The Rodaines were on the sidewalk
when Fairchild came forth from the Richmond home,
and true to his instructions from the frightened girl,
he brushed past them swiftly and went on down the street,
not turning at the muttered invectives which
came from the crooked lips of the older man, not seeming
even to notice their presence as he hurried on toward
Mother Howard’s boarding house. Whether
Fate had played with him or against him, he did not
know,-nor could he summon the brain power
to think. Happenings had come too thickly in
the last few hours for him to differentiate calmly;
everything depended upon what course the Rodaines
might care to pursue. If theirs was to be a campaign
of destruction, without a care whom it might involve,
Fairchild could see easily that he too might soon
be juggled into occupying the cell with Harry in the
county jail. Wearily he turned the corner to
the main street and made his plodding way, along it,
his shoulders drooping, his brain fagged from the
flaring heat of anger and the strain that the events
of the night had put upon it. In his creaky bed
in the old boarding house, he again sought to think,
but in vain. He could only lie awake and stare
into the darkness about him, while through his mind
ran a muddled conglomeration of foreboding, waking
dreams, revamps of the happenings of the last three
weeks, memories which brought him nothing save sleeplessness
and the knowledge that, so far, he fought a losing
fight.
After hours, daylight began to streak
the sky. Fairchild, dull, worn by excitement
and fatigue, strove to rise, then laid his head on
the pillow for just a moment of rest. And with
that perversity which extreme weariness so often exerts,
his eyes closed, and he slept,-to wake
at last with the realization that it was late morning,
and that some one was pounding on the door.
Fairchild raised his head.
“Is that you, Mother Howard?
I’m getting up, right away.”
A slight chuckle answered him.
“But this is n’t Mother Howard.
May I see you a moment?”
“Who is it?”
“No one you know-yet.
I ’ve come to talk to you about your
partner. May I come in?”
“Yes.” Fairchild
was fully alive now to the activities that the day
held before him. The door opened, and a young
man, alert, almost cocky in manner, with black, snappy
eyes showing behind horn-rimmed glasses, entered and
reached for the sole chair that the room contained.
“My name ’s Farrell,”
he announced. “Randolph P. Farrell.
And to make a long story short, I ’m your lawyer.”
“My lawyer?” Fairchild
stared. “I haven’t any lawyer in
Ohadi. The only-”
“That does n’t alter the
fact. I ’m your lawyer, and I ’m
at your service. And I don’t mind telling
you that it’s just about my first case.
Otherwise, I don’t guess I ’d have gotten
it.”
“Why not?” The frankness
had driven other queries from Fairchild’s mind.
Farrell, the attorney, grinned cheerily.
“Because I understand it concerns
the Rodaines. Nobody but a fool out of college
cares to buck up against them. Besides, nearly
everybody has a little money stuck into their enterprises.
And seeing I have no money at all, I ’m not
financially interested. And not being interested,
I ’m wholly just, fair and willing to fight ’em
to a standstill. Now what’s the trouble?
Your partner ’s in jail, as I understand it.
Guilty or not guilty?”
“Wa-wait a minute!”
The breeziness of the man had brought Fairchild to
more wakefulness and to a certain amount of cheer.
“Who hired you?” Then with a sudden inspiration:
“Mother Howard did n’t go and do this?”
“Mother Howard? You mean
the woman who runs the boarding house? Not at
all.”
“But-”
“I ’m not exactly at liberty to state.”
Suspicion began to assert itself.
The smile of comradeship that the other man’s
manner instilled faded suddenly.
“Under those conditions, I don’t believe-”
“Don’t say it! Don’t
get started along those lines. I know what you
’re thinking. Knew that was what would
happen from the start. And against the wishes
of the person who hired me for this work, I-well,
I brought the evidence. I might as well show
it now as try to put over this secret stuff and lose
a lot of time doing it. Here, take a glimpse
and then throw it away, tear it up, swallow it, or
do anything you want to with it, just so nobody else
sees it. Ready? Look.”
He drew forth a small visiting card.
Fairchild glanced. Then he looked-and
then he sat up straight in bed. For before him
were the engraved words:
Miss Anita Natalie Richmond.
While across the card was hastily
written, in a hand distinctively feminine:
Mr. Fairchild: This is my good
friend. He will help you. There is no
fee attached. Please destroy.
Anita Richmond.
“Bu-but I don’t understand.”
“You know Miss-er-the
writer of this card, don’t you?”
“But why should she ?”
Mr. Farrell, barrister-at-law, grinned broadly.
“I see you don’t know
Miss-the writer of this card at all.
That’s her nature. Besides-well,
I have a habit of making long stories short.
All she ’s got to do with me is crook her finger
and I ’ll jump through. I ’m-none
of your business. But, anyway, here I am-”
Fairchild could not restrain a laugh.
There was something about the man, about his nervous,
yet boyish way of speaking, about his enthusiasm,
that wiped out suspicion and invited confidence.
The owner of the Blue Poppy mine leaned forward.
“But you did n’t finish your sentence
about-the writer of that card.”
“You mean-oh-well,
there ’s nothing to that. I ’m in
love with her. Been in love with her since I
’ve been knee-high to a duck. So ’re
you. So ’s every other human being that
thinks he’s a regular man. So’s Maurice
Rodaine. Don’t know about the rest of you-but
I have n’t got a chance. Don’t even
think of it any more-look on it as a necessary
affliction, like wearing winter woolens and that sort
of thing. Don’t let it bother you.
The problem right now is to get your partner out
of jail. How much money have you got?”
“Only a little more than two thousand.”
“Not enough. There ’ll
be bonds on four charges. At the least, they
’ll be around a thousand dollars apiece.
Probabilities are that they ’ll run around
ten thousand for the bunch. How about the Blue
Poppy?”
Fairchild shrugged his shoulders.
“I don’t know what it’s worth.”
“Neither do I. Neither does
the judge. Neither does any one else. Therefore,
it’s worth at least ten thousand dollars.
That ’ll do the trick. Get out your deeds
and that sort of thing-we ’ll have
to file them with the bond as security.”
“But that will ruin us!”
“How so? A bond ’s
nothing more than a mortgage. It doesn’t
stop you from working on the mine. All it does
is give evidence that your friend and partner will
be on the job when the bailiff yells oyez, oyez, oyez.
Otherwise, they ’ll take the mine away from
you and sell it at public sale for the price of the
bond. But that’s a happen-so of the future.
And there ’s no danger if our client-you
will notice that I call him our client-is
clothed with the dignity and the protecting mantle
of innocence and stays here to see his trial out.”
“He ’ll do that, all right.”
“Then we ’re merely using
the large and ample safe of the court of this judicial
district as a deposit vault for some very valuable
papers. I ’d suggest now that you get
up, seize your deeds and accompany me to the palace
of justice. Otherwise, that partner of yours
will have to eat dinner in a place called in undignified
language the hoosegow!”
It was like warm sunshine on a cold
day, the chatter of this young man in horn-rimmed
glasses. Soon Fairchild was dressed and walking
hurriedly up the street with the voluble attorney.
A half-hour more and they were before the court.
Fairchild, the lawyer and the jail-worn Harry, his
mustache fluttering in more directions than ever.
“Not guilty, Your Honor,”
said Randolph P. Farrell. “May I ask the
extent of the bond?”
The judge adjusted his glasses and
studied the information which the district attorney
had laid before him.
“In view of the number of charges
and the seriousness of each, I must fix an aggregate
bond of five thousand dollars, or twelve hundred fifty
dollars for each case.”
“Thank you; we had come prepared
for more. Mr. Fairchild, who is Mr. Harkins’
partner, is here to appear as bondsman. The deeds
are in his name alone, the partnership existing, as
I understand it, upon their word of honor between
them. I refer, Your Honor, to the deeds of the
Blue Poppy mine. Would Your Honor care to examine
them?”
His Honor would. His Honor did.
For a long moment he studied them, and Fairchild,
in looking about the courtroom, saw the bailiff in
conversation with a tall, thin man, with squint eyes
and a scar-marked forehead. A moment later,
the judge looked over his glasses.
“Bailiff!”
“Yes, Your Honor.”
“Have you any information regarding
the value of the Blue Poppy mining claims?”
“Sir, I have just been talking
to Mr. Rodaine. He says they ’re well
worth the value of the bond.”
“How about that, Rodaine?”
The judge peered down the court room. Squint
Rodaine scratched his hawklike nose with his thumb
and nodded.
“They ’ll do,” was
his answer, and the judge passed the papers to the
clerk of the court.
“Bond accepted. I ’ll set this trial
for-”
“If Your Honor please, I should
like it at the very, very earliest possible moment,”
Randolph P. Farrell had cut in. “This is
working a very great hardship upon an innocent man
and-”
“Can’t be done.”
The judge was scrawling on his docket. “Everything
’s too crowded. Can’t be reached
before the November term. Set it for November
11th.”
“Very well, Your Honor.”
Then he turned with a wide grin to his clients.
“That’s all until November.”
Out they filed through the narrow
aisle of the court room, Fairchild’s knee brushing
the trouser leg of Squint Rodaine as they passed.
At the door, the attorney turned toward them, then
put forth a hand.
“Drop in any day this week and
we ’ll go over things,” he announced cheerfully.
“We put one over on his royal joblots that time,
anyway. Hates me from the ground up. Worst
we can hope for is a conviction and then a Supreme
Court reversal. I ’ll get him so mad he
’ll fill the case with errors. He used
to be an instructor down at Boulder, and I stuck the
pages of a lecture together on him one day. That’s
why I asked for an early trial. Knew he ’d
give me a late one. That ’ll let us have
time to stir up a little favorable evidence, which
right now we don’t possess. Understand-all
money that comes from the mine is held in escrow until
this case is decided. But I ’ll explain
that. Going to stick around here and bask in
the effulgence of really possessing a case.
S’long!”
And he turned back into the court
room, while Fairchild, the dazed Harry stalking beside
him, started down the street.
“’Ow do you figure it?” asked the
Cornishman at last.
“What?”
“Rodaine. ’E ’elped us out!”
Fairchild stopped. It had not
occurred to him before. But now he saw it:
that if Rodaine, as an expert on mining, had condemned
the Blue Poppy, it could have meant only one thing,
the denial of bond by the judge and the lack of freedom
for Harry. Fairchild rubbed a hand across his
brow.
“I can’t figure it,”
came at last. “And especially since his
son is the accuser and since I got the best of them
both last night!”
“Got the best of ’em? You?”
The story was brief in its telling.
And it brought no explanation of the sudden amiability
displayed by the crooked-faced Rodaine. They
went on, striving vainly for a reason, at last to stop
in front of the post-office, as the postmaster leaned
out of the door.
“Your name’s Fairchild,
isn’t it?” asked the person of letters,
as he fastened a pair of gimlet eyes on the owner
of the Blue Poppy.
“Yes.”
“Thought so. Some of the
fellows said you was. Better drop in here for
your mail once in a while. There ’s been
a letter for you here for two days!”
“For me?” Vaguely Fairchild
went within and received the missive, a plain, bond
envelope without a return address. He turned
it over and over in his hand before he opened it-then
looked at the postmark,-Denver. At
last:
“Open it, why don’t you?”
Harry’s mustache was tickling
his ear, as the big miner stared over his shoulder.
Fairchild obeyed. They gasped together.
Before them were figures and sentences which blurred
for a moment, finally to resolve into:
Mr. Robert Fairchild,
Ohadi, Colorado.
Dear Sir;
I am empowered by a client whose name
I am not at liberty to state, to make you an offer
of $50,000. for your property in Clear Creek County,
known as the Blue Poppy mine. In replying, kindly
address your letter to
Box 180, Denver, Colo.
Harry whistled long and thoughtfully.
“That’s a ’olé lot of
money!”
“An awful lot, Harry.
But why was the offer made? There ’s nothing
to base it on. There ’s-”
Then for a moment, as they stepped
out of the post-office, he gave up the thought, even
of comparative riches. Twenty feet away, a man
and a girl were approaching, talking as though there
never had been the slightest trouble between them.
They crossed the slight alleyway, and she laid her
hand on his arm, almost caressingly, Fairchild thought,
and he stared hard as though in unbelief of their identity.
But it was certain. It was Maurice Rodaine
and Anita Richmond; they came closer, her eyes turned
toward Fairchild, and then-
She went on, without speaking, without
taking the trouble to notice, apparently, that he
had been standing there.