Red Feather’s mind was not constituted
to entertain more than one leading thought at a time.
Ever since the desertion and death of his daughter,
revenge had been his dominant passion. It was
in order to find Gledware that he had haunted the
trail during the years of lahoma’s youth, always
hoping to discover him in the new country gliding
behind herds of cattle, listening to scraps of talks
among the cattlemen, earning from Mizzoo the uneasy
designation, “the ghost.”
Thanks to the reading aloud of Lahoma’s
letter, he had learned of Gledware’s presence
in the city which he had known years before as Westport
Landing. He went thither unbewildered by its
marvelous changes, undistracted by its tumultuous
flood of life for his mind was full of
his mission; he could see only the blood following
the blade of his knife, heard nothing but a groan,
a death-rattle.
Gledware’s presence in the boat
this morning had been made possible only by the interposition
of Lahoma; but for the Indian’s deep-seated
affection for her whom he regarded as a child, the
man now smiling into Annabel’s pale face would
long ago have found his final resting-place.
It was due to the Indian’s singleness of thought
that Lahoma’s plan had struck him as good.
Gledware, stripped of all his possessions, slinking
as a beggar from door to door, no roof, no bed, but
sky and earth that is what Red Feather
had meant.
He had believed Gledware glad of the
respite. That he should accept the alternative
seemed reasonable. There was a choice only between
death and poverty and Gledware wished to
live so desperately so basely! The
chief cared little for life; still, he would unhesitatingly
have preferred the most meager existence to a knife
in his heart; how much more, then, this craven white
man. But the plan had failed because Gledware
did not believe death was the other alternative.
Never in the remotest way had it occurred to the avenger
that Gledware could be spared should he prove false
to his oath. Red Feather was less a man with
passions than a cold relentless fate. This fate
would surely overcome the helpless wretch, should he
cling to his riches.
As Red Feather skimmed the water with
long sweeps of his oars, never looking back, the voices
of his passengers came to his ears without meaning.
He was thinking of the last few days and how this
morning’s ride was their fitting sequel.
The early sunbeams were full on him as he tilted
back his head, but they showed no emotion on his face,
hard-set and dully red in the clear radiance.
Crouching near the summer-house at
Gledware’s place, he had overheard Red Kimball
boast to bring Gledware the pearl and onyx pin.
Then had shot through his darkened mind the suspicion
that Gledware meant to escape the one condition on
which his life was to be spared. With simple
cunning he had left the pin where the outlaw must find
it; his own death would be taken for granted what
then?
What then? This ride in the
boat. Gledware had made his choice; he had clung
to his possessions and now Death held the
oars. He was scarcely past middle age.
He might have lived so long, he who so loved to live!
But no, he had chosen to be rich and to
die.
When Red Feather brought his mind
back to the present, Gledware was describing to Annabel
a ranch in California for which he had traded the
house near Independence. He would take her far
away; he would build a house thus and thus room
so; terraces here; marble pillars....
Annabel listened gravely, silently,
her face all the paler for the sunlight flashing over
it, for the mimic sun on the waves glancing up into
her pensive eyes. Somehow, the sunshine, the
ripple of the water, seemed to form no part of her
life, belonged rather, to Edgerton Compton rowing
in solitude against the sky. Those naked trees,
bare brown hills and ledges of huge stones seemed
her world-boundaries, kin to her, claiming her
But there was California ... and the splendid house
to be built....
The Indian was listening now, but
as he heard projected details glowingly presented,
no change came in his grim deep-lined face. He
simply knew it was not to be let the fool
plan! He found himself wondering dully why he
no longer hated Gledware with that vindictive fury
that gloats over the death-grip, lingers in fiendish
leisure over the lifted scalp. He scarcely remembered
the wrong done his daughter; it was almost as if he
had banished the cause of his revenge; as if vengeance
itself had become a simple stroke of destiny.
Gledware had chosen his possession, and the Indian
was Fate’s answer.
“Beautiful one,” he heard
Gledware say, speaking in an altered tone, “all
that is in the future but see what I have
brought you; this is for today. It’s yours,
dear let me see it around your neck with
the sun full upon it ”
Red Feather turned his head, curiously.
Gledware held outstretched a magnificent
diamond necklace which shot forth dazzling rays as
it swung from his eager fingers.
Annabel uttered a smothered cry of
delight as the iridescence filled her eyes.
She looked across the water toward the pagoda-shaped
club-house where her mother stood, faintly defined
as a speck of white against the green wall-shingles
of the piazza. It seemed that it needed this
glance to steady her nerves. Edgerton was forgotten.
She reached out her hand. And then, perplexed
at the necklace being suddenly withdrawn, she looked
up. She caught a glimpse of Gledware’s
face, and her blood turned cold.
That face was frozen in horror.
At the turning of the boatman’s head, he had
instantly recognized under the huge-brimmed hat, the
face of his enemy as if brought back from the grave.
There was a moment’s tense silence,
filled with mystery for her, with indescribable agony
for him, with simple waiting for the Indian.
Annabel turned to discover the cause of Gledware’s
terror, but she saw no malice, no threat, in the boatman’s
eyes.
Gledware ceased breathing, then his
form quivered with a sudden inrush of breath as of
a man emerging from diving. His eyes rolled in
his head as he turned about scanning the shore, glaring
at Edgerton’s distant boat. Why had he
come unarmed? How could he have put faith in
Red Kimball’s assurances? He tortured his
brain for some gleam of hope.
“This is all I have,”
he shrieked, as if the Indian’s foot was already
upon his neck. “This is all I have.”
He flung the necklace into the water. “It
was a lie about the California ranch it’s
a lie about all my property I’ve
got nothing, Annabel! I sold the last bit to
get you the necklace, but I shouldn’t have done
that. Now it’s gone. I have nothing!”
The Indian rose slowly. The
oars slipped down and floated away in the flashing
stream of the sun’s rays.
Annabel, realizing that the Indian,
despite his impassive countenance, threatened some
horrible catastrophe, started up with a scream.
Edgerton had already turned toward them; alarmed at
sound of Gledware’s terror. He bent to
the oars, comprehending only that Annabel was in danger.
“Edgerton!” she shrieked
blindly. “Edgerton! Edgerton!
Edgerton!”
Gledware crouched at her feet, crying
beseechingly, “I swear I have nothing nothing!
I sold everything gave it away left
it nothing in all the world! I’m
willing to beg, to starve I don’t
want to own anything I only want to live to
live.... My God! To live...”
Red Feather did not utter a word.
But with the stealthy lightness and litheness of
a panther, he stepped over the seat and moved toward
Gledware.
Then Gledware, pushed to the last
extremity, despairing of the interposition of some
miraculous chance, was forced back upon himself.
With the vision of an inherent coward he saw all chances
against him; but with the desperation of a maddened
soul, he threw himself upon the defensive.
Red Feather had not expected to see
him offer resistance. This show of clenched
teeth and doubled fists suddenly enraged him, and the
old lust of vengeance flamed from his eyes.
Hat and disguising coat were cast aside. For
a moment his form, rigid and erect, gleamed like a
statue of copper cut in stern relentless lines, and
the single crimson feather in his raven locks matched,
in gold, the silver brightness of his upraised blade.
The next moment his form shot forward,
his arm gripped Gledware about the neck, despite furious
resistance, and both men fell into the water.
The violent shock given to the boat
sent Annabel to her knees. Clutching the side
she gazed with horrified eyes at the water in her
wake. The men had disappeared, but in the glowing
white path cut across the lake by the sun, appeared
a dull red streak that thinned away to faint purple
and dim pink. She watched the sinister discoloration
with fascinated eyes. What was taking place beneath
the smooth tide? Or was it all over? Had
Red Feather found a rock to which he could cling while
he drowned himself with his victim? Or had their
bodies been caught in the tangled branches of a submerged
forest tree? It was one of the mysteries of
the Ozarks never to be solved.
She was still kneeling, still staring
with frightened eyes, still wondering, when Edgerton
Compton rowed up beside her.
“He said he had nothing,”
she stammered, as he helped her to rise. “He
said he had nothing.... How true it is!”
Edgerton gently lifted her to his skiff, then stepped
in beside her. He, too, was watching the water
for the possible emergence of a ghastly face.
Annabel began trembling as with the
ague. “Edgerton!... He said it was
all a lie about his property and
so it was. Everything is a lie except this...”
She clung to him.