Keith’s first vision, as he
entered the office of the Inspector of Police, was
not of McDowell, but of a girl. She sat directly
facing him as he advanced through the door, the light
from a window throwing into strong relief her face
and hair. The effect was unusual. She was
strikingly handsome. The sun, giving to the room
a soft radiance, lit up her hair with shimmering gold;
her eyes, Keith saw, were a clear and wonderful gray-and
they stared at him as he entered, while the poise
of her body and the tenseness of her face gave evidence
of sudden and unusual emotion. These things Keith
observed in a flash; then he turned toward McDowell.
The Inspector sat behind a table covered
with maps and papers, and instantly Keith was conscious
of the penetrating inquisition of his gaze. He
felt, for an instant, the disquieting tremor of the
criminal. Then he met McDowell’s eyes squarely.
They were, as Conniston had warned him, eyes that
could see through boiler-plate. Of an indefinable
color and deep set behind shaggy, gray eyebrows, they
pierced him through at the first glance. Keith
took in the carefully waxed gray mustaches, the close-cropped
gray hair, the rigidly set muscles of the man’s
face, and saluted.
He felt creeping over him a slow chill.
There was no greeting in that iron-like countenance,
for full a quarter-minute no sign of recognition.
And then, as the sun had played in the girl’s
hair, a new emotion passed over McDowell’s face,
and Keith saw for the first time the man whom Derwent
Conniston had known as a friend as well as a superior.
He rose from his chair, and leaning over the table
said in a voice in which were mingled both amazement
and pleasure:
“We were just talking about
the devil-and here you are, sir! Conniston,
how are you?”
For a few moments Keith did not see.
He had won! The blood pounded
through his heart so violently that it confused his
vision and his senses. He felt the grip of McDowell’s
hand; he heard his voice; a vision swam before his
eyes-and it was the vision of Derwent Conniston’s
triumphant face. He was standing erect, his head
was up, he was meeting McDowell shoulder to shoulder,
even smiling, but in that swift surge of exultation
he did not know. McDowell, still gripping his
hand and with his other hand on his arm, was wheeling
him about, and he found the girl on her feet, staring
at him as if he had newly risen from the dead.
McDowell’s military voice was
snapping vibrantly, “Conniston, meet Miss Miriam
Kirkstone, daughter of Judge Kirkstone!”
He bowed and held for a moment in
his own the hand of the girl whose father he had killed.
It was lifeless and cold. Her lips moved, merely
speaking his name. His own were mute. McDowell
was saying something about the glory of the service
and the sovereignty of the law. And then, breaking
in like the beat of a drum on the introduction, his
voice demanded, “Conniston-did
you get your man?”
The question brought Keith to his
senses. He inclined his head slightly and said,
“I beg to report that John Keith is dead, sir.”
He saw Miriam Kirkstone give a visible
start, as if his words had carried a stab. She
was apparently making a strong effort to hide her
agitation as she turned swiftly away from him, speaking
to McDowell.
“You have been very kind, Inspector
McDowell. I hope very soon to have the pleasure
of talking with Mr. Conniston-about-John
Keith.”
She left them, nodding slightly to Keith.
When she was gone, a puzzled look
filled the Inspector’s eyes. “She
has been like that for the last six months,”
he explained. “Tremendously interested
in this man Keith and his fate. I don’t
believe that I have watched for your return more anxiously
than she has, Conniston. And the curious part
of it is she seemed to have no interest in the matter
at all until six months ago. Sometimes I am afraid
that brooding over her father’s death has unsettled
her a little. A mighty pretty girl, Conniston.
A mighty pretty girl, indeed! And her brother
is a skunk. Pst! You haven’t
forgotten him?”
He drew a chair up close to his own
and motioned Keith to be seated. “You’re
changed, Conniston!”
The words came out of him like a shot.
So unexpected were they that Keith felt the effect
of them in every nerve of his body. He sensed
instantly what McDowell meant. He was not
like the Englishman; he lacked his mannerisms, his
cool and superior suavity, the inimitable quality
of his nerve and sportsmanship. Even as he met
the disquieting directness of the Inspector’s
eyes, he could see Conniston sitting in his place,
rolling his mustache between his forefinger and thumb,
and smiling as though he had gone into the north but
yesterday and had returned today. That was what
McDowell was missing in him, the soul of Conniston
himself-Conniston, the ne plus
ultra of presence and amiable condescension,
the man who could look the Inspector or the High Commissioner
himself between the eyes, and, serenely indifferent
to Service regulations, say, “Fine morning,
old top!” Keith was not without his own sense
of humor. How the Englishman’s ghost must
be raging if it was in the room at the present moment!
He grinned and shrugged his shoulders.
“Were you ever up there-through
the Long Night-alone?” he asked.
“Ever been through six months of living torture
with the stars leering at you and the foxes barking
at you all the time, fighting to keep yourself from
going mad? I went through that twice to get John
Keith, and I guess you’re right. I’m
changed. I don’t think I’ll ever be
the same again. Something-has gone.
I can’t tell what it is, but I feel it.
I guess only half of me pulled through. It killed
John Keith. Rotten, isn’t it?”
He felt that he had made a lucky stroke.
McDowell pulled out a drawer from under the table
and thrust a box of fat cigars under his nose.
“Light up, Derry-light
up and tell us what happened. Bless my soul,
you’re not half dead! A week in the old
town will straighten you out.”
He struck a match and held it to the
tip of Keith’s cigar.
For an hour thereafter Keith told
the story of the man-hunt. It was his Iliad.
He could feel the presence of Conniston as words fell
from his lips; he forgot the presence of the stern-faced
man who was watching him and listening to him; he
could see once more only the long months and years
of that epic drama of one against one, of pursuit and
flight, of hunger and cold, of the Long Nights filled
with the desolation of madness and despair. He
triumphed over himself, and it was Conniston who spoke
from within him. It was the Englishman who told
how terribly John Keith had been punished, and when
he came to the final days in the lonely little cabin
in the edge of the Barrens, Keith finished with a
choking in his throat, and the words, “And that
was how John Keith died-a gentleman and
a man!”
He was thinking of the Englishman,
of the calm and fearless smile in his eyes as he died,
of his last words, the last friendly grip of his hand,
and McDowell saw the thing as though he had faced it
himself. He brushed a hand over his face as if
to wipe away a film. For some moments after Keith
had finished, he stood with his back to the man who
he thought was Conniston, and his mind was swiftly
adding twos and twos and fours and fours as he looked
away into the green valley of the Saskatchewan.
He was the iron man when he turned to Keith again,
the law itself, merciless and potent, by some miracle
turned into the form of human flesh.
“After two and a half years
of that even a murderer must have seemed like
a saint to you, Conniston. You have done your
work splendidly. The whole story shall go to
the Department, and if it doesn’t bring you a
commission, I’ll resign. But we must continue
to regret that John Keith did not live to be hanged.”
“He has paid the price,” said Keith dully.
“No, he has not paid the price,
not in full. He merely died. It could have
been paid only at the end of a rope. His crime
was atrociously brutal, the culmination of a fiend’s
desire for revenge. We will wipe off his name.
But I can not wipe away the regret. I would sacrifice
a year of my life if he were in this room with you
now. It would be worth it. God, what a thing
for the Service-to have brought John Keith
back to justice after four years!”
He was rubbing his hands and smiling
at Keith even as he spoke. His eyes had taken
on a filmy glitter. The law! It stood there,
without heart or soul, coveting the life that had
escaped it. A feeling of revulsion swept over
Keith.
A knock came at the door.
McDowell’s voice gave permission,
and the door slowly opened. Cruze, the young
secretary, thrust in his head.
“Shan Tung is waiting, sir,” he said.
An invisible hand reached up suddenly
and gripped at Keith’s throat. He turned
aside to conceal what his face might have betrayed.
Shan Tung! He knew what it was now that had pulled
him back, he knew why Conniston’s troubled face
had traveled with him over the Barrens, and there
surged over him with a sickening foreboding, a realization
of what it was that Conniston had remembered and wanted
to tell him-when it was too late.
They had forgotten Shan Tung,
the Chinaman!