Fairchild felt the logic of the remark
and ceased his worriment. Quietly, as though
nothing had happened, the three men went down the
stairs, passed the sleeping night clerk and headed
back to the sheriff’s office, where waited Anita
and Harry, who had completed his last duties in regard
to the chalky-faced Maurice Rodaine. The telephone
jangled. It was Denver. Mason talked a
moment over the wire, then turned to his fellow officer.
“They ’ve got Barnham.
He was in his office, evidently waiting for a call
from here. What’s more, he had close to
a million dollars in currency strapped around him.
Pete Carr ’s bringing him and the boodle up
to Ohadi on the morning train. Guess we ’d
better stir up some horses now and chase along, had
n’t we?”
“Yes, and get a gentle one for
me,” cautioned Harry. “It’s
been eight years since I ’ve sit on the
’urricane deck of a ’orse!”
“That goes for me too,” laughed Fairchild.
“And me-I like automobiles
better,” Anita was twisting her long hair into
a braid, to be once more shoved under her cap.
Fairchild looked at her with a new sense of proprietorship.
“You ’re not going to be warm enough!”
“Oh, yes, I will.”
“But-”
“I’ll end the argument,”
boomed old Sheriff Mason, dragging a heavy fur coat
from a closet. “If she gets cold in this-I
’m crazy.”
There was little chance. In
fact, the only difficulty was to find the girl herself,
once she and the great coat were on the back of a saddle
horse. The start was made. Slowly the five
figures circled the hotel and into the alley, to follow
the tracks in the snow to a barn far at the edge of
town. They looked within. A horse and saddle
were missing, and the tracks in the snow pointed the
way they had gone. There was nothing necessary
but to follow.
A detour, then the tracks led the
way to the Ohadi road, and behind them came the pursuers,
heads down against the wind, horses snorting and coughing
as they forced their way through the big drifts, each
following one another for the protection it afforded.
A long, silent, cold-gripped two hours,-then
finally the lights of Ohadi.
But even then the trail was not difficult.
The little town was asleep; hardly a track showed
in the streets beyond the hoofprints of a horse leading
up the principal thoroughfare and on out to the Georgeville
road. Onward, until before them was the bleak,
rat-ridden old roadhouse which formed Laura’s
home, and a light was gleaming within.
Silently the pursuers dismounted and
started forward, only to stop short. A scream
had come to them, faint in the bluster of the storm,
the racking scream of a woman in a tempest of anger.
Suddenly the light seemed to bob about in the old
house; it showed first at one window-then
another-as though some one were running
from room to room. Once two gaunt shadows stood
forth-of a crouching man and a woman, one
hand extended in the air, as she whirled the lamp before
her for an instant and brought herself between its
rays and those who watched.
Again the chase and then the scream,
louder than ever, accompanied by streaking red flame
which spread across the top floor like wind-blown
spray. Shadows weaved before the windows, while
the flames seemed to reach out and enwrap every portion
of the upper floor. The staggering figure of
a man with the blaze all about him was visible; then
a woman who rushed past him. Groping as though
blinded, the burning form of the man weaved a moment
before a window, clawing in a futile attempt to open
it, the flames, which seemed to leap from every portion
of his body, enwrapping him. Slowly, a torch-like,
stricken thing, he sank out of sight, and as the pursuers
outside rushed forward, the figure of a woman appeared
on the old veranda, half naked, shrieking, carrying
something tightly locked in her arms, and plunged down
the steps into the snow.
Fairchild, circling far to one side,
caught her, and with all his strength resisted her
squirming efforts until Harry and Bardwell had come
to his assistance. It was Crazy Laura, the contents
of her arms now showing in the light of the flames
as they licked every window of the upper portion of
the house,-five heavy, sheepskin-bound books
of the ledger type, wrapped tight in a grasp that
not even Harry could loosen.
“Don’t take them from
me!” the insane woman screamed. “He
tried it, didn’t he? And where ’s
he now-up there burning! He hit me-and
I threw the lamp at him! He wanted my books-he
wanted to take them away from me-but I
would n’t let him. And you can’t
have them-hear me-let go of
my arm-let go!”
She bit at them. She twisted
and butted them with her gray head. She screamed
and squirmed,-at last to weaken. Slowly
Harry forced her arms aside and took from them the
precious contents,-whatever they might
be. Grimly old Sheriff Mason wrapped her in his
coat and led her to a horse, there to force her to
mount and ride with him into town. The house-with
Squint Rodaine-was gone. Already the
flame was breaking through the roof in a dozen places.
It would be ashes before the antiquated fire department
of the little town of Ohadi could reach there.
Back in the office of Sheriff Bardwell
the books-were opened, and Fairchild uttered
an exclamation.
“Harry! Did n’t
she talk about her books at the Coroner’s inquest?”
“Yeh. That’s them. Them ’s
her dairy.”
“Diary,” Anita corrected.
“Everybody knows about that-she writes
everything down in there. And the funny part
about it, they say, is that when she’s writing,
her mind is straight and she knows what she’s
done and tells about it. They ’ve
tried her out.”
Fairchild was leaning forward.
“See if there ’s any entry
along early in July-about the time of the
inquest.”
Bardwell turned the closely written
pages, with their items set forth with a slight margin
and a double line dividing them from the events tabulated
above. At last he stopped.
“Testified to-day at the inquest,”
he read. “I lied. Roady made me do
it. I never saw anybody quarreling. Besides,
I did it myself.”
“What’s she mean-did
it herself?” the sheriff looked up. “Guess
we ’ll have to go ’way back for that.”
“First let’s see how accurate
the thing is,” Fairchild interrupted. “See
if there ’s an item under November 9 of this
year.”
The sheriff searched, then read:
“I dug a grave to-night.
It was not filled. The immortal thing left
me. I knew it would. Roady had come and
told me to dig a grave and put it in there.
I did. We filled it with quicklime. Then
we went upstairs and it was gone. I do not understand
it. If Roady wanted me to kill him, why did
n’t he say so. I will kill if Roady will
be good to me. I ’ve killed before
for him.”
“Still referring to somebody
she ’s killed,” cut in Anita. “I
wonder if it could be possible-”
“I ’ve just thought
of the date!” Harry broke in excitedly.
“It was along about June 7, 1892. I ’m
sure it was around there.”
The old books were mulled over, one
after the other. At last Bardwell leaned forward
and pointed to a certain page.
“Here’s an item under
May 28. It says: ’Roady has been at
me again! He wants me to fix things so that the
three men in the Blue Poppy mine will get caught in
there by a cave-in.’” The sheriff looked
up. “This seems to read a little better
than the other stuff. It’s not so jagged.
Don’t guess she was as much off her nut then
as she is now. Let’s see. Where ’s
the place? Oh, yes: ’If I ’ll
help him, I can have half, and we ’ll live together
again, and he ’ll be good to me and I can have
the boy. I know what it’s all about.
He wants to get the mine without Sissie Larsen having
anything to do with it. Sissie has cemented
up the hole he drilled into the pay ore and has n’t
told Fairchild about it, because he thinks Roady will
go partnerships with him and help him buy in.
But Roady won’t do it. He wants that extra
money for me. He told me so. Roady is good
to me sometimes. He kisses me and makes over
me just like he did the night our boy was born.
But that’s when he wants me to do something.
If he ’ll keep his promise I ’ll fix
the mine so they won’t get out. Then we
can buy it at public sale or from the heirs; and Roady
and I will live together again.’”
“The poor old soul,” there
was aching sympathy in Anita Richmond’s voice.
“I-I can’t help it if she was
willing to kill people. The poor old thing was
crazy.”
“Yes, and she ’s ’ad
us bloody near crazy too. Maybe there ’s
another entry.”
“I ’m coming to it.
It’s along in June. The date ’s
blurred. Listen: ’I did what Roady
wanted me to. I sneaked into the mine and planted
dynamite in the timbers. I wanted to wait until
the third man was there, but I could n’t.
Fairchild and Larsen were fussing. Fairchild
had learned about the hole and wanted to know what
Larsen had found. Finally Larsen pulled a gun
and shot Fairchild. He fell, and I knew he was
dead. Then Larsen bent over him, and when he
did I hit him-on the head with a single-jack
hammer. Then I set off the charge. Nobody
ever will know how it happened unless they find the
bullet or the gun. I don’t care if they
do. Roady wanted me to do it.’”
Fairchild started to speak, but the sheriff stopped
him.
“Wait, here ’s another item:
“’I failed. I did
n’t kill either of them. They got out someway
and drove out of town to-night. Roady is mad
at me. He won’t come near me. And
I ‘m so lonesome for him!’”
“The explanation!” Fairchild
almost shouted it as he seized the book and read it
again. “Sheriff, I ’ve got to
make a confession. My father always thought
that he had killed a man. Not that he told me-but
I could guess it easily enough, from other things that
happened. When he came to, he found a single-jack
hammer lying beside him, and Larsen’s body across
him. Could n’t he naturally believe that
he had killed him while in a daze? He was afraid
of Rodaine-that Rodaine would get up a
lynching party and string him up. Harry here
and Mrs. Howard helped him out of town. And this
is the explanation!”
Bardwell smiled quizzically.
“It looks like there ’s
going to be a lot of explanations. What time
was it when you were trapped in that mine, Harkins?”
“Along about the first of November.”
The sheriff turned to the page.
It was there,-the story of Crazy Laura
and her descent into the Blue Poppy mine, and again
the charge of dynamite which wrecked the tunnel.
With a little sigh, Bardwell closed the book and
looked out at the dawn, forcing its way through the
blinding snow.
“Yes, I guess we ’ll find
a lot of things in this old book,” came at last.
“But I think right now that the best thing any
of us can find is a little sleep.”
Rest,-rest for five wearied
persons, but the rest of contentment and peace.
And late in the afternoon, three of them were gathered
in the old-fashioned parlor of Mother Howard’s
boarding house, waiting for the return of that dignitary
from a sudden mission upon which Anita Richmond had
sent her, involving a trip to the old Richmond mansion.
Harry turned away from his place at the window.
“The district attorney ’ad
a long talk with Barnham,” he announced, “and
’e ’s figured out a wye for all the stock’olders
in the Silver Queen to get what’s coming to
them. As it is, they’s about a ’unnerd
thousand short some’eres.”
Fairchild looked up.
“What’s the scheme?”
“To call a meeting of the stock’olders
and transfer all that money over to a special fund
to buy Blue Poppy stock. We ’ll ’ave
to raise money anyway to work the mine like we ought
to. And it ’d cost something. You
always ’ave to underwrite that sort of thing.
I sort of like it, even if we ’d ’ave
to sell stock a little below par. It ’d
keep Ohadi from getting a bad name and all that.”
“I think so too.” Anita Richmond
laughed, “It suits me fine.”
Fairchild looked down at her and smiled.
“I guess that’s the answer,”
he said. “Of course that does n’t
include the Rodaine stock. In other words, we
give a lot of disappointed stockholders par value
for about ninety cents on the dollar. But Farrell
can look after all that. He ’s got to have
something to keep him busy as attorney for the company.”
A step on the veranda, and Mother
Howard entered, a package under her arm, which she
placed in Anita’s lap. The girl looked
up at the man who stood beside her.
“I promised,” she said,
“that I ’d tell you about the Denver road.”
He leaned close.
“That is n’t all you promised-just
before I left you this morning,” came his whispered
voice, and Harry, at the window, doubled in laughter.
“Why did n’t you speak
it all out?” he gurgled. “I ’eard
every word.”
Anita’s eyes snapped.
“Well, I don’t guess that’s
any worse than me standing behind the folding doors
listening to you and Mother Howard gushing like a couple
of sick doves!”
“That ’olds me,”
announced Harry. “That ’olds me.
I ain’t got a word to sye!”
Anita laughed.
“Persons who live in glass houses,
you know. But about this explanation.
I ’m going to ask a hypothetical question.
Suppose you and your family were in the clutches
of persons who were always trying to get you into
a position where you ’d be more at their mercy.
And suppose an old friend of the family wanted to
make the family a present and called up from Denver
for you to come on down and get it-not for
yourself, but just to have around in case of need.
Then suppose you went to Denver, got the valuable
present and then, just when you were getting up speed
to make the first grade on Lookout, you heard a shot
behind you and looked around to see the sheriff coming.
And if he caught you, it ’d mean a lot of worry
and the worst kind of gossip, and maybe you ’d
have to go to jail for breaking laws and everything
like that? In a case of that kind, what’d
you do?”
“Run to beat bloody ’ell!” blurted
out Harry.
“And that’s just what
she did,” added Fairchild. “I know
because I saw her.”
Anita was unwrapping the package.
“And seeing that I did run,”
she added with a laugh, “and got away with it,
who would like to share in what remains of one beautiful
bottle of Manhattan cocktails?”
There was not one dissenting voice!