“I don’t believe it!”
Anita Richmond exclaimed with conviction and clutched
at Fairchild’s arm. “I don’t
believe it!”
“I can’t!” Robert
answered. Then he turned to the accuser.
“How could it be possible for Harry to be down
here robbing a dance hall when he ’s out working
the mine?”
“Working the mine?” This
time it was the sheriff. “What’s
the necessity for a day and night shift?”
The question was pertinent-and
Fairchild knew it. But he did not hesitate.
“I know it sounds peculiar-but
it’s the truth. We agreed upon it yesterday
afternoon.”
“At whose suggestion?”
“I ’m not sure-but I think
it was mine.”
“Young fellow,” the sheriff
had approached him now, “you ’d better
be certain about that. It looks to me like that
might be a pretty good excuse to give when a man can’t
produce an alibi. Anyway, the identification
seems pretty complete. Everybody in this room
heard that man talk with a Cousin Jack accent.
And Mr. Rodaine says that he saw his face.
That seems conclusive.”
“If Mr. Rodaine’s word counts for anything.”
The sheriff looked at him sharply.
“Evidently you have n’t
been around here long.” Then he turned
to the crowd. “I want a couple of good
men to go along with me as deputies.”
“I have a right to go.” Fairchild
had stepped forward.
“Certainly. But not as a deputy.
Who wants to volunteer?”
Half a dozen men came forward, and
from them the sheriff chose two. Fairchild turned
to say good-by to Anita. In vain. Already
Maurice Rodaine had escorted her, apparently against
her will, to a far end of the dance hall, and there
was quarreling with her. Fairchild hurried to
join the sheriff and his two deputies, just starting
out of the dance hall. Five minutes later they
were in a motor car, chugging up Kentucky Gulch.
The trip was made silently.
There was nothing for Fairchild to say; he had told
all he knew. Slowly, the motor car fighting against
the grade, the trip was accomplished. Then the
four men leaped from the machine at the last rise
before the tunnel was reached and three of them went
forward afoot toward where a slight gleam of light
came from the mouth of the Blue Poppy.
A consultation and then the creeping
forms made the last fifty feet. The sheriff took
the lead, at last to stop behind a boulder and to
shout a command:
“Hey you, in there.”
“’Ey yourself!” It was Harry’s
voice.
“Come out-and be
quick about it. Hold your light in front of your
face with both hands.”
“The ’ell I will! And ’oo
’s talking?”
“Sheriff Adams of Clear Creek
County. You ’ve got one minute to
come out-or I ’ll shoot.”
“I ’m coming on the run!”
And almost instantly the form of Harry,
his acetylene lamp lighting up his bulbous, surprised
countenance with its spraylike mustache, appeared
at the mouth of the tunnel.
“What the bloody ’ell?”
he gasped, as he looked into the muzzle of the revolver.
From down the mountain side came the shout of one
of the deputies:
“Sheriff! Looks like it’s
him, all right. I ’ve found a horse
down here-all sweated up from running.”
“That’s about the answer.”
Sheriff Adams went forward and with a motion of his
revolver sent Harry’s hands into the air.
“Let’s see what you ’ve got
on you.”
A light gleamed below as an electric
flash in the hands of one of the deputies began an
investigation of the surroundings. The sheriff,
finishing his search of ’Arry’s pockets,
stepped back.
“Well,” he demanded, “what did you
do with the proceeds?”
“The proceeds?” Harry stared blankly.
“Of what?”
“Quit your kidding now. They ’ve
found your horse down there.”
“Would n’t it be a good
idea-” Fairchild had cut in acridly-“to
save your accusations on this thing until you’re
a little surer of it? Harry has n’t any
horse. If he ’s rented one, you ought to
be able to find that out pretty shortly.”
As if in answer, the sheriff turned
and shouted a question down the mountain side.
And back came the answer:
“It’s Doc Mason’s.
Must have been stolen. Doc was at the dance.”
“I guess that settles it.”
The officer reached for his hip pocket. “Stick
out your hands, Harry, while I put the cuffs on them.”
“But ’ow in bloody ’ell
’ave I been doing anything when I ’ve
been up ’ere working on this chiv wheel?
’Ow ?”
“They say you held up the dance
to-night and robbed us,” Fairchild cut in.
Harry’s face lost its surprised look, to give
way to a glance of keen questioning.
“And do you say it?”
“I most certainly do not.
The identification was given by that honorable person
known as Mr. Maurice Rodaine.”
“Oh! One thief identifying another-”
“Just cut your remarks along those lines.”
“Sheriff!” Again the voice from below.
“Yeh!”
“We ’ve found a cache
down here. Must have been made in a hurry-two
new revolvers, bullets, a mask, a couple of new handkerchiefs
and the money.”
Harry’s eyes grew wide. Then he stuck
out his hands.
“The evidence certainly is piling
up!” he grunted. “I might as well
save my talking for later.”
“That’s a good idea.”
The sheriff snapped the handcuffs into place.
Then Fairchild shut off the pumps and they started
toward the machine. Back in Ohadi more news awaited
them. Harry, if Harry had been the highwayman,
had gone to no expense for his outfit. The combined
general store and hardware emporium of Gregg Brothers
had been robbed of the articles necessary for a disguise,-also
the revolvers and their bullets. Robert Fairchild
watched Harry placed in the solitary cell of the county
jail with a spirit that could not respond to the Cornishman’s
grin and his assurances that morning would bring a
righting of affairs. Four charges hung heavy
above him: that of horse-stealing, of burglary,
of highway robbery, and worse, the final one of assault
with attempt to kill. Fairchild turned wearily
away; he could not find the optimism to join Harry’s
cheerful announcement that it would be “all
right.” The appearances were otherwise.
Besides, up in the little hospital on the hill, Fairchild
had seen lights gleaming as he entered the jail, and
he knew that doctors were working there over the wounded
body of the fiddler. Tired, heavy at heart, his
earlier conquest of the night sodden and overshadowed
now, he turned away from the cell and its optimistic
occupant,-out into the night.
It was only a short walk to the hospital
and Fairchild went there, to leave with at least a
ray of hope. The probing operation had been
completed; the fiddler would live, and at least the
charge against Harry would not be one of murder.
That was a thing for which to be thankful; but there
was plenty to cause consternation, as Fairchild walked
slowly down the dark, winding street toward the main
thoroughfare. Without Harry, Fairchild now felt
himself lost. Before the big, genial, eccentric
Cornishman had come into his life, he had believed,
with some sort of divine ignorance, that he could carry
out his ambitions by himself, with no knowledge of
the technical details necessary to mining, with no
previous history of the Blue Poppy to guide him, and
with no help against the enemies who seemed everywhere.
Now he saw that it was impossible. More, the
incidents of the night showed how swiftly those enemies
were working, how sharp and stiletto-like their weapons.
That Harry was innocent was certain,-to
Robert Fairchild. There was quite a difference
between a joke which a whole town recognized as such
and a deliberate robbery which threatened the life
of at least one man. Fairchild knew in his heart
that Harry was not built along those lines.
Looking back over it now, Fairchild
could see how easily Fate had played into the hands
of the Rodaines, if the Rodaines had not possessed
a deeper concern than merely to seize upon a happening
and turn it to their own account. The highwayman
was big. The highwayman talked with a “Cousin-Jack”
accent,-for all Cornishmen are “Cousin
Jacks” in the mining country. Those two
features in themselves, Fairchild thought, as he stumbled
along in the darkness, were sufficient to start the
scheming plot in the brain of Maurice Rodaine, already
ugly and evil through the trick played by Harry on
his father and the rebuke that had come from Anita
Richmond. It was an easy matter for him to get
the inspiration, leap out of the window, and then
wait until the robber had gone, that he might flare
forth with his accusation. And after that .
Either Chance, or something stronger,
had done the rest. The finding of the stolen
horse and the carelessly made cache near the mouth
of the Blue Poppy mine would be sufficient in the
eyes of any jury. The evidence was both direct
and circumstantial. To Fairchild’s mind,
there was small chance for escape by Harry, once his
case went to trial. Nor did the pounding insistence
of intuitive knowledge that the whole thing had been
a deliberately staged plot on the part of the Rodaines,
father and son, make the slightest difference in Fairchild’s
estimation. How could he prove it? By personal
animosity? There was the whole town of Ohadi
to testify that the highwayman was a big man, of the
build of Harry, and that he spoke with a Cornish accent.
There were the sworn members of the posse to show
that they, without guidance, had discovered the horse
and the cache,-and the Rodaines were nowhere
about to help them. And experience already had
told Fairchild that the Rodaines, by a deliberately
constructed system, held a ruling power; that against
their word, his would be as nothing. Besides,
where would be Harry’s alibi? He had none;
he had been at the mine, alone. There was no
one to testify for him, not even Fairchild.
The world was far from bright.
Down the dark street the man wandered, his hands
sunk deep in his pockets, his head low between his
shoulders,-only to suddenly galvanize into
intensity, and to stop short that he might hear again
the voice which had come to him. At one side
was a big house,-a house whose occupants
he knew instinctively, for he had seen the shadow
of a woman, hands outstretched, as she passed the
light-strewn shade of a window on the second floor.
More, he had heard her voice, supplemented by gruffer
tones. And then it came again.
It was pleading, and at the same time
angered with the passion of a person approaching hysteria.
A barking sentence answered her, something that Fairchild
could not understand. He left the old board
sidewalk and crept to the porch that he might hear
the better. Then every nerve within him jangled,
and the black of the darkness changed to red.
The Rodaines were within; he had heard first the cold
voice of the father, then the rasping tones of the
son, in upbraiding. More, there had come the
sobbing of a woman; instinctively Fairchild knew that
it was Anita Richmond. And then:
It was her voice, high, screaming.
Hysteria had come,-the wild, racking hysteria
of a person driven to the breaking point:
“Leave this house-hear
me! Leave this house! Can’t you see
that you’re killing him? Don’t you
dare touch me-leave this house! No-I
won’t be quiet-I won’t-you
’re killing him, I tell you !”
And Fairchild waited for nothing more.
A lunge, and he was on the veranda. One more
spring and he had reached the door, to find it unlocked,
to throw it wide and to leap into the hall. Great
steps, and he had cleared the stairs to the second
floor.
A scream came from a doorway before
him; dimly, as through a red screen, Fairchild saw
the frightened face of Anita Richmond, and on the
landing, fronting him angrily, stood the two Rodaines.
For a moment, Fairchild disregarded them and turned
to the sobbing, disheveled little being in the doorway.
“What’s happened?”
“They were threatening me-and
father!” she moaned. “But you shouldn’t
have come in-you should n’t have-”
“I heard you scream. I
could n’t help it. I heard you say they
were killing your father-”
The girl looked anxiously toward an
inner room, where Fairchild could see faintly the
still figure of a man outlined under the covers of
an old-fashioned four-poster.
“They-they-got
him excited. He had another stroke. I-I
could n’t stand it any longer.”
“You ’d better get out,”
said Fairchild curtly to the Rodaines, with a suggestive
motion toward the stairs. They hesitated a moment
and Maurice seemed about to launch himself at Robert,
but his father laid a restraining hand on his arm.
A step and the elder Rodaine hesitated.
“I ’m only going because
of your father,” he said gruffly, with a glance
toward Anita.
Fairchild knew differently, but he
said nothing. The gray of Rodaine’s countenance
told where his courage lay; it was yellow gray, the
dirty gray of a man who fights from cover, and from
cover only.
“Oh, I know,” Anita said.
“It’s-it’s all right.
I-I ’m sorry. I-did
n’t realize that I was screaming-please
forgive me-and go, won’t you?
It means my father’s life now.”
“That’s the only reason
I am going; I ’m not going because-”
“Oh, I know. Mr. Fairchild
should n’t have come in here. He should
n’t have done it. I ’m sorry-please
go.”
Down the steps they went, the older
man with his hand still on his son’s arm; while,
white-faced, Fairchild awaited Anita, who had suddenly
sped past him into the sick room, then was wearily
returning.
“Can I help you?” he asked at last.
“Yes,” came her rather
cold answer, only to be followed by a quickly whispered
“Forgive me.” And then the tones
became louder-so that they could be heard
at the bottom of the stairs: “You can help
me greatly-simply by going and not creating
any more of a disturbance.”
“But-”
“Please go,” came the
direct answer. “And please do not vent
your spite on Mr. Rodaine and his son. I ’m
sure that they will act like gentlemen if you will.
You should n’t have rushed in here.”
“I heard you screaming, Miss Richmond.”
“I know,” came her answer,
as icily as ever. Then the door downstairs closed
and the sound of steps came on the veranda. She
leaned close to him. “I had to say that,”
came her whispered words. “Please don’t
try to understand anything I do in the future.
Just go-please!”
And Fairchild obeyed.