In his own room, with the door closed
and locked, Keith felt again that dull, strange pain
that made his heart sick and the air about him difficult
to breathe.
“If you weren’t my
brother.”
The words beat in his brain.
They were pounding at his heart until it was smothered,
laughing at him and taunting him and triumphing over
him just as, many times before, the raving voices
of the weird wind-devils had scourged him from out
of black night and arctic storm. Her brother!
His hand clenched until the nails bit into his flesh.
No, he hadn’t thought of that part of the fight!
And now it swept upon him in a deluge. If he
lost in the fight that was ahead of him, his life would
pay the forfeit. The law would take him, and he
would hang. And if he won-she would
be his sister forever and to the end of all time!
Just that, and no more. His sister!
And the agony of truth gripped him that it was not
as a brother that he saw the glory in her hair, the
glory in her eyes and face, and the glory in her slim
little, beautiful body-but as the lover.
A merciless preordination had stacked the cards against
him again. He was Conniston, and she was Conniston’s
sister.
A strong man, a man in whom blood
ran red, there leaped up in him for a moment a sudden
and unreasoning rage at that thing which he had called
fate. He saw the unfairness of it all, the hopelessness
of it, the cowardly subterfuge and trickery of life
itself as it had played against him, and with tightly
set lips and clenched hands he called mutely on God
Almighty to play the game square. Give him a chance!
Give him just one square deal, only one; let him see
a way, let him fight a man’s fight with a ray
of hope ahead! In these red moments hope emblazoned
itself before his eyes as a monstrous lie. Bitterness
rose in him until he was drunk with it, and blasphemy
filled his heart. Whichever way he turned, however
hard he fought, there was no chance of winning.
From the day he killed Kirkstone the cards had been
stacked against him, and they were stacked now and
would be stacked until the end. He had believed
in God, he had believed in the inevitable ethics of
the final reckoning of things, and he had believed
strongly that an impersonal Something more powerful
than man-made will was behind him in his struggles.
These beliefs were smashed now. Toward them he
felt the impulse of a maddened beast trampling hated
things under foot. They stood for lies-treachery-cheating-yes,
contemptible cheating! It was impossible for
him to win. However he played, whichever way he
turned, he must lose. For he was Conniston, and
she was Conniston’s sister, and must
be to the end of time.
Faintly, beyond the door, he heard
Mary Josephine singing. Like a bit of steel drawn
to a tension his normal self snapped back into place.
His readjustment came with a lurch, a subtle sort of
shock. His hands unclenched, the tense lines
in his face relaxed, and because that God Almighty
he had challenged had given to him an unquenchable
humor, he saw another thing where only smirking ghouls
and hypocrites had rent his brain with their fiendish
exultations a moment before. It was Conniston’s
face, suave, smiling, dying, triumphant over life,
and Conniston was saying, just as he had said up there
in the cabin on the Barren, with death reaching out
a hand for him, “It’s queer, old top,
devilish queer-and funny!”
Yes, it was funny if one looked at
it right, and Keith found himself swinging back into
his old view-point. It was the hugest joke life
had ever played on him. His sister! He could
fancy Conniston twisting his mustaches, his cool eyes
glimmering with silent laughter, looking on his predicament,
and he could fancy Conniston saying: “It’s
funny, old top, devilish funny-but it’ll
be funnier still when some other man comes along and
carries her off!”
And he, John Keith, would have to
grin and bear it because he was her brother!
Mary Josephine was tapping at his door.
“Derwent Conniston,” she
called frigidly, “there’s a female person
on the telephone asking for you. What shall I
say?”
“Er-why-tell
her you’re my sister, Mary Josephine, and if
it’s Miss Kirkstone, be nice to her and say
I’m not able to come to the ’phone, and
that you’re looking forward to meeting her, and
that we’ll be up to see her some time today.”
“Oh, indeed!”
“You see,” said Keith,
his mouth close to the door, “you see, this Miss
Kirkstone-”
But Mary Josephine was gone.
Keith grinned. His illimitable
optimism was returning. Sufficient for the day
that she was there, that she loved him, that she belonged
to him, that just now he was the arbiter of her destiny!
Far off in the mountains he dreamed of, alone, just
they two, what might not happen? Some day-
With the cold chisel and the hammer
he went to the chest. His task was one that numbed
his hands before the last of the three locks was broken.
He dragged the chest more into the light and opened
it. He was disappointed. At first glance
he could not understand why Conniston had locked it
at all. It was almost empty, so nearly empty that
he could see the bottom of it, and the first object
that met his eyes was an insult to his expectations-an
old sock with a huge hole in the toe of it. Under
the sock was an old fur cap not of the kind worn north
of Montreal. There was a chain with a dog-collar
attached to it, a hip-pocket pistol and a huge forty-five,
and not less than a hundred cartridges of indiscriminate
calibers scattered loosely about. At one end,
bundled in carelessly, was a pair of riding-breeches,
and under the breeches a pair of white shoes with
rubber soles. There was neither sentiment nor
reason to the collection in the chest. It was
junk. Even the big forty-five had a broken hammer,
and the pistol, Keith thought, might have stunned
a fly at close range. He pawed the things over
with the cold chisel, and the last thing he came upon-buried
under what looked like a cast-off sport shirt-was
a pasteboard shoe box. He raised the cover.
The box was full of papers.
Here was promise. He transported
the box to Brady’s table and sat down.
He examined the larger papers first. There were
a couple of old game licenses for Manitoba, half a
dozen pencil-marked maps, chiefly of the Peace River
country, and a number of letters from the secretaries
of Boards of Trade pointing out the incomparable possibilities
their respective districts held for the homesteader
and the buyer of land. Last of all came a number
of newspaper clippings and a packet of letters.
Because they were loose he seized
upon the clippings first, and as his eyes fell upon
the first paragraph of the first clipping his body
became suddenly tensed in the shock of unexpected discovery
and amazed interest. There were six of the clippings,
all from English papers, English in their terseness,
brief as stock exchange reports, and equally to the
point. He read the six in three minutes.
They simply stated that Derwent Conniston,
of the Connistons of Darlington, was wanted for burglary-and
that up to date he had not been found.
Keith gave a gasp of incredulity.
He looked again to see that his eyes were not tricking
him. And it was there in cold, implacable print.
Derwent Conniston-that phoenix among men,
by whom he had come to measure all other men, that
Crichton of nerve, of calm and audacious courage,
of splendid poise-a burglar! It was
cheap, farcical, an impossible absurdity. Had
it been murder, high treason, defiance of some great
law, a great crime inspired by a great passion or a
great ideal, but it was burglary, brigandage of the
cheapest and most commonplace variety, a sneaking
night-coward’s plagiarism of real adventure
and real crime. It was impossible. Keith
gritted the words aloud. He might have accepted
Conniston as a Dick Turpin, a Claude Duval or a Macheath,
but not as a Jeremy Diddler or a Bill Sykes. The
printed lines were lies. They must be. Derwent
Conniston might have killed a dozen men, but he had
never cracked a safe. To think it was to think
the inconceivable.
He turned to the letters. They
were postmarked Darlington, England. His fingers
tingled as he opened the first. It was as he had
expected, as he had hoped. They were from Mary
Josephine. He arranged them-nine in
all-in the sequence of their dates, which
ran back nearly eight years. All of them had
been written within a period of eleven months.
They were as legible as print. And as he passed
from the first to the second, and from the second
to the third, and then read on into the others, he
forgot there was such a thing as time and that Mary
Josephine was waiting for him. The clippings had
told him one thing; here, like bits of driftage to
be put together, a line in this place and half a dozen
in that, in paragraphs that enlightened and in others
that puzzled, was the other side of the story, a growing
thing that rose up out of mystery and doubt in segments
and fractions of segments adding themselves together
piecemeal, welding the whole into form and substance,
until there rode through Keith’s veins a wild
thrill of exultation and triumph.
And then he came to the ninth and
last letter. It was in a different handwriting,
brief, with a deadly specificness about it that gripped
Keith as he read.
This ninth letter he held in his hand
as he rose from the table, and out of his mouth there
fell, unconsciously, Conniston’s own words,
“It’s devilish queer, old top-and
funny!”
There was no humor in the way he spoke
them. His voice was hard, his eyes dully ablaze.
He was looking back into that swirling, unutterable
loneliness of the northland, and he was seeing Conniston
again.
Fiercely he caught up the clippings,
struck a match, and with a grim smile watched them
as they curled up into flame and crumbled into ash.
What a lie was life, what a malformed thing was justice,
what a monster of iniquity the man-fabricated thing
called law!
And again he found himself speaking,
as if the dead Englishman himself were repeating the
words, “It’s devilish queer, old top-and
funny!”