Askatoon had never lost its interest
for Mazarine and his wife since the day the Mayor
had welcomed them at the railway station. Askatoon
was not a petty town. Its career had been chequered
and interesting, and it had given haven to a large
number of uncommon people. Unusual happenings
had been its portion ever since it had been the rail-head
of the Great Transcontinental Line, and many enterprising
men, instead of moving on with the railway, when it
ceased to be the rail-head, settled there and gave
the place its character. The town had never been
lawless, although some lawless people had sojourned
there.
It was too busy a place to be fussing
about little things, or tearing people’s characters
to pieces, or gossiping even to the usual degree;
yet in its history it had never gossiped so much as
it had done since the Mazarines had come.
From the first the vast majority of
folk had sided with Louise and denounced Mazarine.
They knew well she had married too young to be self-seeking
or intriguing; and, in any case, no woman in Askatoon
or yet in the West, could have conceived of a girl
marrying “the ancient one from the jungle,”
as Burlingame had called him.
Burlingame could never have been on
the side of the Ten Commandments himself, even with
a sure and certain hope of happiness on earth, and
in Heaven also, guaranteed to him. Nothing could
have condemned Mazarine so utterly as the coalition
between the “holy good people,” as Burlingame
called them, and himself; and between the holy good
people and himself were many who in their secret hearts
would never have shunned Louise if, after the night
on the prairie with Orlando, release had been found
for her in the Divorce Court. Jonas Billings had
put the matter in a nutshell when he said:
“It ain’t natural, them
two, at Tralee. For marrying her he ought to be
tarred and feathered, and for the way he treats her
he ought to be let loose in the ha’nts of the
grizzlies. What he done to that girl is a
crime ag’in’ the law. If there was
any real spunk in the Methodists, they’d spit
him out like pus.”
That was exactly what the Methodist
body had decided to do on the very day that Louise
had fled from Tralee and the old man pursued her in
the wrong direction. The Methodist body had determined
to discipline Mazarine, to eject him from their communion,
because he had raised a whip against his wife; because
he had maltreated Li Choo; and because he had used
language unbecoming a Christian. They had decided
that Mazarine had not shown the righteous anger of
a Christian man, but of one who had backslided, and
who, in the words of Rigby the chemist, “Must
be spewed out of the mouth of the righteous into the
dust of shame.”
That was the situation when Joel Mazarine
drove furiously into the town and made for the railway
station. Men like Jonas Billings, who saw him,
and had the scent for sensation, passed the word on
downtown, as it is called, that something “was
up” with Mazarine, and the railway station was
the place where what was up could be seen. Therefore;
a quarter of an hour before the arrival of the express
which was to carry Orlando Guise’s mother to
her sick sister three hundred miles down the line,
a goodly number of citizens had gathered at the station-far
more than usually watched the entrance or exit of
the express.
Mazarine’s wagon and steaming
horses were tied up outside the station, and inside
on the platform Moses-not-much, as Mazarine had been
called by Jonas Billings, marched up and down, his
snaky little eyes blinking at the doorway of the station
reception-room. People came and some of them
nodded to him derisively. Some, with more hardihood,
asked him if he was going East; if he was expecting
anyone; if he was seeing somebody off.
A good many asked him the last question,
because, as the minutes had passed, Burlingame had
arrived. He had also disclosed his great joke
to those who would carry it far and near, together
with the news that Louise had taken flight. The
last fact, however, was known to several people, because
more than one had seen the Young Doctor and Patsy
Kernaghan taking Louise to Nolan Doyle’s ranch.
It was dusk. The lamps of the
station were being lighted five minutes before the
express arrived, and as the lights flared up, Orlando
entered the waiting-room of the station, with a lady
on his arm, and presently showed at the platform doorway,
smiling and cheerful. He did not blench when
Mazarine came towards him. Mazarine had seen the
flutter of a blue skirt in the waiting-room, and his
wife had worn blue that day!
Orlando saw the heavy, offensive figure
of Mazarine making for him. He, however, appeared
to take no notice, though he watched his outrageous
pursuer out of the corner of his eye, as he quietly
gave orders to a porter concerning a little heap of
luggage. When he had finished this, he turned,
as it were casually, to Mazarine. Then he giggled
in the face of the Master of Tralee. It was like
the matador’s waving of the scarlet cloth in
the face of the enraged bull. Having thus relieved
his feelings, Orlando turned and walked to the door
of the reception-room, but was stopped by the old
man rushing at him. Swinging round, Orlando almost
filled the doorway.
“You devil’s spawn,”
Mazarine almost shouted, “get out of that doorway.
I want my wife. You needn’t try to hide
her. You thief! You lecherous circus rider!
Stand aside leper!”
Orlando coolly stretched out his elbows
till they touched the sides of the door, and as the
crowd pressed, he said to them mockingly:
“Get back, boys. Give him
air. Can’t you see he’s gasping for
breath.” Then he giggled again.
The old man looked round at the crowd,
but he saw no sympathy only aversion and
ridicule. Suddenly he snatched his little black-bound
Bible from his pocket, and held it up.
“What does this Book say?”
he thundered. “It says that a wife shall
cleave unto her husband until death. For the seducer
and the betrayer death is the portion.”
The whistle of the incoming train
was heard in the distance.
The old man was desperate. It
was clear he meant to assault Orlando. “You
will only take her away over my dead body,” he
ground out in his passion. “The Lord gave,
and only the Lord shall take away.” He gathered
himself together for the attack.
Orlando waved a hand at him as one
would at a troublesome child. At that instant,
his mother stepped up behind him in the reception-room.
“Orlando,” she said in
her mincing, piping little voice, “Orlando, dear,
the train is coming. Let me out. I’m
not afraid of that bad man. I want to catch my
train.”
Orlando stepped aside, and his mother
passed through, to the consternation of Mazarine,
who fell back. The old man now realized that
Burlingame had tricked him. Laughter went up from
the crowd. They had had a great show at no cost.
“‘If at first you don’t
succeed, try, try again,’ Mr. Mazarine!”
called someone from the crowd.
“It’s the next train she’s
going by, old Moses-not-much,” shouted a friend
of Jonas Billings.
“She’s had enough of you, Joel!”
sneered another mocker.
“Wouldn’t you like to
know where she is, yellow-lugs?” queried a fat
washerwoman.
For an instant Mazarine stood demused,
and then, thrusting the Bible into his pocket, he
drew himself up in an effort of pride and defiance.
“Judases! Jezebels!”
he burst out at them all. Then he lunged through
the doorway of the reception-room; but at the door
opening on the street his courage gave way, and hunched
up like one in pain, he ran towards the hitching-post
where he had left his horses and wagon. They were
not there. With a groan which was also a malediction,
he went up the street like a wounded elephant, and
made his way to the police-station through a town
which had no pity for him.
During the hour he remained in the
town, Mazarine searched in vain for his horses and
wagon. He looked everywhere except the shed behind
the Methodist Church. It was there the two wags
who had played the trick on him had carefully hitched
the horses, and presently they announced in town that
they did it because they knew Mazarine would want to
go to the prayer-meeting to lay his crimes before
the Mercy Seat!
It was quite true that it was prayer-meeting
night, and as the merciless wags left the shed, the
voice of brother Rigby the chemist was narrating for
the hundredth time the story of his conversion, when,
as he said, “the pains of hell gat hold of him.”
Brother Rigby loved to relate the tortures of the
day when he was convicted of sin; but on this night
his ancient story seemed appropriate, as he had dealt
with great severity on the doings of the backslider,
Joel Mazarine.
When the two wags returned to the
front street of Askatoon, they were just in time to
see the second meeting of Orlando and Mazarine.
Mazarine had not been able to find his horses at any
hotel or livery stable, or in any street. It
was at the moment, when, in his distraction, he had
decided to walk back to Tralee, that Orlando, driving
up the street, saw him. Orlando reined in his
horses dropped from his buggy and approached him.
There was a look in Orlando’s
eyes which was a reflection from a remote past, from
ancestors who had settled their troubles with the first
weapon and the best opportunity to their hands.
“The furrin element in him,” as Jonas
Billings called it, had been at full flood ever since
he had bade his mother good-bye. A storm of anger
had been raised in him. As he said to himself,
he had had enough; he had been filled up to the chin
by the Mazarine business; and his impulsive youth wanted
to end it by some smashing act which would be sensational
and decisive. So it was that Fate offered the
opportunity, as he came up the front street of Askatoon,
and found himself face to face with Mazarine, over
against the offices of Burlingame.
“A word with you, Mr. Mazarine,”
he said, with the air of a man who wants to ease his
mind of its trouble by action. “Back there
at the station, I kept my tongue and let you down
easy enough, because my mother was present. She
is old and sensitive, and she doesn’t like to
see her son doing the dirty work every man must do
some time or other, when there’s street cleaning
to be done. Now, let me tell you this: you’ve
slandered as good a girl, you’ve libelled as
straight a wife, as the best man in the world ever
had. You’ve made a public scandal of your
private home. You’ve treated the pure thing
as if it were the foul thing; and yet, you want to
keep the pure thing that you treat like a foul thing,
under your rawhide whip, because it’s young and
beautiful and good. You don’t want to save
her soul” he pointed to the Bible,
which the old man had snatched from his pocket again “you
don’t want to save her soul. You don’t
care whether she’s happy in this world or the
next; what you want is what you can see of her, for
your life in this world only. You want ”
The old man interrupted him with a
savage emotion which Jonas Billings said made him
look like “a satyre.”
“I want to save her from the
wrath to come,” he said. “This here
holy Book gives me my rights. It says, ‘Thou
shalt not steal,’ and the trouble I have comes
from you that’s stole my wife, that’s put
her soul in jeopardy, robbed my home ”
“Robbed your home!” interjected
Orlando quietly, but with a voice of suppressed passion.
“Robbed your home! Why, the other day you
tried to prevent her entering it. You wanted
to shut her out. After she had lived with you
all those years, you believed she lied to you when
she told you the truth about that night on the prairie;
but her innocence was proved by one who was there
all the time, and for shame’s sake you had to
let her in. But she couldn’t stand it.
I don’t wonder. A lark wouldn’t be
at home where a vulture roosted.”
“And so the lark flies away
to the cuckoo,” snarled the old man, with flecks
of froth gathering at the corners of his mouth; for
the sight of this handsome, long-limbed youth enraged
him.
“Give her back to me. You
know where she is,” he persisted. “You’ve
got her hid away. That’s why you’ve
sent your mother East so’s she wouldn’t
know, though from what I see, I shouldn’t think
it’d have made much difference to her.”
Exclamations broke from the crowd.
It was the wild West. It was a country where,
not twenty years before, men did justice upon men without
the assistance of the law; and the West understood
that the dark insult just uttered would in days not
far gone have meant death. The onlookers exclaimed,
and then became silent, because a subtle sense of tragedy
suddenly smothered their voices. Upon the silence
there broke a little giggling laugh. It came
from lips that were one in paleness with a face grown
stony.
“I ought to kill you,”
Orlando said quietly after a moment, yet scarcely
above a whisper. “I ought to kill you, Mazarine,
but that would only be playing your game, for the
law would get hold of me, and the girl that has left
you would be sorrowful, for she knows I love her, though
I never told her so. She’d be sorry to
see the law get at me. She’s going to be
mine some day, in the right way. I’m not
going behind your back to say it; I’m announcing
it to all and sundry. I never did a thing to her
that couldn’t have been seen by all the world,
and I never said a thing to her that couldn’t
be heard by all the world; but I hope she’ll
never go back to you. You’ve made a sewer
for her to live in, not a home. As I said, I
ought to kill you, but that would play your game, so
I won’t, not now. But I tell you this,
Mazarine: if I ever meet you again and
I’m sure to do so and you don’t
get off the road I’m travelling on, or the side-walk
I’m walking on, when I meet you or when I pass
you, I’ll let you have what’ll send you
to hell, before you can wink twice.
“As for Louise as
for her: I don’t know where she is, but
I’ll find her. One thing is sure:
if I see her, I’ll tell her never to go back
to you; and she won’t. You’ve drunk
at the waters of Canaan for the last time. For
a Christian you’re pretty filthy. Go and
wash in the pool of Siloam and be clean damn
you, Mazarine!”
With that he turned, almost unheeding
the hands thrust out to grip his, the voices murmuring
approval. In a moment he had swung his horses
round. He did not go beyond ten yards, however,
before someone, running beside his wagon, whispered
up to him: “She’s out at Nolan Doyle’s
ranch. She went with the Young Doctor and Patsy
Kernaghan.”
Behind, in the street, a young boy
came running through the crowd and shouting:
“I know where they are! I know where they
are!” He stopped before Mazarine. “Gimme
half a dollar, and I’ll tell you where your
horses are. Gimme half a dollar. Gimme half
a dollar, and I’ll tell you.”
An instant later, with the half-dollar
in his hand, he said: “They’re up
to the shed of the Meetin’ House.”
“Yes, go along up to the Meetin’
House, Mr. Mazarine,” said one of the miscreants
who had driven the horses there. “They’re
holding a post-mortem on you at the prayer meetin’.
They say you’re dead in trespasses and sins.
Get along, Joel.”
The crowd started to follow him to
the shed where his horses were, but after a moment
he turned on them and said:
“Ain’t you heerd and seen
enough? Ain’t there no law to protect a
man?”
A hoe was leaning against a fence.
He saw it, and with sudden fury, seizing it, swung
it round his head as if to throw it into the crowd.
At that moment a stalwart constable ran forward, raised
a hand towards Mazarine, and then addressed the crowd.
“We’ve had enough of this,”
he said. “I’ll lock up any man that
goes a step further towards the Meetin’ House.
Where do you think you are? This is Askatoon,
the place of peace and happiness, and we’re going
to be happy, if I have to lock up the hull lot of
you. I guess you can go right on, Mr. Mazarine,”
he added. “Go right on and git your wagon.”
A moment later Mazarine was walking
alone towards the Meeting House; but no, not alone,
for a hundred devils were with him.