Stanley Fyles’s extreme satisfaction
was less enduring than might have been expected.
Success, and the prospect of success, were matters
calculated to affect him more nearly than anything
else in his life. That was the man, as he always
had been; that was the man, who, in so brief a time,
had raised himself to the commissioned ranks of his
profession. But, somehow, just now a slight undercurrent
of thought and feeling had set in. It was scarcely
perceptible at first, but growing rapidly, it quickly
robbed the tide of his satisfaction of quite half
its strength, and came near to reducing it to the condition
of slack water.
McBain was in the quarters attending
to the detail which fell to his lot. A messenger
from Winter’s Crossing had come in announcing
the arrival, at that camp, of the reinforcing patrol.
This was the culminating point of Fyles’s satisfaction.
From that moment the undercurrent set in.
The inspector had moved out of the
bluff, which screened the temporary quarters from
chance observation, and had taken up a position on
the shoulder of the valley, where he sat himself upon
a fallen fence post to consider the many details of
the work he had in mind.
The sun was setting in a ruddy cauldron
of summer cloud, and, already, the evening mists were
rising from the heart of the superheated valley.
The wonderful peace of the scene might well have been
a sedative to the stream of rapid thought pouring
through his busy brain.
But its soothing powers seemed to
have lost virtue, and, as his almost unconscious gaze
took in the beauties spread out before it, a curious
look of unrest replaced the satisfaction in his keen
eyes. His brows drew together in a peevish frown.
A discontent set the corners of his tightly compressed
lips drooping, and once or twice he stirred impatiently,
as though his irritation of mind had communicated itself
to his physical nerves.
Once more the image of Kate Seton
had risen up before his mind’s eye, and, for
the first time it brought him no satisfaction.
For the first time he had associated the probable
object of his plans with her. Charlie Bryant
was no longer a mere offender against the law in his
mind. In concentrating his official efforts against
him he realized the jeopardy in which his own regard
for Kate Seton placed him. He saw that his success
now in ridding the district of the whisky-runner would,
at the same time, rob him of all possible chance of
ever obtaining the regard of this woman he loved.
It meant an ostracism based upon the strongest antipathy the
antipathy of a woman wounded in her tenderest emotions,
that wonderful natural instinct which is perhaps beyond
everything else in her life.
The more than pity of it. Kate’s
interest in Charlie Bryant had assumed proportions
which threatened to overwhelm his whole purpose.
It became almost a tragedy. Pondering upon this
ominous realization a sort of panic came near to taking
hold of him. Apart from his own position, the
pain and suffering he knew he must inflict upon her
set him flinching.
Her protestations of Charlie’s
innocence were very nearly absurd. To a mind
trained like his there was little enough doubt of the
man’s offense. He was a rank “waster,”
but, as in the case of all such creatures, there was
a woman ready to believe in him with all the might
of feminine faith. It was a bitter thought that
in this case Kate Seton should be the woman.
She did believe. He was convinced of her honesty
in her declaration. She believed from the bottom
of her heart, she, a woman of such keen sense and
intelligence. It was yes, it was maddening.
Through it all he saw his duty lying plainly before
him. His whole career was at stake, that career
for which only he had hitherto lived, and which, eventually,
he had hoped to lay at Kate’s feet.
What could he do? There was no
other way. He must go on.
His dream was wrecking. It was being demolished
before his eyes. It was not being sent crushing
at one mighty stroke, but was being torn to shreds
and destroyed piecemeal.
He strove to stiffen himself before
the blow, and his very attitude expressed something
of his effort. He told himself a dozen times that
he must accept the verdict, and carry his duty through,
his duty to himself as well as to his superiors.
But conviction was lacking. The human nature
in him was rebelling. For all his discipline it
would not be denied. And with each passing moment
it was gaining in its power to make itself felt and
heard.
Its promptings came swiftly, and in
a direction hardly conceivable in a man of his balance
of mind. But the more sure the strength of the
man, the more sure the strength of the old savage lurking
beneath the sanest thought. The savage rose up
in him now in a reckless challenge to all that was
best and most noble in him. A cruel suspicion
swept through his mind and quickly permeated his whole
outlook. What if he had read Kate’s regard
for the man Bryant wrong? What if he had read
it as she intended him to read it, seeking to blind
him to the true facts? He knew her for a clever
woman, a shrewd woman, even a daring woman. What
if she had read through his evident regard for her,
and had determined to turn it to account in saving
her lover from disaster, by posing with a maternal,
or sisterly regard for his welfare? Such things
he felt had been done. He was to be a tool, a
mere tool in her hands, the poor dupe whose love had
betrayed him.
He sprang from his seat.
No, a thousand times no, he told himself.
His memory of her beautiful, dark, fearless eyes was
too plainly in his mind for that. The honesty
of her concern and regard for the man was too simply
plain to hold any trace of the perfidy which his thought
suggested. He told himself these things.
He told himself again and again, and remained
unconvinced. The savage in him, the human nature
was gaining an ascendancy that would not be denied,
and from the astute, disciplined man he really was,
at a leap, he became the veriest doubting lover.
He threw his powerful arms out, and
stretched himself. His movements were the movements
of unconcern, but there was no unconcern within him.
A teeming, harassing thought was urging him, driving
him to the only possible course whereby he could hope
to obtain a resumption of his broken peace of mind.
He must see Kate. He must see her again, without
delay.
Kate Seton was sitting in the northern
shadow of her little house the following morning when
Stanley Fyles rode down the southern slope of the
valley toward the old footbridge. She had just
dispatched Big Brother Bill on an errand to the village,
and, with feminine tact, had requested him to discover
Helen’s whereabouts, and send her, or bring
her home. She had no particular desire that Helen
should return home. In fact, she would rather
she didn’t until mid-day dinner. But she
felt she was giving the man the excuse he evidently
needed.
As a matter of fact, she had a good
deal of work to do. And the first hour after
Bill had taken his departure she was fully occupied
with her two villainous hired men. After that
she returned to the house, and wrote several letters,
and, finally, took up her position in the shade, and
devoted herself to a basket of long-neglected sewing.
At the sound of the approaching horseman
she looked up with a start. She had no expectation
of a visitor, she had no desire for one just now.
Nevertheless, when she discovered the officer’s
identity, she displayed no surprise, and more interest,
than might have been expected.
She did not disguise from herself
the feelings this man inspired. On the contrary
she rather reveled in them, especially as, in a way,
just now, all her actions must be in direct antagonism
to his efforts.
She felt that a battle, a big battle,
must be fought and won between them. It was a
battle to be fought out openly and frankly. It
was her determination that this man should not wrong
himself by committing a great wrong upon Charlie Bryant.
Kate was very busy at the moment Fyles
rode up. She was intent upon fitting a piece
of lace, obviously too small, upon a delicate white
garment of her sister’s, which was obviously
too big.
For a moment, as she did not look
up, Fyles sat leaning forward in the saddle with his
arms resting upon its horn. He was watching her
with a smiling interest which was not without anxiety.
“There’s surely not a
dandier picture in the world than a girl sitting in
the shade sewing white things,” he
said at last, by way of greeting.
Kate glanced up for the briefest of
smiling glances. Then her dark head bent over
her sewing again.
“And there’s surely nothing
calculated to upset things more than a man butting
in, where the same girl’s fragment of brain is
worrying to fit something that doesn’t fit anyway.”
“Meaning me?”
Fyles smiled in his confident way.
“Seeing there’s no one
else around, I must have meant some other fellow.”
Kate laid the lace aside, and looked
up with a sigh. A gentle amusement shone in her
fine dark eyes.
“Have you ever tried to make
things fit that just won’t?”
she demanded.
Fyles shook his head.
“Maybe I can help, though,” he hazarded.
“Help?” Kate’s amusement
merged into a laugh. “Say, when it comes
to fitting things that don’t fit, two heads
generally muss things right up. All my life I’ve
been trying to fit things that don’t fit, and
I find, if you’re to succeed, you’ve got
to do it to yourself, and by yourself. It always
takes a big lot of thinking which nobody else can
follow. Maybe your way of thinking is different
from other folks, and so they can’t understand,
and that’s why they can’t follow it.
Now here’s a bit of lace, and there’s
a sleeve. The lace is short by an inch.
Still there’s ways and ways of fixing it, but
only one right way. If I make the sleeve smaller
the lace will fit, but poor Helen won’t get
her arm through it. If I tack on a bit more lace
it’ll muss the job, and make it look bad.
Then there’s other ways, too, but there’s
only one right way.” She dropped the lace
in her basket and began to fold the garment.
“I’ll get some new lace that does fit,”
she declared emphatically.
Fyles nodded, but the amusement died out of his eyes.
“All of which is sound sense,”
he said seriously, “and is leading us toward
controversial er subjects.
Eh?”
Kate raised a pair of shoulders with
pretended indifference. But her eyes were smiling
that challenge which Stanley Fyles always associated
with her.
“Not a bad thing when the police
are getting so very busy, and you are their
chief in the district,” she said.
“I must once more remark, you
are well informed,” smiled Fyles.
“And I must once more remark
not as well informed as I could wish,” retorted
Kate quickly.
Fyles had permitted his gaze to wander
down the wooded course of the river. Kate was
watching him closely, speculatively. And curious
enough she was thinking more of the man than his work
at that moment.
The man’s eyes came back abruptly
to her face, and her expression was instantly changed
to one of smiling irony.
“Well?” she demanded.
Fyles shook his head.
“It isn’t,” he said. “May
I ask how you know we are so very busy?”
“Sure,” cried Kate, with
a frank laugh. “You see, I have two of the
worst scamps in the valley working for me, and they
seem to think it more than necessary that they keep
themselves posted as to your movements.”
“I see.” Fyles’s
lighter mood had entirely passed, and with its going
Kate’s became more marked. “I s’pose
they spy out everything for the benefit of their chief.”
Kate clapped her hands.
“What reasoning. I s’pose they have
a chief?” she added slyly.
A frown of irritation crossed the policeman’s
brow.
“Must we open up that old sore,
Miss Kate?” he, asked almost sharply. “They
are known to be when not occupied with the
work of your farm assisting Charlie Bryant
in his whisky-running schemes. They are two of
his lieutenants.”
“And so, because they are so
known among the village people here, you are prosecuting
this campaign against a man whom you hope to catch
red-handed.”
“I have sufficient personal
evidence to prosecute my campaign,”
said Fyles quickly. “As you said just now,
we are not idle.”
“Yes, I know,” Kate sighed,
and her gaze was turned upon the western reaches of
the valley. “Your camp out there is full
of activity. So is Winter’s Crossing.
And the care with which you mask your coming and going
is known to everybody. It is a case of the hunter
being hunted. Yes, I say it without resentment,
I am glad of these things, because I must
know.”
“If we are against each other it
is only natural you should wish to know.”
Kate’s eyes opened wider.
“Of course we are against each
other, as long as you are against Charlie. But
only in our official capacities.”
A whimsical smile stole into the woman’s eyes.
“Oh, you are so so obstinate,”
she cried in mock despair. “In this valley
it is no trouble for me to watch your every move,
and, in Charlie’s interests, to endeavor to frustrate
them. But the worst of it is I’d I’d
like to see you win out. Instead of that I know
you won’t. You’ve had some news.
You had it yesterday, I suppose, by that patrol.
Maybe it’s news of another cargo coming in,
and you are getting ready to capture it, and Charlie.
I’m not here to give any one away, I’m
not here to tell you all I know, must know, living
in the valley, but you are doomed, utterly doomed to
failure, if you count the capture of Charlie success.”
In spite of the lightness of Kate’s
manner her words were not without their effect upon
Fyles. There was a ring of sincerity in them that
would not be denied. But its effect upon him was
not that which she could have wished. His face
set almost sternly. The challenge of the woman
had stirred him out of his calm assurance, but it was
in a direction which she could scarcely have expected.
He thrust his sunburned face forward more aggressively,
and challenged her in return.
“What is this man to you?”
he demanded, his square jaws seeming to clip his question
the more shortly.
In a moment Kate’s face was
flushing her resentment. Her dark eyes were sparkling
with a sudden leaping anger.
“You have no right to ask
me that,” she cried. But Fyles had committed
himself. Nor would he draw back.
“Haven’t I?” he
laughed harshly. “All’s fair in love
and war. We are at war officially.”
The woman’s flushing cheeks
remained, but the sparkle of her eyes had changed
again to an ironical light.
“War yes. Perhaps
you’re right. The only courtesies recognized
in war are observed in the prize ring, and in international
warfare. Our warfare must be less exalted, and
permits hitting below the belt. I’ve
told you what Charlie is to me, and I have told you
truly. I am trying to defend an innocent man,
who is no more to me than a brother, or or
son. I am doing so because of his peculiar ailments
which make him well-nigh incapable of helping himself.
You see, he does not care. His own safety, his
own welfare, are nothing to him. It is for that
reason, for the way he acts in consequence of these
things, that all men believe him a rogue, and a a
waster. I tell you he is neither.”
She finished up a little breathlessly.
She had permitted her loyalty and anxiety to carry
her beyond the calm fencing she had intended.
But Fyles remained unmoved, except
that the harshness had gone out of his manner.
“It is not I who am obstinate,”
he said soberly. “It is you, Miss Kate.
What if I told you I had irrefutable circumstantial
evidence against him? Would that turn you from
your faith in him?”
The woman shook her head.
“It would be merely circumstantial
evidence,” she said. “God knows how
circumstance has filled our penitentiaries wrongfully,”
she added bitterly.
“And but for circumstance our
population of wrongdoers at large would be greater
by a thousand per cent.,” retorted the officer.
“That is supposition,” smiled Kate.
“Which does not rob it of its possibility in
fact.”
The two sat looking at each other,
silently defiant. Kate was smiling. A great
excitement was thrilling her, and she liked this man
all the better for his blunt readiness for combat,
even with her.
Fyles was wondering at this woman,
half angry, half pleased. Her strength and readiness
appealed to him as a wonderful display.
He was the first to speak, and, in
doing so, he felt he was acknowledging his worsting
in the encounter.
“It’s it’s
impossible to fight like this,” he said lamely.
“I am not accustomed to fight with women.”
“Does it matter, so long as
a woman can fight?” Kate cried quickly.
“Chivalry?” she went on contemptuously.
“That’s surely a survival of ages when
the old curfew rang, and a lot of other stupid notions
filled folks’ minds. I I just
love to fight.”
Her smile was so frankly infectious
that Fyles found himself responding. He heaved
a sigh.
“It’s no good,”
he said almost hopelessly. “You must stick
to your belief, and I to mine. All I hope, Miss
Kate, is that when I’ve done with this matter
the pain I’ve inflicted on you will not be unforgivable.”
The woman’s eyes were turned
away. They had become very soft as she gazed
over at the distant view of Charlie’s house.
“I don’t think it will
be,” she said gently. Then with a quick
return to her earlier manner: “You see,
you will never get the chance of hurting Charlie.”
A moment later she inquired naively: “When
is the cargo coming in?”
But Fyles’s exasperation was complete.
“When?” he cried.
“Why, when this scamp is ready for it. It’s it’s
no use, Miss Kate. I can’t stop, or or
I’ll be forgetting you are a woman, and say
‘Damn!’ I admit you have bested me, but young
Bryant hasn’t. I ”
he broke off, laughing in spite of his annoyance, and
Kate cordially joined in.
“But he will,” she cried,
as Peter began to move away. “Good-bye,
Mr. Fyles,” she added, in her ironical fashion
as she picked up her sewing. “I can get
on with these important matters now.”
The man’s farewell was no less
cordial, and his better sense told him that in accepting
his defeat at her hands he had won a good deal in
another direction where he hoped to finally achieve
her capitulation.
While the skirmish between Stanley
Fyles and Kate Seton was going on, the object of it
was discussing the doings of the police and the prospect
of the coming struggle with Big Brother Bill on the
veranda of his house.
He was leaning against one of its
posts while Bill reposed on the hard seat of a Windsor
chair, seeking what comfort he could find in the tremendous
heat by abandoning all superfluous outer garments.
Charlie’s face was darkly troubled.
His air was peevishly irritable.
“Bill,” he said, with
a deep thrill of earnestness in his voice, as he thrust
his brown, delicate hands into the tops of his trousers.
“All the trouble in the world’s just about
to start, if I’m a judge of the signs of things.
There’s a whole crowd of the police in the valley
now. They’re camped higher up. They
think we don’t know, but we do all
of us. I wonder what they think they’re
going to do?”
His manner became more excited, and
his voice grew deeper and deeper.
“They think they’re going
to get a big haul of liquor. They think they’re
going to get me. I tell you, Bill, that for men
trained to smelling things out, they’re blunderers.
Their methods are clumsy as hell. I could almost
laugh, if if I didn’t feel sick at
their coming around.”
Bill stirred uneasily.
“If there were no whisky-running
here they wouldn’t be around,” he said
pointedly.
Charlie eyed him curiously.
“No,” he said. Then
he added, “And if there were no whisky-running
there’d be no village here. If there were
no village here we shouldn’t be here. Kate
and her sister wouldn’t be here. Nothing
would be here, but the old pine that goes
on forever. This village lives on the prohibition
law. Fyles may have a reputation, but he’s
clumsy damned clumsy. I’d like
to see ahead the next few days.”
“He’s smelling a cargo coming
in, isn’t he?” Bill’s tact was holding
him tight.
Again Charlie looked at him curiously
before he replied.
“That’s how they reckon,” he said
guardedly, at last.
Bill had turned away, vainly searching
his unready wit for the best means of carrying on
the discussion. Suddenly his eyes lit, and he
pointed across at the Seton’s house.
“Say, who’s that on
that horse? Isn’t it Fyles? He’s
talking to some one. Looks like ”
He broke off. Charlie was staring
out in the direction indicated, and, in a moment,
his excitement passed, swallowed up in a frowning,
brooding light that had suddenly taken possession of
his dark eyes.
Bill finally broke the uncomfortable silence.
“It’s Fyles?” he said.
“Yes, it’s Fyles,”
said Charlie, with a sudden suppressed fury. “It’s
Fyles curse him, and he’s talking
to Kate.”
At the sound of his brother’s
tone, even Bill realized his blundering. He knew
he had fired a train of passion that was to be deplored,
even dreaded in his brother. He blamed himself
bitterly for his lack of forethought, his absurd want
of discretion.
But the mischief was done. Charlie
had forgotten everything else.
Bill stirred again in his chair.
“What does he want down there?”
he demanded, for lack of something better to say.
“What does he want?” Charlie
laughed. It was an unpleasant laugh, a savage
laugh. It was a laugh that spoke of sore heart,
and feelings crowding with bitterness. “I
guess he wants something he’ll never get while
I’m alive.”
He relapsed into moody silence, and
a new expression grew in his eyes till it even dominated
that which had shone in them before. Bill thought
he recognized it. The word “funk”
flashed through his mind, and left him wondering.
What could Charlie have to fear from Fyles talking
to Kate? Did he believe that Kate would let the
officer pump her with regard to his, Charlie’s,
movements!
Yes, that must be it.
“He won’t get more than
five cents for his dollar out of her,” he said,
in an effort to console.
Charlie was round on him in a flash.
“Five cents for a dollar?
No,” he cried, “nor one cent, nor a fraction
of a cent. Fyles is dealing with the cleverest,
keenest woman I’ve ever met in all my life.
I’m not thinking that way. I’m thinking
how almighty easy it is for a man walking a broken
trail to trip and smash himself right up. The
more sure he is the worse is his fall, because he
takes big chances, and big chances mean big falls.
You’ve hit it, Bill, I’m scared scared
to death just now. If I know Fyles there’s
going to be one hell of a time around here, and, if
you value your future, get clear while you can.
I’m scared, Bill, scared and mad. I can’t
stand to watch that man talking to Kate. I’m
not scared of man or devil, but I’m scared scared
to death when I see that. I must get out of this.
I must get away, or ”
He moved off the veranda in a frantic
state of nervous passion.
Bill sprang from his seat and was
at his brother’s side in two great strides,
and his big hand fell with no little force upon the
latter’s arm and held it.
“What do you mean?” he
cried apprehensively. “Where where
are you going?”
With surprising strength Charlie flung
him off. He turned, facing him with angry eyes
and flushed face.
“Don’t you dare lay hand
on me like that again, Bill,” he cried dangerously.
“I don’t stand for that from anybody.
I’m going down the village, since you want to
know. I’m going down to O’Brien’s.
And you can get it right now that I wouldn’t
stand the devil himself butting in to stop me.”