“LISTENERS NEVER HEAR ANYTHING GOOD”
Before I had ceased chuckling over
the sheriff’s indignant declaration of the canons
of etiquette, I heard Mr. Cullen’s voice demanding
to know what the trouble was, and it was quickly explained
to him that I had escaped. He at once gave them
permission to search his car, and went in with the
sheriff and the cowboys. Apparently Madge went
in too, for in a moment I heard Camp say, in a low
voice,
“Two of you fellows get down
below the car and crawl in under the truck where you
can’t be seen. Evidently that cuss isn’t
here, but he’s likely to come by and by.
If so, nab him if you can, and if you can’t,
fire two shots. Mosely, are you heeled?”
“Do I chaw terbaccy?”
asked Mosely, ironically, clearly insulted at the
suggestion that he would travel without a gun.
“Then keep a sharp lookout,
and listen to everything you hear, especially the
whereabouts of some letters. If you can spot their
lay, crawl out and get word to me at once. Now,
under you go before they come out.”
I heard two men drop into the gravel
close alongside of where I lay, and then crawl under
the truck of 218. They weren’t a moment
too soon, for the next instant I heard two or three
people jump on to the platform, and Albert Cullen’s
voice drawl, “Aw, by Jove, what’s the
row?” Camp not enlightening them, Lord Ralles
suggested that they get on the car to find out, and
the three did so. A moment later the sheriff
came to the door and told Camp that I was not to be
found.
“I told yer this was the last
place to look for the cuss, Mr. Camp,” he said.
“We’ve just discomforted the lady for nothin’.”
“Then we must search elsewhere,”
spoke up Camp. “Come on, boys.”
The sheriff turned and made another
elaborate apology for having had to trouble the lady.
I heard Madge tell him that he hadn’t
troubled her at all, and then, as the cowboys and
Camp walked off, she added, “And, Mr. Gunton,
I want to thank you for reproving Mr. Camp’s
dreadful swearing.”
“Thank yer, miss,” said
the sheriff. “We fellers are a little rough
at times, but me if we don’t
know what’s due to a lady.”
“Papa,” said Madge, as
soon as he was out of hearing, “the sheriff
is the most beautiful swearer I ever heard.”
For a while there was silence round
the station; I suppose the party in 218 were comparing
notes, while the two cowboys and I had the best reasons
for being quiet. Presently, however, the men
came out of the car and jumped down on the platform.
Madge evidently followed them to the door, for she
called, “Please let me know the moment something
happens or you learn anything.”
“Better go to bed, Madgy,”
Albert called. “You’ll only worry,
and it’s after three.”
“I couldn’t sleep if I tried,” she
answered.
Their footsteps died away in a moment,
and I heard her close the door of 218. In a few
moments she opened it again, and, stepping down to
the station platform, began to pace up and down it.
If I had only dared, I could have put my finger through
the crack of the planks and touched her foot as she
walked over my head, but I was afraid it might startle
her into a shriek, and there was no explaining to
her what it meant without telling the cowboys how
close they were to their quarry.
Madge hadn’t walked from one
end of the platform to the other more than three or
four times, when I heard some one coming. She
evidently heard it also, for she said,
“I began to be afraid you hadn’t understood
me.”
“I thought you told me to see
first if I were needed,” responded a voice that
even the distance and the planks did not prevent me
from recognizing as that of Lord Ralles.
“Yes,” said she. “You are sure
you can be spared?”
“I couldn’t be of the
slightest use,” asserted Ralles, getting on
to the platform and joining Madge. “It’s
as black as ink everywhere, and I don’t think
there’s anything to be done till daylight.”
“Then I’m glad you came
back, for I really want to say something, to
ask the greatest favor of you.”
“You only have to tell me what
it is,” said his lordship.
“Even that is very hard,”
murmured Madge. “If if Oh!
I’m afraid I haven’t the courage, after
all.”
“I’ll be glad to do anything I can.”
“It’s well Oh,
dear, I can’t. Let’s walk a little,
while I think how to put it.”
They began to walk, which took a weight
off my mind, as I had been forced to hear every word
thus far spoken, and was dreading what might follow,
since I was perfectly helpless to warn them.
The platform was built around the station, and in a
moment they were out of hearing.
Before many seconds were over, however,
they had walked round the building, and I heard Lord
Ralles say,
“You really don’t mean that he’s
insulted you?”
“That is just what I do mean,”
cried Madge, indignantly. “It’s been
almost past endurance. I haven’t dared to
tell any one, but he had the cruelty, the meanness,
on Hance’s trail to threaten that ”
At that point the walkers turned the
corner again, and I could not hear the rest of the
sentence. But I had heard more than enough to
make me grow hot with mortification, even while I could
hardly believe I had understood aright. Madge
had been so kind to me lately that I couldn’t
think she had been feeling as bitterly as she spoke.
That such an apparently frank girl was a consummate
actress wasn’t to be thought, and yet I
remembered how well she had played her part on Hance’s
trail; but even that wouldn’t convince me.
Proof of her duplicity came quickly enough, for, while
I was still thinking, the walkers were round again,
and Lord Ralles was saying,
“Why haven’t you complained
to your father or brothers?”
“Because I knew they would resent
his conduct to me, and ”
“Of course they would,”
cried her companion, interrupting. “But
why should you object to that?”
“Because of the letters,”
explained Madge. “Don’t you see that
if we made him angry he would betray us to Mr. Camp,
and ”
Then they passed out of hearing, leaving
me almost desperate, both at being an eavesdropper
to such a conversation, and that Madge could think
so meanly of me. To say it, too, to Lord Ralles
made it cut all the deeper, as any fellow who has been
in love will understand.
Round they came again in a moment,
and I braced myself for the lash of the whip that
I felt was coming. I didn’t escape it, for
Madge was saying,
“Can you conceive of a man pretending
to care for a girl and yet treating her so? I
can’t tell you the grief, the mortification,
I have endured.” She spoke with a half-sob
in her throat, as if she was struggling not to cry,
which made me wish I had never been born. “It’s
been all I could do to control myself in his presence,
I have come so utterly to hate and despise him,”
she added.
“I don’t wonder,”
growled Lord Ralles. “My only surprise is ”
With that they passed out of hearing
again, leaving me fairly desperate with shame, grief,
and, I’m afraid, with anger. I felt at
once guilty and yet wronged. I knew my conduct
on the trail must have seemed to her ungentlemanly
because I had never dared to explain that my action
there had been a pure bluff, and that I wouldn’t
have really searched her for well, for anything;
but though she might think badly of me for that, yet
I had done my best to counterbalance it, and was running
big risks, both present and eventual, for Madge’s
sake. Yet here she was acknowledging that thus
far she had used me as a puppet, while all the time
disliking me. It was a terrible blow, made all
the harder by the fact that she was proving herself
such a different girl from the one I loved, so
different, in fact, that, despite what I had heard,
I couldn’t quite believe it of her, and found
myself seeking to extenuate and even justify her conduct.
While I was doing this, they came within hearing,
and Lord Ralles was speaking.
“ with you,”
he said. “But I still do not see what I
can do, however much I may wish to serve you.”
“Can’t you go to him and
insist that he or tell him what I really
feel towards him or anything, in fact, to
shame him? I really can’t go on acting
longer.”
That reached the limit of my endurance,
and I crawled from my burrow, intending to get out
from under that platform, whether I was caught or
not. I know it was a foolish move; after having
heard what I had, a little more or less was quite immaterial.
But I entirely forgot my danger, in the sting of what
Madge had said, and my one thought was to stand face
to face with her long enough to I’m
sure I don’t know what I intended to say.
Just as I reached the plank, however,
I heard Lord Ralles ask,
“Who’s that?”
“It’s me,” said
a voice, “the station agent.”
Then I heard a door close. Some one walked out
to the centre of the platform and remarked,
“That ’ere way freight is late.”
At least the letters were recovered.