The Widow Wade was standing at her
bedroom window staring out, in that vague instinct
which compels humanity in moments of doubt and perplexity
to seek this change of observation or superior illumination.
Not that Mrs. Wade’s disturbance was of a serious
character. She had passed the acute stage of
widowhood by at least two years, and the slight redness
of her soft eyelids as well as the droop of her pretty
mouth were merely the recognized outward and visible
signs of the grievously minded religious community
in which she lived. The mourning she still wore
was also partly in conformity with the sad-colored
garments of her neighbors, and the necessities of
the rainy season. She was in comfortable circumstances,
the mistress of a large ranch in the valley, which
had lately become more valuable by the extension of
a wagon road through its centre. She was simply
worrying whether she should go to a “sociable”
ending with “a dance” a daring
innovation of some strangers at the new
hotel, or continue to eschew such follies, that were,
according to local belief, unsuited to “a vale
of tears.”
Indeed at this moment the prospect
she gazed abstractedly upon seemed to justify that
lugubrious description. The Santa Ana Valley a
long monotonous level was dimly visible
through moving curtains of rain or veils of mist,
to the black mourning edge of the horizon, and had
looked like that for months. The valley in
some remote epoch an arm of the San Francisco Bay every
rainy season seemed to be trying to revert to its
original condition, and, long after the early spring
had laid on its liberal color in strips, bands, and
patches of blue and yellow, the blossoms of mustard
and lupine glistened like wet paint. Nevertheless
on that rich alluvial soil Nature’s tears seemed
only to fatten the widow’s acres and increase
her crops. Her neighbors, too, were equally prosperous.
Yet for six months of the year the recognized expression
of Santa Ana was one of sadness, and for the other
six months of resignation. Mrs. Wade
had yielded early to this influence, as she had to
others, in the weakness of her gentle nature, and partly
as it was more becoming the singular tragedy that
had made her a widow.
The late Mr. Wade had been found dead
with a bullet through his head in a secluded part
of the road over Heavy Tree Hill in Sonora County.
Near him lay two other bodies, one afterwards identified
as John Stubbs, a resident of the Hill, and probably
a traveling companion of Wade’s, and the other
a noted desperado and highwayman, still masked, as
at the moment of the attack. Wade and his companion
had probably sold their lives dearly, and against
odds, for another mask was found on the ground, indicating
that the attack was not single-handed, and as Wade’s
body had not yet been rifled, it was evident that the
remaining highwayman had fled in haste. The hue
and cry had been given by apparently the only one
of the travelers who escaped, but as he was hastening
to take the overland coach to the East at the time,
his testimony could not be submitted to the coroner’s
deliberation. The facts, however, were sufficiently
plain for a verdict of willful murder against the
highwayman, although it was believed that the absent
witness had basely deserted his companion and left
him to his fate, or, as was suggested by others, that
he might even have been an accomplice. It was
this circumstance which protracted comment on the incident,
and the sufferings of the widow, far beyond that rapid
obliteration which usually overtook such affairs in
the feverish haste of the early days. It caused
her to remove to Santa Ana, where her old father had
feebly ranched a “quarter section” in
the valley. He survived her husband only a few
months, leaving her the property, and once more in
mourning. Perhaps this continuity of woe endeared
her to a neighborhood where distinctive ravages of
diphtheria or scarlet fever gave a kind of social
preeminence to any household, and she was so sympathetically
assisted by her neighbors in the management of the
ranch that, from an unkempt and wasteful wilderness,
it became paying property. The slim, willowy
figure, soft red-lidded eyes, and deep crape of “Sister
Wade” at church or prayer-meeting was grateful
to the soul of these gloomy worshipers, and in time
she herself found that the arm of these dyspeptics
of mind and body was nevertheless strong and sustaining.
Small wonder that she should hesitate to-night about
plunging into inconsistent, even though trifling,
frivolities.
But apart from this superficial reason,
there was another instinctive one deep down in the
recesses of Mrs. Wade’s timid heart which she
had kept to herself, and indeed would have tearfully
resented had it been offered by another. The
late Mr. Wade had been, in fact, a singular example
of this kind of frivolous existence carried to a man-like
excess. Besides being a patron of amusements,
Mr. Wade gambled, raced, and drank. He was often
home late, and sometimes not at all. Not that
this conduct was exceptional in the “roaring
days” of Heavy Tree Hill, but it had given Mrs.
Wade perhaps an undue preference for a less certain,
even if a more serious life. His tragic death
was, of course, a kind of martyrdom, which exalted
him in the feminine mind to a saintly memory; yet
Mrs. Wade was not without a certain relief in that.
It was voiced, perhaps crudely, by the widow of Abner
Drake in a visit of condolence to the tearful Mrs.
Wade a few days after Wade’s death. “It’s
a vale o’ sorrow, Mrs. Wade,” said the
sympathizer, “but it has its ups and downs,
and I recken ye’ll be feelin’ soon
pretty much as I did about Abner when he was
took. It was mighty soothin’ and comfortin’
to feel that whatever might happen now, I always knew
just whar Abner was passin’ his nights.”
Poor slim Mrs. Wade had no disquieting sense of humor
to interfere with her reception of this large truth,
and she accepted it with a burst of reminiscent tears.
A long volleying shower had just passed
down the level landscape, and was followed by a rolling
mist from the warm saturated soil like the smoke of
the discharge. Through it she could see a faint
lightening of the hidden sun, again darkening through
a sudden onset of rain, and changing as with her conflicting
doubts and resolutions. Thus gazing, she was
vaguely conscious of an addition to the landscape in
the shape of a man who was passing down the road with
a pack on his back like the tramping “prospectors”
she had often seen at Heavy Tree Hill. That memory
apparently settled her vacillating mind; she determined
she would not go to the dance. But as she
was turning away from the window a second figure,
a horseman, appeared in another direction by a cross-road,
a shorter cut through her domain. This she had
no difficulty in recognizing as one of the strangers
who were getting up the dance. She had noticed
him at church on the previous Sunday. As he passed
the house he appeared to be gazing at it so earnestly
that she drew back from the window lest she should
be seen. And then, for no reason whatever, she
changed her mind once more, and resolved to go to the
dance. Gravely announcing this fact to the wife
of her superintendent who kept house with her in her
loneliness, she thought nothing more about it.
She should go in her mourning, with perhaps the addition
of a white collar and frill.
It was evident, however, that Santa
Ana thought a good deal more than she did of this
new idea, which seemed a part of the innovation already
begun by the building up of the new hotel. It
was argued by some that as the new church and new
schoolhouse had been opened by prayer, it was only
natural that a lighter festivity should inaugurate
the opening of the hotel. “I reckon that
dancin’ is about the next thing to travelin’
for gettin’ up an appetite for refreshments,
and that’s what the landlord is kalkilatin’
to sarve,” was the remark of a gloomy but practical
citizen on the veranda of “The Valley Emporium.”
“That’s so,” rejoined a bystander;
“and I notice on that last box o’ pills
I got for chills the directions say that a little
’agreeable exercise’ not too
violent is a great assistance to the working
o’ the pills.”
“I reckon that that Mr. Brooks
who’s down here lookin’ arter mill property,
got up the dance. He’s bin round town canvassin’
all the women folks and drummin’ up likely gals
for it. They say he actooally sent an invite
to the Widder Wade,” remarked another lounger.
“Gosh! he’s got cheek!”
“Well, gentlemen,” said
the proprietor judicially, “while we don’t
intend to hev any minin’ camp fandangos
or ’Frisco falals round Santa Any (Santa
Ana was proud of its simple agricultural virtues) I
ain’t so hard-shelled as not to give new things
a fair trial. And, after all, it’s the
women folk that has the say about it. Why, there’s
old Miss Ford sez she hasn’t kicked a fût
sence she left Mizoori, but wouldn’t mind trying
it agin. Ez to Brooks takin’ that trouble well,
I suppose it’s along o’ his bein’
healthy!” He heaved a deep dyspeptic sigh,
which was faintly echoed by the others. “Why,
look at him now, ridin’ round on that black
hoss o’ his, in the wet since daylight and not
carin’ for blind chills or rhumatiz!”
He was looking at a serape-draped
horseman, the one the widow had seen on the previous
night, who was now cantering slowly up the street.
Seeing the group on the veranda, he rode up, threw
himself lightly from his saddle, and joined them.
He was an alert, determined, good-looking fellow of
about thirty-five, whose smooth, smiling face hardly
commended itself to Santa Ana, though his eyes were
distinctly sympathetic. He glanced at the depressed
group around him and became ominously serious.
“When did it happen?” he asked gravely.
“What happen?” said the nearest bystander.
“The Funeral, Flood, Fight, or Fire. Which
of the four F’s was it?”
“What are ye talkin’ about?”
said the proprietor stiffly, scenting some dangerous
humor.
“You,” said Brooks
promptly. “You’re all standing here,
croaking like crows, this fine morning. I passed
your farm, Johnson, not an hour ago; the wheat
just climbing out of the black adobe mud as thick as
rows of pins on paper what have you
to grumble at? I saw your stock, Briggs,
over on Two-Mile Bottom, waddling along, fat as the
adobe they were sticking in, their coats shining like
fresh paint what’s the matter with
you? And,” turning to the proprietor,
“there’s your shed, Saunders, over
on the creek, just bursting with last year’s
grain that you know has gone up two hundred per cent.
since you bought it at a bargain what are
you growling at? It’s enough to provoke
a fire or a famine to hear you groaning and
take care it don’t, some day, as a lesson to
you.”
All this was so perfectly true of
the prosperous burghers that they could not for a
moment reply. But Briggs had recourse to what
he believed to be a retaliatory taunt.
“I heard you’ve been askin’
Widow Wade to come to your dance,” he said,
with a wink at the others. “Of course she
said ‘Yes.’”
“Of course she did,” returned
Brooks coolly. “I’ve just got her
note.”
“What?” ejaculated the
three men together. “Mrs. Wade comin’?”
“Certainly! Why shouldn’t
she? And it would do you good to come too,
and shake the limp dampness out o’ you,”
returned Brooks, as he quietly remounted his horse
and cantered away.
“Darned ef I don’t think
he’s got his eye on the widder,” said Johnson
faintly.
“Or the quarter section,” added Briggs
gloomily.
For all that, the eventful evening
came, with many lights in the staring, undraped windows
of the hotel, coldly bright bunting on the still damp
walls of the long dining-room, and a gentle downpour
from the hidden skies above. A close carryall
was especially selected to bring Mrs. Wade and her
housekeeper. The widow arrived, looking a little
slimmer than usual in her closely buttoned black dress,
white collar and cuffs, very glistening in eye and
in hair, whose glossy black ringlets were
perhaps more elaborately arranged than was her custom, and
with a faint coming and going of color, due perhaps
to her agitation at this tentative reentering into
worldly life, which was nevertheless quite virginal
in effect. A vague solemnity pervaded the introductory
proceedings, and a singular want of sociability was
visible in the “sociable” part of the
entertainment. People talked in whispers or with
that grave precision which indicates good manners in
rural communities; conversed painfully with other
people whom they did not want to talk to rather than
appear to be alone, or rushed aimlessly together like
water drops, and then floated in broken, adherent
masses over the floor. The widow became a helpless,
religious centre of deacons and Sunday-school teachers,
which Brooks, untiring, yet fruitless, in his attempt
to produce gayety, tried in vain to break. To
this gloom the untried dangers of the impending dance,
duly prefigured by a lonely cottage piano and two
violins in a desert of expanse, added a nervous chill.
When at last the music struck up somewhat
hesitatingly and protestingly, from the circumstance
that the player was the church organist, and fumbled
mechanically for his stops, the attempt to make up
a cotillon set was left to the heroic Brooks.
Yet he barely escaped disaster when, in posing the
couples, he incautiously begged them to look a little
less as if they were waiting for the coffin to be borne
down the aisle between them, and was rewarded by a
burst of tears from Mrs. Johnson, who had lost a child
two years before, and who had to be led away, while
her place in the set was taken by another. Yet
the cotillon passed off; a Spanish dance succeeded;
“Moneymusk,” with the Virginia Reel, put
a slight intoxicating vibration into the air, and
healthy youth at last asserted itself in a score of
freckled but buxom girls in white muslin, with romping
figures and laughter, at the lower end of the room.
Still a rigid decorum reigned among the elder dancers,
and the figures were called out in grave formality,
as if, to Brooks’s fancy, they were hymns given
from the pulpit, until at the close of the set, in
half-real, half-mock despair, he turned desperately
to Mrs. Wade, his partner:
“Do you waltz?”
Mrs. Wade hesitated. She had,
before marriage, and was a good waltzer. “I
do,” she said timidly, “but do you think
they”
But before the poor widow could formulate
her fears as to the reception of “round dances,”
Brooks had darted to the piano, and the next moment
she heard with a “fearful joy” the opening
bars of a waltz. It was an old Julien waltz,
fresh still in the fifties, daring, provocative to
foot, swamping to intellect, arresting to judgment,
irresistible, supreme! Before Mrs. Wade could
protest, Brooks’s arm had gathered up her slim
figure, and with one quick backward sweep and swirl
they were off! The floor was cleared for them
in a sudden bewilderment of alarm a suspense
of burning curiosity. The widow’s little
feet tripped quickly, her long black skirt swung out;
as she turned the corner there was not only a sudden
revelation of her pretty ankles, but, what was more
startling, a dazzling flash of frilled and laced petticoat,
which at once convinced every woman in the room that
the act had been premeditated for days! Yet even
that criticism was presently forgotten in the pervading
intoxication of the music and the movement. The
younger people fell into it with wild rompings, whirlings,
and clasping of hands and waists. And stranger
than all, a corybantic enthusiasm seized upon the
emotionally religious, and those priests and priestesses
of Cybele who were famous for their frenzy and passion
in camp-meeting devotions seemed to find an equal
expression that night in the waltz. And when,
flushed and panting, Mrs. Wade at last halted on the
arm of her partner, they were nearly knocked over
by the revolving Johnson and Mrs. Stubbs in a whirl
of gloomy exultation! Deacons and Sunday-school
teachers waltzed together until the long room shook,
and the very bunting on the walls waved and fluttered
with the gyrations of those religious dervishes.
Nobody knew nobody cared how long this frenzy
lasted it ceased only with the collapse
of the musicians. Then, with much vague bewilderment,
inward trepidation, awkward and incoherent partings,
everybody went dazedly home; there was no other dancing
after that the waltz was the one event
of the festival and of the history of Santa Ana.
And later that night, when the timid Mrs. Wade, in
the seclusion of her own room and the disrobing of
her slim figure, glanced at her spotless frilled and
laced petticoat lying on a chair, a faint smile the
first of her widowhood curved the corners
of her pretty mouth.
A week of ominous silence regarding
the festival succeeded in Santa Ana. The local
paper gave the fullest particulars of the opening of
the hotel, but contented itself with saying:
“The entertainment concluded with a dance.”
Mr. Brooks, who felt himself compelled to call upon
his late charming partner twice during the week, characteristically
soothed her anxieties as to the result. “The
fact of it is, Mrs. Wade, there’s really nobody
in particular to blame and that’s
what gets them. They’re all mixed up in
it, deacons and Sunday-school teachers; and when old
Johnson tried to be nasty the other evening and hoped
you hadn’t suffered from your exertions that
night, I told him you hadn’t quite recovered
yet from the physical shock of having been run into
by him and Mrs. Stubbs, but that, you being a lady,
you didn’t tell just how you felt at the exhibition
he and she made of themselves. That shut him up.”
“But you shouldn’t have
said that,” said Mrs. Wade with a frightened
little smile.
“No matter,” returned
Brooks cheerfully. “I’ll take the
blame of it with the others. You see they’ll
have to have a scapegoat and I’m just
the man, for I got up the dance! And as I’m
going away, I suppose I shall bear off the sin with
me into the wilderness.”
“You’re going away?”
repeated Mrs. Wade in more genuine concern.
“Not for long,” returned
Brooks laughingly. “I came here to look
up a mill site, and I’ve found it. Meantime
I think I’ve opened their eyes.”
“You have opened mine,”
said the widow with timid frankness.
They were soft pretty eyes when opened,
in spite of their heavy red lids, and Mr. Brooks thought
that Santa Ana would be no worse if they remained
open. Possibly he looked it, for Mrs. Wade said
hurriedly, “I mean that is I’ve
been thinking that life needn’t always be
as gloomy as we make it here. And even here,
you know, Mr. Brooks, we have six months’ sunshine though
we always forget it in the rainy season.”
“That’s so,” said
Brooks cheerfully. “I once lost a heap of
money through my own foolishness, and I’ve managed
to forget it, and I even reckon to get it back again
out of Santa Ana if my mill speculation holds good.
So good-by, Mrs. Wade but not for long.”
He shook her hand frankly and departed, leaving the
widow conscious of a certain sympathetic confidence
and a little grateful for she knew not what.
This feeling remained with her most
of the afternoon, and even imparted a certain gayety
to her spirits, to the extent of causing her to hum
softly to herself; the air being oddly enough the Julien
Waltz. And when, later in the day, the shadows
were closing in with the rain, word was brought to
her that a stranger wished to see her in the sitting-room,
she carried a less mournful mind to this function of
her existence. For Mrs. Wade was accustomed to
give audience to traveling agents, tradesmen, working-hands
and servants, as chatelaine of her ranch, and the
occasion was not novel. Yet on entering the room,
which she used partly as an office, she found some
difficulty in classifying the stranger, who at first
glance reminded her of the tramping miner she had
seen that night from her window. He was rather
incongruously dressed, some articles of his apparel
being finer than others; he wore a diamond pin in
a scarf folded over a rough “hickory” shirt;
his light trousers were tucked in common mining boots
that bore stains of travel and a suggestion that he
had slept in his clothes. What she could see
of his unshaven face in that uncertain light expressed
a kind of dogged concentration, overlaid by an assumption
of ease. He got up as she came in, and with a
slight “How do, ma’am,” shut the
door behind her and glanced furtively around the room.
“What I’ve got to say
to ye, Mrs. Wade, as I reckon you be, is
strictly private and confidential! Why, ye’ll
see afore I get through. But I thought I might
just as well caution ye agin our being disturbed.”
Overcoming a slight instinct of repulsion,
Mrs. Wade returned, “You can speak to me here;
no one will interrupt you unless I call
them,” she added with a little feminine caution.
“And I reckon ye won’t
do that,” he said with a grim smile. “You
are the widow o’ Pulaski Wade, late o’
Heavy Tree Hill, I reckon?”
“I am,” said Mrs. Wade.
“And your husband’s buried
up thar in the graveyard, with a monument over him
setting forth his virtues ez a Christian and a square
man and a high-minded citizen? And that he was
foully murdered by highwaymen?”
“Yes,” said Mrs. Wade, “that is
the inscription.”
“Well, ma’am, a bigger pack o’ lies
never was cut on stone!”
Mrs. Wade rose, half in indignation, half in terror.
“Keep your sittin’,”
said the stranger, with a warning wave of his hand.
“Wait till I’m through, and then you call
in the hull State o’ Californy, ef ye want.”
The stranger’s manner was so
doggedly confident that Mrs. Wade sank back tremblingly
in her chair. The man put his slouch hat on his
knee, twirled it round once or twice, and then said
with the same stubborn deliberation:
“The highwayman in that business
was your husband Pulaski Wade and
his gang, and he was killed by one o’ the men
he was robbin’. Ye see, ma’am, it
used to be your husband’s little game to rope
in three or four strangers in a poker deal at Spanish
Jim’s saloon I see you’ve heard
o’ the place,” he interpolated as Mrs.
Wade drew back suddenly “and when
he couldn’t clean ’em out in that way,
or they showed a little more money than they played,
he’d lay for ’em with his gang in a lone
part of the trail, and go through them like any road
agent. That’s what he did that night and
that’s how he got killed.”
“How do you know this?”
said Mrs. Wade, with quivering lips.
“I was one o’ the men
he went through before he was killed. And I’d
hev got my money back, but the rest o’ the gang
came up, and I got away jest in time to save my life
and nothin’ else. Ye might remember thar
was one man got away and giv’ the alarm, but
he was goin’ on to the States by the overland
coach that night and couldn’t stay to be a witness.
I was that man. I had paid my passage through,
and I couldn’t lose that too with my other
money, so I went.”
Mrs. Wade sat stunned. She remembered
the missing witness, and how she had longed to see
the man who was last with her husband; she remembered
Spanish Jim’s saloon his well-known
haunt; his frequent and unaccountable absences, the
sudden influx of money which he always said he had
won at cards; the diamond ring he had given her as
the result of “a bet;” the forgotten recurrence
of other robberies by a secret masked gang; a hundred
other things that had worried her, instinctively,
vaguely. She knew now, too, the meaning of the
unrest that had driven her from Heavy Tree Hill the
strange unformulated fears that had haunted her even
here. Yet with all this she felt, too, her present
weakness knew that this man had taken her
at a disadvantage, that she ought to indignantly assert
herself, deny everything, demand proof, and brand
him a slanderer!
“How did you know it was
my husband?” she stammered.
“His mask fell off in the fight;
you know another mask was found it was
his. I saw him as plainly as I see him there!”
he pointed to a daguerreotype of her husband which
stood upon her desk.
Mrs. Wade could only stare vacantly,
hopelessly. After a pause the man continued in
a less aggressive manner and more confidential tone,
which, however, only increased her terror. “I
ain’t sayin’ that you knowed anything
about this, ma’am, and whatever other folks might
say when they know of it, I’ll allers
say that you didn’t.”
“What, then, did you come here
for?” said the widow desperately.
“What do I come here for?”
repeated the man grimly, looking around the room;
“what did I come to this yer comfortable home this
yer big ranch and to a rich woman like yourself for?
Well, Mrs. Wade, I come to get the six hundred dollars
your husband robbed me of, that’s all! I
ain’t askin’ more! I ain’t
askin’ interest! I ain’t askin’
compensation for havin’ to run for my life and,”
again looking grimly round the walls, “I ain’t
askin’ more than you will give or
is my rights.”
“But this house never was his;
it was my father’s,” gasped Mrs. Wade;
“you have no right”
“Mebbe ‘yes’ and
mebbe ‘no,’ Mrs. Wade,” interrupted
the man, with a wave of his hat; “but how about
them two checks to bearer for two hundred dollars
each found among your husband’s effects, and
collected by your lawyer for you my
checks, Mrs. Wade?”
A wave of dreadful recollection overwhelmed
her. She remembered the checks found upon her
husband’s body, known only to her and her lawyer,
believed to be gambling gains, and collected at once
under his legal advice. Yet she made one more
desperate effort in spite of the instinct that told
her he was speaking the truth.
“But you shall have to prove it before
witnesses.”
“Do you want me to prove
it before witnesses?” said the man, coming nearer
her. “Do you want to take my word and keep
it between ourselves, or do you want to call in your
superintendent and his men, and all Santy Any, to
hear me prove your husband was a highwayman, thief,
and murderer? Do you want to knock over that
monument on Heavy Tree Hill, and upset your standing
here among the deacons and elders? Do you want
to do all this and be forced, even by your neighbors,
to pay me in the end, as you will? Ef you do,
call in your witnesses now and let’s have it
over. Mebbe it would look better ef I got the
money out of your friends than ye a
woman! P’raps you’re right!”
He made a step towards the door, but she stopped him.
“No! no! wait! It’s
a large sum I haven’t it with me,”
she stammered, thoroughly beaten.
“Ye kin get it.”
“Give me time!” she implored.
“Look! I’ll give you a hundred down
now, all I have here, the rest
another time!” She nervously opened a drawer
of her desk and taking out a buckskin bag of gold thrust
it in his hand. “There! go away now!”
She lifted her thin hands despairingly to her head.
“Go! do!”
The man seemed struck by her manner.
“I don’t want to be hard on a woman,”
he said slowly. “I’ll go now and come
back again at nine to-night. You can git the
money, or what’s as good, a check to bearer,
by then. And ef ye’ll take my advice, you
won’t ask no advice from others, ef you want
to keep your secret. Just now it’s safe
with me; I’m a square man, ef I seem to be a
hard one.” He made a gesture as if to take
her hand, but as she drew shrinkingly away, he changed
it to an awkward bow, and the next moment was gone.
She started to her feet, but the unwonted
strain upon her nerves and frail body had been greater
than she knew. She made a step forward, felt
the room whirl round her and then seem to collapse
beneath her feet, and, clutching at her chair, sank
back into it, fainting.
How long she lay there she never knew.
She was at last conscious of some one bending over
her, and a voice the voice of Mr. Brooks in
her ear, saying, “I beg your pardon; you seem
ill. Shall I call some one?”
“No!” she gasped, quickly
recovering herself with an effort, and staring round
her. “Where is when did you come
in?”
“Only this moment. I was
leaving tonight, sooner than I expected, and thought
I’d say good-by. They told me that you had
been engaged with a stranger, but he had just gone.
I beg your pardon I see you are ill.
I won’t detain you any longer.”
“No! no! don’t go!
I am better better,” she said feverishly.
As she glanced at his strong and sympathetic face
a wild idea seized her. He was a stranger here,
an alien to these people, like herself. The advice
that she dare not seek from others, from her half-estranged
religious friends, from even her superintendent and
his wife, dare she ask from him? Perhaps he saw
this frightened doubt, this imploring appeal, in her
eyes, for he said gently, “Is it anything I can
do for you?”
“Yes,” she said, with
the sudden desperation of weakness; “I want you
to keep a secret.”
“Yours? yes!” he said promptly.
Whereat poor Mrs. Wade instantly burst
into tears. Then, amidst her sobs, she told him
of the stranger’s visit, of his terrible accusations,
of his demands, his expected return, and her own utter
helplessness. To her terror, as she went on she
saw a singular change in his kind face; he was following
her with hard, eager intensity. She had half hoped,
even through her fateful instincts, that he might have
laughed, manlike, at her fears, or pooh-poohed the
whole thing. But he did not. “You say
he positively recognized your husband?” he repeated
quickly.
“Yes, yes!” sobbed the
widow, “and knew that daguerreotype!” she
pointed to the desk.
Brooks turned quickly in that direction.
Luckily his back was towards her, and she could not
see his face, and the quick, startled look that came
into his eyes. But when they again met hers, it
was gone, and even their eager intensity had changed
to a gentle commiseration. “You have only
his word for it, Mrs. Wade,” he said gently,
“and in telling your secret to another, you
have shorn the rascal of half his power over you.
And he knew it. Now, dismiss the matter from your
mind and leave it all to me. I will be here a
few minutes before nine and alone
in this room. Let your visitor
be shown in here, and don’t let us be disturbed.
Don’t be alarmed,” he added with a faint
twinkle in his eye, “there will be no fuss and
no exposure!”
It lacked a few minutes of nine when
Mr. Brooks was ushered into the sitting-room.
As soon as he was alone he quietly examined the door
and the windows, and having satisfied himself, took
his seat in a chair casually placed behind the door.
Presently he heard the sound of voices and a heavy
footstep in the passage. He lightly felt his waistcoat
pocket it contained a pretty little weapon
of power and precision, with a barrel scarcely two
inches long.
The door opened, and the person outside
entered the room. In an instant Brooks had shut
the door and locked it behind him. The man turned
fiercely, but was faced by Brooks quietly, with one
finger calmly hooked in his waistcoat pocket.
The man slightly recoiled from him not as
much from fear as from some vague stupefaction.
“What’s that for? What’s your
little game?” he said half contemptuously.
“No game at all,” returned
Brooks coolly. “You came here to sell a
secret. I don’t propose to have it given
away first to any listener.”
“You don’t who are you?”
“That’s a queer question
to ask of the man you are trying to personate but
I don’t wonder! You’re doing it d d
badly.”
“Personate you?” said
the stranger, with staring eyes.
“Yes, me,” said Brooks
quietly. “I am the only man who escaped
from the robbery that night at Heavy Tree Hill and
who went home by the Overland Coach.”
The stranger stared, but recovered
himself with a coarse laugh. “Oh, well!
we’re on the same lay, it appears! Both
after the widow afore we show up her husband.”
“Not exactly,” said Brooks,
with his eyes fixed intently on the stranger.
“You are here to denounce a highwayman who is
dead and escaped justice. I am here to denounce
one who is living! Stop! drop your
hand; it’s no use. You thought you had
to deal only with a woman to-night, and your revolver
isn’t quite handy enough. There! down! down!
So! That’ll do.”
“You can’t prove it,” said the man
hoarsely.
“Fool! In your story to
that woman you have given yourself away. There
were but two travelers attacked by the highwaymen.
One was killed I am the other. Where
do you come in? What witness can you be except
as the highwayman that you are? Who is left to
identify Wade but his accomplice!”
The man’s suddenly whitened
face made his unshaven beard seem to bristle over
his face like some wild animal’s. “Well,
ef you kalkilate to blow me, you’ve got to blow
Wade and his widder too. Jest you remember that,”
he said whiningly.
“I’ve thought of that,”
said Brooks coolly, “and I calculate that to
prevent it is worth about that hundred dollars you
got from that poor woman and no more!
Now, sit down at that table, and write as I dictate.”
The man looked at him in wonder, but obeyed.
“Write,” said Brooks,
“’I hereby certify that my accusations
against the late Pulaski Wade of Heavy Tree Hill are
erroneous and groundless, and the result of mistaken
identity, especially in regard to any complicity of
his in the robbery of John Stubbs, deceased, and Henry
Brooks, at Heavy Tree Hill, on the night of the 13th
August, 1854.’”
The man looked up with a repulsive
smile. “Who’s the fool now, Cap’n?
What’s become of your hold on the widder, now?”
“Write!” said Brooks fiercely.
The sound of a pen hurriedly scratching
paper followed this first outburst of the quiet Brooks.
“Sign it,” said Brooks.
The man signed it.
“Now go,” said Brooks,
unlocking the door, “but remember, if you should
ever be inclined to revisit Santa Ana, you will find
me living here also.”
The man slunk out of the door and
into the passage like a wild animal returning to the
night and darkness. Brooks took up the paper,
rejoined Mrs. Wade in the parlor, and laid it before
her.
“But,” said the widow,
trembling even in her joy, “do you do
you think he was really mistaken?”
“Positive,” said Brooks
coolly. “It’s true, it’s a mistake
that has cost you a hundred dollars, but there are
some mistakes that are worth that to be kept quiet.”
They were married a year later; but
there is no record that in after years of conjugal
relations with a weak, charming, but sometimes trying
woman, Henry Brooks was ever tempted to tell her the
whole truth of the robbery of Heavy Tree Hill.