So she was his friend! So all
these days of waiting had not been in vain; all the
cutting hopelessness of seeing her, only to have her
turn away her head and fail to recognize him, had
been for their purpose after all. And yet Fairchild
remembered that she was engaged to Maurice Rodaine,
and that the time of the wedding must be fast approaching.
Perhaps there had been a quarrel, perhaps-
Then he smiled. There was no perhaps about
it! Anita Richmond was his friend; she had been
forced into the promise of marriage to Maurice Rodaine,
but she had not been forced into a relinquishment of
her desire to reward him somehow, some way, for the
attention that he had shown her and the liking that
she knew existed in his heart.
Hastily Fairchild folded the paper
and stuffed it into an inside pocket. Then,
seeking out one of the workmen, he appointed him foreman
of the gang, to take charge in his absence. Following
which, he made his way out of the mine and into town,
there to hire men of Mother Howard’s suggestion
and send them to the Blue Poppy, to take their stations
every few feet along the tunnel, to appear mere spectators,
but in reality to be guards who were constantly on
the watch for anything untoward that might occur.
Fairchild was taking no chances now. An hour
more found him at the Sampler, watching the ore as
it ran through the great crusher hoppers, to come
forth finely crumbled powder and be sampled, ton by
ton, for the assays by old Undertaker Chastine and
the three other men of his type, without which no sampler
pays for ore. Bittson approached, grinning.
“You guessed just about right,”
he announced. “That stuff ’s running
right around two hundred dollars a ton. Need
any money now?”
“All you can let me have!”
“Four or five hundred?
We ’ve gotten in eight tons of that stuff
already; don’t guess I ’d be taking any
risk on that!” he chuckled. Fairchild reached
for the currency eagerly. All but a hundred dollars
of it would go to Mother Howard,-for that
debt must be paid off first. And, that accomplished,
denying himself the invitation of rest that his bed
held forth for him, he started out into town, apparently
to loiter about the streets and receive the congratulations
of the towns-people, but in reality to watch for one
person and one alone,-Squint Rodaine!
He saw him late in the afternoon,
shambling along, his eyes glaring, his lips moving
wordlessly, and he took up the trail. But it
led only to the office of the Silver Queen Development
Company, where the scar-faced man doubled at his desk,
and, stuffing a cigar into his mouth, chewed on it
angrily. Instinctively Fairchild knew that the
greatest part of his mean temper was due to the strike
in the Blue Poppy; instinctively also he felt that
Squint Rodaine had known of the value all along, that
now he was cursing himself for the failure of his
schemes to obtain possession of what had appeared until
only a day before to be nothing more than a disappointing,
unlucky, ill-omened hole in the ground. Fairchild
resumed his loitering, but evening found him near
the Silver Queen office.
Squint Rodaine did not leave for dinner.
The light burned long in the little room, far past
the usual closing time and until after the picture-show
crowds had come and gone, while the man of the blue-white
scar remained at his desk, staring at papers, making
row after row of figures, and while outside, facing
the chill and the cold of winter, Fairchild trod the
opposite side of the street, careful that no one caught
the import of his steady, sentry-like pace, yet equally
careful that he did not get beyond a range of vision
where he could watch the gleam of light from the office
of the Silver Queen. Anita’s note had
told him little, yet had implied much. Something
was fermenting in the seething brain of Squint Rodaine,
and if the past counted for anything, it was something
that concerned him.
An hour more, then Fairchild suddenly
slunk into the shadows of a doorway. Squint
had snapped out the light and was locking the door.
A moment later he had passed him, his form bent,
his shoulders hunched forward, his lips muttering
some unintelligible jargon. Fifty feet more,
then Fairchild stepped from the doorway and took up
the trail.
It was not a hard one to follow.
The night wind had brought more snow with it, to
make a silent pad upon the sidewalks and to outline
to Fairchild more easily the figure which slouched
before him. Gradually Robert dropped farther
and farther in the rear; it gave him that much more
protection, that much more surety in trailing his quarry
to wherever he might be bound.
And it was a certainty that the destination
was not home. Squint Rodaine passed the street
leading to his house without even looking up.
Two blocks more, and they reached the city limits.
But Squint kept on, and far in the rear, watching
carefully every move, Fairchild followed his quarry’s
shadow.
A mile, and they were in the open
country, crossing and recrossing the ice-dotted Clear
Creek. A furlong more, then Fairchild went to
his knees that he might use the snow for a better
background. Squint Rodaine had turned up the
lane which led to a great, shambling, old, white building
that, in the rosy days of the mining game, had been
a roadhouse with its roulette wheels, its bar, its
dining tables and its champagne, but which now, barely
furnished in only a few of its rooms, inhabited by
mountain rats and fluttering bats and general decay
for the most part, formed the uncomfortable abode
of Crazy Laura!
And Fairchild followed. It could
mean only one thing when Rodaine sought the white-haired,
mumbling old hag whom once he had called his wife.
It could mean but one outcome, and that of disaster
for some one. Mother Howard had said that Crazy
Laura would kill for Squint. Fairchild felt sure
that once, at least, she had lied for him, so that
the name of Thornton Fairchild might be branded as
that of a murderer and that his son might be set down
in the community as a person of ill-intent and one
not to be trusted. And now that Squint Rodaine
was seeking her once more, Fairchild meant to follow,
and to hear-if such a thing were within
the range of human possibility-the evil
drippings of his crooked lips.
He crossed to the side of the road
where ran the inevitable gully and taking advantage
of the shelter, hurried forward, smiling grimly in
the darkness at the memory of the fact that things
were now reversed; that he was following Squint Rodaine
as Rodaine once had followed him. Swiftly he
moved, closer-closer; the scar-faced man
went through the tumble-down gate and approached the
house, not knowing that his pursuer was less than
fifty yards away!
A moment of cautious waiting then,
in which Fairchild did not move. Finally a light
showed in an upstairs room of the house, and Fairchild,
masking his own footprints in those made by Rodaine,
crept to the porch. Swiftly, silently, protected
by the pad of snow on the soles of his shoes, he made
the doorway and softly tried the lock. It gave
beneath his pressure, and he glided within the dark
hallway, musty and dusty in its odor, forbidding,
evil and dark. A mountain rat, already disturbed
by the entrance of Rodaine, scampered across his feet,
and Fairchild shrunk into a corner, hiding himself
as best he could in case the noise should cause an
investigation from above. But it did not.
Now Fairchild could hear voices, and in a moment more
they became louder, as a door opened.
“It don’t make any difference!
I ain’t going to stand for it! I tell
you to do something and you go and make a mess of it!
Why did n’t you wait until they were both there?”
“I-I thought they
were, Roady!” The woman’s voice was whining,
pleading. “Ain’t you going to kiss
me?”
“No, I ain’t going to
kiss you. You went and made a mess of things.”
“You kissed me the night our
boy was born. Remember that, Roady? Don’t
you remember how you kissed me then?”
“That was a long time ago, and
you were a different woman then. You ’d
do what I ’d tell you.”
“But I do now, Roady.
Honest, I do. I ’ll do anything you tell
me to-if you ’ll just be good to
me. Why don’t you hold me in your arms
any more ?”
A scuffling sound came from above.
Fairchild knew that she had made an effort to clasp
him to her, and that he had thrust her away.
The voices came closer.
“You know what you got us into,
don’t you? They made a strike there to-day-same
value as in the Silver Queen. If it had n’t
been for you-”
“But they get out someway-they
always get out.” The voice was high and
weird now. “They ’re immortal.
That’s what they are-they ’re
immortal. They have the gift-they
can get out-”
“Bosh! Course they get
out when you wait until after they ’re gone.
Why, one of ’em was downtown at the assayer’s,
so I understand, when you went in there.”
“But the other-he ’s immortal.
He got out-”
“You’re crazy!”
“Yes, crazy!” She suddenly
shrieked at the word. “That’s what
they all call me-Crazy Laura. And
you call me Crazy Laura too, when my back ’s
turned. But I ain’t-hear me-I
ain’t! I know-they’re
immortal, just like the others were immortal!
I can’t hold ’em when they ’ve
got the spirit that rises above-I ’ve
tried, ain’t I-and I ’ve
only got one!”
“One?” Squint’s voice became suddenly
excited. “One-what one?”
“I ’m not going to tell.
But I know-Crazy Laura-that’s
what they call me-and they give me a sulphur
pillow to sleep on. But I know-I
know!”
There was silence then for a moment,
and Fairchild, huddled in the darkness below, felt
the creeping, crawling chill of horror pass over him
as he listened. Above were a rogue and a lunatic,
discussing between them what, at times, seemed to
concern him and his partner; more, it seemed to go
back to other days, when other men had worked the
Blue Poppy and met misfortunes. A bat fluttered
about, just passing his face, its vermin-covered wings
sending the musty air close against his cringing flesh.
Far at the other side of the big hall a mountain
rat resumed its gnawing. Then it ceased.
Squint Rodaine was talking again.
“So you ’re not going
to tell me about ‘the one’, eh? What
have you got this door shut for?”
“No door ’s shut.”
“It is-don’t
you think I can see? This door leading into the
front room.”
The sound of heavy shoes, followed
by a lighter tread. Then a scream above which
could be heard the jangling of a rusty lock and the
bumping of a shoulder against wood. High and
strident came Crazy Laura’s voice:
“Stay out of there-I
tell you, Roady! Stay out of there! It’s
something that mortals should n’t see-it’s
something-stay out-stay out!”
“I won’t-unlock this door!”
“I can’t do it-the time has
n’t come yet-I must n’t-”
“You won’t-well,
there ’s another way.” A crash, the
sudden, stumbling feet of a man, then the scratching
of a match and an exclamation: “So this
is your immortal, eh?”
Only a moaning answered, moaning intermingled
with some vague form of a weird chant, the words of
which Fairchild in the musty, dark hall below could
not distinguish. At last came Squint’s
voice again, this time in softened tones:
“Laura-Laura, honey.”
“Yes, Squint.”
“Why did n’t you tell your sweetheart
about this?”
“I must n’t-you ’ve
spoiled it now, Roady.”
“No-Honey.
I can show you the way. He ’s nearly gone.
What were you going to do when he went ?”
“He ’d have dissolved in air, Roady-I
know. The spirits have told me.”
“Perhaps so.” The
voice of the scar-faced, mean-visaged Squint Rodaine
was still honeyed, still cajoling. “Perhaps
so-but not at once. Is n’t
there a barrel of lime in the basement?”
“Yes.”
“Come downstairs with me.”
They started downward then, and Fairchild,
creeping as swiftly as he could, hurried under the
protection of the rotten casing, where the wainscoting
had dropped away with the decay of years. There
he watched them pass, Rodaine in the lead, carrying
a smoking lamp with its half-broken chimney careening
on the base. Crazy Laura, mumbling her toothless
gums, her hag-like hands extended before her, shuffling
along in the rear. He heard them go far to the
rear of the house, then descend more stairs.
And he went flat to his stomach on the floor, with
his ear against a tiny chink that he might hear the
better. Squint still was talking in his loving
tones.
“See, Honey,” he was saying.
“I ’ve-I ’ve
broken the spell by going in upstairs. You should
have told me. I did n’t know-I
just thought-well, I thought there was
some one in there you liked, and I got jealous.”
“Did you, Roady?” She cackled. “Did
you?”
“Yes-I did n’t
know you had him there. And you were making
him immortal?”
“I found him, Roady. His
eyes were shut, and he was bleeding. It was
at dusk, and nobody saw him when I carried him in here.
Then I started giving him the herbs-”
“That you ’ve gathered around at
night?”
“Yes-where the dead
sleep. I get the red berries most. That’s
the blood of the dead, come to life again.”
The quaking, crazy voice from below
caused Fairchild to shiver with a sudden cold that
no warmth could eradicate. Still, however, he
lay there listening, fearful that every move from
below might bring a cessation of their conversation.
But Rodaine talked on.
“Of course, I know. But
I ’ve spoiled that now. There’s
another way, Laura. Get that spade. See,
the dirt’s soft here. Dig a hole about
four feet deep and six or seven feet long. Then
put half that lime from the barrel in there.
Understand?”
“What for?”
“It’s the only way now;
we ’ll have to do that. It’s the
other way to immortality. You ’ve
given him the herbs?”
“Yes.”
“Then this is the end. See? Now
do that, won’t you, Honey?”
“You’ll kiss me, Roady?”
“There!” The faint sound
of a kiss came from below. “And there’s
another one. And another!”
“Just like the night our boy
was born. Don’t you remember how you bent
over and kissed me then and held me in your arms?”
“I ’m holding you that
way now, Honey-just the same way that I
held you the night our boy was born. And I ’ll
help you with this. You dig the hole and put
half the lime in there-don’t put it
all. We ’ll need the rest to put on top
of him. You ’ll have it done in about two
hours. There ’s something else needed-some
acid that I ’ve got to get. It ’ll
make it all the quicker. I ’ll be back,
Honey. Kiss me.”
Fairchild, seeking to still the horror-laden
quiver of his body, heard the sound of a kiss and
then the clatter of a man’s heavy shoes on the
stairs, accompanied by a slight clink from below.
He knew that sound,-the scraping of the
steel of a spade against the earth as it was dragged
into use. A moment more and Rodaine, mumbling
to himself, passed out the door. But the woman
did not come upstairs. Fairchild knew why:
her crazed mind was following the instructions of the
man who knew how to lead the lunatic intellect into
the channels he desired; she was digging, digging
a grave for some one, a grave to be lined with quicklime!
Now she was talking again and chanting,
but Fairchild did not attempt to determine the meaning
of it all. Upstairs was some one who had been
found by this woman in an unconscious state and evidently
kept in that condition through the potations of the
ugly poison-laden drugs she brewed,-some
one who now was doomed to die and to lie in a quicklime
grave! Carefully Fairchild gained his feet; then,
as silently as possible, he made for the rickety stairs,
stopping now and again to listen for discovery from
below. But it did not come; the insane woman
was chanting louder than ever now. Fairchild
went on.
He felt his way up the remaining stairs,
a rat scampering before him; he sneaked along the
wall, hands extended, groping for that broken door,
finally to find it. Cautiously he peered within,
striving in vain to pierce the darkness. At
last, listening intently for the singing from below,
he drew a match from his pocket and scratched it noiselessly
on his trousers. Then, holding it high above
his head, he looked toward the bed-and
stared in horror!
A blood-encrusted face showed on the
slipless pillow, while across the forehead was a jagged,
red, untended wound. The mouth was open, the
breathing was heavy and labored. The form was
quite still, the eyes closed. And the face was
that of Harry!