MISSING
When Stoddard did not come to his
desk that morning the matter remained for a time unnoticed,
except by McPherson, who fretted a bit at so unusual
a happening. Truth to tell, the old Scotchman
had dreaded having this rich young man for an associate,
and had put a rod in pickle for his chastisement.
When Stoddard turned out to be a regular worker, punctual,
amenable to discipline, he congratulated himself, and
praised his assistant, but warily. Now came the
first delinquency, and in his heart he cared more
that Stoddard should absent himself without notice
than for the pile of letters lying untouched.
“Dave,” he finally said
to the yellow office boy, “I wish you’d
’phone to Mr. Stoddard’s place and see
when he’ll be down.”
Dave came back with the information
that Mr. Stoddard was not at the house; he had left
for an early-morning ride, and not returned to his
breakfast.
“He’ll just about have
stopped up at the Country Club for a snack,”
MacPherson muttered to himself. “I wonder
who or what he found there attractive enough to keep
him from his work.”
Looking into Gray’s office at
noon, the closed desk with its pile of mail once more
offended MacPherson’s eye.
“Mr. Stoddard here?” inquired
Hartley Sessions, glancing in at the same moment.
“No, I think not,” returned
the Scotchman, unwilling to admit that he did not
exactly know. “I believe he’s up at
the club. Perhaps he’s got tangled in for
a longer game of golf than he reckoned on.”
This unintentional and wholly innocent
falsehood stopped any inquiry that there might have
been. MacPherson had meant to ’phone the
club during the day, but he failed to do so, and it
was not until evening that he walked up himself to
put more cautious inquiries.
“No, sah no,
sah, Mr. Gray ain’t been here,” the
Negro steward told him promptly. “I sure
would have remembered, sah,” in answer to
a startled inquiry from MacPherson. “Dey
been havin’ a big game on between Mr. Charley
Conroy and Mr. Hardwick, and de bofe of ’em
spoke of Mr. Gray, and said dey was expectin’
him to play.”
MacPherson came down the stone steps
of the clubhouse, gravely disquieted. Below him
the road wound, a dimly conjectured, wavering gray
ribbon; on the other side of it the steep slope took
off to a gulf of inky shadow, where the great valley
lay, hushed under the solemn stars, silent, black,
and shimmering with a myriad pulsating electric lights
which glowed like swarms of fireflies caught in an
invisible net. That was Watauga. The strings
of brilliants that led from it were arc lights at
switch crossings where the great railway lines rayed
out. Near at hand was Cottonville with its vast
bulks of lighted mills whose hum came faintly up to
him even at this distance. MacPherson stood uncertainly
in the middle of the road. Supper and bed were
behind him. But he had not the heart to turn
back to either. Somewhere down in that abyss of
night, there was a clue or there were many
clues to this strange absence of Gray Stoddard.
Perhaps Gray himself was there; and the Scotchman cursed
his own dilatoriness in waiting till darkness had covered
the earth before setting afoot inquiries.
He found himself hurrying and getting
out of breath as he took his way down the ridge and
straight to Stoddard’s cottage, only to find
that the master’s horse was not in the stable,
and the Negro boy who cared for it had seen nothing
of it or its rider since five o’clock that morning.
“I wonder, now, should I give
the alarm to Hardwick,” MacPherson said to himself.
“The lad may have just ridden on to La Fayette,
or some little nearby town, and be staying the night.
Young fellows sometimes have affairs they’d
rather not share with everybody and then,
there’s Miss Lydia. If I go up to Hardwick’s
with the story, she’ll be sure to hear it from
Hardwick’s wife.”
“Did Mr. Stoddard ever go away
like this before without giving you notice?”
he asked with apparent carelessness.
The boy shook his head in vigorous negative.
“Never since I’ve been
working for him,” he asserted. “Mr.
Stoddard wasn’t starting anywhere but for his
early ride at least he wasn’t intending
to. He hadn’t any hat on, and he was in
his riding clothes. He didn’t carry anything
with him. I know in reason he wasn’t intending
to stay.”
This information sent MacPherson hurrying
to the Hardwick home. Dinner was over. The
master of the house conferred with him a moment in
the vestibule, then opened the door into the little
sitting room and asked abruptly:
“When was the last time any of you saw Gray
Stoddard?”
His sister-in-law screamed faintly,
then cowered in her chair and stared at him mutely.
But Mrs. Hardwick as yet noted nothing unusual.
“Yesterday evening,” she
returned placidly. “Don’t you remember,
Jerome, he was here at the Lyric reception?”
“Oh, I remember well enough,”
said Hardwick knitting his brows. “I thought
some of you might have seen him since then. He’s
missing.”
“Missing!” echoed Lydia
Sessions with a note of terror in her tones.
Now Mrs. Hardwick looked startled.
“But, Jerome, I think you’re
inconsiderate,” she began, glancing solicitously
at her sister. “Under the circumstances,
it seems to me you might have made your announcement
more gently to Lydia, anyhow. Never
mind, dearie there’s nothing in it
to be frightened at.”
“I’m not frightened,”
whispered Lydia Sessions through white lips that belied
her assertion. Hardwick looked impatiently from
his sister-in-law to his wife.
“I’m sorry if I startled
you, Lydia,” he said in a perfunctory tone,
“but this is a serious business. MacPherson
tells me Stoddard hasn’t been at the factory
nor at his boarding-house to-day. The last person
who saw him, so far as we know, is his stable boy.
Black Jim says Stoddard rode out of the gate at five
o’clock this morning, bareheaded and in his
riding clothes. Have any of you seen him since that’s
what I want to know?”
“Since?” repeated Miss
Sessions, who seemed unable to get beyond the parrot
echoing of her questioner’s words. “Why
Jerome, what makes you think I’ve seen him since
then? Did he say did anybody tell you ”
She broke off huskily and sat staring
at her interlaced fingers dropped in her lap.
“No no. Of course
not, Lydia,” her sister hastened to reassure
her, crossing the room and putting a protecting arm
about the girl’s shoulders. “He shouldn’t
have spoken as he did, knowing that you and Gray knowing
how affairs stand.”
“Well, I only thought since
you and Stoddard are such great friends,” Hardwick
persisted, “he might have mentioned to you some
excursion, or made opportunity to talk with you alone,
sometime last night to to say
something. Did he tell you where he was going,
Lydia? Are you keeping something from us that
we ought to know? Remember this is no child’s
play. It begins to look as though it might be
a question of the man’s life.”
Lydia Sessions started galvanically.
She pushed off her sister’s caressing hand with
a fierce gesture.
“There’s nothing no
such relation as you’re hinting at, Elizabeth,
between Gray Stoddard and me,” she said sharply.
Memory of what Gray had (as she supposed) followed
her into the library to say to her wrung a sort of
groan from the girl. “I suppose Matilda’s
told you that we had had some conversation
in the library,” she managed to say.
Her brother-in-law shook his head.
“We haven’t questioned
the servants yet,” he said briefly. “We
haven’t questioned anybody nor hunted up any
evidence. MacPherson came direct to me from Stoddard’s
stable boy. Gray did stop and talk to you last
night? What did he say?”
“I why nothing in I
really don’t remember,” faltered Lydia,
with so strange a look that both her sister and Hardwick
looked at her in surprise. “That is oh,
nothing of any importance, you know. I I
believe we were talking about socialism, and and
different classes of people.... That sort of
thing.”
MacPherson, who had pushed unceremoniously
into the room behind his employer, nodded his gray
head. “That would always be what he was
speaking of.” He smiled a little as he said
it.
“All right,” returned
Hardwick, struggling into his overcoat at the hat-tree,
and seeking his hat and stick, “I’ll go
right back with you, Mac. This thing somehow
has a sinister look to me.”
As the two men were leaving the house,
Hardwick felt a light, trembling touch on his arm,
and turned to face his sister-in-law.
“Why Jerome, why
did you say that last?” Lydia quavered.
“What do you think has happened to him?
Do you think anybody that is ?
Oh, you looked at me as though you thought I had something
to do with it!”
“Come, come, Lyd. Pull
yourself together. You’re getting hysterical,”
urged Hardwick kindly. Then he turned to MacPherson.
As the two men went companionably down the walk and
out into the street, the Scotchman said apologetically:
“Of course, I knew Miss Lydia
would be alarmed. I understand about her and
Stoddard. It made me hesitate a while before coming
up to you folks with the thing.”
“Well, by the Lord, you did
well not to hesitate too long, Mac!” ejaculated
Hardwick. “I shouldn’t feel the anxiety
I do if we hadn’t been having trouble with those
mountain people up toward Flat Rock over that girl
that died at the hospital.” He laughed a
little ruefully. “Trying to do things for
folks is ticklish business. There wasn’t
a man in the crowd that interviewed me whom I could
convince that our hospital wasn’t a factory
for the making of stiffs which we sold to the Northern
Medical College. Oh, it was gruesome!
“I told them the girl had had
every attention, and that she died of pernicious anæmia.
They called it ‘a big dic word’ and asked
me point blank if the girl hadn’t been killed
in the mill. I told them that we couldn’t
keep the body indefinitely, and they said they ’aimed
to come and haul it away as soon as they could get
a horse and wagon.’ I called their attention
to the fact that I couldn’t know this unless
they wrote and told me so in answer to my letter.
But between you and me, Mac, I don’t believe
there was a man in the crowd who could read or write.”
“For God’s sake!”
exclaimed the Scotchman. “You don’t
think those people were up to doing a mischief
to Stoddard, do you?”
“I don’t know what to
think,” protested Hardwick. “Yes;
they are mediaeval half savage. The
fact is, I have no idea what they would or what they
wouldn’t do.”
MacPherson gave a whistle of dismay.
“Gad, it sounds like the manoeuvres
of one of our Highland clans three hundred years ago!”
he said. “Wouldn’t it be the irony
of fate that Stoddard poor fellow! a
friend of the people, a socialist, ready to call every
man his brother should be sacrificed in
such a way?”
The words brought them to Stoddard’s
little home, silent and deserted now. Down the
street, the lamps flared gustily. It was after
eleven o’clock.
“Where does that boy live that
takes care of the horses black Jim?”
Hardwick inquired, after they had rung the bell, thumped
on the door, and called, to make sure the master had
not returned during MacPherson’s absence.
“I don’t know really,
I don’t know. He might have a room over
the stable,” MacPherson suggested.
But the stable proved to be a one-story
affair, and they were just turning to leave when a
stamping sound within arrested their notice.
“Good God! what’s
that?” ejaculated MacPherson, whose nerves were
quivering.
“It’s the horse,”
answered Hardwick in a relieved tone. “Stoddard’s
got back ”
“Of course,” broke in
old MacPherson, quickly, “and gone over to Mrs.
Gandish’s for some supper. That is why he
wasn’t in the house.”
To make assurance doubly sure, they
opened the unlocked stable door, and MacPherson struck
a match. The roan turned and whinnied hungrily
at sight of them.
“That’s funny,”
said Hardwick, scarcely above his breath. “It
looks to me as though that animal hadn’t been
fed.”
In the flare of the match MacPherson
had descried the stable lantern hanging on the wall.
They lit this and examined the stall. There was
no feed in the box, no hay in the manger. The
saddle was on Gray Stoddard’s horse; the bit
in his mouth; he was tied by the reins to his stall
ring. The two men looked at each other with lengthening
faces.
“Stoddard’s too good a
horseman to have done that,” spoke Hardwick
slowly.
“And too kind a man,”
supplied MacPherson loyally. “He’d
have seen to the beast’s hunger before he satisfied
his own.”
As the Scotchman spoke he was picking
up the horse’s hoofs, and digging at them with
a bit of stick.
“They’re as clean as if
they’d just been washed,” he said, as he
straightened up. “By Heaven! I have
it, Hardwick that fellow came into town
with his hoofs muffled.”
The younger man looked also, and assented
mutely, then suggested:
“He hasn’t come far; there’s not
a hair turned on him.”
The Scotchman shook his head.
“I’m not sure of that,” he debated.
“Likely he’s been led, and that slowly.
God this is horrible!”
Mechanically Hardwick got some hay
down for the horse, while MacPherson pulled off the
saddle and bridle, examining both in the process.
Grain was poured into the box, and then water offered.
“He won’t drink,”
murmured the Scotchman. “D’ye see,
Hardwick? He won’t drink. You can’t
come into Cottonville without crossing a stream.
This fellow’s hoofs have been wet within an
hour yes, within the half-hour.”
As their eyes encountered, Hardwick
caught his breath sharply; both felt that chill of
the cuticle, that stirring at the roots of the hair,
that marks the passing close to us of some sinister
thing stark murder, or man’s naked
hatred walking in the dark beside our cheerful, commonplace
path. By one consent they turned back from the
stable and went together to Mrs. Gandish’s.
The house was dark.
“Of course, you know I don’t
expect to find him here,” said Hardwick.
“I don’t suppose they know anything about
the matter. But we’ve got to wake them
and ask.”
They did so, and set trembling the
first wave of that widening ring of horror which finally
informed the remotest boundaries of the little village
that a man from their midst was mysteriously missing.
The morning found the telegraph in
active requisition, flashing up and down all lines
by which a man might have left Cottonville or Watauga.
The police of the latter place were notified, furnished
with information, and set to find out if possible
whether anybody in the city had seen Stoddard since
he rode away on Friday morning.
The inquiries were fruitless.
A young lady visiting in the city had promised him
a dance at the Valentine masque to be held at the Country
Club-house Friday night. Some clothing put out
a few days before to be cleaned and pressed was ready
for delivery. His laundry came home. His
mail arrived punctually. The postmaster stated
that he had no instructions for a change of address;
all the little accessories of Gray Stoddard’s
life offered themselves, mute, impressive witnesses
that he had intended to go on with it in Cottonville.
But Stoddard himself had dropped as completely out
of the knowledge of man as though he had been whisked
off the planet.