“Oh, this is absurd!”
cried the new-comer as soon as he had recovered somewhat
from his surprise. “I am George Harrington.
What does it mean some subterfuge on your
part, sir, to make me take fresh steps to prove my
identity? If so, pray speak out.”
The lawyer made a deprecatory movement.
“I beg your pardon, ladies,
for speaking out so abruptly, but it was a natural
feeling of indignation.”
“It is quite excusable, sir, and this is no
subterfuge.”
“But in Heaven’s name give me some explanation.”
“My dear Gertrude, Mrs Hampton,”
said the lawyer with dignity, “perhaps it would
be better for you to leave us. This gentleman
and I will discuss the matter together.”
Gertrude looked at him almost resentfully,
and then there was quite an air of sympathy in her
manner, as she turned to their visitor, who said gravely:
“Yes, Miss Bellwood, I quite
agree with this gentleman, it would, perhaps, be better
that we should discuss the question alone. Indeed,
till I have proved that I am no impostor, I am no fit
company for ladies.”
He crossed to the door, held it open,
and bowed gravely, as without a word they passed out,
and then as soon as they were gone, he turned fiercely
upon the old man.
“Now, sir, if you please, I
am waiting for an explanation,” he said in a
low, angry voice.
“Yet,” said Mr Hampton,
throwing himself back in his chair, thrusting up his
glasses, and fixing his calm, cold eyes upon the visitor
as he continued, “I do not grant that you have
any right, sir, to demand this explanation.
Your position should be that, if you consider you have
a just claim, you should instruct a solicitor, and
he would place himself in communication with me.”
“Hang all solicitors, sir!”
cried the young man angrily, and his eyes seemed to
flash with indignation.
The old man made a gesture.
“I beg your pardon, Mr Hampton.
I believe you said you were a solicitor,” he
added quickly.
“Go on, sir; I am not offended.
On the contrary I rather like your display of anger.
It makes me feel that you may be honest instead of
an extremely clever pretender.”
“Honest, sir! Good Heavens!
Put yourself in my place. Now, between man
and man what does this mean?”
“Simply what I have told you;
but sit down, sir. This is a question for calm
consideration, and you are walking up and down like ”
“A wild beast in a cage.
Yes, I know it; but who can be calm at a time like
this? Pray excuse me and go on.”
“I have very little to tell
you, sir. Perhaps, as the solicitor of the party
in possession, I ought to make no admissions.
I can merely tell you that nearly four months ago
Mr George Harrington came over from America with indubitable
proofs of his identity, and, as soon as the proper
legal forms could be gone though, took possession.”
“Nearly four months ago?
Here, stop a moment, sir. Was he a man about
my height?”
“Yes.”
“Rather darker?”
The old lawyer bowed, and scrutinised the speaker
carefully.
“He had a quick, sharp way of
speaking, and a habit of looking behind him as if
in search of danger.”
“Exactly. You are describing Mr George
Harrington most carefully.”
“The villain! The hound!
And I thought it was for robbery only. Well,
one knows how to treat a man like that when we meet.”
He showed his regular white teeth,
as his brow puckered up, and there was a look of fierce
determination in his eyes as startling as his next
act, which was to slip his hand behind him, and draw
a small heavy-looking revolver from his pocket.
This he examined quickly as he tried the lock.
“Put that away, sir,”
cried Mr Hampton sternly. “You are not
in the Far West now but in civilised England.
Give me that pistol instantly.”
The young man handed the weapon without
a moment’s hesitation.
“I beg your pardon, Mr Hampton,”
he said. “Temper, got the better of me.”
He threw himself into a chair.
“Will you let me speak out quietly and calmly?”
“Go on, sir,” said the lawyer.
There was a pause, during which the
young man seemed to be collecting himself, and then
he said in a deep, clear voice:
“You are quite right, sir.
This is a question for calm settlement, and as I
have right on my side I can afford to wait.”
“That’s talking like a reasonable man,
sir.”
“You must excuse me. Much
of my life has been passed on ranches and upon the
mountains, among desperadoes and rough fellows, who
do not place much value upon a man’s life.
Then I have had long dealings with Indians and bears,
and altogether I am not much of a drawing-room man.”
The lawyer bowed and glanced at the
pistol on the table at his side.
“During my last year in the
West, I picked up for companion a clever, shrewd fellow,
named Portway Daniel Portway. He was
in terribly low water, and as it seemed to me undeservedly.
He had been gold-prospecting, he told me, and had
made some good finds; but ill-luck had dogged his
steps. He was robbed by his companions twice
over. He was attacked by Indians three or four
times, and when I came upon him in Denver the poor
wretch was down with fever. Well, to make the
story short, I did what one Englishman would do by
another if he found him out in a wild place dying.
I couldn’t get a woman to attend him for love
or money, so I had to do it myself, and a long and
tedious job I had. I don’t know that I
liked him, but I found he was a clever hunter, and
knew the way about the mountains well, so we became
companions, and I took him on my hunting expeditions.
There, sir, honestly, I don’t think I could
have behaved better to him if he had been a brother.”
There was a pause, and then in a voice
husky with emotion he exclaimed:
“Hang it all! how can a man
be such a brute? Well, sir, I suppose in chatting
with him I let him know all my affairs, and at last
read him my letters. He knew that I was coming
to England as soon as I had ended that last expedition.
There, I’m a frank sort of fellow, who would
trust any man till I found out that he was a rogue.
I suppose I began talking about my affairs, like
a fool, to relieve the tedium of his illness.
Thus it went on till he must have known all I knew.”
“This is a very plausible story,
Mr Daniel Portway,” said the lawyer quietly;
but he started, and laid his hand upon the revolver,
so fierce was the bound the young man made to his
feet.
But he sat down again directly.
“No, no; you don’t think that, sir.
May I go on?”
“By all means.”
“Shall I take the cartridges
out of the revolver, sir?” said the young man
drily, “in case, I make a snatch at it.”
“No, no, no. Go on, sir; go on.”
There was a meaning smile on the young
man’s lips as he went on again, and began telling
of his last hunting-trip; but the smile soon died out,
and he looked stern and relentless as he spoke of the
weary tramp they had had, the midday sleep, and their
journey afterwards till they were beside the great
canon, where he stepped forward to look about him.
“And then I suppose
it was a sudden temptation the brute took
a step or two forward, came close behind me, and before
I could turn, for I felt paralysed with the horror
of my position, he raised his rifle as high as he
could reach, and struck me a crashing blow upon the
back of the head.”
“How do you know if you were
looking in another direction?”
“Because the evening sun cast
his shadow upon the side of the canon, where it seemed
to me in that momentary flash that one giant was smiting
down another. Then I fell headlong down, and
for a few moments all was darkness.”
“Go on, sir,” said the
old lawyer, who was deeply interested, for his vis-a-vis
was talking in a slow, laboured way, as if the recollection
of the terrible scene was more than he could bear and
choked him with emotion.
“Then I came to myself, to lie
helpless as if in a dream. I could not stir
or make a sound; but I could hear distinctly, as I
lay low down where I had fallen, the sounds made by
some one lowering himself down the side of the canon.
Now twigs were breaking, and now stones kept falling;
and after what seemed to be a long time, full of a
dull sense of pain and drowsiness, I was conscious
of a heavy breathing as of a wild beast.”
“A bear,” said the old lawyer involuntarily.
“No,” said the young man
with a bitter smile; “a worse kind of wild beast
than that: a man, sir mine own familiar
friend Dan Portway.”
“Ah!”
“He was searching my pockets,
and taking everything about me; my roughly-made, plain
gold ring pure gold from a pocket in the
mountains what letters I had; everything.
Of course I had not much with me; nearly all I possessed
was at my tent in the saddlebags miles away.”
“You felt all this?”
“And saw, though my eyes were
nearly closed. And at last, as it seemed to
me, he was about to finish his work by casting me down
headlong into the profound depths of the great chasm,
when a devilish thought entered his mind and seemed
to flash into mine as he held me.”
There was another pause, and the young
man’s voice sounded very husky, and he seemed
to be suffering the bygone horror over again as he
recommenced:
“I tell you I could not stir,
but I could think, and feel, and see that devil’s
satisfied grin as he must have said to himself:
“`Some day, perhaps, his body
may be found, and then they will say he was last seen
in my company, and it might prove awkward. They
shall think he was killed by the Indians.’”
During the earlier part of this narrative
the old lawyer had leaned back in his chair; but as
he grew interested he sat up, then leaned forward,
and now rested his hands upon the arms of his chair,
and gazed full in the speaker’s face, so as
not to lose a gesture, the slightest play of his countenance,
or a word.
“Yes,” he continued; “go on.”
“It was as I thought, and for
a moment I tried to shut out the horror, and to ask
God to forgive all I had done wrong, and spare me the
horrible agony I was to feel before I died.
“But I could only think a few
of the words I wished to say, and then, as if every
other sense grew more capable of taking in all that
passed, I saw him draw his keen hunting-knife from
his belt. He seized my hair, and the next moment
the point was dividing the skin of my forehead, and
I felt the resistance offered by the bone, the sharp
pain, and the blood start and begin to trickle over
my temples. Then there was a hideous yell; he
let me fall, and fled.”
“Repentant?” said the old lawyer in an
excited whisper.
“You shall hear, sir.
As my head struck the rock there was a heavy breathing,
a rustling sound of undergrowth being thrust aside,
and a heavy foot was planted upon my chest, as a huge
bear rushed over me in full pursuit of my would-be
murderer, and then I lay listening to the crackling
of twigs and the falling of stones. By degrees
this died away, and for a long time all was still,
and I must have glided into a state of insensibility
from which I was roused by a low, snuffling noise,
and I felt hot breath upon my face, and the wet tongue
of the great bear licking my forehead. Then
I felt him paw at me, and turn me over on to my face.
“Then all was blank.
“When I could see again I was
lying chest downward, perfectly helpless, but with
my head so turned that I could see, a dozen yards away,
the great grizzly bear busy feeding upon the fruit
of one of the low shrubs which grew on the side of
the canon. Sometimes he crawled leisurely down,
sometimes up, as the fruit was most abundant; and this
seemed to satisfy him; for though during the next
two days he came near me again and again, he never
so much as snuffed about me.
“But it all seems, after I awoke
that morning, dreamlike and strange. I told
you it was two days, but I am not sure about that.
I have a dim recollection of the sun burning me,
and seeming to scorch my brain, of its being light
and dark, and of a horrible sensation of thirst, and
then of all being blank. Rather a ghastly tale
for ladies’ ears, sir?”
“Yes, yes,” said the old lawyer.
“And afterwards?”
“Afterwards, sir? Yes;
the next thing I remember is lying upon a bison-skin
in an Indian’s skin lodge, and of the dark, dirty,
wild face of a squaw looking down into mine.
Then of being held up while my head was bandaged,
and then for a long period all seemed misty and wild.
I was hunting and shooting in the Rockies.
Then I was galloping after bison with which the plain
seemed to be black. Then I was prospecting for
gold, and finding rifts in the rocks full and
waiting to be torn out, but I could never get the
gold, never succeed in hunting or shooting.
There was always something to interfere, till at last
I found that I was as weak as a child, and with almost
the thought and action of a helpless babe, living
in the lodge of a roving party of Indians who camped
just where it seemed to be good in their own eyes.
They are savages, whom the white man has ousted from
nearly all their own hunting grounds; they are filthy
and abominable in their ways, false and treacherous,
all that is bad some have learned, but they nursed
me through a long fever and delirium into a sort of
imbecile childhood, from which I slowly gained my
manhood’s reason and strength, and then they
gave me my rifle, and set me at liberty to join a party
of gold-seekers across whom we came.”
“They found you there, lying half dead by the
bear.”
“I suppose so, sir. All
I know I found out by thinking the matter over.
I recollect standing my rifle against a rock close
to the track; and as my companion fled, I suppose
they must have seen it in passing, hunted about for
the owner and found me. I do not know for I could
not understand the Indians, and they could not understand
me.
“I have nearly done, sir,”
said the young man speaking more briskly now.
“I made my way to my old camping-place, but there
was nothing there, and I was wondering whether Dan
Portway had carried everything off, till I remembered
seeing the bear charge him, and I went to the place,
expecting, perhaps, to find his bones. But I
made no discovery; and knowing what a hopeless task
it would be to try and find the villain, I determined
to come on here in obedience to the letter I had received
before I went for my last trip, made my way to San
Francisco, and there I learned of my grandfather’s
death.”
“You made no effort then to
find your assailant?” said the lawyer.
“No, sir, and it has proved
to be the correct thing to do, for in coming here
I have run him to earth.”
They sat gazing at each other for
some moments in silence. Then Mr Hampton spoke.
“You have the scar, then, made by your enemy’s
knife?”
“Yes, sir, here,” said
the young man, slightly pressing back his hair, and
bending forward so that the light of the shaded lamp
fell upon a red line about half an inch from the roots.
“And the injury to your head?”
“Rather an ugly place still,
sir. The skull was slightly fractured.
Do you wish for that proof of my identity?”
“I should like that proof of
the truth of your story, sir. I am a lawyer.”
“Give me your hand, then.”
He took the old man’s index
finger, bent lower, and pressed it upon the back of
his head.
The old man shuddered and drew back.
“And if you want any further
proof that I am the man I say, I have one here that
I had forgotten. When I was a child, for some
freak, my father tattooed a heart and dart upon my
breast. There they are.”
He tore open the flannel shirt he
wore, and displayed the blue marks upon his clear
white skin.
“There, sir; that is all I can
tell you now. The next thing is to confront
Mr Dan Portway.”
“You think, then, that your
old companion I mean you wish me to believe
that your old companion took everything he could to
prove his identity, and has come here, and traded
upon the knowledge he won?”
“And come here and laid claim
to the estate, sir. Yes, I could lay my life
that is the case.”
At that moment there was a tap at the door.