It was just as well. Fairchild
could have said nothing that would have helped matters.
He could have done nothing that would have damaged
them. The cards were still the same; the deck
still bore its markings, and the deal was going on
without ever a change, except that now the matter
of concealment of enmities had turned to an open, aboveboard
proposition. Whether Harry had so intended it
or not, he had forced Squint Rodaine to show his hand,
and whether Squint realized it, that amounted to something.
Fairchild was almost grateful for the fact as he
went back into the tunnel, spun the flywheels of the
gasoline engines and started them revolving again,
that the last of the water might be drained from the
shaft before the pumps must be returned to their owners.
Several hours passed, then Harry returned,
minus his gorgeous clothing and his diamond ring,
dressed in mining costume now, with high leather boots
into which his trousers were tucked, and carrying a
carbide lantern. Dolefully he looked at the
vacant finger where once a diamond had sparkled.
Then he chuckled.
“Sam took it back,” he
announced. “And I took part of the money
and paid it out for rent on these pumps. We
can keep ’em as long as we want ’em.
It’s only costing about a fourth of what it
might of. Drowning ’s worth something,”
he laughed again. Fairchild joined him, then
sobered.
“It brought Rodaine out of the
bushes,” he said. “Squint threatened
us after they ’d hauled you down town on the
rail.”
Harry winked jovially.
“Ain’t it just what I
expected? It’s better that wye than to
’ave ’im snoopin’ around.
When I came up to the mine, ’e was right behind
me. I knew it. And I ’d figured on
it. So I just gave ’im something to get
excited about. It was n’t a minute after
I ’d thrown a rock and my ’at in there
and let out a yell that he came thumping in, looking
around. I was ’iding back of the timbers
there. Out ’e went, muttering to ’imself,
and I-well, I went to Center City and read
the papers.”
They chuckled together then; it was
something to know that they had not only forced Squint
Rodaine to show his enmity openly, but it was something
more to make him the instrument of helping them with
their work. The pumps were going steadily now,
and a dirty stream of water was flowing down the ditch
that had been made at one side of the small tram track.
Harry looked down the hole, stared intently at nothing,
then turned to the rusty hoist.
“’Ere ’s the thing
we ’ve got to fix up now. This ’ere
chiv wheel’s all out of gear.”
“What makes your face so red?”
Fairchild asked the question as the be-mustached
visage of Harry came nearer to the carbide. Harry
looked up.
“Mother ’Oward almost
slapped it off!” came his rueful answer.
“For not telling ’er what I was going
to do, and letting ’er think I got drownded.
But ’ow was I to know?”
He went to tinkering with the big
chiv wheel then, supported on its heavy timbers, and
over which the cable must pass to allow the skip to
travel on its rails down the shaft. Fairchild
absently examined the engines and pumps, supplying
water to the radiators and filling an oil cup or two.
Then he turned swiftly, voicing that which was uppermost
in his mind.
“When you were here before,
Harry, did you know a Judge Richmond?”
“Yeh.” Harry pawed
his mustache and made a greasy, black mark on his
face. “But I don’t think I want to
know ’im now.”
“Why not?”
“’E’s mixed up with the Rodaines.”
“How much?”
“They own ’im-that’s
all.”
There was silence for a moment.
It had been something which Fairchild had not expected.
If the Rodaines owned Judge Richmond, how far did
that ownership extend? After a long time, he
forced himself to a statement.
“I know his daughter.”
“You?” Harry straightened. “’Ow
so?”
“She sold me a ticket to a dance,”
Fairchild carefully forgot the earlier meeting.
“Then we ’ve happened to meet several
times after that. She said that her father had
told her about me-it seems he used to be
a friend of my own father.”
Harry nodded.
“So ’e was. And
a good friend. But that was before things ’appened-like
they ’ve ’appened in the last ten
years. Not that I know about it of my own knowledge.
But Mother ’Oward-she knows a lot.”
“But what’s caused the change? What ?”
Harry’s intent gaze stopped him.
“’Ow many times ’ave
you seen the girl when she was n’t with young
Rodaine?”
“Very few, that’s true.”
“And ’ow many times ’ave you
seen Judge Richmond?”
“I have n’t ever seen him.”
“You won’t-if
Mother ’Oward knows anything. ’E
ain’t able to get out. ’E’s
sick-apoplexy-a stroke.
Rodaine’s taken advantage of it.”
“How?”
“’Ow does anybody take
advantage of somebody that’s sick? ’Ow
does anybody get a ’old on a person? Through
money! Judge Richmond ’ad a lot of it.
Then ’e got sick. Rodaine, ’e got
’old of that money. Now Judge Richmond
’as to ask ’im for every penny he gets-and
’e does what Rodaine says.”
“But a judge-”
“Judges is just like anybody
else when they’re bedridden and only ’arf
their faculties working. The girl, so Mother
’Oward tells me, is about twenty now.
That made ’er just a little kid, and motherless,
when Rodaine got in ’is work. She ain’t
got a thing to sye. And she loves ’er
father. Suppose,” Harry waved a hand, “that
you loved somebody awful strong, and suppose that
person was under a influence? Suppose it meant
’is ’appiness and ’is ’ealth
for you to do like ’e wanted you? Wouldn’t
you go with a man? What’s more, if ’e
don’t die pretty soon, you ’ll see a wedding!”
“You mean ?”
“She ’ll be Mrs. Maurice
Rodaine. She loves ’er father enough to
do it-after ’er will’s broken.
And I don’t care ’oo it is; there ain’t
a woman in the world that’s got the strength
to keep on saying no to a sick father!”
Again Robert Fairchild filled an oil
cup, again he tinkered about the pumps. Then
he straightened.
“How are we going to work this
mine?” he asked shortly. Harry stared
at him.
“’Ow should I know? You own it!”
“I don’t mean that way.
We were fifty-fifty from the minute you showed up.
There never has been any other thought in my mind-”
“Fifty-fifty? You’re making me a
bloated capitalist!”
“I hope I will. Or rather,
I hope that you ’ll make such a thing possible
for both of us. But I was talking about something
else; are we going to work hard and fight it out day
and night for awhile until we can get things going,
or are we just going at it by easy stages?”
“Suppose,” answered Harry
after a communication with his magic mustache, “that
we go dye and night ’til we get the water out?
It won’t be long. Then we ’ll ’ave
to work together. You ’ll need my vast
store of learning and enlightenment!” he grinned.
“Good. But the pumping
will last through tomorrow night. Can you take
the night trick?”
“Sure. But why?”
“I want to go to that dance!”
Harry whistled. Harry’s big lips spread
into a grin.
“And she ’s got brown
eyes!” he chortled to himself. “And
she ’s got brown ’air, and she ’s
a wye about ’er. Oh! She’s
got a wye about ’er! And I ’ll bet
she ’s going with Maurice Rodaine! Oh!
She’s got a wye about’er!”
“Oh, shut up!” growled
Fairchild, but he grinned in schoolboy fashion as
he said it. Harry poured half a can of oil upon
the bearings of the chiv wheel with almost loving
tenderness.
“She ’s got a wye about
’er!” he echoed. Fairchild suddenly
frowned.
“Just what do you mean?
That she ’s in love with Rodaine and just-”
“’Ow should I know? But she ’s
got a wye about ’er!”
“Well,” the firm chin
of the other man grew firmer, “it won’t
be hard to find out!”
And the next night he started upon
his investigations. Nor did he stop to consider
that social events had been few and far between for
him, that his dancing had progressed little farther
than the simple ability to move his feet in unison
to music. Years of office and home, home and
office, had not allowed Robert Fairchild the natural
advantages of the usual young man. But he put
that aside now; he was going to that dance, and he
was going to stay there as long as the music sounded,
or rather as long as the brown eyes, brown hair and
laughing lips of Anita Richmond were apparent to him.
What’s more, he carried out his resolution.
The clock turned back with the entrance
to that dance hall. Men were there in the rough
mining costumes of other days, with unlighted candles
stuck through patent holders into their hats, and women
were there also, dressed as women could dress only
in other days of sudden riches, in costumes brought
from Denver, bespangled affairs with the gorgeousness
piled on until the things became fantastic instead
of the intensely beautiful creations that the original
wearers had believed them to be. There was only
one idea in the olden mining days, to buy as much
as possible and to put it all on at once. High,
Spanish combs surmounted ancient styles of hairdressing.
Rhinestones glittered in lieu of the real diamonds
that once were worn by the queens of the mining camps.
Dancing girls, newly rich cooks, poverty-stricken
prospectors’ wives suddenly beaming with wealth,
nineteenth-century vamps, gambling hall habitues,-all
were represented among the femininity of Ohadi as
they laughed and giggled at the outlandish costumes
they wore and thoroughly enjoyed themselves.
Far at one side, making a brave effort
with the “near” beer and “almost
there” concoctions of a prohibition buried country,
was the “old-fashioned bar” with its old-fashioned
bartender behind it, roaring out his orders and serving
drinks with one hand while he waved and pulled the
trigger of a blank-cartridged revolver with the other.
Farther on was the roulette wheel, and Fairchild strolled
to it, watching the others to catch the drift of the
game before he essayed it, playing with pennies where,
in the old days, men had gambled away fortunes; surrounded
by a crowd that laughed and chattered and forgot its
bets, around a place where once a “sleeper”
might have meant a fortune. The spirit of the
old times was abroad. The noise and clatter
of a dance caller bellowed forth as he shouted for
everybody to grab their “podners one an’
all, do-se-do, promenade th’ hall!”
and Fairchild, as he watched, saw that his lack of
dancing ability would not be a serious handicap.
There were many others who did not know the old numbers.
And those who did had worn their hobnailed boots,
sufficient to take the spring out of any one’s
feet. The women were doing most of the leading,
the men clattered along somewhere in the rear, laughing
and shouting and inadvertently kicking one another
on the shins. The old times had come back, boisterously,
happily,-and every one was living in those
days when the hills gushed wealth, and when poverty
to-day might mean riches tomorrow.
Again and again Fairchild’s
eyes searched the crowds, the multicolored, overdressed
costumes of the women, the old-fashioned affairs with
which many of the men had arrayed themselves, ranging
all the way from high leather boots to frock suits
and stovepipe beaver hats. From one face to
another his gaze went; then he turned abstractedly
to the long line of tables, with their devotees of
keno, and bought a paddle.
From far away the drone of the caller
sounded in a voice familiar, and Fairchild looked
up to see the narrow-eyed, scarred face of Squint
Rodaine, who was officiating at the wheel. He
lost interest in the game; lackadaisically he placed
the buttons on their squares as the numbers were shouted,
finally to brush them all aside and desert the game.
His hatred of the Rodaines had grown to a point where
he could enjoy nothing with which they were connected,
where he despised everything with which they had the
remotest affiliation,-excepting, of course,
one person. And as he rose, Fairchild saw that
she was just entering the dance hall.
Quaint in an old-fashioned costume
which represented more the Civil War days than it
did those of the boom times of silver mining, she seemed
prettier than ever to Robert Fairchild, more girlish,
more entrancing. The big eyes appeared bigger
now, peeping from the confines of a poke bonnet; the
little hands seemed smaller with their half-length
gloves and shielded by the enormous peacock feather
fan they carried. Only a moment Fairchild hesitated.
Maurice Rodaine, attired in a mauve frock suit and
the inevitable accompanying beaver, had stopped to
talk to some one at the door. She stood alone,
looking about the hall, laughing and nodding,-and
then she looked at him! Fairchild did not wait.
From the platform at the end of the
big room the fiddles had begun to squeak, and the
caller was shouting his announcements. Couples
began to line up on the floor. The caller’s
voice grew louder:
“Two more couples-two more couples!
Grab yo’ podners!”
Fairchild was elbowing his way swiftly
forward, apologizing as he went. A couple took
its place beside the others. Once more the plea
of the caller sounded:
“One more couple-then
the dance starts. One more couple, lady an’
a gent! One more-”
“Please!” Robert Fairchild
had reached her and was holding forth his hand.
She looked up in half surprise, then demurred.
“But I don’t know these old dances.”
“Neither do I-or
any other, for that matter,” he confessed with
sudden boldness. “But does that make any
difference? Please!”
She glanced quickly toward the door.
Maurice Rodaine was still talking, and Fairchild
saw a little gleam come into her eyes,-the
gleam that shows when a woman decides to make some
one pay for rudeness. Again he begged:
“Won’t you-and
then we ’ll forget. I-I could
n’t take my payment in money!”
She eyed him quickly and saw the smile
on his lips. From the platform the caller voiced
another entreaty:
“One more cou-ple!
Ain’t there no lady an’ gent that’s
goin’ to fill out this here dance? One
more couple-one more couple!”
Fairchild’s hand was still extended.
Again Anita Richmond glanced toward the door, chuckled
to herself while Fairchild watched the dimples that
the merriment caused, and then-Fairchild
forgot the fact that he was wearing hobnailed shoes
and that his clothes were worn and old. He was
going forward to take his place on the dance floor,
and she was beside him!
Some way, as through a haze, he saw
her. Some way he realized that now and then
his hand touched hers, and that once, as they whirled
about the room, in obedience to the monarch on the
fiddler’s rostrum, his arm was about her waist,
and her head touching his shoulder. It made
little difference whether the dance calls were obeyed
after that. Fairchild was making up for all the
years he had plodded, all the years in which he had
known nothing but a slow, grubbing life, living them
all again and rightly, in the few swift moments of
a dance.
The music ended, and laughing they
returned to the side of the hall. Out of the
haze he heard words, and knew indistinctly that they
were his own:
“Will-will you dance with me again
tonight?”
“Selfish!” she chided.
“But will you?”
For just a moment her eyes grew serious.
“Did you ever realize that we ’ve
never been introduced?”
Fairchild was finding more conversation
than he ever had believed possible.
“No-but I realize
that I don’t care-if you ’ll
forgive it. I-believe that I ’m
a gentleman.”
“So do I-or I would n’t have
danced with you.”
“Then please-”
“Pardon me.” She
had laid a hand on his arm for just a moment, then
hurried away. Fairchild saw that she was approaching
young Rodaine, scowling in the background. That
person shot an angry remark at her as she approached
and followed it with streaming sentences. Fairchild
knew the reason. Jealousy! Couples returning
from the dance floor jostled against him, but he did
not move. He was waiting-waiting for
the outcome of the quarrel-and in a moment
it came. Anita Richmond turned swiftly, her
dark eyes ablaze, her pretty lips set and firm.
She looked anxiously about her, sighted Fairchild,
and then started toward him, while he advanced to
meet her.
“I ’ve reconsidered,”
was her brief announcement. “I ’ll
dance the next one with you.”
“And the next after that?”
Again: “Selfish!”
But Fairchild did not appear to hear.
“And the next and the next and
the next!” he urged as the caller issued his
inevitable invitations for couples. Anita smiled.
“Maybe-I ’ll think about it.”
“I ’ll never know how
to dance, unless you teach me.” Fairchild
pleaded, as they made their way to the center of the
floor. “I ’ll-”
“Don’t work on my sympathies!”
“But it’s the truth. I never will.”
“S’lute yo’
podners!” The dance was on. And while
the music squealed from the rostrum, while the swaying
forms some way made the rounds according to the caller’s
viewpoint of an old-time dance, Anita Richmond evidently
“thought about it.” When the next
dance came, they went again on the floor together,
Robert Fairchild and the brown-eyed girl whom he suddenly
realized he loved, without reasoning the past or the
future, without caring whom she might be or what her
plans might contain; a man out of prison lives by
impulse, and Fairchild was but lately released.
A third dance and a fourth, while
in the intervals Fairchild’s eyes sought out
the sulky, sullen form of Maurice Rodaine, flattened
against the wall, eyes evil, mouth a straight line,
and the blackness of hate discoloring his face.
It was as so much wine to Fairchild; he felt himself
really young for the first time in his life.
And as the music started again, he once more turned
to his companion.
Only, however, to halt and whirl and
stare in surprise. There had come a shout from
the doorway, booming, commanding:
“’Ands up, everybody! And quick
about it!”
Some one laughed and jabbed his hands
into the air. Another, quickly sensing a staged
surprise, followed the example. It was just the
finishing touch necessary,-the old-time
hold-up of the old-time dance. The “bandit”
strode forward.
“Out from be’ind that
bar! Drop that gun!” he commanded of the
white-aproned attendant. “Out from that
roulette wheel. Everybody line up! Quick-and
there ain’t no time for foolin’.”
Chattering and laughing, they obeyed,
the sheriff, his star gleaming, standing out in front
of them all, shivering in mock fright, his hands higher
than any one’s. The bandit, both revolvers
leveled, stepped forward a foot or so, and again ordered
speed. Fairchild, standing with his hands in
the air, looked down toward Anita, standing beside
him.
“Is n’t it exciting,”
she exclaimed. “Just like a regular hold-up!
I wonder who the bandit is. He certainly looks
the part, does n’t he?”
And Fairchild agreed that he did.
A bandanna handkerchief was wrapped about his head,
concealing his hair and ears. A mask was over
his eyes, supplemented by another bandanna, which,
beginning at the bridge of his nose, flowed over his
chin, cutting off all possible chance of recognition.
Only a second more he waited, then with a wave of
the guns, shouted his command:
“All right, everybody!
I’m a decent fellow. Don’t want
much, but I want it quick! This ’ere ’s
for the relief of widders and orphans. Make it
sudden. Each one of you gents step out to the
center of the room and leave five dollars. And
step back when you ’ve put it there.
Ladies stay where you ’re at!”
Again a laugh. Fairchild turned
to his companion, as she nudged him. “There,
it’s your turn.”
Out to the center of the floor went
Fairchild, the rest of the victims laughing and chiding
him. Back he came in mock fear, his hands in
the air. On down the line went the contributing
men. Then the bandit rushed forward, gathered
up the bills and gold pieces, shoved them in his pockets,
and whirled toward the door.
“The purpose of this ’ere
will be in the paper to-morrow,” he announced.
“And don’t you follow me to find out!
Back there!”
Two or three laughing men had started
forward, among them a fiddler, who had joined the
line, and who now rushed out in flaunting bravery,
brandishing his violin as though to brain the intruder.
Again the command:
“Back there-get back!”
Then the crowd recoiled. Flashes
had come from the masked man’s guns, the popping
of electric light globes above and the showering of
glass testifying to the fact that they had contained
something more than mere wadding. Somewhat dazed,
the fiddler continued his rush, suddenly to crumple
and fall, while men milled and women screamed.
A door slammed, the lock clicked, and the crowd rushed
for the windows. The hold-up had been real after
all,-instead of a planned, joking affair.
On the floor the fiddler lay gasping-and
bleeding. And the bandit was gone.
All in a moment the dance hall seemed
to have gone mad. Men were rushing about and
shouting; panic-stricken women clawed at one another
and fought their way toward a freedom they could not
gain. Windows crashed as forms hurtled against
them; screams sounded. Hurriedly, as the crowd
massed thicker, Fairchild raised the small form of
Anita in his arms and carried her to a chair, far
at one side.
“It’s all right now,”
he said, calming her. “Everything ’s
over-look, they ’re helping the fiddler
to his feet. Maybe he ’s not badly hurt.
Everything ’s all right-”
And then he straightened. A
man had unlocked the door from the outside and had
rushed into the dance hall, excited, shouting.
It was Maurice Rodaine.
“I know who it was,” he
almost screamed. “I got a good look at
him-jumped out of the window and almost
headed him off. He took off his mask outside-and
I saw him.”
“You saw him ?”
A hundred voices shouted the question at once.
“Yes.” Then Maurice
Rodaine nodded straight toward Robert Fairchild.
“The light was good, and I got a straight look
at him. He was that fellow’s partner-a
Cornishman they call Harry!”