Yes, she’s taking him to California; he doesn’t seem well enough, she
thinks, to go to school, so he is to have a tutor out there. I’m a
little afraid Aunt Rebecca mollycoddles the boy.”

“Aunt Rebecca never struck me as a molly-coddler. I always considered
her a tolerably cynical old Spartan. But do you mean there is any doubt
of their going? Awfully good of you to wait to see if they don’t go,
but I’m sure Aunt Rebecca wouldn’t want you to sacrifice your section--”

Mrs. Melville lifted a shapely hand in a Delsartian gesture of arrest;
her smiling words were the last the colonel had expected. “Hush, dear
Bertie; Aunt Rebecca doesn’t _know_ I am going. I don’t want her to
know until we are on the train.”

“Oh, I see, a surprise?” But he did _not_ see; and, with a quiet
intentness, he watched the color raddle Mrs. Melville’s smooth cheeks.

“Hardly,” returned the lady. “The truth is, Bertie, Melville and I
are worried about Aunt Rebecca. She, we fear, has fallen under the
influence of a most plausible adventuress; I suppose you have heard of
her companion, Miss Smith?”

“Can’t say I have exactly,” said the colonel placidly, but his eyes
narrowed again. “Who is the lady?”

“I thought--I am _sure_ Melville must have written you. But-- Oh,
yes, he wrote yesterday to Boston. Well, Bertie, Miss Smith is a
Southerner; she says she is a South Carolinian, but Aunt Rebecca picked
her up in Washington, where she was with a kind of cousin of ours who
was half crazy. Miss Smith took care of her and she died”--she fixed a
darkling eye on the soldier--“she _died_ and she left Miss Smith money.”

“Much?”

“A few thousands. That is how Aunt Rebecca met her, and she pulled the
wool over auntie’s eyes, and they came back together. She’s awfully
clever.”

“Young? Pretty?”

“Oh, dear, no. And she’s nearer forty than thirty. Just the designing
age for a woman when she’s still wanting to marry some one but
beginning to be afraid that she can’t. Then such creatures always try
to get _money_. If they can’t marry it, and there’s no man to set
their caps for, they try to wheedle it out of some poor fool woman!”
Millicent was in earnest, there was no doubt of that; the sure sign was
her unconscious return to the direct expressions of her early life in
the Middle West.

“And you think Miss Smith is trying to influence Aunt Rebecca?”

“Of course she is; and Aunt Rebecca is eighty, Rupert. And often while
people of her age show no other sign of weakening intellect, they are
not well regulated in their affections; they take fancies to people
and get doting and clinging. She is getting to depend on Miss Smith.
Really, that woman has more influence with her than all the rest of
us together. She won’t hear a word against her. Why! when I tried to
suggest how little we knew about Miss Smith and that it would be better
not to trust her _too_ entirely, she positively _resented_ it. Of
course I used tact, too. I was so hurt, so surprised!” Mrs. Millicent
was plainly aggrieved.

The colonel, who had his own opinion of the tact of his brother’s wife,
was not so surprised; but he made an inarticulate sound which might
pass for sympathy.

“We’ve been worried a good deal,” pursued Mrs. Melville, “about the way
Aunt Rebecca has acted. She wouldn’t stay in Fairport, where we could
have some influence over her. She was always going south or going to
the sea-shore or going _somewhere_. Sometimes I suspect Miss Smith made
her, to keep her away from _us_, you know.”

“Well, as long as I have known Aunt Rebecca--anyhow, ever since Uncle
Archibald died--she has been restless and flying about.”

“Not as she is now. And then she only had her maid--”

“Oh, yes, Randall; she’s faithful as they make ’em. What does _she_ say
about Miss Smith?”

“Bertie, she’s won over Randall. Randall swears by her. Oh, she’s
_deep_!”

“Seems to be. But--excuse me--what’s your game, Millicent? How do you
mean to protect our aged kinswoman and, incidentally, of course, the
Winter fortune?”

“I shall watch, Bertie; I shall be on my guard every waking hour. That
deluded old woman is in more danger, perhaps, than you dream.”

“As how?”

“Miss Smith”--her voice sank portentously--“_was a trained nurse_.”

“What harm does that do--unless you think she would know too much about
poisons?” The colonel laughed.

“It’s no laughing matter, Bertie. Rebecca is so rich and this other
woman is so poor, and, in my estimation, so ambitious. I make no
insinuations, I only say she needs watching.”

“You may be right about that,” said the colonel thoughtfully. “There
is Haley and the boy for your bags!”

The boy picked up the big dress-suit case, the smaller dress-suit
case and the hat case, he grabbed the bundle of cloaks, the case of
umbrellas, and the lizard-skin bag. Dubiously he eyed the colonel’s
luggage, as he tried to disengage a finger.

“Niver moind, young feller,” called Haley, peremptorily whisking away
the nearest piece, “I’ll help you a bit with yours, instead; you’ve a
load, sure!”

Mrs. Melville explained in an undertone: “I take all the hand-luggage I
possibly can; the over-weight charges are wicked!”

“Haley, they won’t let you inside without a ticket,” objected the
colonel. But Haley, unheeding, strode on ahead of the staggering youth.

“I have an English bath-tub, locked, of course, and packed with things,
but he has put _that_ in the car,” said Mrs. Melville.

“Certainly,” said the colonel absently; he was thinking: Mrs. Winter,
the boy, Miss Smith--how ridiculously complete! Decidedly _something_
will bear watching.




CHAPTER II

AUNT REBECCA


No sooner was Mrs. Melville ushered into her section than the colonel
went through the train. He was not so suspicious as he told himself
he might have been, with such a dovetailing of circumstances into his
accidentally captured information; he couldn’t yet read villainy on
that college lad’s frank face. But no reason, therefore, to neglect
precautions. “Hope the best of men and prepare for the worst,” was the
old campaigner’s motto.

A walk through the cars showed him no signs of the two men. It was a
tolerably complete inspection, too. There was only one drawing-room or
state-room of which he did not manage to get a glimpse--the closed room
being the property of a very great financial magnate, whose private car
was waiting for him in Denver. His door was fast, and the click of the
type-writer announced the tireless industry of our rulers.

But if he did not find the college boy or the man with the moles he
did get a surprise for his walk; namely, the sight of the family of
Haley, and Haley himself beside their trig, battered luggage, in a
section of the car next his own. Mrs. Haley turned a guilty red, while
Haley essayed a stolid demeanor.

“What does this mean?” demanded the colonel.

“Haley felt he would _have_ to go with you, Colonel,” replied Mrs.
Haley, who had timid, wide, blue eyes and the voice of a bird, but a
courage under her panic, as birds have, too, when their nests are in
peril. “We’ve rinted the house to a good man with grown-up children,
and Haley can get a job if you won’t want him.”

“Yis, sor,” mumbled Haley. He was standing at attention, as was his
wife, the toddling Nora being held in the posture of respect on the
plush seat.

“And I suppose you took the furniture money to buy tickets?”

“Yis, sor.”

“And you’re bound to go with me?”

“Yis, sor,” said Haley.

“You ought to be ashamed of yourself, Sergeant,” said the colonel; but
he was glad at the heart of him for this mutinous loyalty.

“Yis, sor,” said Haley.

“Well, since you are here, I engage you from to-day, you understand.”

“Yis, sor,” said Haley. Mrs. Haley whimpered a blessing; but the only
change in the soldier was that his military stolidity became natural
and real instead of forced.

“Sit down on this seat over here with me and I’ll tell you what I want.
You fraud, letting me say good-by to you--”

“I didn’t want to take the liberty, sor, but you _made_ me shake hands.
I was afraid you’d catch on, sor. ’Tis a weight off me moind, sor.”

“I dare say. You always have your way with me, you old mule. Now
listen; I want you to be on the watch for two men”--thereupon the
colonel described his men, laying special stress on the moles on the
face of one, and the other’s dimple.

Having set Haley his tasks, he went back to his car in better spirits.

By this time the train was moving. He had seen his kinswoman and her
party enter; and he found the object of Mrs. Melville’s darksome
warnings sitting with a slender lad in the main body of the car. Aunt
Rebecca was in the drawing-room, her maid with her. Mrs. Melville, who
had already revealed her presence, sat across the aisle. She presented
the colonel at once.

Miss Smith did not look formidable; she looked “nice,” thought
the colonel. She was of medium height; she was obviously plump,
although well proportioned; her presence had an effect of radiant
cleanliness, her eyes were so luminous and her teeth so fine and her
white shirt-waist so immaculate. There was about her a certain soft
illumination of cheerfulness, and at the same time a restful repose;
she moved in a leisurely fashion and she sat perfectly still. “I never
saw any one who looked less of an adventuress,” Winter was thinking, as
he bowed. Then swiftly his glance went to the lad, a pale young fellow
with hazel eyes and a long slim hand which felt cold.

The boy made a little inarticulate sound in his throat and blushed
when Colonel Winter addressed him. But he looked the brighter for the
blush. It was not a plain face; rather an interesting one in spite of
its listlessness and its sickly pallor; its oval was purely cut, the
delicate mouth was closed firmly enough, and the hazel eyes with their
long lashes would be beautiful were they not so veiled.

“He has the Winter mouth, at least,” noted the colonel. He felt a
novel throb at his heart. Had his own boy lived, the baby that died
when it was born, he would be only a year older than Archie. At least,
this boy was of his own blood. Without father or mother, but _not_
alone in the world; and, if any danger menaced, not without defenders.
The depression which had enveloped him lifted as mist before the sun,
burned away by the mere thought of possible difficulties. “We will
see if any one swindles you out of your share,” said Rupert Winter,
compressing the Winter mouth more firmly, “or if those gentlemanly
kidnappers mean you.”

His ebbing suspicion of the boy’s companion revived; he would be on his
guard, all right.

“Aunt Rebecca wants to see you,” Mrs. Melville suggested. “She is in
the drawing-room with her solitaire.”

“Still playing Penelope’s Web?”

“Oh, she always comes back to it. But she plays bridge, too; Rupert, I
hear your game is a wonder. Archie’s been learning, so he could play
with you.”

“Good for Archie!”--he shot a glance and a smile at the lad’s reddening
face--“we’ll have a game.”

“Lord, I wish he didn’t look quite so ladylike,” he was grumbling
within, as he dutifully made his way to his aunt’s presence.

The electric lights flooded the flimsy railway table on which were
spread rows of small-sized cards. An elderly lady of quality was musing
over the pasteboard rows. A lady of quality--that was distinctly the
phrase to catch one’s fancy at the first glimpse of Mrs. Winter. Not
an aged lady, either, for even at eighty that elegantly moulded,
slim figure, that abundance of silvery hair--parted in the middle
and growing thickly on each side in nature’s own fashion, which art
can not counterfeit, as well as softly puffed and massed above--that
exquisitely colored and textured skin, strangely smooth for her years,
with tiny wrinkles of humor, to be sure, about the eyes, but with
cheeks and skin unmarred; that fine, firmly carved profile, those black
eyebrows and lashes and still brilliant dark eyes; most of all that
erect, alert, dainty carriage, gave no impression of age; but they all,
and their accessories of toilet and manner, and a little prim touch of
an older, more reticent day in both dress and bearing, recalled the
last century phrase.

A soft gray bunch of chinchilla fur lay where she had slipped it on
her soft gray skirts; one hand rested in the fur--her left hand--and on
the third finger were the only rings which she wore, a band of gold,
worn by sixty years, and a wonderful ruby, wherein (at least such was
Rupert’s phantasy) a writhing flame was held captive by its guard of
diamond icicles. The same rings admired by her nephew ever since he was
a cadet--just the same smiling, inscrutable, high-bred, unchanging old
dame!

“Good evening, Aunt Rebecca; not a day older!” said the colonel.

“Good evening, Bertie,” returned the lady, extending a hand over the
cards; “excuse my not rising to greet you; I might joggle the cards. Of
course I’m not a day older; I don’t dare to grow older at my age! Sit
down. I’m extremely glad to see you; I’ve a heap to talk to you about.
Do you mind if I run this game through first?”

The colonel didn’t mind. He raised the proffered hand to his lips; such
homage seemed quite the most natural act in the world with Mrs. Winter.
And he unobtrusively edged his own lean and wiry person into the vacant
seat opposite her.

“How far are you going?” said she, after a few moves of the cards.

“My ticket says Los Angeles; but it had to say something, so I chose
Los Angeles for luck; I’m an irresponsible tramp now, you know; and I
may drop off almost anywhere. You are for southern California, aren’t
you?”

“Eventually; but we shall stop at San Francisco for two or three weeks.”

“Do you mind if I stop off with you? I want to get acquainted with my
ward,” said the colonel.

“That’s a good idea, Bertie.”

“He seems rather out of sorts; you aren’t worried about--well,
tuberculosis or that sort of thing?”

“I am worried about just that sort of thing; although the doctor says
nothing organic at all is the matter with him; but he is too melancholy
for a boy; he needs rousing; losing his father and mother in one year,
you know, and he was devoted to them. I can’t quite make him out,
Bertie; he hasn’t the Winter temperament. I suppose he has a legal
right to his mother’s nature; but it is very annoying. It makes him so
much harder to understand--not that she wasn’t a good woman who made
Tom happy; but she wasn’t a Winter. However, Janet has brightened him
up considerably--you’ve seen Janet--Miss Smith? What do you think of
her?”

Winter said honestly that she was very nice-looking and that she looked
right capable; he fell into the idiom of his youth sometimes when with
a Southerner.

“She is,” said Aunt Rebecca.

“Where did you find her?” asked the colonel carelessly, inspecting the
cards.

Aunt Rebecca smiled. “I thought Millicent would have given you all
the particulars. She was nurse, secretary, companion and diet cook to
Cousin Angela Nelson; when _she_ died I got her. Lucky for me.”

“So I should judge,” commented the colonel politely.

“I presume Millicent has told you that she is an adventuress and after
my money and a heap more stuff. If she hasn’t she will. Get a notion
once in Millicent’s head and a surgical operation is necessary to
dislodge it! Janet is the only mortal person who could live with poor
Cousin Angela, who had enough real diseases to kill her and enough
imaginary ones to kill anybody who lived with her! Janet made her
comfortable, would not stand everything on earth from her--though she
did stand a heap--and really cared for her. When she died Cousin Angela
left her some money; not very much, but a few thousands. She would
have left her more, but Janet wouldn’t let her. She left some to some
old servants, who surely deserved it for living with _her_, some to
charities and the rest to her sisters, who hadn’t put a foot inside the
house for fifteen years, but naturally resented her not giving them
everything. I reckon they filled Millicent up with their notions.” She
pushed the outspread cards together.

“You had several moves left,” said the colonel.

“Four. But then, I was finished. Bertie, you play bridge, of course;
and I used to hear of your whist triumphs; how did you happen to take
to whist?”

“To fill up the time, I reckon. I began it years ago. Now a soldier’s
life is a great deal more varied, because a man will be shifted around
and get a show of the different kinds of service. And there are the
exams, and the Philippines--oh, plenty of diversions. But in the old
days a man in the line was billed for an awfully stupid time. I didn’t
care to take to drink; and I couldn’t read as you do if I’d had books,
which I hadn’t, so I took to playing cards. I played skat and poker
and whist, and of late years I’ve played bridge. Millicent plays?”

“Millicent is a celebrated player. She was a great duplicate-whist
player, you know. To see Millicent in her glory, one should play
duplicate with her. I’m only a chump player; my sole object is to win
tricks.”

“What else should it be?”

Aunt Rebecca smiled upon him. “To give information to your partner.
The main object of the celebrated American-leads system is signaling
information to your partner. Incidentally, one tells the adversaries,
as well as one’s partner, which, however, doesn’t count really as much
as you might think; for most people don’t notice what their partners
play _very_ much, and don’t notice what their adversaries play at
all. Millicent is always so busy indicating things to her partner and
watching for his signals and his indications that you can run a cross
ruff in on her without her suspecting. She asked me once if she didn’t
play an intelligible game, and I told her she did; a babe in arms could
understand it. She didn’t seem quite pleased.”

“How about Archie? Can he play a good game?”

“Very fair for a boy of fourteen; he was fond of whist until his
troubles came,” said Mrs. Winter, with a faint clouding of her keen
gaze. “Since then he hasn’t taken much interest in anything. Janet has
brightened him up more than any one; and when he heard you were coming
that did rouse him. You are one of his heroes. He’s that sort of a
boy,” she added, with a tinge of impatience in her soft Southern voice.
As if to divert her thoughts, she began deftly moving the cards before
her. Her hands showed the blue veins more prominently than they show in
young hands. This was their only surrender to time; they were shapely
and white, and the slim fingers were as straight as when the beaux of
Fairfax County would have ridden all day for a chance to kiss them.

The colonel watched the great ruby wink and glow. The ruby was a part
of his memories of his aunt; she had always worn it. He remembered
it, when she used to come and visit him at the hotel at West Point,
dazzling impartially officers, professors, cadets and hotel waiters.
Was that almost forty years ago? Well, thirty-four, anyhow! She had
been very good, very generous to all the young Winters, then. Indeed,
although she never quite forgave him for not marrying the wife of
her selecting, she had always been kind and generous to Rupert; yet,
somehow, while he had admired and found a humorous joy in his Aunt
Rebecca, he wondered if he had ever loved her. She was both beautiful
and brilliant when she was young, a Southern belle, a Northern society
leader; her life was full of conquests; her footsteps, which had
wandered over the world, had left a phosphorescent wake of admiration.
She had always been a personage. She was a power in Washington after
the war; they had found her uniquely delightful in royal courts long
before Americans were the fashion; she had been of importance in New
York, and they had loved her epigrams in Boston; now, in her old age,
she held a veritable little court of her own in the provincial Western
city which had been her husband’s home. He went to Congress from
Fairport; he had made a fortune there, and when he died, many years
ago, in Egypt, back to his Western home, with dogged determination and
lavish expenditures of both money and wit, his widow had brought him to
rest. The most intense and solemn experience of a woman she had missed,
for no children had come to them, but her husband had been her lover
so long as he lived, and she had loved him. She had known great men;
she had lived through wonderful events; and often her hand had been on
those secret levers which move vast forces. She had been in tragedies,
if an inviolable coolness of head, perhaps of heart, had shielded
her from being of them. The husband of her youth, the nearest of her
blood, the friends of her middle life--all had gone into the dark; yet
here she sat, with her smooth skin and her still lustrous eyes and her
fragrant hands, keenly smiling over her solitaire. The colonel wondered
if he could ever reconcile himself with such philosophy to his own
narrowed and emptied life; she was older than he, yet she could still
find a zest in existence. All the great passions gone; all the big
interests; and still her clever mind was working, happy, possibly, in
its mere exercise, disdaining the stake, she who had had every success.
What a vitality! He looked at her, puzzling. Her complexity bewildered
him, he not being of a complex nature himself. As he looked, suddenly
he found himself questioning why her face, in its revival of youthful
smoothness and tint, recalled some other face, recently studied by
him--a face that had worn an absolutely different expression; having
the same delicate aquiline nose, the same oval contour, the same wide
brows--who? who? queried the colonel. Then he nodded. Of course; it was
the man with the moles, the brother. He looked enough like Mrs. Winter
to be her kinsman. At once he put his guess to the test. “Aunt Becky,”
said he, “have you any kin I don’t know about?”

“I reckon not. I’m an awfully kinless old party,” said she serenely. “I
was a Winter, born as well as married, and so you and Mel and Archie
are double kin to me. I was an only child, so I haven’t anything closer
than third or fourth cousins, down in Virginia and Boston.”

“Have you, by chance, any cousin, near or far, named Mercer?”

Resting her finger-tips on the cards, Aunt Rebecca seemed to let her
mind search amid Virginian and Massachusetts genealogical tables. “Why,
certainly,” she answered after a pause, “there was General Philemon
Mercer--Confederate army, you know--and his son, Sam Nelson; Phil was
my own cousin and Sam Nelson my second, and Sam Nelson’s sons would be
my third, wouldn’t they? Phil and Sam are both dead, and Winnie Lee,
the daughter, is dead, and poor Phil--the grandson, you know--poor
boy, _he_ shot himself while at Harvard; but his brother Cary is alive.”

“Do you know him?”

“Never saw him but once or twice. He has very good manners.”

“Is he rich?”

“He was, but after he had spent his youth working with incredible
industry and a great deal of ability to build up a steel business and
had put it into a little combination--not a big trust, just a genuine
corporation--some of the financial princes wanted it for a club--to
knock down bigger game, I reckon--and proceeded to cheapen the stock
in order to control it. Cary held on desperately, bought more than he
could hold, mortgaged everything else; but they were too big for him
to fight. It was in 1903, you know, when they had an alleged financial
panic, and scared the banks. Cary went to the wall, and Phil with him,
and poor Phil killed himself. Afterward Cary’s wife died; he surely did
have a mean time. And, to tell you the truth, Bertie, I think there has
been a little kink in Cary’s mind ever since.”

“Did you hold any of Cary’s stock?” He was piecing his puzzle together.

“Yes, but my stock was all paid for, and I held on to it; now it is
over par and paying dividends. Oh, the property was all right, had it
been kept in honest hands and run for itself. The trouble with Cary
was that in order to keep control of the property he bought a lot of
shares on margins, and when they began to run downhill, he was obliged
to borrow money on his actual holdings to protect his fictitious ones.
The stock went so low that he was wiped out. He wouldn’t take my advice
earlier in the game; and I knew that it would only be losing money to
lend it to him, later--still, sometimes I have been rather sorry I
didn’t. Would I better try the spade, Bertie, or the diamond?”

The colonel advised the spade. He wondered whether he should repeat
to his aunt the few sentences which he had overheard from Mercer and
his companion; but a belief that old age worries easily, added to his
natural man’s disinclination to attack the feminine nerves, tipped the
scales against frankness. So, instead, he began to talk about Archie;
what was he like? was he fond of athletics? or was he a bookish lad?
Aunt Rebecca reported that he had liked riding and golf; but he was not
very rugged, and since his father’s death he had seemed listless to
a degree. “But he is better now,” she added with a trace of eagerness
quite foreign to her usual manner. “Janet Smith has roused him up; and
what do you suppose she has done? But really, you are the cause.”

“I?” queried the colonel.

“Just you. Archie, Janet argued, is the kind of nature that must have
some one to be devoted to.”

“And has he taken a fancy to her? Or to you?”

Aunt Rebecca’s eyes dulled a little and her delicate lips were twisted
by a smile which had more wistfulness than humor in it. “I’m not a
lovable person; anyhow, he does not love easily. We are on terms of
the highest respect, even admiration, but we haven’t got so far as
friendship, far less comradeship. Janet is different. But I don’t mean
Janet; she has grown absurdly fond of him; and I think he’s fond of
her; but what she did was to make him fond of you. You, General Rupert
Winter; why, that boy could pass an examination on your exploits and
not miss a question. Janet and he have a scrap-book with every printed
word about you, I do believe. And she has been amazingly shrewd. We
didn’t know how to get the youngster back to his sports while he was
out of school; and, in fact, an old woman like me is rather bewildered
by such a young creature, anyhow; but Janet rode with him; _you_ are a
remarkable rider; I helped there, because I remembered some anecdotes
about you at West Point--”

“But, my dear Aunt--”

“Don’t interrupt, Bertie, it’s a distinctly American habit. And
we read in the papers that you had learned that Japanese trick
fighting--jiu-jitsu--and were a wonder--”

“I’m not, I assure you; that beast of a newspaper man--”

“Never mind, if you are not a wonder, you’ll have to be; you can take
lessons in Los Angeles; there are quantities of Japs there. Why, even
in Chicago, Janet picked up one, and we imported him, and Archie took
lessons, and practises every day. There’s a book in my bag, in the
rack there, a very interesting book; Janet and I have both read it so
we could talk to Archie. You would better skim it over a little if you
really aren’t an expert, enough so you can _talk_ jiu-jitsu, anyhow; we
can’t be destroying Archie’s ideals until he gets a better appetite.”

“Well, upon my word!” breathed the colonel. “Do you expect me to be
a fake hero? I never took more than two lessons in my life. That
reporter interviewed my teacher, who was killed in the Japanese War,
by the way; he went to the army after my second lesson. He didn’t know
any English beyond ‘yes’ and ‘if you please’; and he used them both on
the reporter, who let his own fancy go up like a balloon. Well, where
is the book?”

He found it easily; and with a couple of volumes of another kidney,
over which he grinned.

“_The Hound of the Baskervilles_ and _The Leavenworth Case_! I’ve read
them, too,” he said; “they’re great! And do you still like detective
stories? You would have made a grand sleuth yourself, Aunt Becky.”
Again he had half a mind to speak of the occurrence at the station;
again he checked the impulse. “I remember,” he added, “that you used to
hold strenuous opinions.”

“You mean my thinking that the reason crimes escape discovery is not
that criminals are so bright, but that detectives in general are so
particularly stupid? Oh, yes, I think that still. So does Sir Conan
Doyle. And I have often wished I could measure my own wits, once, with
a really _fine_ criminal intellect. It would be worth the risk.”

“God forbid!” said the colonel hastily.

There came a tap on the door.

“Millicent!” groaned Aunt Rebecca. “I know the creaking of her stays.
No, don’t stay, Bertie; go and get Janet and a rescue bridge party as
quick as you can!”

“The original and only Aunt Rebecca,” thought the colonel at the door,
smiling. But, somehow, the handsome old dame never had seemed so nearly
human to him before.




CHAPTER III

THE TRAIN ROBBERS


When the colonel awoke next morning the train was running smoothly
over the Iowa prairies, while low hills and brick factory chimneys
announced Council Bluffs. The landscape was wide and monotonous; a
sweep of illimitable cornfields in their winter disarray, or bleakly
fresh from the plow, all painted with a palette holding only drabs and
browns; here and there a dab of red in a barn or of white in windmill
or house; but these livelier tints so scattered that they were no more
than pin spots on the picture. The very sky was as dimly colored as the
earth, lighter, yet of no brighter hue than the fog which smoked up
from the ground. Later in the spring this same landscape would be of
a delicate and charming beauty; in summer or autumn it would make the
beholder’s pulses throb with its glorious fertility; but on a blurred
March morning it was as dreary as the reveries of an aging man who has
failed.

Nevertheless, Rupert Winter’s first conscious sensation was not
depression, only a little tingle of interest and excitement, such as
stings pleasantly one who rises to a prospect of conflict in which
he has the confidence of his own strength. “By Jove!” he wondered,
“whatever makes me feel so kiddish?”

His first impulse was to peep through his curtains into the car. It
wore its early morning aspect of muffled berths and stuffy curtains,
among which Miss Smith’s trig, carefully finished presence in a fresh
white shirt-waist, attended by the pleasant whiffs of cologne water,
gave the beholder a certain refreshing surprise. One hand (white and
firm and beautifully cared for) held a wicker bottle, source of the
pleasant whiffs; her sleek back braids were coiled about her comely
head, and the hair grew very prettily in a blunted point on the
creamy nape of her neck. It was really dark brown hair, but it looked
black against the whiteness of her skin. She had very capable-looking
shoulders, the colonel noted, and a flat back; perhaps she wasn’t
pretty, but in a long while he had not seen a more attractive-looking
woman. She made him think of a Bonne Celine rose, somehow. He could
hear her talking to some one behind the berth’s curtains. Could those
doleful moans emerge from Archie? Could a Winter boy be whimpering
about the jar of the train in that fashion? Immediately he was aware
that the sufferer was Randall, for Miss Smith spoke: “Drink the tea,
and lie down again, I’ll attend to Mrs. Winter. Don’t you worry!”

“Getting solid with Randall,” commented the colonel. “Which is
she--kind-hearted, or an accomplished villainess? Well, it’s
interesting, anyhow.”

By the time he had made his toilet the train was slacking speed ready
to halt in Council Bluffs, and all his suspicions rushed on deck again
at the sight of Miss Smith and Archie walking outside.

He joined them, and he had to admit that Miss Smith looked as pleased
as Archie at his appearance. Nor did she send a single furtive glance,
slanting or backward, while they walked in the crisp, clean air.
Once the train had started and Miss Smith was in the drawing-room,
breakfasting with Mrs. Winter and Archie, he politely attended Mrs.
Millicent through the morning meal in the dining-car. It was so good
a meal that he naturally, although illogically, thought better of
Miss Smith’s prospects of innocence; and cheerily he sought Haley.
He found him in the smoking compartment of the observation-car,
having for companions no less personages than the magnate and a
distinguished-looking New Englander, who, Rupert Winter made no doubt,
was a Harvard professor of rank and renown among his learned kind. He
knew the earmarks of the species. The New Englander’s pencil was flying
over a little improvised pad of telegraph blanks, while he listened
with absorbed interest to Haley’s rich Irish tones. There was a little
sidewise lunge of Haley’s mouth, a faint twinkle of Haley’s frank and
simple eyes which the colonel appraised at very nearly their real
value. He knew that it isn’t in Irish-American nature to perceive a
wide-open ear and not put something worth hearing into it. Besides, his
sharp ears had brought him a key to the discourse, a sorrowful remark
of the sergeant’s as he entered: “Yes, sor, thim wather torchures is
_terrible_!”

He glanced suspiciously from one of Haley’s audience to the other. The
newspaper cartoonist had pictured on all kinds of bodies of preying
creatures, whether of the earth or air, the high brows, the round head,
the delicate features, the thin cheeks, the straight line of the
mouth, and the mild, inexpressive eyes of the man before him. He had
been extolled as a far-sighted benefactor of the world, and execrated
picturesquely as the king of pirates who would scuttle the business of
his country without a qualm.

Winter, amid his own questionings and problems, could not help a
scrutiny of a man whose power was greater than that of medieval kings.
He sat consuming a cigarette, more between his fingers than his lips;
and glancing under drooping eyelids from questioner to narrator. At the
colonel’s entrance he looked up, as did Haley, who rose to his feet
with an unconscious salute. “I’d be glad to spake wid youse a minnit,
if I might, General,” said Haley, “about where I put your dress-shute
case, sor.”

The colonel, of course, did not expect any remarks about a suit case
when he got Haley by himself at the observation end of the car; but
what he did get was of sufficient import to drive out of his mind a
curt lecture about blackening the reputation of the army with lies
about the Philippines. Haley had told him that he had seen the man with
the two moles on his face jump out of his own car at Council Bluffs.
He had simply stood on the platform, looking to right and left for a
moment; then he had swung himself back on the car. Haley had watched
him walk down the aisle and enter the drawing-room. He did not come
out; Haley had found out that the drawing-room belonged to Edwin S.
Keatcham, “the big railroad man, sor.”

“It doesn’t seem likely that _he_ would be an accomplice of a
kidnapper,” mused the colonel. “The man might have gone in there while
he was out.”

“Sure, he might, sor; ’twas mesilf thinking that same; and I wint
beyant to the observation-car, and there the ould gintleman was
smoking.”

“And you stopped to tell yarns to that other gentleman instead of
getting back and following--”

“No, sor, I beg your pardon, sor; I was kaping me eyes open and on him;
for himsilf was in the observation-car where you are now, sor, until we
come in, and thin he walked back, careless like, to his own car. Will I
be afther following him?”

“Yes; don’t lose him.”

They did not lose him; they both saw him enter the drawing-room and
almost immediately come out and sit down in one of the open sections.

“See if you can’t find out from the conductor where he is going,” the
colonel proposed to Haley; and he frowned over his thoughts for a bad
quarter of an hour at the window. The precipitate of all this mental
ferment was a determination to stick close to the boy, saying nothing.
He hoped that when they stopped over night at Salt Lake City, according
to Aunt Rebecca’s plan, they might shake off the “brother’s” company.
The day passed uneventfully. He played bridge with Mrs. Millicent and
Miss Smith and Archie, while Aunt Rebecca kept up her French with one
of Bentzon’s novels.

Afterward she said grimly to him: “I think you must have been converted
out in the Philippines; you never so much as winced, that last hand;
no, you sat there smiling over your ruin as sweetly as if you enjoyed
it.”

The colonel smiled again. “Ah, but, you see, I did enjoy it; didn’t you
notice the hand? No? Well, it was worth watching. It was the rubber
game; they were twenty-four and we were twenty-six and we were on the
seventh round; Miss Smith had made it hearts. She sat on my left, dummy
on my right. Millicent had the lead. She had four little spades, a
little club, the queen of hearts and a trey; dummy had the queen, the
ten and the nine of spades, it had the king of hearts and three clubs
with the jack at the top. I had a lovely diamond suit which I hadn’t
had a chance to touch, top sequence, ace, king, queen; I had the jack
of trumps and the jack of spades; and the queen and a little club. I
hadn’t a lead, you understand; Millicent had taken five tricks and
they had taken one; they needed six to win the game, we needed two;
see? Well, Millicent hadn’t any diamonds to lead me, and unhappily she
didn’t think to lead trumps through dummy, which would have made a
world of difference. She led a club; dummy put on the jack. I knew Miss
Smith had the ace and one low heart; no clubs, a lot of low diamonds,
and she might or might not have a spade. I figured that she had the
ace and a little one; if she would trump in with the little one, as
ninety-nine out of a hundred women would have done, her ace and her
partner’s king would fall together; or, at worst, he would have to
trump her diamond lead, after she had led out her king of spades, and
lead spades, which I could trump and bring in all my diamonds. Do you
take in the situation?”

“You mean that Janet had the king of spades alone, the ace and the
little trump and four worthless diamonds? I see. It is a chance for the
grand _coup_; I reckon she played it.”

“She _did_!” cried the colonel with unction. “She slapped that ace on
the trick, she modestly led her king of spades, gathered in my jack,
then ‘she stole, she stole my child away,’ my little jack of trumps;
it fell on dummy’s king, and dummy led out his spades and I had to see
that whole diamond suit slaughtered. They made their six tricks, the
game and the rubber; and I wanted to clap my hands over the neatness of
it.”

“She is a good player,” agreed Aunt Rebecca, “and a very pleasant
person. You remember the epitaph, don’t you, Bertie? ‘She was so
pleasant.’ Yet Janet has had a heap of trouble; but, after all,
happiness is not a condition but a temperament; I suppose Janet has the
temperament. She’s a good loser, too; and she never takes advantage of
the rules.”

“She certainly loves a straight game,” reflected the colonel. “I
confess I don’t like the kind of woman that is always grabbing a trick
if some one plays out of the wrong hand.”

He said something of the kind to Millicent, obtaining but scant
sympathy in that quarter.

“She’s deep, Bertie; I told you that,” was the only reply, “but I’m
watching. I have reason for my feeling.”

“Maybe you have been misinformed,” ventured her brother-in-law with
proper meekness.

“Not at all,” retorted she sharply. “I happen to know that she worked
against me with the Daughters.”

“Daughters,” the colonel repeated inanely, “your daughters?”

“Certainly not! The Daughters of the Revolution.”

“It’s a mighty fine society, that; did a lot during the Spanish War.
And you are the state president, aren’t you?”

“No, Rupert,” returned Mrs. Melville with dignity, “I am no longer
state regent. By methods that would shame the most hardened men
politicians I was defeated; why! didn’t you read about it?”

“You know I only came back from the Philippines in February.”

“It was in all the Chicago papers. I was interviewed myself. I assure
you the other candidates (there were two) tried the very _lowest_
political methods. Melville said it was scandalous. There were at
least three luncheons given against me. It wasn’t the congress, it was
the lobby defeated me. And their methods! I would not believe that
gentlewoman could stoop to such infamy of misrepresentation.” The
colonel chewed his mustache; he felt for that reporter of the Chicago
paper; he was evidently getting a phonographic record now; he made an
inarticulate rumble of sympathy in his throat which was as the clucking
of the driver to the mettled horse. Mrs. Melville gesticulated with
Delsartian grace, as she poured forth her woes.

“They accused me of a domineering spirit; they said I was trying to
set up a machine. _I!_ I worked for them, many a time, half the night,
at my desk; never was a letter unanswered; I did half the work of the
corresponding secretary; yet at the crucial moment _she betrayed me_!
I learned more in those two days of the petty jealousy, the pitiless
malevolence of _some_ women than I had known all my life before; but at
the same time, to the faithful band of friends”--the colonel had the
sensation of listening to the record again--“whose fidelity was proof
against ridicule and cruel misrepresentation, I return a gratitude
that will never wane. Rupert”--she turned herself in the seat and
waved the open palm of her hand in a graceful and dramatic gesture,
“--those women not only stooped to malignant falsehoods, they not only
trampled parliamentary law underfoot, but they circulated through the
hall a cartoon called the _Making of the Slate_. Of course, we had
our quarters at a hotel, and after the evening meeting, after I had
retired, in fact, a bell-boy brought me a message; it was necessary
to have a meeting at once, to decide for the secretaryship, as we had
found out Mrs. Ellennere was false. The ladies in the adjoining rooms
and the others of us on the board who were loyal came into my chamber.
Rupert, will you believe it, those women, had a grotesque picture of
_us_, with faces cut out of the newspapers--of course, all our pictures
were in the papers--and they had the audacity and the meanness to
picture me in--in the garments of night!”

“That was pretty tough. But where does Miss Smith come in?”

“She was at the convention. She is a Daughter. I’ve always said we are
too lax in our admissions.”

“Who drew the picture?”

“It may not be Miss Smith, but--she does draw. I’m _sure_ that she
worked against me; she covered up her footprints so that I have no
proof; but I suspect her. She’s deep, Bertie, she’s deep. But she can’t
hoodwink _me_. I’ll find her out.”

The colonel experienced the embarrassment that is the portion of a rash
man trying to defend one woman against another; he retreated because he
perceived defense was in vain; but he did not feel his growing opinion
of Miss Smith’s innocence menaced by Mrs. Melville’s convictions.

She played too square a game for a kidnapper--and Smith was the
commonest of names. No, there must be some explanation; Rupert Winter
had lived too long not to distrust the plausible surface clue. “It is
the improbable that always happens, and the impossible most of the
time,” Aunt Rebecca had said once. He quite agreed with her whimsical
phrase.

Nothing happened to arouse his suspicions that day. Haley reported
that Cary Mercer was going on to San Francisco. The conductor did not
know his name; he seemed to know Mr. Keatcham and was with him in his
drawing-room most of the time. Had the great man a secretary with him?
Yes, he seemed to have, a little fellow who had not much to say for
himself, and jumped whenever his boss spoke to him. There was also a
valet, an Englishman, who did not respond properly to conversational
overtures. They were all going to get off at Denver.

Haley was not misinformed, as the colonel perceived with his own
eyes--and he saw Cary Mercer bow in parting to the great man, who
requited the low salute with a gruff nod. Here was an opportunity for a
nearer glimpse of Mercer, possibly for that explanation in which Winter
still had a lurking hope. He caught Mercer just in the car doorway, and
politely greeted him: “Mr. Mercer, I think? You may not remember me,
Colonel Winter. I met you in Cambridge, three years ago--”

It seemed a brutal thing to do, to recall a meeting under such
circumstances; but if Mercer could give the explanation he would
excuse him; it was better than suspecting an innocent man. But there
was no opportunity for explanation. Mercer turned a blank and coldly
suspicious face toward him. “I beg pahdon,” he said in his Southern
way, “I think you have made a mistake in the person.”

“And are you _not_ Mr. Cary Mercer?” The colonel felt the disagreeable
resemblance of his own speeches to those made in newspaper stories by
the gentleman who wishes his old friend to change a fifty-dollar bill
or to engage in an amusing game with a thimble. Mercer saw it as well
as he. “Try some one from the country,” he remarked with an unpleasant
smile, brushing past, while the color mounted to the colonel’s tanned
cheek. “The _next_ time you meet me,” Rupert Winter vowed, “you’ll know
me.”

A new porter had come on at Denver; a light brown, chubby, bald man
with a face that radiated friendliness. He was filled with the desire
for conversation, and he had worked on the road for eight years, hence
could supplement _Over the Range_ and the other guide-books with
personal gossip. He showed marked deference to the colonel, which
that unassuming and direct man could not quite fathom, until Archie
enlightened him. Archie smiled, a queer, chewed-up smile which the
colonel hailed with:

“Why are you making fun of me, young man?”

“It’s Lewis, the porter; he follows you round and listens to you in
such an awestruck way.”

“But why?”

“Why, Sergeant Haley told him about you; and I told him a _little_,
and he says he wishes you’d been on the train when they had the
hold-ups. This is an awful road for hold-ups, he says. He’s been at
five hold-ups.”

“And what does he advise?”

“Oh, he says, hold up your hands and they won’t hurt you.”

“Well, I reckon his advice is sound,” laughed the colonel. “See you
follow it, Archie.”

“Shall _you_ hold up your hands, Uncle Bertie?” asked Archie.

“Much the wisest course; these fellows shoot.”

Archie looked disappointed. “I suppose so,” he sighed. “I’m afraid I’d
want to, if they were pointing pistols at me. Lewis was on the train
once when a man showed fight. He wouldn’t put up his hands, and the
bandit plugged him, like a flash; he fell crosswise over the seat and
the blood spurted across Lewis’ wrist; he said it was like a hot jet of
water.”

The homely and bizarre horror of the picture had evidently struck home
to Archie; he half shivered.

“Too much imagination,” grumbled the colonel to himself. “A Winter
ought to take to fighting like a duck to water!” He betook himself to
Miss Smith; and he was uneasily conscious that he was going to her for
consoling. But he felt better after a little talk about Archie with
her. Plainly she thought Archie had plenty of spirit; although, of
course, he hadn’t told her about the bandits. The negro was “kidding”
the passengers; and women shouldn’t be disturbed by such nonsense.
The colonel had old-fashioned views of guarding his womankind from
the harsh ways of the world. Curious, he reflected, what sense Miss
Smith seemed to have; and how she understood things. He felt better
acquainted with her than a year’s garrison intercourse would have made
him with any other woman he knew.

That afternoon, they two sat watching the fantastic cliffs which took
grotesque semblance of ruined castles crowning their barren hillsides;
or of deserted amphitheaters left by some vanished race to crumble.
They had talked of many things. She had told him of the sleepy old
South Carolinian town where she was born, and the plantation and the
distant cousin who was like her mother, and the hospital where she
had been taught, and the married sister who had died. Such a narrow,
laborious, innocent existence as she described! How cheerfully, too,
she had shouldered her burdens! They talked of the South and of the
Philippines; a little they talked of Archie and his sorrow and of the
eternal problems that have troubled the soul of man since first death
entered the world. As they talked, the colonel’s suspicions faded into
grotesque shadows. “Millicent is ridiculous,” quoth he. Then he fell to
wondering whether there had been a romance in Miss Smith’s past life.
“Such a handsome woman would look high,” he sighed. Only twenty-four
hours ago he had called Miss Smith “nice-looking,” with careless
criticism. He was quite unconscious of his change of view. That night
he felt lonely, of a sudden; the old wound in his heart ached; his
future looked as bleak as the mountain-walled plains through which
he was speeding. After a long time the train stopped with a jar and
rattle, ending in a sudden shock. He raised the curtain to catch the
flash of the electric lights at Glenwood. Out of the deep defile they
glittered like diamonds in a pool of water. Why should he think of Miss
Smith’s eyes? With an impatient sigh, he pulled down the curtain and
turned over to sleep.

His thoughts drifted, floated, were submerged in a wavering procession
of pictures; he was back in the Philippines; they had surprised the
fort; how could that be when he was on guard? But they were there--
He sat up in his berth. Instinctively he slipped the revolver out of
his bag and held it in one hand, as he peeped through the crevice
of the curtains. There was no motion, no sound of moving; but heads
were emerging between the curtains in every direction; and Archie was
standing, his hands shaking above his tumbled brown head and pale face.
A man in a soft hat held two revolvers while another man was pounding
on the drawing-room door, gruffly commanding those inside to come
out. “No, we shall not come out,” responded Aunt Rebecca’s composed,
well-bred accents, her neat enunciation not disturbed by a quiver. “If
you want to kill an old woman, you will have to break down the door.”

“Let them alone, Shay, it takes too long; let’s finish here, first,”
called the man with the revolver; “they’ll come soon enough when we
want them. Here, young feller, fish out! Nobody’ll get hurt if you keep
quiet; if you don’t you’ll get a dose like the man in number six, two
years ago. Hustle, young feller!”

The colonel was eying every motion, every shifting from one foot to
the other. Let them once get by Archie--

The boy handed over his pocket-book.

“Now your watch,” commanded the brigand; “take it, Shay!”

“Won’t you please let me keep that watch?” faltered Archie; “that was
papa’s watch.”

The childish name from the tall lad made the robber laugh. “And mama’s
little pet wants to keep it, does he? Well, he can’t. Get a move on
you!”

The colonel had the sensation of an electric shock; as the second
robber grabbed at the fob in the boy’s belt, Archie struck him with the
edge of his open hand so swiftly and so fiercely under the jaw that
he reeled back against his companion. The colonel’s surprise did not
disturb the automatic aim of an old fighter of the plains; his revolver
barked; and he sprang out, on the man he shot. “Get back in the berths,
all of you,” he shouted; “give me a chance to shoot!”

The voice of the porter, whose hands had been turning up the lights not
quite steadily, now pealed out with camp-meeting power, “Dat’s it; give
de colonel a chance to do some killing!”

Both bandits were sprawling on the floor of the aisle, one limp and
moaning; but the other got one hand up to shoot; only to have Archie
kick the revolver out of it, while at the same instant an umbrella
handle fell with a wicked whack on the man’s shoulder. The New England
professor was out of his berth. He had been a baseball man in his own
college days; his bat was a frail one, but he hit with a will; and
a groan told of his success. Nevertheless, the fellow scrambled to
his feet. Mrs. Melville was also out of her berth, thanks to which
circumstance he was able to escape; as the colonel (who had grappled
with the other man and prevented his rising) must needs have shot
through his sister-in-law to hit the fleeing form.

[Illustration: Miss Smith was sitting beside Archie, holding the watch.
Page 67]

“What’s the matter?” demanded Mrs. Melville, while the New Englander
used an expression which, no doubt, as a good church-member, he
regretted, later, and the colonel thundered: “All the women back into
their berths. Don’t anybody shoot! You, professor, look after that
fellow on the floor.” He was obeyed; instinctively, the master of the
hour is obeyed. The porter came forward and helped the New Englander
bind the prostrate outlaw, with two silk handkerchiefs and a pair of
pajamas, guard mount being supplied by three men in very startling
costumes; and a kind of seraglio audience behind the curtains of the
berth being enacted by all the women in the car, only excepting Aunt
Rebecca and Miss Smith. Aunt Rebecca, in her admirable traveling
costume of a soft gray silk wrapper, looked as undisturbed as if
midnight alarms were an every-night feature of journeys. Miss Smith’s
black hair was loosely knotted; and her face looked pale, while her
dark eyes shone. They all heard the colonel’s revolver; they all saw
the two men who had met him at the car door spring off the platform
into the dark. The robbers had horses waiting. The colonel got one
shot; he saw the man fall over his horse’s neck; but the horse galloped
on; and the night, beyond the little splash of light, swallowed them
completely.

After the conductor and the engineer had both consulted him, and the
express messenger had appeared, armed to the teeth, a little too late
for the fray, but not too late for lucid argument, Winter made his
way back to the car. Miss Smith was sitting beside Archie; she was
holding the watch, which had played so important a part in the battle,
up under the electric light to examine an inscription. The loose black
sleeves of her blouse fell back, revealing her arms; they were white
and softly rounded. She looked up; and the soldier felt the sudden rush
of an emotion that he had not known for years; it caught at his throat
almost like an invisible hand.

“Well, Archie,” he said foolishly, “good for jiu-jitsu!”

Archie flushed up to his eyes.

“Why didn’t you obey orders, young man, and hold up your hands?” said
Colonel Rupert Winter. “You’re as bad as poor Haley, who is nearly
weeping that he had no chance, but only broke away from Mrs. Haley in
time to see the robbers make off.”

“I--I did at first; but I got so mad I forgot,” stammered Archie
happily. “Afterward you were my superior officer and I had to do what
you said.”

All the while he chaffed the boy, he was watching for that beautiful
look in Janet Smith’s eyes; and wondering when he could get her off by
herself to brag to her of the boy’s courage. When his chance at a few
words did come he chuckled: “Regular fool Winter! I knew he would act
in just that absurd, reckless way.” Then he caught the look he wanted;
it surely was a lovely, womanly look; and it meant--what in thunder
_did_ it mean? As he puzzled, his pulses gave the same unaccountable,
smothering leap; and he felt as the boy of twenty had felt, coming back
from his first battle to his first love.




CHAPTER IV

THE VANISHING OF ARCHIE


“In my opinion,” said Aunt Rebecca, critically eying her new
drawing-room on the train to San Francisco; “the object of our legal
methods seems to be to defend the criminal. And a very efficient means
to this end is to make it so uncomfortable and costly and inconvenient
for any witness of a crime that he runs away rather than endure it.
Here we have had to stay over so long in Salt Lake we nearly lost our
drawing-room. But never mind, you got your man committed. Did you find
out anything about his gang?”

The colonel shook his head. “No, he’s a tough country boy; he has
the rural distrust of lawyers and of sweat-boxes. He does absolutely
nothing but groan and swear, pretending his wound hurts him. But I’ve a
notion there are bigger people back of him. It’s most awfully good of
you, Aunt Rebecca, to stick to me this way.”

“Of course, I stick to you; I’m too old to be fickle. Did you ever
know a Winter who wouldn’t stand by his friends? I belong to the old
régime, Bertie; we had our faults--glaring ones, I dare say--but if
we condoned sin too readily, we never condoned meanness; such a trick
as that upstart Keatcham is doing would have been impossible to my
contemporaries. You saw the morning papers; you know he means to eat up
the Midland?”

“Yes, I know,” mused the colonel; “and turn Tracy, the president,
down--the one who gave him his start on his bucaneering career. Tracy
declines to be his tool, being, I understand, a very decent sort of
man, who has always run his road for his stock-holders and not for the
stock-market. A capital crime, that, in these days. So Keatcham has,
somehow, by one trick or another, got enough directors since Baneleigh
died to give him the control; though he couldn’t get enough of the
stock; and now he means to grab the road to use for himself. Poor
Tracy, who loves the road as a child, they say, will have to stand by
and see it turned into a Wall Street foot-ball; and the equipment run
down as fast as its reputation. I think I’m sorry for Tracy. Besides,
it’s a bad lookout, the power of such fellows; men who are not captains
of industry, not a little bit; only inspired gamblers. Yet they are
running the country. I wonder where is the class that will save us.”

“I don’t know. I don’t admire the present century, Bertie. We had
people of quality in my day; we have only people of culture in this. I
confess I prefer the quality. They had robuster nerves and really asked
less of people, although they may have appeared to ask more. _We_ used
to be contented with respect from our inferiors and courtesy from our
equals--”

“And what from your betters, Aunt Rebecca?” drawled the colonel.

“We had no betters, Rupert; we were the best. I think partly it was our
assurance of our position, which nobody else doubted any more than we,
that kept us so mannerly. Nowadays, nobody has a real position. He may
have wealth and a servile following, who expect to make something out
of him, but he hasn’t position. The newspapers can make fun of him.
The common people watch him drive by and never think of removing their
caps. Nobody takes him seriously except his toadies and himself. And
as for the sentiments of reverence and loyalty, very useful sentiments
in running a world, they seem to have clean disappeared, except”--she
smiled a half-reluctant smile--“except with youngsters like Archie,
who would find it agreeable to be chopped into bits for _you_, and the
women who have not lived in the world, like Janet, who makes a heroine
out of _me_--upon my word, Bertie, _je t’ai fait rougir_!”

“Not at all,” said the colonel; “an illusion of the sunset; but what do
you mean when you say people of quality required less than people of
culture?”

“Oh, simply this; all _we_ demanded was deference; but your cultivated
gang wants admiration and submission, and will not let us possess our
secret souls, even, in peace. And, then, the quality despised no one,
but the cultivated despise every one. Ah, well--

  ‘Those good old times are past and gone,
    I sigh for them in vain,--’

Janet, I wish Archie would fish his mandolin out and you would sing to
me; I like to hear the songs of my youth. Not rag-time, or coon-songs,
but dear old Foster’s melodies; _Old Kentucky Home_, and _Massa’s in
the Col’, Col’ Ground_, and _Nellie Was a Lady_--what makes that so
sad, I wonder?--‘Nellie was a lady, las’ night she died;’ it’s all
in that single line; I think it is because it represents the pathetic
idealization of love; Nellie was that black lover’s ideal of all that
was lovely, and she was dead. Is the orchestra ready--and the choir?
Yes, shut the door; we are for art’s sake only, not for the applause of
the cold world in the car.”

Afterward, when he was angry over his own folly, his own blind,
dogged, trustfulness against all the odds of evidence, Rupert Winter
laid his weakness to that hour; to a woman’s sweet, untrained, tender
voice singing the simple melodies of his youth. They sang one song
after another while the sun sank lower and stained the western sky.
Through the snow-sheds they could catch glimpses of a wild and strange
nature; austere, yet not repelling; vistas of foot-hills bathed in
the evening glow; rank on rank of firs, tall, straight, beautiful,
not wind-tortured and maimed, like the woeful dwarfs of Colorado; and
wonderful snow-capped mountain peaks, with violet shadows and glinting
streaks of silver. Snow everywhere: on the hillsides; on the close
thatch of the firs; on the ice-locked rivers; snow freshly fallen,
softly tinted, infinitely, awesomely pure.

Presently they came out into a lumber country where the mills huddled
in the hollows, over the streams. Huge fires were blazing on the
river-banks. Their tawny red glare dyed the snow for a long distance,
making entrancing tints of rose and yellow; and the dark green of the
pines, against this background, looked strangely fresh. And then,
without warning, they plunged into the dimness of another long wooden
tunnel and emerged into lovely spring. The trees were in leaf, and not
alone the trees; the undulating swells of pasture land and roadside
by the mountains were covered with a tender verdure; and there were
innumerable vines and low glossy shrubs with faintly colored flowers.

“This is like the South,” said Miss Smith.

Archie was devouring the scene. “Doesn’t it just somehow make you feel
as if you couldn’t breathe, Miss Janet?” said he.

“Are you troubled with the high altitude?” asked Millicent anxiously;
“I have prepared a little vial of spirits of ammonia; I’ll fetch it for
you.”

The colonel had some ado to rescue Archie; but he was aided by the
porter, who was now passing through the car proclaiming: “You all have
seen Dutch Flat Mr. Bret Hahte wrote ’bout; nex’ station is Shady Run;
and eve’ybody look and see the greates’ scenic ’traction of dis or any
odder railroad, Cape Hohn!”

Instantly, Mrs. Melville fished her guide-book and began to read:

“‘There are few mountain passes more famous than that known to the
world as Cape Horn. The approach to it is picturesque, the north fork
of the American River raging and foaming in its rocky bed, fifteen
hundred feet below and parallel with the track--’”

“Do you mind, Millicent, if we look instead of listen?” Aunt Rebecca
interrupted, and Mrs. Melville lapsed into an injured muteness.

Truly, Cape Horn has a poignant grandeur that strikes speech from the
lips. One can not look down that sheer height to the luminous ghost
of a river below, without a thrill. If to pass along the cliff is a
shivering experience, what must the actual execution of that stupendous
bit of engineering have been to the workmen who hewed the road out of
the rock, suspended over the abyss! Their dangling black figures seem
to sway still as one swings around the curve.

Our travelers sat in silence, until the “Cape” was passed and again
they could see their road-bed on the side. Then Mrs. Melville made a
polite excuse for departure; she had promised a “Daughter” whom she
had met at various “biennials” that she would have a little talk with
her. Thus she escaped. They did not miss her. Hardly speaking, the
four sat in the dimly lighted, tiny room, while mountains and fields
and star-sown skies drifted by. Unconsciously, Archie drew closer to
his uncle, and the older man threw an arm about the young shoulders.
He looked up to meet Janet’s eyes shining and sweet, in the flash of a
passing station light. Mrs. Winter smiled, her wise old smile.

With the next morning came another shift of scene; they were in the
fertile valleys of California. At every turn the landscape became more
softly tinted, more gracious. Aunt Rebecca was in the best of humor
and announced herself as having the journey of her life. The golden
green of the grain fields, the towering palms, the pepper-trees with
their fascinating grace, the round tops of the live-oaks, the gloss
of the orange groves, the calla-lily hedges and the heliotrope and
geranium trees which climbed to the second story of the stucco houses,
filled her with the enthusiasm of a child. She drank in the cries
of the enterprising young liar who cried “Fresh figs,” months out of
season, and she ate fruit, withered in cold storage, with a trustful
zest. No less than three books about the flora of California came out
of her bag. A certain vine called the Bougainvillea, she was trying
to find, if only the cars would not go so fast; as for poinsettias,
she certainly should raise her own for Christmas. She was learned in
gardens and she discoursed with Miss Smith on the different kinds of
trumpet-vine, and whether the white jasmine trailing among the gaudy
clusters was of the same family as that jasmine which they knew in the
pine forests. But she disparaged the roses; they looked shop-worn. The
colonel watched her in amazement.

“Bertie, I make you think of that little dwarf of Dickens’, don’t
I?” she cried. “Miss Muffins, Muggins? what _was_ her name? You are
expecting me to exclaim, ‘Ain’t I volatile?’ Thank Heaven, I am. I
could always take an interest in trifles. It has been my salvation to
cultivate an interest in trifles, Bertie; there are a great many more
trifles than crises in life. Where has Janet gone? Oh, to give the
porter the collodion for his cut thumb. People with troubles, big or
little, are always making straight for Janet. Bertie, have you made
your mind up about her?”

“Only that she is charming,” replied the colonel. He did not change
color, but he was uneasily conscious that he winced, and that the
shrewd old critic of life and manners perceived it. But she was
mercifully blind to all appearance; she went on with the little frown
of the solver of a psychological enigma. “Yes, Janet is charming; and
why? She is the stillest creature. Have you noticed? Yet you never have
the sense that she hasn’t answered you. She’s the best listener in the
world; and there’s one thing about her unusual in most listeners--her
eyes never grow vacant.”

Rupert had noticed; he called himself a doddering old donkey silently,
because he had assumed that there was anything personal in the interest
of those eyes when he had spoken. Of course not; it was her way with
every one, even Millicent, no doubt. His aunt’s next words were lost,
but a sentence caught his ear directly: “For all she’s so gentle, she
has plenty of spirit. Bertie, did I ever tell you about the time our
precious cousin threw our great-great-grandfather’s gold snuff-box at
her? No? It was funny. She flew into one of her towering rages, and
shrieking, ‘Take _that_!’ hurled the snuff-box at Janet. Janet wasn’t
used to having things thrown at her. She caught the box, then she rang
the bell. ‘Thank you very much,’ says Janet; and when old Aunt Phrosie
came, she handed the snuff-box to her, saying it had just been given to
her as a present. But she sent it that same day to one of the sisters.
There was never anything else thrown at her, I can tell you.”

They found a wonderful sunset on the bay when San Francisco was
reached. Still in her golden humor, as they rattled over the
cobblestones of the picturesque streets to the Palace Hotel, Mrs.
Winter told anecdotes of Robert Louis Stevenson, obtained from a
friend who had known his mother. Mrs. Winter had chosen the Palace in
preference to the St. Francis, to Mrs. Melville’s high disgust.

“She thinks it more typical,” sneered Millicent; “myself, I prefer
cleanliness and comfort to types.”

Their rooms were waiting for them and two bell-boys ushered Mrs.
Winter into her suite. Randall was lodged on the same floor, and Mrs.
Melville, who was to spend a few days with her aunt on the latter’s
invitation, was on a lower floor. The colonel had begged to have Archie
next to him; and he examined the quarters with approbation. His own
room was the last of the suite; to the right hand, between his room and
Archie’s, was their bath; then the parlor of Mrs. Winter’s suite next
her room and bath, and last, to the right, Miss Smith’s room.

Archie was sitting by the window looking out on the street; only the
oval of his soft boyish cheek showed. The colonel went by him to the
parlor beyond, where he encountered his aunt, her hands full of gay
postal cards.

“_Souvenirs de voyage_,” she answered his glance; “I am going to post
them.”

“Can’t I take them for you?”

“No, thanks, I want the exercise.”

“May I go with you?”

“Indeed, no. My dear Bertie, I’m only aged, I’m not infirm.”

“You will _never_ be aged,” responded the colonel gallantly. He turned
away and walked along the arcade which looked down into the great court
of the hotel. Millicent was approaching him; Millicent in something of
a temper. Her room was hideously draughty and she could not get any
one, although she had rung and telephoned to the office and tried
every device which was effectual in a well-conducted hotel; but this,
she concluded bitterly, was not well-conducted; it was only typical.

“There’s a lovely fire in Aunt Rebecca’s parlor,” soothed the colonel;
“come in there.”

Afterward it seemed to him that this whole interview with Millicent
could not have occupied more than four minutes; that it was not more
than seven minutes since he had seen Archie’s shapely curly head
against the curtain fall of the window.

But when he opened the door, Miss Smith came toward them. “Is Archie
with Aunt Rebecca?” said she.

The colonel answered that he had left him in the parlor; perhaps he had
stepped into his own room.

But neither in Archie’s nor the colonel’s nor in any room of the party
could they find the boy.




CHAPTER V

BLIND CLUES


“But this is preposterous,” cried Mrs. Melville, “you _must_ have seen
him had he come out of the room; you were directly in front of the
doors all the time.”

“I was,” admitted the colonel; “can--can the boy be hiding to scare
us?” He spoke to Miss Smith. She had grown pale; he did not know that
his own color had turned. Millicent stared from one to the other.

“How ridiculous!” she exclaimed; “of course not; but he must be
somewhere; let _me_ look!”

Look as they might through all the staring, empty rooms, there was no
vestige of the boy. He was as clean vanished as if he had fallen out of
the closed and locked windows. The colonel examined them all; had there
been one open, he would have peered outside, frightened as he had never
been when death was at his elbow. But it certainly wasn’t possible to
jump through a window, and not only shut, but lock it after one.

Under every bed, in every closet, he prowled; he was searching still
when Mrs. Winter returned. By this time Mrs. Melville was agitated,
and, naturally, irritated as well. “I think it is unpardonable in
Archie to sneak out in this fashion,” she complained.

“I suppose the boy wanted to see the town a bit,” observed Aunt Rebecca
placidly. “Rupert, come in and sit down; he will be back in a moment;
smoke a cigar, if your nerves need calming.”

Rupert felt as if he were a boy of ten, called back to common sense out
of imaginary horrors of the dark.

“But, if he wanted to go out, why did he leave his hat and coat behind
him?” asked Miss Smith.

“He may be only exploring the hotel,” said Mrs. Winter. “Don’t be so
restless, Bertie; sit down.”

The colonel’s eye was furtively photographing every article of
furniture in the room; it lingered longest on Mrs. Winter’s
wardrobe-trunk, which was standing in her room. Randall had been
despatched for a hot-water bottle in lieu of one which had sprung a
leak on the train; so the trunk stood, its door ajar.

“Maybe he is doing the Genevra stunt in there--is that what you are
thinking?” she jeered. “Well, go and look.”

Light as her tone was, she was not unaffected by the contagion of
anxiety about her; after a moment, while Rupert was looking at the
wardrobe-trunk, and even profanely exploring the swathed gowns held in
rigid safety by bands of rubber, she moved about the rooms herself.

“There isn’t room for a mouse in that box,” growled the colonel.

“Of course not,” said his aunt languidly, sinking into the easiest
chair; “but your mind is easier. Archie will come back for dinner;
don’t worry.”

“How could he get by _me_?” retorted the colonel.

“Perhaps he went into one of the neighboring rooms,” Miss Smith
suggested. “Shall I go out and rap on the door of the next room on the
left?” On the right the last room of the party was a corner room.

“Why, you _might_,” acquiesced Aunt Rebecca; but Mrs. Melville cut the
ends of her words.

“Pray let me go, Aunt Rebecca,” she begged, suiting the action to the
words, and was out of the door almost ahead of her sentence.

The others waited; they were silent; little flecks of color raddled
Mrs. Winter’s cheeks. They could hear Millicent’s knock reverberating.
There was no answer. “Telephone to the adjacent rooms,” proposed the
colonel.

“I’ll telephone,” said Mrs. Winter, and rang up the number of the next
room. There was no response; but when she called the number of the
room adjoining, she seemed to get an answer, for she announced her
name. “Have you seen a young lad?” she continued, after an apology for
disturbing them. “He belongs to our party; has he by chance got into
your room? and is he there?” In a second she put down the receiver with
a heightened color, saying, “They might be a little civiler in their
answers, if it _is_ Mr. Keatcham’s suite.”

“What did the beggar say?” bristled the colonel.

“Only that it was Mr. Keatcham’s suite--Mr. E. S. Keatcham--as if
_that_ put getting into it quite out of the question. Some underling, I
presume.”

“There is the unoccupied room between. That is not accounted for.
But it shall be. I will find out who is in there.” Rupert rose as he
spoke, pricked by the craving for action of a man accustomed to quick
decision. He heard his aunt brusquely repelling Millicent’s proposal of
the police, as he left the room. Indeed, she called him back to exact a
promise that he would not make Archie’s disappearance public. “We want
to find him,” was her grim addendum; “and we can’t have the police and
the newspapers hindering us.”

In the office, he found external courtesy and a rather perfunctory
sympathy, based on a suppressed, but perfectly visible conviction that
the boy had stolen out for a glimpse of the city, and would be back
shortly.

The manager had no objection to telling Colonel Winter, whom he knew
slightly, that the occupant of the next room was a New England lady
of the highest respectability, Mrs. Winthrop Wigglesworth. If the
young fellow didn’t turn up for dinner, he should be glad to ask
Mrs. Wigglesworth to let Mrs. Winter examine her room; but he rather
thought they would be seeing young Winter before then--oh, his hat?
They usually carried caps in their pockets; and as to coats--boys never
thought of their coats.

The manager’s cheeriness did not especially uplift the colonel. He
warmed it over dutifully, however, for his womankind’s benefit. Miss
Smith had gone out; why, he was not told, and did not venture to ask.
Mrs. Melville kept making cautious signals to him behind his aunt’s
back; otherwise she was preserving the mien of sympathetic solemnity
which she was used to show at funerals and first visits of condolence
and congratulation to divorced friends. Mrs. Winter, as usual, wore an
inscrutable composure. She was still firmly opposed to calling in the
aid of the police.

Did she object to his making a few inquiries among the hotel bell-boys,
the elevator boy and the people in the restaurant or in the office?

Not at all, if he would be cautious.

So he sallied out, and, in the midst of his fruitless inquisition,
Millicent appeared.

Forcing a civil smile, he awaited her pleasure. “Go on, don’t mind me,”
said she mournfully; “you will feel better to have done everything in
your power.”

“But I shall not discover anything?”

“I fear not. Has it not occurred to you that he has been kidnapped?”

“Hmn!” said the colonel.

“And did you notice how perturbed Miss Smith seemed? She was quite
pale; her agitation was quite noticeable.”

“She is tremendously fond of Archie.”

“Or--she knows more than she will say.”

“Oh, what rot!” sputtered the colonel; then he begged her pardon.

“Wait,” he counseled, and his man’s resistance to appearances had
its effect, as masculine immobility always has, on the feminine
effervescence before him. “Wait,” was his word, “at least until we give
the boy a chance to turn up; if he has slipped by us, he is taking a
little _pasear_ on his own account; lads do get restless sometimes if
they are held too steadily in the leash, especially--if you will excuse
me--by, well, by ladies.”

“If he has frightened us out of our wits--well, I don’t know what
oughtn’t to be done to him!”

“Oh well, let us wait and hear _his_ story,” repeated the soldier.

But the last streaks of red faded out of the west; a chill fog smoked
up from the darkening hills, and Archie had not come. At eight, Mrs.
Winter ordered dinner to be served in their rooms. Miss Smith had
not returned. The colonel attempted a military cheerfulness, which
his aunt told him bluntly, later in the evening, reminded her of a
physician’s manner in critical cases where the patient’s mind must be
kept absolutely quiet.

But she ate more than he at dinner; although her own record was not a
very good one. Millicent avowed that she was too worried to eat, but
she was tempted by the strawberries and carp, and wondered were the
California fowls really so poor; and gave the sample the benefit of
impartial and fair examination, in the end making a very fair meal.

It is not to be supposed that Winter had been idle; before dinner he
had put a guard in the hall and had seen Haley, who reported that his
wife and child had gone to a kinswoman in Santa Barbara.

“Sure the woman has a fine house intirely, and she’s fair crazy over
the baby that’s named afther her, for she’s a widdy woman with never a
child excipt wan that’s in hivin, a little gurrl; and she wudn’t let
us rist ’til she’d got the cratur’. Nor I wasn’t objictin’, for I’m
thinking there’ll be something doin’ and the wimin is onconvanient,
thim times.”

The colonel admitted that he shared Haley’s opinion. He questioned the
man minutely about Mercer’s conduct on the train. It was absolutely
commonplace. If he had any connection (as the colonel had suspected)
with the bandits, he made no sign. He sent no telegrams; he wrote no
letters; he made no acquaintances, smoking his solitary cigar over a
newspaper. Indeed, absolutely the only matter of note (if that were
one) was that he read so many newspapers--buying every different
journal vended. At San Francisco he got into a cab and Haley heard
him give the order: “To the St. Francis.” Having his wife and child
with him, the sergeant couldn’t follow; but he went around to the St.
Francis later, and inquired for Mr. Mercer, for whom he had a letter
(as was indeed the case--the colonel having provided him with one),
but no such name appeared on the register. Invited to leave the letter
to await the gentleman’s arrival, Haley said that he was instructed
to give it to the gentleman himself; therefore, he took it away with
him. He had carried it to all the other hotels or boarding-places in
San Francisco which he could find, aided greatly thereto by a friend
of his, formerly in “the old --th,” a sergeant, now stationed at the
Presidio. Thanks to him, Haley could say definitely that Mercer was not
at any of the hotels or more prominent boarding-houses in the city, at
least under his own name.

“And you haven’t seen him since he got into the cab at the station?”
the colonel summed up.

Haley’s reply was unexpected: “Yes, sor, I seen him this day, in the
marning, in this same hotel.”

“Where?”

“Drinking coffee at a table in th’ coort. He wint out, havin’ paid
the man, not a-signin’, an’ he guv the waiter enough to make him say,
‘Thank ye, sor,’ but not enough to make him smile and stay round to
pull aff the chair. I follied him to the dure, but he got into an
autymobile--”

“Get the number?”

“Yis, sor. Number--here ’tis, sor, I wrote it down to make sure.” He
passed over to the colonel an old envelope on which was written a
number.

[A]“M. 20139,” read the colonel, carefully noting down the number in
his own memorandum-book. And he reflected, “That is a Massachusetts
number--humph!”

Haley’s information ended there. He heard of Archie’s disappearance
with his usual stolid mien, but his hands slowly clenched. The colonel
continued:

“You are to find out, if you can, by scraping acquaintance with the
carriage men, if that auto--you have written a description, I see,
as well as the number--find out if that auto left this hotel this
afternoon between six and seven o’clock. Find out who were in it. Find
out where it is kept and who owns it. Get H. Birdsall, Merchants’
Exchange Building, to send a man to help you. Wait, I’ve a card ready
for you to give him from me; he has sent me men before. Report by
telephone as soon as you know anything. If I’m not here, speak Spanish
and have them write it down. Be back here to-night by ten, if you can,
yourself.”

Haley dismissed, and his own appetite for dinner effectually dispelled
by his report, Winter joined his aunt. Should he tell her his
suspicions and their ground? Wasn’t he morally obliged, now, to tell
her? She was co-guardian with him of the boy, who, he had no doubt, had
been spirited away by Mercer and his accomplice; and hadn’t she a right
to any information on the matter in his possession?

Reluctantly he admitted that she did have such a right; and, he
admitted further, being a man who never cheated at solitaire, that his
object in keeping the talk of the two men from her had not been so much
the desire to guard her nerves (which he knew perfectly well were of a
robuster fiber than those of most women twenty or forty years younger
than she); no, he admitted it grimly, he had not so much spared his
aunt as Janet Smith; he could not bear to direct suspicion toward her.
But how could he keep silent longer? Kicking this question about in his
mind, he spoiled the flavor of his after-dinner cigar, although his
aunt graciously bade him smoke it in her parlor.

And still Miss Smith had not returned; really, it was only fair to her
to have her present when he told his story to his aunt; no, he was
_not_ grabbing at any excuse for delay; if he could watch that girl’s
face while he told his story he would--well, he would have his mind
settled one way or another.

Here the telephone bell rang; the manager informed Colonel Winter that
Mrs. Wigglesworth had returned.

“Wigglesworth? what an extraordinary name!” cried Millicent when the
colonel shared his information.

“Good old New England name; I know some extremely nice Wigglesworths
in Boston,” Mrs. Winter amended with a touch of hauteur; and, at this
moment, there came a knock at the door.

There is all the difference in the world between knocks; a knock
as often as not conveys a most unintentional hint in regard to the
character of the one behind the knuckles; and often, also, the mood of
the knocker is reflected in the sound which he makes. Were there truth
in this, one would judge that the person who knocked at this moment
must be a woman, for the knock was not loud, but almost timidly gentle;
one might even guess that she was agitated, for the tapping was in a
hurried, uneven measure.

“I believe it is Mrs. Wigglesworth herself,” declared Aunt Rebecca.
“Bertie, I’m going into the other room; she will talk more freely to
you. She would want to spare my nerves. That is the nuisance of being
old. Now open the door.”

She was half-way across the threshold before she finished, and the
colonel’s fingers on the door-knob waited only for the closing of her
door to turn to admit the lady in waiting.

A lady she was beyond doubt, and any one who had traveled would have
been sure that she was a lady from Massachusetts. She wore that little
close bonnet which certain elderly Boston gentlewomen can neither be
driven nor allured to abandon; her rich and quiet black silken gown
might have been made any year within the last five, and her furs
would have graced a princess. She had beautiful gray hair and a soft
complexion and wore glasses. Equally evident to the observer was the
fact of her suppressed agitation.

She waved aside the colonel’s proffered chair, introducing herself in
a musical, almost tremulous voice with the crisp enunciation of her
section of the country. “I am Mrs. Wigglesworth; I understand, Colonel
Winter--you?--y-yes, no, thank you, I will not sit. I--I understood
Mrs. Winter--ah, your aunt, is an elderly woman.”

“This is my sister-in-law, Mrs. Melville Winter,” explained the
colonel. “My aunt is elderly in years, but in nothing else.”

Mrs. Wigglesworth smiled a faint smile; the colonel could see a tremble
of the hand that was unconsciously drawing her fur collar more tightly
about her throat. “How very nice--yes, to be sure,” she faltered. “But
you will understand that I did not wish to alarm her. I heard that you
wanted to speak to me, and that the little boy was lost.”

“Or stolen,” Mrs. Melville said crisply.

The colonel, in a few words, displayed the situation. He had prevailed
upon his visitor to sit down, and while he spoke he noticed that her
hands held each other tightly, although she appeared perfectly composed
and did not interrupt. She answered his questions directly and quietly.
She had been away taking tea with a friend; she had remained to dine.
Her maid had gone out earlier to spend the day and night with a sister
in the city; so the room was empty between six and seven o’clock.

“The chambermaid wasn’t there, then?”

“I don’t think so. She usually does the room and brings the towels
for the bath in the morning. But I asked her, to make sure, and she
says that she was not there since morning. She seems a good girl; I
think she didn’t--but I have found something. At least I am af--I may
have found something. I thought I might see Mrs. Winter’s niece about
it”--she glanced toward Millicent, who said, “Certainly,” at a venture;
and looked frightened.

“And you found--?” said the colonel.

“Only this. I went to my rooms, turned on the light and was taking off
my gloves before I untied my bonnet. One of my rings fell on the floor.
It went under a rug, and I at once remarked that it was a different
place for the rug to the one where it had been before. Before, it
was in front of the dresser, a very natural place, but now it is on
the carpet to one side, a place where there seemed no reason for its
presence. These details seem trivial, but--”

“I can see they are not,” said the colonel. “Pray proceed, Madam. The
ring had rolled under the rug!”

Mrs. Wigglesworth gave him a grateful nod.

“Yes, it had. And when I removed the rug I saw it; but as I bent to
pick it up I saw something else. In one place there was a stain, as
large as the palm of my hand, a little pool of--it looks like blood.”

Mrs. Melville uttered an exclamation of horror.

The colonel’s face stiffened; but there was no change in his polite
attention.

“May we be permitted to see this--ah, stain?” said he.

The three stepped through the corridor to the outside door, and went
into the chamber. The rug was flung to one side, and there on the gray
velvet nap of the carpet was an irregular, sprawling stain about which
were spattered other stains, some crimson, some almost black.

Millicent recoiled, shuddering. The colonel knelt down and examined the
stains. “Yes,” he said very quietly, “you are right, it is blood.”

There was a tap on the door, which was opened immediately without
waiting for a permission. Millicent, rigid with fright, could only
stare helplessly at the erect figure, the composed, pale face and the
brilliant, imperious eyes of her aunt.

“What did you say, Bertie?” said Rebecca Winter. “I think I have a
right to the whole truth.”




CHAPTER VI

THE VOICE IN THE TELEPHONE


“Well, Bertie?” Mrs. Winter had gone back to her parlor in the most
docile manner in the world. Her submission struck Rupert on the heart;
it was as if she were stunned, he felt.

He was sitting opposite her, his slender, rather short figure looking
shrunken in the huge, ugly, upholstered easy-chair; he kept an almost
constrained attitude of military erectness, of which he was conscious,
himself; and at which he smiled forlornly, recalling the same pose in
Haley whenever the sergeant was disconcerted.

“But, first,” pursued his aunt, “who was that red-headed bell-boy with
whom you exchanged signals in the hall?”

The colonel suppressed a whistle. “Aunt Becky, you’re a wonder! Did you
notice? And he simply shut the palm of his hand! Why, it’s this way: I
was convinced that Archie must be on the premises; he _couldn’t_ get
off. So I telephoned a detective that I know here, a private agency,
_not_ the police, to send me a sure man to watch. He is made up as
a bell-boy (with the hotel manager’s consent, of course); either I,
or Millicent, or that boy has kept an eye on the Keatcham doors and
the next room ever since I found Archie was gone. No one has gone out
without our seeing him. If any suspicious person goes out, we have it
arranged to detain him long enough for me to get a good look. I can
tell you exactly who left the room.”

“It is you who are the wonder, Bertie,” said Aunt Rebecca, a little
wearily, but smiling. “Who has gone out?”

“At seven Mr. Keatcham’s secretary went down to the office and ordered
dinner, very carefully. I didn’t see him, but my sleuth did. He had the
secretary and the valet of the Keatcham party pointed out to him; he
saw them. They had one visitor, young Arnold, _the_ Arnold’s son--”

“The one who has all the orange groves and railways? Yes, I knew his
father.”

“That one; he only came a few moments since. Mr. Keatcham and his
secretary dined together, and Keatcham’s own man waited on them; but
the waiter for this floor brought up the dishes. At nine the dishes
were brought out and my man helped Keatcham’s valet to pile them a
little farther down the corridor in the hall.”

These items the colonel was reading out of his little red book.

“You have put all that down. Do you think it means anything?”

“I have put everything down. One can’t weed until there is a crop of
information, you know.”

“True,” murmured Aunt Rebecca, nodding her head thoughtfully. “Well,
did anything else happen?”

“The secretary posted a lot of letters in the shute. They are all
smoking now. Yes--” he was on his feet and at the door in almost a
single motion. There had been just the slightest tattoo on the panel.
When the door was opened the colonel could hear the rattle of the
elevator. He was too late to catch it, but he could see the inmates.
Three gentlemen stood in the car. One was Keatcham, the other two had
their backs to Winter. One seemed to be supporting Keatcham, who looked
pale. He saw the colonel and darted at him a single glance in which
was something like a poignant appeal; what, it was too brief for the
receiver to decide, for in the space of an eye-blink a shoulder of the
other man intervened, and simultaneously the elevator car began to sink.

There was need to decide instantly who should follow, who stay on
guard. Rupert bade the boy go down by the stairs, while, with a kind
of bulldog instinct, he clung to the rooms. The lad was to fetch the
manager and the keys of the Keatcham suite.

Meanwhile Rupert paced back and forth before the closed doors, whence
there penetrated the rustle of packing and a murmur of voices.
Presently Keatcham’s valet opened the farther door. He spoke to some
one inside. “Yes, sir,” he said, “the porter hought to be ’ere now.”

The porter was there; at least he was coming down the corridor which
led to the elevator, trundling his truck before him. He entered the
rooms and busied himself about the luggage.

Doggedly the colonel stuck to his guard until the valet and another
man, a clean-shaven, fresh-faced young man whom the watcher had never
seen before, came out of the room. The valet superintended the taking
of two trunks, accepting tickets and checks from the porter with a
thoroughly Anglican suspicion and thoroughness of inspection, while
the young man stood tapping his immaculate trousers-leg with the stick
of his admirably slender umbrella.

“It’s all right, Colvin,” he broke in impatiently; “three tickets to
Los Angeles, drawing-room, one lower berth, one section, checks for two
trunks; come on!”

Very methodically the man called Colvin stowed away his green and red
slips, first in an envelope, then in his pocket-book, finally buttoning
an inside pocket over all. He was the image of a rather stupid,
conscientious English serving creature. Carefully he counted out a
liberal but not lavish tip for the porter, and watched that functionary
depart. Last of all, he locked the door.

With extreme courtesy of manner Winter approached the young man.

“Pardon me,” said he. “I am Colonel Winter; my aunt, Mrs. Winter, has
the rooms near yours, and she finds that she needs another room or two.
Are you leaving yours?”

“These are Mr. Keatcham’s rooms, not mine,” the young man responded
politely. “_He_ is leaving them.”

“When you give up your keys, would you mind asking the clerk to send
them up to me?” pursued the colonel. “Room three twenty-seven.”

“Certainly,” replied the young man, “or would you like to look at them
a moment now?”

“Why--if it wouldn’t detain you,” hesitated Winter; he was hardly
prepared for the offer of admittance.

“Get the elevator and hold it a minute, Colvin,” said the young man,
and he instantly fitted the key to the door, which he flung open.

“Excuse me,” said he, as they stood in the room, “but aren’t you the
Colonel Winter who held that mountain pass to let the other fellows get
off, after your ammunition was exhausted?”

“I seem to recall some such episode, only it sounds rather gaudy the
way you put it.”

“I read about you in the papers; you swam a river with Funston; did all
kinds of stunts--”

“Or the newspaper reporter did. You don’t happen to know anything about
the price of these rooms, I suppose?”

The young man did not know, but he showed the colonel through all the
rooms with vast civility. He seemed quite indifferent to the colonel’s
interest in closets, baths and wardrobes; he only wanted to talk about
the Philippines.

The colonel, who always shied like a mettled horse from the flutter of
his own laurels, grew red with discomfort and rattled the door-knobs.

“There the suite ends,” said the young man.

“Oh, we don’t want it all, only a room or two,” Colonel Winter
demurred. “Any one of these rooms would do. Well, I will not detain
you. The elevator boy will be tired, and Mr. Keatcham will grow
impatient.”

“Not at all; he will have gone. I--I’m so very glad to have met you,
Colonel--”

In this manner, with mutual civilities, they parted, the young man
escorting the colonel to his own door, which the latter was forced to
enter by the sheer demands of the situation.

But hardly had the door closed than he popped out again. The young man
was swinging round the corner next the elevator.

“Is he an innocent bystander or what?” puzzled the soldier. He resumed
his march up and down the corridor. The next room to the Keatcham suite
was evidently held by an agent of the Fireless Cooking Stove, since one
of his samples had strayed into the hall and was mutely proclaiming its
own exceeding worth in very black letters on a very white placard.

“If the young man and the valet are straight goods, the key will come
up reasonably soon from the office,” thought the watcher.

Sure enough, the keys, in the hands of Winter’s own spy, appeared
before he had waited three minutes. He reported that the old gentleman
got into a cab with his secretary and the valet, and the other
gentlemen took another cab. The secretary paid the bill. Had he gone
sooner than expected? No; he had engaged the rooms until Thursday
night; this was Thursday night.

The colonel asked about the next room, which was directly on the cross
corridor leading to the elevator. The detective had been instructed to
watch it. How long had the Fireless Cooking Stove man had it? There was
no meat for suspicion in the answer. The stove man had come the day
before the Keatcham party. He was a perfectly commonplace, good-looking
young man, representing the Peerless Fireless Cooking Stove with much
picturesque eloquence; he had sold a lot of stoves to people in the
hotel, and he tried without much success to tackle “old Keatcham”; he
had attacked even the sleuth himself. “He gave me a mighty good cigar,
too,” chuckled the red-headed one.

“Hmn, you got it now?”

“Only the memory,” the boy grinned.

“You ought to have kept it, Birdsall would tell you; you are watching
every one in these rooms. Did it have a necktie? And did you throw that
away?”

“No, sir, I kept that; after I got to smoking, I just thought I’d keep
it.”

When he took the tiny scrap of paper from his pocket-book the colonel
eyed it grimly. “‘_A de Villar y Villar_,’” he read, with a slight
ironic inflection. “Decidedly our young Fireless Stove promoter smokes
good cigars!”

“Maybe Mr. Keatcham gave it to him. He was in there.”

“Was he? Oh, yes, trying to sell his stove--but not succeeding?”

“He said he was trying to get past the valet and the secretary; he
thought if he could only get at the old man and demonstrate his stove
he could make the sale. He could cook all right, that feller.”

The colonel made no comment, and presently betook himself to his aunt.
She was waiting for him in the parlor, playing solitaire. Through the
open door the white bed that ought to have been Archie’s was gleaming
faintly. The colonel’s brows met.

“Well, Bertie? Did you find anything?” Mrs. Winter inquired smoothly.

“I’m afraid not; but here is the report.” He gave it to her, even down
to the cigar wrapper.

“It doesn’t seem likely that Mr. Keatcham has anything to do with it,”
said she. “He, no doubt, has stolen many a little railway, but a little
boy is too small game.”

“Oh, I don’t suspect Keatcham; but I wish I had caught the elevator
to-night. He looked at me in a mighty queer way.”

“Did you recognize his secretary as any one whom you ever saw before?”
asked Mrs. Winter.

“I can’t say,” was the answer, given with a little hesitation. “I’m not
sure.”

“I don’t think I quite understand you, Bertie; better make a clean
breast of all you know. I’m getting a little worried myself.”

The colonel reached across the cards and tapped his aunt’s arm
affectionately. He felt the warmest impulse toward sympathy for her
that he had ever known; it glistened in his eyes. Mrs. Winter’s cheeks
slowly crimsoned; she turned her head, exclaiming, did she hear a
noise; but the colonel’s keen ears had not been warned. “Poor woman,”
he thought, “she is worried to death, but she will not admit it.”

“Now, Bertie,” said Mrs. Winter calmly, but her elbow fell on her cards
and spoiled a very promising game of Penelope’s Web, “now, Bertie,
_what_ are you keeping back?”

Then, at last, the colonel told her of his experience in Chicago.
She heard him quite without comment, and he could detect no shift of
emotion in her demeanor of absorbed but perfectly calm attention,
unless a certain tension of attitude and feature (as if, he phrased it,
she were “holding herself in”) might be so considered. And he was not
sure of this. When he came to the words which stuck in his throat, the
sentence about Miss Smith, she smiled frankly, almost laughed.

At the end of the recital--and the colonel had not omitted a word or a
look in his memory--she merely said: “Then you think Cary Mercer has
kidnapped Archie, and the nice-looking Harvard boy is helping him?”

“Don’t you think it looks that way, yourself?”

She answered that question by another one: “But you don’t think, do
you, that Janet is the Miss Smith mentioned?”

His reply came after an almost imperceptible hesitation: “No!”

Again she smiled. “That is because you know Janet; if you didn’t know
her you would think the chances were in favor of their meaning her?
Naturally! Well, I know Cary a little. I knew his father _well_. I
don’t believe he would harm a hair of Archie’s head. He isn’t a cruel
fellow--at least not toward women and children. I’ve a notion that what
he calls his wrongs have upset his wits a bit, and he might turn the
screws on the Wall Street crowd that ruined him. That is, if he had a
chance; but he is poor; he would need millions to get even a chance for
a blow at them. But a child, a lad who looks like his brother--no, you
may be sure he wouldn’t hurt Archie! He _couldn’t_.”

“But--the name, Winter; it is not such a common name; and the words
about a lady of--of--” The polite soldier hesitated.

“An old woman, do you mean?” said Aunt Rebecca, with a little curving
of her still unwrinkled upper lip.

“It sounds so complete,” submitted her nephew.

“Therefore distrust it,” she argued dryly. “Gaboriau’s great detective
and Conan Doyle’s both have that same maxim--not to pick out easy
answers.”

Winter smiled in his own turn. “Still, sometimes the easy answers are
right. Now, here is the situation: I hear this conversation at the
depot. I find one of the men on the same train with me. He, presumably,
if he _is_ Cary Mercer, and I don’t think I can be mistaken in his
identity--”

“Unless another man is making up as Cary!”

“It may seem conceited, but I don’t think I could be fooled. This man
had every expression of the other’s, and I was too struck by the--I may
almost call it malignant--look he had, not to recognize him. No, it
_was_ Mercer; he would certainly recognize you, and he would know who
I am; he would not be called upon to snub me as a possible confidence
man.”

“That rankles yet, Bertie?”

He made a grimace and nodded.

“But,” he insisted, “isn’t it so? If he is up to some mischief, any
mischief--doesn’t care to have his kin meet him--that is the way he
would act, don’t you think?”

“He might be up to mischief, yet have no designs on his kin.”

“He might,” said the colonel musingly. A thought which he did not
confide to the shrewd old woman had just flipped his mind. But he went
on with his plea.

“He avoids you; he avoids me. He is seen going into Keatcham’s
drawing-room; that means some sort of an acquaintance with Keatcham,
enough to talk to him, anyway. How much, I can’t say. Then comes the
attack by the robbers; he is in another car, so there is no call for
him to do anything; there is no light whatever on whether he had
anything to do with the robbery.

“Then we come here. Keatcham has the room next but one. Archie goes
into his own room; we see him go; I am outside, directly outside; it
is simply impossible for him to go out into the hall without my seeing
him; besides, I found the doors outside all locked except the one to
the right where we entered your suite; then we may assume that he could
not go out. He could not climb out of locked windows on the third floor
down a sheer descent of some forty or fifty feet. Your last room to
the right, Miss Smith’s bedroom, is a corner room; besides, she was
in it; that excludes every exit except that to the left. We find Mrs.
Wigglesworth was absent, and there were evidences of--an--an attack
of some kind carefully hidden, afterward. But there is no sign of
the boy. I watch the rooms. If he is hidden somewhere in Keatcham’s
rooms, the chances are, after Keatcham goes, they will try to take him
off. I don’t think it probable that Keatcham knows anything about the
kidnapping; in fact, it is wildly _im_probable. Well, Keatcham goes;
immediately I get into the room. The valet and the young man visiting
Keatcham, young Arnold, let me in without the slightest demur. Either
they know nothing of the boy or somehow they have got him away, else
they would not let me in so easily. Maybe they are ignorant and the boy
is gone, both. We go to the rooms very soon after; there is not the
smallest trace of Archie.”

“How did he get out?”

“They must have outwitted me, somehow,” the colonel sighed, “and it
looks as if he went voluntarily; there was no possible carrying away
by force. And there was no odor of chloroform about; that is very
penetrating; it would get into the halls. They must have persuaded him
to go--but how?”

“If they have kidnapped him,” said Mrs. Winter, “they will send me some
word, and if they have persuaded him to run away, plainly he must be
able to walk, and that--mess in Mrs. Wigglesworth’s room doesn’t mean
anything bad.”

“Of course not,” said the colonel firmly.

Then, in as casual a tone as he could command: “By the way, where is
Miss Smith? She is back, isn’t she?”

“Oh, a long time ago,” said Mrs. Winter. “I sent her to bed.”

“I’ve been frank with you. You will reciprocate and tell me why, for
what, you sent her out?”

Mrs. Winter made not the least evasion. She answered frankly: “I
sent her with a carefully worded advertisement--but you needn’t tell
Millicent, who has also gone to bed, thank Heaven--I sent her with
a carefully worded advertisement to all the papers. This is the
advertisement. It will reach the kidnappers, and it will not reach any
one else. See.” She handed him a slip of paper from her card-case. He
read:

“To the holders of Archie W: Communicate with R. S. W., same address
as before, and you will hear of something to your advantage. Perfectly
safe.”

The colonel read it thoughtfully, a little puzzled. Before he had time
to speak, his quick ears caught the sharp ring of his room telephone
bell. He excused himself to answer it. His room was the last of the
suite, but he shut the door on his way to the telephone.

He expected Haley; nor was he disappointed. Haley reported--in
Spanish--that he had traced the automobile; it was the property of
young Mr. Arnold, son of the rich Mr. Arnold. Young Arnold had been at
Harvard last year, and he took out a Massachusetts license; he had a
California one, too. Should he (Haley) look up young Arnold? And should
he come to report that night?

The colonel thought he could wait till morning, and, a little
comforted, hung up the receiver. Barely was it out of his hand when the
bell shrilled again, sharply, vehemently. Winter put the tube to his
ear.

“Does any one want Colonel Winter, Palace Hotel?” he asked.

A sweet, eager, boyish voice called back: “Uncle Bertie! Uncle Bertie,
don’t you worry; I’m all right!”

“_Archie!_” cried the colonel. “_Where are you?_”

But there was no answer. He called again, and a second time; he
told the lad that they were dreadfully anxious about him. He got no
response from the boy; but another voice, a woman’s voice, said, with
cold distinctness, as if to some one in the room: “No, don’t let him;
it is impossible!” Then a dead wall of silence and Central’s impassive
ignorance. He could get nothing.

Rupert Winter stood a moment, frowning and thinking deeply. Directly,
with a shrug of the shoulders, he walked out of his own outside door,
locking it, and went straight to Miss Smith’s.

He knocked, at first very gently, then more vigorously. But there was
no answer. He went away from the door, but he did not reënter his room.
He did not bear to his aunt the news which, with all its meagerness
and irritating incompleteness, had been an enormous relief to him. He
simply waited in the corridor. Five minutes, ten minutes passed; then
he heard the elevator whir, and, standing with his hand on the knob of
his open door, he saw his aunt’s companion, dressed for the street,
step out and speed down the corridor to her own door.

The other voice--the woman’s voice--had been Janet Smith’s.




CHAPTER VII

THE HAUNTED HOUSE


A mud-splashed automobile runabout containing two men was turning
off Van Ness Avenue down a narrower and shadier side street in the
afternoon of the Sunday following the disappearance of Archie Winter.
One of the occupants seemed to be an invalid whom the brilliant March
sunshine had not tempted out of his heavy wrappings and cap; the
other was a short, thick-set, corduroy-jacketed chauffeur. One marked
the runabout at a glance as a hardly used livery motor-car; but a
moment’s inspection might have shown that it was running with admirable
smoothness and quiet. The chauffeur wore goggles, hence his eyes were
shielded, but he turned a broad smile upon the pallid cheeks and
sharpened profile beside him.

“Colonel, as a health-seeker who can’t keep warm enough, you’re great!”
he cried. “Lord, but you look the part!”

“If I can’t shed some of these confounded mufflers soon,” growled
the pale sufferer addressed, “I’ll get so red with heat it will come
through my beautiful powder. I hope those fellows won’t see us, for
they will be on to us, all right.”

“Our own mothers wouldn’t be on to us in these rigs,” the chauffeur
replied cheerily; he seemed to be in a hopeful mood; “and let us once
get into the house, and surprise ’em, and there’ll be something drop.
But I haven’t really had a chance to tell you the latest--having
to pick you up at a drug store this way. Now, let’s sum things up!
You think the boy got out through Keatcham’s apartment? Or Mrs.
Wigglesworth’s?”

“How else?” said the colonel, “he can’t fly, and if he could, he
couldn’t fly out and then lock the windows from the inside.”

“I see”--the chauffeur appeared thoughtful--“and the Wigglesworth door
was locked. You think that Keatcham is in it, someway?”

“Not Keatcham,” said the colonel. “There was another man in the
car--Atkins they called him, though he has disappeared. But Mercer
remains. His secretary and that valet of his; I think the secretary is
Cary Mercer. The boy might have slipped out in those few moments we
were hunting for him inside. Afterward, either Mrs. Melville Winter or
I was on guard until your man came. He might go to the Fireless Stove
man, slip out of his rooms, and round the corner to the elevator in a
couple of seconds. Then, of course, I might see their rooms--”

“Provided, that is, the Fireless Stove drummer is in the plot, too.”

“The Fireless Stove drummer who smokes _Villar y Villar_ cigars? He is
in it, I think, Birdsall.”

“Well, I’ll assume that. Next thing: you get the telephone call. And
you say the voice sounded chipper; didn’t look like he was being hurt
or bothered anyway, did it?”

“Not at all. Besides, you know the letter Miss Smith got this morning?”

“I think I’d like another peek at that; will you drive her a minute,
while I look at the letter again?” The instant his hands were free
Birdsall pulled out the envelope from his leather-rimmed pocket.

It was rectangular in shape and smaller than the ordinary business
envelope. The paper was linen of a common diamond pattern, having
no engraved heading. The detective ran his eyes down the few lines
written in an unformed boyish hand. There was neither date nor place;
only these words:

  DEAR MISS JANET--Don’t you or auntie be woried about me because I am
  well and safe and having a good time. I had the nose bleed that is
  why I spoted the carpet. Tell Auntie to please pay for it out of my
  next week’s allowance. Be sure and don’t wory.

                                     Your aff. friend,
                                                  ARCHIBALD PAGE WINTER.

“You’re sure this is the boy’s writing?” was the detective’s comment.

“Sure. And his spelling, too.”

“Now,” said Birdsall, watching the colonel’s keen, aquiline profile
as he spoke, “now you notice there’s no heading or mark on the paper;
and the water-mark is only O. K. E., Mass., 1904. And that amounts to
nothing; those folks sell all over the country. But you notice that
it is not the ordinary business paper; it looks rather ladylike than
commercial, doesn’t it?”

The colonel admitted that it did look so.

“Now, assuming that this letter was sent with the connivance of the
kidnappers, it looks as if our young gentleman wasn’t in any particular
danger of having a hard time. To me, it looks pretty certain he must
have skipped himself; tolled along someway, maybe, but not making
any resistance. Now, is there anybody that you know who has enough
influence over him for that? How about the lady’s maid?”

“Randall has been a faithful servant for twenty years, a middle-aged,
serious-minded, decent woman. Out of the question.”

“This Miss Smith, your aunt’s companion, who is she? Do you know?”

“A South Carolinian; good family; she has lived with my aunt as
secretary and companion for a year; my aunt is very fond of her.”

“That all you know? Well _I_ have found out a little more; she used to
live with a Mrs. James S. Hastings, a rich Washington woman. The lady’s
only son fell in love with her; _somehow_ the marriage was broken off.”

“What was his name?”

“Lawrence. They call him Larry. He went to Manila. Maybe you’ve met him
there.”

“Yes, I knew him; I don’t believe he ever was accepted by her.”

“I don’t know. I have only had two days on her biography. Later, she
went to Johns Hopkins Hospital. One of the doctors was very attentive
to her--but it did not come to anything. She didn’t graduate. Don’t
know why. Then she went to live with Miss Angela Nelson, who died and
left her money, away from her own family. There was talk of breaking
the will; but it wasn’t done. Then she came to Mrs. Winter.”

The colonel was silent; there was nothing discreditable in these
details. He had known before that Janet Smith was poor; that she
had been thrown on the world early; that she must earn her own
livelihood; yet, somehow, as Birdsall marshaled the facts, there was
an insidious, malarious hint of the adventuress, bandied from place
to place, hawking her attractions about, wheedling, charming for
hire, entrapping imbecile young cubs--Larry Hastings wasn’t more than
twenty-two--somehow he felt a revolt against the picture and against
the man submitting it--and, confound Millicent!

The detective changed the manner of his questions a little. “I suppose
your aunt is pretty advanced in years, though she is as well preserved
an old lady as I have ever met, and as shrewd. Say, wouldn’t she be
likely to leave the boy a lot of money?”

“I dare say.” The colonel was conscious of an intemperate impulse to
kick Birdsall, who had been such a useful fellow in the Philippines.

“If anything was to happen to him, who would get the money?”

“Well, Mrs. Melville and I are next of kin,” returned the colonel
dryly. “Do you suspect _us_?”

“I did look up Mrs. Melville,” answered the unabashed detective, “but I
guess she’s straight goods all right. But say, how about Miss Smith?”

The colonel stared, then he laughed. “Birdsall,” said he, “there’s
somewhat too much mention of ladies’ names to suit my Virginian taste.
But if you mean to imply that Miss Smith is going to kill Archie to get
my aunt’s money, I can tell you you are _’way off!_ Your imagination
is too active for your profession. You ought to hire out to the yellow
journals.”

His employer’s satire did not even flick the dust off Birdsall’s
complacency; he grinned cheerfully. “Oh, I’m not so bad as _that_; I
don’t suppose she did kill the boy; I think he’s alive, all right.
But say, Colonel, I’ll give it to you straight; I do think the señora
coaxed the boy off. You admit, don’t you, he went off. Well, then he
was coaxed, somehow. Now, who’s got influence enough to coax him? You
cross out the maid; so do I. You cross out Mrs. Melville Winter; so do
I. I guess we both cross out the old lady. Well, there’s you and the
señora left. I don’t suspect _you_, General.”

“Really? I don’t see why. I stand to make more than anybody else, if
you are digging up motives. And how about the chambermaid?”

Birdsall flashed a glance of reproach on his companion. “Now, Colonel,
do you think I ain’t looked _her_ up? First thing. Nothing in it.
Decent Vermont girl, three years in the hotel. Came for her lungs. She
ain’t in it. But let’s get back to Miss Smith. Did you know she is Cary
Mercer’s sister-in-law?”

He delivered his shot in a casual way, and the colonel took it stonily;
nevertheless, it went to the mark. Birdsall continued. “Now, question
is, _was_ Mercer the secretary? You didn’t see the man in the elevator,
except his back. Had he two moles?”

“I couldn’t see. He had different clothes; but still there was
something like Mercer about the shoulders.”

“Burney didn’t get a chance to take a snapshot, but he did snap the
stove man. Here it is. Pull that book out of my pocket.”

Obeying, the colonel lifted a couple of small prints which he
scrutinized intently, at the end, admitting, “Yes, it is he all right.
Now do you know what _I_ think?”

Birdsall couldn’t form an idea.

“I think the Keatcham party is in it; and I think they are after
bigger game than Archie. Maybe the train robbers were a part of the
scheme--although I’m not so sure of that.”

“Oh, the robbers were in it all right. But now come to Miss Smith;
where does she come in? Or are you as sure of her as Mercer was in
Chicago?”

If he had expected to get a spark out of the Winter tinder by this
scraping stroke, he was mistaken; the soldier did not even move his
brooding gaze fixed on the hills beyond the house roofs; and he
answered in a level tone: “Did you get _that_ story from my aunt, or
was it Mrs. Melville? I’m pretty certain you got your biography from
that quarter. My aunt might have told her.”

“That would be betraying a lady’s confidence. I’m only a detective,
whose business is to pry, but I never go back on the ladies. And I
think, same’s you, that the lady in question is a real nice, high-toned
lady; but I can’t disregard the evidence. I never give out my system,
but I’ve got one, all the same. Look here, see this paper?”--he had
replaced the envelope in his pocket; he pulled it out again; or rather,
so the colonel fancied, until Birdsall turned the envelope over,
revealing it to be blank. “There’s a sheet of paper inside; take it
out. Look at the water-mark, look at the pattern; then compare it with
this letter”--handing the colonel the original envelope. “Same exactly,
ain’t they?”

The colonel, who had studied the two sheets of paper silently, nodded
as silently; and he had a premonition of Birdsall’s next sentence
before it came. “Well, Mrs. Melville Winter, this morning, took me to
Miss Smith’s desk, where we found this and a lot more like it.”

“You seem to be right in thinking the paper widely distributed,”
observed the colonel.

“And you don’t think that suspicious?”

“I should think it more suspicious if the paper were not out on her
desk. If she is such a deep one as you seem to think, she would hide
such an incriminating bit of evidence.”

“She didn’t know we suspected her. Of course, you haven’t shadowed her
a little bit?”

“There is a limit to detective duty in the case of a gentleman,”
returned the colonel haughtily. “I have not.”

Little Birdsall sighed; then in a propitiatory tone: “Well, of course,
we both think there are other people in the job; I don’t know exactly
what you mean by bigger game, but I can make a stagger at it. Now, say,
did you get any answer when you wrote to Keatcham himself?”

“Yes,” said the colonel grimly, “I heard. You know the sort of letter
I wrote; telling him of our dreadful anxiety and about the lad’s being
an orphan; don’t you think it was the sort of letter a decent man would
answer, no matter how busy he might be?”

“Sure. Didn’t you get an answer?”

“I did.” The colonel extricated himself from his wrappings enough to
find a pale blue envelope, which he handed to Birdsall, at the same
time taking the motor handle. “You see; type-written, very polite,
chilly sort of letter, kind to make a man hot under the collar and
swear at Keatcham’s heartlessness. Mr. Keatcham unable to answer,
having been ill since he left San Francisco. Did not see anything of
any boy. Probably boy ran away. Has no information of any kind to
afford. And the writer is very sincerely mine. The minute I read it I
was sure Mercer wrote it; and he wrote it to make me so disgusted with
Keatcham I wouldn’t pursue the subject with him. Just the same way he
snubbed my aunt; and, for that matter, just the way he tried to snub
me on the train. But he missed his mark; I wired every hotel in Santa
Barbara and every one in Los Angeles; and Keatcham isn’t there and
hasn’t been there. He has a big bunch of mail at Santa Barbara waiting
for him, forwarded from Los Angeles, but he hasn’t shown himself.”

Birdsall shot a glance of cordial admiration at the colonel. “You’re
all there, General,” he cried with unquenchable familiarity. “I’ve been
trying to call up the Keatcham outfit, and _I_ couldn’t get a line,
either. They haven’t used the tickets they bought--their reservations
went empty to Los Angeles. Now, what do you make out of that?”

“I make out that Archie is only part of their game,” replied the
soldier. “Now see, Birdsall, you are not going to get a couple of rich
young college fellows to do just plain kidnapping and scaring women out
of their money--”

“Lord, General,” interrupted Birdsall, “those college guys don’t turn a
hair at kidnapping; they regularly steal the president of the freshman
class, and the things they do at their hazing bees and initiations
would make an Apache Indian sit up and take notice. I tell you,
General, they’re the limit for deviltry.”

“Some kinds. Not that kind; it’s too dirty. Arnold was one of the
cleanest foot-ball players at Harvard. And I don’t know anything about
human nature if that other youngster isn’t decent. But Mercer--_es
un loco_; you can look out for anything from him. Now, see the
combination. Arnold was at Harvard! I have traced the motor-car they
used to him; and then, if you add that his father is away safe in
Europe and he has an empty house, off to one side, with a quantity of
space around it and the reputation of being haunted, why--”

“It looks good to me. And I understand my men have got around it on the
quiet all right. How’s your man Haley got on, hiring out to the Jap in
charge?”

“Well enough; the Jap took him on to mow, but either Mr. Caretaker
doesn’t know anything or he won’t tell. He’s bubbling over with
conversation about the flowers and the country and the Philippines,
where he used to be; but he only knows that the honorable family are
all away and he is to shun the house. Aren’t we almost there?”

“Just around the corner. I guess when you see it you’ll think it’s just
the _patio_ a spook of taste would freeze to.”

“_Why_ is it haunted?”

“Now you have me. I ain’t on to such dream stuff. Gimme five cards.
Mrs. Arnold died off in Europe, so ’tain’t her; and the house has
only been built two years; but the neighbors have seen lights and
heard groans and a pick chopping at the stones. Some folks say the
land belonged to an old miner and he died before he could tell where
he’d buried his _mazuma_; so he is taking a little _buscar_ after it.
There’s the house, General.”

The street climbed a gentle hill, and on its crest a large house, in
mission style, looked over a pleasant land. Its position on a corner
and the unusual size of the grounds about it gave the mansion an
effect of space. Of almost rawly recent erection though it was, the
kindly climate had so fostered the growth of the pines, acacias and
live-oaks, the eucalypti and the orange-trees, which made a rich blur
of color on the hillside, had so lavishly tended the creeping ivies
and Bougainvilleas which masked the rounded lantern arches of the
stern gray façade, and so sumptuously blazoned the flower-beds in the
garden on the one hand, yet, on the other, had so cunningly dulled the
greenish gray of the cobblestones from California arroyos in chimney
and foundation, and had so softly streaked the marble of the garden
statues and the plaster of walls and mansion with tiny filaments of
lichens or faint green moss, that the beholder might fancy the house
to be the ancient home of some Spanish hidalgo, handed down with an
hereditary curse, through generations, to the last of his race. One
was tempted to such a flutter of fancy because of the impression given
by the mansion. A sullen reticence hung about the place. The windows,
for the most part, were heavily shuttered. Not a pane of glass flashed
back at the sunlight; even those casements not shuttered turned blank
dark green shades, like bandaged eyes, on the court and the beautiful
terraces and the lovely sweep of hillsides where the wonderful shadows
swayed and melted.

The bent figure of a man raking, distorted by the perspective, was
visible just beyond the high pillars of the gateway. He paid no
attention to the motions of the motor-car, nor did he answer a hail
until it was repeated. Then he approached the car. Birdsall was in the
roadway trying to unlock the gate. The man, whose Japanese features
were quite distinguishable, bowed; he explained that the honorable
owners were not at home; his insignificant self was the only keeper of
the grounds. He spoke sufficiently good English with the accompaniment
of a deprecatory, amiable smile. Birdsall, in turn, told him that his
own companion was a very great gentleman from the East who belonged to
a society of vast power which was investigating spectral appearances,
and that he had come thousands of miles to see the ghost.

The Japanese extended both hands, while the appeal of his smile
deepened. “Too bad, velly,” he murmured, “but not leally any g’lost,
no, nev’.”

“Don’t you believe in the ghost?” asked Colonel Winter.

“No, me Clistian boy, no believe not’ing.”

“All the samee,” said the colonel, laboriously swinging himself from
his vantage-ground of the motor seat to the flat top of the wall,
thence dropping to the greensward below, “allee samee, like go in house
hunt ghost.” He crackled a bank-note in the palm of the slim brown
hand, smiling and nodding as if to break the force of his brusque
action. Meanwhile, Birdsall had safely shut off his engine before he
placed himself beside the others with an agility hardly to be expected
of his rotund build.

As for the caretaker, whether because he perceived himself outnumbered,
or because he was really void of suspicion, he accepted the money with
outward gratitude and proffered his guidance through the garden and
the orchards. He slipped into the rôle of cicerone with no atom of
resistance; he was voluble; he was gracious; he was artlessly delighted
with his señors. In spite of this flood of suavity, however, there
seemed to be no possibility of persuading him to admit them to the
house.

Assured of this, the two fell back for a second, time for the merest
eyeflash from the detective to the soldier, who at once limped briskly
up to the Jap, saying: “We are very much obliged to you; this is a
beautiful house, beautiful gardens; but we want to see the ghost; and
if you can give me young Mr. Arnold’s address I will see him--or write,
and we can come back.”

The gardener, with many apologies and smiles, did not know Mr. Arnold’s
honorable address, but he drew out a soiled card, explaining that it
bore the name of the gentleman in charge of the property. Birdsall,
peering over the Jap’s shoulders, added that it was the card of a
well-known legal firm.

“Then,” said the colonel with deliberation, “we will thank you again
for your courtesy, and--what’s that?”

The Jap turned; they all started at the barking detonation of some
explosion; while they gazed about them there came another booming
sound, and they could see smoke pouring from the chimney and leaking
through the window joints of a room in the rear of the house. Like a
hare, not breaking his wind by a single cry, the Jap sped toward the
court. The others were hard on his heels, though the colonel limped and
showed signs of distress by the time they reached the great iron door.

The Jap pulled out a key; he turned it and swung the door barely wide
enough to enter, calling on them to stay out; he would tell them if he
needed them.

“Augustly stay; maybe honolable t’ieves!” he cried.

But the detective had interposed a stalwart leg and shoulder.
Instantly the door swung open; he acted as if he had lost his wits with
excitement. “You’re burning up! Lord! you’re burning! _Fire!_ _Fire!_”
he bawled, and rushed boldly into the room.

Winter followed him, also calling aloud in a strident voice. And it was
to be observed, being such an unusual preparation for a conflagration,
that he had drawn a heavy revolver and ran with it in his hand. Before
he jumped out of the car he had discarded his thick top-coat and all
his wrappings.

An observer, also (had there been one near), would have taken note of a
robust Irishman, who had been weeding the flower-beds, and would have
seen him straighten at the first peal of the explosion, stare wildly at
the chimneys before any distinct smoke was to be seen, then run swiftly
and climb up to a low chimney on a wing of the house, watering-pot in
hand. He would have seen him empty his inadequate fire extinguisher
and rapidly descend the ladder, while the smoke volleyed forth, as if
defying his puny efforts; later, he would have seen the watering-pot
bearer pursue the others into the house, emitting noble yells of
“Fire!” and “Help!”

[Illustration: The detective had interposed a stalwart leg and
shoulder. Page 135]

Further, this same observer, had he been an intimate friend of Sergeant
Dennis Haley, certainly would have recognized that resourceful man of
war in the amateur fireman.




CHAPTER VIII

FACE TO FACE


When the two men got into the house the dim rooms made them stumble
for a moment after the brilliant sunshine of the outer skies; but in
a second Birdsall’s groping hand had found an electric push-button
and the room was flooded with light. They were in a small office
off the kitchen, apparently. Smoke of a peculiarly pungent odor and
eye-smarting character blurred all the surroundings; but during the
moment the Jap halted to explore its cause the others perceived two
doors and made for them. One was locked, but the other must have been
free to open, since Haley, with his watering-can, bounded through it
while they were tugging at the other. Almost immediately, however,
Haley was back again shouting and pointing down the dark passage.

“The fire’s _there_,” screamed the detective. “I can smell smoke!
The smoke comes through the keyhole!” But while the Jap fitted a key
in the lock and swung back the door, and Haley, who had paused to
replenish his watering-can at a convenient faucet, darted after the
other two, the colonel stood listening with every auditory nerve
strained to catch some sound. He yelled “Fire! help!” at the top of his
voice, but not moving a muscle. “Too far off,” he muttered, then he
yelled again and threw a heavy chair as if he had stumbled against it.
Another pause; he got down on his knees to put his ear to the floor.
Directly he rose; he did not speak, but the words that he said to
himself were only: “Just possible. Some one down cellar; but not under
here.” Meanwhile he was hurrying in pursuit of the others as swiftly as
his stiff knee would allow. He found them in a side hall with tiled or
brick floor, gathered about a water-soaked heap of charred red paper.

“’Tis terrible!” announced Haley, “a bum for sure! a dinnermite
bum!”--fishing out something like a tin tomato can from the sodden mass.

“Anyhow, _there_ goes the real thing,” observed the colonel coolly, as
a formidable explosion jarred the air.

“If you blow us up, I kill you flist!” hissed the Jap, and his knife
flashed.

“_Chito, Chito!_” soothed the colonel, lifting his revolver almost
carelessly. Simultaneously two brawny arms pinioned the Jap’s own arms
at his sides.

“Shure, Mister Samurai, ’tis the ongrateful chap youse is,”
expostulated Haley. “I hate to reshtrain ye, but if ye thry any
jehujits on me ’twill be sahanara wid youse mighty quick.”

“No understan’,” murmured the Jap plaintively. “Why you hult me?”

“Come, put out the fire first,” said the colonel; “you know the house,
you go ahead.”

The Jap darted on ahead so swiftly that they had some ado to follow;
which seemed necessary, since he might have clashed a bolt on them at
any turn. The colonel’s stiff leg kept him in the rear, but Haley was
never a hand’s-breadth behind the runner.

They found smoke in two places, but they easily extinguished the tiny
flames. In both cases the bombs turned out to be no more dangerous
than a common kind of fireworks yielding a suffocating smoke in an
inclosure, but doing no especial damage on safe and fire-proof ground,
like a hearth. They were quickly extinguished. In their search they
passed from one luxurious room to another, the Jap leading, until he
finally halted in a spacious library hung in Spanish leather, with
ancient, richly carved Spanish tables and entrancing Spanish chairs of
turned wood and age-mellowed cane, and bookcases sumptuously tempting
a book-lover. But the colonel cared only for the soul of a book, not
its body; the richest and clearest of black letter or the daintiest
of tooling had left him cold; moreover, every fiber in him was strung
by his quest; and Haley, naturally, was immune; strangely enough, it
was the cheerful, vulgar little detective who gave a glance, rapid but
full of admiration, at the shelves and pile of missals on the table,
incongruously jostled by magazines of the day.

Winter faced the Jap, who was sheathed again in his bland and impassive
politeness. “Where is Mr. Mercer?” said he.

The Jap waved his hands in an eloquent oriental gesture. He assured the
honorable questioner that he did not know any Mr. Mercer. There was no
one in the house.

The colonel had seated himself in a priceless arm-chair in Cordova
stamped leather; he no longer looked like an invalid. “Show your star,
please,” he commanded Birdsall, and the latter silently flung back the
lapel of his coat.

“I ought to tell you,” continued Rupert Winter, “that the game is up.
It would do no good for you to run that poisoned bit of steel of yours
into me or into any of us; we have only to stay here a little too long
and the police of San Francisco will be down on you--oh, I know all
about what sort they are, but we have money to spend as well as you.
You take the note I shall write to Mr. Mercer, or whatever you choose
to call him, and bring his answer. We stay here until he comes.”

Having thus spoken in an even, gentle voice, he scribbled a few words
on a piece of paper which he took out of his note-book. This he
proffered to the Jap.

On his part, the latter kept his self-respect; he abated no jot of
his assurance that they were alone in the house; he insinuated his
suspicion that they were there for no honest purpose; finally he was
willing to search the house if they would stay where they were.

“I am not often mistaken in people,” was the colonel’s rather oblique
answer, “and I think you are a gentleman who might kill me if you had
a chance, but would not break his word to me. If you will promise to
play fair with us, do no harm to my nephew, take this letter and bring
me an answer--if you find any one--on your word of honor as a Japanese
soldier and gentleman, you may go; we will not signal the police. Is it
a bargain?”

The Jap gravely assented, still in the language of the East, “saving
his face” by the declaration of the absence of his principals. And
he went off as gracefully and courteously as if only the highest
civilities had passed between them.

“Won’t he try some skin game on us?” the detective questioned; but
Winter only motioned toward the telephone desk. “Listen at it,” he
said, “you can tell if the wires are cut; and he knows your men are
outside hiding, somewhere; he doesn’t know how many. You see, we have
the advantage of them there; to be safe they don’t dare to let many
people into their secret. _We_ can have a whole gang. We haven’t many,
but they may _think_ we have.”

Birdsall, who had lifted the receiver to his ear, laid it down with
an appeased nod. Immediately he proceeded to satisfy his professional
conscience by a search in every nook and cranny of the apartment. But
no result appeared important enough to justify the production of his
red morocco note-book and his fountain-pen. He had paused in disgust
when the colonel sat up suddenly, erect in his chair; his keener
ears had caught some sound which made him dart to all the windows in
succession. He called Haley (whom he had posted outside to guard the
door) and despatched him across the hall to reconnoiter. “I am sure it
was the sound of wheels,” he explained, “but Haley will be too late; we
are on the wrong side of the house.”

As he spoke the buzz of an electric bell jarred their ears. “Somebody
is coming in the front door,” hazarded Birdsall.

“Evidently,” returned the colonel dryly. “How can our absent friends
get in otherwise--at least how can they let us understand they have
come in? I think we are going to have the pleasure of an interview with
the elusive Mr. Mercer.”

They waited. The colonel motioned Birdsall to a seat by the table,
within breathing distance of the telephone. He himself fluttered the
loose journals and magazines, his ironic smile creasing his cheek.
“Our Japanese friend reads the newspapers,” he remarked. “Here are
to-day’s papers; yes, _Examiner_ and _Chronicle_, unfolded and smoked
over. Cigar, too, not cigarette, for here is a stump--decidedly our
cherry-blossom friends are getting civilized!”

“Oh, there is somebody _in_ here all right,” grunted Birdsall. “Say,
Colonel, you are sure Mrs. Winter has had no answer to her ad? No kind
of notice about sending money?”

“I haven’t seen her for a few hours, but I saw Mrs. Melville Winter;
she was positive no word had come. She thought my aunt was more worried
than she would admit, and Miss Smith looked pale, although she seemed
hopeful.”

“She didn’t really want to give me the letter, I thought,” said the
detective. The colonel gave him no reply save a black look. A silence
fell. A footfall outside broke it, a firm, in nowise stealthy footfall.
Birdsall slipped his hand inside his coat. The colonel rose and bowed
gravely to Cary Mercer.

On his part, Mercer was not in the least flurried; he looked at the
two men, not with the arrogant suspicion which had stung Winter on the
train, but with the melancholy courtesy of his bearing at Cambridge,
three years before.

“This, I think, is Colonel Winter?” he said, returning the bow, but not
extending his hand, which hung down, slack and empty at his side.

“I am glad you recognized me this time, Mr. Mercer.”

“I am sorry that I did not recognize you before,” answered Mercer.
“Will you gentlemen be seated? I am not the owner of the house nor his
son; I am not even a friend, only a casual acquaintance of the young
man, but I seem to be rather in the position of host, so will you be
seated, and may I offer you some Scotch and Shasta--Mr.--ah--”

“Mr. Horatio Birdsall, of the Birdsall and Gwen Detective Agency,”
interposed Winter. Birdsall bowed. Mercer bowed. “Excuse me if I
decline for us both; our time is limited--no, thank you, not a cigar,
either. Now, Mr. Mercer, to come to the point, I want my nephew. I
understand he is in this house.”

“You are quite mistaken,” Mercer responded with unshaken calm. “He is
not.”

“Where is he, then?”

“I do not know, Colonel Winter. What I should recommend is for you to
go back to the Palace, and if you do not find him there--why, come and
shoot us up again!” His eye strayed for a second to the blackened,
reeking mass on the great stone hearth.

“Have you sent him home? Is that what you mean to imply?”

“I imply nothing, Colonel; I don’t dare to with such strenuous fighters
as you gentlemen; only go and see, and if you do find the young
gentleman has had no ill treatment, no scare--only a little adventure
such as boys like, I hope you will come out here, or wherever I may be,
and have that cigar you are refusing.”

The colonel was frankly puzzled. He couldn’t quite focus his wits on
this bravado which had nothing of the bravo about it, in fact had
a tinge of wistfulness in its quiet. One would have said the man
regretted his compulsory attitude of antagonism; that he wanted peace.

Mercer smiled faintly. “You ought to know by this time when a man is
lying, Colonel,” he continued, “but I will go further. I may have done
plenty of wrong things in my life, some things, maybe, which the law
might call a crime; but I have never done anything which would debar
me from passing my word of honor as a gentleman; nor any one else from
taking it. I give you my word of honor that I have meant and I do mean
no slightest harm to Archie Winter; and that, while I do not _know_
where he is at this speaking, I believe you will find him safe under
your aunt’s protection when you get back to the Palace.”

“Call up the Palace Hotel, Mr. Birdsall,” was the colonel’s reply. “Mr.
Mercer, I do not distrust that you are speaking exactly, but you know
your Shakespeare; and there are promises which keep their word to the
ear but break it to the sense.”

“I don’t wonder at your mistake; but you are mistaken, suh.”

Birdsall was phlegmatically ringing up Mrs. Winter, having the usual
experience of the rash person who intrudes his paltry needs on the
complex workings of a great hotel system.

“No, I don’t know the number, I haven’t the book here, but
_you_ know, Palace Hotel. Well give me Information, then--Busy?
Well, give me another Information, then--yes, I want the Palace
Hotel--P-a-l-a-c-e--yes, yes, Palace Hotel; yes, certainly. Yes? Mrs.
Archibald Winter. Yes--line busy? Well, hold on until it is disengaged.
Say, Miss Furber, that you? This is Birdsall and Gwen. Yes. Give me
Mrs. Winter, will you, 337? This Mrs. Winter? Oh! When will she be
back? Is Mrs. Melville Winter in? Well, Miss Smith in? She’s gone,
too? Has Master Archibald got back, yet, to the hotel? Hasn’t? Thank
you--eh?” in answer to the colonel’s interruption. “What say, Colonel?”

“Tell her to call up this number,”--the colonel read it out of the
telephone book--“when Master Archie does get back, will you? I am
afraid, Mr. Mercer, that you will have to allow us to trespass on your
hospitality for a little longer.”

He suspected that Mercer was annoyed, although he answered lightly
enough: “As you please, Colonel Winter. I am sure you will hear very
soon. Now, there is another matter, your machine; I understand you left
it outside. Will you ring for Kito, Colonel? Under the circumstances
you may prefer to do your own ringing. I will ask him to attend to the
car.”

The colonel made proper acknowledgments. He was thinking that had
Mercer cared to confiscate the motor, he would have done it without
ringing; on the other hand, did he desire some special intercourse
with his retainer, wherein, under their very noses, he could issue his
orders--well, possibly they might get a whiff of the secret themselves
were he allowed to try. At present the game baffled him. Therefore he
nodded at Birdsall’s puckered face behind Mercer’s shoulder. And he
rang the bell.

The Jap answered it with suspicious alacrity.

“Kito,” said Mercer, “will you attend to General Winter’s car? Bring it
up to the court.”

Absolutely harmless, to all appearances, but Birdsall, from his safe
position behind master and man, looked shrewd suspicion at the soldier.

“Shall your man in the hall go with him?” asked Mercer.

The colonel shook his head. “No,” he said quietly, “we have other
men outside if he needs help. Call Skid, please.” But when Birdsall
attempted to get Central there was no response.

The colonel merely shrugged his shoulders, although Birdsall frowned
with vexation. “What a pity!” said Winter softly. “Now the fellows will
come when the time is up; we can’t call them off.”

Mercer smiled faintly. “There are two more telephones in the house,” he
observed. “You can call off your dogs easily any time you wish. Also
you can hear from the Palace. Will you come up-stairs with me? I assure
you I have not the least intention to harm you or the honest sergeant.”

“You take the first trick, Mercer,” said the colonel. “I supposed the
bell was your signal to have the wires cut. But about going; no, I
think we will stay here. There is a door out on the court which, if you
will open--thank you. A charming prospect! Excuse me if I send Haley
out there; and may I go myself?”

Anticipating the answer, he stepped under the low mission lintel into
a fairy-like Californian court or _patio_ of pepper-trees and palms
and a moss-grown fountain. There was the usual colonnade with a stone
seat running round the wall. Mercer, smiling, motioned to one of them.
“I wish I could convince you, Colonel, that you are in no need of
that plaything in your hand, and that you are going to dine with your
boy--isn’t he a fine fellow?”

The colonel did not note either his admission that he had seen Archie,
nor a curious warming of his tone; he had stiffened and grown rigid
like a man who receives a blow which he will not admit. He stole a
glance at the detective and met an atrocious smirk of complacency.
They both had caught a glimpse of a figure flitting into a door of the
court. They both had seen a woman’s profile and a hand holding a little
steel tool which had ends like an alligator’s nose. And both men had
recognized Miss Smith.




CHAPTER IX

THE AGENT OF THE FIRELESS STOVE


The time was two hours later. Rupert Winter was sitting on one of
the stone benches of the colonnade about the _patio_. The court was
suffused with the golden glow presaging sunset. Warm afternoon shadows
lay along the flags; wavering silhouettes of leafage or plant; blurred
reflections from the bold bas-reliefs of Spanish warriors and Spanish
priests sculptured between the spandrels of the arches. Winter’s dull
eyes hardly noted them: the exotic luxuriance of foliage, the Spanish
armor and Spanish cowls were all too common to a denizen of a Spanish
colony in the tropics, to distract his thoughts from his own ugly
problem. He had been having it out with himself, as he phrased it. And
there had been moments during those two hours, when he had ground his
teeth and clenched his fists because of the futile and furious pain in
him.

When he recognized Janet Smith, by that same illuminating flash he
recognized that this woman who had been tricking him was the woman
that he loved. He believed that he had said his last word to love, but
love, after seeming to accept the curt dismissal, was lightly riding
his heart again. “Fooled a second time,” he thought with inexpressible
bitterness, recalling his unhappy married life and the pretty, weak
creature who had caused him such humiliation. Yet with her there had
been no real wrong-doing, only absolute lack of discretion and a
childish craving for gaiety and adulation. Poor child! what a woeful
ending for it all! The baby, the little boy who was their only living
child, to die of a sudden access of an apparently trifling attack of
croup, while the mother was dancing at a post ball! He was East, taking
his examination for promotion. The frantic drive home in the chill
of the dawn had given her a cold which her shock and grief left her
no strength to resist--she was always a frail little creature, poor
butterfly!--and she followed her baby inside of a month. Had she lived,
her husband might have found it hard to forgive her, for already a sore
heart was turning to the child for comfort; but she was dead, and he
did not let his thoughts misuse her memory. Now--here was another, so
different but just as false. Then, he brought himself up with a jerk;
he would be fair; he would look at things as they were; many a man had
been fooled by the dummy. He would not jump at conclusions because they
were cruel, any more than he would because they were kind. There was
such a thing, he knew well, as credulous suspicion; it did more harm
than credulous trust. Meanwhile, he had his detail. He was to find
Archie; therefore, he waited. They were in the house; it were only
folly to give up their advantage under the stress of any of Mercer’s
plausible lurings to the outside.

Moreover, by degrees, he became convinced that Mercer, certainly to
some extent, was sincere in his profession of belief in Archie’s
absence and safety. This, in spite of hearing several times that Archie
was not returned. Mercer did all the speaking, but he allowed Birdsall
to hold the receiver and take the message from Mrs. Winter.

The telephone was in an adjoining room, but by shifting his position
a number of times the colonel was able to catch a murmur of the
conversation. He heard Mercer’s voice distinctly. He had turned away
and was following the detective out of the room. “I don’t understand it
any more than you do, Mr. Birdsall,” he said; “you won’t believe me,
suh, but I am right worried.”

“Of course I believe you,” purred the detective so softly that the
colonel knew he did not believe any more than Mercer suspected. “Of
course I believe you; but I don’t know what to do. It ain’t on the map.
I guess it’s up to you to throw a little light. I’ve called the boys
off twice already and told ’em to wait an hour or a half-hour longer. I
got to see the colonel.”

“I can trust my intuitions, or I can trust the circumstantial
evidence,” thought the colonel. He jumped up and began to pace the
court.

“Seems to be like a game of bridge before one can see the dummy,” he
complained; and as so often happens in the crises of life, a trivial
illustration struck a wavering mind with the force of an argument. His
thoughts reverted whimsically to the card-table; how many times had he
hesitated over the first lead between evenly balanced suits of four;
and how often had he regretted or won, depending solely upon whether
his card instinct had been denied or obeyed! It might be instinct, this
much-discussed “card instinct,” or it might be a summing up of logical
deductions so swift that the obscure steps were lost, and the reasoner
was unconscious of his own logical processes. “Now,” groaned Rupert
Winter, “I am up against it. She _looks_ like a good woman; she _seems_
like a good woman; but I have only my impressions and Aunt Rebecca’s
against the apparent facts in the case. Well, Aunt Rebecca is a shrewd
one!” He sat down and thought harder. Finally he rose, smiling. He
had threshed out his problem; and his conclusion, inaudibly but very
distinctly uttered to himself, was: “Me for my own impressions! If that
girl is in with this gang, either what they are after isn’t so bad--or
they have made her believe it isn’t bad.”

He looked idly about him at the arched doorway of the outer court. It
was carved with a favorite mission design of eight-pointed flowers with
vase-like fluting below. There was a tiny crack in one of the flowers,
the tiniest crack in the world. He looked at it without seeing it, or
seeing it with only the outer half of his senses, but--he could not
have told how--into his effort to pierce his own tangle there crept
a sudden interest, a sudden keenness of scrutiny of this minute,
insignificant crack in the stone. He became aware that the crack was
singularly regular, preserving the form of the flower and the fluting
beneath. Kito, the Japanese, who was sitting at the far end of the
court, conversing in amity with Haley, just here rose and came to this
particular pillar. The Irishman sat alone, rimmed by the sunset gold,
little spangles of motes drifting about him; for the merest second
Winter’s glance lingered on him ere it went to the Jap, who passed him,
courteously saluting.

After he had passed, the colonel looked again at the column and the
crack--it was not there.

“_Chito, chito!_” muttered the colonel. Carelessly he approached
the column and took the same posture as the Jap. Unobtrusively his
fingers strayed over the stone. He scratched the surface; not stone,
but cement. He tapped cautiously, keeping his hand well hidden by his
body; no hollow sound rewarded him; but all at once his groping fingers
touched a little round object under the bold point of an eight-pointed
flower. He didn’t dare press on it; instead he resumed his cautious
tapping. It seemed to him that the sound had changed. He glanced about
him. Save for Haley he was alone in the _patio_. He pressed on the
round white knob, and what he had half expected happened: a segment
of the column swung on inner hinges, disclosing the hollow center
of the engaged columns on either side. He looked down. Nothing but
darkness was visible, but while he stood, tensely holding his breath,
his abnormally sensitive auricular nerve caught distinctly the staccato
breath of that kind of sigh which is like a groan, and a voice said
more wearily than angrily: “Oh, damn it all!”

       *       *       *       *       *

Almost simultaneously, he heard the faint footfalls of the men within;
he must replace his movable flower. The column was intact, and he was
bending his frowning brows on the stylobate of another when Birdsall
and Mercer entered together, Mercer, with a shrug of his shoulders at
the detective’s dogged suspicion, preceding the latter.

“Well,” said the colonel, “did you get my aunt?”

“Yes, suh, I got your aunt herself,” responded Mercer, with his
Virginian survival of the formal civility of an earlier generation.
“Yes, suh; but I regret to say Archie is not there.”

“Where is he?” The soldier’s voice was curt.

“Honestly,” declared Mercer, “I wish I knew, suh, I certainly _do_.
But--” Mercer’s jaw fell; he turned sharply at the soft whir of an
electric stanhope gently entering the _patio_ through the great arched
gateway. It stopped abreast of the group, and its only occupant, a
handsome young man, jumped nimbly out of the vehicle. He greeted them
with a polite removal of his cap, a bow, and a flashing smile which
made the circuit of the beholders. Birdsall and the colonel recognized
the traveling enthusiast of the Fireless Stove.

The colonel took matters into his own hands.

“I think you’re the young gentleman who took my nephew away,” said he.
“Will you kindly tell us where he is?”

“And don’t get giddy, young gentleman,” Birdsall chimed in, “because
we know perfectly well that you are _not_ the agent of the Peerless
Fireless Stove.”

“I’ve got one here on trial, and I’ve come back to see if they like
it,” explained the young man, in silken accents, but with a dancing
gleam of the eyes.

“We are going to keep it,” said Mercer. “Kito,” calling the unseen Jap,
“fetch that Fireless Stove this gentleman left us, and show it to this
gentleman here.”

“Oh, cut it out!” Birdsall waved him off. “It’s only ten minutes
before our fellows will come. You can put the police court wise with
all that. Try it on _them_; it don’t go with us.”

“Where is the boy?” said the colonel.

“Tell him, if you know,” said Mercer. “This gentleman,” he explained,
“left a stove with us to test. He was here about it this morning, and
we gave Archie to _him_ to take to the Palace Hotel.”

“And he is there now,” said the young man.

“Did you leave him there?” asked the colonel.

“Yes, _did_ you?” insisted Mercer.

The young man looked from Mercer to the other two men. There was no
visible appeal to the Southerner, but Winter felt sure of two things:
one, that the new-comer was Mercer’s confederate whom he was striving
to shield by pretending to disavow; the other, that for some reason
Mercer was as anxious for the answer as were they.

“Why-y,” hesitated the stove promoter, “you see, Mr.--ah, gentlemen,
you see, I was told to take the boy to the Palace Hotel, and I set out
to do it. We weren’t going at more than an eight-mile-an-hour clip,
yet some foozler of a cop arrested us for speeding. It was perfectly
ridiculous, and I tried to shake him, but it was no use. They carried
us off to a police court and stuck me for ten dollars. Meanwhile my
machine and my passenger were outside. When I got outside I couldn’t
find them. I skirmished around, and finally did get the machine. I’d
taken the precaution to fix it so it couldn’t be run before I left
it--took the key out, you know--it must have been trundled off by
hand somewhere!--but I couldn’t find the boy. Naturally, I was a bit
worried; but after I had looked up the force and the neighborhood, it
occurred to me to ’phone to the Palace. I did, and I was told he was
there.”

“Who told you?” The question came simultaneously out of three throats.

“Why, Mrs. Winter--that’s what she called herself.”

“But not three minutes ago Mrs. Winter told me that he wasn’t there,”
remarked Mercer coldly. “_When_ did you telephone?”

“It was at least fifteen minutes ago,” the young man said dolefully.
“I say, wouldn’t you better call them up again? There may be some
explanation. I shouldn’t have come back without the kid if I hadn’t
been _sure_ he was safe.”

“Was it Mrs. Melville or Mrs. Winter you got?” This came from the
colonel. “Did she by chance have an English accent, or was it
Southern?”

“Oh, no, not Southern,” protested the young man. “Yes, I should say it
was English--or trying to be.”

“It would be exactly like Millicent,” thought the colonel wrathfully,
“to try to fool the kidnappers, who had apparently lost Archie, by
pretending he was at the hotel!”

He made no comment aloud, but he nodded assent to Mercer’s proposal to
telephone; and then he walked up to the stove man.

“The game is up,” he said quietly. “We have a lot of men waiting
outside. If we signal, they will come any minute; if we don’t signal,
they will come in ten minutes. Give us a chance to be merciful to you.
This is no kind of a scrape for your father’s son--or for Arnold’s.”

Shot without range though it was, Winter was sure that it went home
under all the young fellow’s assumed bewilderment. He continued,
looking kindly at him:

“You look now, I’ll wager, about as you used to look in the office when
you called on the dean--by invitation--and were wondering just where
the inquiry was going to light!”

The dimple showed in the young man’s cheek. “I admit,” he replied,
“that I didn’t take advantage as I should of my university
opportunities. Probably that is why I have to earn a strenuous
livelihood boosting the Only Peerless Fireless Stove. By the way, have
_you_ ever seen the Fireless in action? Just the thing for the army!
Fills a long-felt want. I should be very pleased to demonstrate. We
have a stove here.”

The colonel grinned responsively. “You do it very well,” said he.
“Can’t you let me into the game?”

There was the slightest waver in the promoter’s glance, although he
smiled brilliantly as he answered: “I’ll take it into consideration,
but--will you excuse me? I want to speak to Mr. Mercer about the stove.”

The moment he had removed his affable young presence Birdsall
approached his employer. It had been a difficult quarter of an hour
with the detective. Vague instinct warned him not to touch the subject
of Miss Smith; he felt in no way assured about anything else. The
result had been that he had fidgeted in silence. But the accumulated
flood could no longer be held.

“I’ve found out one thing,” exploded Birdsall, puffing in the haste of
his utterance. “The boy is on the premises.”

“Think so?” was all the colonel’s answer.

“I’m sure of it. Say, I overheard Mercer talking down a speaking-tube.”

“What did he say?”

“Talked French, damn him! But say, what’s _gorge_?”

“Throat.”

“What’s _cupillo gorge_?”

“Sure he wasn’t talking of a carriage, or did he say _je le couperai la
gorge_?”

“Maybe. I wouldn’t swear to it. I don’t _parlez français_ a little bit.”

“Did you hear any other noises? Where were they?”

Birdsall thought he had heard other noises, and that they were down
cellar. “And anyhow, Colonel, I’m dead-to-rights sure those guys are
giving us hot stuff to get us out of the house. I’m for getting our men
in now and rushing the house. It’s me for the cellar.”

While the colonel was rolling Birdsall’s information around in his
mind, he heard the echo of steps on the flagging which preceded Mercer
and the other man.

There was that in the bearing and the look of them that made the
watcher, used to the signs of decision on men’s faces, instantly sure
that their whole course of plans and action was changed.

Mercer spoke first and in a low tone to the colonel.

“I have no right,” said he, “to ask so much trust from you, but will
you trust me enough to step aside with this young man and me for a
moment only--out of ear-shot? I give you my word of honor I mean no
slightest harm to you. I want to be frank. I will go alone if you
desire.”

The colonel eyed him intently for the briefest space. “I’ll trust you,”
said he. Then: “I think you have the key to this queer mix-up. At your
service. And let your friend come, too. He is an ingenuous sort, and he
amuses me.”

Birdsall looked distinctly sullen over the request to wait, intimating
quite frankly that his employer was walking into a trap. “I won’t stand
here more than fifteen minutes,” he grumbled. “I’ve given those fellows
_poco tiente_ long enough.” But the colonel insisted on twenty minutes,
and reluctantly Birdsall acquiesced.

Mercer conducted the others to the library. When they were seated he
began in his composed, melancholy fashion:

“I earnestly beg of you to listen to me, and to believe me, for your
nephew’s sake. I am going to tell you the absolute truth. It is the
only way now. When you came, we handed him over to this gentleman,
exactly as we have said. I do not know why he should have been stopped.
I do not know why he left the machine--”

“Might he not have been _carried_ away?” said Winter.

“He might; but I don’t know what motive--”

“What motive had _you_? You kidnapped him!”

“Not exactly. We had no intention of harming him. He came accidentally
into the room between Mrs. Winter’s and Mr. Keatcham’s suites. Standing
in that room, trying to stanch the bleeding of a sudden hemorrhage of
the nose, he overheard me and my friend--”

“_You?_” asked the colonel laconically of the young Harvard man.

“I,” smilingly confessed the latter. “I am ready to own up. You are a
decent fellow, and you are shrewd. You ought to be on our side, not
fighting us. I tell you, you don’t want to have the boy turn up safe
and sound any more than I do. Mr. Mercer was talking to me, and the
kid overheard. We heard him and went into the room--”

“How?”

“Knocked on the door and he opened it. And we jumped on him. It was
life and death for us not to be blown on; so, as we didn’t wish to kill
the kid, and as we didn’t know the youngster well enough to trust him
_then_--although we might, for he is game and the whitest chap!--but
we didn’t know--why, we just told him he would have to stay with us a
while until our rush was over. That was all we meant; and we let him
’phone you.”

“How about his great-aunt--the cruel anxiety--”

“Anxiety nothing!” began the other man, but a glance from Mercer cut
him short.

The Southerner took the word in his slow, gentle voice. “I tried to
reassure our aunt, Colonel Winter. I think I succeeded. She telephoned
and I told her it was all right. As for Archie, after we talked with
him, he was willing enough to go. He stole out with my friend inside
of five minutes, while you all were searching your rooms. It was _he_
insisted on calling you up, lest you should be worried. He said you
were right afraid of kidnappers, and you would be sending the police
after us. You can call Mrs. Winter up and find out if I am not telling
you the exact facts.”

“Very well, I _will_,” said Winter. They met the sullen detective at
the door. Cary Mercer, with his mirthless smile, led the way. Mercer
rang up the hotel for Winter, himself. To the colonel’s vast relief
Aunt Rebecca answered the call.

“_Est-ce que c’est vous-même, mon neveu?_” said she dryly.

“_Mais oui, ma tante._ Why are you speaking so formally in foreign
tongues? Is Millicent on deck?”

“In her room,” came the answer, still in French. “Well, you have got us
in a pretty mess. Where is my boy?”

“I only wish I knew! Tell me now, though, is Mercer’s story straight?”

“Absolutely. You may trust him.”

“What’s his real game, then? The one he was afraid Archie would expose?”

“Ask him.”

“But _you_ are in it, aren’t you?”

“Enough to ask that you abandon the chase--immediately! Unless you wish
to ruin me!”

“You’ll have to speak plainer. I’ve been kept in the dark as long as I
can stand in this matter.”

But before he could finish the sentence. “_Pas ici, pas
maintenant--c’est trop de péril_,” she cried, and she must have
gone, for he could get no more from her. When he rang again, Randall
responded:

“Mrs. Winter says, sir, will you please come up here as quick as you
can. She’s gone out. She thought she caught sight of Mr. Archie on the
street.”

To the colonel’s demand, “Where, how did she see him?” he obtained no
answer, and on his vicious pealing of the bell there came, eventually,
mellow Anglican accents which asked: “Yes? Whom do you wish to see?” It
is an evidence of the undisciplined nature of the sex that the soldier
made a face and--hung up the receiver.

He found himself--although this to a really open mind is no excuse--in
a muddle of conflicting impulses. He was on edge to get into the
street for the search after the boy; he was clutched in a vise by his
conviction that the clue to Archie’s whereabouts lay in Mercer’s hands,
and that the Southerner meant no harm to the lad. And all the while he
could feel Birdsall tugging at the leash.

“It’s on the cards,” he grumbled, with a wry face, “quite on the cards
that he may bolt in spite of me, and do some foolish stunt of his own
that will make a most awful muddle.”

Not nearly so composed as he looked, therefore, he turned to Mercer.
However, his ammunition was ready, and to Mercer’s inquiry, was he
satisfied? he replied calmly: “Well, not entirely. If Archie isn’t in
the house, _who_ is it whose throat you wish to cut? Who is hidden
here?”

It could not have been an unexpected question or Mercer hardly had
answered so readily: “You know who it is,” said he. “It is Mr.
Keatcham.”




CHAPTER X

THE SMOLDERING EMBERS


If Mercer’s avowal surprised the colonel, there was no trace of such
emotion in his face or his manner. “I rather thought it might be,” he
said. “And our young friend who is promoting Fireless Stoves with the
solemn energy he learned doing Dicky stunts?”

“Mr. Endicott Tracy.” Mercer had the manner of a ceremonious
introduction. Tracy flavored the customary murmur of pleasure with his
radiant smile.

“Pleased, I am sure,” said the colonel in turn, bowing. “Your father,
I suppose, is the president of the Midland; and Mr. Keatcham will, I
suppose, not be able to prevent his reëlection to-morrow. Is that the
game?”

Mr. Tracy’s son admitted that it might be.

“Ah, very clever,” said the colonel, “very. Any side-show, for example?”

“I did not go into this for money.” Mercer’s level gaze did not relax,
and he kept his dreary eyes unflinchingly on Winter’s. A peculiar look
in the eyes recalled some tragic and alien memory, just what, Rupert
could not capture; it flitted hazily through his thoughts ere the
next words drove it off. “Nevertheless, it is true that if we win out
I shall have enough to pay back to all the people who trusted me the
money they lost when they were frightened into selling their stock in
the Tidewater, and your aunt and Mr. Tracy stand to make money.”

“How do you expect to make it?”

“The M. and S. stock is away down because of rumors Keatcham is likely
to control it. When it is settled it is not to be looted by him, the
stock will rise--we are sure of the ten points; we may make twenty--”

“And my aunt has financed your scheme, has she?--paid all your
expenses?”

The Harvard man laughed out. “Our _expenses_? Oh, yes, she has
grub-staked us, all right; but she has done a good deal more--she has
furnished more than half a million to us for our gamble.”

The colonel considered; then: “But why did you keep him here so long
beforehand?” said he.

“It was not long beforehand,” said Mercer. “The meeting was adjourned
for a day--we don’t know why--we fancy that his partners suspect
something. It is called for to-morrow, in spite of their efforts to
have it put off a week. But we want more; we want to induce Keatcham to
vote his own stock for us, and to call off his dogs himself.”

“And you can’t force him to do it?”

“We shall force him, easily enough,” returned Mercer, “but we don’t
trust him. We want his private code book to be sure he is playing fair.
In fact, we have to have it, because nothing gets any attention that
isn’t, so to speak, properly introduced.”

“And he will not give it to you?”

“Says he has lost it.”

“Perhaps he _has_,” mused the soldier. “But now, all this is not my
concern, except that I have no right, as a soldier, even passively
to aid in breaking the laws. It is my duty to rescue and free Mr.
Keatcham.”

But before he could speak further Mercer lifted a hand in apologetic
interruption. Would Colonel Winter excuse him, but he must ask Mr.
Tracy to go back to the _patio_ and have an eye on the detective.
Endicott only exchanged a single glance before he obeyed. Mercer’s eyes
followed him. “It was not to be helped,” he said, half to himself, “but
I have been sorry more than once that I had to take him into this.”

Winter looked at him, more puzzled than he wanted to admit to himself;
indeed, he was rather glad to have the next word come from Mercer.

“I have a few things I want to say to you; they go easier when we are
alone--but won’t you sit down?” When the colonel had seated himself he
went on: “I’d like to explain things a bit.”

“I’d like to have you,” answered the soldier. “I think you have the
clue to Archie’s whereabouts and don’t recognize it yourself; so put me
wise, as the slang goes.”

Then, without preface, in brief, nervous sentences, spoken hardly
with a quiver of a muscle or a wavering cadence of the voice, yet
nevertheless instinct with a deadly earnestness, Mercer began to talk.
He told of his struggling youth on the drained plantation, mortgaged
so that after the interest was paid there was barely enough to get
the meagerest living for his mother and sister and little brother;
of his accidental discovery of iron ore on the place; of his working
as a common laborer in the steel mills; of his being “rooster,”
“strand-boy,” “rougher,” “heater,” “roller,” during three years while
he was waiting for his chance; of his heart-draining toil; of his
solitary studies.

“I never was the kind of fellow to make friends,” he said, in his soft,
monotonous voice, “so I expect I was the fonder of my own kin. I’d a
mighty good mother, sir, and sister; and there was Phil--my little
brother. We were right happy all together on the old place that’s
been in our family for a hundred years, and it was all we asked to
stay there; but it had every dollar of mortgage it could stand, and
the soil all worn-out, needing all kinds of things; and I wish you
could have seen the makeshifts we had for machines! I was blacksmith
and carpenter and painter--just sixteen, and not an especially bright
chap, but mighty willing to work; and my mother and Sis and I--we did
a heap. When I stumbled on the ore I couldn’t be sure, but I wrote to
Aunt Rebecca Winter. She sent a man down. He looked up things. It would
take a heap of money to work the mines, but it might be a big thing.
She paid off the mortgage and took another. First to last, she’s been
mighty kind to us. She would have done more had we let her. So I went
to Pittsburgh and learned my trade, and I made enough to pay interest,
and the people at home got a fairly good living. When I was twenty-one
I was back home, and got a company started and put up a mill. You
know how those things have to creep up. But there was ore, all right,
and I understood my business and taught the hands. We’d a right sweet
little mill. Well, I don’t want to take up your time, suh. Those next
ten or twelve years were right hard work, but they were happy, too.
We prospered; we helped the whole county prosper. We paid Aunt Becky.
We were in good shape. We went through ’93 paying our dividends just
as regular, and making them, too, though we didn’t much more--it was
close sailing. But we were honest; we made a mighty good article; and
everybody trusted us. Then came the craze for mergers, and a number
of us got together. Still we weren’t very big, but we were big enough
to be listed. I didn’t want it, but some of the men thought it was a
terrible fine thing to be ‘Iron Kings.’ That was how. Keatcham was
looking over the country for fish for his net; he somehow heard that
here was a heap of good ore and new mills. The first intimation we had
was his secretary coming as a Northern invalid--why, he stayed at our
house because we were so sorry for him, the hotel being in new hands
and not right comfortable. He seemed so interested in our mills, and
bought some stock, and sent presents to Phil and my mother after he
went.”

“That was Keatcham’s private secretary, you say?”

“Yes, suh, Atkins. You met him on the train--as sleek and deadly a
little scoundrel as ever got rich quick. Oh, he’s deep. Well, suh,
you know the usual process. Convinced of the value of the property,
Keatcham and one or two others set out to buy it. They got little
blocks of it here and there. Then Atkins wrote me in confidence that
some men were after the controlling interest and meant to squeeze us
all out--offered to lend me money to buy--of course, on a margin. And
I was plumb idiot enough to be tolled into his trap! I, who had never
speculated with a dollar before, I didn’t borrow _his_ money, but I
took all I could raise myself, and I bought enough to be sure I could
control the next election. Then--the slump came, and after the slump
the long, slow crumbling. I controlled the election all right, of
course, but before the next one came I was ruined, and Keatcham put
his own men in. I went desperately to New York. I didn’t know how to
fight those fellows; it was a new game. I didn’t find Atkins. Maybe
because that wasn’t his name when I had known him. I was so sure that
the property was good--as if that mattered! As if anything mattered
with these gamblers who play with loaded dice and dope the horses they
bet against! Phil had all his property in the mills; we all had. We
mortgaged the house; we had to, to protect our stock. You know how
the fight ended, and what happened at Cambridge. That isn’t all. My
wife--” He stood a little straighter, and the light went out of his
eyes. “I told you I don’t make friends easily, and I am not the kind of
man women take to; all the same, the loveliest girl in the South loved
me ever since I jumped over the mill-dam to save her rag doll, once,
when she was visiting her aunt near us. I’d married, when we seemed
prosperous. Now, understand me, I don’t say it was my ruin and Phil’s
death that killed her and the baby; she had pneumonia, and it may be
that seeing that paper by accident didn’t turn the scale; but I do say
that she had her last hours embittered by it. That’s enough for me.
When I got home with--with Phil, she was dead.”

“Tough,” said the colonel. He began to revise his impressions of Mercer.

“Wasn’t it?” the other asked, with a simplicity of appeal that affected
the listener more than anything he had heard. He jumped out of his
chair and began pacing the room, talking more rapidly. “You’re a _man_;
you know what I wanted to do.”

“Kill somebody, I suppose. _I_ should.”

“Just that. I ran Atkins to cover after a while through Endicott Tracy.
That boy is one of the noblest fellows that ever lived; yes, suh. He
was going to help poor Phil, Phil’s room-mate had told him. All those
boys--look a-here, Colonel Winter, if ever anybody talks to you about
Harvard fellows being indifferent--”

“I shall tell him he can’t get under the American surface. A Harvard
boy will do anything on earth for his friends.”

“They were mighty good to me. It was Endy found out about Atkins, just
from my description of him. I found out about Keatcham for myself. And
you are quite right--for a little while I wanted to kill them both.
Looked like I just naturally _had_ to kill them! But there was my
mother. There was nobody to take care of her but Sis and me, and a
trial for murder is terribly expensive. Of course, anybody can get off
who has got money and can spend it; but it takes such an awful heap
of money. And we were all ruined together, for what little was left
was all in the company, and that promptly stopped paying dividends.
I couldn’t risk it. I had to wait. I had to go to work to support
my mother, to pay Sis and her back, don’t you see? We came here. I
got a job, a well-paid one, too, through Endy’s father, reporting on
the condition of the mills--a kind of examiner. And the job was for
Keatcham.”

“Why did you take it? I know, though. You did it to familiarize him
with your appearance, so that he would not be warned when your chance
came.”

“How did you know that?”

“A man I knew in the Philippines--a Filipino--was wronged by a white
man, who took his wife and threw her aside when he tired of her. The
girl killed herself. Her husband watched his chance for a year, found
it at last--thanks to that very fact that his victim wasn’t on guard
against him--and sent his knife home. He’d been that fellow’s servant.
I picked the dead man up. That Filipino looked as you looked a minute
ago.”

“What became of the Filipino?” inquired his listener.

The colonel had not told the story quite without intention. He argued
subconsciously, that if Mercer were a good sort under all, he would
have a movement of sympathy for a more cruelly wronged man than he;
if not, he would drive ahead to his purpose, whatever that might be.
His keen eyes looked a little more gentle as he answered: “He poisoned
himself. The best way out, I reckon. I should hate to have had him
shot after I knew the story. But there was really no option. But I’m
interrupting you. You did your work well and won Keatcham’s confidence?”

“He isn’t a very confiding man. I didn’t see him often. My dealings
were with Atkins. He didn’t know that I had found him out; he thought
that he had only to explain his two names, and expected gratitude for
his warning, as he called it. He is slimy; but I was able to repay a
little of my score with him. I was employed by more than Keatcham, and
I saw a good many industrial back-yards. Just by chance, I came on a
clue, and Endy Tracy and I worked it up together. Atkins was selling
information to Keatcham’s enemies. We did not make out a complete
case, but enough of one to make Keatcham suspect him, and at the right
time. But that happened later--you see, I don’t know how to tell a
story even with so much at stake.” He pulled out his handkerchief, and
Winter caught the gleam of the beads on his sallow forehead. “It was
this way,” he went on. “At first I was only looking about for a safe
chance to kill him, and to kill that snake of an Atkins; but then it
grew on me; it was all too easy a punishment--just a quick death, when
his victims had years of misery. I wanted him to wade through the hell
_I_ had to wade through. I wanted him to know _why_ he was condemned.
Then it was I began to collect just the cases I knew about--just one
little section of the horrible swath of agony and humiliation and
poverty and sin he and his crowd had made--the one I knew every foot
of, because I’d gone over it every night I wasn’t so dead tired I _had_
to sleep. God! do you know what it is to have the people who used to
be running out of their houses just to say howdy to you, curse you for
a swindler or a fool or turn out of one street and down the other not
to pass you? Did _you_ ever have a little woman who used to give you
frosted cake when you were a boy push her crape veil off her gray hair
and hand you the envelope with her stock, with your handwriting on the
envelope, and beg you--trying so hard not to cry, ’twas worse than if
she had--beg you to lend her just half her interest money--_and you
couldn’t do it_? Did you--never mind. I said I waded through hell. I
_did!_ Not I alone--that was the worst--all the people that had trusted
me! And just that some rich men should be richer. Why should _they_
have the lion’s share? The lion’s share belongs to the lion. _They_ are
nothing but jackals. They’re meaner than jackals, for the jackals take
what the lion leaves, and these fellows steal the lion’s meat away from
him. We made honest money; we paid honest wages; folks had more paint
on their houses and more meat in their storehouses, and wore better
clothes Sunday, and there were more school-houses and fewer saloons,
and the negroes were learning a trade instead of loafing. The whole
county was the better off for our prosperity, and there isn’t a mill in
the outfit--and I know what I’m talking about--there isn’t a shop or a
mine that’s as well run or makes as big an output now as it did when
the old crowd was in. You find it that way everywhere; and that’s what
is going to break things down. We saw to all the little affairs; they
were _our_ affairs, don’t you know? But Keatcham’s new men draw their
salaries and let things slide. Yet Keatcham is a great manager if he
would only take the time; only he’s too busy stealing to develop his
businesses; there’s more money in stealing a railway than in building
one up. Oh, he isn’t a fool; if I could once get him where he would
_have_ to listen, I know I could make him understand. He’s pretty
cold-blooded, and he doesn’t realize. He only sees straight ahead,
not all round, like all these superhumanly clever thieves; they have
mighty stupid streaks. Well, I’ve got him now, and it is kill or cure
for him. He can’t make a riffle. I knew I couldn’t do anything alone;
I had to wait. I had to have stronger men than I am to help. By and by
they tried their jackal business on a real lion--on Tracy. They wanted
to steal _his_ road. I got on to them first. I see a heap of people
in a heap of different businesses--the little people who talk. They
notice all right, but they can see only their own little patch. I was
the fellow riding round and seeing the township. I pieced together the
plot and I told Endy Tracy. He wouldn’t believe me at first, because
his father had given Keatcham his first start and done a hundred things
for him. To be sure, his father has been obliged as an honest man to
oppose Keatcham lately, but Keatcham couldn’t mean to burn him out that
way. But he soon found that was precisely what Keatcham did mean. Then
he was glad enough to help me save his father. The old man doesn’t know
a thing; we don’t mean he ever shall know. We let him put up the best
sort of a fight a man can with his hands tied while the other fellow
is free. _My_ hands are free, too. I don’t respect the damned imbecile
laws that let me be plundered any more than they do; and since my poor
mother died last summer I am not afraid of anything; they _are_; that’s
where I have the choice of weapons. I tell you, suh, _nobody_ is big
enough to oppress a desperate man! Keatcham had one advantage--he had
unlimited money. But Aunt Rebecca helped us out there. Colonel, I want
you to know I didn’t ask her for more than the bare grub-stake; it was
she herself that planned our stock deal.”

“She is a dead game sport,” the colonel chuckled. “I believe you.”

“And I hope you don’t allow that I was willing to have her mix herself
in our risks. She would come; she said she wanted to see the fun--”

“I believe you again,” the colonel assured him, and he remembered the
odd sentence which his aunt had used the first night of their journey,
when she expressed her hankering to match her wits against those of a
first-class criminal.

“We didn’t reckon on your turning up, or the complication with Archie.
I wish to God we’d taken the boy’s own word! But, now you know all
about it, will you keep your hands off? That’s all we ask.”

“Well,”--the colonel examined his finger-nails, rubbing his hands
softly, the back of one over the palm of the other--“well, you haven’t
quite told me all. Don’t, unless you are prepared to have it used
against you, as the policemen say _before_ the sweat-box. What did you
do to Keatcham to get him to go with you so like Mary’s little lamb?”

“I learned of a little device that looks like a tiny currycomb and is
so flat and small you can bind it on a man’s arm just over an artery.
Just press on the spring and give the least scratch, and the man falls
down in convulsions. I showed him a rat I had had fetched me, and
killed it like a flash. He had his choice of walking out quietly with
me--I had my hand on his arm--or dropping down dead. He went quietly
enough.”

“That was the meaning of his look at me, was it?” Winter thought. He
said only: “Did Endicott Tracy know about that?”

“Of course not,” Mercer denied. “Do you reckon I want to mix the boy up
in this more than I have? And Arnold only knew I was trying some kind
of bluff game.”

“I will lay odds, though,” the colonel ventured in his gentlest tone,
“that Mr. Samurai, as Haley calls him, knew more. But when did you get
rid of Atkins?”

“Mr. Keatcham discharged him at Denver. I met Mr. Keatcham here; it was
arranged on the train. We had it planned out. If that plan had failed I
had another.”

“Neat. Very neat. And then you became the secretary?”

Mercer flushed in an unexpected fashion. “Certainly not!” he said with
emphasis. “Do you think I would take his wages and not do the work
faithfully? No, suh. I assumed to be his secretary in the office; that
gave me a chance to arrange everything. But I did it to oblige him. I
never touched a cent of his money. I paid, in fact, for our board out
of our own money. It would have burned my fingers, suh!”

“And the valet? Was he in your plot? Don’t answer if you--”

“He was not, suh,” replied Cary Mercer. “He is a right worthy fellow,
and he thought, after he had seen to the tickets--which he did very
carefully--and given them to me, he could go off on the little vacation
which came to him by his master through me.”

“That’s a little bit evasive. However, I haven’t the right to ask you
to give away your partners, anyhow.” He was peering at Mercer’s face
behind his glasses, but the pallid, tired features returned him no clue
to the thoughts in the head above them. “What have you done with Mr.
Keatcham?” he concluded suddenly.

The question brought no change of expression, and Mercer answered
readily: “I put him off by himself, where he sees no one and hears
nothing. I read a good deal about prisons and the most effectual way
of taming men, and solitary confinement is recommended by all the
authorities. His meals are handed to him by--by a mechanical device. He
has electric light some of the time, turned on from the outside. He has
a comfortable room and his own shower-bath. He has comfortable meals.
And he is supplied with reading.”

“Reading?” repeated the colonel, his surprise in his voice.

For the first time he saw Mercer smile, but it was hardly a pleasant
smile. “Yes, suh, reading,” he said. “I have had type-written copies
made of all the cases which I discovered in regard to his stealing our
company. I reasoned that when he would get absolutely tired of himself
and his own thoughts he would just naturally be _obliged_ to read, and
that would be ready for him. He tore up one copy.”

“Hmn--I can’t say I wonder. What did you do?”

“I sent him another. I expected he would do that way. After a while he
will go back to it, because it will draw him. He’ll hate it, but he
will want to know them all. I know his nature, you see.”

“What are you going to do with him?”

“Let him go, after he does what we want and promises never to molest
any of us.”

“But can you trust him?”

“He never breaks his word,” replied Mercer indifferently, “and besides,
he knows he will be killed if he should. He isn’t given to being
scared, but he’s scared of me, all right.”

“What do you want him to do?”

“Promise to be a decenter man and to let Mr. Tracy alone in future;
meanwhile, to send a wire in his secret code saying he has changed his
mind. It will not surprise his crowd. He never confides in them, and he
expects them to obey blindly anything in that code language. I reckon
other telegrams are just for show, and they don’t notice them much.”

The colonel took a turn around the room to pack away this information
in an orderly fashion in his mind. Mercer waited patiently; he had said
truly that he was used to waiting. Perhaps he supposed that Winter was
trying the case in his own mind; but in reality Rupert was seeking
only one clue, as little diverted from his purpose as a bloodhound. He
began to understand the man whose fixed purpose had his own quality,
but sharpened by wrong and suffering. This man had not harmed Archie;
as much as his warped and fevered soul could feel softer emotions,
he was kindly intentioned toward the lad. Who had carried him away,
then? Or was he off on his own account, really, this time? Or suppose
Atkins, the missing secretary discharged at Denver, coming back for
another appeal to his employer, finding Keatcham gone, but, let one
say, stumbling on some trace of mystery in his departure; suppose him
to consider the chance of his having his past condoned and a rosy
future given him if his suspicions should prove true and _he_ should
release the captive--wouldn’t such a prospect spur on a man who was as
cunning as he was unprincipled? Mightn’t he have watched all possible
clues, and mightn’t he have heard about Archie and plotted to capture
the child, thinking he would be easily pumped? That would presuppose
that Atkins knew that Archie was at the Arnolds’ or--no, he might only
have seen the boy on the street; he knew him by sight; the colonel
remembered that several times Archie had been with him in Keatcham’s
car. It was worth considering, anyhow. He spoke out of his thoughts:
“Do you think Keatcham could have told the truth, and that code of
his be lost or stolen? Why couldn’t Atkins have stolen it? He had the
chance, and he isn’t hampered by principle, you say.”

Mercer frowned; it was plain the possibility had its argument for him.
“He might,” he conceded, “but I doubt it. Why hasn’t he done something
with it? He hasn’t. They wouldn’t have postponed that meeting if he
had wired his proxy and his directions in the code. He’d have voted
his employer’s stock. He’s got too much at stake. I happen to know he
thought it a sure tip to sell short, and he has put almost all he has
on it. You see, Keatcham was banking on that; he knew it. He thought
Atkins wouldn’t dare give any of his secrets away or go against him in
this deal, because they were in the same boat.”

“Still, I reckon I’ll have to see Keatcham.”

Mercer shook his head, gently but with decision. “I hate to refuse you,
Colonel, but unless you promise not to interfere, it is impossible. But
I’ll gladly go with you to see if we can find any trace of Archie. I’ll
risk that much. And if you will promise--”

“Such a promise would be impossible to an officer and a gentleman,” the
colonel urged lightly, smiling. “Besides, don’t you see I have all the
cards? I have only to call in my men. I’d hate to do it, but if you
force me, you would have no chance resisting.”

“We shouldn’t resist, Colonel, no, suh; your force is overwhelming. But
it would do no good; you couldn’t find him.”

“We could try; and we may be better sleuths than you imagine.”

“Then it would be the worse for him; for if you find him, you will find
him dead.”

There was something so chilling in his level tones that Winter broke
out sharply: “Are you fooling with me? Have you been such an incredible
madman as to kill him already?”

Mercer’s faint smile made the colonel feel boyish and impetuous. “Of
course not, suh,” he answered. “I told you he was alive, myself. I
reckoned you knew when a man is lying and when he is telling the solemn
truth. You _know_ I have told you the truth and treated you on the
square. But, just the same, if you try to take that man away, you’ll
only have his dead body. He can’t do any more harm then, and a dead man
can’t vote.”

The colonel, who had taken out his cigarette case, opened it and
meditatively fingered the rubber band. “Do you reckon,” he suggested,
in his most amiable voice, “do you reckon young Arnold and Endicott
Tracy will stand for such frills in warfare as assassination?”

“I do not, suh,” replied Mercer gravely, and as he spoke he pushed back
the heavy tapestry hiding a window opposite the colonel’s head, “but
they can both prove an alibi. Mr. Arnold is in Pasadena, and there goes
Mr. Tracy now in his machine--to try to find Archie. Do you see?”

The colonel saw. He inclined his head, at the same time proffering his
case.

“I rather think, Mr. Mercer, that I was wrong. _You_ have the last
trump.”




CHAPTER XI

THE CHARM OF JADE


It was no false lure to distract pursuit, that hurried sentence of
Randall’s which had met the colonel’s angry appeal for information. The
woman was not only repeating Mrs. Winter’s message; the message itself
described a fact. As she stood at her room telephone, Aunt Rebecca had
happened to glance at Randall, supplementing the perfunctory dusting of
the hotel maid with her own sanitary, dampened, clean cloth; Randall’s
eyes suddenly glazed and bulged in such startling transformation that,
instead of questioning her, Mrs. Winter stepped swiftly to the window
where she was at work, to seek the cause of her agitation.

“Oh, Lord! Oh, Mrs. Winter!” gasped Randall. “Ain’t _that_ Master
Archie?”

Mrs. Winter saw for herself; the face at a cab window, the waving of a
slim hand--Archie’s face, Archie’s hand. Brief as was the Space of his
passing (for the two horses in the cab were trotting smartly), she was
sure of both. “Give me my bonnet,” she commanded, “_any_ bonnet, _any_
gloves! And my bag with some money!”

It was as she flung through the door that she threw her message to the
colonel back exactly as Randall had submitted it. Miss Smith was coming
along the loggia. “Don’t stop me!” said Mrs. Winter sternly. “I’ve seen
Archie; I’m after him.”

“Stop!” cried Miss Smith--but it was to the elevator boy who was
whizzing below them in his cage, not to her employer; and she boarded
the elevator with the older woman. “I’ll go with you,” she said. There
was no vibration in her even tones, although a bright red flickered up
in her cheek.

But Rebecca Winter caught savagely at her breath, which was coming
fast. “It is not with the running; you needn’t think it, Janet,”
she panted sharply, in a second. “It was the sight of his face--so
suddenly; I never expected _any_ face would make my heart pump like
that again. All of which shows”--she was speaking quite naturally and
placidly again--“that women may grow too old for men to make fools of
them, but never for children. Come; it was a shabby sort of hack he
was in, drawn by two horses with auburn tails. Here’s the office floor.”

Not a word did Janet Smith say; she was not a woman of words in any
case. Moreover, the pace which Mrs. Winter struck was too rapid for
comments or questions; it swept them both past the palm-shaded _patio_
into the side hall, out on the noisy, dazzling, swaying street. Looking
before her, Miss Smith could see the dusty body of a hack a block away.
Mrs. Winter had stepped up to a huge crimson motor-car, in the front
seat of which lounged the chauffeur, his forehead and eyes hunched
under his leather visor. The machine was puffing, with the engine
working, ready to leap forward at a touch of the lever.

“Twenty dollars an hour if you let me get in now!” said Mrs. Winter,
lightly mounting by his side as she spoke.

“Hey, me? what!” gurgled the chauffeur, plucked out of a half-doze.
“Oh, say, beg your pardon, lady, but this is hired, it belongs--”

“I don’t care to whom it belongs, I have to have it,” announced
Mrs. Winter calmly. “Whoever hired it can get another. I’ll make it
all right. You start on and catch that hack with the auburn-tailed
horses--”

“_I’ll_ make it right with your fare!” Miss Smith cut in before the
chauffeur could answer. “It’s a case of kidnapping. You catch that
cab!” She was standing on the curb, and even as she spoke an elderly
man and his wife came out of a shop. They stared from her to the
automobile, and in their gaze was a proprietary irritation. This was
instantly transfused by a more vivid emotion. The woman looked shocked
and compassionate. “Oh, pa!” she gasped, “did you hear _that_?”

The man was a country banker from Iowa. He had a very quick, keen eye;
it flashed. “Case of kidnapping, hey?” snapped he, instantly grasping
the character of the speakers and jumping at the situation. “Take the
auto, Madam. Get a move on you, Mr. Chauffeur!”

“Oh, I’m moving, all right,” called the chauffeur, as he skilfully
dived his lower wheels under the projecting load of a great wagon and
obliquely bumped over the edge of a street-car fender, pursued by the
motorman’s curses. “I see ’em, lady; I see the red tails; I’ll catch
’em!”

His boast most likely had been made good (since for another block they
bore straight on their course) but for an orange-wagon which had been
overturned. There was a rush of pursuit of the golden balls from
the sidewalk; a policeman came to the rescue of traffic and ordered
everything to halt until the cart was righted. The boys and girls in
the street chased back to the sidewalk. The episode took barely a
couple of minutes, but on the edge of the last minute the cab turned
a corner. The motor-car turned the same corner, but saw no guiding
oriflamme of waving red horsehair. The cross street next was equally
bare. They were obliged to explore two adjacent highways before they
came upon the hack again. This time it was in distant perspective,
foreshortened to a blur of black and a swish of red. And even as they
caught sight of it the horses swung round into profile and turned
another corner. In the turn a man wearing a black derby hat stuck his
arm and head out of the window in order to give some direction to the
driver. Then he turned half around. It was almost as if he looked back
at his pursuers; yet this, Mrs. Winter argued, hardly could be, since
he had not expected pursuit, and anyhow, the chances were he could not
know her by sight.

It was a mean street, narrow and noisome, but full of shipping
traffic and barred by tramways--a heartbreaking street for a chase.
The chauffeur was a master of his art; he jumped his great craft at
every vacant arm’s-length; he steered it through incredibly narrow
lanes; he progressed sometimes by luffs, like a boat under sail when
the forward passage must be reached in such indirect fashion; but the
crowd of ungainly vehicles, loaded dizzily above his head, made the
superior speed of the motor of no avail. In spite of him they could
see the red tails lessening. Again and yet again, the hack turned;
again, but each time with a loss, the motor struck its trail. By now
the street was changed; the dingy two-story buildings lining it were
brightened by gold-leaf and vermilion; oriental arms and garbs and
embroidery spangled the windows and oriental faces looked inscrutably
out of doorways. There rose the blended odors of spice, sandalwood and
uncleanliness that announce the East, reeking up out of gratings and
puffing out of shops.

“Ah,” said Mrs. Winter softly to herself, “Chinese quarter, is it?
Well.” Her eyes changed; they softened in a fashion that would have
amazed one who only knew the surface of Mrs. Winter, the eccentric
society potentate. She looked past the squalid, garish scene, past
the shining sand-hills and the redwood trees, beyond into a stranger
landscape glowing under a blinder glare of sun. Half mechanically she
lifted a tiny gold chain that had slipped down her throat under the
gray gown. Raising the yellow thread and the carven jade ornament
depending therefrom, she let it lie outside amid the white lace and
chiffon.

“We’re making good now,” called the chauffeur. “Will I run alongside
and hail ’em, or what?”

She told him quietly to run alongside. But her lips twitched, and when
she put up her hand to press them still, she smiled to discover that
the hand was bare. She had forgotten to pull on her glove. She began to
pull it on now.

“The road is narrow,” said she. “Run ahead of the hack and block its
way. You can do it without hitting the horses, can’t you?”

“Well, I guess,” returned the chauffeur, instantly accomplishing the
manœuver in fine style.

But he missed his deserved commendation; indeed, he forgot it himself;
because, as he looked back at the horses rearing on the sudden check
and tossing their auburn manes, then ran his scrutiny behind them to
the hack, he perceived no life in it; and when his own passenger jumped
with amazing nimbleness from her seat and flung the crazy door wide
open, she recoiled, exclaiming: “Where are they? Where did you leave
them?”

“Leave who?” queried the hackman. “Say, what you stoppin’ me fur?
Runnin’ into me with your devil-wagon! _Say!_”--then his wrath trailed
into an inarticulate mutter as he appreciated better the evident
quality of the gentlewoman before him.

“You may be mixed up in a penitentiary offense, my man,” said she
placidly. “It is a case of kidnapping. Where did you leave that boy who
was in the cab? If you give us information that will find him, there’s
five dollars; if you fool us--well, I have your number. Where did you
leave the boy?”

“Why, there was a cop with ’im--a cop and a gentleman. Ain’t you got
hold of the wrong party, lady?”

“A brown-haired boy in a gray suit with a blue cravat--you know he was
in your cab. And how do you know it was a real policeman?”

“Or he wasn’t helping on the deviltry if it was?” sneered the
chauffeur, who had now become a full-fledged partizan. “Ain’t you lived
in this burg long enough to find out how to make a little _mazuma_
on the side? You’re too good for ’Frisco. Heaven is your home, my
Christian friend.”

“Cut it out!” retorted the man. “I guess I know how to find my way
round as well as the next man--”

“Certainly you do,” soothed Mrs. Winter, who was fingering a crisp new
five-dollar bank-note, “and you are no kidnapper, either; you made no
bargain with those men--”

“Sure I didn’t,” agreed the hackman, “nor I ain’t standin’ for
kidnapping, neither. Why, I got kids of my own, and my woman she’d
broom me outer the house if I was to do them games. Say, I’ll tell you
all I knows. They got off, them three, at that there corner, and I was
to drive fast ’s I could three blocks ahead and then git home any old
way. And that’s God’s truth, I--”

“You didn’t see where they went?” Mrs. Winter was quietly insistent.

“No, I didn’t. I guess I was a dumb fool not ter notice, but they paid
me well, and I’d a bad thirst, and I was hiking to a place I know for
beer; and that’s--”

“Did the boy seem willing?”

“He didn’t do no kicking as I seen.”

A few more questions revealed that the man had unpacked his full
kit of information. He had never seen either of the men before. The
gentleman--yes, he was sure he was a gentleman; he wasn’t no swell
confidence guy; he was the regular thing--gentleman engaged him to take
a party to the Chinese quarter; he’d tell where to stop; didn’t need
a guide; only wanted to make a few purchases, he said, and he knew
where the things was; yes, ma’am, that was all; only down there on
Market Street, or maybe--why, somewhere near by--he stuck his head out
and told him to turn the corner, and then he kept telling him to turn
corners, until finally he told him to stop and they got out.

Mrs. Winter gave the man the bank-note, counseling him to keep his eyes
open for the two men and the boy, and to report to her at the Palace
Hotel, giving his number, should he see either man or boy. It would be
very well worth his while.

The chauffeur did not interrupt, but he shook his head over the
departing hack. “He’d ought to have known it wan’t on the square, but
these hack drivers ain’t got good sense even when they’re, so to speak,
sober, which ain’t often,” he soliloquized. “Well, lady, if they’ve
took to the Chinese quarter, we’d better be looking up a Chink to help
us, I guess. I know a fairly decent one--”

“I think I know a better,” interrupted Mrs. Winter, with a faint smile.
She had detected a suppressed pity in the man’s regard. “Motor slowly
along the street. There is a shop, if I can find it, where there ought
to be a man--”

“Man you know? Say, lady, I guess I better go in with you, if you don’t
mind--”

“No; stay in your car. You don’t know how safe I am. Not only my gray
hair protects me, but I have only to say a few words and any of these
men will fight for me if necessary. But this is in confidence--just
between us, you understand. You are not to repeat it, ever.”

She looked at him with a frank smile, and involuntarily his hand went
up to his cap. “What you say goes, lady. But jest remember I’m right
here, spark going all the time, ready to throw her wide open when you
step in; and”--his voice sank--“I ain’t absolutely unprepared for a
scrap, either.”

“I understand,” said she, looking at him keenly, and a few moments
later she stepped briskly into the shop before which he halted with
a little lightening of the heart because of this uncouth knight of
the lever. The shop itself was like any one of a score on the street,
crowded with oriental objects, bizarre carvings of ivory and jade,
daggers and strings of cash, swords, gorgeous embroidered robes of silk
and gold in a huddle over a counter or swinging and gleaming in the
dusky background, squat little green and brown gods with puffy eyelids,
smiling inscrutably amid shoes and fans and Chinese lanterns of glass
and bronze, glittering with beads--in all these, like the score about
it; yet the clean windows and a certain order within gave it a touch
out of the common. A man and a boy served the shop, both in the
American dress, with their pigtails tucked under visorless caps. Both
greeted her in the serene oriental fashion, bowing and smiling, their
obsequious courtesy showing no smallest sign of the surprise which the
sight of an unattended woman must have given them.

Nevertheless, Mrs. Winter was aware that both, under their lowered
eyelids, took cognizance of that soft-carven disk of jade among the
laces on her breast. She asked the man if he had seen a lad and an
older man, or it might be two older men, one a policeman, come into
that or any other neighboring shop. She explained that the lad was
her grand-nephew and was lost (she eschewed the harsher word, for she
had no desire to set afloat a rumor which might bring the police upon
her). She named a sum large enough to kindle a sudden gleam in the
boy’s eyes, as the reward awaiting the lucky man who might put her on
the right track. But her words struck no responsive spark from the
Chinaman’s veiled gaze. In perfect English and a very soft voice he
avowed ignorance and sympathy with the same breath.

And all the while she could feel his glance slant down at the jade
ornament.

“Send the boy to look in the shop next door,” said she. As she
spoke she raised the charm between her thumb and first two fingers,
looking at him directly. Her tone was that of command, not request.
He frowned very slightly, making an almost imperceptible gesture, to
which she returned a single Chinese phrase, spoken so low that had he
not expected the words they had been indistinguishable to his ear.
Instantly he addressed the boy rapidly in their own language. The
boy went out. The master of the shop returned to Mrs. Winter. His
manner had utterly changed; the tradesman’s perfunctory deference was
displaced by an almost eager humility of bearing. He would have her
sit--there were a few cane-seated American arm-chairs, in grotesque
contrast to all their accompaniments--he prostrated himself before her;
he put himself at her service; still to her trained eye there was a
corner of his mind where incredulity wrestled with a stronger emotion.

“Do not fear,” she said gently. “It is really my own, and he gave it
to me himself, almost thirty years ago. He was hardly thirty years old
himself then. You see, my husband had been so fortunate as to do him a
kindness. It was he who had it first. When he died it came to me, and
now for the second time in my life I am using it. I knew you belonged.
I saw the sign. Will you help me find my boy?”

“Did your ladyship know _he_ is he’e, in San Flancisco?”

If she had not already dissipated any doubt in his mind, her evident
relief blew the last shred away now. “Haven’t you such a thing as a
telephone somewhere?” cried Rebecca Winter. “Time is precious. Can’t
you speak to him--have him come here?”

It appeared that there was a telephone, and in a moment she was put
into communication by the shopkeeper. He stood in an attitude of deep
respect while she talked. He heard with unsmiling attention her first
Chinese words; he listened as she returned to English, speaking very
quietly, but with a controlled earnestness, explaining that she was
Archibald Winter’s widow, giving dates and places, in nowise alluding
to the service which had won the charm about her neck. Yet as he
listened, insensibly the Chinaman grew certain that she had spoken the
truth. Presently she turned to him. “He wishes to speak to you,” she
said, and went back to the shop. She sighed as one sighs from whose
heart a great burden rolls. “To find him here, and still grateful!” she
was thinking. “What wonderful good fortune!”

She sat down, and her face grew dreamy. She was no longer thinking
of Archie. Her vision was on another face, another scene, a time of
peril, when almost against her reason her instinctive woman’s recoil of
pity for a fellow-creature in danger of unthinkable torture had been
so intense that she had more than acquiesced in her husband’s plan
of risking both their lives to save him; she had impelled him to it;
she had overcome his terror of the risks on her account. “It is only
death we have to fear, at worst,” she had argued. “We have the means
to escape in a second, both of us, from anything else; and if we run
away and leave this poor wretch, who hasn’t done anything but love his
country, just as we love ours, and be too civilized for his trifling,
ornery, pusillanimous country-people to understand, to get slashed to
pieces by their horrible ling-ling--whatever they call it--Archibald
Winter, don’t you reckon we shall have nightmares as long as we live?”

Thirty years ago--yet it seemed like yesterday. Distinctly she could
hear her husband’s voice; it had not come back to her with such reality
for years; it was more real than the cries of the street outside; and
her heart was beating faster for his words: “Becky, there never was a
woman like you! You could make a dead man hop up and fight, bless you!”

“Your ladyship”--it was the shopkeeper back again; he had lived in
England, and he offered the most respectful western title of his
knowledge--“your ladyship may be chee’ful. All will be done of the
best. The young gentleman will be back fo’ to-night. If your ladyship
will now letu’n to the hotel.”

[Illustration: It took only a moment to transfer a passenger. Page 211]

Mrs. Winter bowed slightly; she was quite her self-possessed self
again. “I will go certainly,” she said, “but I shall hope to see you,
also, to-night; and meanwhile, will you accept, as a token from a
friend who trusts you, _this_?” She took a little gem-encrusted watch
from her fob and handed it to him. Her manner was that of a queen who
rewards her general. And she left him bowing low. She entered the
motor-car. It was no longer a lone motor. Another car steamed and
snorted near by, in which sat the amiable banker from Iowa, his wife
and Janet Smith.

It took only a moment to transfer a passenger, to explain that she
hoped to find the boy who had been lost--no, she would not use such a
strenuous word as kidnapped--and would they complete their kindness
by not mentioning the affair to any one? One hated so to get into the
papers. And would they let her see them again to thank them? Then, as
she sank back on the cushions, she remarked, as much to the expectant
chauffeur as to Janet: “Yes, I think it is all right. I think we shall
see Archie to-night.”




CHAPTER XII

A BLOW


There was no one but Mrs. Winter to welcome the colonel when, jaded,
warm and dusty, he tapped on Aunt Rebecca’s parlor door. Mrs.
Millicent was bristling with a sense of injury; one couldn’t touch her
conversationally without risk of a scratch. The colonel put up the
shield of his unsuitable appearance, his fatigue and his deplorable
need of a bath, and escaped into his own apartment. But he made his
toilet with reckless haste. All the time he was questioning his recent
experience, trying to sort over his theories, which had been plunged
into confusion by Mercer’s confession. “I suppose,” he reflected, “that
I had no right to give Mercer that hint at the door.” The hint had been
given just as they parted. It was in a single sentence:

“By the way, Mercer, if that pillar in the _patio_ is of importance in
your combination, you would better keep an eye on it; it has a trick of
cracking.”

“The devil it has!” grunted Mercer. Then he thanked him, with a kind
of reluctant admiration in his tone.

“You are sure you don’t object to my detective’s staying?” questioned
the colonel.

“No, suh; prefer to have him. You told him to have his men in and
overhaul the house?”

“I did. I warned you I should have to. You promise there shall be no
racket? But I--I think I’ll take Haley.”

“Thank you. That’s right kind of you, suh. Good-by, suh.”

This had been the manner of their parting--assuredly a singular one,
after the sinister suspicions and the violent promises which the
soldier had made himself in regard to this very man. After leaving,
he had motored into town, down to the police courts, to discover no
records of the arrest and no trace of Archie. Thence, discouraged,
perplexed and more worried than he liked to admit, he had repaired
to the hotel. His aunt was gone, Miss Smith was gone, and Randall
could only relate how Mrs. Winter “had flewed like a bird, sir, into
a big red motor-car and gone off, and then Miss Smith and a lady and
gentleman had got into a white car and gone off in the same direction.”

He was meditating on his next step, when Birdsall was announced below.
The detective looked as warm and as tired as the colonel had felt
an hour before. Rupert was not eager to see him, but neither was he
anxious for the tête-à-tête with Millicent which awaited him in the
parlor. Between the two he chose Birdsall.

“Well,” he greeted him, “did you find any trace of the boy?”

“Of course I did,” growled Birdsall. “They didn’t try to hide ’im.
They had him lodged in a dandy room with his own bath. Of course, he
left his tooth-brush. They’d got him some automobile togs, too, and
he’d left some leggings when he packed, and a letter begun on a pad to
Miss Smith--‘Dear Miss Janet,’ it begins, ‘I am having a bully time. I
can steer the machine, only I can’t back’--that’s all. Say, the young
dog has been having it fat while we were in the frying-pan for fear
somebody was bothering him.”

“But he is not in the house now?”

“No, nor nothing else.”

“_Nobody_ hidden away? Where did the groans you heard come from?”
queried the colonel politely.

Birdsall flushed. “I do believe that slick deceiver you call Mercer
put up a game on us out of meanness--just to git me guessing.”

“That sort of thing looks more like the college boys.”

“Say, it might have been. This thing is giving me nervous prostration.
Say, why didn’t you see the thing out with me?”

The colonel shamelessly told the truth to deceive. “I was called here.
I was told that Mrs. Winter, my aunt, had seen Archie in the street.”

“She was just getting out of a machine as I came up. Miss Smith was
with her, and they had their hands full of candy boxes. They were
laughing. I made sure the boy had been found.”

“Not to my knowledge,” said the colonel. But in some excitement he
walked into the parlor. The ladies had arrived; they stood in the
center of the room while Randall took away the boxes.

“Candy for Archie,” explained Aunt Rebecca, and these were the first
words to reach Rupert Winter’s ears. “I expect him to dinner.”

“Aunt Rebecca,” proclaimed Millicent, “I never have been one
to complain, but there _are_ limits to human endurance. I am a
modern person, a civilized Episcopalian, accustomed to a regular
and well-ordered life, and for the last few days I seem to have
been living in a kind of medieval mystery, with kidnappers, and
blood-stains, and, for anything I know, somebody ready to stick a
knife into any one of us any time! You people may enjoy this sort of
thing--_you seem to_--but I don’t. And I tell you frankly that I am
going to apply to the police, not to any private detective inquiry
office, as like as not in league with the criminals”--thus ungratefully
did Mrs. Millicent slur the motives of her only truly interested
auditor--“but _real_ policemen. I shall apply--”

She did not tell where she should apply, the words being snapped out of
her mouth by the sharp tinkle of the telephone bell.

Aunt Rebecca responded to the call. “Send him up,” was her answer to
the inaudible questioner.

She laid down the receiver. Then she put it back. Then she stood up,
her silver head in the air, her erect little figure held motionless.

Janet Smith’s dark eyes sought hers; her lips parted only to close
firmly again.

Even the detective perceived the electric intensity of the moment, and
Rupert shut his fists tight, with a quickened beating of the heart; but
emotional vibrations did not disturb Mrs. Melville Winter’s poise. She
continued her plaint.

“This present situation is unbearable, unprecedented and
un--un--unexpected,” she declaimed, rather groping for a climax which
escaped her. Aunt Rebecca raised her hand.

“Would you be so very kind, Millicent,” said she, “as to wait a moment?
I am trying to listen.”

Like a response to her words, the knob of the door was turned, the door
swung, and Archie entered the room, smiling his odd little chewed-up
smile.

Janet uttered a faint cry and took a single step, but, as if
recognizing a superior right, hung back while the boy put his arm about
his great-aunt’s waist and rather bashfully kissed her cheek.

She received the salute with entire composure, except for a tiny splash
of red which crept up to each cheek-bone. “Is it really you, Archie?”
said she. “You are a little late for dinner day before yesterday, but
quite in time for to-day. Sit down and tell us where you have been.”

“Quite so!” exclaimed Mrs. Millicent. “Good heavens! Do you know how we
have suffered? _Where_ have you been? _Why_ did you run away?”

But Archie, who had surrendered one-half of him to be hugged by Miss
Smith and the other to be clapped on the shoulder by his uncle, seemed
to think a vaguely polite “How-de-do, Aunt Millicent; I’m sorry to have
worried you!” to be answer enough. Only when the question was repeated
by Mrs. Winter herself did he reply: “I’m awfully sorry, Aunt Rebecca,
but I’ve promised not to say anything about it. But, truly, I didn’t
mean to bother you.”

Millicent exploded in an access of indignation: “And do you mean that
you expect us to accept such a ridiculous promise--after all we have
been through?”

“Quite so,” remarked Aunt Rebecca, with a precise echo of her niece’s
most Anglican utterance--the gift of mimicry had been one of Mrs.
Winter’s most admired and distrusted social gifts from her youth.

Rupert Winter hastened to distract Millicent’s attention by saying
decisively: “If the boy has promised, that ends it; he can’t break his
parole. Anyhow, they don’t seem to have hurt you, old son?”

“Oh, they treated me dandy, those fellows,” said Archie. “Miss Janet, I
know how to run an electric motor-car, except backing.”

“I’ll bet you do,” muttered the detective.

Here the colonel came to the boy’s relief a second time and drew
Birdsall aside. “Best let me pump the chap a little. You get
down-stairs and see how he got here, who brought him. They’ll get clean
away. It is late for that as it is. You can report to-morrow.”

It was the colonel, also, who eliminated Mrs. Millicent by the masterly
stratagem of suggesting that she pass the news to Mrs. Wigglesworth. He
artfully added that it would require tact to let the lady from Boston
understand that the lad had been found without in any way gratifying
her natural curiosity in regard to the manner of finding or the cause
of disappearance. “I’ll have to leave _that_ to you,” he concluded.
“Maybe you can see a way out; I confess my hands are in the air.”

Millicent thus relegated to the ambassador’s shelf, the colonel
slipped comfortably into his pet arm-chair facing his nephew on the
lounge between Aunt Rebecca and Miss Smith. Miss Smith looked frankly,
charmingly happy. Aunt Rebecca looked rather tired.

“Of course,” remarked he, “I understand, old man, that you have
promised secrecy to--well, to the Fireless Stove gang, as we’ll call
them; but the _other_ kidnappers, the crowd that held up your car
and then switched you off on a side track while young Fireless was
detained--they haven’t any hold on you?”

“No, sir,” said Archie; “but--you see, that strange gentleman and Aunt
Millicent--I was scared lest I’d give something away.”

“They’re not here now. All friends here. Suppose you make a clean
breast of your second kidnapping. It may be important you should.”

Nothing loath, Archie told his story. Left outside while Tracy went
into the office with a policeman, to whom he gave his assumed name, he
remained for hardly two minutes before a gentleman and a “cop” came up
to him, and the latter ordered him to descend from the machine--but not
until they had found it impossible to move the vehicle. When they did
discover that the key was out and gone, the man in citizen’s clothes
hailed a cab and the officer curtly informed Archie that Gardiner
(Tracy’s traveling name) had been taken to another court and he was to
follow. He didn’t suspect anything beyond a collision with the speed
regulations of the city, but had he seen a chance to dive under his
escort’s arm the boy would have taken it. Such chance was not afforded
him, and all he was able to do was to lean out suddenly as they passed
the Palace and to wave at Randall. “I wanted them to stop and let me
get some one to pay my fine,” said Archie, “but they said I was only
a witness. They wouldn’t let me stop; they run down the curtain--at
least so far as it would run. It was like all those hack curtains, you
know--all out of order.”

“Archie,” the colonel interjected here, “was one of the men a little
fellow, clean-shaven, with a round black head, blue eyes--one of his
eyes winks a little faster than the other?”

“Yes, sir. How did you know?”

“I didn’t know; I guessed. Well, get on; they wanted to pump you when
they got you safely out of sight?”

“Yes,” Archie said, “they put me into the sweat-box, all right.”

“Did you tell them anything?” asked Mrs. Winter.

Archie looked at her reproachfully. Did she think that he had gone to
boarding-school for nothing? He explained that, being a stranger in
the town, he could not tell anything about where he’d been. There was
an agent at the house trying to sell stoves, and they let him take him
off back to the hotel. The man seemed to know all about who he (Archie)
was, and about his having gone away. The men asked him an awful lot of
questions about how he was taken away. He said he didn’t know, and he’d
promised not to tell. He couldn’t tell. They said he would have to go
to jail if he didn’t tell, because the men who had him were such bad
men. But he didn’t tell.

“Did they try to frighten you--to make you tell?” said Mrs. Winter.

“Oh, they bluffed a little,” returned Archie carelessly, yet the
keen eyes on him--eyes both worldly-wise and shrewd--noted that the
lad’s color shifted and he winced the least in the world over some
remembrance.

“But they didn’t hurt you? They didn’t burn you or cut you or twist
your arms, or try any other of their playful ways?” Mrs. Winter
demanded; and Janet began feeling the boy’s arms, breathing more
quickly. The colonel only looked.

“No, they didn’t do a thing. I knew they wouldn’t, too,” Archie assured
her earnestly. “I told them if they did anything, Uncle Rupert and you
would make them pay.”

“And you weren’t frightened, away from every one--in that hideous
quarter?” cried Miss Smith. “Oh, my dear!” She choked.

“Well, maybe I was a little scared. I kept thinking of a rotten yarn
of Kipling’s; something happened to _him_, down in the underground
quarter, in just such a hot, nasty-smelling hole, I guess, as I was
in; you remember, Miss Janet, about the game of cards and the Mexican
stabbing a Chink for cheating, and how Kipling jumped up and ran for
his life, never looked around; and don’t you remember that nasty bit,
how he felt sure they had dealt with the greaser their own way and he’d
never get up to the light again--”

“I’ve been remembering that story all this afternoon,” answered Miss
Smith with a shudder.

“Agreeable little tale,” said Aunt Rebecca dryly. “Archie, you must
have had a right nasty quarter of an hour; what stopped it?”

“Why, a Chink came and called the little man off; and there was a lot
of talking which I couldn’t hear, and the cop was swearing; I think
they didn’t like it. But, in a minute the Chinaman--he was an awful
nice little feller--he came up to me and took me out, led me all sorts
of ways, not a bit like the way I came in, and got me out to the
street. The other fellows were very polite; they told me that they were
my friends and only wanted to find a clue to my kidnappers; and the
burning holes in me was only a joke to give me an excuse to break my
word under compulsion--why, _they_ wouldn’t hurt me for the world! I
pretended to be fooled, and said it was all right, and looked pleasant;
but--I’d like to scare them the same way, once, all the same.”

The boy caught at his lip which was trembling, and ended with a shaky
laugh. Miss Smith clenched the fist by her side; but she dropped the
arm near Archie, and said in a matter-of-fact, sprightly tone: “Archie,
you really ought to go dress--and wash for dinner; excuse me for
mentioning it, but you have no idea how grimy you are.”

The commonplace turn of thought did its errand. Archie, who had been
bracing himself anew against the horror which he remembered, dropped
back into his familiar habits and jumped up consciously. “It’s the
dust, motoring,” he offered bashfully. “I ought to have washed before I
came up. Well, that’s all; we came straight here. Now, may I go take a
bath?”

Aunt Rebecca was fingering a curious jade locket on her neck. She
watched the boy run to the open door.

“I wish you’d go into your room, Colonel,” said Miss Smith, “and see
that nothing happens to him. It’s silly, but I am expecting to see him
vanish again!”

The sentence affected the colonel unpleasantly; why need she be
posing before him, as if that first disappearance had had any real
fright in it? Of course she didn’t know yet (although Aunt Rebecca
might have told her--she _ought_ to have told her and stopped this
unnecessary deceit) that he was on to the game; but--he didn’t like it.
Unconsciously, his inward criticism made his tone drier as he replied
with a little bow that he imagined Archie was quite safe, now, and he
would ask to be excused, as he had to attend to something before dinner.

Was it his fancy that her face changed and her eyes looked wistful?
It must have been. He walked stiffly away. Hardly had he entered his
room and turned his mind on the changed situation before the telephone
apprised him that a gentleman, Mr. Gardiner, who represented the
Fireless Cook Stove, said that he had an appointment with Colonel
Winter to explain the stove; should he be sent up?

Directly, Endicott Tracy entered, smiling. “Where’s the kid? I know
he’s back,” were his first words; and he explained that he had been
hunting the kidnappers to no purpose. “Except that I learned enough to
know they put up a job with the justice, all right; I got next to that
game without any Machiavellian exertions. But they got away. Who is it?
Any of Keatcham’s gang?”

“Atkins,” said the colonel concisely.

Tracy whistled and apologized. “It’s a blow,” he confessed. “That
little wretch! He has brains to burn and not an ounce of conscience.
You know he has been mousing round at the hotels after Keatcham’s
mail--”

“He didn’t get it?”

“No, Cary had covered that point. Cary has thought this all out very
carefully, but Atkins has got on to the fact that Cary was here in this
hotel with Keatcham. But he doesn’t know where we come in; whether
Keatcham’s gang is just lying low for some game of its own, or whether
_we’ve_ got him. At least, I don’t believe he knows.”

“You ought not to be talking so freely to me; I haven’t promised you
anything, you know,” warned the colonel.

“But you’ve got your nephew back all right; we have been on the square
with _you_; why should you butt in? I know you won’t.”

“I don’t seem to have a fair call to,” observed the colonel.

“And I think the old boy is going to give in; he has made signals of
distress, to my thinking. Wanted his mail; and wanted to write; and
informed Cary--he saw him for the first time to-day--that he had bigger
things on deck than the Midland; and wanted to get at them. We’re going
to win out all right.”

“Unless Atkins gets at him to-night,” the colonel suggested. “You
oughtn’t to have come here, Gardiner. Don’t go home, now. Wait until
later, and let me rig you up in another lot of togs and give you my own
motor-car. Better.”

Tracy was more than impressed by the proposal; he was plainly grateful.
He entered with enthusiasm into the soldier’s masquerade--Tracy had
always had a weakness for theatricals and some of his Hasty Pudding
_Portraits of Unknown People We Know_ had won him fame at Cambridge.
Ten minutes later, there sat opposite the colonel a florid-faced,
mustached, western commercial traveler whose plaided tweeds, being an
ill-advised venture of Haley’s which the colonel had taken off his
hands and found no subject of charity quite obnoxious enough to deserve
them, naturally did not fit the present wearer, but suited his inane
complacence of bearing and might pass for a bad case of ready-made
purchase.

“Now,” said the adviser, “I’ll notify Haley to have my own hired
motor ready for you and you can slip out and take it after you’ve had
something to eat. Here’s the restaurant card. Haley will be there.
Leave it at the drug store on Van Ness Street--Haley will give you
the number--and get home as unobtrusively as possible. You can peel
off these togs in the motor if necessary. You’ve your own underneath
except your coat. Wrap that in a newspaper and carry it. I don’t know
that Atkins has any one on guard at the hotel, but I think it more than
likely he suspects some connection between our party and Keatcham’s.
But first, tell me about Atkins; what do you know about him? It’s an
American name.”

“America can take all the glory of him, I fancy,” said Tracy. “He’s
been Keatcham’s secretary for six years. He seems awfully mild and
useful and timid. He’s not a bit timid. He’s full of resource;
he’s sidled suggestions into Keatcham’s ear and has been gradually
working to make himself absolutely necessary. I think he aimed at a
partnership; but Keatcham wouldn’t stand for it. I think it was in
revenge that he sold out some of Keatcham’s secrets. Cary got on to
that and has a score of his own to settle with him, besides. I don’t
know how he managed, but he showed him up; and Keatcham gave him the
sack in his own cold-blooded way. I know him only casually. But my
cousin, Ralph Schuyler, went to prep. school with him, so I got his
character straight off the bat. His father was a patent-medicine man
from Mississippi, who made a fair pile, a couple of hundred thousand
which looked good to that section, you know. I don’t know anything
about his people except that his father made the ‘Celebrated Atkins’
Ague Busters’; and that Atkins was ashamed of his people and shook
his married sisters who came to see him, in rather a brutal fashion;
but I know a thing or two about him; he was one of those bounders who
curry favor with the faculty and the popular boys and never break
rules apparently, but go off and have sly little bats by themselves.
He never was popular, yet, somehow, he got into things; he knew where
to lend money; and he was simply sickeningly clever; in math. he was
a wonder. Ralph hated him. For one thing, he caught him in a dirty
lie. Atkins hated him back and contrived to prevent his being elected
class president, and when he couldn’t prevent Ralph’s making his senior
society the happy thought struck Atkins to get on the initiation
committee. They had a cheery little branding game to make the fellows
quite sure they belonged, you know, and he rammed his cigar stump into
Ralph’s arm so that Ralph had blood-poisoning and a narrow squeak for
his life. You see that I’m not prepossessed in the fellow’s favor. He’s
got too vivid an imagination for me!”

“Seems to have,” acquiesced the colonel.

“I think, you know”--Tracy made an effort to be just--“I think Atkins
was rather soured. Some of the fellows made fun of the ‘Ague Busters’;
he had a notion that the reason it was such uphill work for him in
the school, was his father’s trade. No doubt he did get nasty licks,
at first; and he’s revengeful. He hasn’t got on in society outside,
either--this he lays to his not being a university man. You see his
father lost some of his money and put him to work instead of in
college. He was willing enough at the time--I think he wanted to get
married--but afterward, when he was getting a good salary and piling up
money on his tips, he began to think that he had lost more than he had
bargained for. Altogether, he’s soured. Now, what he wants is to make a
thundering big strike and to pull out of Wall Street, buy what he calls
‘a seat on the James’ and set-up for a Southern gentleman. He’s trying
to marry a Southern girl, they say, who is kin to the Carters and the
Byrds and the Lees and the Carys--why, _you_ know her, she’s Mrs.
Winter’s secretary.”

“Does--does she care for him?” The colonel suddenly felt his mouth
parched; he was savagely conscious of his mounting color. What a
fiendish trick of fate! he had never dreamed of this! Well, whether she
cared for him or not, the man was a brute; he shouldn’t get her. That
was one certainty in the colonel’s mind.

“Why, Cary vows she doesn’t, that it was only a girlish bit of nonsense
up in Virginia, that time he was prospecting, you know. But I don’t
feel so safe. She’s too nice for such a cur. But you know what women
are; the nicest of them seem to be awfully queer about men. There’s no
betting on them.”

“I’m afraid not,” remarked the colonel lightly. But he put his fingers
inside his collar and loosened it, as if he felt choked.

Because he had a dozen questions quarreling for precedence in his head,
he asked not one. He only inquired regarding the situation; discovering
that both Mercer and Tracy were equally in the dark with himself as to
Atkins’ plans, Atkins’ store of information, Atkins’ resources. How he
could have waylaid Tracy and the boy without knowing whence they came
was puzzling; it was quite as puzzling, however, assuming that he did
know their whereabouts, to decide why he was so keen to interrogate the
boy. In fact, it was, as Tracy said, “too much like Professor Santa
Anna’s description of a German definition of metaphysics, ‘A blind man
hunting in a dark room for a black cat that isn’t there.’”

“In any event, you would better keep away from _me_,” was the colonel’s
summing up of the situation; “I don’t want to be inhospitable, but
the sooner you are off, and out of the hotel, the safer for your
speculation.”

“Friends will please accept the intimation,” said Tracy good-humoredly.
“Very well, it’s twenty-three for me. I’m hoping you’ll see your way
clear to run over as soon as the old man has surrendered; I’m going to
invite him to make us a proper visit, then, and see the country. I’m
always for letting the conquered keep their side-arms.”

He went away smiling his flashing smile, and turned it up at the hotel
as he walked out; the colonel made no sign of recognition from the
window whence he observed him. Instead, he drew back quickly, frowning;
it might be a mere accident that only a hand’s-breadth of space from
the young Harvard man was a dapper little shape in evening clothes, a
man still young, with a round black head; if so, it was an accident not
to the colonel’s liking.

“Damn you!” whispered Rupert Winter very softly. “What is your little
game?”

At once he descended, having telephoned Haley to meet him at the court.
When he entered and sent his glance rapidly among the little tables, by
this time filled with diners, he experienced a disagreeable surprise.
It did not come from the sight of Sergeant Haley in his Sunday civilian
clothes, stolidly reading the _Call_; it came from a vision of Atkins
standing, bowing, animatedly talking with Janet Smith.

Instead of approaching Haley, Winter fell back and scribbled a few
words on a page of his note-book, while safely shielded by a great
palm. The note he despatched to Haley, who promptly joined him. While
they stood, talking on apparently indifferent subjects, Miss Smith
passed them. Whether because he was become suspicious or because she
had come upon him suddenly, she colored slightly. But she smiled as she
saluted him and spoke in her usual tranquil tone. “You are going to
dine with us, aren’t you, Colonel?” said she. “I think dinner is just
about to be served.”

The colonel would be with them directly.

Haley’s eyes followed her; he had returned her nod and inquiry for his
wife and little Nora with a military salute and the assurance that they
were both wonderfully well and pleased with the country.

“Sure, ain’t it remarkable the way that lady do keep names in her
mind?” cried he. “An’ don’t she walk foine and straight? Oi’ve been
always towld thim Southern ladies had the gran’ way wid ’em; Oi see now
’tis thrue.” The unusual richness of Haley’s brogue was a sure sign of
feeling. The colonel only looked grim. After he had taken Haley to a
safe nook for his confidence, a nook where there were neither ears nor
eyes to be feared, he would have made his way up-stairs; but half-way
down the office he was hailed by the manager. The manager was glad
to hear that the young gentleman was safely back. He let the faint
radiance of an intelligent, respectfully tactful smile illumine his
words and intimate that his listener would have no awkward questions to
parry from him. The colonel felt an ungrateful wrath, a reprehensible
snare of temper which did not show in his confidentially lowered
voice, as he replied: “Mighty lucky, too, we are; the boy’s all right;
but San Francisco is no place for an innocent kid even to take the
safest-looking walk. What sort of a police system have you, anyhow?”

The manager shook his head. “I’m not bragging about it; nor about
the Chinese quarter, either. I confess I’ve felt particularly
uncomfortable, myself, the last day. Well--if you’ll excuse the
advice--least said, you know.”

The colonel nodded. He proffered his cigar-case; the manager
complimented its contents, as he selected a cigar; and both gentlemen
bowed. A wandering, homesick Frenchman, who viewed their parting,
felt refreshed as by a breath from his own land of admirable manners.
Meanwhile, the colonel was fuming within: “Confound his insinuating
curiosity! but I reckon I headed him off. And who would have thought,”
he wondered forlornly, “that I could be going to dine with the boy safe
and sound and be feeling so like a whipped hound!”

But none of this showed during the dinner at which Millicent was in
high good humor, having obtained information about most astounding
bargains in the Chinese quarter from Mrs. Wigglesworth. Her good humor
extended even to Miss Smith, who received it without enthusiasm, albeit
courteously; and who readily consented to be her companion for the
morning sally on the distressed Orientals, whose difficulties with the
customs had reduced them to the necessity of sales at any cost. Aunt
Rebecca listened with an absent smile, while Archie laughed at every
feeblest joke of his uncle in a boyish interest so little like his
former apathy that often Miss Smith’s eyes brightened and half timidly
sought the uncle’s, as if calling his attention to the change. Only a
few hours back, his would have brightened gratefully in answer; now,
he avoided her glances. Yet somehow, his heart felt heavier when they
ceased. For his part, he was thankful to have his aunt request his
company in a little promenade around the “loggia,” as she termed it,
overlooking the great court.

She took him aside to tell him her afternoon experience, and to ask
his opinion of the enigmatical appearance of Atkins. He was strongly
tempted, in return, to question her frankly about Miss Smith, to tell
her of seeing the latter with Atkins only that evening. He knew that
it was the sensible thing to do--but he simply could not do it. To
frame his suspicions past or present of the woman he loved; to discuss
the chances of her affection for a man loathsomely unworthy of her;
worse, to balance the possibilities of her turning betrayer in her turn
and chancing any damage to her benefactress and her kinsman for this
fellow’s sake--no, it was beyond him. He had intended to discuss his
aunt’s part in the waylaying of Keatcham, with calmness and with the
deference due her, but unsparingly; he meant to show her the legal if
not moral obliquity of her course, to point out to her the pitfalls
besetting it, to warn her how hideous might be the consequences of a
misstep. Somehow, however, his miserable new anxiety about Miss Smith
had disturbed all his calculations and upset his wits; and he could not
rally any of the poignant phrases which he had prepared. All he was
able to say was something about the rashness of the business; it was
like the Filipinos with their bows and arrows fighting machine-guns.

“Or David with his ridiculous little sling going against Goliath,”
added she. “Very well put, Bertie; only the good advice comes too late;
the question now is, how to get out with a whole skin. Surprising as it
may be, I expect to--with your help.”

“Honored, I’m sure,” growled Bertie.

“There is one thing I meant to ask you--I haven’t, but I shall now.
Instead of making it impossible for me to sleep to-night, as you
virtuously intended in order to clear your conscience before you tried
to pull me out of the trap I’ve set for myself, suppose you do me a
favor, right now.”

“You put it so well, you make me ashamed of my moral sense, Aunt Becky;
what is it you want?”

“Oh, nothing unbefitting a soldier and a gentleman, dear boy; just
this: Cary has to have some money. I meant to give it to Stoves, but
you hustled him off in such a rush that I didn’t get at him. You know
where he is, don’t you? You haven’t sent him straight back?”

“I can find him, I reckon.”

“Then I’ll give _you_ the money, at once.”

How weak a thing is man! Here was an eminently cool-headed, reasonable
man of affairs who knew that paws which had escaped from the fire
unsinged had no excuse to venture back for other people’s chestnuts;
he had expressed himself clearly to this effect to young Tracy; now,
behold him as unable to resist the temptation of a conflict and the
chance to baffle Atkins as if he were a hot-headed boy in plain
shoulder-straps!

“I’ll do better for you, Aunt Rebecca,” said he. “I’ll not only take
Fireless the money, I’ll go with him to the house. I can make a sneak
from here; and Atkins is safely down-stairs at this moment. He may be
shadowing Fireless; if he is, perhaps I can throw him off the track.”

Thus it befell that not an hour later Rupert Winter was guiding the
shabby and noisy runabout a second time toward the haunted house.

“Nothing doin’,” said the joyous apprentice to crime; “I called old
Cary up and got a furious slating for doing it; but he said there
wasn’t a watch-dog in sight; and the old man had surrendered. He was
going to let him into the library on parole.”

“You need a guardian,” growled the colonel; “where did you telephone?
_Not_ in the drug store?”

“Oh, dear, no, not in such a public place; I’ve a shrinking nature that
never did intrude its private, personal affairs on the curious world.
I used the ’phone of that nice quiet little restaurant where they gave
me a lovely meal but were so long preparing it, I used up all the
literature in sight, which was the _Ladies’ Home Journal_ and a tract
on the virtues of Knox’s Gelatine. When I couldn’t think of anything
else to do I routed out Cary--I’d smoked all my cigarettes and all my
cigars but one which I was keeping for after dinner. And Cary rowed me
good and plenty. There wasn’t a soul in the room.”

“Has any one followed you?”

“Not a man, woman or child, not even a yellow dog. I kept looking
round, too.”

“It was a dreadfully risky thing to do; you don’t deserve to escape;
but perhaps you did. Atkins may have come to the Palace for some other
purpose and never have noticed you.”

“My own father wouldn’t have got on to me in that dinky rig.”

Winter was not so easy in his mind. But he hoped for the best, since
there was nothing else for him to do. They were in sight of the house
now, which loomed against the dim horizon, darker, grimmer than ever.
Where the upper stories were pierced with semicircular arches, the
star-sown sky shone through with an extraordinary effect of depth and
mystery. All the lighter features of the architecture, carving on
pediment or lintel or archivolt, delicate iron tracery of _rejas_,
relief of arcature and colonnade--all these the dusk blurred if it
did not obliterate; the great dark bulk of the house with its massive
buttresses, its pyramidal copings and receding upper stories, was the
more boldly silhouetted on the violet sky; yet because of the very
flatness of the picture, the very lack of shadow and projection, it
seemed unsubstantial, hardly more of reality than the giant shadow it
cast upon the hillside. Electric lights wavered and bristled dazzling
beams on either side of the street; not a gleam, red, white or yellow,
leaked through the shuttered windows of the house. In its blackness,
its silence, its determined isolation it renewed, but with a greater
force, the first sinister thrill which the sight of it had given the
man who came to rifle it of its secrets.

“Lonesome-looking old shanty, isn’t it?” said the Harvard boy; “seems
almost indecorous to speak out loud. Here’s where we _cache_ the car
and make a gentle detour by aid of the shrubbery up the arroyo to the
north side of the _patio_. See?”

He directed the colonel’s course through an almost imperceptible
opening in the hedge along sharp turns and oblique and narrow ways into
a small vacant space where the vines covered an adobe hut. Jumping
out, Tracy unlocked the door of this tiny building so that the colonel
could run the car inside; and after Winter had emerged again, he
re-locked the door. As there was no window, the purpose of the hut was
effectually concealed.

“Very neat,” the colonel approved; whereat Tracy flashed his smile at
him in the moonlight and owned with ingenuous pride that he himself was
the contriver of this reticent garage.

From this point he took the lead. Neither spoke. They toiled up the
hill, in this part of the grounds less of the nature of a hill than of
an arroyo or ravine through which rocks had thrust their rugged sides
and over which spiked semi-tropical cacti had sprawled, and purple
and white flowered vines had made their own untended tangle. Before
they reached the level the colonel was breathing hard, every breath
a stab. Tracy, a famous track man who had won his H in a wonderful
cross-country run, felt no distress--until he heard his companion gasp.

“Jove! But that hill’s fierce!” he breathed explosively. “Do you mind
resting a minute?”

“Hardly,”--the colonel was just able to hold his voice steady--“I have
a Filipino bullet in my leg somewhere which the X-ray has never been
able to account for; and I’m not exactly a mountain goat!”

“Why, of course, I’m a brute not to let you run up the drive in the
machine. Not a rat watching us to-night, either; but I wanted you to
see the place; and you seem so fit--”

“You oughtn’t to give away your secrets to me, an outsider--”

“You’re no outsider; I consider you the treasurer of the band,” laughed
Tracy. They had somehow come to an unexpressed but perfectly understood
footing of sympathy. The colonel even let the younger man help him up
the last stiff clamber of the path. He forgot his first chill, as of
a witness approaching a tragedy; there was a smile on his lips when
the two of them passed into the _patio_. It lingered there as he stood
in the flower-scented gloom. It was there as Tracy stumbled to a
half-remembered push-button, wondering aloud what had become of Cary
and Kito that they shouldn’t have answered his whistle; it was there,
still, when Tracy slipped, and grumbled: “What sticky stuff has Kito
spilled on this floor?”--and instantly flooded the court with light.
Then--he saw the black, slimy pool and the long slide of Tracy’s nailed
sole in it; and just to one side, almost pressing against his own foot,
he saw a man in a gray suit huddled into the shape of a crooked U, with
his arms limp at his side and his head of iron-gray fallen back askew.
The light shone on the broad bald dome of the forehead. He had been
stabbed between the shoulders, in the back; and one side of the gray
coat was ugly to see.

“Good God!” whispered Tracy, growing white. “It’s Keatcham! they’ve
killed him! Oh, why didn’t I come back before!”




CHAPTER XIII

WHOSE FEET WERE SHOD WITH SILENCE


“Get out your revolver,” ordered the colonel; “look sharp! there may be
some one here.”

But there was not a sign of life revealed by the search. Meanwhile,
Winter was examining the body. His first thought was that Keatcham had
tried to escape and had been struck down in his flight. Kito would not
scruple at such a deed; nor for that matter, Mercer. But why leave the
man thus? Why not dispose of the body--unless, indeed, the assassins
had been interrupted. Anyhow, what a horrid mess this murder would make
of the affair! and how was he to keep the women out of it! All at once,
in the examination which he had been making (while a dozen gruesome
possibilities tumbled over one another in his mind) he stopped; he put
his ear to the man’s heart.

“Isn’t he dead?” asked Tracy under his breath.

“No, he is not dead, but I’m afraid he’ll never find it out,” returned
the colonel, shrugging his shoulders. “However, any brandy handy? And
get me some water.”

“I know where there is some brandy--I’ll get it; there is some water in
the fountain right--_Cary!_”

“What’s the matter?” demanded Cary Mercer in one of the arcade doorways
of the _patio_. “What’s happened? The devil! Who did this?” He strode
up to the kneeling soldier.

“You are in a position to know much better than I,” said the colonel
dryly. “We came this moment; we found this.”

“Cary, did _you_ do it?”--the young man laid his hand on Cary’s
shoulder; his face was ashy but his voice rang full and clear. “If you
did, I am sure you had a reason; but I want to know; we’re partners in
this thing to the finish.”

“Thank you, boy,” said Cary gently, “that’s good to hear. But I didn’t
hurt him, Endy. Why should I? We’d got what we wanted.”

“_Who did?_” asked the colonel.

“I didn’t and Kito didn’t. He went away to see his only brother who is
sick. He hasn’t got back. I don’t know who did it; but whoever stabbed
him must have done it without warning him; for I didn’t hear a sound.
I was in the library.”

“He’s breathing a little, I think,” murmured the young man, who was
sopping the gray mask of a face while Winter trickled brandy drop by
drop into the sagging mouth, “and--look! somebody has tried to rob him;
that’s a money belt!”

The waistcoat was open and Winter could see, beneath, a money belt with
buttoned pockets, which had been torn apart with such haste that one of
the buttons had been wrenched off.

“They seem to have been after money,” said he; “see! the belt is full
of bills; there’s only one pocket empty.”

“Perhaps he was interrupted,” explained Mercer. “Push the brandy,
Colonel, he’s moving his eyelids, suh!”

“We’ve got to do something to that hole in him, first,” said the
colonel. “Is there any doctor--”

“I daren’t send for one.”

“Tony Arnold might know one we could trust,” suggested Tracy. “I can
get him over the long distance.”

“We want somebody _now_, this minute,” declared the colonel.

“There’s Janet Smith,” said Mercer, “my sister-in-law; she’s Mrs.
Winter’s companion; she used to be a trained nurse and a mighty good
one; _she_ could be trusted.”

Could she? And how the terms of his distrust had changed! He had
fought against an answer in the affirmative this morning; now his
heart was begging for it; he was cold with fear lest she wasn’t this
conspirator’s confederate.

“Send for them both,” said he with no sign of emotion.

“I’ll call up Aunt Rebecca,” said Mercer. “Isn’t he reviving? No? Best
not move him till we get the wound dressed, don’t you reckon, Colonel?”

But the colonel was already making a rough tourniquet out of his
handkerchief and a pencil to stanch the bleeding. The others obeyed
his curt directions; and it was not until the still unconscious man
was disposed in a more comfortable posture on the cushions which Tracy
brought, that Winter sent the latter to the telephone; and then he
addressed Mercer. He took a sealed package from an inner pocket and
tendered it, saying: “You know who sent it. Whatever happens, you’re a
Southern gentleman, and I look to you to see that she--they are kept
out of this nasty mess--absolutely.”

“Of course,” returned Mercer, with a trace of irritation; “what do you
take me for? Now, hadn’t I better call Janet?”

“But if this were to be discovered--”

“_She_ wouldn’t have done anything; she is only nursing a wounded man
whom she doesn’t know, at my request.”

“Very well,” acquiesced the colonel, with a long sigh as he turned away.

He sat down, cross-legged, like a Turk, on the flags beside the wounded
man. Mercer was standing a little way off. It was to be observed that
he had not touched Keatcham, nor even approached him close enough
to reach him by an outstretched hand. Winter studied his face, his
attitude--and suppressed the slightest of starts; Mercer had turned his
arm to light another electric bulb and the action revealed some crimson
spots on his cuff and a smear on his light trousers above the knee. The
lamp was rather high and he was obliged to raise his arm, thus lifting
the skirts of his coat which had previously hidden the stain. He did
not seem aware that his action had made any disclosure. He was busy
with the light. “That’ll be better,” said he; “I’ll go call up Sister
Janet.”

How had those stains come? Mercer professed just to have entered.
Vainly Winter’s brain tried to labor through the crazy bewilderment of
it all; Mercer spoke like an honest man--but look at his cuffs! How
could any outside assassin enter that locked and guarded house?--yet,
if Mercer had not lied, some one must have stolen in and struck
Keatcham. Kito? But the Jap was out of the house--perhaps! And Janet
Smith, what was she doing talking to Atkins? Had she given that reptile
any clue? Could he--but it was his opportunity to rescue Keatcham, not
to murder him--what a confounded maze!

And what business had he, Rupert Winter, who had supposed himself to
be an honorable man, who had sworn to support the Constitution and the
laws of the United States, what business had _he_ to help law-breakers
and murderers escape the just punishment of their deeds? He almost
ground his teeth. Oh, well, there was one way out, and that was to
resign his commission. He would do it this very night, he resolved;
and he swore miserably at himself, at his venerable aunt who must be
protected at such a sacrifice, at Atkins, at the feebly moaning wretch
whom he had not ceased all this while to ply carefully with drops of
brandy. “You everlasting man-eater, if you dare to die, I’ll _kill_
you!” he snorted.

Thereupon he went at the puzzle again. Before any answer could come to
the telephone calls, a low, mournful, inhuman cry penetrated the thick
walls. It was repeated thrice; on the third call, Tracy ran quickly
through the _patio_ to a side door, barred and locked like all the
entrances, released and swung it open and let in Kito. A few murmured
words passed between them. The Jap uttered a startled exclamation. “But
how can it to be? How? no one can get in! And who shall stab him? For
_why_?”

He examined the wounded man, after a gravely courteous salute to
Winter; and frowned and sighed. “What did it?” said he; “did who
stabbed, take it ’way, he must give _stlong_ pull!”

“Whoever did it,” said the colonel, “must have put a knee on the man’s
back and pulled a strong pull, as you say.” In speaking the words he
felt a shiver, for he seemed to see that red smear above Mercer’s knee.

He felt the shiver again when Mercer returned and he glanced at him;
there was not a stain on his shining white cuffs; he had changed them;
he had also changed his suit of clothes and his shoes. His eyes met the
colonel’s; and Winter fancied there was a glint of defiance in them; he
made no comment, for no doubt a plausible excuse for the fresh clothes
was ready. Well, he (Winter) wouldn’t ask it. Poor devil! he had had
provocation.

For the next half-hour they were all busy with Keatcham.

“He is better,” pronounced the Jap; “he will not live, maybe, but he
will talk, he can say who hult him.”

“If he can only do that!” cried Mercer. “It is _infernal_ to think any
one can get in here and do such a thing!”

“Rotten,” Tracy moaned.

The colonel said nothing.

They were all still working over Keatcham when a bell pealed. Tracy
started; but Mercer looked a shade relieved. “They’ve come,” said he.

“_They?_” repeated the colonel. He scrambled to his feet and gasped.

Miss Smith was coming down the colonnade, but not Miss Smith alone.
Aunt Rebecca walked beside her, serene, erect and bearing a small
hand-bag. Miss Smith carried a larger bag; and Tracy had possessed
himself of a dress-suit case.

“Certainly, Bertie,” remarked his aunt in her softest tone, “I came
with Janet. My generation believed in _les convenances_.”

All the colonel could articulate was a feeble, “And Archie? and
Millicent?”

“Haley is staying in your room with Archie. Millicent had retired;
if she asks for us in the morning we shall not be up. She has an
appointment with Janet, but it isn’t until half-past eleven. Randall
has her instructions.”

“But--but--how did you get here?”

Aunt Rebecca drew herself up. “I trust now, Bertie, you will admit
that I am as fit as any of you to rough it. If there is one mode of
transit I abominate, it is those loathsome, unsanitary, uncivil, joggly
street-cars; we came as far as the corner in the _street-cars_, then we
walked. Did we want to give the number to a cab-man, do you suppose?
Bertie, have you such a thing as a match about you? I think Janet wants
to heat a teaspoonful of water for a strychnine hypodermic.”




CHAPTER XIV

FROM MRS. MELVILLE’S POINT OF VIEW


                                      The Palace Hotel,
                                          San Francisco, March 24, 1906.

My dear Husband:

Although I sent you a postal yesterday, I am writing again to-day to
try to keep you in touch with our _extraordinary series_ of events.
Nothing has been heard from Archie except the letter--_if he wrote
it_--which tells nothing except that his kidnappers use the same kind
of writing paper as Miss Janet Smith. I grow more suspicious of her all
the time. You ask (but of course you wrote before the recent mysterious
and tragical occurrences) you ask do I like Miss Smith any better,
now that I am thrown with her so closely. No, Melville, _I_ have not
the _fatal credulity_ of the Winters! I distrust her _more_. She has,
I admit, an engaging personality; there is a superficial amiability
that would be dangerous to one not on her guard. But I am never off my
guard with her. I’m sorry to say, however, that your brother seems
deceived by her plausible ways. And, of course, our poor aunt is still
her blind dupe. Aunt Rebecca has failed a good deal this last year;
she is quite irritable with me, sometimes; and I suppose it is the
insensibility of age, but she does not appear to realize the full
horror of this kidnapping. Miss Smith actually seems to suffer more;
she looks pale and haggard and has no appetite. I do not think it _all
pretense_, either; I dare say much of it is _remorse_! The situation is
dreadful. Sometimes I think Aunt Rebecca will not yield to the demands
of these wretches who have our poor boy, and that he will be mutilated
or murdered; sometimes I think that they have murdered him already and
are writing forged letters to throw us off the track. You can imagine
how my nerves are shaken! I have seen hardly anything of the city; and
of course have not gone into society at all. Indeed, I have met only
one pleasant person; that was the secretary of the great financier, Mr.
Edwin Keatcham, who was here, next to us. The secretary is a pleasing
person quite _comme il faut_ in appearance. I met him here in the court
where he nearly knocked me over; and he apologized profusely--and
really very nicely, using my name. That surprised me, but he explained
that they had been on the train with us. Then I remembered him. His
name is Horatio Atkins; and he is very polite. He is on a two weeks’
vacation and came here to see Mr. Keatcham, not knowing he was gone. He
was really most agreeable and so sympathetic about poor dear Archie. He
agreed with me that such a nervous temperament as Archie’s suffers much
more from unkindness. I could see, in spite of his assumed hopefulness,
that he shared my fears. He has met quite a number of our friends. He
may (through Mr. Keatcham) be a _most valuable_ acquaintance. Didn’t
you tell me, once, that Keatcham was the leading benefactor of the
university?

He (Mr. Atkins) got his vacation on account of his health; and he is
going to Southern California. I don’t wonder. I have never suffered
more than in this land of sunshine! It is not so much the cold of
the air as the humidity! Do pray be cautious about changing to your
summer underwear. _Don’t do it!_ I nearly perished, in the bleak wind
yesterday, when I tried to visit a few shops. Be sure and take the
cough medicine _on the second shelf of our bath-room medicine closet_;
don’t mistake _rheumatism liniment_ for it; they are both on the same
shelf; you would better sort them out. You are _so_ absent-minded,
Melville, I haven’t a peaceful day when I’m away from you; and do for
Heaven’s sake try to bow to Mrs. Farrell and call her by her right
name! You certainly have been to the president’s house often enough
to know his wife on the street; and I don’t think that it was a good
excuse which you gave to Professor Dale for calling “Good morning,
Katy!” to Mrs. Dale (who was born a Schuyler and is _most_ punctilious)
_that you mistook her for our cook_!

I miss you very much. Give my love to all our friends and be sure to
wear your galoshes (your _rubbers_, you know) when the campus is wet,
whether it is raining or not.

                                                  Your aff. wife,
                                                              M. WINTER.


THE SAME TO THE SAME

                                   The Palace Hotel, March 25, ten P. M.

My dear Husband:

What do you think has happened? I am almost too excited to write.
_Archie is back!_ Yes, back safe and sound, and absolutely
indifferent, to all appearances, to all our indescribable sufferings
on his account! He walked into the parlor about six or a little after,
grinning like an ape, as if to disappear from the face of the earth and
come back to it were quite the usual thing. And when we questioned him,
he professed to be on his word not to tell anything. And Bertie upheld
him in this ridiculous position! However, I was told by the detective
whom Bertie employed, rather a decent, vulgar, little man, that they
(Bertie and he) had cornered the kidnappers and “called their bluff,”
as he expressed it; but I’m inclined to think they got their ransom
from our unfortunate, victimized aunt who is too proud to admit it, and
that they probably managed it through Miss S--. I know they called up
the room to know if the boy was back; and I puzzled them well, I fancy,
by saying he _was_. I may have saved our poor aunt some money by that;
but I can’t tell, of course. Melville, I am almost _sure_ that Miss J.
S-- is at the bottom of it, whatever the mystery is. I am almost sure
that, not content with blackmailing and plundering auntie, Miss S-- is
now _making a dead set_ at poor, blind, simple-hearted Bertie! I have
reasons which I haven’t time to enumerate. Bertie will hardly bear a
word of criticism of her patiently; in fact, I have ceased to criticize
her to him or to Aunt Rebecca--ah, it is a lonely, lonely lot to be
clear-sighted; but _noblesse oblige_. But often during the last few
days I have thought that Cassandra wasn’t enough pitied.

                                                  Your aff. wife,
                                                                      M.


THE SAME TO THE SAME

                                       Casa Fuerte, San Francisco, Cal.,
                                                           Wednesday.

Dear Husband:

This heading may surprise you. But we are making a visit to Mr. Anthony
Arnold (_the_ Arnold’s son) in his beautiful house in the suburbs of
the city. It was far more convenient for me at the Palace where I
found Mrs. Wigglesworth most attentive and congenial and found some
_great bargains_; but you know I can not be false to my _Trust_. To
watch Aunt Rebecca Winter (without seeming to watch, of course, for
the aged always resent the care which they need) is my chief object in
this trip; therefore when Mr. Arnold (whose father she knows, but the
old gentleman is traveling in Europe with his married daughter and her
family) when the young Arnold urged us all to come and spend a couple
of weeks with him, I could not very well refuse. Though a stranger
to me, he is not to Auntie or Bertie. The house is his own, left him
by his mother, who died not very long ago. At first, I remained at
the Palace with Bertie and Archie; Bertie seemed so disturbed at the
idea of my going and Aunt Rebecca was very liberal, insisting that I
was just as much her guest as before, it was only she who was running
away; and the end of it was (she has such a compelling personality,
you know) that she went with Randall and J. S. to Casa Fuerte (Strong
House--and you would call it well-named could you see it; it is a
massive structure!) while we others remained until Sunday. On account
of what I have hinted in regard to the designs of a certain lady I was
not sorry to have Bertie under another roof. He has a fortune of his
own, you know, and a reputation as well. Wealth and position at one
blow certainly would appeal to her, an obscure dependent probably of no
family (it is not a romantic name), and Bertie is very well-bred and
rather handsome with his black eyebrows and gray hair and aquiline
nose. I have been very, very worried, but I feel relieved as to
that. Melville, _she is flying at higher game_! In this house is a
multimillionaire, in fact the fourth richest man in the United States,
Edwin S. Keatcham. He is ill--probably with appendicitis which seems to
be the common lot. I asked the doctor--of course, very delicately--and
he said, “Well, not exactly, but--” and smiled very confidentially; and
begged me not to mention Mr. Keatcham’s illness or even that he was
in the house. “You know,” he said, “that when these great financiers
sneeze, the stock-market shakes; so absolute secrecy, please, my dear
madam.” Don’t mention it to a soul, will you? Of course I haven’t seen
the invalid; but I’ve seen his valet, who is very English; and I have
seen his nurse. Who do you suppose she is? Janet Smith! Yes; you know
she has been a trained nurse. Was there ever a more artful creature!
But Mr. K. is none of my affairs; he will have to save himself or be
lost. Once she is his wife we are safe from that designing woman. I am
quite willing to admit his danger and her fascination. Now, Melville,
for once admit that I can be just to a woman whom I dislike.

This house is sumptuous; I’ve a lovely bath-room and a beautiful huge
closet with a window. It must have cost a mint of money. I have been
told that Arnold _père_ made a present of it to his wife; he let
the architect and her draw all the plans of it, but he insisted on
attending to the construction himself; he said he was not going to
have any contract work or “scamping,” such as I am reliably informed
has been common in these towering new buildings in San Francisco; he
picked out all the materials himself and inspected the inspector. It
has what they call “reinforced concrete” and all the beams, etc., are
steel and the lower story is enormously thick as to walls, in the
genuine Mission style. He said he built for earthquakes. The house
is all in the Spanish _hidalgo_ fashion. I wish you could see the
bas-reliefs and the carved furniture with cane seats of the seventeenth
century, _all genuine_; and the stamped leather and the iron grille
work--_rejas_ they call it--all copied from famous Spanish models from
Toledo; you know the ancient Spaniards were renowned for their _rejas_.
The pictures are fine--all Spanish; I don’t know half the names of the
artists, but they are all old and imposing and some of them wonderfully
preserved. The electric lights are all in the shape of lanterns.
The _patio_, as they call the court around which the house is built,
reminded me of the court in Mrs. Gardiner’s palace in Boston, only
it was not so crowded with _objets_ and the pillars are much thicker
and the tropical plants and vines more luxuriant--on account of the
climate, I suppose. It is all certainly very beautiful.

There is a great arched gateway for carriages--which reminds me, do be
sure to send the horses into the country to rest, one at a time; and
have Erastus clean the stable properly while they are gone. You can
keep one horse for golf; but don’t use the brougham ever; and why not
send the surrey to be done over while I am gone? Is the piazza painted
yet? How does the new cook do? Insist upon her cooking you nourishing
food. You might have the Bridge Club of an evening--there are only the
four of you--and she might, with Emily’s help, get you a nice repast of
lobster à la Newburg, sandwiches and chicken salad; but be sure _you_
don’t touch the lobster! You know what happened the last time; and I
shan’t be there to put on mustard-plasters and give you Hunyadi water.
If Erastus needs any more chamois skins Emily knows where they are,
but admonish him to be careful with them; I never saw mortal man go
through chamois skins the way he can; sometimes I think he gives them
to the horses to eat!

                                               Good-by,
                                                    Your aff. wife,
                                                                      M.




CHAPTER XV

“THE LIGHT THAT NEVER WAS”


The changes which Mrs. Melville had accepted so philosophically,
the metamorphosis of the tragic and lonely house of mystery into
a luxurious country villa, the flinging open of the shutters, the
marshaling of servants, the turning, one may say, of the lime-light on
a rich man’s ordinary life--all this had occurred as swiftly and with
as little warning as a scene shifts on the stage.

Mrs. Rebecca Winter may have the credit for this _bouleversement_ of
plans. By an astonishingly early hour, the next morning, she was awake
and down-stairs, where Kito and Tracy were making coffee, toasting
bread and admiring the oatmeal which had cooked, while they slept, in
the Fireless Stove. Tracy had planned a surprise of brown bread, but
through no fault of the Fireless, owing solely to his omitting what he
called “the pick-me-up,” commonly known as soda--an accident, as he
truly said, which might happen to any lady--the bread was “rather too
adhesive.” The breakfast, notwithstanding, was a cheerful one, because
Miss Smith reported the patient a shade better. She looked smiling,
although rather heavy-eyed. Mercer and the colonel had taken turns
sitting in the adjoining room to bring her ice or hot water or be of
service outside.

The colonel had suggested calling a doctor, but Aunt Rebecca had
demurred: “Janet can do everything; it is just a question of his heart;
and she has digitalis and nitroglycerin and strychnine, the whole
outfit of whips. She has dressed the wound with antiseptics. To-morrow
will be soon enough for the medical talent.” It was she, however,
who, as soon as breakfast was over, took first Mercer and Tracy, then
the colonel apart, and proposed calling up Keatcham’s confidential
associates on the long-distance telephone. “Strike, but hear me,
nephew,” she said languidly, smiling at his bewilderment. “Our only
chance now is to exhaust trumps. Yesterday the game was won. Keatcham
had surrendered, he had told his partners in the deal to make no fight
on Tracy’s election; they could get what they wanted without the
Midland; he advised them to cover their shorts and get ready for a bull
market--”

“How did he do all that when he had lost his private code book?”

“How would _you_ do it? You would use the long distance telephone.
We caught them at Seattle, where his men had gone for the meeting. I
don’t understand why they needed me to suggest that. There the poor
man was, as your Harvard stove agent calls it, rubbering about the
library, trying to find _The Fortunes of Nigel_ in the edition Darley
had illustrated; of course, it wasn’t there. He had lost it just before
he came to the Palace, he thought. It seems his old cipher needs a
particular book, that kind. No doubt in my mind that your theory is
right and that Atkins stole it and perhaps thought he stole the key,
but didn’t get it. He took a memorandum of ciphers which looked like
a key. There Keatcham was, with millions hanging on his wires and his
modern substitute for the medieval signet-ring that would enforce the
message quite lost. What to do? Why, there was nothing to do but get
another cipher! They made up a temporary one, right in that library,
yesterday afternoon.”

“But how could Mercer be sure Keatcham would not play a trick on him?
Did he hear the conversation?”

“Certainly not. He took Keatcham’s word. Whatever his faults, Keatcham
has always kept his word. Mercer was sure he would keep it. He went out
of the room. He was in the library when Keatcham was stabbed.”

The colonel drew a long, difficult breath. “Then you don’t believe
Mercer did it?”

“I’m sure he didn’t. He didn’t hurt him. Why should he kill him after
he had surrendered? He had nothing to gain and considerable to risk, if
not to lose. We want that bull market.”

“But who did then? Atkins? But he is trying to rescue him.”

“Is he? How do we know? The rescue was only our supposition. I’m only
certain none of our crowd did it.”

“Kito?”

“No, Kito keeps absolutely within his orders; he knew how things stood
when he went away. Mercer saw him go. He couldn’t get in, either; he
had to signal to be let in. They were as careful as that. Now, assuming
they all are innocent, isn’t it the best plan to telephone to Seattle
to Keatcham’s next friend there?”

“He hasn’t any family, has he? His wife died and there were no
children, I think.”

“No, and if he ever had any brothers or sisters they died when
they were little; his business associates are the only people Cary
knows about. He is anxious to have word sent at once, because there
are important things to do in Keatcham’s own interest; he came
to California and he has employed Cary in a big Portland cement
investment; Cary has been working all the time on it for him--I beg
your pardon--” for the colonel had raised his hand with a little gasp.

“Do you mean,” said he, “that Mercer has been acting as Keatcham’s
agent, working in _his interest_ all the time he was holding him a
prisoner and ready to kill him rather than let him go?”

“Why not? Cary is a man of honor. This cement deal is a perfectly
fair one which will give a fair price to the present owners and make
a great business proposition. There are other schemes, too, very
large ones, which need the man at the wheel. Now, I have talked with
Cary and Endicott Tracy and my plan is to call up Warnebold, his next
friend, who knows Mercer has been employed by Keatcham and knows his
voice and knows he is a trusty man (for Mercer has done some inquiries
for him and saved him once from buying a water-logged steel plant) to
call _him_ up and--tell him the truth. We can say Mr. Keatcham was
mysteriously stabbed; we can ask what is best to do. By that time we
can report that we have the best medical assistance--young Arnold will
get his family physician, who can be trusted. Warnebold will instruct
Mercer, I reckon, to keep the fact of the assault a secret, not even
mention that Mr. Keatcham is ill; and very likely he or some one else
will come straight on here. Meanwhile, young Arnold can open the house,
hire some servants who won’t talk--I can get them for him; we all say
nothing of the magnate’s presence. And the bull market will come all
right.”

After a little reflection the colonel agreed that the bold course would
be the safest. Thus it came about, with amazing rapidity, that the
haunted house was opened; that sleek, smiling Chinamen whisked brooms
and cleaning cloths at open windows; and Haley and Kito frankly told
any curious inquirers who hailed them over the lawn and the flower-beds
that young Mr. Arnold was coming home and going to have a house-party
of friends. The servants had been carefully selected by Mrs. Winter’s
powerful Chinese friend; they had no dread of white spooks, however
they might cringe before yellow ones. Mrs. Winter and Randall left
their hotel, after all the appropriate ceremonies, amid the lavish bows
and smiles of liberally paid bell-boys and porters. They gave out that
they were to visit friends; and the colonel, who remained, was to take
charge of their mail; hence, with no appearance of secrecy, the trail
took to water and was lost, since the motor-car which carried them was
supplied by Birdsall and driven by a safe man of his own.

Regarding the detective, Rupert Winter had had what he called “a stiff
think;” he could not afford even the remote risk of his going with the
picturesque assortment of information which he had obtained about Casa
Fuerte and Mercer, into Atkins’ employ; therefore he hired him, still,
himself. He made a partial but absolutely truthful statement of the
case; he said frankly: “Birdsall, I’m not going to treat you fair, for
I’m not going to tell you all I know, because--well, for one thing, I
don’t feel sure how much I do know myself. But all I’m going to ask of
you is to watch the house, day and night, without seeming to watch it.
You will oblige Mr. Keatcham as well as me. There is a big game going
on, but it isn’t what you thought. Mr. Keatcham’s best helpers are
right in that house. Mercer and I and young Fireless and Arnold are
doing our best to guard him, not hurt him. Now, there is big money for
you if you will watch out for us.”

Birdsall reflected a moment before he answered, but he did answer,
screwing up his face: “I don’t like these jobs in the dark; but I like
you, Colonel, and it’s a go.”

Keatcham’s valet was next summoned from his vacation and became, in
Tracy’s phrase, “a dandy sub-nurse.”

The Tracys’ family physician came twice a day. He was known to be
visiting one of the guests who had fallen ill. Mercer sent three
or four telegrams a day to Seattle and to New York, to Keatcham’s
associates. Several times he held a conversation of importance over
the telephone with the man who acted as distributer of intelligence.
Warnebold, himself, came on to San Francisco from Seattle, and was
received with every courtesy. He questioned Kito, questioned Mercer,
questioned the colonel. Tracy had effaced himself and was in Pasadena
for a day or two.

The colonel was the star witness (at least this was young Arnold’s
verdict). His narrative was to the effect that he had gone out to see
Mercer, who was a family connection; no, he was not alone, he had a
young friend with him; confidentially, he would admit that the friend
was Mr. Tracy’s son; and, while he could not be sure, he had reason
to suspect that he, “young Tracy,” had been conducting some delicate
negotiations with Mr. Keatcham. At this point the interlocutor nodded
slightly; he was making the deductions expected and explaining to
himself Keatcham’s astonishing communication over the telephone. So,
he was surmising shrewdly, _that_ was the clue; the old man had been
making some sort of a deal with Tracy through the son; well, they were
protected, thanks to Keatcham’s orders. Likely as not they never would
know all the reasons for this side-stepping.

“I understand, then,” he said, as one who holds a clue but has no
notion of letting it slip out of his own fingers, “you and young Tracy
got here and you found Mr. Keatcham? How did you get in? Did Mr. Mercer
let you in? How did it happen he didn’t discover Mr. Keatcham instead
of you, or did you come in on the side?”

Mrs. Winter who was in the room had a diversion ready, but it was not
needed; the colonel answered unhesitatingly, with a frank smile: “No,
we came in ourselves; young Tracy had a key.”

“Oh, he _had_, had he?” returned Warnebold with a shrug of the
shoulders.

“He is a great friend of young Arnold’s; they were at Harvard together,
belonged to the same societies.”

“Yes, I understand; well--”

The rest of the interview was clear sailing. Mrs. Winter’s presence was
explained in her very own words. “Of course I was put out a good deal
at first,” added the colonel, “by the women getting mixed up in it; but
Miss Smith undoubtedly saved Mr. Keatcham’s life. I never saw any one
who seemed to think of so many things to do. Half a dozen times, that
first night, he seemed to be fading away; but every time she brought
him back. I was anxious to have a doctor called in; but Mercer seemed
opposed to making a stir--”

“He knew his business thoroughly,” interjected Keatcham’s confidant,
“he undoubtedly had his instructions to keep Keatcham’s presence here a
secret.”

“He _had_,” said Mrs. Winter; “besides, Miss Smith is his sister-in-law
and he knew that she could be trusted to do everything possible. And,
really, it didn’t look as if anything could help him. I hardly believed
that he could live an hour when I saw him.”

“Nor I,” the colonel corroborated.

Warnebold, plainly impressed by Mrs. Winter’s grand air, assured
them both that he felt that everything that could be done had been
done; Miss Smith was quite wonderful; and he would admit (of course,
confidentially) that Mr. Keatcham did have a heart trouble; Mr. Mercer
had recalled one or two fainting fits; there was some congestion;
and the doctor found a sad absence of reaction; he believed that
there had been a--er--syncope of some sort before the stabbing; Mr.
Keatcham himself, although he was still too weak to talk much, had no
recollection of anything except a very great faintness. Mr. Mercer’s
theory seemed to cover the ground.

“Except as to who did the stabbing,” said the colonel.

“Has Mr. Keatcham any bitter enemies?” asked Aunt Rebecca thoughtfully.

“What man who has made a great fortune hasn’t?” demanded Warnebold with
a saturnine wrinkle of the lips. “But our enemies don’t stab or shoot
us, nowadays.”

“They do out West,” said the colonel genially; “we’re crude.”

“Are you in earnest?”

“Entirely. I know a man, a mine superintendent, who got into a row with
his miners because he discharged a foreman, one of the union lights,
for stealing ore. In consequence he got a big strike on his hands,
found a dynamite bomb under his front piazza, and was shot at twice.
The second time he was too quick for them; he shot back and killed one
of them. He thought it was time to put a stop to so much excitement, so
he sent for the second assassin--”

“And had him arrested?”

“Oh, dear, no; he wasn’t in Massachusetts; I told you he wanted the
thing stopped. No, he sent for him and told him that he had no special
ill feeling toward _him_, but that the next time anything of the kind
happened he had made arrangements to have not him, or any other thug
who was doing the work, but the two men who were at the bottom of the
whole business, killed within twenty-four hours. They took the hint and
kind feeling now prevails.”

Warnebold grunted; he declared it to be a beastly creepy situation; he
said he never wanted to sit down without a wall against his back; and
he intimated that the president of the United States was to blame for
more than he realized. “I hope you have some one watching the house,”
he fumed, “and that he--well, he doesn’t belong to the police force.”

“No, he’s an honest mercenary,” said the colonel; “I’ll introduce him
to you.”

“And you haven’t found any method of entering the house?” fumed the
financier.

“No,” said Aunt Rebecca.

“Yes,” said the colonel.

He laughed as they both whirled round on him.

“You speak first, my dear aunt,” he proposed politely; “I’ll explain
later.”

Mrs. Winter said that a most careful examination had been made not only
by Mercer and the colonel together, but also by young Arnold. They
found everything absolutely secure; all the windows were bolted and all
the cellar gratings firm and impossible to open.

“Now, you?” said Warnebold.

“I only found out to-day,” apologized the colonel, “or I should have
spoken of it. I got to thinking; and it occurred to me that in a house
built, as I understood from Arnold, by a very original architect,
there might be some queer features, such as secret passages. With that
in my mind, I induced the young gentleman to hunt up the architect,
as he lives in San Francisco. He not only showed us some very pretty
secret passages about the house, but one that led into it. Shall I show
it to you?”

On their instantly expressed desire to see the hidden way, the colonel
led them to the _patio_. He walked to the engaged column which once
before had interested him; he pressed a concealed spring under the
boldly carved eight-pointed flower; instantly, the entire side of the
columns swung as a door might swing. As they peered into the dusky
space below, the colonel, who had put down his arm, pressed an electric
button and the white light flooded the shaft, revealing an ingenious
ladder of cleats fitted into steel uprights.

“Here,” said the colonel, “is a secret way from the _patio_ to the
cellar. The cellar extends a little beyond the _patio_ and there is a
way down from the yard to the cellar--I can quickly show you, if you
like.”

“No, thank you,” replied Warnebold, who was a man of full habit and
older than the colonel, “I will take _your_ personal experience
instead.”

“Then if you will go out into the yard with me I will show you where
a charming pergola ends in a vine-wreathed sun-dial of stone that you
may tug at and not move; but press your foot on a certain stone, the
whole dial swings round on a concealed turn-table such as they have in
garages, you know. You will have no difficulty in finding the right
stone, because an inscription runs round the dial: _Más vale tarde que
nunca_; and the stone is directly opposite _nunca_. When you have moved
away your dial you will see a gently inclining tunnel, high enough for
a man to walk in without stooping, wide enough for two, and much better
ventilated than the New York subway. That tunnel leads to a secret door
opening directly into the cellar, so skilfully contrived that it looks
like an air-shaft. This door is only a few feet from the shaft to the
_patio_. We have found a bolt and put it on this entrance, but there
wasn’t any before; nor did any one in the house know of the secret
passage.”

The colonel went on to say that on questioning the architect he averred
that he had never mentioned the secret passage to his knowledge--except
that very recently, only a few days before, at a dinner, he had barely
alluded to it; and one of the gentlemen present, an Easterner, had
asked him where he got a man to make such a contrivance--it must take
skill. He had mentioned the name of the workman. The colonel had hunted
up the artisan mentioned, only to find that he had left town to take a
job somewhere; no one seemed to know where. Of course he had inquired
of everybody. The name of the Easterner was Atkins.

“Atkins,” cried Warnebold, at this turn of the narrative, “Keatcham’s
secretary? Why, he’s the boldest and slyest scoundrel in the United
States! He started a leak in Keatcham’s office that made him a couple
of hundred thousands and lost us a million, and might have lost us more
if Mercer hadn’t got on to him. Keatcham wouldn’t believe he had been
done to the extent he was at first--you know the old man hates to own
to any one’s getting the better of him; it’s the one streak of vanity
I’ve ever been able to discover in him. Otherwise, he’s cold and keen
as a razor on a frosty morning. He was convinced enough, however, to
discharge Atkins; the next news I had, he was trying to send him to the
pen. Gave us instructions how to get the evidence. No allusion to his
past confidence in the fellow, simply the orders--as if we knew all
the preliminaries. Wonderful man, Mr. Keatcham, Colonel Winter.”

“Very,” agreed the colonel dryly.

By this time the warrior and the man of finance were on easy terms.
Warnebold remained three days. Before he left the patient had been
pronounced out of danger and had revived enough to give some succinct
business directions. Mercer had been sent to look out for the cement
deal; and Keatcham appeared a little relieved and brighter when he was
told that Mercer was on his way.

“He will put it through if it can be put,” he had said weakly to
Warnebold; “he’s moderately smart and perfectly honest.” Such words,
Warnebold explained later to Mrs. Winter, coming from Keatcham might
be regarded almost as extravagant commendation. “Your cousin’s fortune
is made,” he pronounced solemnly; “he can get Atkins’ place, I make no
doubt.”

Mrs. Winter thought that Mercer was a very valuable man.

“Only always so melancholy; I’ve been afraid he had something serious
the matter with his digestion. It’s these abominable quick lunches that
are ruining the health of all our steady young men. I don’t know but
they are almost as bad as chorus girls and late suppers. Well, Mrs.
Winter, I’m afraid we shall not have another chance at bridge until
I see you in New York. But, anyhow, we stung the colonel once--and
with Miss Smith playing her greatest game, too. Pity she can’t induce
Mr. Keatcham to play; but he never touches a card, hardly ever takes
anything to drink, doesn’t like smoking especially, takes a cigarette
once in a while only, never plays the races or bets on the run of the
vessel--positively such icy virtue gives an ordinary sinner the cramps!
Very great man though, Mrs. Winter, and a man we are all proud to
follow; he may be overbearing; and he doesn’t praise you too much, but
somehow you always have the consciousness that he sees every bit of
good work you do and is marking it up in your favor; and you won’t be
the loser. There is no question he has a hold on his associates; but he
certainly is not what I call a genial man.”

Only on the day of his departure did Warnebold, in young Arnold’s
language, “loosen up” enough to tell Arnold and the colonel a vital
incident. The night of the attack a telegram was sent to Warnebold in
Keatcham’s confidential cipher, directing the campaign against Tracy
to be pushed hard, ordering the dumping of some big blocks of stock
on the market and arranging for their dummy purchasers. The naming of
Atkins as the man in charge was plausible enough, presuming there had
been no knowledge of the break in his relations with Keatcham. The
message was couched in Keatcham’s characteristic crisp phraseology.
But for the receiver’s knowledge of the break and but for the previous
long-distance conversation, it had reached its mark. The associates of
Keatcham were puzzled. The hands were the hands of Esau but the voice
was the voice of Jacob. There had been a hurried consultation into
which the second long-distance telephone from San Francisco broke like
a thunderclap. It decided the hearers to keep to their instructions and
disregard the cipher despatch.

“And didn’t you send any answer?” the colonel asked.

“Oh, certainly; we had an address given, The Palace Hotel, Mr. John G.
Makers. We wired Mr. Makers--in cipher. ‘Despatch received. Will attend
to it,’ I signed. And I wired to the manager of the hotel to notice the
man who took the despatch. It wasn’t a man, it was a lady.”

“A lady?”

“Yes, she had an order for Mr. Makers’ telegrams. Mr. Makers gave the
order. Mr. Makers himself only stopped one night and went away in
the morning and nobody seemed to remember him particularly; he was a
nondescript sort of party.”

“But the lady?” The colonel’s mouth felt dry.

“The lady? She was tall, fine figure, well dressed, dark hair, the
telegraph girl thought, but she didn’t pay any special attention. She
had a very pleasant, musical voice.”

“That doesn’t seem to be very definite,” remarked the colonel with a
crooked smile.

It didn’t look like a clue to Warnebold, either; but he was convinced
of one thing, namely, that it would pay to watch the ex-secretary.

“And,” chuckled he, “there’s a cheerful side to the affair. Atkins is
loaded to the guards with short contracts; and the Midland is booming;
if the rise continues, he can’t cover without losing about all he
has. By the way, we got another wire later in the day demanding what
we were about, what it all meant that we hadn’t obeyed instructions.
Same address for answer. This time we thought we had laid a nice trap.
But you can’t reckon on a hotel; somehow, before we got warning, Mr.
Makers had telephoned for his despatch and got it.”

“Where did he telephone from?”

“From his room in the Palace.”

“I thought he had given up his room?”

“He had. But--somebody telephoned to the telegraph office from
somewhere in the hotel and got Mr. Makers’ wire. You can get pretty
much everything except a moderate bill out of a hotel.”

“I see,” said the colonel and immediately in his heart compared
himself to the immortal “blind man;” for his wits appeared to him to
be tramping round futilely in a maze; no nearer the exit than when the
tramp began.

That night, after Warnebold had departed, leaving most effusive thanks
and expressions of confidence, Winter was standing at his window
absently looking at the garden faintly colored by the moonlight, while
his mind was plying back and forth between half a dozen contradictions.

He went over the night of the attack on Keatcham; he summoned every
look, every motion of Janet Smith; in one phase of feeling he
cudgeled himself for a wooden fool who had been absolutely brutal to
a defenseless woman who trusted him; he hated himself for the way
he would not see her when she looked toward him; no wonder at last
she stiffened, and now she absolutely avoided him! But, in a swift
revulsion against his own softness he was instantly laying on the
blows as lustily because of his incredible, pig-headed credulity. How
absolutely simple the thing was! She _cared_ for this scoundrel of an
Atkins who had first betrayed his employer and then tried to murder
him. Very likely they had been half engaged down there in Virginia; and
he had crawled out of his engagement; it would be quite like the cur!
Later he found that just such a distinguished, charming woman, who had
family and friends, was what he wanted; it would be easy enough for
him to warm up his old passion, curse him! Then, he had met her and
run in a bunch of plausible lies that had convinced her that he had
been a regular angel in plain clothes; hadn’t done a thing to Cary or
to her. Atkins was such a smooth devil! Winter could just picture him
whining to the girl, putting his life in her hands and all that rot;
and making all kinds of a tool of her--why, the whole hand was on the
board! So she was ready to throw them all overboard to save Atkins from
getting his feet wet. That was why she looked so pale and haggard of a
morning sometimes, in spite of that ready smile of hers; that was why
her eyes were so wistful; she wasn’t a false woman and she sickened of
her squalid part. She loved Aunt Rebecca and Archie--all the same, she
would turn them both down for him; while as to Rupert Winter, late of
the United States army, a worn-out, lame, elderly idiot who had flung
away the profession he loved and every chance of a future career in
order to have his hands free to keep her out of danger--where were
there words blistering enough for such puppy-dog folly! At this point
in his jealous imaginings the pain in him goaded him into motion; he
began furiously pacing the room, although his lame leg, which he had
been using remorselessly all day, was sending jabs and twists of agony
through him. But after a little he halted again before the casement
window.

The wide, darkening view; the great, silent city with its myriad
lights; the shining mist of the bay; the foot-hills with their
sheer, straw-colored streaks through the forests and vineyards; the
illimitable depths of star-sown, violet sky--all these touched his
fevered mood with a sudden calm. His unrest was quieted, as one whose
senses are cooled by a running stream.

“You hot-headed Southerner!” he upbraided himself, “don’t get up in the
air without any real proof!”

Almost in the flitting of the words through his brain he saw her. The
white gown, which was her constant wear in the sick-room, defined her
figure clearly against a clump of Japan plum-trees. Their purplish
red foliage rustled; and an unseen fountain beyond made a delicate
tinkle of water splashing a marble basin. Her face was hidden; only the
moonlight gently drew the oval of her cheek. She was standing still,
except that one foot was groping back and forth as if trying to find
something. But, as he looked, his face growing tender, she knelt on the
sod and pulled something out of the ground. This something she seemed
to dust off with her handkerchief--he could not see the object, but he
could see the flutter of the handkerchief; and when she rose the white
linen partly hid the thing in her hand. Only partly, because when she
passed around the terrace wall the glow from an electric lantern, in an
arch, fell full upon her and burnished a long, thin blade of steel.

He looked down on her from his unlighted chamber; and suddenly she
looked up straight at the windows of the room where she thought he was
sleeping; and smiled a dim, amused, weary, tender smile. Then she sped
by, erect and light of foot; and the deep shadow of the great gateway
took her. All he could see was the moonlight on the bluish green lawn;
and the white electric light on the gleaming rubber-trees and dusty
palms.

He sat down. He clasped his hands over his knee. He whistled softly a
little Spanish air. He laughed very gently. “My dear little girl,” said
he, “I am going to marry you. You may be swindled into helping a dozen
murderers; but I am going to marry you!”




CHAPTER XVI

THE REAL EDWIN KEATCHAM


One Sunday after Mrs. Melville Winter and Archie came to Casa
Fuerte, Mr. Keatcham sent for the colonel. There was nothing
unusual in such a summons. From the beginning of his illness he had
shown a curious, inexpressive desire for the soldier’s company.
He would have him sit in the room, although too weak to talk to
him, supposing he wished to talk, which was not at all sure. “I
like-to-see-him-just-sitting-there,” he faltered to his nurse,
“can’t-he-read-or-play-solitaire-like-the-old-lady?”

Sometimes Winter would be conscious that the feeble creature in the
bed, with the bluish-white face, was staring at him. Whether the glassy
eyes beheld his figure or went beyond him to unfinished colossal
schemes that might change the fate of a continent, or drifted backward
to the poverty-stricken home, the ferocious toil and the unending
self-denial of Keatcham’s youth on the Pacific slope, the dim gaze
gave no clue. All that was apparent was that it was always on Winter,
as he curled his legs under his chair, wrote or knitted his brow over
rows of playing-cards.

At the very first, Keatcham’s mind had wandered; he used to shrink
from imaginary people who were in the room; he would try to talk to
them, distressing himself painfully, for he was so weak that his nurses
turned his head on the pillow; he would feebly motion them away.
In such aberrations he would sometimes appeal, in a changed, thin,
childish voice, to the obscure, toil-worn pioneer woman who had died
while he was a lad. “Mother, I _was_ a good boy; I always got up when
you called me, didn’t I? I helped you iron when the other boys were
playing--mother, please don’t let that old woman stay and cry here!” Or
he would plead: “Mother, tell her, say, _you_ tell her I didn’t know
her son would kill himself--I couldn’t tell--he was a damn coward,
anyhow--excuse me, mama, I didn’t mean to swear, but they make me so
awful mad!” There was a girl who came, sometimes, from whose presence
he shrank; a girl he had never seen; nor, indeed, had he ever known
in the flesh any of the shapes which haunted him. They had lived; but
never had his eyes fallen on them. Nevertheless, their presence was
as real to him as that of the people about him whom he could hear and
touch and see. It did not take Winter’s imagination long to piece
out the explanation of these apparitions: they were specters of the
characters in those dramas of ruthless conquest which Mercer had culled
out of newspaper “stories” and affidavits and court reports and forced
upon Keatcham’s attention. Miss Smith helped him to the solution,
although her own ignorance of Mercer’s method was puzzling. “How did
he ever know old Mrs. Ferris?” she said. “He called her Ferris and
he talks about her funny dress--she always did wear a queer little
basque and full skirt after all the world went into blouses--but how
did _he_ ever come across her? They had a place on the James that had
been in the family a hundred years and had to lose it on account of the
Tidewater; and Nelson Ferris blew his brains out.”

“Don’t you know how?” asked the colonel. “Well, I’ll tell you my guess
sometime. Who is the girl who seems to make him throw a fit so?”

“I’m not sure; I imagine it is poor Mabel Ray; there were two of them,
sisters; they made money out of their Tidewater stock and went to New
York to visit some kin; and they got scared when the stock fell and the
dividends stopped; and they sold out at a great loss. They never did
come back; they had persuaded all their kin to invest; and the stopping
of the dividends made it difficult for some of the poor ones--Mabel
said she couldn’t face her old aunts. She went on the stage in New
York. She was very pretty; she wasn’t very strong. Anyway, you can
imagine the end of the story. I saw her in the park last winter when
Mrs. Winter was in New York; she turned her face away--poor Mabel!”

Through Janet Smith’s knowledge of her dead sister’s neighbors, Winter
got a dozen pitiful records of the wreckage of the Tidewater. “Mighty
interesting reading,” he thought grimly, “but hardly likely to make the
man responsible for them stuck on himself!” Then he would look at the
drawn face on the pillow and listen to the babblings of the boy who had
had no childhood; and the frown would melt off his brow.

He did not always talk to his mother when his mind wandered; several
times he addressed an invisible presence as “Helen” and “Dear” with an
accent of tenderness very strange on those inflexible lips. When he
talked to this phantasm he was never angry or distressed; his turgid
scowl cleared; the austere lines chiseling his cheeks and brow faded;
he looked years younger. But for the most part, it was to no unreal
creature that he turned, but to Colonel Rupert Winter. He would address
him with punctilious civility, but as one who was under some obligation
to assist him, saying, for instance, “Colonel Winter, I must beg you
not to let those persons in the room again. They annoy me. But you
needn’t let Mercer know that. Please attend to it yourself, and get
them away. Miss Smith says you will. Explain to them that when I get up
I will investigate their claims. I’m too sick now!”

Conscious and free from fever, he was barely able to articulate, but
when delirious fancies possessed him he could talk rapidly, in a good
voice. Very soon it was clear that he was calmer for the colonel’s
presence. Hence, the latter got into the habit of sitting in the
room. He would request imaginary ruined and desperate beings to leave
Keatcham in peace; he would gravely rise and close the door on their
departure. He never was surprised nor at a loss; and his dramatic nerve
never failed. Later, as the visions faded, a moody reserve wrapped the
sick man. He lay motionless, evidently absorbed by thought. In one way
he was what doctors call a very good patient. He obeyed all directions;
he was not restless. But neither was he ever cheerful. Every day he
asked for his pulse record and his temperature and his respiration.
After a consultation with the doctor, Miss Smith gave them to him.

“It is against the rules,” grumbled the doctor, “but I suppose each
patient has to make his own rules.” On the same theory he permitted the
colonel’s visits.

Therefore, with no surprise, Winter received and obeyed the summons.
Keatcham greeted him with his usual stiff courtesy.

“The doctor says I can have the--papers--will you pick
out--the--one--day after I was stabbed.”

Miss Smith indicated a pile on a little table, placed ready at hand. “I
kept them for him,” she said.

“Read about--the Midland,” commanded the faint, indomitable voice.

“Want the election and the newspaper sentiments?” asked the colonel;
he gave it all, conscious the while of Janet Smith’s compassionate,
perplexed, sorrowful eyes.

“Don’t skip!” Keatcham managed to articulate after a pause.

The colonel gave him a keen glance. “Want it straight, without a
chaser?”

Keatcham closed his eyes and nodded.

The colonel read about the virtually unanimous election of Tracy; the
astonishment of the outsiders among the supposed anti-Tracy element;
the composed and impenetrable front of the men closest to Keatcham; the
reticence and amiability of Tracy himself, in whose mien there could
be detected no hint either of hostility or of added cordiality toward
the men who had been expected “to drag his bleeding pride in the dust;”
finally of the response of the stock-market in a phenomenal rise of
Midland.

Keatcham listened with his undecipherable mask of attention; there was
not so much as the flicker of an eyelid or the twitch of a muscle. All
he said was: “Now, read if there is anything about the endowment of the
new fellowships in some medical schools for experimental research.”

“Who gives the endowment?”

“Anonymous. In memory of Maria Warren Keatcham and Helen Bradford
Keatcham. Find anything?”

The colonel found a great deal about it. The paper was full of this
munificent gift, amounting to many millions of dollars and filling
(with most carefully and wisely planned details) an almost absolute
vacuum in the American scheme of education. The dignity and fame of the
chairs and fellowships endowed were ample to tempt the best ability of
the profession. The reader grew enthusiastic as he read.

“Why, it’s immense! And we have always needed it!” he exclaimed.

“There are some letters about it, there,”--Keatcham feebly motioned
to a number of neatly opened, neatly assorted letters on a desk. “The
doctor said I might have the letters read to me. Miss Smith got him to.
For fear of exciting you, the doctors usually let you worry your head
off because you don’t know about things. I’ve got to carry a few things
through if it kills me. Don’t you see?”

“I see,” said the colonel, “you shall.”

The next time he saw the financier, although only a few days had
elapsed, he was much stronger; he was able to breathe comfortably, he
spoke with ease, in his ordinary voice; in fine, he looked his old self
again, merely thinner and paler. Hardly was the colonel seated before
he said without preface--Keatcham never made approaches to his subject,
regarding conversational road-making as waste of brains for a busy man:

“Colonel, Miss Smith hasn’t time to be my nurse and secretary both. I
won’t have one sent from New York; will you help her out?”

The colonel’s lips twitched; he was thinking that were Miss Smith
working for Atkins, she couldn’t have a better chance to make a
killing. “But I’ll bet my life she isn’t,” he added; “she may be trying
to save his life, but she isn’t playing his game!”

He said aloud: “I will, Mr. Keatcham, if you will let me do it as part
of the obligation of the situation; and there is no bally rot about
compensation.”

“Very well,” said Keatcham. He did not hesitate; it was (as the colonel
had already discovered) the rarest thing in the world for him to
hesitate; he thought with astonishing rapidity; and he formulated his
answer while his interlocutor talked; before the speech was over the
answer was ready. Another trait of his had struck the soldier, namely,
the laborious correctness of his speech; it was often formal and
old-fashioned; Aunt Rebecca said that he talked like Daniel Webster’s
speeches; but it had none of the homely and pungent savor one might
expect from a man whose boyhood had scrambled through miners’ camps
into a San Francisco stock office; who had never gone to school in his
life by daylight; who had been mine superintendent, small speculator
and small director in California until he became a big speculator and
big railway controller in New York.

“You might begin on the morning mail,” Keatcham continued. “Let me sort
them first.” He merely glanced at the inscriptions on the envelopes,
opening and taking out one which he read rather carelessly, frowning a
little before he placed it to one side.

A number of the letters concerned the endowments of the experimental
chairs at the universities. Keatcham’s attention was not lightened by
any ray of pleasure. Once he said: “That fellow has caught my idea,”
and once: “That’s right,” but there was no animation in his voice, no
interest in his pallid face. Stealing a furtive scrutiny of it, now and
then, Rupert Winter was impressed with its mystical likeness to that of
Cary Mercer. There was no physical similarity of color or feature; it
was a likeness of the spirit rather than the flesh. The colonel’s eyes
flashed.

“I have it!” he exclaimed within, “I have it; they are fanatics, both
of them; Keatcham’s a fanatic of finance and Mercer is a fanatic of
another sort; but fanatics they both are, ready to go any length for
their principles or their ambitions or their revenge! _J’ai trouvé le
mot d’énigme_, as Aunt Becky would say--I wonder what she’ll say to
this sudden psychological splurge of mine.”

“The business hour is up,”--it was Miss Smith entering with a bowl on a
white-covered tray; the sun glinted the lump of ice in the milk and the
silver spoon was dazzling against the linen--“your biscuit and milk,
Mr. Keatcham. Didn’t you have it when you were a boy?”

“I did, Miss Janet,”--and Keatcham actually smiled. “I used to think
crackers and milk the nicest thing in the world.”

“That is because you never tasted corn pone and milk; but you are going
to.”

“When you make it for me. I’m glad you’re such a good cook. It’s one of
your ways I like. My mother was a very good cook. She could make better
dishes out of almost nothing than these mongrel chefs can make with
the whole world.”

“I reckon she could,” said Miss Smith; she was speaking sincerely.

“When my father didn’t strike pay dirt, my mother would open her bakery
and make pies for the miners; she could make bread with potato yeast or
‘salt-emptins’--can you make salt-rising bread?”

“I can--shall I make you some, to-morrow?”

“I’d like it. My mother used to make more money than my father;
sometimes when we children were low in clothes and dad owed a bigger
lot of money than usual, we had a laundry at our house as well as a
bakery. Yet, in spite of all the work, my mother found time to teach
all of us; and she knew how to teach, too; for she was principal of
a school when my father married her. She was a New Englander; so was
he; but they went West. We’re forty-niners. I saw the place where our
little cloth-and-board shack used to stand. After the big fire, you
know. It burned us all up; we had saved a good deal and my mother had a
nice bakery. She worked too hard; it killed her. Work and struggle and
losing the children.”

“They died?” said Miss Janet.

“Diphtheria. They didn’t know anything about the disease then. We
all had it; and my little sister and both my brothers died; but I’m
tough. I lived. My mother fell into what they called a decline. I was
making a little money then--I was sixteen; but I couldn’t keep her from
working. Perhaps it made no difference; but it did make a difference
her not having the--the right kind of food. Nobody knew anything about
consumption then. I used to go out in the morning and be afraid I’d
find her dead when I got back. One night I did.” He stopped abruptly,
crimsoning up to his eyes--“I don’t know why I’m telling you all this.”

“I call that tough,”--as the colonel blurted out the words, he was
conscious of a sense of repetition. When had he said those very same
words before, to whom? Of all people in the world, to Cary Mercer.
“Mighty tough,” murmured he softly.

“Yes,” said Keatcham, “it was.” He did not say anything more. Neither
did the colonel. Keatcham obediently ate his milk and biscuit; and very
shortly the colonel took his leave.

The next morning after an uneventful hour of sorting, reading and
answering letters for Miss Smith to copy on the traveling type-writer,
Keatcham gave his new secretary a sharp sensation; he ordered in his
quiet but peremptory fashion: “Now put that trash away; sit down; tell
me all you know of Cary--real name is Cary Mercer, isn’t it?”

The colonel said it was; he asked him if he wanted everything.

“Everything. Straight. Without a chaser,” snapped Keatcham.

The colonel gave it to him. He began with his own acquaintance; he told
about Phil Mercer; he did not slur a detail; neither did he underscore
one; Keatcham got the uncolored facts. He heard them impassively,
making only one comment: “A great deal of damage would be saved in this
world if youngsters could be shut up until they had sense enough not
to fool with firearms.” When Winter came to Mercer’s own exposition of
his motives and his design if successful in his raid on the kings of
the market, Keatcham grunted; at the end he breathed a noiseless jet of
a sigh. “You don’t think Mercer is at all”--he tapped the side of the
head.

“No more than you are.”

“Or you?”

“Oh, well,” the colonel jested, “we all have a prejudice in favor of
our own sanity. What I meant was that Mercer is a bit of a fanatic; his
hard luck has--well, prejudiced him--”

Keatcham’s cold, firm lips straightened into his peculiar smile, which
was rather of perception than of humor.

One might say of him--Aunt Rebecca Winter did say of him--that he saw
the incongruous, which makes up for humor, but he never enjoyed it;
possibly it was only another factor in his contempt of mankind.

“Colonel,” said Keatcham, “do you think Wall Street is a den of
thieves?”

“I do,” said the colonel promptly. “I should like to take a machine gun
or two and clean you all out.”

Keatcham did not smile; he blinked his eyes and nodded. “I presume a
good many people share your opinion of us.”

“Millions,” replied the colonel.

Again Keatcham nodded. “I thought so,” said he. “Of course you are all
off; Wall Street is as necessary to the commonwealth as the pores to
your skin; they don’t make the poison in the system any more than the
pores do; they only let it escape. And I suppose you think that big
financiers who control the trusts and the railways and--”

“Us,” the colonel struck in, “well?”

“You think we are thieves and liars and murderers and despots?”

“All of that,” said the colonel placidly; “also fools.”

“You certainly don’t mince your words.”

“You don’t want me to. What use would my opinion be in a one-thousandth
attenuation? You’re no homeopath; and whatever else you may be, you’re
no coward.”

“Yet, you think I surrendered to Mercer? You think I did it because I
was afraid he would kill me? I suppose he would have killed me if I
hadn’t, eh?”

“He can speak for himself about that; he seems--well, an earnest sort
of man. But I don’t think you gave in because you were afraid, if that
is what you mean. You are no more afraid than he was! You wanted to
live, probably; you had big things on hand. The Midland was only a
trump in the game; you could win the odd trick with something else; you
let the Midland go.”

“Pretty close,”--Keatcham really smiled--“but there is a good deal
more of it. I was shut up with the results of my--my work. He did
it very cleverly. I had nothing to distract me. There were the big
type-written pages about the foolish people who had lost their money,
in some cases really through my course, mostly because they got scared
and let go and were wiped out when, if they had had confidence in me
and held on, they would be very much better off, now. But they didn’t,
and they were ruined and they starved and took their boys out of
college and mortgaged their confounded homes that had been in their
families ever since Adam; and the old people died of broken hearts
and the girls went wrong and some of the idiotic quitters killed
themselves--it was not the kind of crowd you would want shut up with
you in the dark! I was shut up with them. He had some sort of way of
switching off the lights from the outside. I never saw a face or heard
a voice. I would have to sit there in the dark after he thought I had
read enough to occupy my mind. It--was unpleasant. Perhaps you suppose
that brought me round to his way of thinking?”

The colonel meditated. “I’ll tell you honestly,” he said after a pause,
“I was of that opinion, or something of the kind, until I talked your
case over with my aunt--”

“The old dame is not a fool; what did she say?”

“She said no, he didn’t convert you; but he convinced you how other
people looked at your methods. You couldn’t get round the fact that a
majority of your countrymen think your type of financier is worse than
smallpox, and more contagious.”

“Oh, she put it that way, did she? I wish she would write a prospectus
for me. Well, you think she was nearer right than you?”

“I think _you_ do; I myself think it was a little of both. You’ve
got a heart and a conscience originally, though they have got pretty
well tanned out in the weather; you didn’t want to be sorry for those
people, but you are. They have bothered you a lot; but it has bothered
you more to think that instead of going down the ages as a colossal
benefactor and empire builder, you are hung up on the hook to see
where you’re at; and where you _will_ be if the people get thoroughly
aroused. You all are building bigger balloons when it ought to be you
for the cyclone cellar! But _you_ are different. You can see ahead. I
give you credit for seeing.”

“Have you ever considered,” said Keatcham slowly, “that in spite
of the iniquitous greed of the men you are condemning, in spite of
their oppression of the people, the prosperity of the country is
unparalleled? How do you explain it?”

“Crops,” said the colonel; “the crops were too big for you.”

“You might give _us_ a little credit--your aunt does. She was here
to-day; she is a manufacturer and she comprehended that the methods of
business can not be revolutionized without somebody’s getting hurt.
Yet, on the whole, the change might be immensely advantageous. Now,
why, in a nutshell, do you condemn us?”

“You’re after the opinion of the average man, are you?”

“I suppose so, the high average.”

The colonel crossed his legs and uncrossed them again; he looked
straight into the other’s eyes; his own narrowed with thought.

“I’ll tell you,” said he. “I don’t know much about the Street or
high finance or industrial development. I’m a plain soldier; I’m
not a manufacturer and I’m not a speculator. I understand perfectly
that you can’t have great changes without somebody’s getting hurt in
the shuffle. It is beyond me to decide whether the new industrial
arrangements with the stock-jobber on top instead of the manufacturer
will make for better or for worse--but I know this; it is against the
fundamental law to do evil that good may come. And you fellows in Wall
Street, when, to get rich quick, you lie about stocks in order to buy
cheap and then lie another way to sell dear; when you make a panic out
of whole cloth, as you did in 1903, because, having made about all you
can out of things going up, you want to make all you can out of them
going down; when you play foot-ball with great railway properties and
insurance properties, because you are as willing to rob the dead as the
living; when you do all that, and when your imitators, who haven’t so
much brains or so much decency as you, when _they_ buy up legislatures
and city councils; and _their_ imitators run the Black Hand business
and hold people up who have money and are not strong enough, they
think, to hunt them down--why, not being a philosopher but just a plain
soldier, I call it bad, _rotten_ bad. What’s more, I can tell you the
American people won’t stand for it.”

“You think they can help themselves?”

“I know they can. You fellows are big, but you won’t last over night
if the American people get really aroused. And they are stirring in
their sleep and kicking off the bed-clothes.”

“Yet you ought to belong to the conservatives.”

“I do. That’s why the situation is dangerous. You as an old San
Franciscan ought to remember how conservative was that celebrated
Vigilance Committee. It is when the long-suffering, pusillanimous,
conservative element gets fighting mad that something is doing.”

“Maybe,” muttered Keatcham thoughtfully. “I believe we can manage for
you better than you can for yourselves; but when the brakes are broken
good driving can’t stop the machine; all the chauffeur can do is to
keep the middle of the road. I like to be beaten as little as any of
them; but I’m not a fool. Winter, you are used to accomplishing things;
what is your notion of the secret?”

“Knowing when to stop exhausting trumps, I reckon--but you don’t play
cards.”

“It is the same old game whatever you play,” said the railway king.
He did not pursue the discussion; his questions, Winter had found,
invariably had a purpose, and that purpose was never argument. He lay
back on the big leather cushions of the lounge, his long, lean fingers
drumming on the table beside him and an odd smile playing about the
corners of his mouth; his next speech dived into new waters. He said:
“Have those men from New York got Atkins, yet?”

“They couldn’t find him,” answered the colonel. “I have been having
him shadowed, on my own idea--I think he stabbed you, though I have no
proof of it; I take it you have proof of your matter.”

“Plenty,” said Keatcham. “I was going to send him to the pen in
self-defense. It isn’t safe for me to have it creep out that my
secretary made a fortune selling my secrets. Besides, I don’t want to
be killed. You say they can’t find him?”

“Seems to have gone to Japan--”

“Seems? What do you mean?”

“I am not sure. He was booked for a steamer; and a man under his name,
of his build and color, did actually sail on the boat,” announced the
colonel blandly.

“Hmn! He’s right here in San Francisco; read that note.”

Winter read the note, written on Palace Hotel note-paper, in a sharp,
scrawling, Italian hand. The contents were sufficiently startling.

  Dear friend Hoping this find you well. Why do you disregard a true
  Warning? We did write you afore once for say you give that money or
  we shal be unfortunately compel to kill you quick. No? You laff. God
  knows we got have that twenty-five thousan dol. Yes. And now because
  of such great expence it is fifty thousan you shall pay. We did not
  mean kill you dead only show you for sure there is no place so secret
  you can Hide no place so strong can defend you. Be Warn. You come
  with $50000.00 in $100 bills. You go or send Mr. Mercer to the Red
  Hat; ask for Louis. Say to Louis For the Black Hand. Louis will say
  For the Black Hand. You follow him. No harm will come to you. You
  will be forgive all heretobefores. Elseways you must die April 15-20.
  _This is sure_. You have felt our dagger the other is worse.

                                             You well wishing Fren,
                                                         The Black Hand.

“Sounds like Atkins pretending to be a Dago,” said the colonel dryly.
“I could do better myself.”

“Very likely,” said Keatcham.

“Does he mean business? What’s he after?”

“To get me out of the way. He knows he isn’t safe until I’m dead. Then
he hasn’t been cleaned out, but he has lost a lot of money in this
Midland business. The cipher he has is of no use to him, there, or in
the other things which unluckily he knows about. With me dead and the
cipher in his hands, he could have made millions; even without the
cipher, if he knows I’m dead before the rest of the world, he ought to
make at least a half-million. I think you will find that he has put
everything he has on the chance. I told you he was slick. And unstable.
What do you anticipate he will do? Straight, with no chaser, as you
say.”

“Well, straight with no chaser, I should say a bomb was the meanest
trick in sight, so, naturally, he will choose a bomb.”

“I agree with you. You say the house is patrolled?”

“The whole place. But we’ll put on a bigger force; I’ll see Birdsall
at once. Atkins would have to hire his explosive talent, wouldn’t he?”
questioned the colonel.

“Oh, he knows plenty of the under-world rascals; and besides, for a
fellow of his habits, there is a big chance for loot. Mrs. Millicent
Winter tells me that your aunt has valuable jewels with her. If she
told me, she may have told other people, and Atkins may know. He will
use other people, but he will come, too, in my opinion.”

“I see,” said the colonel; “to make sure they don’t foozle the bomb.
But he’ll have his alibi ready all right. Mr. Keatcham, did they send
you a previous letter?”

“Oh, dear no; that’s only part of the game; makes a better story. So is
using the hotel paper; if it throws suspicion on anybody it would be
your party; you see Atkins knew Mercer had a grudge against me as well
as him. He was counting on that. I rather wonder that he didn’t fix up
some proof for you to find.”

“By Jove!” cried the colonel; “maybe he did.”

“And you didn’t find it?”

“Well, you see I was too busy with you; the others must have overlooked
it. Hard on Atkins after he took so much trouble, wasn’t it?”

“I told you he was too subtle. But it is not wise to underrate him, or
bombs either; we must get the women and those boys out of the house.”

“But how? You are not really acquainted with my aunt, Mrs. Rebecca
Winter, I take it.”

“You think she wouldn’t go if there was any chance of danger?”

“You couldn’t fire her unless out of a cannon; but she would help get
Archie away; Mrs. Melville and Miss Smith--”

“Well--ur--Miss Smith, I am afraid, will not be easy to manage; you
see, she knows--”

“Knows? Did you tell her?” asked Colonel Winter anxiously.

“Well, not exactly. As the children say, it told itself. There has been
a kind of an attempt, already. A box came, marked from a man I know in
New York, properly labeled with express company’s labels. Miss Smith
opened it; I could see her, because she was in the bath-room with the
door open. There was another box inside, wrapped in white tissue paper.
Very neatly. She examined that box with singular care and then she drew
some water in the lavatory basin, half opened the box and put the whole
thing under water in the basin. Then I thought it was time for me and
I asked her if it was a bomb. Do you know that girl had sense enough
not to try to deceive me? She saw that I had seen every move she had
made. She said merely that it was safe under water. It was an ingenious
little affair which had an electrical arrangement for touching off a
spark when the lid of the box would be lifted.”

“Ah, yes. Thoughtful little plan to amuse an invalid by letting him
open the box, himself, to see the nice surprises from New York. Very
neat, indeed. What did you do with the box?”

“Nothing, so far. It only came about an hour ago.”

“Do you reckon some of the Black Hands are out on the street, rubbering
to see if there are any signs of anything doing?”

“Perhaps; you might let Birdsall keep a watch for anything like that.
But they hear, somehow; there is a leak somewhere in our establishment.
It is not your aunt; she can hold her tongue as well as use it; the
boy, Archie, does not know anything to tell--”

“He wouldn’t tell it if he did,” interrupted the colonel; and very
concisely but with evident pride he gave Archie’s experience in the
Chinese quarter.

Keatcham’s comment took the listener’s breath away; so far afield was
it and so unlike his experience of the man; it was: “Winter, a son like
that would be a good deal of a comfort, wouldn’t he?”

“Poor little chap!” said Winter. “He hasn’t any father to be proud of
him--father and mother both dead.”

Keatcham eyed Winter thoughtfully a moment, then he said: “You’ve been
married and lost children, your aunt says. That must be hard. But--did
you ever read that poem of James Whitcomb Riley’s to his friend whose
child was dead? It’s true what he says--they were better off than he
‘who had no child to die.’”

Rupert was looking away from the speaker with the instinctive
embarrassment of a man who surprises the deeper feelings of another.
He could see out of the window the lovely April garden and Janet Smith
amid the almond blossoms. Only her shining black head and her white
shoulders and bodice rose above the pink clusters. She looked up and
nodded, seeing him; her face was a little pale, but she was smiling.

“I don’t know,” he said, “it’s hard enough either way for a man.”

“I never lost any children”--Keatcham’s tone was dry, still, but it
had not quite the former desiccated quality--“but I was married, for a
little while. If it’s as bad to lose your children as it is to lose the
hope of having them, it must be hard. You lost your wife, too?”

“Yes,” said Rupert Winter.

At this moment he became conscious that Keatcham was avoiding his gaze
in the very manner of his avoiding of Keatcham’s a moment ago; and it
gave him a bewildering sensation.

“I wanted to marry my wife for seven years before we were married,”
Keatcham continued in that carefully monotonous voice. “She was the
daughter of the superintendent of the mine where I was working. I
was only eighteen when I first saw her. I was twenty-five when we
were married. She used to give me lessons; she was educated and
accomplished. She did more than is easy telling, for me. Of course, her
parents were opposed at first because they looked higher for her, but
she brought them round by her patience and her sweetness and her faith
in me. Six months after we were married, she had an accident which left
her a helpless invalid in a wheeled chair, at the best; at the worst,
suffering--you’ve known what it is to see anybody, whom you care for,
in horrible pain and trying not to show it when you come near?”

“I have,” said Winter; “merry hell, isn’t it?”

“I have seen that expression,” said Keatcham; “I never recognized
its peculiar appropriateness before. Yes, it is that. Yet, Winter,
those two years she lived afterwards were the happiest of my whole
life. She said, the last night she was with me, that they had been
the happiest of hers.” The same flush which once before, when he had
seemed moved, had crept up to his temples, burned his hollow cheeks.
He was holding the edge of the table with the tips of his fingers and
the blood settled about the nails with the pressure of his grip. There
was an intense moment during which Winter vainly struggled to think of
something to say and looked more of his sympathy than he was aware;
then: “Cary Mercer needn’t think that he has had all the hard times in
the world!” said Keatcham in his usual toneless voice, relaxing his
hold and leaning back on his pillows. The color ebbed away gradually
from his face.

“I don’t wonder you didn’t marry again,” said Winter.

“You would not wonder if you had known Helen. She always understood.
Of course, now, at sixty-one, I could buy a pretty, innocent, young
girl who would do as her parents bade her, and cry her eyes out before
the wedding, or a handsome and brilliant society woman with plenty of
matrimonial experience--but I don’t want them. I should have to explain
myself to them; I don’t know how to explain myself; you see I can’t
half do it--”

“I reckon I understand a little.”

“I guess you do. You are different, too. Well, let’s get down to
business, think up some way of getting the women out of the house; and
get your sleuths after Atkins. It is ‘we get him, or he gets us!’”

The amateur secretary assented and prepared to go, for the valet was
at the door, ready to relieve him; but opposite Keatcham, he paused a
second, made a pretense of hunting for his hat, picked it up in his
left hand and held out the right hand, saying, “Well, take care of
yourself.”

Keatcham nodded; he shook the hand with a good firm pressure. “Much
obliged, Winter,” said he.

“Well,” meditated the soldier as he went his way, “I never did think to
take that financial bucaneer by the hand; but--it wasn’t the bucaneer,
it was the real Edwin Keatcham.”




CHAPTER XVII

IN WHICH THE PUZZLE FALLS INTO PLACE


While the colonel was trying to decipher his tragical puzzle, while
Edwin Keatcham was busied with plans that affected empires and
incidentally were to save and to extinguish some human lives, while
Janet Smith had her own troubles, while Mrs. Rebecca Winter enjoyed
a game more exciting and deadly than Penelope’s Web, Mrs. Millicent
Winter and the younger people found the days full of joyous business.
The household had fallen into normal ways of living. Although the
secret patrol watched every rod of approach to the house, the espial
was so unobtrusive that guests came and went, tradesmen rattled
over the driveways; the policemen, themselves, slumbered by day and
loitered majestically by night without the Casa Fuerte portals, never
suspecting. Little Birdsall had his admirable points; they were now in
evidence. To all outward seeming, a pleasant house-party was enjoying
the lavish Californian hospitality of Casa Fuerte; and Black Care was
bundled off to the closet with the family skeleton, according to the
traditions of mannerly people. Arnold had opened his garage and his
stables. There was bridge of an evening; and the billiard-balls clinked
on the pool-table. Archie could now back the electric motor into almost
any predicament. The new Chinese chef was a wonder and Tracy was
initiating him into the possibilities of the Fireless, despite a modest
shrinking on the part of the oriental artist who considered it to be a
new kind of bomb.

Millicent, encouraged by Arnold, had had Mrs. Wigglesworth and two
errant Daughters, whose husbands were state regents for Melville’s
university, to luncheon and to dinner; the versatile Kito donning a
chauffeur’s livery and motoring them back to the city in the Limousine,
on both occasions; all of which redounded to Millicent’s own proper
glory and state.

Indeed, about this time, Millicent was in high good humor with her
world. Even Janet Smith was no longer politely obliterated as “the
nurse,” but became “our dear Miss Janet”; and was presented with
two of Mrs. Melville’s last year’s Christmas gifts which she could
not contrive to use; therefore carried about for general decorative
generosity. One was a sage-green linen handkerchief case, quite fresh,
on which was etched, in brown silk, the humorous inscription: “WIPE
ME BUT DO NOT SWIPE ME!” The other was a white celluloid brush-broom
holder bedecked with azure forget-me-nots enframing a complicated
monogram which might just as well stand for J. B. B. S. (Janet Byrd
Brandon Smith) as for M. S. W. (Millicent Sears Winter) or any other
alphabetical herd. These unpretending but (considering their source)
distinguished gifts she bestowed in the kindest manner. Janet was no
doubt grateful; she embroidered half a dozen luncheon napkins with Mrs.
Melville’s monogram and crest, in sign thereof; and very prettily,
she being a skilful needle-woman. On her part, Mrs. Mellville was so
pleased that she remarked to her brother-in-law, shortly after, that
she believed Cousin Angela’s sisters hadn’t been just to Miss Smith;
she was a nice girl; and if she married (which is quite possible,
insinuated Mrs. Melville archly), she meant to give a tea in her honor.

“Now, that’s right decent of you, Millie,” cried the colonel; and he
smiled gratefully after Mrs. Melville’s beautifully fitted back. Yet a
scant five minutes before he had been pursuing that same charming back
through the garden terraces, in a most unbrotherly frame, resolved to
give his sister-in-law a “warning with a fog-horn.” The cause of said
warning was his discovery of her acquaintance with Atkins. For days
a bit of information had been blistering his mind. It came from the
girl at the telegraph office at the Palace, not in a bee-line, but
indirectly, through her chum, the girl who booked the theater tickets.
It could not be analyzed properly because the telegraph girl was gone
to Southern California. But before she went she told the theater girl
that the lady who received Mr. Makers’ wires was one of Mrs. Winter’s
party! This bit of information was like a live coal underfoot in the
colonel’s mind; whenever he trod on it in his mental excursions he
jumped.

“Who else but Janet?” he demanded. But by degrees he became first
doubtful, then daring. He had Birdsall fetch the telegraph girl back
to San Francisco. A ten minutes’ interview assured him that it was his
brother’s wife who had called for Mr. Makers’ messages, armed with Mr.
Makers’ order.

Aunt Rebecca was not nearly so vehement as he when he told her. She
listened to his angry criticism with a lurking smile and a little shrug
of her shoulders.

“Of course she has butted in, as you tersely express it, in the
language of this mannerless generation; Millicent always butts in. How
did she get acquainted with this unpleasant, assassinating, poor white
trash? My dear child, _she_ didn’t probably; he made an acquaintance
with her. He pumped her and lied to her. We know he wanted to find
out Mr. Keatcham’s abode; he may have got his clue from her; she knew
young Arnold had been to see him. There’s no telling. I only know
that in the interest of keeping a roof over our heads and having our
heads whole instead of in pieces from explosives, I butted in a few
days ago when somebody wanted Mrs. Melville Winter on the telephone.
I answered it. The person asked if I was Mrs. Melville Winter; it
was a strange man’s voice. I don’t believe in Christian Science or
theosophy or psychics, but I do believe I felt in my bones that here
was an occasion to be canny rather than conscientious. You know I
can talk like Millicent--or anybody else; so I intoned through the
telephone in her silken Anglican accents, ‘Do you want Mrs. Melville
Winter or Aunt Rebecca, _Madam_ Winter?’ I hate to be called Madam
Winter, and she knows it, but Millicent is catty, you know, and she
always calls me Madam Winter behind my back. The fellow fell into the
trap at once--recognized the voice, I dare say, and announced that
it was Mr. Makers; Mr. Atkins, who had left for Japan, had not been
able to pay his respects and say good-by; but he had left with him an
embroidered Chinese kimono for Professor Winter, whom he had admired
so much; and if it wouldn’t be too much trouble for her to pay a visit
to her friend--one of those women she had to luncheon, who’s at the
St. Francis--he would like to show her several left by Mr. Atkins, for
her to select one. Then in the most casual way, he asked after Mr.
Keatcham’s health. I believed he was improving; had had a very good
night. I fancy it didn’t please him, but he made a good pretense. Then
he went off into remarks about its being such a pity Mr. Atkins had
left Mr. Keatcham; but he was so conscientious, a Southern gentleman
I knew; yet he really thought a great deal still of Mr. Keatcham,
who had many fine qualities; only on account of the unfortunate
differences--Atkins was so proud and sensitive; he was anxious to hear,
but not for the world would he have any one know that he had inquired;
so would I be very careful not to let any one know he had asked. Of
course I would be; I promised effusively; and said I quite understood.
I think I _do_, too.”

“They are keeping tab on us through Millicent,” fumed the colonel. “I
dare say she gave it away that Arnold was visiting Keatcham at the
hotel; and it wouldn’t take Atkins long to piece out a good deal more,
especially if his spy overheard Tracy’s ’phone. Well, I shall warn
Millicent--with a fog-horn!”

The way he warned Millicent has been related. But from Millicent he
deflected to another subject--the impulse of confession being strong
upon him. He freed his mind about the stains on Cary Mercer’s cuffs;
and, when at last he sought Millicent he was in his soul praising
his aunt for a wise old woman. After justice was disarmed by his
miscomprehension of Millicent’s words, he took out his cigarette case
and began pacing the garden walks, smoking and humming a little
Spanish love song, far older than the statehood of California.

  _La noche está serena, tranquilo el aquilon;
    Tu dulce centinella te guarda el corazon.
  Y en al as de los céfiros, que vagan par doquier,
    Volando van mis suplicas, á ti, bella mujer!
    Volando van mis suplicas, á ti, bella mujer!_

  _De un corazon que te ama, recibe el tierno amor;
    No aumentes mas la llama, piedad, á an trobador.
  Y si te mueve á lastima eterno padecer,
    Como te amo, amama, bellissima mujer!
    Como te amo, amama, bellissima mujer!_[B]

The words belonged to the air which he had whistled a weary week ago.
Young Tracy came along, and caught up the air, although he was innocent
of Spanish; he had his mandolin on his arm; he proffered it to the
colonel.

“Miss Janet has been singing coon-songs to his nibs, who is really
getting almost human,” he observed affably; “well, a little patience
and interest will reveal new possibilities of the Fireless Stove! In
man or metal. Shall we get under his nibs’ window and give him the
_Bedouin Love Song_ and _I Picked Me a Lemon in the Garden of Love_ and
the Sextette from _Lucia_ and other choice selections? He seemed to be
sitting up and taking notice; let’s lift him above the sordid thoughts
of Wall Street and his plans for busting other financiers.”

The soldier gave this persiflage no answer; his own thoughts were far
from gay. He stood drinking in the beauty of the April night. The air
was wonderfully hushed and clear; and the play of the moonlight on
the great heliotrope bushes and the rose-trees, which dangled their
clusters of yellow and white over the stone parapets of the balconies,
tinted the leafage and flickered delicately over the tracery of shadow
on the gray walls. Not a cloud flecked the vast aërial landscape--only
stars beyond stars, through unfathomable depths of dim violet, and
beneath the stars a pale moon swimming low in the heavens; one could
see it between the spandrels of the arches spanning the colonnade.

“Looks like a prize night-scene on the stage, doesn’t it?” said Tracy.
“Jolly good shadows--and aren’t these walls bulging out at the bottom
bully? I used to know the right name for such architectural stunts
when I was taking Fine Arts Four--dreadful to neglect your educational
advantages and then forget all the little you didn’t neglect, ain’t it?
I say, get on to those balconies--that isn’t the right word for the
mission style, I guess; but never mind; aren’t they stunning? Do you
see the ladies up there? Is that Archie sniggering? What do you think
of the haunted house, _now_, Colonel?”

Tracy’s gay eyes sought the other’s gaze to find it turn somber.
Winter couldn’t have told why; but a sudden realization of the hideous
peril dogging the warm, lighted, tenanted house, submerged him and
suffocated him like a foul gas. Let their guards be vigilant as fear,
let their wonderful new search-light flood rock and slope and dusky
Chaparral bush; and peer as it might through the forest aisles beyond;
yet--yet--who could tell!

But he forced an equal smile in a second for the college boy; and
chatted easily enough as they climbed up the stepped arches to the
balcony and the little group looking seaward.

Aunt Rebecca in black lace and jewels was tilting with the world in
general and Millicent Winter in particular; she displayed her most
cynical mood. She had demolished democracy; had planted herself firmly
on the basic doctrine that the virtues cultivated by slavery far
outnumber its inseparable vices; and that most people, if not all,
need a master; had been picturesquely and inaccurately eloquent on the
subject of dynamite (which she pronounced the logical fourth dimension
of liberty, fraternity and equality); had put the yellow rich where
they belonged; and the red anarchists mainly under the sod; and she
had abolished the Fourth of July to the last sputter of fire-cracker;
thence by easy transitions she had extolled American art (which
American patrons were too ignorant to appreciate), deplored American
music (“The trouble isn’t that it is _canned_,” says she, “but that it
was spoiled before they canned it!”) and was now driving a chariot of
fire through American literature; as for the Academics, they never said
what they thought, but only what they thought they ought to think; and
they always mistook anemia for refinement, as another school mistook
yelling and perspiring for vigor.

Just as Winter modestly entered the arena, no less a personage than
Henry James was under the wheels. Janet Smith had modestly confessed to
believing him a consummate artist; and Millicent in an orotund voice
declared that he went deep, deep down into the mysteries of life.

“I don’t deny it; he _ought_ to get down deep,” returned Aunt Rebecca
in her gentlest, softest utterance; “he’s always boring.”

Mrs. Melville’s suppressed agitation made her stays creak.

“Do you really think that James is not a great artist?” she breathed.

“I think he is not worth while.”

“Wow!” cried Tracy. “Oh, I say--”

“Aunt Rebecca; you can not mean--” this was Mrs. Melville, choking with
horror.

“His style,” repeated the unmoved iconoclast, “his style has the
remains of great beauty; all his separate phrases, if you wish, are
gems; and he is a literary lapidary; but his sentences are so subtle,
so complex, so intricately compounded, and so discursive that I get a
pain in the back of my neck before I find out what he _may_ mean; and
then--I don’t agree with him! Now is it worth while to put in so much
hard reading only to be irritated?”

“I beg pardon,” Winter interposed, with masculine pusillanimity evading
taking sides in the question at issue, “I thought we were going to have
some music; why don’t you boys give us some college songs? Here is a
mandolin.”

Aunt Rebecca’s still luminous eyes went from the speaker to Janet
Smith in the corner. She said something about hearing the music better
from the other side of the balcony. Now (as Mrs. Millicent very truly
explained) there was not a ha’pennyworth’s difference in favor of one
side over the other; but she followed in the wake of her imperious aunt.

The colonel drew nearer to Janet Smith; in order to sink his voice
below disturbing the music-lovers he found it necessary to sit on a
pile of cushions at her feet.

“Did you know Mercer will be back to-night?” he began, a long way from
his ultimate object. He noticed that leaning back in the shadow her
ready smile had dropped from her face, which looked tired. “I want to
tell you a little story about Mercer,” he continued; “may I? It won’t
take long.”

He was aware, and it gave him a twinge of pain to see it, that she
sat up a little straighter, like one on guard; and oh, how tired her
face was and how sweet! He told her of all his suspicions of her
brother-in-law; of the blood-stains and the changing of clothes; she
did not interrupt him by a question, hardly by a motion, until he told
of the conversation with Keatcham and the note signed “The Black Hand.”
At this her eyes lighted; she exclaimed impetuously: “Cary Mercer never
_did_ send that letter!” She drew a deep intake of breath. “I don’t
believe he touched Mr. Keatcham!”

“Neither do I,” said the colonel, “but wait!” He went on to the theater
girl’s report of the receiver of the telegrams. Her hands, which
clasped her knee, fell apart; her lips parted and closed firmly.

“Did I think it was you?” said he. “Why, yes, I confess I did fear it
might be and that you might be trying to shield Atkins.”

“I!” she exclaimed hotly; “that detestable villain!”

“_Isn’t_ he?” cried the colonel. “But--well, I couldn’t tell how he
might strike a lady,” he ended lamely.

“I reckon he _would_ strike a lady if she were silly enough to marry
him and he got tired of her. He is the kind of man who will persecute a
girl to marry him, follow her around and importune her and flatter her
and then, if he should prevail, never forgive her for the bother she
has given him. Oh, I never _did_ like him; I’m afraid of him--awfully.”

“Not you?”--the colonel’s voice was cheerful, as if he had not shivered
over his own foreboding vision. “I’ve seen you in action already, you
know.”

“Not fighting bombs. I hate bombs. There are so many pieces to hit you.
You can’t run away.”

“Well, you’ll find them not so bad; besides, you _did_ fight one this
very morning, and you were cool as peppermint!”

“That was quite different; I had time to think, and the danger was more
to me than to any one else; but to think of Mrs. Winter and Archie and
y-- all of you; that scares me.”

“Now, don’t let it get on your nerves,” he soothed--of course it is
necessary to take a girl’s hand to soothe her when she is frightened.
But Miss Smith calmly released her hand, only reddening a little; and
she laughed. “Where--where were we at?” she asked in her unconscious
Southern phraseology.

“Somewhere around Atkins, I think,” said the colonel; he laughed in his
turn,--he found it easy to laugh, now that he knew how she felt toward
Atkins. “You see, after I talked with Keatcham I couldn’t make anything
but Atkins out of the whole business. But there were those stained
cuffs and his changing his clothes--”

“Yes,” said she.

“How explain? There was only one explanation: that was, that perhaps
Mercer had discovered Keatcham before we did, unconsciously spotted
his cuffs, been alarmed by our approach and hidden, lest it should be
the murderers returning. He might have wanted a chance to draw his
revolver. Say he did that way, he might foolishly pretend to enter
for the first time. If he made that mistake and then discovered the
condition of his cuffs and the spots on his knee, what would be his
natural first impulse? Why, to change them, trusting that they hadn’t
been noticed. Maybe, then, he would wash them out--”

“No,” murmured Miss Smith meekly, with a little twinkle of her eye;
“_I_ did that; he hid them. How ridiculous of me to get in such a
fright! But you know how Cary hated Mr. Keatcham; and you--no, you
don’t know the lengths that such a temperament as his will go. I did
another silly thing: I found a dagger, one of those Moorish stilettoes
that hang in the library; it was lying in the doorway. When no one
was looking I hid it and carried it off. I stuck it in one of the
flower-beds; I stuck it in the ferns; I have stuck that wretched thing
all over this yard. I didn’t dare carry it back and put it in the empty
place with the others because some one might have noticed the place.
And I didn’t dare say anything to Cary; I was right miserable.”

“So was I,” said the colonel, “thinking you were trying to protect the
murderer. But do you know what I had sense to do?”

“Go to Mrs. Winter? Oh, I _wanted_ to!”

“Exactly; and do you know what that dead game sport said to me? She
said she found those washed and ironed cuffs and the trousers neatly
cleaned with milka--what’s milka?--and the milka cleaned the spots so
much cleaner than the rest that she had her own suspicions started. But
says she, ‘Not being a plumb idiot, I went straight to Cary and he told
me the whole story--’”

“Which was like _your_ story?”

“Very near. And you see it would be _like_ Atkins to leave
incriminating testimony round loose. That is, incriminating testimony
against Mercer and Tracy. The dagger, Tracy remembers, was not in the
library; it was in the _patio_. Right to hand. Atkins must have got in
and found Mr. Keatcham on the floor in a faint. Whether he meant to
make a bargain with him or to kill him, perhaps we shall never know;
but when he saw him helpless before him he believed his chance was come
to kill him and get the cipher key, removing his enemy and making his
fortune at a blow, as the French say. _Voilà tout!_”

“Do you think”--her voice sank lower; she glanced over her
shoulder--“do you reckon _Atkins_ had anything to do with that train
robbery? Was it a mere pretext to give a chance to murder Mr. Keatcham,
fixing the blame on ordinary bandits?”

“By Jove! it might be.”

“I don’t suppose we shall ever know. But, Colonel Winter, do you mind
explaining to me just what Brother Cary’s scheme with Mr. Keatcham was?
Mrs. Winter told me you would.”

“She told _me_,” mused the colonel, “that you didn’t know anything
about this big game which has netted them millions. They’ve closed
out their deals and have the cash. No paper profits for Auntie! She
said that she would not risk your being mixed up in it; so kept you
absolutely in the dark. I’m there, too. Didn’t you know Mercer had
kidnapped Archie?”

“No; I didn’t know he was with Mr. Keatcham at the hotel. It would have
saved me a heap of suffering; but she didn’t dare let me know for fear,
if anything should happen, I would be mixed up in it. It was out of
kindness, Colonel Winter, truly it was. Afterward when she saw that I
was worried she gave me hints that I need not worry, Archie was quite
safe.”

“And the note-paper?”

“I suppose she gave it to them,” answered Miss Smith.

“And the voice I heard in the telephone?” He explained how firmly she
had halted the conversation the time Archie would have reassured him.
“You weren’t there, of course?” said he.

“No, I was down-stairs in the ladies’ entrance of the court in
the hotel; I had come in a little while before, having carried
an advertisement to the paper; I wonder why she--maybe it was to
communicate with them without risking a letter.”

“But how did _your_ voice get into my ’phone?” he asked.

She looked puzzled only a second, then laughed as he had not heard her
laugh in San Francisco--a natural, musical, merry peal, a girlish laugh
that made his heart bound.

“Why, of course,” said she, “it is so easy! There was a reporter who
insisted on interviewing Mrs. Winter about her jewelry; and I was
shooing him away. Somehow the wires must have crossed.”

“Do you remember--this is very, very pretty, don’t you think? Just like
a puzzle falling into place. Do you remember coming here on the day
Archie was returned?”

“I surely do; my head was swimming, for Mrs. Winter sent me and I began
then to suspect. She told me Brother Cary was in danger; of course I
wanted to do anything to help him; and I carried a note to him. I
didn’t go in, merely gave the note and saw him.”

“_I_ saw you.”

“You? How?”

“Birdsall and I; we were here, in the _patio_; we, my dear Miss Janet,
were the Danger! You had on a brown checked silk dress and you were
holding a wire clipper in your hand.”

“Yes, sir. I saw it on the grass and picked it up.”

She laughed a little; but directly her cheeks reddened. “What must you
have thought of me!” she murmured under her breath; and bit the lip
that would have quivered.

“I should like to tell you--_dear_,” he answered, “if you will--O Lord,
forgive young men for living! If they are not all coming back to ask me
to sing! But, Janet, dear, let me say it in Spanish--yes, _yes_ if you
really won’t be bored; throw me that mandolin.”

Aunt Rebecca leaned back in the arm-chair, faintly smiling, while the
old, old words that thousands of lovers have thrilled with pain and
hopes and dreams beyond their own power of speech and offered to their
sweethearts, rose, winged by the eternal longing:

  “_Y si te mueve á lastima mi eterno padecer,
    Como te amo, amame, bellissima mujer!
    Como te amo, amame, bellissima mujer!_”

“And what does it mean in English, Bertie?” said Mrs. Melville. “Can’t
you translate it?”

“Shall I?” said the colonel, his voice was careless enough, but not so
the eyes which looked up at Janet Smith.

“Not to-night, please,” said she. “I--I think Mr. Keatcham is expecting
me to read to him a little. Good night. Thank you, Colonel Winter.”

She was on her feet as she spoke; and Winter did not try to detain her;
he had held her hand; and he had felt its shy pressure and caught a
fleeting, frightened, very beautiful glance. His dark face paled with
the intensity of his emotion.

Janet moved away, quietly and lightly, with no break in her composure;
but as she passed Mrs. Winter she bent and kissed her. And when Archie
would have run after her a delicate jeweled hand was laid on his arm.
“Not to-night, laddie; I want you to help me down the steps.”

With her hand on the boy’s shoulder she came up to Rupert, and inclined
her handsome head in Janet’s direction. “I think, by rights, that kiss
belonged to you, _mon enfant_,” said she.




CHAPTER XVIII

CASA FUERTE


Winter would have said that he was too old a man to stay awake all
night, when he had a normal temperature; yet he saw the stars come
out and the stars fade on that fateful April night. He entered his
room at the hour when midnight brushes the pale skirts of dawn and
misguided cocks are vociferating their existence to an indifferent
world. Before he came there had been a long council with Mercer and
his aunt. Mercer, who had been successful in his mission, had barely
seen his chief for a moment before a gentle but imperious nurse ordered
him away. Winter caught a queer, abrupt laugh from the financier. The
latter beckoned to him. “See you are as obedient as I am when your time
comes,” he chuckled; and he chuckled again when both the soldier and
Miss Smith blushed over his awkward jocoseness. Yet, the next moment
he extended his hand with his formal, other-generation courtesy and
took Miss Janet’s shapely, firm fingers in his own lean and nervous
grasp. “Allow me to offer you both my sincere congratulations,” began
he, and halted, his eyes, which seemed so incurious but were so keen,
traveling from the woman’s confusion to the man’s. “I beg your pardon;
I understood--Archie who was here, gave me to understand--and I heard
you singing; you will hardly believe it, but years ago _I_ sang that to
my wife.”

“So far as I am concerned, it _is_ settled,” said the colonel steadily.

“We are all,” Keatcham continued, no longer with any trace of
embarrassment, as he touched the hand which he still held with his
own other hand, “we are all, as you know, my dear young lady, in
considerable personal peril; I regret that it should be on my account;
but it really is not my fault; it is because I will not relax my
pursuit of a great scoundrel who is dangerous to all decent people. But
being in such danger, I think you will be glad afterward if you are
generously frank, and give up something of the sex’s prerogative to
keep a lover on the anxious seat. Excuse me if--if I presume on my age
and my privileges as a patient.”

Janet lifted her sweet eyes and sent one glance as fleeting and light
as the flash of a bird’s wing. “I--I--reckon it is settled,” murmured
she; but immediately she was the nurse again. “Mr. Keatcham, you are
staying awake much too late. Here is Colvin, who will see to anything
you want. Good night.”

It was then that Mr. Keatcham had taken the colonel’s breath away by
kissing Janet’s hand; after which he shook hands with the colonel with
a strange new cordiality, and watched them both go away together with a
look on his gaunt face unlike any known to Colvin.

Only three minutes in the hall, with the moon through the arched
window; and his arm about her and the fragrance of her loosened hair
against his cheek and her voice stirring his heartstrings with an
exquisite pang. Only time for the immemorial questions of love: “Are
you sure, dear, it is really _I?_” and “When did you first--” To this
last she had answered with her half-humorous, adorable little lilt of
a laugh. “Oh, I reckon it was--a--little--all along, ever since I read
about your saving that poor little Filipino boy, like Archie; the one
who was your servant in Manila, and going hungry for him on the march
and jumping into the rapids to save him--when you were lame, too--”

Here the colonel burst in with a groan: “Oh, that monstrous newspaper
liar! The ‘dear little Filipino boy’ was a married man; and I didn’t go
hungry for him, and I didn’t jump into the river to save him. It wasn’t
more than wading depth--I only swore at him for an idiot and told him
to _walk_ out when he tipped over his boat and was floundering about.
And he _did_! He was the limit as a liar--”

To his relief, the most sensible as well as the most lovable woman in
the world had burst into a delicious fit of laughter; and returned:
“Oh, well, you _would_ have jumped in and saved him if the water had
been deep; it wasn’t _your_ fault it was shallow!” And just at this
point Mercer and Aunt Rebecca must needs come with a most unusual
premonitory racket, and Janet had fled.

Afterward had come the council. All the coil had been unraveled.
Birdsall appeared in person, as sleek, smiling and complacent over his
blunders as ever. One of his first sentences was a declaration of trust
in Miss Smith.

“I certainly went off at half-cock there,” said he amiably; “and just
because she was so awful nice I felt obliged to suspect her; but I’ve
got the real dog that killed the sheep this time; it’s sure the real
Red Wull!” It appeared that he had, of a verity, been usefully busy.
He had secured the mechanic who had given Atkins a plan of the secret
passages of Casa Fuerte. He had found the policeman who had arrested
Tracy (he swore because he was going too fast) and the magistrate
who had fined him; and not only that, he had captured the policeman,
a genuine officer, not a criminal in disguise, who had been Atkins’
instrument in kidnapping Archie. This man, whom Birdsall knew how to
terrify completely, had confessed that it was purely by chance that
Atkins had seen the boy, left outside in the motor-car. Atkins, so
he said, had pretended that the boy was a tool of some enemies of
Keatcham’s, whose secretary he was, trading, not for the only time, on
his past position. In reality, Birdsall had come to believe Atkins knew
that Keatcham was employing Mercer in his place.

“Why, he knew the old gentleman was just off quietly with Mr. Mercer
and some friends; knew they were all friendly, just as well as you
or me,” declared Birdsall. He had seen Archie on the train, for, as
the colonel remembered, he had been in the Winters’ car on the night
of the robbery. Somehow, also, Atkins had found out about Archie’s
disappearance from the hotel.

“I can’t absolutely put my finger on his information,” said Birdsall;
“but I _suspect_ Mrs. Melville Winter; I know she was talking to him,
for one of my men saw her. The lady meant no harm, but she’s one of the
kind that is always slamming the detectives and being took in by the
rascals.”

He argued that Mrs. Winter and Miss Smith knew where the boy was; for
some reason they had let him go and were pretending not to know where
he was. “Ain’t that so?” the detective appealed to Aunt Rebecca, who
merely smiled, saying: “You’re a wonder, Mr. Birdsall!” According to
Birdsall’s theory, Atkins was puzzled by Archie’s part in the affair.
But he believed could he find the boy’s present hosts he would find
Edwin Keatcham. It would not be the first time Keatcham had hidden
himself, the better to spin his web for the trapping of his rivals.
That Mercer was with his employer the ex-secretary had no manner of
doubt, any more than he doubted that Mercer’s scheme had been to
oust him and to build his own fortunes on Atkins’ ruin. He knew both
Tracy and young Arnold very well by sight. When he couldn’t frighten
Archie into telling anything, probably he went back to his first plan
of shadowing the Winter party at the Palace. He must have seen Tracy
here. He penetrated his disguise. (“He’s as sharp as the devil, I tell
you, Colonel.”) He either followed him himself or had him followed;
and he heard about the telephone. (“Somebody harking in the next room,
most likely.”) Knowing Tracy’s intimacy with Arnold it was not hard
for so clever and subtle a mind as Atkins’ to jump to the conclusion
and test it in the nearest telephone book. (“At least that is how _I_
figure it out, Colonel.”) Birdsall had traced the clever mechanic who
was interrogated by the Eastern gentleman about to build; this man
had given the lavish and inquisitive Easterner a plan of the secret
passages--to use in his own future residence. Whether Atkins went alone
or in company to the Casa Fuerte the detective could only surmise. He
couldn’t tell whether his object would be mere blackmail, or robbery
of the cipher, or assassination. Perhaps he found the insensible man
in the _patio_ and was tempted by the grisly opportunity; victim and
weapon both absolutely to his hand; for it was established that the
dagger had been shown Tracy by Mercer as a curio, and left on the
stone bench.

Perhaps he had not found the dagger, but had his own means to make
an end of his enemy and his own terror. Birdsall believed that he
had accomplices, or at least one accomplice, with him. He conceived
that they had lain in ambush watching until they saw Kito go away.
Then an entry had been made. “Most like,” Birdsall concluded, “he
jest flung that dagger away for you folks to find and suspect the
domestics, say Kito, ’cause he was away.” But this was not all that
Birdsall had to report. He had traced Atkins to the haunts of certain
unsavory Italians; he had struck the trail, in fine. To be sure, it ran
underground and was lost in the brick-walled and slimy-timbered cellars
of Chinatown which harbored every sin and crime known to civilization
or to savagery. What matter? By grace of his aunt’s powerful friend
they could track the wolves even through those noisome burrows.

“Yes,” sighed the colonel, stretching out his arms, with a resonant
breath of relief, “we’re out of the maze; all we have to do now is to
keep from being killed. Which isn’t such a plain proposition in ’Frisco
as in Massachusetts! But I reckon we can tackle it! And then--then, my
darling, I shall dare be happy!”

He found himself leaning on his window-sill and staring like a boy on
the landscape, lost in the lovely hallucinations of moonlight. It was
no scene that he knew, it was a vision of old Spain; and by and by from
yonder turret the princess, with violets in her loosened hair and her
soft cheek like satin and snow, would lean and look.

  _Y si te mueve á lastima mi eterno padecer.
    Como te amo, amame, bellissima mujer!_

“Ah, no, little girl,” he muttered with a shake of the head, “I like
it better to have you a plain, American gentlewoman, as Aunt Becky
would say, who could send me to battle with a nice little quivery
smile--_sweetheart_! Oh, I’m not good enough for you, my dear, my
dear.” He felt an immense humility as he contrasted his own lot with
the loneliness of Keatcham and Mercer and the multitude of solitaries
in the world, who had lost, or sadder still, had never possessed, the
divine dream that is the only reality of the soul. As such thoughts
moved his heart, suddenly in the full tide of hope and thankfulness,
it stood still, chilled, as if by the glimpse of an iceberg in summer
seas. Yet how absurd; it was only that he had recalled his stoical
aunt’s most unexpected touch of superstition. Quite in jest he had
asked her if she felt any presentiments or queer things in her bones
to-night. He expected to be answered that Janet had driven every other
anxiety out of her mind; and how was she to break it to Millicent?--or
with some such caustic repartee. Instead, she had replied testily:
“Yes, I _do_, Bertie. I feel--horrid! I feel as if something out of the
common awful were going to happen. It isn’t exactly Atkins, either. Do
you reckon it could be the _I Suey When_, that bamboo-shoots mess we
had for dinner?”

Although they spent a good twenty minutes after that, joking over
superstitions, and he had repeated to her some of Tracy’s and Arnold’s
most ingenious “spooky stunts,” to make the neighborhood keep its
distance from Casa Fuerte, and they had laughed freely, she as heartily
as he, nevertheless he divined that her smile was a pretense. Suddenly,
an unruly tremor shook his own firm spirits. Looking out on the stepped
and lanterned arches of the wing, he was conscious of the same tragic
endowment of the darkened pile, which had oppressed him that night,
weeks before, when he had stood outside on the crest of the hill;
and the would-be murderers might have been skulking in the shadows of
the pepper-trees. He tried vainly to shake off this distempered mood.
Although he might succeed for a moment in a lover’s absorption, it
would come again, insidiously, seeping through his happiness like a
fume. After futile attempts to sleep he rose, and still at the bidding
of his uncanny and tormenting impulse he took his bath and dressed
himself for the day. By this time the ashen tints of dawn were in his
chamber and on the fields outside. He stood looking at the unloveliest
aspect of nature, a landscape on the sunless side, before the east
is red. The air felt lifeless; there were no depths in the pale sky;
the azure was a flat tint, opaque and thin, like a poor water-color.
While he gazed the motionless trees, live-oaks and olives and palms,
were shaken as by a mighty wind; the pepper plumes tossed and streamed
and tangled like a banner; the great elms along the avenue bent over
in a breaking strain. Yet the silken cord of the Holland window-shade
did not so much as swing. There was not a wing’s breath of air. But
gradually the earth and cloud vibrated with a strange grinding noise
which has been described a hundred times, but never adequately; a
sickening crepitation, as of the rocks in the hills scraping and
splintering. Before the mind could question the sound, there succeeded
an anarchy of uproar. In it was jumbled the crash of trees and
buildings, the splintering crackle of glass, the boom of huge chimneys
falling and of vast explosions, the hiss of steam, the hurling of
timbers and bricks and masses of stone or sand, and the awful rush of
frantic water escaping from engine or main.

“’Quake, sure’s you’re born!” said the colonel softly.

Now that his invisible peril was real, was upon him, his spirits leaped
up to meet it. He looked coolly about him, noting in his single glance
that the house was standing absolutely stanch, neither reeling nor
shivering; and that the chimney just opposite his eye had not misplaced
a brick. In the same instant he caught up his revolver and ran at his
best pace from the room. The hall was firm under his hurrying feet. As
he passed the great arched opening on the western balcony he saw an
awful sight. Diagonally across from Casa Fuerte was the great house of
the California magnate who did not worry his contractor with demands
for Colonial honesty of workmanship as well as Colonial architecture.
The stately mansion with its beautiful piazzas and delicate harmony of
pillar and pediment, shone white and placid on the eye for a second;
then rocked in ghastly wise and collapsed like a house of cards.
Simultaneously a torchlike flame streamed into the air. A woeful din of
human anguish pierced the inanimate tumult of wreck and crash.

“Bully for Casa Fuerte!” cried the soldier, who now was making a
frenzied speed to the other side of the house. He cast a single glance
toward the door which he knew belonged to Janet’s room; and he thought
of the boy, but he ran first to his old aunt. He didn’t need to go the
whole way. She came out of her door, Janet and Archie at her side.
They were all perfectly calm, although in very light and semi-oriental
attire. Archie plainly had just plunged out of bed. His eyes were
dancing with excitement.

“This house is a dandy, ain’t it, Uncle Bertie?” he exclaimed. “Mr.
Arnold told me all about the way his father built it; he said it
wouldn’t bat its eye for an earthquake. It didn’t either; but that
house opposite is just kindling-wood! Say! here’s Cousin Cary;
and--look, Uncle Bertie, Mr. Keatcham has got up and he’s all dressed.
Hullo, Colvin! Don’t be scared. It’s only a ’quake!” Colvin grinned a
sickly grin and stammered, “Yes, sir, quite so, sir.” Not an earthquake
could shake Colvin out of his manners.

“Are you able to do this, Mr. Keatcham?” young Arnold called
breathlessly, plunging into the _patio_ to which they had all
instinctively gravitated. Keatcham laughed a short, grunting laugh.
“Don’t you understand, this is no little every-day ’quake? Look out! Is
there a way you can look and not see a spout of flame? I’ve got to go
down-town. Are the machines all right?”

“We must find Randall; the poor soul has a mortal terror of ’quakes--”
Aunt Rebecca’s well-bred accents were unruffled; she appeared a thought
stimulated, nothing more; danger always acted as tonic on Winter
nerves--“Archie, you go put your clothes on this minute, honey. And I
suppose we ought to look up Millicent.”

The colonel, however, had barely set foot on the threshold when Mrs.
Melville appeared, propelling Randall, whom she had rescued from the
maid’s closet where she was cowering behind her neat frocks, momently
expecting death, but decently ready for it in gown and shoes. Mrs.
Melville herself, in the disorder of the shock, had merely added her
best Paris hat and a skeleton bustle to her dainty nightgear. She had
not forgotten her kimono; she had only forgotten to don it; and it
draggled over her free arm. But her dignity was intact. The instant she
beheld her kindred she demanded of them, as if they were responsible,
whether _this_ was a sample of the Californian climate. Keatcham
blushed and fled with Colvin and the giggling Arnold and Archie, who
were too polite to giggle.

Mrs. Winter put on her eye-glasses. “Millicent,” said she in the
gentlest of tones, “your bustle is on crooked.”

One wild glance at the merciless mirror in the carved pier-glass did
Mrs. Melville give, and, then, without a word, she fled.

“Randall,” said Mrs. Winter, “you look very nice; come and help me
dress. There will most likely be some more shocks.”

Randall, trembling in every limb, but instinctively assuming a composed
mien, followed the undaunted old lady.

The colonel was going in another direction, having heard a telephone
bell. He was most anxious to put himself into communication with
Birdsall, because not even during the earthquake had he forgotten an
uglier peril; and it had occurred to him that Atkins was of a temper
not to be frightened by the convulsions of order; but rather to make
his account of it. Nor did the message through the telephone tend to
reassure him.

The man at the other end of the telephone was Birdsall. No telling how
long the telephone service would keep up, he reported; wires were down
around the corner; worse, the water mains were spouting; and from where
he stood since he felt the first shock he had counted thirty-six fires.
Ten of them were down in the quarter where some of his men had homes;
and a field-glass had shown that the houses were all tossed about
there; he couldn’t keep his men steady; it seemed inhuman to ask them
to stay when their wives and children might be dying; of course it was
his damn luck to have all married men from down there.

“Well, I reckon you will have to let them go; but watch out,” begged
the colonel, “for you know the men we are after will take advantage of
general disorder to get in their dirty work. Now is the most dangerous
time.”

Birdsall knew it; he had had intimations that some men were trying to
sneak up the hill; they had been turned back. They pretended to be
some wandering railway workers; but Birdsall distrusted them. He--No
use to ring! Vain to tap the carriage of the receiver! The telephone
was dead, jarred out of existence somewhere beyond their ken.

By this time the cold sunlight of the woefulest day that San Francisco
had ever seen was spread over the earth. The city was spotted with
blood-red spouts of flames. The ruin of the earthquake had hardly been
visible from their distance, although it was ugly enough and of real
importance; but, even in the brief space which they in Casa Fuerte
had waited before they should set forth, fires had enkindled in all
directions, most dreadful to see; nor did there seem to be any check
upon them.

Tracy had waked the domestic staff, and, dazed but stoical, they were
getting breakfast. But Keatcham could not wait; he was in a cold fury
of haste to get to the town.

He had consented to wait for his breakfast under Miss Smith’s
representation that it would be ready at once and her assurance that he
couldn’t work through the day without it.

“Happily, Archie,” explained Tracy, whose unquenchable college
levity no earthquake could affect, “happily my domestic jewel has
been stocked up with rice and oatmeal, two of the most nutritious of
foods; and Miss Janet is making coffee on her traveling coffee pot for
the Boss. That’s alcohol, and independent of gas-mains. Lucky; for
the gas-range is out of action, and we have to try charcoal. Notice
one interesting thing, Archie? Old Keatcham, whom we were fighting
tooth and nail three weeks ago, is now bossing us as ruthlessly as a
foot-ball coach; and Cousin Cary is taking his slack talk as meek as
a freshman. Great old boy, Keatcham! And--oh, I say! has any one gone
to the rescue of the Rogerses? I saw Kito speeding over that way from
the garage and Haley hiking after him. I hope the nine small yellow
domestics are not burned at the stake with Rogers; the bally fire-trap
is blazing like a tar-barrel!”

As it happened, the colonel had despatched a small party to their
neighbor’s aid. Haley and Kito were not among them; they were to guard
the garage which was too vital a point in their household economy to
leave unprotected. Nevertheless, Haley and Kito did both run away,
leaving a Mexican helper to watch; and when they returned they were
breathless and Haley’s face was covered with blood. He was carefully
carrying something covered with a carriage-robe in his hand.

“I’ve the honor to report, sir,” Haley mumbled, stiff and straight in
his military posture, a very grimy and blood-stained hand at salute,
“I’ve the honor to report, sor, that Private Kito and me discovered two
sushpicious characters making up the hillside by the sekrut road. We
purshooed thim, sor, and whin they wu’dn’t halt we fired on thim, sor,
ixploding this here bum which wint off whin the hindmost man tumbled.”

Kito smilingly flung aside the carriage-robe, disclosing the still
smoking shell of an ingenious round bomb, very similar to those used in
fireworks.

The colonel examined it closely; it was an ugly bit of dynamite craft.

“Any casualties, Sergeant?” the colonel asked grimly.

“Yes, sor. The man wid the bum was kilt be the ixplosion; the other
man was hit by Private Kito and wounded in the shoulder but escaped. I
mesilf have a confusion on me right arrum, me ankle is sprained; and
ivery tooth in me head is in me pockit! That’s all.”

“Report to Miss Smith at the hospital, Sergeant. Any further report?”

“I wu’d like to riccommind Private Kito for honorable minshun for
gallanthry.”

“I shall certainly remember him; and you also, Sergeant, in any report
that I may make. Look after the garage, Kito.”

Kito bowed and retired, beaming, while Haley hobbled into the house.
The consequences of the attack made on the garage did not appear at
once. One was that young Arnold had already brought the touring-car
into the _patio_ in the absence of Haley and Kito. Another was that
he and Tracy and Kito all repaired to the scene of the explosion to
examine the dead man’s body. They returned almost immediately, but for
a few moments there was no one of the house in the court. The colonel
went to Keatcham in a final effort to dissuade him from going into
the city until after he himself had gone to the Presidio and returned
with a guard. He represented as forcibly as he could the danger of
Keatcham’s appearance during a time of such tumult and lawlessness.

“We are down to the primeval passions now,” he pleaded. “Do you suppose
if it had been Haley instead of that dago out there who was killed
that we could have punished the murderer? Not unless we did it with
our own hands. They are maybe lying in wait at the first street-corner
now. If you will only wait--”

Keatcham chopped off his sentence without ceremony, not irritably, but
with the brusquerie of one whose time is too precious for dilatory
amenities.

“Will the _fire_ wait?” he demanded. “Will the thieves and toughs and
ruffians whom we have to crush before they realize their strength,
will _they_ wait? This is _my_ town, Winter, the only town I care a
rap for; and I propose to help save it. I can. Danger? Of course there
is danger; there is danger in every battle; but do you keep out of
battles where you belong because you may get killed? This is my affair;
if I get killed it is in the way of business, and I can’t help it! No,
Arnold, I won’t have your father’s son mixed up in my fights; you can’t
go.”

“Somebody has to run the machine, sir,” insinuated young Arnold with a
coaxing smile; “and I fancy I shouldn’t be my father’s son if I didn’t
look after my guest--not very long; he’d cut me out. Tracy is going,
too, he’s armed--”

“You are not both going,” said the colonel; “somebody with a head on
him must stay here to guard the ladies.”

He would have detailed both Tracy and Mercer; but Mercer could really
help Keatcham better than any one in any business arrangements which
might need to be made. And Keatcham plainly wished his company. Had
not the situation been so grimly serious Winter could have laughed
at the grotesque reversal of their conditions; Tracy and Arnold did
laugh; they were all taking their orders from the man who had been
their defeated prisoner a little while back. Mercer alone kept his
melancholy poise; he had obtained the aim of years; he was not sure but
his revenge was subtler and completer than he had dared to hope. Being
a zealot he was possessed by his dreams. Suppose he had converted this
relentless and tremendous power to his own way of faith; what mightn’t
he hope to accomplish? Meanwhile, so far as the business in hand was
concerned, he believed in Keatcham and in Keatcham’s methods of help;
he bowed to the innate power of the man; and he was as simply obedient
and loyal as Kito would have been to his feudal lord.

In a very brief time all the arrangements were made; the four men went
into the _patio_ to enter the touring-car. They walked up to the
empty machine. The colonel stepped into the front seat of the machine.
Something in the noise of the engine which was panting and straining
against its control, some tiny sibilant undertone which any other ear
would have missed, warned his; he bent quickly. A dark object gyrated
above the heads of the other two just mounting the long step; it landed
with a prodigious splash in the fountain, flying into a multitude of
sputtering atoms and hurling a great column of water high up in air.
Unheeding its shrieking clamor, the soldier sprang over the side of
the car, darted through the great arched doorway out upon the terrace
toward a clump of rubber-trees. He fired; again he fired.

In every catastrophe the spectators’ minds lose some parts of the
action. There are blanks to be supplied by no one. Every one of the
men and women present on that fatal morning had a different story.
Colvin was packing; he could only remember the deafening roar and
the shouting; and when he got down-stairs and saw--he turned deadly
sick; his chief impression is the backs of people and the way their
hands would shake. Janet Smith, inside, dressing Haley’s wounds, was
first warned by the tumult and cries; she as well as Archie and Haley
who were with her could see nothing until they got outside. All Mrs.
Melville saw was the glistening back of the car and Mercer stepping
into the car and instantly lurching backward. The explosion seemed
to her simultaneous with Mercer’s entering the car. But Mrs. Rebecca
Winter, who perhaps had the coolest head of all, and who was standing
on the dais of the arcade exactly opposite the car, distinctly saw
Keatcham with an amazing exertion of vigor for a man just risen from a
sick-bed, and with a kind of whirling motion, literally hurl Mercer out
of the car. She is sure of this because of one homely little detail,
sickening in its very homeliness. As he clutched Mercer Keatcham’s
soft gray hat dropped off and the light burnished the bald dome of his
head. In the space of that glance she heard a crackle and a roar and
Kito screamed in Japanese, running in from the carriage side. She can
not tell whether Tracy or Arnold reached the mangled creature on the
pavement first. Arnold only remembers how the carriage-robe flapped in
Tracy’s shaking hands before he flung it over the man. Tracy’s fair
skin was a streaky, bluish white, and his under jaw kept moving up and
down like that of a fish out of water, while he gasped, never uttering
a sound.

Young Arnold was trembling so that his hands shook when he would have
raised the wounded man. Mercer alone was composed although deathly
pale. He had the presence of mind to throw the harmless fragments of
the bomb into the fountain and to examine the interior of the car lest
there should be more of destruction hidden therein. Then he approached
the heap on the flags; but Keatcham was able to motion him away, saying
in his old voice, not softened in the least: “Don’t you do that! I’m
all in. No use. They got me. But it won’t do them any good; you boys
know that will you witnessed; it gives a fifty thousand for the arrest
and conviction or the killing of Atkins; his own cutthroats will betray
him for that. But--where’s Winter? You damn careless fools didn’t let
_him_ get hurt?”

“Shure, sor, he didn’t let himsilf git hurted,” Haley blurted out; he
had run in after Miss Smith, brandy bottle in hand; “’tis the murdering
dagoes is gettin’ hurted off there behind the big rubber-trees; I kin
see the dead legs of thim, this minnit. ’Tis a grand cool shot the
colonel is, sor.”

“Bring him in, let them go; they were only tools,” panted Keatcham
weakly; but the brandy revived him; and his lips curled in a faint
smile as Janet Smith struck a match to heat the teaspoonful of water
for her hypodermic. “Make it good and strong, give me time to say
something to Mercer and Winter--there he comes; good runners those boys
are!”

[Illustration: He kept death at bay by the sheer force of his will.
Page 368]

Tracy and Arnold, acting on a common unspoken impulse, had dashed after
Winter and were pushing him forward between them. Keatcham was nearly
spent, but he rallied to say the words in his mind. He kept death at
bay by the sheer force of his will. When Winter knelt down beside him,
with a poignant memory of another time in the same place when he had
knelt beside a seemingly dying man, and gently touched the unmarred
right hand lying on the carriage-robe, he could still form a smile
with his stiff lips and mutter: “Only thing about me isn’t in tatters;
of course you touched it and didn’t try to lift me where I’m all in
pieces. You always understood. Listen! You, too, Mercer. Winter knows
the things I’m bound to have go through. I’ve explained them to him.
You’ll be my executors and trustees? A hundred thousand a year; not too
big a salary for the work--you can do it. It’s a bigger job than the
army one, Winter. Warnebold will look after the other end. He’s narrow
but he is straight. I’ve made it worth his while. Some loose ends--it
can’t be helped now. Maybe you’ll find out there are more difficulties
in administering a big fortune than you fancied; and that it isn’t the
easiest thing in the world helping fools who can’t ... help themselves.
There are all those Tidewater idiots ... made me read about ... you’ll
have to attend to them, Mercer ... old woman in the queer clothes ...
chorus girl ... those old ladies who had one egg between them for
breakfast ... you’ll see to them all?”

“Yes,” said Mercer, looking down on the shrunken features with a look
of pain and bewilderment. “Yes, suh, I’ll do my best.”

“And--we’re even?”

“I reckon I am obliged to call it so, suh,” returned Mercer with a
long, gasping sigh, “but--my Lord! you’d better have let _me_ go!”

“Very likely,” said Keatcham dryly, “the city needs me. Well, Winter,
you must look after that. I’ve been thinking why a man throws his life
away as I did; he _has_ to, unless he’s a poltroon. He can’t count
whether he’s more useful than the one he saves ... he has simply _got_
to save him ... you were a good deal right, Winter, about not doing the
evil thing to get the good. No, it’s a bad time for me to be taken; but
it’s an honorable discharge.... Helen will be glad ... you know I’m not
a pig, Winter ... do what I tried to do ... where’s my kind nurse?”
Janet was trying by almost imperceptible movements to edge a pillow
under his shoulders; he was past turning his head, but his eyes moved
toward her. “I’ve left you ... a wedding gift ... if I lived ... given
to you; but made it safe, anyhow. Mercer?”

His voice had grown so feeble and came in such gasps from his torn
and laboring chest that Mercer bent close to his lips to hear the
struggling sentences. “Mercer,” he whispered, “I want ... just ... to
tell you ... _you didn’t convert me_!”

Thus, having made amends to his own will, having also, let us humbly
hope, made amends to that greater and wiser Will which is of more
merciful and wider vision that our weakness can comprehend, Edwin
Keatcham very willingly closed his eyes on earth.




CHAPTER XIX

EXTRACT FROM A LETTER


From Mrs. Rebecca Winter to Mrs. John S. G. Winslow,

                                                         Fairport, Iowa.

       *       *       *       *       *

And it was delightful to discover that you were so distressed about
me. I must be getting a trifle maudlin in my old age, for I have had a
lump in my throat every time I have thought of Johnny and you actually
starting out to find me; I am thankful my telegram (Please, Peggy, do
not call it a _wire_ again--to me! I loathe these verbal indolences)
reached you at Omaha in time to stop you.

Really, we have not had hardships. Thanks to Israel Putnam Arnold!
I have a very admiring gratitude for that man! In these days of
degeneracy he builded a stanch enduring house. With union labor, too! I
don’t see how he contrived to do it. Generally, when they build houses
here, they scamp the underpinning and weaken the joists and paint over
the dirt instead of washing it off; and otherwise deserve to be killed.
The unfortunate man opposite had just that kind of house, which tumbled
down and burned up, at once; but, alas! it killed some of the people in
it, not the guilty masons and carpenters.

Our chimneys have been inspected and we are now legally as well as
actually sound; but we did not suffer. We cooked out on the sidewalk,
and supplemented our cooking with young Tracy’s stove.

I told you of Janet’s engagement. Confidentially, my dear Peggy, I
am a bit responsible. They met by chance on the train; and I assure
you, although chance might have parted us, I did not let it. I clung
to Nephew Bertie. I’m sure he wondered why. I knew better than to let
him suspect. But a success you can’t share is like a rose without a
smell. So I confess to you, _I_ have made this match. But when you see
Millicent she will tell you that _she_ helped things along. She has
abused Janet like a pickpocket; but now, since she has discovered Janet
didn’t draw the Daughters’ caricature of her, she regards her as one of
the gems of the century.

We are recovering from the terrible events of which we wrote. It
is certainly a relief that Atkins is killed. He was one of the two
scoundrels who sneaked into the _patio_ and put the bombs into the
automobile. Bertie shot him. You have no doubt heard all about Mr.
Keatcham’s death. He was killed by the man whose wickedness he had
unconsciously fostered. He did not know it, but I make no doubt his
swollen fortune and the unscrupulous daring of its acquiring had a
great influence in corrupting his secretary.

And his corruption was his master’s undoing. I must say I sympathize
with young Tracy, who said last night: “I feel as if I had been put
to soak in crime! That bomb was the limit. In future, me for common
or garden virtue; it may be tame but I prefer tameness to delirium
tremens!”

I used to think that I should like to match my wits against a
first-class criminal intellect; God forgive me for the wish! I have
been matching wits for the last month; and never putting on my shoes
without looking in them for a baby bomblet or feeling a twinge of
indigestion without darkly suspecting the cook--who is really the
best creature in the world, sent Mr. Arnold by a good Chinese friend
of mine. (I had a chance to do a good turn to my friend, by the way,
during the earthquake and thus repay some of his to me.)

Archie is well and cheerful. Isn’t it like the Winter temperament
to lose its melancholy in such horrors as we have seen? Archie is
distinctly happier since he came to California. As for Janet and
Rupert--oh, well, my dear, you and Johnny _know_! The house has been
full of people, and we have had several friends of our own for a day
or two. I got a recipe for a delicious tea-cake from Mrs. Wigglesworth
of Boston. She didn’t save anything but her furs and her kimono and a
bridge set, besides what she had on; she packed her trunk with great
care and nobody would take it down-stairs. Of course she saved her bag
of jewels, which reminds me that poor Mr. Keatcham left Janet some
pearls--that is, the money for them. He was very much attached to her.

We buried him on the crest of the hill; later, when more settled times
shall come, he may take another and last journey to that huge mausoleum
where his wife and mother are buried. Poor things! it is to be hoped
they had no taste living or else that they can’t see now how hideous
and flamboyant is their last costly resting place. But if Keatcham
hadn’t a taste for the fine arts he had compensating qualities. I shall
never forget the night of his burial. It was a “wonderful great night
of stars,” as Stevenson says. A poor little tired-out clergyman, in a
bedraggled surplice, who had been reading prayers over people for the
last ten hours and was fit to drop, hurried through the service; and
the town the dead man loved was flaming miles beyond miles. About the
grave was none of his blood, none of his ancient friends, but the men
I believe he would have chosen--men who had fought him and then had
fought for him faithfully. They were haggard and spent with fighting
the fire; and they went from his burial back to days and nights of
desperate effort. He had fought and lost and yet did not lose at the
last, but won, snatching victory out of defeat as he was wont to do
all his life. The heavy burdens which have dropped from his shoulders
these others whom he chose will carry, maybe more humbly, perhaps not
so capably, but quite as courageously. And it is singular how his
influence persists, how it touches Kito and Haley, as well as the
others.

“Shure,” said honest Haley (whose wit you are likely to sample in the
near future, for he has elected to be the Rupert Winters’ chauffeur;
they don’t know it yet, but they _will_ when it is time); “shure,” says
he, “whin thot man so mashed up there ye cudn’t move him for fear ye’d
lose the main parrt of him, whin _he_ was thinkin’ of the town and
nothin’ else, I hadn’t the heart to be complainin’ for the loss of a
few teeth and a few limps about me! An’ I fair wu’ked like the divil.
So did Kito, who’s a dacint Jap gintleman and no haythin at all.”

Poor Keatcham, he had no childhood and his wife died too soon to
revive the fragrance of his youth; but I can’t help but think he had
a reticent, awkward, shy sort of heart somewhere about him. Well, he
was what Millicent would call “a compelling personality.” I use plain
language and I call him a great man. He won the lion’s share because
he was the lion. And yet, poor Lion, his share was a lonely life and a
tragic death.


THE END


FOOTNOTES:


[A] Of course, no allusions are made to any real M. 20139.

[B]   So still and calm the night is,
        The very winds asleep,
      My heart’s so tender sentinel
        His watch and ward doth keep.
      And on the wings of zephyrs soft
        That wander how they will,
        To thee, O woman fair, to thee
        My prayers go fluttering still.

      Oh, take the heart’s love to thy heart
        Of one that doth adore!
      Have pity, add not to the flame
        That burns thy troubadour!
      And if compassion stirs thy breast
        For my eternal woe,
        Oh, as I love thee, loveliest
        Of women, love me so!



TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:


  Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.

  Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.

  Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.

  Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.