It was over. The rambling house,
with its rickety, old-fashioned furniture-and
its memories-was now deserted, except for
Robert Fairchild, and he was deserted within it, wandering
from room to room, staring at familiar objects with
the unfamiliar gaze of one whose vision suddenly has
been warned by the visitation of death and the sense
of loneliness that it brings.
Loneliness, rather than grief, for
it had been Robert Fairchild’s promise that
he would not suffer in heart for one who had longed
to go into a peace for which he had waited, seemingly
in vain. Year after year, Thornton Fairchild
had sat in the big armchair by the windows, watching
the days grow old and fade into night, studying sunset
after sunset, voicing the vain hope that the gloaming
might bring the twilight of his own existence,-a
silent man except for this, rarely speaking of the
past, never giving to the son who worked for him, cared
for him, worshiped him, the slightest inkling of what
might have happened in the dim days of the long ago
to transform him into a beaten thing, longing for
the final surcease. And when the end came, it
found him in readiness, waiting in the big armchair
by the windows. Even now, a book lay on the
frayed carpeting of the old room, where it had fallen
from relaxing fingers. Robert Fairchild picked
it up, and with a sigh restored it to the grim, fumed
oak case. His days of petty sacrifices that
his father might while away the weary hours with reading
were over.
Memories! They were all about
him, in the grate with its blackened coals, the old-fashioned
pictures on the walls, the almost gloomy rooms, the
big chair by the window, and yet they told him nothing
except that a white-haired, patient, lovable old man
was gone,-a man whom he was wont to call
“father.” And in that going, the
slow procedure of an unnatural existence had snapped
for Robert Fairchild. As he roamed about in his
loneliness, he wondered what he would do now, where
he could go; to whom he could talk. He had worked
since sixteen, and since sixteen there had been few
times when he had not come home regularly each night,
to wait upon the white-haired man in the big chair,
to discern his wants instinctively, and to sit with
him, often in silence, until the old onyx clock on
the mantel had clanged eleven; it had been the same
program, day, week, month and year. And now
Robert Fairchild was as a person lost. The ordinary
pleasures of youth had never been his; he could not
turn to them with any sort of grace. The years
of servitude to a beloved master had inculcated within
him the feeling of self-impelled sacrifice; he had
forgotten all thought of personal pleasures for their
sake alone. The big chair by the window was
vacant, and it created a void which Robert Fairchild
could neither combat nor overcome.
What had been the past? Why
the silence? Why the patient, yet impatient
wait for death? The son did not know. In
all his memories was only one faint picture, painted
years before in babyhood: the return of his father
from some place, he knew not where, a long conference
with his mother behind closed doors, while he, in childlike
curiosity, waited without, seeking in vain to catch
some explanation. Then a sad-faced woman who
cried at night when the house was still, who faded
and who died. That was all. The picture
carried no explanation.
And now Robert Fairchild stood on
the threshold of something he almost feared to learn.
Once, on a black, stormy night, they had sat together,
father and son before the fire, silent for hours.
Then the hand of the white-haired man had reached
outward and rested for a moment on the young man’s
knee.
“I wrote something to you, Boy,
a day or so ago,” he had said. “That
little illness I had prompted me to do it. I-I
thought it was only fair to you. After I ’m
gone, look in the safe. You ’ll find the
combination on a piece of paper hidden in a hole cut
in that old European history in the bookcase.
I have your promise, I know-that you ’ll
not do it until after I ’m gone.”
Now Thornton Fairchild was gone.
But a message had remained behind; one which the
patient lips evidently had feared to utter during life.
The heart of the son began to pound, slow and hard,
as, with the memory of that conversation, he turned
toward the bookcase and unlatched the paneled door.
A moment more and the hollowed history had given up
its trust, a bit of paper scratched with numbers.
Robert Fairchild turned toward the stairs and the
small room on the second floor which had served as
his father’s bedroom.
There he hesitated before the little
iron safe in the corner, summoning the courage to
unlock the doors of a dead man’s past.
At last he forced himself to his knees and to the
numerals of the combination.
The safe had not been opened in years;
that was evident from the creaking of the plungers
as they fell, the gummy resistance of the knob as
Fairchild turned it in accordance with the directions
on the paper. Finally, a great wrench, and the
bolt was drawn grudgingly back; a strong pull, and
the safe opened.
A few old books; ledgers in sheepskin
binding. Fairchild disregarded these for the
more important things that might lie behind the little
inner door of the cabinet. His hand went forward,
and he noticed, in a hazy sort of way, that it was
trembling. The door was unlocked; he drew it
open and crouched a moment, staring, before he reached
for the thinner of two envelopes which lay before
him. A moment later he straightened and turned
toward the light. A crinkling of paper, a quick-drawn
sigh between clenched teeth; it was a letter; his strange,
quiet, hunted-appearing father was talking to him through
the medium of ink and paper, after death.
Closely written, hurriedly, as though
to finish an irksome task in as short a space as possible,
the missive was one of several pages,-pages
which Robert Fairchild hesitated to read. The
secret-and he knew full well that there
was a secret-had been in the atmosphere
about him ever since he could remember. Whether
or not this was the solution of it, Robert Fairchild
did not know, and the natural reticence with which
he had always approached anything regarding his father’s
life gave him an instinctive fear, a sense of cringing
retreat from anything that might now open the doors
of mystery. But it was before him, waiting in
his father’s writing, and at last his gaze centered;
he read:
My son:
Before I begin this letter to you
I must ask that you take no action whatever until
you have seen my attorney-he will be yours
from now on. I have never mentioned him to you
before; it was not necessary and would only have brought
you curiosity which I could not have satisfied.
But now, I am afraid, the doors must be unlocked.
I am gone. You are young, you have been a faithful
son and you are deserving of every good fortune that
may possibly come to you. I am praying that the
years have made a difference, and that Fortune may
smile upon you as she frowned on me. Certainly,
she can injure me no longer. My race is run;
I am beyond earthly fortunes.
Therefore, when you have finished
with this, take the deeds inclosed in the larger envelope
and go to St. Louis. There, look up Henry F.
Beamish, attorney-at-law, in the Princess Building.
He will explain them to you.
Beyond this, I fear, there is little
that can aid you. I cannot find the strength,
now that I face it, to tell you what you may find if
you follow the lure that the other envelope holds
forth to you.
There is always the hope that Fortune
may be kind to me at last, and smile upon my memory
by never letting you know why I have been the sort
of man you have known, and not the jovial, genial companion
that a father should be. But there are certain
things, my son, which defeat a man. It killed
your mother-every day since her death I
have been haunted by that fact; my prayer is that
it may not kill you, spiritually, if not physically.
Therefore is it not better that it remain behind
a cloud until such time as Fortune may reveal it-and
hope that such a time will never come? I think
so-not for myself, for when you read this,
I shall be gone; but for you, that you may not be
handicapped by the knowledge of the thing which whitened
my hair and aged me, long before my time.
If he lives, and I am sure he does,
there is one who will hurry to your aid as soon as
he knows you need him. Accept his counsels, laugh
at his little eccentricities if you will, but follow
his judgment implicitly. Above all, ask him
no questions that he does not care to answer-there
are things that he may not deem wise to tell.
It is only fair that he be given the right to choose
his disclosures.
There is little more to say.
Beamish will attend to everything for you-if
you care to go. Sell everything that is here;
the house, the furniture, the belongings. It
is my wish, and you will need the capital-if
you go. The ledgers in the safe are only old
accounts which would be so much Chinese to you now.
Burn them. There is nothing else to be afraid
of-I hope you will never find anything to
fear. And if circumstances should arise to bring
before you the story of that which has caused me so
much darkness, I have nothing to say in self-extenuation.
I made one mistake-that of fear-and
in committing one error, I shouldered every blame.
It makes little difference now. I am dead-and
free.
My love to you, my son. I hope
that wealth and happiness await you. Blood of
my blood flows in your veins-and strange
though it may sound to you-it is the blood
of an adventurer. I can almost see you smile
at that! An old man who sat by the window, staring
out; afraid of every knock at the door-and
yet an adventurer! But they say, once in the
blood, it never dies. My wish is that you succeed
where I failed-and God be with you!
Your father.
For a long moment Robert Fairchild
stood staring at the letter, his heart pounding with
excitement, his hands grasping the foolscap paper
as though with a desire to tear through the shield
which the written words had formed about a mysterious
past and disclose that which was so effectively hidden.
So much had the letter told-and yet so
little! Dark had been the hints of some mysterious,
intangible thing, great enough in its horror and its
far-reaching consequences to cause death for one who
had known of it and a living panic for him who had
perpetrated it. As for the man who stood now
with the letter clenched before him, there was promise
of wealth, and the threat of sorrow, the hope of happiness,
yet the foreboding omen of discoveries which might
ruin the life of the reader as the existence of the
writer had been blasted,-until death had
brought relief. Of all this had the letter told,
but when Robert Fairchild read it again in the hope
of something tangible, something that might give even
a clue to the reason for it all, there was nothing.
In that super-calmness which accompanies great agitation,
Fairchild folded the paper, placed it in its envelope,
then slipped it into an inside pocket. A few
steps and he was before the safe once more and reaching
for the second envelope.
Heavy and bulky was this, filled with
tax receipts, with plats and blueprints and the reports
of surveyors. Here was an assay slip, bearing
figures and notations which Robert Fairchild could
not understand. Here a receipt for money received,
here a vari-colored map with lines and figures
and conglomerate designs which Fairchild believed
must relate in some manner to the location of a mining
camp; all were aged and worn at the edges, giving
evidence of having been carried, at some far time
of the past, in a wallet. More receipts, more
blueprints, then a legal document, sealed and stamped,
and bearing the words:
County of Clear Creek, ) ss.
State of Colorado. )
Deed patent.
Know all men by
these presents: That on this day of
our Lord, February 22, 1892, Thornton W. Fairchild,
having presented the necessary affidavits and statements
of assessments accomplished in accordance with-
On it trailed in endless legal phraseology,
telling in muddled, attorney-like language, the fact
that the law had been fulfilled in its requirements,
and that the claim for which Thornton Fairchild had
worked was rightfully his, forever. A longer
statement full of figures, of diagrams and surveyor’s
calculations which Fairchild could neither decipher
nor understand, gave the location, the town site and
the property included within the granted rights.
It was something for an attorney, such as Beamish,
to interpret, and Fairchild reached for the age-yellowed
envelope to return the papers to their resting place.
But he checked his motion involuntarily and for a moment
held the envelope before him, staring at it with wide
eyes. Then, as though to free by the stronger
light of the window the haunting thing which faced
him, he rose and hurried across the room, to better
light, only to find it had not been imagination; the
words still were before him, a sentence written in
faint, faded ink proclaiming the contents to be “Papers
relating to the Blue Poppy Mine”, and written
across this a word in the bolder, harsher strokes
of a man under stress of emotion, a word which held
the eyes of Robert Fairchild fixed and staring, a word
which spelled books of the past and evil threats of
the future, the single, ominous word:
“Accursed!”