Fairchild blinked in surprise at this
and sank back into his chair. Finally he laughed
uneasily and puffed again on the dubious cigar.
“I ’d say,” came
finally, “that there is n’t any such animal.”
“But there is. She has-”
Then he stopped, as though to cover the slip.
Fairchild leaned forward.
“She?”
Mr. Barnham gave the appearance of a very flustered
man.
“My tongue got away from me;
I should n’t have said it. I really should
n’t have said it. If she ever finds it
out, it will mean trouble for me. But truly,”
and he beamed, “you are such a tough customer
to deal with and so suspicious-no offense
meant, of course-that I really was forced
to it. I-feel sure she will forgive
me.”
“Whom do you mean by ’she’?”
Mr. Barnham smiled in a knowing manner.
“You and I both know,”
came his cryptic answer. “She is your one
great, good friend. She thinks a great deal of
you, and you have done several things to cause that
admiration. Now, Mr. Fairchild, coming to the
point, suppose she should point a way out of your troubles?”
“How?”
“In the first place, you and
your partner are in very great difficulties.”
“Are we?” Fairchild said it sarcastically.
“Indeed you are, and there is
no need of attempting to conceal the fact. Your
friend, whose name must remain a secret, does not love
you-don’t ever think that-but-”
Then he hesitated as though to watch
the effect on Fairchild’s face. There was
none; Robert had masked it. In time the words
went on: “But she does think enough of
you to want to make you happy. She has recently
done a thing which gives her a great deal of power
in one direction. In another, she has connections
who possess vast money powers and who are looking
for an opening here in the west. Now,-”
he made a church steeple out of his fingers and leaned
back in his chair, staring vacuously at the ceiling,
“if you will say the word and do a thing which
will relieve her of a great deal of embarrassment,
I am sure that she can so arrange things that life
will be very easy for you henceforth.”
“I ’m becoming interested.”
“In the first place, she is
engaged to be married to a very fine young man.
You, of course, may say differently, and I do not
know-I am only taking her word for it.
But-if I understand it, your presence in
Ohadi has caused a few disagreements between them and-well,
you know how willful and headstrong girls will be.
I believe she has committed a few-er-indiscretions
with you.”
“That’s a lie!”
Fairchild’s temper got away from him and his
fist banged on the table. “That’s
a lie and you know it!”
“Pardon me-er-pardon
me! I made use of a word that can have many
meanings, and I am sure that in using it, I did n’t
place the same construction that you did in hearing
it. But let that pass. I apologize.
What I should have said was that, if you will pardon
me, she used you, as young women will do, as a foil
against her fiance in a time of petty quarreling between
them. Is that plainer?”
It was too plain to Fairchild.
It hurt. But he nodded his head and the other
man went on.
“Now the thing has progressed
to a place where you may be-well-what
one might call the thorn in the side of their happiness.
You are the ‘other man’, as it were,
to cause quarrels and that sort of thing. And
she feels that she has not done rightly by you, and,
through her friendship and a desire to see peace all
around, believes she can arrange matters to suit all
concerned. To be plain and blunt, Mr. Fairchild,
you are not in an enviable position. I said that
I had information for you, and I ’m going to
give it. You are trying to work a mine.
That demands capital. You have n’t got
it and there is no way for you to procure it.
To get capital, one must have standing-and
you must admit that you are lacking to a great extent
in that very necessary ingredient. In the first
place, your mine is in escrow, being held in court
in lieu of five thousand dollars bond on-”
“You seem to have been making a few inquiries?”
“Not at all. I never heard
of the proposition before she brought it to me.
As I say, the deeds to your mine are held in escrow.
Your partner now is accused of four crimes and will
go to trial on them in the fall. It is almost
certain that he will be convicted on at least one of
the charges. That would mean that the deeds
to the mine must remain in jurisdiction of the court
in lieu of a cash bond while the case goes to the
Supreme Court. Otherwise, you must yield over
your partner to go to jail. In either event,
the result would not be satisfactory. For yourself,
I dare say that a person whose father is supposed to
have committed a murder-not that I say
he did it, understand-hardly could establish
sufficient standing to borrow the money to proceed
on an undertaking which requires capital. Therefore,
I should say that you were in somewhat of a predicament.
Now-” a long wait and then, “please
take this as only coming from a spokesman: My
client is in a position to use her good offices to
change the viewpoint of the man who is the chief witness
against your partner. She also is in a position
to use those same good offices in another direction,
so that there might never be a grand jury investigation
of the finding of a certain body or skeleton, or something
of the kind, in your mine-which, if you
will remember, brought about a very disagreeable situation.
And through her very good connections in another
way, she is able to relieve you of all your financial
embarrassment and procure for you from a certain eastern
syndicate, the members of which I am not at liberty
to name, an offer of $200,000 for your mine.
All that is necessary for you to do is to say the
word.”
Fairchild leaned forward.
“And of course,” he said
caustically, “the name of this mysterious feminine
friend must be a secret?”
“Certainly. No mention
of this transaction must be made to her directly,
or indirectly. Those are my specific instructions.
Now, Mr. Fairchild, that seems to me to be a wonderful
offer. And it-”
“Do you want my answer now?”
“At any time when you have given the matter
sufficient thought.”
“That’s been accomplished
already. And there ’s no need of waiting.
I want to thank you exceedingly for your offer, and
to tell you-that you can go straight to
hell!”
And without looking back to see the
result of his ultimatum, Fairchild rose, strode to
the door, unlocked it, and stamped down the hall.
He had taken snap judgment, but in his heart, he
felt that he was right. What was more, he was
as sure as he was sure of life itself that Anita Richmond
had not arranged the interview and did not even know
of it. One streaking name was flitting through
Fairchild’s brain and causing it to seethe with
anger. Cleverly concealed though the plan might
have been, nicely arranged and carefully planted,
to Robert Fairchild it all stood out plainly and clearly-the
Rodaines!
And yet why? That one little
word halted Fairchild as he left the elevator.
Why should the Rodaines be willing to free him from
all the troubles into which his mining ventures had
taken him, start him out into the world and give him
a fortune with which to make his way forward?
Why? What did they know about the Blue Poppy
mine, when neither he nor Harry had any idea of what
the future might hold for them there? Certainly
they could not have investigated in the years that
were gone; the cave-in precluded that. There
was no other tunnel, no other means of determining
the riches which might be hidden within the confines
of the Blue Poppy claims, yet it was evident.
That day in court Rodaine had said that the Blue
Poppy was a good property and that it was worth every
cent of the value which had been placed on it.
How did he know? And why ?
At least one answer to Rodaine’s
action came to him. It was simple now to see
why the scar-faced man had put a good valuation on
the mine during the court procedure and apparently
helped Fairchild out in a difficulty. In fact,
there were several reasons for it. In the first
place, the tying up of the mine by placing it in the
care of a court would mean just that many more difficulties
for Fairchild, and it would mean that the mine would
be placed in a position where work could be hampered
for years if a first conviction could be obtained.
Further, Rodaine could see that if by any chance
the bond should be forfeited, it would be an easy
matter for the claims to be purchased cheap at a public
sale by any one who desired them and who had the inside
information of what they were worth. And evidently
Rodaine and Rodaine alone possessed that knowledge.
It was late now. Fairchild went
to a junk yard or two, searching for the materials
which Harry had ordered, and failed to find them.
Then he sought a hotel, once more to struggle with
the problems which the interview with Barnham had
created and to cringe at a thought which arose like
a ghost before him:
Suppose that it had been Anita Richmond
after all who had arranged this? It was logical
in a way. Maurice Rodaine was the one man who
could give direct evidence against Harry as the man
who had held up the Old Times Dance, and Anita now
was engaged to marry him. Judge Richmond had
been a friend of Thornton Fairchild; could it have
been possible that this friendship might have entailed
the telling of secrets which had not been related
to any one else? The matter of the finding of
the skeleton could be handled easily, Fairchild saw,
through Maurice Rodaine. One word from him to
his father could change the story of Crazy Laura and
make it, on the second telling, only the maundering
tale of an insane, herb-gathering woman. Anita
could have arranged it, and Anita might have arranged
it. Fairchild wished now that he could recall
his words, that he could have held his temper and
by some sort of strategy arranged matters so that the
offer might have come more directly-from
Anita herself.
Yet, why should she have gone through
this procedure to reach him? Why had she not
gone to Farrell with the proposition-to
a man whom she knew Fairchild trusted, instead of
to a greasy, hand rubbing shyster? And besides-
But the question was past answering
now. Fairchild had made his decision, and he
had told the lawyer where to go. If, at the same
time, he had relegated the woman who had awakened affection
in his heart, only to have circumstances do their
best to stamp it out again, to the same place,-well,
that had been done, too, and there was no recalling
of it now. But one thing was certain: the
Blue Poppy mine was worth money. Somewhere in
that beetling hill awaited wealth, and if determination
counted for anything, if force of will and force of
muscle were worth only a part of their accepted value,
Fairchild meant to find it. Once before an offer
had come, and now that he thought of it, Fairchild
felt almost certain that it had been from the same
source. That was for fifty thousand dollars.
Why should the value have now jumped to four times
its original figures? It was more than the adventurer
could encompass; he sought to dismiss it all, went
to a picture show, then trudged back to his hotel
and to sleep.
The next day found him still striving
to put the problem away from him as he went about
the various errands outlined by Harry. A day
after that, then the puffing, snorting, narrow-gauged
train took him again through Clear Creek canon and
back to Ohadi. The station was strangely deserted.
None of the usual loungers were there.
None of the loiterers who, watch in hand, awaited
the arrival and departure of the puffing train as
though it were a matter of personal concern.
Only the bawling ’bus man for the hotel, the
station agent wrestling with a trunk or two,-that
was all. Fairchild looked about him in surprise,
then approached the agent.
“What’s happened? Where ’s
everybody?”
“Up on the hill.”
“Something happened?”
“A lot. From what I hear
it’s a strike that’s going to put Ohadi
on the map again.”
“Who made it?”
“Don’t know. Some
fellow came running down here an hour or so ago and
said there ’d been a tremendous strike made on
the hill, and everybody beat it up there.”
Fairchild went on, to turn into a
deserted street,-a street where the doors
of the stores had been left open and the owners gone.
Everywhere it was the same; it was as if Ohadi suddenly
had been struck by some catastrophe which had wiped
out the whole population. Only now and then
a human being appeared, a few persons left behind at
the banks, but that was about all. Then from
far away, up the street leading from Kentucky Gulch,
came the sound of cheering and shouting. Soon
a crowd appeared, led by gesticulating, vociferous
men, who veered suddenly into the Ohadi Bank at the
corner, leaving the multitude without for a moment,
only to return, their hands full of gold certificates,
which they stuck into their hats, punched through
their buttonholes, stuffed into their pockets, allowing
them to hang half out, and even jammed down the collars
of their rough shirts, making outstanding decorations
of currency about their necks. On they came,
closer-closer, and then Fairchild gritted
his teeth. There were four of them leading the
parade, displaying the wealth that stood for the bonanza
of the silver strike they had just made, four men
whose names were gall and wormwood to Robert Fairchild.
Blindeye Bozeman and Taylor Bill were
two of them. The others were Squint and Maurice
Rodaine!