HOW DID THE SECRET LEAK OUT?
I made up for my three nights’
lack of sleep by not waking the next morning till
after ten. When I went to 218, I found only the
chef, and he told me the party had gone for
a ride. Since I couldn’t talk to Madge,
I went to work at my desk, for I had been rather neglecting
my routine work. While I still wrote, I heard
horses’ hoofs, and, looking up, saw the Cullens
returning. I went out on the platform to wish
them good-morning, arriving just in time to see Lord
Ralles help Miss Cullen out of her saddle; and the
way he did it, and the way he continued to hold her
hand after she was down, while he said something to
her, made me grit my teeth and look the other way.
None of the riders had seen me, so I slipped into
my car and went back to work. Fred came in presently
to see if I was up yet, and to ask me to lunch, but
I felt so miserable and down-hearted that I made an
excuse of my late breakfast for not joining them.
After luncheon the party in the other
special all came out and walked up and down the platform,
the sound of their voices and laughter only making
me feel the bluer. Before long I heard a rap
on one of my windows, and there was Miss Cullen peering
in at me. The moment I looked up, she called,
“Won’t you make one of us, Mr. Misanthrope?”
I called myself all sorts of a fool,
but out I went as eagerly as if there had been some
hope. Miss Cullen began to tease me over my sudden
access of energy, declaring that she was sure it was
a pose for their benefit, or else due to a guilty
conscience over having slept so late.
“I hoped you would ride with
us, though perhaps it wouldn’t have paid you.
Apparently there is nothing to see in Ash Forks.”
“There is something that may
interest you all,” I suggested, pointing to
a special that had been dropped off N that morning.
“What is it?” asked Madge.
“It’s a G. S. special,”
I said, “and Mr. Camp and Mr. Baldwin and two
G. S. officials came in on it.”
“What do you think he’d
give for those letters?” laughed Fred.
“If they were worth so much
to you, I suppose they can’t be worth any less
to the G. S.,” I replied.
“Fortunately, there is no way
that he can learn where they are,” said Mr.
Cullen.
“Don’t let’s stand
still,” cried Miss Cullen. “Mr. Gordon,
I’ll run you a race to the end of the platform.”
She said this only after getting a big lead, and she
got there about eight inches ahead of me, which pleased
her mightily. “It takes men so long to
get started,” was the way she explained her victory.
Then she walked me beyond the end of the boarding
to explain the workings of a switch to her. That
it was only a pretext she proved to me the moment
I had relocked the bar, by saying,
“Mr. Gordon, may I ask you a question?”
“Certainly,” I assented.
“It is one I should ask papa
or Fred, but I am afraid they might not tell me the
truth. You will, won’t you?” she begged,
very earnestly.
“I will,” I promised.
“Supposing,” she continued,
“that it became known that you have those letters?
Would it do our side any harm?”
I thought for a moment, and then shook
my head. “No new proxies could arrive here
in time for the election,” I said, “and
the ones I have will not be voted.”
She still looked doubtful, and asked,
“Then why did papa say just now, ’Fortunately’?”
“He merely meant that it was
safer they shouldn’t know.”
“Then it is better to keep it
a secret?” she asked, anxiously.
“I suppose so,” I said,
and then added, “Why should you be afraid of
asking your father?”
“Because he might well,
if he knew, I’m sure he would sacrifice himself;
and I couldn’t run the risk.”
“I am afraid I don’t understand?”
I questioned.
“I would rather not explain,”
she said, and of course that ended the subject.
Our exercise taken, we went back to
the Cullens’ car, and Madge left us to write
some letters. A moment later Lord Ralles remembered
he had not written home recently, and he too went
forward to the dining-room. That made me call
myself something, for not having offered
Miss Cullen the use of my desk in 97. Owing to
this the two missed part of the big game we were playing;
for barely were they gone when one of the servants
brought a card to Mr. Cullen, who looked at it and
exclaimed, “Mr. Camp!” Then, after a speaking
pause, in which we all exchanged glances, he said,
“Bring him in.”
On Mr. Camp’s entrance he looked
as much surprised as we had all done a moment before.
“I beg your pardon for intruding, Mr. Cullen,”
he said. “I was told that this was Mr. Gordon’s
car, and I wish to see him.”
“I am Mr. Gordon.”
“You are travelling with Mr.
Cullen?” he inquired, with a touch of suspicion
in his manner.
“No,” I answered.
“My special is the next car, and I was merely
enjoying a cigar here.”
“Ah!” said Mr. Camp.
“Then I won’t interrupt your smoke, and
will only relieve you of those letters of mine.”
I took a good pull at my cigar, and
blew the smoke out in a cloud slowly to gain time.
“I don’t think I follow you,” I said.
“I understand that you have
in your possession three letters addressed to me.”
“I have,” I assented.
“Then I will ask you to deliver them to me.”
“I can’t do that.”
“Why not?” he challenged. “They’re
my property.”
I produced the Postmaster-General’s telegram
and read it to him.
“Why, this is infamous!”
Mr. Camp cried. “What use will those letters
be after the eighteenth? It’s a conspiracy.”
“I can only obey instructions,” I said.
“It shall cost you your position if you do,”
Mr. Camp threatened.
As I’ve already said, I haven’t
a good temper, and when he told me that I couldn’t
help retorting,
“That’s quite on a par with most G. S.
methods.”
“I’m not speaking for
the G. S., young man,” roared Mr. Camp.
“I speak as a director of the Kansas & Arizona.
What is more, I will have those letters inside of
twenty-four hours.”
He made an angry exit, and I said
to Fred, “I wish you would stroll about and
spy out the proceedings of the enemy’s camp.
He may telegraph to Washington, and if there’s
any chance of the Postmaster-General revoking his
order I must go back to Flagstaff on N this afternoon.”
“He sha’n’t do anything
that I don’t know about till he goes to bed,”
Fred promised. “But how the deuce did he
know that you had those letters?”
That was just what we were all puzzling
over, for only the occupants of N and myself,
so far as I knew, were in a position to let Mr. Camp
hear of that fact.
As Fred made his exit he said, “Don’t
tell Madge that there is a new complication, for the
dear girl has had worries enough already.”
Miss Cullen not rejoining us, and
Lord Ralles presently doing so, I went to my own car,
for he and I were not good furniture for the same
room. Before I had been there long, Fred came
rushing in.
“Camp and Baldwin have been
in consultation with a lawyer,” he said, “and
now the three have just boarded those cars,”
pointing out the window at the branch-line train that
was to leave for Phoenix in two minutes.
“You must go with them,”
I urged, “and keep us informed as to what they
do, for they evidently are going to set the law on
us, and the G. S. has always owned the Territorial
judges, so they’ll stretch a point to oblige
them.”
“Have I time to fill a bag?”
“Plenty,” I assured him,
and, going out, I ordered the train held till I should
give the word.
“What does it all mean?”
asked Miss Cullen, joining me.
I laughed, and replied, “I’m
doing a braver thing even than your party did; I’m
holding up a train all by my lonesome.”
“But my brother came dashing
in just now and said he was starting for Phoenix.”
“Let her go,” I called
to the conductor, as Fred jumped aboard; and the train
pulled out.
“I hope there’s nothing
wrong?” Madge questioned, anxiously.
“Nothing to worry over,”
I laughed. “Only a little more fun for
our money. By the way, Miss Cullen,” I went
on, to avoid her questions, “if you have your
letters ready, and will let me have them at once,
I can get them on N, so that they’ll go East
to-night.”
Miss Cullen blushed as if I had said
something I ought not to have, and stammered, “I I
changed my mind, and that is I
didn’t write them, after all.”
“I beg your pardon, I
ought to have known; I mean, it’s very natural,”
I faltered and stuttered, thinking what a dunce I had
been not to understand that both hers and Lord Ralles’s
letters had been only a pretext to get away from the
rest of us.
My blundering apology and evident
embarrassment deepened Miss Cullen’s blush fivefold,
and she explained, hurriedly, “I found I was
tired, and so, instead of writing, I went to my room
and rested.”
I suppose any girl would have invented
the same yarn, yet it hurt me more than the bigger
one she had told on Hance’s trail. Small
as the incident was, it made me very blue, and led
me to shut myself up in my own car for the rest of
that afternoon and evening. Indeed, I couldn’t
sleep, but sat up working, quite forgetful of the
passing hours, till a glance at my watch startled
me with the fact that it was a quarter of two.
Feeling like anything more than sleep, I went out
on the platform, and, lighting a cigar, paced up and
down, thinking of well, thinking.
The night agent was sitting in the
station, nodding, and after I had walked for an hour
I went in to ask him if the train to Phoenix had arrived
on time. Just as I opened the door, the telegraph
instrument began clicking, and called Ash Forks.
The man, with the curious ability that operators get
of recognizing their own call, even in sleep, waked
up instantly and responded, and, not wishing to interrupt
him, I delayed asking my question till he should be
free. I stood there thinking of Madge, and listening
heedlessly as the instrument ticked off the cipher
signature of the sending operator, and the “twenty-four
paid.” But as I heard the clicks .....
.... which meant ph, I suddenly became attentive,
and when it completed “Phoenix” I concluded
Fred was wiring me, and listened for what followed
the date.
That may not look particularly intelligible,
but if the Phoenix operator had been talking over
the ’phone to me he couldn’t have said
any plainer,
“Sheriff yavapai county ash
forks arizona be at railroad station three forty five
today to meet train arriving from phoenix prepared
to immediately serve peremptory mandamus issued tonight
by judge wilson sig theodore e camp.”
My question being pretty thoroughly
answered, I went back and continued my walk; but before
five minutes had passed, the operator came out, and
handed me a message. It was from Fred, and read
thus:
“Camp, Baldwin, and lawyer went
at once to house of Judge Wilson, where they stayed
an hour. They then returned with judge to station,
and after despatching a telegram have taken seats in
train for Ash Forks, leaving here at three twenty-five.
I shall return with them.”
A bigger idiot than I could have understood
the move. I was to be hauled before Judge Wilson
by means of mandamus proceedings, and, as he was notoriously
a G. S. judge, and was coming to Ash Forks solely
to oblige Mr. Camp, he would unquestionably declare
the letters the property of Mr. Camp and order their
delivery.
Apparently I had my choice of being
a traitor to Madge, of going to prison for contempt
of court, or of running away, which was not far off
from acknowledging that I had done something wrong.
I didn’t like any one of the options.