The general suspicion that Bill Atkins
knew more about Brick Willock than he had revealed,
was not without foundation; though the extent of his
knowledge was more limited than the town supposed.
Bill had carried to his friend hidden
in the crevice in the mountain-top the
news of Red Kimball’s death; since then, they
had not seen each other.
Skulking along wooded gullies by day,
creeping down into the cove at night, Willock had
unconsciously reverted to the habits of thought and
action belonging to the time of his outlawry.
He was again, in spirit, a highwayman, though his
hostility was directed only against those seeking
to bring him to justice. The softening influence
of the years spent with Lahoma was no longer apparent
in his shifting bloodshot eyes, his crouching shoulders,
his furtive hand ever ready to snatch the weapon from
concealment. This sinister aspect of wildness,
intensified by straggling whiskers and uncombed locks,
gave to his giant form a kinship to the huge grotesquely
shaped rocks among which he had made his den.
He heard of Red Kimball’s death
with bitter disappointment. He had hoped to
encounter his former chief, to grapple with him, to
hurl him, perhaps, from the precipice overlooking
Bill’s former home. If in his fall, Kimball,
with arms wound about his waist, had dragged him down
to the same death, what matter? Though his enemy
was now no more, the sheriff held the warrant for
his arrest as if the dead man could still
strike a mortal blow. The sheriff might be overcome he
was but a man. That piece of paper calling for
his arrest an arrest that would mean, at
best, years in the penitentiary had behind
it the whole state of Texas.
To Willock’s feverish imagination,
the warrant became personified; a mysterious force,
not to be destroyed by material means; it was not
only paper, but spirit. And it had come between
him and Lahoma, it had shut him off from the possibility
of a peaceful old age. The cove was no longer
home but a hiding-place.
He did not question the justice of
this sequel to his earlier life. No doubt deeds
of long ago, never punished, demanded a sacrifice.
He hated the agents of this justice not so much because
they threatened his liberty, his life, as because
they stepped in between himself and Lahoma.
Always a man of expedients, he now sought some way
of frustrating justice, and naturally his plans took
the color of violence. Denied the savage joy
of killing Red Kimball and he would have
killed him with as little compunction as if he had
been a wolf his thoughts turned toward
Gledware.
Gledware was the only witness of the
deed for which the warrant demanded his arrest.
Willock wished many of his other deeds had been prompted
by impulses as generous as those which had led to Kansas
Kimball’s death. Perhaps it was the irony
of justice that he should be threatened by the one
act of bloodshed which had saved Lahoma’s life.
If he must be hanged or imprisoned because he had not,
like the rest of the band, given himself up for official
pardon, it was as well to suffer from one deed as
from another. But it would be better still, as
in the past, to escape all consequences. Without
Gledware, they could prove nothing.
Would Gledware testify, now that Red
Kimball, who had bought his testimony with the death
of the Indian, no longer lived to exact payment?
Willock felt sure he would. In the first place,
Gledware had placed himself on record as a witness,
hence could hardly retreat; in the second place, he
would doubtless be anxious to rid himself of the danger
of ever meeting Willock, whom his conscience must have
caused him to hate with the hatred of the man who
wrongs his benefactor.
Willock transferred all his rage against
the dead enemy to the living. He reminded himself
how Gledware had caused the death of Red Feather,
not in the heat of fury or in blind terror, but in
coldblooded bargaining. He meditated on Gledware’s
attitude toward Lahoma; he thought nothing good of
him, he magnified the evil. That scene at the
grave of his wife and Red Feather’s
account of how he had dug up the body for a mere pin
of pearl and onyx.... Ought such a creature to
live to condemn him, to bring sorrow on the stepdaughter
he had basely refused to acknowledge?
To wait for the coming of the witness
would be to lose an opportunity that might never recur.
Willock would go to him. In doing so, he would
not only take Gledware by surprise, but would leave
the only neighborhood in which search would be made
for himself. Thus it came about that while the
environs of the cove were being minutely examined,
Brick, riding his fastest pony, was on the way to Kansas
City.
He reached Kansas City without unusual
incident, where he was accepted naturally, as a product
of the West. Had his appearance been twice as
uncouth, twice as wild, it would have accorded all
the better with western superstitions that prevailed
in this city, fast forgetting that it had been a western
outpost. At the hotel, whose situation he knew
from Lahoma’s letters, he learned that Gledware
was neither there, nor at his home in the country.
The country-house was closed up and, in fact, there
was a rumor that it was sold, or was about to be sold.
One of the porters happened to know that Gledware
had gone for a week’s diversion down in the
Ozarks. There were a lake, a club-house, a dancing-hall,
as yet unopened. The season was too early for
the usual crowd at Ozark Lodge, but the warm wave
that nearly always came at this time of year, had
prompted a sudden outing party which might last no
longer than the warm wave.
Willock took the first train south
and rode with the car window up the outside
breath was the breath of balmy summer though the trees
stood bleak and leafless against the sky. Two
days ago, snow had fallen but the birds
did not remember it. Seven hours brought him
to a lonely wagon-trail called Ozark Lodge because
after winding among hills several miles it at last
reached the clubhouse of that name overlooking the
lake. He left the train in the dusk of evening,
and walked briskly away, the only moving figure in
the wilderness.
His pace did not slacken till a gleam
as of fallen sky cupped in night-fringe warned him
that the club-house must be near. A turn of a
hill brought it into view, the windows not yet aglow.
Nearer at hand was the boat-house, seemingly deserted.
But as Willock, now grown wary, crept forward among
the post-oaks and blackjacks, well screened from observation
by chinkapin masses of gray interlocked network, he
discovered two figures near the platform edging the
lake. Neither was the one he sought; but from
their being there they were Edgerton Compton
and Annabel, he knew Gledware could not
be far away.
“No,” Annabel was saying
decisively, and yet with an accent of regret, “No,
Edgerton, I can’t.”
“But our last boat-ride,”
he urged. “Don’t refuse me the last
ride a ride to think about all my life.
I’m going away tomorrow at noon, as I promised.
But early in the morning ”
“I have promised him,”
she said with lingering sadness in her voice.
“So I must go with him. He has already
engaged the boatman. He’ll be here at
seven, waiting for me. So you see ”
“Annabel, I shall be here at
seven, also!” he exclaimed impetuously.
“But why? I must go with him, Edgerton.
You see that.”
“Then I shall row alone.”
“Why would you add to my unhappiness?”
she pleaded.
“I shall be here at seven,”
he returned grimly; “while you and he take your
morning boat-ride, I shall row alone.”
She turned from him with a sigh, and
he followed her dejectedly up the path toward the
club-house.
She had lost some of the fresh beauty
which she had brought to the cove, and her step was
no longer elastic; but this Willock did not notice.
He gave little heed to their tones, their gestures,
their looks in which love sought a thin disguise wherein
it might show itself unnamed. He had seized
on the vital fact that in the morning, Annabel and
Gledware would push off from the boat-house steps,
presumably alone; and it would be early morning.
Perhaps Gledware would come first to the boat-house,
there to wait for Annabel. In that case, he
would not ride with Annabel. The lake was deep deep
as Willock’s hate.
Willock passed the night in the woods,
sometimes walking against time among the hills, sometimes
seated on the ground, brooding. The night was
without breath, without coolness. Occasionally
he climbed a rounded elevation from which the clubhouse
was discernible. No lights twinkled among the
barren trees. All in that wilderness seemed asleep
save himself. The myriad insects that sing through
the spring and summer months had not yet found their
voices; there was no trill of frogs, not even the
hooting of an owl, no sound but his own
breathing.
At break of dawn he crept into the
boat-house like a shadow, barefooted, bareheaded the
club-house was not yet awake. He looked about
the barnlike room for a hiding-place. Walls,
floor, ceiling were bare. Near the door opening
on the lake was a rustic bench, impossible as a refuge.
Only in one corner, where empty boxes and a disused
skiff formed a barricade, could he hope for concealment.
He glided thither, and on the floor between the dusty
wall of broad boards and the jumbled partition, he
found a man stretched on his back.
At first, he thought he had surprised
a sleeper, but as the figure did not move, he decided
it must be a corpse. He would have fled but for
his need of this corner. He bent down the
man was bound hand and foot. In the mouth, a
gag was fastened. Neck and ankles were tied to
spikes in the wall.
Willock swiftly surveyed the lake
and the sloping hill leading down from the club-house.
Nobody was near. As he stared at the landscape,
the front door of the club-house opened. He darted
hack to the corner. “Pardner,” he
said, “I got to ask your hospitality for a spell,
and if you move so as to attract attention, I got
to fix you better. I didn’t do this here,
pardner, but you shore look like some of my handiwork
in days past and gone. I’ll share this
corner with you for a while, and if you don’t
give me away to them that’s coming, I promise
to set you free. That’s fair, I guess.
‘A man ain’t all bad,’ says Brick,
’as unties the knots that other men has tied,’
says he. Just lay still and comfortable, and
we’ll see what’s coming.”
Presently there were footsteps in
the path, and to Willock’s intense disappointment,
Gledware and Annabel came in together. They were
in the midst of a conversation and at the first few
words, he found it related to Lahoma. The boatman
who had promised to bring the skiff for them at seven it
developed that Gledware had no intention of doing the
rowing had not yet come. They sat
down on the rustic bench, their voices distinctly
audible in all parts of the small building.
“Her closest living relative,”
Gledware said, “is a great-aunt, living in Boston.
As soon as I found out who she was I’d
always supposed her living among Indians, and that
it would be impossible to find her but
as soon as I learned the truth, without saying anything
to her, I wrote to her great-aunt. I’ve
never been in a position to take care of Lahoma I
felt that I ought to place her with her own family.
I got an answer about what you would expect.
They’d give her a home I told them
what a respectable girl she is fairly creditable
appearance intelligent enough... But
they couldn’t stand those people she lives
with criminals, you know, Annabel, highwaymen murderers!
Imagine Brick Willock in a Boston drawing-room...
But you couldn’t.”
“No,” Annabel agreed.
“Poor Lahoma! And I know she’d never
give him up.”
“That’s it she’s
immovable. She’d insist on taking him along.
But he belongs to another age a different
country. He couldn’t understand.
He thinks when you’ve anything against a man,
the proper move is to kill ’im. He’s
just like an Indian a wild beast. Wouldn’t
know what we meant if we talked about civilization.
His religion is the knife. Well you
see; if he were out of the way, Lahoma would have her
chance.”
“But couldn’t he be arrested?”
“That’s my only hope.
If he were hanged, or locked up for a certain number
of years, Lahoma’d go East. But as long
as he’s at large, she’ll wait for him
to turn up. She’ll stay right there in
the cove till she dies of old age, if he’s free
to visit her at odd moments. It’s her idea
of fidelity, and it’s true that he did take her
in when she needed somebody. There’s a
move on foot now, to arrest him for an old crime a
murder. I witnessed the deed I’ll
testify, if called on. Lahoma will hate me for
that but it’ll be the greatest favor
I could possibly do her. She knows I mean to
appear against him, and she thinks me a brute.
But if I can convict Willock, it’ll place Lahoma
in a family of wealth and refinement ”
He broke off with, “Wonder why
that old deaf boatman doesn’t come?” He
walked impatiently to the head of the steps and stared
out over the lake. “Somebody out there
now,” he exclaimed. “Oh, it’s
Edgerton, rowing about!”
He returned to the bench, but did
not sit down. “Annabel,” he said
abruptly, “you promised me to name the day, this
morning.”
“Yes,” she responded very faintly.
“And I am sure, dear,”
he added in a deep resonant voice, “that in time
you will come to care for me as I care for you now you,
the only woman I have ever loved. I understand
about Edgerton, but you see, you couldn’t marry
him in fact, he couldn’t marry anybody
for years; he has nothing.... And these earlier
attachments that we think the biggest things in our
lives well, they just dwindle, Annabel,
they dwindle as we get the true perspective.
I know your happiness depends upon me, and it rejoices
me to know it. I can give you all you want all
you can dream of and I’m man-of-the-world
enough to understand that happiness depends just on
that getting what you want.”
Annabel started up abruptly.
“I think I heard the boat scraping outside.”
“Yes, he’s there.
Come, dear, and before the ride is ended you must
name the day ”
“Don’t!” she exclaimed sharply.
“He ”
“He’s as deaf as a post,
my dear,” Gledware murmured gently. “That’s
why I selected him. I knew we’d want to
talk I knew you’d name the day.”
He helped her down the rattling boards.
Brick Willock rose softly and stole
toward the opening, his eyes filled with a strange
light. They no longer glared with the blood-lust
of a wild beast, but showed gloomy and perplexed;
the words spoken concerning himself had sunk deep.
The boatman sat with his back to Gledware
and Annabel. He wore a long dingy coat of light
gray and a huge battered straw hat, whose wide brim
hid his hair and almost eclipsed his face. Willock,
careful not to show himself, stared at the skiff as
it shot out from the landing, his brow wrinkled in
anxious thought. He felt strange and dizzy, and
at first fancied it was because of the resolution
that had taken possession of him the resolution
to return to Greer County and give himself up.
This purpose, as unreasoning as his plan to kill Gledware,
grew as fixed in his mind as half an hour before his
other plan had been.
To go voluntarily to the sheriff,
unresistingly to hold out his wrists for the handcuffs that
would indeed mark a new era in his life. “A
wild Indian wouldn’t do that,” he mused,
“nor a wild beast. I guess I understand,
after all. And if that’s the way to make
Lahoma happy....”
No wonder he felt queer; but his light-headedness
did not rise, as a matter of fact, entirely from subjective
storm-threatenings. There was something about
that boatman now, when he tilted up his
head slightly, and the hat failed to conceal was
it possible?...
“My God!” whispered Willock; “it’s
Red Feather!”
And Gledware, with eyes only for Annabel,
finding nothing beyond her but a long gray coat, a
big straw hat and two rowing arms did not
suspect the truth!
In a flash, Willock comprehended all.
The Indian had dropped the pin in Kimball’s
path, and Kimball, finding it, had carried it to Gledware
as if Red Feather were dead. The Indian had led
his braves against the stage-coach Kimball
had fallen under his knife. Yonder man in the
corner, bound and gagged, was doubtless the old deaf
boatman engaged by Gledware. Red Feather had
taken his place that he might row Gledware far out
on the lake....
But Annabel was in the boat. If the Indian...
Far away toward the east, Edgerton
Compton was rowing, not near enough to intervene in
case the Indian attempted violence, but better able
than himself to lend assistance if the boat were overturned.
Willock could, in truth, do nothing, except shout
a warning, and this he forebore lest it hasten the
impending catastrophe. He remained, therefore,
half-hidden, crouching at the doorway, his eyes glued
to the rapidly gliding boat, with its three figures
clear-cut against the first faint sun-glow.