Fairchild did not show the item to
Harry. There was little that it could accomplish,
and besides, he felt that his comrade had enough to
think about. The unexpected turn of the coroner’s
inquest had added to the heavy weight of Harry’s
troubles; it meant the probability in the future of
a grand jury investigation and the possible indictment
as accessory after the fact in the murder of “Sissie”
Larsen. Not that Fairchild had been influenced
in the slightest by the testimony of Crazy Laura;
the presence of Squint Rodaine and his son had shown
too plainly that they were connected in some way with
it, that, in fact, they were responsible. An
opportunity had arisen for them, and they had seized
upon it. More, there came the shrewd opinion
of old Mother Howard, once Fairchild and Harry had
reached the boarding house and gathered in the parlor
for their consultation:
“Ain’t it what I said
right in the beginning?” the gray-haired woman
asked. “She ’ll kill for that man,
if necessary. It was n’t as hard as you
think-all Squint Rodaine had to do was to
act nice to her and promise her a few things that
he ’ll squirm out of later on, and she went
on the stand and lied her head off.”
“But for a crazy woman-”
“Laura’s crazy-and
she ain’t crazy. I ’ve seen
that woman as sensible and as shrewd as any sane woman
who ever drew breath. Then again, I ’ve
seen her when I would n’t get within fifty miles
of her. Sometimes she ’s pitiful to me;
and then again I ’ve got to remember the
fact that she ’s a dangerous woman. Goodness
only knows what would happen to a person who fell
into her clutches when she ’s got one of those
immortality streaks on.”
“One of those what?” Harry looked up in
surprise.
“Immortality. That’s
why you ’ll find her sneaking around graveyards
at night, gathering herbs and taking them to that old
house on the Georgeville Road, where she lives, and
brewing them into some sort of concoction that she
sprinkles on the graves. She believes that it’s
a sure system of bringing immortality to a person.
Poison-that’s about what it is.”
Harry shrugged his shoulders.
“Poison ’s what she is!”
he exclaimed. “Ain’t it enough that
I ’m accused of every crime in the calendar
without ’er getting me mixed up in a murder?
And-” this time he looked at Fairchild
with dolorous eyes-“’ow ’re
we going to furnish bond this time, if the grand jury
indicts me?”
“I ’m afraid there won’t be any.”
Mother Howard set her lips for a minute, then straightened
proudly.
“Well, I guess there will!
They can’t charge you a million dollars on
a thing like that. It’s bondable-and
I guess I ’ve got a few things that are
worth something-and a few friends that I
can go to. I don’t see why I should be
left out of everything, just because I ’m a woman!”
“Lor’ love you!”
Harry grinned, his eyes showing plainly that the
world was again good for him and that his troubles,
as far as a few slight charges of penitentiary offenses
were concerned, amounted to very little in his estimation.
Harry had a habit of living just for the day.
And the support of Mother Howard had wiped out all
future difficulties for him. The fact that convictions
might await him and that the heavy doors at Canon
City might yawn for him made little difference right
now. Behind the great bulwark of his mustache,
his big lips spread in a happy announcement of joy,
and the world was good.
Silently, Robert Fairchild rose and
left the parlor for his own room. Some way he
could not force himself to shed his difficulties in
the same light, airy way as Harry. He wanted
to be alone, alone where he could take stock of the
obstacles which had arisen in his path, of the unexplainable
difficulties and tribulations which had come upon him,
one trailing the other, ever since he had read the
letter left for him by his father. And it was
a stock-taking of disappointing proportions.
Looking back, Fairchild could see
now that his dreams had led only to catastrophes.
The bright vista which had been his that day he sat
swinging his legs over the tailboard of the truck as
it ground up Mount Lookout had changed to a thing
of gloomy clouds and of ominous futures. Nothing
had gone right. From the very beginning, there
had been only trouble, only fighting, fighting, fighting
against insurmountable odds, which seemed to throw
him ever deeper into the mire of defeat, with every
onslaught. He had met a girl whom he had instinctively
liked, only to find a mystery about her which could
not be fathomed. He had furthered his acquaintance
with her, only to bring about a condition where now
she passed him on the street without speaking and which,
he felt, had instigated that tiny notice in the Bugle,
telling of her probable marriage in the late autumn
to a man he detested as a cad and as an enemy.
He had tried his best to follow the lure of silver;
if silver existed in the Blue Poppy mine, he had labored
against the powers of Nature, only to be the unwilling
cause of a charge of murder against his father.
And more, it was clear, cruelly clear, that if it
had not been for his own efforts and those of a man
who had come to help him, the skeleton of Sissie Larsen
never would have been discovered, and the name of
Thornton Fairchild might have gone on in the peace
which the white-haired, frightened man had sought.
But now there was no choosing.
Robert was the son of a murderer. Six men had
stamped that upon him in the basement of the courthouse
that night. His funds were low, growing lower
every day, and there was little possibility of rehabilitating
them until the trial of Harry should come, and Fate
should be kind enough to order an acquittal, releasing
the products from escrow. In case of a conviction,
Fairchild could see only disaster. True, the
optimistic Farrell had spoken of a Supreme Court reversal
of any verdict against his partner, but that would
avail little as far as the mine was concerned.
It must still remain in escrow as the bond of Harry
until the case was decided, and that might mean years.
And one cannot borrow money upon a thing that is
mortgaged in its entirety to a commonwealth.
In the aggregate, the outlook was far from pleasant.
The Rodaines had played with stacked cards, and so
far every hand had been theirs. Fairchild’s
credit, and his standing, was ruined. He had
been stamped by the coroner’s jury as the son
of a murderer, and that mark must remain upon him until
it could be cleared by forces now imperceptible to
Fairchild. His partner was under bond, accused
of four crimes. The Rodaines had won a victory,
perhaps greater than they knew. They had succeeded
in soiling the reputations of the two men they called
enemies, damaging them to such an extent that they
must henceforth fight at a disadvantage, without the
benefit of a solid ground of character upon which to
stand. Fairchild suddenly realized that he was
all but whipped, that the psychological advantage
was all on the side of Squint Rodaine, his son, and
the crazy woman who did their bidding. More,
another hope had gone glimmering; even had the announcement
not come forth that Anita Richmond had given her promise
to marry Maurice Rodaine, the action of a coroner’s
jury that night had removed her from hope forever.
A son of a man who has been called a slayer has little
right to love a woman, even if that woman has a bit
of mystery about her. All things can be explained-but
murder!
It was growing late, but Fairchild
did not seek bed. Instead he sat by the window,
staring out at the shadows of the mountains, out at
the free, pure night, and yet at nothing. After
a long time, the door opened, and a big form entered-Harry-to
stand silent a moment, then to come forward and lay
a hand on the other man’s shoulder.
“Don’t let it get you,
Boy,” he said softly-for him.
“It’s going to come out all right.
Everything comes out all right-if you ain’t
wrong yourself.”
“I know, Harry. But it’s an awful
tangle right now.”
“Sure it is. But it ain’t
as if a sane person ’ad said it against you.
There ’ll never be anything more to that; Farrell
’ll ’ave ’er adjudged insane
if it ever comes to anything like that. She ’ll
never give no more testimony. I ’ve
been talking with ’im-’e stopped
in just after you came upstairs. It’s
only a crazy woman.”
“But they took her word for
it, Harry. They believed her. And they
gave the verdict-against my father!”
“I know. I was there,
right beside you. I ’eard it. But
it ’ll come out right, some way.”
There was a moment of silence, then
a gripping fear at the heart of Fairchild.
“Just how crazy is she, Harry?”
“’Er? Plumb daft!
Of course, as Mother ’Oward says, there ’s
times when she ’s straight-but they
don’t last long. And, if she ’d given
’er testimony in writing, Mother ’Oward
says it all might ’ave been different,
and we ’d not ’ave ’ad
anything to worry about.”
“In writing?”
“Yes, she ’s ’arfway
sane then. It seems ’er mind ’s disconnected,
some wye. I don’t know ’ow-Mother
’Oward ’s got the ’olé lingo,
and everybody in town knows about it. Whenever
anybody wants to get anything real straight from Crazy
Laura, they make ’er write it. That part
of ’er brain seems all right. She remembers
everything she does then and ’ow crazy it is,
and tells you all about it.”
“But why did n’t Farrell insist upon that
tonight?”
“’E could n’t have
gotten ’er to do it. And nobody can get
’er to do it as long has Squint’s around-so
Mother ’Oward says. ’E ’s got
a influence about ’im. And she does exactly
what ’e ’ll sye-all ’e
’s got to do is to look at ’er.
Notice ’ow flustered up she got when the coroner
asked ’er about that book?”
“I wonder what it would really tell?”
Harry chuckled.
“Nobody knows. Nobody
’s ever seen it. Not even Squint Rodaine.
That’s the one thing she ’s got the strength
to keep from ’im-I guess it’s
a part of ’er right brain that tells ’er
to keep it a secret! I ’m going to bed
now. So ’re you. And you ’re
going to sleep. Good night.”
He went out of the room then, and
Fairchild, obedient to the big Cornishman’s
command, sought rest. But it was a hard struggle.
Morning came, and he joined Harry at breakfast, facing
the curious glances of the other boarders, staving
off their inquiries and their illy couched consolations.
For, in spite of the fact that it was not voiced
in so many words, the conviction was present that Crazy
Laura had told at least a semblance of the truth,
and that the dovetailing incidents of the past fitted
into a well-connected story for which there must be
some foundation. Moreover, in the corner were
Blindeye Bozeman and Taylor Bill, hurrying through
their breakfast that they might go to their work in
the Silver Queen, Squint Rodaine’s mine, less
than a furlong from the ill-boding Blue Poppy.
Fairchild could see that they were talking about
him, their eyes turned often in his direction; once
Taylor Bill nodded and sneered as he answered some
remark of his companion. The blood went hot in
Fairchild’s brain. He rose from the table,
hands clenched, muscles tensed, only to find himself
drawn back by the strong grasp of Harry. The
big Cornishman whispered to him as he took his seat
again:
“It ’ll only make more
trouble. I know ’ow you feel-but
’old in. ’Old in!”
It was an admonition which Fairchild
was forced to repeat to himself more than once that
morning as he walked uptown with Harry, to face the
gaze of the street loafers, to be plied with questions,
and to strive his best to fence away from them.
There were those who were plainly curious; there
were others who professed not to believe the testimony
and who talked loudly of action against the coroner
for having introduced the evidence of a woman known
by every one to be lacking in balanced mentality.
There were others who, by their remarks, showed that
they were concealing the real truth of their thoughts
and only using a cloak of interest to guide them to
other food for the carrion proclivities of their minds.
To all of them Fairchild and Harry made the same
reply: that they had nothing to say, that they
had given all the information possible on the witness
stand during the inquest, and that there was nothing
further forthcoming.
And it was while he made this statement
for the hundredth time that Fairchild saw Anita Richmond
going to the post-office with the rest of the usual
crowd, following the arrival of the morning train.
Again she passed him without speaking, but her glance
did not seem so cold as it had been on the morning
that he had seen her with Rodaine, nor did the lack
of recognition appear as easily simulated. That
she knew what had happened and the charge that had
been made against his father, Fairchild did not doubt.
That she knew he had read the “personal”
in the Bugle was as easily determined.
Between them was a gulf-caused by what
Fairchild could only guess-a gulf which
he could not essay to cross, and which she, for some
reason, would not. But there was nothing that
could stop him from watching her, with hungry eyes
which followed her until she had disappeared in the
doorway of the post-office, eyes which believed they
detected a listlessness in her walk and a slight droop
to the usually erect little shoulders, eyes which
were sure of one thing: that the smile was gone
from the lips, that upon her features were the lines
and hollows of sleeplessness, and the unmistakable
lack of luster and color which told him that she was
not happy. Even the masculine mentality of Fairchild
could discern that. But it could not answer
the question which the decision brought. She
had become engaged to a man whom she had given evidence
of hating. She had refused to recognize Fairchild,
whom she had appeared to like. She had cast her
lot with the Rodaines-and she was unhappy.
Beyond that, everything was blank to Fairchild.
An hour later Harry, wandering by
the younger man’s side, strove for words and
at last uttered them.
“I know it’s disagreeable,”
came finally. “But it’s necessary.
You ’ave n’t quit?”
“Quit what?”
“The mine. You ’re going to keep
on, ain’t you?”
Fairchild gritted his teeth and was
silent. The answer needed strength. Finally
it came.
“Harry, are you with me?”
“I ain’t stopped yet!”
“Then that’s the answer.
As long as there ’s a bit of fight left in
us, we ’ll keep at that mine. I don’t
know where it’s going to lead us-but
from appearances as they stand now, the only outlook
seems to be ruin. But if you ’re willing,
I ’m willing, and we ’ll make the scrap
together.”
Harry hitched at his trousers.
“They ’ve got that
blooming skeleton out by this time. I ’m
willing to start-any time you say.”
The breath went over Fairchild’s
teeth in a long, slow intake. He clenched his
hands and held them trembling before him for a lengthy
moment. Then he turned to his partner.
“Give me an hour,” he
begged. “I ’ll go then-but
it takes a little grit to-”
“Who’s Fairchild here?”
A messenger boy was making his way along the curb
with a telegram. Robert stretched forth a hand
in surprise.
“I am. Why?”
The answer came as the boy shoved
forth the yellow envelope and the delivery sheet.
Fairchild signed, then somewhat dazedly ran a finger
under the slit of the envelope. Then, wondering,
he read:
Please come to Denver at once.
Have most important information for you.
R. V. Barnham,
H & R Building.
A moment of staring, then Fairchild
passed the telegram over to Harry for his opinion.
There was none. Together they went across the
street and to the office of Farrell, their attorney.
He studied the telegram long. Then:
“I can’t see what on earth
it means, unless there is some information about this
skeleton or the inquest. If I were you, I ’d
go.”
“But supposing it’s some sort of a trap?”
“No matter what it is, go and
let the other fellow do all the talking. Listen
to what he has to say and tell him nothing. That’s
the only safe system. I ’d go down on
the noon train-that ’ll get you there
about two. You can be back by 10:30 to-morrow.”
“No ’e can’t,”
it was Harry’s interruption as he grasped a pencil
and paper. “I ’ve got a list
of things a mile long for ’im to get. We’re
going after this mine ’ammer and tongs now!”
When noon came, Robert Fairchild,
with his mysterious telegram, boarded the train for
Denver, while in his pocket was a list demanding the
outlay of nearly a thousand dollars: supplies
of fuses, of dynamite, of drills, of a forge, of single
and double jack sledges, of fulminate caps,-a
little of everything that would be needed in the months
to come, if he and ’Arry were to work the mine.
It was only a beginning, a small quantity of each
article needed, part of which could be picked up in
the junk yards at a reasonable figure, other things
that would eat quickly into the estimate placed upon
the total. And with a capital already dwindling,
it meant an expenditure which hurt, but which was
necessary, nevertheless.
Slow, puffing and wheezing, the train
made its way along Clear Creek canon, crawled across
the newly built trestle which had been erected to
take the place of that which had gone out with the
spring flood of the milky creek, then jangled into
Denver. Fairchild hurried uptown, found the
old building to which he had been directed by the telegram,
and made the upward trip in the ancient elevator,
at last to knock upon a door. A half-whining
voice answered him, and he went within.
A greasy man was there, greasy in
his fat, uninviting features, in his seemingly well-oiled
hands as they circled in constant kneading, in his
long, straggling hair, in his old, spotted Prince Albert-and
in his manners. Fairchild turned to peer at
the glass panel of the door. It bore the name
he sought. Then he looked again at the oily being
who awaited him.
“Mr. Barnham?”
“That’s what I ’m
called.” He wheezed with the self-implied
humor of his remark and motioned toward a chair.
“May I ask what you ’ve come
to see me about?”
“I have n’t the slightest
idea. You sent for me.” Fairchild
produced the telegram, and the greasy person who had
taken a position on the other side of a worn, walnut
table became immediately obsequious.
“Of course! Of course!
Mr. Fairchild! Why did n’t you say so
when you came in? Of course-I ’ve
been looking for you all day. May I offer you
a cigar?”
He dragged a box of domestic perfectos
from a drawer of the table and struck a match to light
one for Fairchild. He hastily summoned an ash
tray from the little room which adjoined the main,
more barren office. Then with a bustling air
of urgent business he hurried to both doors and locked
them.
“So that we may not be disturbed,”
he confided in that high, whining voice. “I
am hoping that this is very important.”
“I also.” Fairchild
puffed dubiously upon the more dubious cigar.
The greasy individual returned to his table, dragged
the chair nearer it, then, seating himself, leaned
toward Fairchild.
“If I ’m not mistaken,
you ’re the owner of the Blue Poppy mine.”
“I ’m supposed to be.”
“Of course-of course.
One never knows in these days what he owns or when
he owns it. Very good, I ’d say, Mr. Fairchild,
very good. Could you possibly do me the favor
of telling me how you ’re getting along?”
Fairchild’s eyes narrowed.
“I thought you had information-for
me!”
“Very good again.”
Mr. Barnham raised a fat hand and wheezed in an effort
at intense enjoyment of the reply. “So
I have-so I have. I merely asked
that to be asking. Now, to be serious, have n’t
you some enemies, Mr. Fairchild?”
“Have I?”
“I was merely asking.”
“And I judged from your question that you seemed
to know.”
“So I do. And one friend.”
Barnham pursed his heavy lips and nodded in an authoritative
manner. “One, very, very good friend.”
“I was hoping that I had more than that.”
“Ah, perhaps so. But I
speak only from what I know. There is one person
who is very anxious about your welfare.”
“So?”
Mr. Barnham leaned forward in an exceedingly friendly
manner.
“Well, is n’t there?”
Fairchild squared away from the table.
“Mr. Barnham,” came coldly;
the inherent distrust for the greasy, uninviting individual
having swerved to the surface. “You wired
me that you had some very important news for me.
I came down here expressly because of that wire.
Now that I ’m here, your mission seems to be
wholly taken up in drawing from me any information
that I happen to possess about myself. Plainly
and frankly, I don’t like it, and I don’t
like you-and unless you can produce a great
deal more than you have already, I ’ll have
to chalk up the expense to a piece of bad judgment
and go on about my business.”
He started to rise, and Barnham scrambled to his feet.
“Please don’t,”
he begged, thrusting forth a fat hand, “please,
please don’t. This is a very important
matter. One-one has to be careful
in going about a thing as important as this is.
The person is in a very peculiar position.”
“But I ’m tired of the
way you beat around the bush. You tell me some
meager scrap of filmy news and then ask me a dozen
questions. As I told you before, I don’t
like it-and I ’m just about at the
point where I don’t care what information you
have!”
“But just be patient a moment-I
’m coming to it. Suppose-”
then he cupped his hands and stared hard at the ceiling,
“Suppose that I told you that there was some
one who was willing to see you through all your troubles,
who had arranged everything for you, and all you had
to do would be to say the word to find yourself in
the midst of comfort and riches?”