Kate found her sister, as the stranger
had intimated, fully prepared. A hasty inventory
of provisions and means of subsistence showed that
they had ample resources for a much longer isolation.
“They tell me it is by no means
an uncommon case, Kate; somebody over at somebody’s
place was snowed in for four weeks, and now it appears
that even the Summit House is not always accessible.
John ought to have known it when he bought the place;
in fact, I was ashamed to admit that he did not.
But that is like John to prefer his own theories to
the experience of others. However, I don’t
suppose we should even notice the privation except
for the mails. It will be a lesson to John, though.
As Mr. Lee says, he is on the outside, and can probably
go wherever he likes from the Summit except to come
here.”
“Mr. Lee?” echoed Kate.
“Yes, the wounded one; and the
other’s name is Falkner. I asked them in
order that you might be properly introduced. There
were very respectable Falkners in Charlestown, you
remember; I thought you might warm to the name, and
perhaps trace the connection, now that you are such
good friends. It’s providential they are
here, as we haven’t got a horse or a man in
the place since Manuel disappeared, though Mr. Falkner
says he can’t be far away, or they would have
met him on the trail if he had gone towards the Summit.”
“Did they say anything more of Manuel?”
“Nothing; though I am inclined
to agree with you that he isn’t trustworthy.
But that again is the result of John’s idea of
employing native skill at the expense of retaining
native habits.”
The evening closed early, and with
no diminution in the falling rain and rising wind.
Falkner kept his word, and unostentatiously performed
the out-door work in the barn and stables, assisted
by the only Chinese servant remaining, and under the
advice and supervision of Kate. Although he seemed
to understand horses, she was surprised to find that
he betrayed a civic ignorance of the ordinary details
of the farm and rustic household. It was quite
impossible that she should retain her distrustful
attitude, or he his reserve in their enforced companionship.
They talked freely of subjects suggested by the situation,
Falkner exhibiting a general knowledge and intuition
of things without parade or dogmatism. Doubtful
of all versatility as Kate was, she could not help
admitting to herself that his truths were none the
less true for their quantity or that he got at them
without ostentatious processes. His talk certainly
was more picturesque than her brother’s, and
less subduing to her faculties. John had always
crushed her.
When they returned to the house he
did not linger in the parlor or sitting-room, but
at once rejoined his friend. When dinner was ready
in the dining-room, a little more deliberately arranged
and ornamented than usual, the two women were somewhat
surprised to receive an excuse from Falkner, begging
them to allow him for the present to take his meals
with the patient, and thus save the necessity of another
attendant.
“It is all shyness, Kate,”
said Mrs. Hale, confidently, “and must not be
permitted for a moment.”
“I’m sure I should be
quite willing to stay with the poor boy myself,”
said Mrs. Scott, simply, “and take Mr. Falkner’s
place while he dines.”
“You are too willing, mother,”
said Mrs. Hale, pertly, “and your ’poor
boy,’ as you call him, will never see thirty-five
again.”
“He will never see any other
birthday!” retorted her mother, “unless
you keep him more quiet. He only talks when you’re
in the room.”
“He wants some relief to his
friend’s long face and moustachios that make
him look prematurely in mourning,” said Mrs.
Hale, with a slight increase of animation. “I
don’t propose to leave them too much together.
After dinner we’ll adjourn to their room and
lighten it up a little. You must come, Kate,
to look at the patient, and counteract the baleful
effects of my frivolity.”
Mrs. Hale’s instincts were truer
than her mother’s experience; not only that
the wounded man’s eyes became brighter under
the provocation of her presence, but it was evident
that his naturally exuberant spirits were a part of
his vital strength, and were absolutely essential to
his quick recovery. Encouraged by Falkner’s
grave and practical assistance, which she could not
ignore, Kate ventured to make an examination of Lee’s
wound. Even to her unpractised eye it was less
serious than at first appeared. The great loss
of blood had been due to the laceration of certain
small vessels below the knee, but neither artery nor
bone was injured. A recurrence of the haemorrhage
or fever was the only thing to be feared, and these
could be averted by bandaging, repose, and simple
nursing.
The unfailing good humor of the patient
under this manipulation, the quaint originality of
his speech, the freedom of his fancy, which was, however,
always controlled by a certain instinctive tact, began
to affect Kate nearly as it had the others. She
found herself laughing over the work she had undertaken
in a pure sense of duty; she joined in the hilarity
produced by Lee’s affected terror of her surgical
mania, and offered to undo the bandages in search
of the thimble he declared she had left in the wound
with a view to further experiments.
“You ought to broaden your practice,”
he suggested. “A good deal might be made
out of Ned and a piece of soap left carelessly on the
first step of the staircase, while mountains of surgical
opportunities lie in a humble orange peel judiciously
exposed. Only I warn you that you wouldn’t
find him as docile as I am. Decoyed into a snow-drift
and frozen, you might get some valuable experiences
in resuscitation by thawing him.”
“I fancied you had done that
already, Kate,” whispered Mrs. Hale.
“Freezing is the new suggestion
for painless surgery,” said Lee, coming to Kate’s
relief with ready tact, “only the knowledge should
be more generally spread. There was a man up
at Strawberry fell under a sledge-load of wood in
the snow. Stunned by the shock, he was slowly
freezing to death, when, with a tremendous effort,
he succeeded in freeing himself all but his right
leg, pinned down by a small log. His axe happened
to have fallen within reach, and a few blows on the
log freed him.”
“And saved the poor fellow’s
life,” said Mrs. Scott, who was listening with
sympathizing intensity.
“At the expense of his left
leg, which he had unknowingly cut off under the
pleasing supposition that it was a log,” returned
Lee demurely.
Nevertheless, in a few moments he
managed to divert the slightly shocked susceptibilities
of the old lady with some raillery of himself, and
did not again interrupt the even good-humored communion
of the party. The rain beating against the windows
and the fire sparkling on the hearth seemed to lend
a charm to their peculiar isolation, and it was not
until Mrs. Scott rose with a warning that they were
trespassing upon the rest of their patient that they
discovered that the evening had slipped by unnoticed.
When the door at last closed on the bright, sympathetic
eyes of the two young women and the motherly benediction
of the elder, Falkner walked to the window, and remained
silent, looking into the darkness. Suddenly he
turned bitterly to his companion.
“This is just h-ll, George.”
George Lee, with a smile on his boyish face, lazily
moved his head.
“I don’t know! If
it wasn’t for the old woman, who is the one solid
chunk of absolute goodness here, expecting nothing,
wanting nothing, it would be good fun enough!
These two women, cooped up in this house, wanted excitement.
They’ve got it! That man Hale wanted to
show off by going for us; he’s had his chance,
and will have it again before I’ve done with
him. That d d fool of a messenger wanted
to go out of his way to exchange shots with me; I
reckon he’s the most satisfied of the lot!
I don’t know why you should growl.
You did your level best to get away from here, and
the result is, that little Puritan is ready to worship
you.”
“Yes but this playing it on them George this ”
“Who’s playing it? Not you; I see
you’ve given away our names already.”
“I couldn’t lie, and they know nothing
by that.”
“Do you think they would be
happier by knowing it? Do you think that soft
little creature would be as happy as she was to-night
if she knew that her husband had been indirectly the
means of laying me by the heels here? Where is
the swindle? This hole in my leg? If you
had been five minutes under that girl’s d d
sympathetic fingers you’d have thought it was
genuine. Is it in our trying to get away?
Do you call that ten-feet drift in the pass a swindle?
Is it in the chance of Hale getting back while we’re
here? That’s real enough, isn’t it?
I say, Ned, did you ever give your unfettered intellect
to the contemplation of that?”
Falkner did not reply. There
was an interval of silence, but he could see from
the movement of George’s shoulders that he was
shaking with suppressed laughter.
“Fancy Mrs. Hale archly introducing
her husband! My offering him a chair, but being
all the time obliged to cover him with a derringer
under the bedclothes. Your rushing in from your
peaceful pastoral pursuits in the barn, with a pitchfork
in one hand and the girl in the other, and dear old
mammy sympathizing all round and trying to make everything
comfortable.”
“I should not be alive to see
it, George,” said Falkner gloomily.
“You’d manage to pitchfork
me and those two women on Hale’s horse and ride
away; that’s what you’d do, or I don’t
know you! Look here, Ned,” he added more
seriously, “the only swindling was our bringing
that note here. That was your idea.
You thought it would remove suspicion, and as you
believed I was bleeding to death you played that game
for all it was worth to save me. You might have
done what I asked you to do propped me
up in the bushes, and got away yourself. I was
good for a couple of shots yet, and after that what
mattered? That night, the next day, the next
time I take the road, or a year hence? It will
come when it will come, all the same!”
He did not speak bitterly, nor relax
his smile. Falkner, without speaking, slid his
hand along the coverlet. Lee grasped it, and their
hands remained clasped together for a few minutes in
silence.
“How is this to end? We
cannot go on here in this way,” said Falkner
suddenly.
“If we cannot get away it must
go on. Look here, Ned. I don’t reckon
to take anything out of this house that I didn’t
bring in it, or isn’t freely offered to me;
yet I don’t otherwise, you understand, intend
making myself out a d d bit better than
I am. That’s the only excuse I have for
not making myself out just what I am.
I don’t know the fellow who’s obliged
to tell every one the last company he was in, or the
last thing he did! Do you suppose even these
pretty little women tell us their whole story?
Do you fancy that this St. John in the wilderness is
canonized in his family? Perhaps, when I take
the liberty to intrude in his affairs, as he has in
mine, he’d see he isn’t. I don’t
blame you for being sensitive, Ned. It’s
natural. When a man lives outside the revised
statutes of his own State he is apt to be awfully fine
on points of etiquette in his own household.
As for me, I find it rather comfortable here.
The beds of other people’s making strike me as
being more satisfactory than my own. Good-night.”
In a few moments he was sleeping the
peaceful sleep of that youth which seemed to be his
own dominant quality. Falkner stood for a little
space and watched him, following the boyish lines
of his cheek on the pillow, from the shadow of the
light brown lashes under his closed lids to the lifting
of his short upper lip over his white teeth, with his
regular respiration. Only a sharp accenting of
the line of nostril and jaw and a faint depression
of the temple betrayed his already tried manhood.
The house had long sunk to repose
when Falkner returned to the window, and remained
looking out upon the storm. Suddenly he extinguished
the light, and passing quickly to the bed laid his
hand upon the sleeper. Lee opened his eyes instantly.
“Are you awake?”
“Perfectly.”
“Somebody is trying to get into the house!”
“Not him, eh?” said Lee gayly.
“No; two men. Mexicans, I think. One
looks like Manuel.”
“Ah,” said Lee, drawing himself up to
a sitting posture.
“Well?”
“Don’t you see? He believes the women
are alone.”
“The dog d d hound!”
“Speak respectfully of one of
my people, if you please, and hand me my derringer.
Light the candle again, and open the door. Let
them get in quietly. They’ll come here
first. It’s his room, you understand,
and if there’s any money it’s here.
Anyway, they must pass here to get to the women’s
rooms. Leave Manuel to me, and you take care of
the other.”
“I see.”
“Manuel knows the house, and
will come first. When he’s fairly in the
room shut the door and go for the other. But no
noise. This is just one of the SW-EETEST things
out if it’s done properly.”
“But you, George?”
“If I couldn’t manage
that fellow without turning down the bedclothes I’d
kick myself. Hush. Steady now.”
He lay down and shut his eyes as if
in natural repose. Only his right hand, carelessly
placed under his pillow, closed on the handle of his
pistol. Falkner quietly slipped into the passage.
The light of the candle faintly illuminated the floor
and opposite wall, but left it on either side in pitchy
obscurity.
For some moments the silence was broken
only by the sound of the rain without. The recumbent
figure in bed seemed to have actually succumbed to
sleep. The multitudinous small noises of a house
in repose might have been misinterpreted by ears less
keen than the sleeper’s; but when the apparent
creaking of a far-off shutter was followed by the sliding
apparition of a dark head of tangled hair at the door,
Lee had not been deceived, and was as prepared as
if he had seen it. Another step, and the figure
entered the room. The door closed instantly behind
it. The sound of a heavy body struggling against
the partition outside followed, and then suddenly
ceased.
The intruder turned, and violently
grasped the handle of the door, but recoiled at a
quiet voice from the bed.
“Drop that, and come here.”
He started back with an exclamation.
The sleeper’s eyes were wide open; the sleeper’s
extended arm and pistol covered him.
“Silence! or I’ll let that candle shine
through you!”
“Yes, captain!” growled
the astounded and frightened half-breed. “I
didn’t know you were here.”
Lee raised himself, and grasped the
long whip in his left hand and whirled it round his
head.
“Will you dry up?”
The man sank back against the wall in silent terror.
“Open that door now softly.”
Manuel obeyed with trembling fingers.
“Ned” said Lee in a low voice, “bring
him in here quick.”
There was a slight rustle, and Falkner
appeared, backing in another gasping figure, whose
eyes were starting under the strong grasp of the captor
at his throat.
“Silence,” said Lee, “all of you.”
There was a breathless pause.
The sound of a door hesitatingly opened in the passage
broke the stillness, followed by the gentle voice of
Mrs. Scott.
“Is anything the matter?”
Lee made a slight gesture of warning
to Falkner, of menace to the others. “Everything’s
the matter,” he called out cheerily. “Ned’s
managed to half pull down the house trying to get at
something from my saddle-bags.”
“I hope he has not hurt himself,” broke
in another voice mischievously.
“Answer, you clumsy villain,” whispered
Lee, with twinkling eyes.
“I’m all right, thank
you,” responded Falkner, with unaffected awkwardness.
There was a slight murmuring of voices,
and then the door was heard to close. Lee turned
to Falkner.
“Disarm that hound and turn
him loose outside, and make no noise. And you,
Manuel! tell him what his and your chances are if he
shows his black face here again.”
Manuel cast a single, terrified, supplicating
glance, more suggestive than words, at his confederate,
as Falkner shoved him before him from the room.
The next moment they were silently descending the stairs.
“May I go too, captain?”
entreated Manuel. “I swear to God ”
“Shut the door!” The man obeyed.
“Now, then,” said Lee,
with a broad, gratified smile, laying down his whip
and pistol within reach, and comfortably settling the
pillows behind his back, “we’ll have a
quiet confab. A sort of old-fashioned talk, eh?
You’re not looking well, Manuel. You’re
drinking too much again. It spoils your complexion.”
“Let me go, captain,”
pleaded the man, emboldened by the good-humored voice,
but not near enough to notice a peculiar light in the
speaker’s eye.
“You’ve only just come,
Manuel; and at considerable trouble, too. Well,
what have you got to say? What’s all this
about? What are you doing here?”
The captured man shuffled his feet
nervously, and only uttered an uneasy laugh of coarse
discomfiture.
“I see. You’re bashful.
Well, I’ll help you along. Come! You
knew that Hale was away and these women were here
without a man to help them. You thought you’d
find some money here, and have your own way generally,
eh?”
The tone of Lee’s voice inspired
him to confidence; unfortunately, it inspired him
with familiarity also.
“I reckoned I had the right
to a little fun on my own account, cap. I reckoned
ez one gentleman in the profession wouldn’t interfere
with another gentleman’s little game,”
he continued coarsely.
“Stand up.”
“Wot for?”
“Up, I say!”
Manuel stood up and glanced at him.
“Utter a cry that might frighten
these women, and by the living God they’ll rush
in here only to find you lying dead on the floor of
the house you’d have polluted.”
He grasped the whip and laid the lash
of it heavily twice over the ruffian’s shoulders.
Writhing in suppressed agony, the man fell imploringly
on his knees.
“Now, listen!” said Lee,
softly twirling the whip in the air. “I
want to refresh your memory. Did you ever learn,
when you were with me before I was obliged
to kick you out of gentlemen’s company to
break into a private house? Answer!”
“No,” stammered the wretch.
“Did you ever learn to rob a
woman, a child, or any but a man, and that face to
face?”
“No,” repeated Manuel.
“Did you ever learn from me
to lay a finger upon a woman, old or young, in anger
or kindness?”
“No.”
“Then, my poor Manuel, it’s
as I feared; civilization has ruined you. Farming
and a simple, bucolic life have perverted your morals.
So you were running off with the stock and that mustang,
when you got stuck in the snow; and the luminous idea
of this little game struck you? Eh? That
was another mistake, Manuel; I never allowed you to
think when you were with me.”
“No, captain.”
“Who’s your friend?”
“A d d cowardly nigger from the Summit.”
“I agree with you for once;
but he hasn’t had a very brilliant example.
Where’s he gone now?”
“To h-ll, for all I care!”
“Then I want you to go with
him. Listen. If there’s a way out of
the place, you know it or can find it. I give
you two days to do it you and he.
At the end of that time the order will be to shoot
you on sight. Now take off your boots.”
The man’s dark face visibly
whitened, his teeth chattered in superstitious terror.
“I’m not going to shoot
you now,” said Lee, smiling, “so you will
have a chance to die with your boots on, if you are
superstitious. I only want you to exchange them
for that pair of Hale’s in the corner. The
fact is I have taken a fancy to yours. That fashion
of wearing the stockings outside strikes me as one
of the neatest things out.”
“To die with
one’s boots on.” A synonym for death
by
violence, popular among
Southwestern desperadoes, and the
subject of superstitious
dread.
Manuel suddenly drew off his boots
with their muffled covering, and put on the ones designated.
“Now open the door.”
He did so. Falkner was already
waiting at the threshold, “Turn Manuel loose
with the other, Ned, but disarm him first. They
might quarrel. The habit of carrying arms, Manuel,”
added Lee, as Falkner took a pistol and bowie-knife
from the half-breed, “is of itself provocative
of violence, and inconsistent with a bucolic and pastoral
life.”
When Falkner returned he said hurriedly
to his companion, “Do you think it wise, George,
to let those hell-hounds loose? Good God!
I could scarcely let my grip of his throat go, when
I thought of what they were hunting.”
“My dear Ned,” said Lee,
luxuriously ensconcing himself under the bedclothes
again with a slight shiver of delicious warmth, “I
must warn you against allowing the natural pride of
a higher walk to prejudice you against the general
level of our profession. Indeed, I was quite struck
with the justice of Manuel’s protest that I was
interfering with certain rude processes of his own
towards results aimed at by others.”
“George!” interrupted Falkner, almost
savagely.
“Well. I admit it’s
getting rather late in the evening for pure philosophical
inquiry, and you are tired. Practically, then,
it was wise to let them get away before they
discovered two things. One, our exact relations
here with these women; and the other, how many
of us were here. At present they think we are
three or four in possession and with the consent of
the women.”
“The dogs!”
“They are paying us the highest
compliment they can conceive of by supposing us cleverer
scoundrels than themselves. You are very unjust,
Ned.”
“If they escape and tell their story?”
“We shall have the rare pleasure
of knowing we are better than people believe us.
And now put those boots away somewhere where we can
produce them if necessary, as evidence of Manuel’s
evening call. At present we’ll keep the
thing quiet, and in the early morning you can find
out where they got in and remove any traces they have
left. It is no use to frighten the women.
There’s no fear of their returning.”
“And if they get away?”
“We can follow in their tracks.”
“If Manuel gives the alarm?”
“With his burglarious boots
left behind in the house? Not much! Good-night,
Ned. Go to bed.”
With these words Lee turned on his
side and quietly resumed his interrupted slumber.
Falkner did not, however, follow this sensible advice.
When he was satisfied that his friend was sleeping
he opened the door softly and looked out. He
did not appear to be listening, for his eyes were
fixed upon a small pencil of light that stole across
the passage from the foot of Kate’s door.
He watched it until it suddenly disappeared, when,
leaving the door partly open, he threw himself on
his couch without removing his clothes. The slight
movement awakened the sleeper, who was beginning to
feel the accession of fever. He moved restlessly.
“George,” said Falkner, softly.
“Yes.”
“Where was it we passed that
old Mission Church on the road one dark night, and
saw the light burning before the figure of the Virgin
through the window?”
There was a moment of crushing silence.
“Does that mean you’re wanting to light
the candle again?”
“No.”
“Then don’t lie there
inventing sacrilegious conundrums, but go to sleep.”
Nevertheless, in the morning his fever
was slightly worse. Mrs. Hale, offering her condolence,
said, “I know that you have not been resting
well, for even after your friend met with that mishap
in the hall, I heard your voices, and Kate says your
door was open all night. You have a little fever
too, Mr. Falkner.”
George looked curiously at Falkner’s
pale face it was burning.