For the space of several seconds the
girls stood staring at the figure outside the window.
Then, the man turned sharply, and Hetty gasped as she
heard the crunch of footsteps in the snow below.
There was a little of it on the verandah, and the
stars shone brilliantly.
“Catch hold of the frame here,
Flo,” she said breathlessly. “Now,
push with all your might.”
Miss Schuyler did as she was bidden.
The double sashes moved with a sharp creaking, and
while she shivered as the arctic cold struck through
her, Hetty stretched out an arm and drew the man in.
Then with a tremendous effort she shut the window
and pulled the curtains together. There was darkness
in the room now, and one of the cow-boys called out
below.
“Hear anything, Jake?”
“Somebody shutting a door in
the house there,” said another man, and Hetty,
passing between the curtains, could see two figures
move across the snow, and the little scintillation
from something that was carried by one of them, and
she realized that they had very narrowly averted a
tragedy.
“Flo,” she said, with
a little quiver in her voice, “light the lamp
quick. If they see the room dark they might come
up.”
Miss Schuyler was unusually clumsy,
but at last the light sprang up, and showed Larry
standing just inside the curtain with the dust of snow
on his fur coat and cap. His face looked a little
less bronzed than usual, but he showed no other sign
of discomposure. Hetty was very pale as she stood
in front of him with the pistol still in her hand.
She dropped it on a chair with a shiver, and broke
into a little strained laugh.
“You are quite sure they didn’t
see you, Larry? You took a terrible risk just
now.”
Grant smiled, more with his lips than
his eyes. “Yes,” he said, “I
guess I did. I taught you to shoot as well as
most men, Hetty.”
Hetty gasped again and sank limply
into the nearest chair. “What brought you
here?” she said. “Still, you can’t
get away now. Sit down, Larry.”
Grant sat down with a bow to Miss
Schuyler, and fumbled in the pocket of his big fur
coat. “I came to give you something you
sent me by mistake,” he said. “I
would not have come this way if I could have helped
it, but I saw there was a man with a rifle every here
and there as I crept up through the bluff, and it
was quite a while before I could swing myself up by
a pillar on to the verandah. You have been anxious
about this, Hetty?”
He laid a packet on the table, and
Hetty’s eyes shone as she took it up.
“Couldn’t you have given
it to somebody to bring me? It would have been
ever so much safer,” she said.
“No,” said the man simply, “I don’t
think I could.”
Hetty understood him, and so did Miss
Schuyler, while the meaning of the glance her companion
cast at her was equally plain. Miss Torrance’s
face was still pallid, but there was pride in her
eyes.
“I wonder if you guessed what
was in that letter, Mr. Grant?” Flora Schuyler
asked.
Larry smiled. “I think I have a notion.”
“Of course!” said Hetty
impulsively. “We knew you had, and that
was why we felt certain you would try to bring it
back to me.”
“If it could have been managed
in a different fashion it would have pleased me better,”
Grant said, with a little impatient gesture. “I
am sorry I frightened you, Hetty.”
The colour crept back into Hetty’s
cheeks. “I was frightened, but only just
a little at first,” she said. “It
was when I saw who it was and heard the boys below,
that I grew really anxious.”
She did not look at the man as she
spoke; but it was evident to Miss Schuyler that he
understood the significance of the avowal.
“Then,” he said, “I
must try to get away again more quietly.”
“You can’t,” said
Hetty. “Not until the man by the store goes
away. You have taken too many chances already.
You have driven a long way in the cold. Take
off that big coat, and Flo will make you some coffee.”
Grant, turning, drew the curtains
aside a moment, and let them fall back again.
Then, he took off the big coat and sat down with a
little smile of contentment beside the glowing stove
on which Miss Schuyler was placing a kettle.
“Well,” he said, “I
am afraid you will have to put up with my company
until that fellow goes away; and I need not tell you
that this is very nice for me. One hasn’t
much time to feel it, but it’s dreadfully lonely
at Fremont now and then.”
Hetty nodded sympathetically, for
she had seen the great desolate room at Fremont where
Grant and Breckenridge passed the bitter nights alone.
The man’s half-audible sigh was also very expressive,
for after his grim life he found the brightness and
daintiness of the little room very pleasant.
It was sparely furnished; but there was taste in everything,
and in contrast with Fremont its curtains, rugs, and
pictures seemed luxurious. Without were bitter
frost and darkness, peril, and self-denial; within,
warmth and refinement, and the companionship of two
cultured women who were very gracious to him.
He also knew that he had shut himself out from the
enjoyment of their society of his own will, that he
had but to make terms with Torrance, and all that
one side of his nature longed for might be restored
to him.
Larry was as free from sensuality
as he was from asceticism; but there were times when
the bleak discomfort at Fremont palled upon him, as
did the loneliness and half-cooked food. His
overtaxed body revolted now and then from further
exposure to Arctic cold and the deprivation of needed
sleep, while his heart grew sick with anxiety and the
distrust of those he was toiling for. He was
not a fanatic, and had very slight sympathy with the
iconoclast, for he had an innate respect for the law,
and vague aspirations after an ampler life made harmonious
by refinement, as well as a half-comprehending reverence
for all that was best in art and music. There
are many Americans like him, and when such a man turns
reformer he has usually a hard row, indeed, to hoe.
“What do you do up there at nights?” asked
Hetty.
Larry laughed. “Sometimes
Breckenridge and I sit talking by the stove, and now
and then we quarrel. Breckenridge has taste, and
generally smooths one the right way; but there are
times when I feel like throwing things at him.
Then we sit quite still for hours together listening
to the wind moaning, until one of the boys comes in
to tell me we are wanted, and it is a relief to drive
until morning with the frost at fifty below. It
is very different from the old days when I was here
and at Allonby’s two or three nights every week.”
“It must have been hard to give
up what you did,” said Hetty, with a diffidence
that was unusual in her. “Oh, I know you
did it willingly, but you must have found it was very
different from what you expected. I mean that
the men you wanted to smooth the way for had their
notions too, and meant to do a good deal that could
never please you. Suppose you found they didn’t
want to go along quietly, making this country better,
but only to trample down whatever was there already?”
Flora Schuyler looked up. “I
think you will have to face that question, Mr. Grant,”
she said. “A good many men of your kind
have had to do it before you. Isn’t a faulty
ruler better than wild disorder?”
“Yes,” said Hetty eagerly.
“That is just what I mean. If you saw they
wanted anarchy, Larry, you would come back to us?
We should be glad to have you!”
The man turned his eyes away, and
Flora Schuyler saw his hands quiver.
“No,” he said. “I
and the rest would have to teach them what was good
for them, and if it was needful try to hold them in.
Whatever they did, we who brought them here would
have to stand in with them.”
Hetty accepted the decision in his
tone, and sighed. “Well,” she said,
“we will forget it; and Flo has the coffee ready.
That is yours, Larry, and here’s a box of crackers.
Now, we’ll try to think of pleasant things.
It’s like our old-time picnics. Doesn’t
it remind you of the big bluff only we
had a black kettle then, and you made the fire of sticks?
There was the day you shot the willow grouse.
It isn’t really so very long ago!”
“It seems years,” said
the man, wistfully. “So much has happened
since.”
“Well,” said Hetty, “I
can remember all of it still the pale blue
sky behind the bluff, with the little curl of grey
smoke floating up against it. You sat by the
fire, Larry, roasting the grouse, and talking about
what could be done with the prairie. It was all
white in the sunshine, and empty as far as one could
see, but you told me it would be a great red wheat-field
by and by. I laughed at you for dreaming things
that couldn’t be, but we were very happy that
day.”
Grant’s face was very sad for
a moment, but he turned to Miss Schuyler with a little
smile. “Hetty is leaving you out,”
he said.
“I wasn’t there, you see,”
Miss Schuyler said quickly. “Those days
belong to you and Hetty.”
Hetty glanced at her sharply, and
fancied there was a slightly strained expression in
the smiling face, but the next moment Miss Schuyler
laughed.
“What are you thinking, Flo?” said Hetty.
“It was scarcely worth mentioning.
I was wondering how it was that the only times we
have crossed the bridge we met Mr. Grant.”
“That’s quite simple,”
said Larry. “Each time it was on Wednesday,
and I generally drive round to see if I am wanted
anywhere that day. They have had to do almost
without provisions at the homesteads in the hollow
lately. Your dollars will be very welcome, Hetty.”
Hetty blushed for no especial reason,
except that when Grant mentioned Wednesday she felt
that Flora Schuyler’s eyes were upon her.
Then, a voice rose up below.
“Hello! All quiet, Jake?”
There were footsteps in the snow outside,
and when the sentry answered, the words just reached
those who listened in the room.
“I had a kind of notion I saw
something moving in the bluff, but I couldn’t
be quite sure,” he said. “There was
a door or window banged up there on the verandah a
while ago, but that must have been done by one of
the women in the house.”
Grant rose and drew back the curtain,
when, after a patter of footsteps, the voices commenced
again.
“Somebody has come in straight
from the bluff,” said one of the men. “You
can see where he has been, but I’m blamed if
I can figure where he went to unless it was up the
post into the verandah, and he couldn’t have
done that without Miss Torrance hearing him.
I’ll stop right here, any way, and I wish my
two hours were up.”
“I’m that stiff I can
scarcely move,” said the man relieved, and there
was silence in the room, until Hetty turned to the
others in dismay.
“He is going to stay there two
hours, and he would see us the moment we opened the
window,” she said.
Grant quickly put on his big fur coat,
and unnoticed, he fancied, slipped one hand down on
something that was girded on the belt beneath it.
“I must get away at once through
the house,” he said.
Hetty had, however, seen the swift motion of his hand.
“There’s a man with a
rifle in the hall,” she said, shudderingly.
“Flo, can’t you think of something?”
Flora Schuyler looked at them quietly.
“I fancy it would not be very difficult for
Mr. Grant to get away, but the trouble is that nobody
must know he has been near the place. That is
the one thing your father could not forgive, Hetty.”
Hetty turned her head a little, but
Grant nodded. “Had it been otherwise I
should have gone an hour ago,” he said.
“Well,” said Flora Schuyler,
with a curious look in her face, “while I fancy
we can get you away unnoticed, if anybody did see you,
it needn’t appear quite certain that it was
any affair with Hetty that brought you.”
“No?” said Hetty, very sharply. “What
do you mean, Flo?”
Miss Schuyler smiled a little and
looked Grant in the eyes. “What would appear
base treachery in Hetty’s case would be less
astonishing in me. Mr. Grant, you must not run
risks again to talk to me, but since you have done
it I must see you through. You are sure there
is only one cow-boy in the hall, Hetty?”
Hetty turned and looked at them.
Flora Schuyler was smiling bravely, the man standing
still with grave astonishment in his eyes.
“No,” she said, with quick
incisiveness, “I can’t let you, Flo.”
“I don’t think I asked
your permission,” said Miss Schuyler. “Could
you explain this to your father, Hetty? I believe
he would not be angry with me. Adventurous gallantry
is, I understand, quite approved of on the prairie.
Call your maid. Mr. Grant, will you come with
me?”
For several seconds Hetty stood silent,
recognizing that what Torrance might smile at in his
guest would appear almost a crime in his daughter,
but still horribly unwilling. Then, as Flora Schuyler,
with a half-impatient gesture, signed to Grant, she
touched a little gong, and a few moments later her
maid met them in the corridor. The girl stopped
suddenly, gasping a little as she stared at Grant,
until Hetty grasped her arm, nipping it cruelly.
“If you scream or do anything
silly you will be ever so sorry,” she said.
“Go down into the hall and talk to Jo. Keep
him where the stove is, with his back to the door.”
“But how am I to do it?” the girl asked.
“Take him something to eat,”
Miss Schuyler said impatiently. “Any way,
it should not be hard to fool him I have
seen him looking at you. Now, I wonder if that
grey dress of mine would fit you I have
scarcely had it on, but it’s a little too tight
for me.”
The girl’s eyes glistened, she
moved swiftly down the corridor, Flora Schuyler laughed,
and Grant looked away.
“Larry,” said Hetty, “it
isn’t just what one would like but
I am afraid it is necessary.”
Five minutes later Hetty moved across
the hall, making a little noise, so that the cow-boy,
who stood near the other end of it, with the maid close
by him, should notice her. She softly opened the
outer door, and then came back and signed to Grant
and Flora Schuyler, who stood waiting in the corridor.
“No,” he said, and the
lamplight showed a darker hue than the bronze of frost
and sun in his face. “Miss Schuyler, I have
never felt quite so mean before, and you will leave
the rest to me.”
“It seems to me,” she
said coolly, “that what you feel does not count
for much. Just now you have to do what is best
for everybody. Stoop as low as you can.”
She stretched out her hand with a
little imperious gesture, and laid it on his arm,
drawing herself up to her full height as she stood
between him and the light. They moved forward
together, and Hetty closed her hand as she watched
them pass into the hall. The end was dim and shadowy,
for the one big lamp that was lighted stood some distance
away by the stove, where the man on watch was talking
to the maid. Hetty realized that the girl was
playing her part well as she saw her make a swift step
backwards, and heard the man’s low laugh.
Flora Schuyler and Grant were not
far from the door now, the girl walking close to her
companion. In another moment they would have passed
out of sight into the shadow, but while Hetty felt
her fingers trembling, the man on watch, perhaps hearing
their footsteps, turned round.
“Hallo!” he said.
“It seems kind of cold. What can Miss Schuyler
want with opening the door? Is that Miss Torrance
behind her?”
He moved forward a pace, apparently
not looking where he was going, but towards the door,
and might have moved further, but that the maid swiftly
stretched out one foot, and a chair with the tray laid
on it went over with a crash.
“Now there’s going to
be trouble. See what you’ve done,”
she said.
The man stopped, staring at the wreck upon the floor.
“Well,” he said, “I’m
blamed if I touched the thing. What made it fall
over, any way?”
“Pick them up,” the girl
said sharply. “You don’t want to make
trouble for me!”
He stooped, and Hetty gasped with
relief as she saw him carefully scraping some dainty
from the floor, for just then one of the two figures
slipped away from the other, and there was a sound
that might have been made by a softly closing door.
The cow-boy looked up quickly, and saw Miss Torrance
and Miss Schuyler standing close together, then stood
up as they came towards him. Hetty paused and
surveyed the overturned crockery, and then, though
her heart was throbbing painfully, gave the man a glance
of ironical inquiry. He looked at the maid as
if for inspiration, but she stood meekly still, the
picture of bashful confusion.
“I’m quite sorry, Miss
Torrance,” he said. “The concerned
thing went over.”
Hetty laughed. “Well,”
she said, “it’s a very cold night, and
Lou can get you some more supper. She is, however,
not to stay here a minute after she has given it you.”
She went out with Miss Schuyler, and
the two stood very silent by a window in the corridor.
One of them fancied she saw a shadowy object slip round
the corner of a barn, but could not be sure, and for
five very long minutes they stared at the faintly
shining snow. Nothing moved upon it, and save
for the maid’s voice in the hall, the great building
was very still. Hetty touched Miss Schuyler’s
arm.
“He has got away,” she
said. “Come back with me. I don’t
feel like standing up any longer.”
They sat down limply when they returned
to the little room, and though Miss Schuyler did not
meet her companion’s gaze, there was something
that did not seem to please the latter in her face.
“Flo,” she said, “one
could almost fancy you felt it as much as I did.
It was awfully nice of you.”
Miss Schuyler smiled, though there
was a tension in her voice. “Of course
I felt it,” she said. “Hetty, I’d
watch that maid of yours. She’s too clever.”
Hetty said nothing for a moment, then,
suddenly crossing the room, she stooped down and kissed
Miss Schuyler.
“I have never met any one who
would do as much for me as you would, Flo,”
she said. “I don’t think there is
anything that could come between us.”
There was silence for another moment,
and during it Miss Schuyler looked steadily into Hetty’s
eyes. “No,” she said, “although
you do not seem quite sure, I don’t think there
is.”
It was early the next morning when
Christopher Allonby arrived at the Range. He
smiled as he glanced at the packet Hetty handed him.
“I have never seen your father
anything but precise,” he said.
“Has anything led you to fancy
that he has changed?” asked Hetty.
Allonby laughed as he held out the
packet. “The envelope is all creased and
crumpled. It might have been carried round for
ever so long in somebody’s pocket. Now,
I know you don’t smoke, Hetty.”
“There is no reason why I should
not, but, as it happens, I don’t,” said
Miss Torrance.
“Then, the packet has a most
curious, cigar-like smell,” said Allonby, smiling.
“Now, I don’t think Mr. Torrance carries
loose cigars and letters about with him together.
I wonder what deduction one could make from this.”
Hetty glanced at Miss Schuyler.
“You could never make the right one, Chris,”
she said.
Allonby said nothing further and went
out with the letter; a day or two later he handed
it to the Sheriff.
“I guess you know what’s inside it?”
said the latter.
“Yes,” said the lad. “I want
to see you count them now.”
The Sheriff glanced at him sharply,
took out a roll of bills and flicked them over.
“Yes,” he said, “that’s
quite right; but one piece of what I have to do is
going to be difficult.”
“Which?” said Allonby.
“Well,” said the Sheriff,
“I guess you know. I mean the getting hold
of Larry.”