Sally Madeira crept to the door of
her father’s study and listened. In the
pallid light that was stealing up to her from Piney’s
story her face was shadowy, with hurtful doubt, ashamed
fear, and she steadied herself by the wall with hands
that shook. She had stopped to put on a white
gown that her father loved and her lustrous hair lay
banded closely, a halo, about her shapely head.
Her face looked like a saint’s.
“It is not so much to save Bruce
Steering’s inheritance for him, it’s to
save my father for myself.” Her lips moved
stiffly as she whispered. “My old dream-father,
my idol, I cannot live without him!” As she opened
the door and passed in, she felt as though he had
been away on a long journey and that this might be
the hour of his return.
Inside Madeira sat at his desk, Bruce
Grierson’s letter spread out before him, the
ghost of his torture. At night he heard it move,
with a spectral rustling, under his pillow where he
kept it. By day it writhed, a small, hot thing,
over his heart. He had tried again and again to
destroy it. Everything else that had got in his
way he had destroyed, but this he had not destroyed.
He was trying to destroy it now, but he returned it
to his pocket, unable to destroy it, ruled by it, when
he raised his eyes and saw his daughter before him.
She had not been without foresight even in her shame
and sorrow. She had taken great pains to gown
herself especially for him, especially to establish
her influence over him. He held out his arms
to her lovingly. In the sickness of soul and
body now upon him he had turned more and more to her;
she had to be with him almost constantly.
“You look so sweet,” he
said. “You are sweetest like this.
I love you like this.” Despite the relief
that came when with her, he talked nervously, his
mouth jerking. His hands wandered to her head,
and he held her face and peered at her. “Sally,
I wish I was a girl like you,” he said, “girls
look so peaceful. Business tangles a man, just
to have peace, Sally.”
“It will come Father, it will
come. Father, Piney rode in from the hills just
now, and he brought me news.”
He could feel the tremor of her lithe
body against his breast, and he moved quickly and
uneasily, suspecting danger. His dreams had so
long been terror-fraught that he was all nerves and
suspicion. “News of what, Sally?”
The whitest, deadest voice, for so simple a question;
on his face the most awful strain! She drew back
on his knee and looked at him steadily, lovingly,
and his eyes dropped and his hands began to drum on
the chair-arm.
“Father,” she said, “Piney
has heard a long story. He was hid on the bluff-side,
up at Redbud, and he heard a letter read at the shack
there, a dead man’s letter.”
“A dead oh, God bless
you wait Sally, did that move?
eh, what foolishness is this, a dead man’s letter?
What dead man? eh? what dead man?”
“Bruce Grierson, father.”
“They lie! They lie! Let them prove
it!”
“Ah, that was what I told Piney,
Father! I knew, I knew that you could explain
it. And you can now, and you will, Father?”
She was really beseeching him to rise up against her
and the accusation against him, rise up in a great
storm of indignation; she was praying that he would
do that, expecting that he would, so firm were her
convictions of his nobility. She drew back a
little, to give him room, as it were; her hands fell
upon his knee, and she leaned from him the better to
see him, her face aglow with her fierce hope, her
big belief, while she waited for that storm, that
outraged denial, that tremendous vindication.
And while she waited, erect, hopeful, eager, he shrank
in upon himself; crumpled and wrinkled in upon himself
until he looked weazened and small.
“Let them prove it, let them,” a whining
mumble.
“They will not, Father.”
She was leaning toward him again, her face quiet as
the first frightened dawn of a grey morning; her voice
was beaten and sad, but she went on dauntlessly.
“The letter was to Uncle Bernique, Father.
And Bruce Steering read it. And though it told
him that he was the owner of the Tigmores, he and
Uncle Bernique will not prove it.” For
a moment she paused, and then, with some new purpose
on her face, she began again, “There was an
oath to make all sure that they would not prove it.
Listen, Father, these were the words of the oath:
’Swear, I by my love for Salome Madeira, you
by your love for Piney’s young mother, that
never, so help us God, shall one or the other of us
carry word of this thing to anyone, least of all to
Crittenton Madeira and his daughter, Salome!’”
“Ah-h-h!” The words of
the oath seemed to bring Madeira his first brief respite
in a long torture. The girl shivered at such relief,
then went on resolutely:
“So now you see, Father, everything
is safe. I have come to let you know that everything
is safe, that you need not be troubled, sleeping or
waking, any more about this thing. You may keep
the Tigmores as long as you will,” the light
of her eyes beat upon him like a rain of pure gold,
“you may be as rich as you like, Father.
Mr. Steering is to leave here; you need never be dispossessed
during your lifetime. It is all safe and sure.
Uncle Bernique will not tell, Mr. Steering will not
tell, Piney will not tell, I shall make no sign.”
The tragic strength of her endeavour to make him see
that it was all with him; to leave it all to him;
if so be that the better part were to be chosen, to
make him choose it for himself; re-establish himself
in so much as was possible for her loving regard,
was in the hot clasp of the young hand that she laid
upon him, the sweet earnestness of the face that leaned
toward him. It was a strange fight, a battle
of vast forces. He began to shake like an aspen
leaf, but his eyes lifted to hers presently, to drink
from them as from a fountain of life. His lips
moved.
“Just to have peace,”
he gasped hoarsely, “take that letter take
it from my pocket send it to Steering.”
“Father!” It was the cry
of victory well won. “Father! I am
so glad!” over and over again. “All
my life, Father, I have expected the good thing to
happen because of you, the right thing, I am so glad!”
Laughing, crying, she kissed him, took the letter and
stole to the door. “Piney shall be its
bearer,” she cried as she went, “Piney
shall take it; he will say the very best that there
is to say!”
She ran out, and the door swung quickly
behind her, so that she did not see that he put his
hand over his empty pocket and held his heart with
a great relief; then pitched forward suddenly, his
head on the desk, a look of late-come, profound peace
on his face.