Burlingame had the best practice of
any lawyer in Askatoon, although his character had
its shady side. The prairie standards were not
low; but tolerance is natural where the community
is ready-made; where people from all points of the
compass come together with all sorts of things behind
them; where standards have at first no organized sanction.
Financially Burlingame was honest enough, his defects
being associated with those ancient sources of misconduct,
wine and women and in his case the morphia
habit as well. It said much for his physique that,
in spite of his indulgences, he not only remained
a presentable figure but a lucky and successful lawyer.
Being something of a philosopher,
the Young Doctor looked upon Burlingame chiefly as
one of those inevitable vintages from a vineyard which,
according to the favour or disfavour of Heaven, yields
from the same soil both good and bad. He had
none of that Puritanism which would ruthlessly root
out the vines yielding the bad wine. To his mind
that could only be done by the axe, the rope or the
bullet. It seemed of little use, and very unfair,
to drive the wolf out of your own garden into that
of your neighbour. Therefore Burlingame must be
endured.
The day after the Young Doctor had
paid his professional visit to Tralee, and Orlando
Guise had first seen the girl-wife of, the behemoth,
the Young Doctor visited Burlingame’s office.
Burlingame had only recently returned from England,
whither he had gone on important legal business, which
he had agreeably balanced by unguarded adventures in
forbidden paths. He was in an animated mood.
Three things had just happened which had given him
great pleasure.
In the morning he had gained a verdict
of acquittal in the case of one of the McMahon Gang
for manslaughter connected with jumping a claim; and
this meant increased reputation.
He had also got a letter from Orlando
Guise, and a cheque for six thousand dollars, with
instructions to pay the amount in cash to Joel Mazarine;
and this meant a chance of meeting Mazarine and perhaps
getting a new client.
Likewise he had received a letter
of instructions from a client in Montreal, a kinsman
and legatee of old Michael Turley, the late owner
of Tralee, in connection with a legacy. This would
involve some legal proceedings with considerable costs,
and also contact with Joel Mazarine, whom he had not
yet seen; for Mazarine had come while he was away
in England.
His interest in Mazarine, however,
was really an interest in Mrs. Mazarine, concerning
whom he had heard things which stimulated his imagination.
To him a woman was the supreme interest of existence,
apart from making a necessary living. He was
the primitive and pernicious hunter. He had been
discreet enough not to question people too closely
where Mazarine’s wife was concerned, but there
was, however, one gossip whom Burlingame questioned
with some freedom. This was Patsy Kernaghan.
Before the Young Doctor arrived at
his office this particular morning, Patsy, who had
followed him from the Court-house, was put under a
light and skillful cross-examination. He had
been of service to Burlingame more than once; and
he was regarded as a useful man to do odd jobs for
his office, as for other offices in Askatoon.
“Aw, him that murderin’
moloch at Tralee!” exclaimed Patsy when
the button was pressed. “That Methodys’
fella with the face of a pirate! If there wasn’t
a better Protistan’ than him in the world, the
Meeting Houses’d be used for kindlin’-wood.
Joel, they call him a dacint prophet’s
name misused!
“I h’ard him praying once,
as I stood outside the Meetin’ House windys.
To hear that holy hyena lift up his voice to the skies!
Shure, I’ve never been the same man since, for
the voice of him says wan thing, and the look of him
another. Sez I to meself, Mr. Burlingame,
y’r anner, the minute I first saw him, sez I,
‘Askatoon’s no safe place for me.’
Whin wan like that gits a footin’ in a place,
the locks can’t be too manny to shut ye in whin
ye want to sleep at night. That fella’s
got no pedigree, and if it wouldn’t hurt some
dacent woman, maybe, I’d say he was misbegotten.
But still, I’ll tell ye: out there at Tralee
there’s what’d have saved Sodom and Gomorrah-aye,
that’d have saved Jerusalem, and there wouldn’t
ha’ been a single moan from Jeremiah. Out
at Tralee there’s as beautiful a little lady
as you’d want to see. Just a girl she is,
not more than nineteen or twenty years of age.
She’s got a face that’d make ye want to
lift the chorals an’ the antiphones to her every
marnin’. She’s got the figure of one
that was never to grow up, an’ there she is
the wedded wife of that crocodile great-grandfather.
“Aw, I know all about it, Mr.
Burlingame, y’r anner. How do I know?
Didn’t Michael Turley tell me before he died
what sort o’ man his cousin was? Didn’t
he tell me Joel Mazarine married first whin he was
eighteen years of age; an’ his daughter was
married whin she was seventeen; an’ her son
was married whin he was eighteen an’
Joel’s a great-grandfather now. An’
see him out there with her that looks as if the kindergarten
was the place for her.”
“Do you go to Tralee often?”
asked Burlingame. “Aw yis. There’s
a job now and then to do. I’m ridin’
an old moke on errands for him whin his hired folks
is busy. A man must live, and there’s that
purty lass with the Irish eyes! Man alive, but
it goes to me heart to luk at her.”
“Well, I think I must have a
‘luk’ at her then,” was Burlingame’s
half satirical remark.
Not long after Patsy Kernaghan had
left Burlingame’s office, the Young Doctor came.
His business was brief, and he was about to leave when
Burlingame said:
“The Mazarines out at Tralee-you
know them? They came while I was away. Queer
old goat, isn’t he?”
“His exact place in natural
history I’m not able to select,” answered
the Young Doctor dryly, “but I know him.”
“And his wife you know her?”
asked Burlingame casually.
The other nodded. “Yes-in a professional
way.”
“Has she been sick?”
“She is ill now.”
“What’s the matter?”
“What’s the truth about
that McMahon claim-jumper who was acquitted this morning?”
asked the Young Doctor with a quizzical eye and an
acid note to his voice. “You’ve got
your verdict, but you know the real truth, and you
mustn’t and won’t tell it. Well?”
Burlingame saw. “Well,
I’ll have to ask the old goat myself,”
he said. “He’s coming here to-day.”
He took up Orlando Guise’s letter from the table,
glanced at it smilingly, and threw it down again.
“He must be a queer specimen,” Burlingame
continued. “He wouldn’t take Orlando
Guise’s cheque yesterday. He says he’ll
only be paid in hard cash. He’s coming
here this afternoon to get it. He’s a crank,
whatever else he is. They tell me he doesn’t
keep a bank account. If he gets a cheque, he has
it changed into cash. If he wants to send a cheque
away, he buys one for cash from somebody. He
pays for everything in cash, if he can. Actually,
he hasn’t a banking account in the place.
Cash nothing but cash! What do you
think of that?”
The Young Doctor nodded: “Cash
as a habit is useful. Every man must have his
hobby, I suppose. Considering the crimes tried
at the court in this town, Mazarine’s got unusual
faith in human nature; or else he feels himself pretty
safe at Tralee.”
“Thieves?” asked Burlingame satirically.
“Yes, I believe that’s
still the name, though judging from some of your talk
in the Court-house, it’s a word that gives opportunity
to take cover. I hope your successful client
of to-day, and his brothers, are not familiar with
the ways of Mr. Mazarine. I hope they don’t
know about this six thousand dollars in cold cash.”
A sneering, sour smile came to Burlingame’s
lips. The medical man’s dry allusions touched
him on the raw all too often.
“Oh, of course, I told them
all about that six thousand dollars! Of course!
A lot of people suspect those McMahons of being crooked.
Well, it has never been proved. Until it’s
proved, they’re entitled ”
Burlingame paused.
“To the benefit of the doubt, eh?”
“Why not? I’ve heard
you hold the balance pretty fair ’twixt your
patients and the undertaker.”
Quite unmoved, the Young Doctor coolly
replied: “In your own happy phrase of
course! I get a commission from the undertaker
when the patient’s a poor man; when he’s
a rich man, I keep him alive! It pays. The
difference between your friends the criminals and me
is that probably nobody will ever be able to catch
me out. But the McMahons, we’ll get them
yet,” a stern, determined look came
into his honest eye, “yes, we’ll
get them yet. They’re a nasty fringe on
the skirts of Askatoon.
“But there it is as it is,”
he continued. “You take their dirty money,
and I don’t refuse pay when I’m called
in to attend the worst man in the West, whoever he
may be. Why, Burlingame, as your family physician,
I shouldn’t hesitate even to present my account
against your estate if, in a tussle with the devil,
he got you out of my hands.”
Now a large and friendly smile covered
his face. He liked hard hitting, but he also
liked to take human nature as it was, and not to quarrel.
Burlingame, on his part, had no desire for strife with
the Young Doctor. He would make a very dangerous
enemy. His return smile was a great effort, however.
Ruefulness and exasperation were behind it.
The Young Doctor had only been gone
a few minutes when Joel Mazarine entered Burlingame’s
office. “I’ve come about that six
thousand dollars Mr. Guise of Slow Down Ranch owes
me,” the old man said without any formal salutation.
He was evidently not good-humoured.
At sight of Mazarine, Burlingame at
once accepted the general verdict concerning him.
That, however, would not prejudice him greatly.
Burlingame had no moral sense. Mazarine’s
face might revolt him, but not his character.
“I’ve got the cash here
for you, and I’ll have in a witness and hand
the money over at once,” he said: “The
receipt is ready. I assume you are Joel Mazarine,”
he added, in a weak attempt at being humorous.
“Get on with the business, Mister,”
said the old man surlily.
In a few moments he had the six thousand
dollars in good government notes in two inner pockets
of his shirt. It made him feel very warm and
comfortable. His face almost relaxed into a smile
when he bade Burlingame good-day.
Burlingame had said nothing about
the letter from the late Michael Turley’s kinsman
in Montreal and the question of the legacy. This
was deliberate on his part. He wanted an excuse
to visit Tralee and see its mistress with his own
eyes. He had attempted to pluck many flowers in
his day, and had not been unsuccessful. Out at
Tralee was evidently a rare orchid carefully shielded
by the gardener.
As Mazarine left the lawyer’s
office, he met in the doorway that member of the McMahon
family for whom Burlingame had secured a verdict of
acquittal a couple of hours before. As was his
custom, Mazarine gave the other a sharp, scrutinizing
look, but he saw no one he knew; and he passed on.
The furtive smile which had betrayed his content at
pocketing the six thousand dollars still lingered
at the corners of his mouth.
Though he did not know the legally
innocent McMahon whom he had just passed, McMahon
was not so ignorant. There was no one in all the
countryside whom the McMahons did not know. It
was their habit or something else to
be familiar with the history of everybody thereabouts,
although they lived secluded lives at Arrowhead Ranch,
which adjoined that belonging to Orlando Guise.
When Tom McMahon saw Mazarine leave
Burlingame’s office, his furtive eye lighted.
Then it was true, what he had heard from the hired
girl at Slow Down Ranch: that old Mazarine was
to receive six thousand dollars in cash from Orlando
Guise by the hands of Burlingame! Only that very
morning, at the moment of his own release from jail,
his brother Bill McMahon had told him of the conversation
overheard between Orlando and his mother, by Milly
Gorst, the hired girl.
He turned and watched Mazarine go
down the street and enter a barber’s shop.
If Mazarine was going to have his hair cut, he would
be in the barber’s shop for some time.
With intense reflection in his eyes, McMahon entered
Burlingame’s office. He had come to settle
up accounts for a clever piece of court-room work
on the part of Burlingame. It was very well worth
paying for liberally.
When he entered the office, Burlingame
was not there. A clerk, however, informed him
that Burlingame would be free within a few moments and
would he take a chair? Thereupon, the clerk left
the room. McMahon took a chair not
the one towards which the clerk pointed him, but one
beside the desk whereon were lying a number of open
letters.
The interrogation always in the mind
of a natural criminal, prompted McMahon to take a
seat near the open letters. As soon as the clerk
left the room, a hairy hand reached out for the nearest
letter, and a swift glance took in its contents.
A grimly cheerful, vicious smile lighted
up the heavily bearded face. Placing the letter
on the desk again, as soon as it was read, McMahon
almost threw himself over to the chair at some distance
from the desk, which the clerk had first offered him.
There he sat with his elbows on his knees and his
chin in his hands when Burlingame entered the room.
Ten minutes later, with a receipted
bill in his pocket, Tom McMahon made for the barber’s
shop which Mazarine had entered. He found it full,
but seated in the red-plush chair, tipped back at
a convenient angle, was Mazarine undergoing the triple
operations of shaving his upper lip, beard-trimming
and haircutting. From that moment and for the
rest of all the long day and evening, Joel Mazarine
commanded the unvarying interest of two members of
the McMahon family.
Orlando Guise had had a long day,
but one that somehow made him whistle or sing to himself
most of the time. In a way, half a lifetime had
gone since the day before, when he had first seen
what he called to himself “the captive maid.”
He had never been so happy in his life; and yet he
knew that he had not the faintest right to be happy.
The girl who had so upset his self-control as to make
him stumble on her doorstep was the wife of another
man. It was, of course, silly to call him “another
man,” because he seemed a million miles away
from any sphere in which Orlando lived. Yet he
was another man; and he was also the husband of the
girl who had made Orlando feel for the very first
time a strange singing in his veins. It actually
was as though some wonderful, magnetic thing was making
his veins throb and every nerve tingle and sing.
“It beats me,” he said
to himself fifty times that day. He had never
been in love. He did not know what it was like,
except that he had seen it make men do silly things,
just as drink did. He did not know whether he
was in love or not. It was absurd that a man should
be in love with a face at a window a face
with the beauty of a ghost rather than of a real live
woman.
Orlando had little evil in his nature;
his eyes did not look towards Tralee as did Burlingame’s
eyes. Nothing furtive stirred in Orlando’s
intensely blue eyes. Whatever the feeling was,
it was an open thing, which had neither motive nor
purpose behind it just a thing almost feminine
in its nature. As yet it was like the involuntary
adoration which girls at a certain period of their
lives feel successively for one hero after another.
What it would become, who could tell? What would
happen to the young girl adoring the actor, or the
hero of the North Pole, the battle-field or the sea,
if the adored one was not far off, but very near?
Indeed, who could tell?
But as it was, in the upper room where
Louise sat all day looking out over the prairie, and
on the prairie where business carried Orlando from
ranch to ranch on this perfect day, no recreant thought
or feeling existed. Each was a simple soul, as
yet unspoiled and in one sense unsophisticated the
girl, however, with an instinctive caution, such as
an animal possesses in the presence of a foe with which
it is in truce; the man with an astuteness which belonged
to a native instinct for finding a way of doing hard
things in the battle of life.
All day Orlando wondered when he should
see that face again; all day the eyes of Louise pleaded
for another look at the ranchman with the dress of
a dandy, the laugh of a child, and the face of an Apollo or
so it seemed to her. It was the sort of day which
ministers to human emotion, which stirs the sluggish
blood, revives the drooping spirit. There was
a curious, delicate blueness of the sky over which
an infinitely more delicate veil of mist was softly
drawn. At many places on the prairie the haymakers
were loading the great wagons; here and there a fallow
field was burning; yonder a house was building; cattle
were being rounded up; and far off, like moving specks,
ranchmen were climbing the hills where the wild bronchos
were, for a day of the toughest, most thrilling sport
which the world knows.
Night fell, and found Orlando making
for the trail between what was known as the Company’s
Ranch and Tralee. To reach his own ranch, he had
to cross it at an angle near the Tralee homestead.
It was dark, with no moon, but the stars were bright.
As he crossed the Tralee trail, he
suddenly heard a cry for help. Between him and
where the sound came from was a fire burning.
It was the camp-fire of some prairie pioneer making
for a new settlement in the North; and beside it was
a tent whose owner was absent in Askatoon.
Orlando dug heels into his horse and
rode for the point from which the cry for help had
come. Something was undoubtedly wrong. The
voice was that of one in real trouble a
hoarse, strangled sort of voice.
As he galloped through the light of
the camp-fire, a pistol-shot rang out, and he felt
a sharp, stinging pain in his side. Still urging
his horse, he cleared the little circle of light and
presently saw a man rapidly mounting a horse, while
two others struggled on the ground.
He dashed forward. As he did
so, one of the men on the ground freed himself, sprang
to his feet, mounted his horse, and was away into the
night with his companion. Orlando slid to the
ground beside the figure which was slowly raising
itself from the ground.
“What’s the matter?
Are you all right? Have they hurt you?”
he asked, as he stooped over and caught the shoulders
of the victim of the two fleeing figures.
At that instant there were two more
pistol-shots, and a bullet hit the ground beside Orlando.
Then he saw dimly the face of the man whom he was
helping to his feet.
“Mazarine! Good Lord-Mazarine!”
he said in an anxious voice. “What have
they done to you?”
“Nothing I’m
all right. The dogs, the rogues, the thieves but
they didn’t get it! It was in the pockets
of my shirt.” The old man was almost hysterical.
“You just come in time, Mr. Guise. You frightened
’em off. They’d have found it, if
it hadn’t been for you.”
“Found what?” asked Orlando,
as he helped the old man towards the camp-fire, himself
in pain, and a dizziness coming over him.
“Found your six thousand dollars
that Burlingame paid me to-day,” gasped the
old man, spasmodically; “but it’s here-it’s
here!” He caught at his breast with devouring
greed.
Somehow the agitated joy of the old
man revolted Orlando. He had a sudden rush of
repulsion; but he fought it down.
“Are you all right?” he
asked. “Are you all right?” Somehow
the sound of his own voice was very weak. “Yes,
I’m all right,” Mazarine said, and he
called to his horse near by.
The horse did not stir, and the old
man, whose breath came almost normally now, moved
over and caught its bridle.
In a dazed kind of way, and with growing
unsteadiness, Orlando walked towards the camp-fire.
He was leaning against his horse, and opening his
coat and waistcoat to find the wound in his side and
staunch it with the kerchief from his neck, when Mazarine
came up.
“What’s that on your coat
and breeches? Say, you’re all bloody!”
exclaimed Mazarine. “Why, they shot you!”
“Yes, they got me,” was
Orlando’s husky reply, and he gave a funny little
laugh. Giggling, people had called it.
“How are we going to get you
home?” Mazarine asked. “You can’t
ride.”
At that moment there was the rumbling
jolt of a wagon. It was the pioneer-emigrant
returning from Askatoon to his camp.
A few minutes later Orlando was lying
on some bags in the emigrant’s wagon, while
Mazarine rode beside it. “It’s only
a few hundred yards to the house,” said the
emigrant sympathetically, as he looked down at the
now unconscious figure in the wagon.
“It’s four miles to his
house,” said Mazarine. “Well, I’m
not taking him four miles to his house or any house,”
said the emigrant. “My horse has had enough
to-day, and the sooner the lad’s attended to,
the better. He’s going to the nearest house,
and that’s Tralee, as they call it, just here.”
“That’s my house,”
gruffly replied the old man. “Well, that’s
where you want him to go, ain’t it?” asked
the pioneer sharply. He could not understand
the owner of Tralee.
“Yes, that’s where I want
him to go,” replied Mazarine slowly.
“Then you ride ahead on the
trail, and I’ll follow,” returned the other
decisively.
“What’s the matter?
Who hurt him?” he presently called to Mazarine,
riding in front.
“I’ll tell you when we
get to Tralee,” answered the old man, with his
eyes fixed on two lights in the near distance.
One was in the kitchen, where a half-breed woman was
giving supper to Li Choo, a faithful Chinaman roustabout;
the other was in the room where a young wife sat with
hands clasped, wondering why her husband did not return,
yet glad that he did not.