“He’ll swing just the
same to-morrow. Exit Malachi!” said Freddy
Tarlton gravely.
The door suddenly opened on the group
of gossips, and a man stepped inside and took the
only vacant seat near the fire. He glanced at
none, but stretched out his hands to the heat, looking
at the coals with drooping introspective eyes.
“Exit Malachi,” he said
presently in a soft ironical voice, but did not look
up.
“By the holy poker, Pierre,
where did you spring from?” asked Tarlton genially.
“The wind bloweth where it listeth,
and ” Pierre responded, with a little
turn of his fingers.
“And the wind doesn’t
tell where it’s been, but that’s no reason
Pierre shouldn’t,” urged the other.
Pierre shrugged his shoulders, but
made no answer. “He was a tough,”
said a voice from the crowd. “To-morrow
he’ll get the breakfast he’s paid for.”
Pierre turned and looked at the speaker with a cold
inquisitive stare. “Mon Dieu!” he
said presently, “here’s this Gohawk playing
preacher. What do you know of Malachi, Gohawk?
What do any of you know about Malachi? A little
of this, a little of that, a drink here, a game of
euchre there, a ride after cattle, a hunt behind Guidon
Hill! But what is that? You have heard
the cry of the eagle, you have seen him carry off
a lamb, you have had a pot-shot at him, but what do
you know of the eagle’s nest? Mais non.
“The lamb is one thing, the
nest is another. You don’t know the eagle
till you’ve been there. And you, Gohawk,
would not understand, if you saw the nest. Such
cancan!”
“Shut your mouth!” broke
out Gohawk. “D’ye think I’m
going to stand your ”
Freddy Tarlton laid a hand on his
arm. “Keep quiet, Gohawk. What good
will it do?” Then he said, “Tell us about
the nest, Pierre; they’re hanging him for the
lamb in the morning.”
“Who spoke for him at the trial?” Pierre
asked.
“I did,” said Tarlton.
“I spoke as well as I could, but the game was
dead against him from the start. The sheriff was
popular, and young; young that was the
thing; handsome too, and the women, of course!
It was sure from the start; besides, Malachi would
say nothing didn’t seem to care.”
“No, not to care,” mused
Pierre. “What did you say for him to the
jury I mean the devil of a thing to make
them sit up and think, ’Poor Malachi!’ like
that.”
“Best speech y’ever heard,”
Gohawk interjected; “just emptied the words
out, split ’em like peas, by gol! till he
got to one place right before the end. Then he
pulled up sudden, and it got so quiet you could ’a
heard a pin drop. ‘Gen’lemen of the
jury,’ says Freddy Tarlton here gen’lemen,
by gol! all that lot Lagan and the
rest! ’Gen’lemen of the jury,’
he says, ’be you danged well sure that you’re
at one with God A’mighty in this; that you’ve
got at the core of justice here; that you’ve
got evidence to satisfy Him who you’ve all got
to satisfy some day, or git out. Not evidence
as to shootin’, but evidence as to what that
shootin’ meant, an’ whether it was meant
to kill, an’ what for. The case is like
this, gen’lemen of the jury,’ says Freddy
Tarlton here. ’Two men are in a street
alone. There’s a shot, out comes everybody,
and sees Fargo the sheriff laid along the ground,
his mouth in the dust, and a full-up gun in his fingers.
Not forty feet away stands Malachi with a gun smokin’
in his fist. It seems to be the opinion that it
was cussedness just cussedness that
made Malachi turn the sheriff’s boots to the
sun. For Malachi was quarrelsome. I’ll
give you a quarter on that. And the sheriff was
mettlesome, used to have high spirits, like as if
he’s lift himself over the fence with his bootstraps.
So when Malachi come and saw the sheriff steppin’
round in his paten’ leathers, it give him the
needle, and he got a bead on him and away
went Sheriff Fargo right away! That
seems to be the sense of the public.’ And
he stops again, soft and quick, and looks the twelve
in the eyes at once. ‘But,’ says
Freddy Tarlton here, ‘are you goin’ to
hang a man on the little you know? Or are you
goin’ to credit him with somethin’ of what
you don’t know? You haint got the inside
of this thing, and Malachi doesn’t let you know
it, and God keeps quiet. But be danged well sure
that you’ve got the bulge on iniquity here; for
gen’lemen with pistols out in the street is
one thing, and sittin’ weavin’ a rope in
a court-room for a man’s neck is another thing,’
says Freddy Tarlton here. ’My client has
refused to say one word this or that way, but don’t
be sure that Some One that knows the inside of things
won’t speak for him in the end.’
Then he turns and looks at Malachi, and Malachi was
standin’ still and steady like a tree, but his
face was white, and sweat poured on his forehead.
’If God has no voice to be heard for my client
in this court-room to-day, is there no one on earth no
man or woman who can speak for one who
won’t speak for himself?’ says Freddy
Tarlton here. Then, by gol! for the first
time Malachi opened. ’There’s no
one,’ he says. ‘The speakin’
is all for the sheriff. But I spoke once, and
the sheriff didn’t answer.’ Not a
bit of beg-yer-pardon in it. It struck cold.
‘I leave his case in the hands of twelve true
men,’ says Freddy Tarlton here, and he sits
down.”
“So they said he must walk the air?” suggested
Pierre.
“Without leavin’ their seats,” someone
added instantly.
“So. But that speech of
’Freddy Tarlton here’?” “It
was worth twelve drinks to me, no more, and nothing
at all to Malachi,” said Tarlton. “When
I said I’d come to him to-night to cheer him
up, he said he’d rather sleep. The missionary,
too, he can make nothing of him. ’I don’t
need anyone here,’ he says. ‘I eat
this off my own plate.’ And that’s
the end of Malachi.”
“Because there was no one to speak for him eh?
Well, well.”
“If he’d said anything
that’d justify the thing make it a
manslaughter business or a quarrel then!
But no, not a word, up or down, high or low.
Exit Malachi!” rejoined Freddy Tarlton sorrowfully.
“I wish he’d given me half a chance.”
“I wish I’d been there,”
said Pierre, taking a match from Gohawk, and lighting
his cigarette.
“To hear his speech?”
asked Gohawk, nodding towards Tarlton.
“To tell the truth about it
all. T’sh, you bats, you sheep, what have
you in your skulls? When a man will not speak,
will not lie to gain a case for his lawyer or
save himself, there is something! Now, listen
to me, and I will tell you the story of Malachi.
Then you shall judge.
“I never saw such a face as
that girl had down there at Lachine in Quebec.
I knew her when she was a child, and I knew Malachi
when he was on the river with the rafts, the foreman
of a gang. He had a look all open then as the
sun yes. Happy? Yes, as happy
as a man ought to be. Well, the mother of the
child died, and Malachi alone was left to take care
of the little Norice. He left the river and went
to work in the mills, so that he might be with the
child; and when he got to be foreman there he used
to bring her to the mill. He had a basket swung
for her just inside the mill not far from him, right
where she was in the shade; but if she stretched out
her hand it would be in the sun. I’ve seen
a hundred men turn to look at her where she swung,
singing to herself, and then chuckle to themselves
afterwards as they worked.
“When Trevoor, the owner, come
one day, and saw her, he swore, and was going to sack
Malachi, but the child that little Norice leaned
over the basket, and offered him an apple. He
looked for a minute, then he reached up, took the
apple, turned round, and went out of the mill without
a word so. Next month when he come
he walked straight to her, and handed up to her a
box of toys and a silver whistle. ’That’s
to call me when you want me,’ he said, as he
put the whistle to her lips, and then he put the gold
string of it round her neck. She was a wise little
thing, that Norice, and noticed things. I don’t
believe that Trevoor or Malachi ever knew how sweet
was the smell of the fresh sawdust till she held it
to their noses; and it was she that had the saws all
sizes start one after the other, making
so strange a tune. She made up a little song
about fairies and others to sing to that tune.
And no one ever thought much about Indian Island,
off beyond the sweating, baking piles of lumber, and
the blistering logs and timbers in the bay, till she
told stories about it. Sure enough, when you saw
the shut doors and open windows of those empty houses,
all white without in the sun and dark within, and
not a human to be seen, you could believe almost anything.
You can think how proud Malachi was. She used
to get plenty of presents from the men who had no
wives or children to care for little silver
and gold things as well as others. She was fond
of them, but no, not vain. She loved the gold
and silver for their own sake.”
Pierre paused. “I knew
a youngster once,” said Gohawk, “that ”
Pierre waved his hand. “I
am not through, M’sieu’ Gohawk the talker.
Years went on. Now she took care of the house
of Malachi. She wore the whistle that Trevoor
gave her. He kept saying to her still, ’If
ever you need me, little Norice, blow it, and I will
come.’ He was droll, that M’sieu’
Trevoor, at times. Well, she did not blow, but
still he used to come every year, and always brought
her something. One year he brought his nephew,
a young fellow of about twenty-three. She did
not whistle for him either, but he kept on coming.
That was the beginning of ’Exit Malachi.’
The man was clever and bad, the girl believing and
good. He was young, but he knew how to win a
woman’s heart. When that is done, there
is nothing more to do she is yours for good
or evil; and if a man, through a woman’s love,
makes her to sin, even his mother cannot be proud
of him-no. But the man married Norice, and took
her away to Madison, down in Wisconsin. Malachi
was left alone Malachi and Trevoor, for
Trevoor felt towards her as a father.
“Alors, sorrow come to
the girl, for her husband began to play cards and
to drink, and he lost much money. There was the
trouble the two together. They lived
in a hotel. One day a lady missed a diamond necklace
from her room. Norice had been with her the evening
before. Norice come into her own room the next
afternoon, and found detectives searching. In
her own jewel-case, which was tucked away in the pocket
of an old dress, was found the necklace. She was
arrested. She said nothing for she
waited for her husband, who was out of town that day.
He only come in time to see her in court next morning.
She did not deny anything; she was quiet, like Malachi.
The man played his part well. He had hid the
necklace where he thought it would be safe, but when
it was found, he let the wife take the blame a
little innocent thing. People were sorry for
them both. She was sent to jail. Her father
was away in the Rocky Mountains, and he did not hear;
Trevoor was in Europe. The husband got a divorce,
and was gone. Norice was in jail for over a year,
and then she was set free, for her health went bad,
and her mind was going, they thought. She did
not know till she come out that she was divorced.
Then she nearly died. But then Trevoor come.”
Freddy Tarlton’s hands were
cold with excitement, and his fingers trembled so
he could hardly light a cigar.
“Go on, go on, Pierre,” he said huskily.
“Trevoor said to her he
told me this himself ’Why did you
not whistle for me, Norice? A word would have
brought me from Europe.’ ’No one could
help me, no one at all,’ she answered. Then
Trevoor said, ’I know who did it, for he has
robbed me too.’ She sank in a heap on the
floor. ’I could have borne it and anything
for him, if he hadn’t divorced me,’ she
said. Then they cleared her name before the world.
But where was the man? No one knew. At last
Malachi, in the Rocky Mountains, heard of her trouble,
for Norice wrote to him, but told him not to do the
man any harm, if he ever found him ah,
a woman, a woman!... But Malachi met the man
one day at Guidon Hill, and shot him in the street.”
“Fargo the sheriff!” roared
half-a-dozen voices. “Yes; he had changed
his name, had come up here, and because he was clever
and spent money, and had a pull on someone, got
it at cards perhaps, he was made sheriff.”
“In God’s name, why didn’t
Malachi speak?” said Tarlton; “why didn’t
he tell me this?”
“Because he and I had our own
plans. The one evidence he wanted was Norice.
If she would come to him in his danger, and in spite
of his killing the man, good. If not, then he
would die. Well, I went to find her and fetch
her. I found her. There was no way to send
word, so we had to come on as fast as we could.
We have come just in time.”
“Do you mean to say, Pierre,
that she’s here?” said Gohawk.
Pierre waved his hand emphatically.
“And so we came on with a pardon.”
Every man was on his feet, every man’s
tongue was loosed, and each ordered liquor for Pierre,
and asked him where the girl was. Freddy Tarlton
wrung his hand, and called a boy to go to his rooms
and bring three bottles of wine, which he had kept
for two years, to drink when he had won his first
big case.
Gohawk was importunate. “Where
is the girl, Pierre?” he urged.
“Such a fool as you are, Gohawk! She is
with her father.”
A half-hour later, in a large sitting-room,
Freddy Tarlton was making eloquent toasts over the
wine. As they all stood drinking to Pierre, the
door opened from the hall-way, and Malachi stood before
them. At his shoulder was a face, wistful, worn,
yet with a kind of happiness too; and the eyes had
depths which any man might be glad to drown his heart
in.
Malachi stood still, not speaking,
and an awe or awkwardness fell on the group at the
table.
But Norice stepped forward a little,
and said: “May we come in?”
In an instant Freddy Tarlton was by
her side, and had her by the hand, her and her father,
drawing them over.
His ardent, admiring look gave Norice
thought for many a day.
And that night Pierre made an accurate prophecy.