As Auntie Sue was closing the door
of her guest’s room carefully behind her, Judy
came from the kitchen in great excitement, and the
knocking at the front door of the house was repeated.
“Hit’s the Sheriff, ma’m,”
whispered Judy. “I was just a-comin’
ter tell you. I seed ’em from the kitchen-winder.
He’s got two other men with him. Their
hosses is tied ter the fence in front. What in
hell will we do, now? They are after him in there,
sure ’s death!”
Auntie Sue’s face was white,
and her lips trembled, but only for a moment.
“Go back into the kitchen, Judy,
and stay there,” she commanded, in a whisper;
and went to open the front door as calmly as if nothing
unusual had happened.
Sheriff Knox was a big man, with a
bluff, kindly manner, and a voice that made nothing
of closed doors. He returned Auntie Sue’s
greeting heartily, and, with one of his companions, a
quiet, business-looking gentleman, accepted
her cordial invitation to come in. The third man
of the party remained near the saddle-horses at the
gate.
“Well, Auntie Sue,” said
the Sheriff, settling his ponderous bulk in one of
the old lady’s rocking-chairs, which certainly
was not built to carry such a weight, “how are
you? I haven’t seen you in a coon’s
age. I’ll swear, though, you ain’t
a minute older than you was when you first begun teachin’
the little Elbow Rock school up there on the hill,
are you?”
“I don’t know, Sheriff,”
Auntie Sue returned, with a nervous little laugh.
“I sometimes think that I am a few days older.
I have watched a good many sunsets since then, you
know.”
The big officer’s laughter almost
shook the log walls of the house. To his quiet
companion, who had taken a chair near the window, he
said: “I’ll have to tell you, Ross,
that Auntie Sue owns every sunset in these Ozark Mountains.
What was it you paid for them?” He turned again
to their smiling hostess. “Oh, yes; fifty
cents an acre for the land and fourteen dollars and
a half for the sunsets. You’ll have to be
blamed careful not to trespass on the sunsets in this
neighborhood, Ross.” Again, his hearty
laugh roared out, while his chair threatened to collapse
with the quaking of his massive body.
The gentleman seated at the window
laughed quietly, in sympathy.
“You’ll be all right,
though, Ross,” the Sheriff continued, “as
long as you’re with me. Auntie Sue and
me have been friends for about twenty year, now.
I always stop to see her whenever I’m passing
through the Elbow Rock neighborhood, if I ain’t
in too big a hurry. Stayed with her a week, once,
five years ago, when we was after that Lewis gang.
She knows I’d jail any man on earth that would
even touch one of her sunsets.”
Then, as if the jesting allusion to
his office reminded him of his professional duties,
he added: “I plumb forgot, Auntie Sue, this
gentleman is Mr. Ross. He is one of William J.
Burns’s crack detectives. Don’t be
scared, though, he ain’t after you.”
Auntie Sue, while joining in the laughter,
and acknowledging the introduction, regarded the business-looking
gentleman by the window with intense interest.
“I think,” she said, slowly, and
the sweetness of her low, cultured voice was very
marked in contrast to the Sheriff’s thundering
tones, “I think, sir, that this is
the first time in my life that I ever saw a real detective.
I have read about them, of course.”
Mr. Ross was captivated by the charm
of this beautiful old gentlewoman, who regarded him
with such child-like interest, and who spoke with such
sweet frankness and dignity. Smilingly, he returned:
“I fear, madam, that you would
find me very disappointing. No one that I ever
knew in my profession could hope to live up to the
reputation given us by the story-books. No secret
service man living can remotely approximate the deeds
performed by the detectives of fiction. We are
very, very human, I can assure you.”
“I am sure that you, at least,
must be very kind,” returned Auntie Sue, gently.
And the cheeks of the experienced officer flushed like
the cheeks of a schoolboy.
“Mr. Ross, Auntie Sue,”
said the Sheriff, “is, as I was telling you,
one of William J. Burns’s big men.”
Auntie Sue gave her attention to her big friend:
“Yes?”
The Sheriff continued: “Now,
the Burns people, you see, protect the banks all over
the country.”
“Yes?” came, again, in
a tone so low and gentle that the monosyllable was
scarcely heard.
The officer’s loud voice went
on: “And Mr. Ross, here, works most of
his time on these bank cases. Just now, he is
trailing a fellow that got away with a lot of money
from the Empire Consolidated Savings Bank, of Chicago,
about a month ago; that is, the man disappeared
about a month ago. He had been stealing along
from the bank for about a year, worked,
for them, you see.”
“The Empire Consolidated Savings
Bank!” Auntie Sue spoke the words in a voice
that was little more than a whisper. It was to
the Empire Consolidated Savings Bank that she had
sent the money which she had received from her brother
in Buenos Aires; and Homer T. Ward, the president
of that bank, was one of her old pupils. Why,
her stranger guest, in the other room there, was that
very moment wearing one of the bank president’s
nightshirts.
“And do you” Auntie
Sue addressed the detective “do you
know the man’s name, Mr. Ross?”
“Oh, yes,” returned the
officer, “his name is Brian Kent.”
Some source of strength, deep-hidden
in her gentle nature, enabled Auntie Sue to control
her emotions, though her voice broke a little as she
slowly repeated the man’s name, “Brian
Kent. And do I understand, sir, that you have
traced the man to this neighborhood?”
The detective was too skilled not
to notice Auntie Sue’s manner and the break
in her voice; but he never dreamed that this old gentlewoman’s
agitation was caused by a deeper interest than a quite
natural fear that a dangerous criminal might be lurking
in the immediate vicinity.
“Not exactly, Mrs. ah
“Miss Wakefield,” she supplied
her name with a smile.
With a courteous bow, the detective
continued: “We do not know for sure that
the man is in this neighborhood, Miss Wakefield.
There is really no cause for you to be alarmed.
Even if he should call at your house, here, you need
not be frightened, for I assure you the man is not
at all a dangerous character.”
“I am glad,” said Auntie
Sue; and she laughed a little with a relief more genuine
than her callers knew.
Detective Ross continued as if anxious
to finish his unpleasant duty: “It is too
bad for us to be disturbing you with this business,
Miss Wakefield, and I hope you will forgive us; but,
the case is like this: We traced our man to the
little town of Borden, some forty miles up the river
from here. He disappeared from the hotel one night,
leaving his suit-case and, apparently, everything
he had with him, and not a soul that we can find has
seen him since. Of course, everybody says ‘suicide.’
He had been drinking heavily and acting rather queer
the two or three days he was at the hotel, it
seems. But I am not willing, yet, to accept the
suicide idea as final, because it would be too easy
for him to give things that appearance in order to
throw us off; and I can’t get away from the
fact that a John-boat that was tied to the bank near
the hotel managed to break loose and drift off down
the river that same night. Working on my theory,
we are following down the river, trying to get trace
of either the boat or the man. So far, we haven’t
heard of either, which rather strengthens me in my
belief that the boat and the man went away together.
He is probably traveling nights, and lying up under
the willows in daylight. But he will be compelled
to show himself somewhere, soon, in order to get something
to eat, for he couldn’t have taken much with
him, trying, as he was, to create the impression that
he had committed suicide. You have a wonderful
view of the river here, Miss Wakefield.”
“Yes, sir; it is beautiful from the porch.”
“You spend a good deal of time on the porch,
do you?”
“Yes, sir.”
“And you would be quite likely
to notice any boat passing, wouldn’t you?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Could you see a boat at night, in
the moonlight, I mean?”
“I could if it were well out
in the middle of the stream, away from the shadow
of the trees, along the bank.”
“Have you seen any boats pass lately, Miss Wakefield?”
“No, sir; I haven’t seen a boat on the
river for a month, at least.”
“Dead certain about it, are you, Auntie Sue?”
asked the Sheriff.
“Yes, sir; I am very sure,”
she returned. “Judy and I were talking about
it yesterday.”
“Who is Judy?” asked the detective.
The Sheriff answered, “Just a girl that lives
with Auntie Sue.”
And Auntie Sue added: “I
know Judy has seen no boats passing, because, as I
say, we were talking about it.”
“I see,” said the detective.
“And may I ask, Miss Wakefield, if any one any
stranger, I mean has called at the house
lately, or if you have seen any one in the vicinity?”
The gentle old lady hesitated.
The officers thought she was searching
her memory to be sure before she answered.
Then Auntie Sue said, deliberately:
“No, sir; we have not seen a stranger in this
vicinity for several weeks. The last one was a
mule-buyer, who stopped to ask if he was on the right
road to Tom Warden’s; and that must have been
fully six weeks ago.”
The detective looked at Sheriff Knox.
“Well,” said the big officer, “I
reckon we might as well push along.”
The two men arose.
“Oh, but surely you will stay
for dinner,” said Auntie Sue, while her dear
heart was faint with fear lest they accept, and thus
bring about who could say what disastrous consequences
through their meeting with Judy.
“Not this time, Auntie Sue,”
returned the Sheriff. “Mr. Ross is anxious
to get on down the river as fast as he can. He’s
got men on watch at White’s Crossing, and if
our man ain’t passed there, or if we don’t
strike his trail somewhere before we get there, we
will jump back on the railroad, and get some boy to
bring the horses through later.”
“I see,” returned Auntie
Sue. And to the detective she added, smiling:
“I am sure it must be very difficult for any
one to escape you, Mr. Ross. I have read such
wonderful things about Mr. Burns and the work of his
organization; and now that I have met you, a
real live detective, I shall be very careful,
indeed, about what I do in the future. I shouldn’t
want to have you on my track, I assure you.”
The two men laughed heartily, and
the detective, as he extended his hand in farewell,
returned: “I count it a great privilege
to have met you, Miss Wakefield; and if you will promise
to do one thing for me, I’ll agree to be very
lenient with you if I am ever assigned to a case in
which you are to be brought to justice.”
“I promise,” returned
the old lady, quickly. “I really wouldn’t
dare to refuse under the circumstances, would I?
What do you want me to do, Mr. Ross?”
“If this man Brian Kent should
happen to appear in this vicinity, will you get a
message as quickly as possible, at any cost, to Sheriff
Knox?”
“Why, of course,” agreed
Auntie Sue. “But you have not yet told me
what the man looks like, Mr. Ross.”
“He is really a fine looking
chap,” the detective answered. “Thirty
years old fully six feet tall rather
slender, but well built weighs about one
hundred fifty a splendid head smooth
shaven reddish hair dark blue
eyes and a high, broad forehead. He
is of Irish extraction is cultured very
courteous in his manner and speech dresses
well and knows a lot about books and authors
and such things.”
“I would surely know him from
that description,” said Auntie Sue, thinking
of the wretched creature who had fallen, sobbing, at
her feet so short a time before. “But,
you do not make him seem like a criminal at all.
It is strange that a man such as you describe should
be a fugitive from the law, is it not?”
“We come in contact with many
strange things in our business, Miss Wakefield,”
the Burns operative answered a little sadly,
Auntie Sue thought. “Life itself is so
strange and complex, though you in your quiet retreat,
here, can scarcely find it so.”
“Indeed, I find life very wonderful,
Mr. Ross, even here in my little house by the river,”
she answered, slowly.
Sheriff Knox held out a newspaper
to Auntie Sue: “Just happened to remember
that I had it in my pocket,” he said. “It
gives a pretty full account of this fellow Kent’s
case. You will notice there is a big reward offered
for his capture. If you can catch him for us,
you’ll make enough money to keep you mighty
nigh all the rest of your life.” And the
officer’s great laugh boomed out at the thought
of the old school-teacher as a thief-catcher.
“By the way, Sheriff,”
said Auntie Sue, as they were finally saying good-bye
at the door, “you didn’t happen to ask
at Thompsonville for my mail, did you, as you came
through?” Her voice was trembling, now, with
eagerness and anxiety.
“I’m plumb sorry, Auntie
Sue, but I didn’t. You see, we were so busy
on this job, I clean forgot about stopping here; and,
besides, we might have caught our man before we got
this far, you see.”
“Of course,” returned
Auntie Sue, “I should have thought of that; but
I have been rather anxious about an important letter
that seems to have been delayed. Some of the
neighbors will probably be going to the office to-day,
though. Good-bye! You know you are always
welcome, Sheriff; and you, too, Mr. Ross, if you should
ever happen to be in this part of the country again.”
“A wonderful old woman, Ross,”
commented Sheriff Knox as they were riding away.
And the quiet, business-looking detective, whose life
had been spent in combating crime and deception, answered,
as he waved farewell to Auntie Sue, who watched them
from the door of the little log house by the river,
“A very wonderful woman, indeed, the
loveliest old lady I have ever met, and
the most remarkable.”