I
Before the members of the Sagamore
Fish and Game Association had erected their handsome
club-house, and before they had begun to purchase those
thousands of acres of forest, mountain, and stream
which now belonged to them, a speculative lumberman
with no capital, named O’Hara, built the white
house across the river on a few acres of inherited
property, settled himself comfortably with his wife
and child, and prepared to acquire all the timber
in sight at a few dollars an acre ... on credit.
For thus, thought he, is the beginning of all millionaires.
So certain was O’Hara of ultimately
cornering the standing timber that he took his time
about it, never dreaming that a rival might disturb
him in the wilderness of Sagamore County.
He began in the woodland which he
had inherited, which ran for a mile on either side
of the river. This he leisurely cut, hired a few
river drivers, ran a few logs to Foxville, and made
money.
Now he was ready to extend business
on a greater scale; but when he came to open negotiations
with the score or more of landholders, he found himself
in the alarming position of a bidder against an unknown
but clever rival, who watched, waited, and quietly
forestalled his every movement.
It took a long time for O’Hara
to discover that he was fighting a combination of
fifteen wealthy gentlemen from New York. Finally,
when the Sagamore Club, limited to fifteen, had completed
operations, O’Hara suddenly perceived that he
was bottled up in the strip of worthless land which
he had inherited, surrounded by thousands of acres
of preserved property outwitted, powerless,
completely hemmed in. And that, too, with the
best log-driving water betwixt Foxville and Canada
washing the very door-sill of his own home.
At first he naturally offered to sell,
but the club’s small offer enraged him, and
he swore that he would never sell them an inch of his
land. He watched the new club-house which was
slowly taking shape under the trowels of masons and
the mallets of carpenters; and his wrath grew as grew
the house.
The man’s nature began to change;
an inextinguishable hatred for these people took possession
of him, became his mania, his existence.
His wife died; he sent his child to
a convent school in Canada and remained to watch.
He did the club what damage he could, posting his
property, and as much of the river as he controlled.
But he could not legally prevent fishermen from wading
the stream and fishing; so he filled the waters with
sawdust, logs, barbed-wire, brambles, and brush, choking
it so that no living creature, except perhaps a mink,
could catch a fish in it.
The club protested, and then offered
to buy the land on O’Hara’s own terms.
O’Hara cursed them and built a dam without a
fishway, and sat beside it nights with a loaded shot-gun.
He still had a few dollars left; he
wanted millions to crush these rich men who had come
here to mock him and take the bread out of his mouth
for their summer’s sport.
He had a shrewd young friend in New
York, named Amasa Munn. Through this man, O’Hara
began to speculate in every wild-cat scheme that squalled
aloud for public support; and between Munn and the
wild-cats his little fortune spread its wings of gold
and soared away, leaving him a wreck on his wrecked
land.
But he could still find strength to
watch the spite dam with his shot-gun. One day
a better scheme came into his unbalanced brain; he
broke the dam and sent for Munn. Between them
they laid a plan to ruin forever the trout-fishing
in the Sagamore; and Munn, taking the last of O’Hara’s
money as a bribe, actually secured several barrels
full of live pickerel, and shipped them to the nearest
station on the Sagamore and Inland Railway.
But here the club watchers caught
Munn, and held him and his fish for the game-wardens.
The penalty for introducing trout-destroying pickerel
into waters inhabited by trout was a heavy fine.
Munn was guilty only in intent, but the club keepers
swore falsely, and Peyster Sprowl, a lawyer and also
the new president of the Sagamore Club, pushed the
case; and Munn went to jail, having no money left
to purge his sentence.
O’Hara, wild with rage, wrote, threatening Sprowl.
Then Sprowl did a vindictive and therefore
foolish thing: he swore out a warrant for O’Hara’s
arrest, charging him with blackmail.
The case was tried in Foxville, and
O’Hara was acquitted. But a chance word
or two during the testimony frightened the club and
gave O’Hara the opportunity of his life.
He went to New York and scraped up enough money for
his purpose, which was to search the titles of the
lands controlled by the Sagamore Club.
He worked secretly, grubbing, saving,
starving; he ferreted out the original grants covering
nine-tenths of Sagamore County; he disinterred the
O’Hara patent of 1760; and then he began to understand
that his title to the entire Sagamore Club property
was worth the services, on spec, of any first-class
Centre Street shyster.
The club got wind of this and appointed
Peyster Sprowl, in his capacity of lawyer and president
of the club, to find out how much of a claim O’Hara
really had. The club also placed the emergency
fund of one hundred thousand dollars at Sprowl’s
command with carte-blanche orders to arrest
a suit and satisfy any claim that could not be beaten
by money and talent.
Now it took Sprowl a very short time
to discover that O’Hara’s claim was probably
valid enough to oust the club from three-quarters of
its present holdings.
He tried to see O’Hara, but
the lumberman refused to be interviewed, and promptly
began proceedings. He also made his will; for
he was a sick man. Then he became a sicker man,
and suspended proceedings and sent for his little
daughter.
Before she arrived he called Munn
in, gave him a packet of papers, and made him burn
them before his eyes.
“They’re the papers in
my case,” he said. “I’m dying;
I’ve fought too hard. I don’t want
my child to fight when I’m dead. And there’s
nothing in my claim, anyway.” This was
a lie, and Munn suspected it.
When the child, Eileen, arrived, O’Hara
was nearly dead, but he gathered sufficient strength
to shove a locked steel box towards his daughter and
tell her to keep it from Munn, and keep it locked until
she found an honest man in the world.
The next morning O’Hara appeared
to be much better. His friend Munn came to see
him; also came Peyster Sprowl in some alarm, on the
matter of the proceedings threatened. But O’Hara
turned his back on them both and calmly closed his
eyes and ears to their presence.
Munn went out of the room, but laid
his large, thin ear against the door. Sprowl
worried O’Hara for an hour, but, getting no reply
from the man in the bed, withdrew at last with considerable
violence.
O’Hara, however, had fooled
them both: he had been dead all the while.
The day after the funeral, Sprowl
came back to look for O’Hara’s daughter;
and as he peeped into the door of the squalid flat
he saw a thin, yellow-eyed young man, with a bony
face, all furry in promise of future whiskers, rummaging
through O’Hara’s effects. This young
gentleman was Munn.
In a dark corner of the disordered
room sat the child, Eileen, a white, shadowy elf of
six, reading in the Book of Common Prayer.
Sprowl entered the room; Munn looked
up, then coolly continued to rummage.
Sprowl first addressed himself to
the child, in a heavy, patronizing voice:
“It’s too dark to read
there in that corner, young one. Take your book
out into the hall.”
“I can see better to read in
the dark,” said the child, lifting her great,
dark-blue eyes.
“Go out into the hall,” said Sprowl, sharply.
The child shrank back, and went, taking
her little jacket in one hand, her battered travelling-satchel
in the other.
If the two men could have known that
the steel box was in that satchel this story might
never have been told. But it never entered their
heads that the pallid little waif had sense enough
to conceal a button to her own profit.
“Munn,” said Sprowl, lighting
a cigar, “what is there in this business?”
“I’ll tell you when I’m done,”
observed Munn, coolly.
Sprowl sat down on the bed where O’Hara
had died, cocked the cigar up in his mouth, and blew
smoke, musingly, at the ceiling.
Munn found nothing not
a scrap of paper, not a line. This staggered
him, but he did not intend that Sprowl should know
it.
“Found what you want?” asked Sprowl, comfortably.
“Yes,” replied Munn.
“Belong to the kid?”
“Yes; I’m her guardian.”
The men measured each other in silence for a minute.
“What will you take to keep
quiet?” asked Sprowl. “I’ll
give you a thousand dollars.”
“I want five thousand,” said Munn, firmly.
“I’ll double it for the papers,”
said Sprowl.
Munn waited. “There’s
not a paper left,” he said; “O’Hara
made me burn ’em.”
“Twenty thousand for the papers,” said
Sprowl, calmly.
“My God, Mr. Sprowl!” growled Munn, white
and sweating with anguish.
“I’d give them to you for half that if
I had them. Can’t you believe me?
I saw O’Hara burn them.”
“What were you rummaging for, then?” demanded
Sprowl.
“For anything to get a hold on you,”
said Munn, sullenly.
“Blackmail?”
Munn was silent.
“Oh,” said Sprowl, lazily. “I
think I’ll be going, then ”
Munn barred his exit, choking with anger.
“You give me five thousand dollars,
or I’ll stir ’em up to look into your
titles!” he snarled.
Sprowl regarded him with contempt;
then another idea struck him, an idea that turned
his fat face first to ashes, then to fire.
A month later Sprowl returned to the
Sagamore Club, triumphant, good-humored, and exceedingly
contented. But he had, he explained, only succeeded
in saving the club at the cost of the entire emergency
fund one hundred thousand dollars which,
after all, was a drop in the bucket to the remaining
fourteen members.
The victory would have been complete
if Sprowl had also been able to purchase the square
mile of land lately occupied by O’Hara.
But this belonged to O’Hara’s daughter,
and the child flatly refused to part with it.
“You’ll have to wait for
the little slut to change her mind,” observed
Munn to Sprowl. And, as there was nothing else
to do, Sprowl and the club waited.
Trouble appeared to be over for the
Sagamore Club. Munn disappeared; the daughter
was not to be found; the long-coveted land remained
tenantless.
Of course, the Sagamore Club encountered
the petty difficulties and annoyances to which similar
clubs are sooner or later subjected; disputes with
neighboring land-owners were gradually adjusted; troubles
arising from poachers, dishonest keepers, and night
guards had been, and continued to be, settled without
harshness or rancor; minks, otters, herons, kingfishers,
and other undesirable intruders were kept within limits
by the guns of the watchers, although by no means exterminated;
and the wealthy club was steadily but unostentatiously
making vast additions to its splendid tracts of forest,
hill, and river land.
After a decent interval the Sagamore
Club made cautious inquiries concerning the property
of the late O’Hara, only to learn that the land
had been claimed by Munn, and that taxes were paid
on it by that individual.
For fifteen years the O’Hara
house remained tenantless; anglers from the club fished
freely through the mile of river; the name of Munn
had been forgotten save by the club’s treasurer,
secretary, and president, Peyster Sprowl.
However, the members of the club never
forgot that in the centre of their magnificent domain
lay a square mile which did not belong to them; and
they longed to possess it as better people than they
have coveted treasures not laid up on earth.
The relations existing between the
members of the Sagamore Club continued harmonious
in as far as their social intercourse and the general
acquisitive policy of the club was concerned.
There existed, of course, that tacit
mutual derision based upon individual sporting methods,
individual preferences, obstinate theories concerning
the choice of rods, reels, lines, and the killing properties
of favorite trout-flies.
Major Brent and Colonel Hyssop continued
to nag and sneer at each other all day long, yet they
remained as mutually dependent upon each other as
David and Jonathan. For thirty years the old gentlemen
had angled in company, and gathered inspiration out
of the same books, the same surroundings, the same
flask.
They were the only guests at the club-house
that wet May in 1900, although Peyster Sprowl was
expected in June, and young Dr. Lansing had wired
that he might arrive any day.
An evening rain-storm was drenching
the leaded panes in the smoking-room; Colonel Hyssop
drummed accompaniment on the windows and smoked sulkily,
looking across the river towards the O’Hara house,
just visible through the pelting downpour.
“Irritates me every time I see it,” he
said.
“Some day,” observed Major
Brent, comfortably, “I’m going to astonish
you all.”
“How?” demanded the Colonel, tersely.
The Major examined the end of his cigarette with a
cunning smile.
“It isn’t for sale, is
it?” asked the Colonel. “Don’t
try to be mysterious; it irritates me.”
Major Brent savored his cigarette leisurely.
“Can you keep a secret?” he inquired.
The Colonel intimated profanely that he could.
“Well, then,” said the
Major, in calm triumph, “there’s a tax
sale on to-morrow at Foxville.”
“Not the O’Hara place?” asked the
Colonel, excited.
The Major winked. “I’ll
fix it,” he said, with a patronizing squint at
his empty glass.
But he did not “fix it”
exactly as he intended; the taxes on the O’Hara
place were being paid at that very moment.
He found it out next day, when he
drove over to Foxville; he also learned that the Rev.
Amasa Munn, Prophet of the Shining Band Community,
had paid the taxes and was preparing to quit Maine
and re-establish his colony of fanatics on the O’Hara
land, in the very centre and heart of the wealthiest
and most rigidly exclusive country club in America.
That night the frightened Major telegraphed
to Munnville, Maine, an offer to buy the O’Hara
place at double its real value. The business-like
message ended: “Wire reply at my expense.”
The next morning an incoherent reply
came by wire, at the Major’s expense, refusing
to sell, and quoting several passages of Scripture
at Western Union rates per word.
The operator at the station counted
the words carefully, and collected eight dollars and
fourteen cents from the Major, whose fury deprived
him of speech.
Colonel Hyssop awaited his comrade
at the club-house, nervously pacing the long veranda,
gnawing his cigar. “Hello!” he called
out, as Major Brent waddled up. “Have you
bought the O’Hara place for us?”
The Major made no attempt to reply;
he panted violently at the Colonel, then began to
run about, taking little, short, distracted steps.
“Made a mess of it?” inquired
the Colonel, with a badly concealed sneer.
He eyed the Major in deepening displeasure.
“If you get any redder in the face you’ll
blow up,” he said, coldly; “and I don’t
propose to have you spatter me.”
“He he’s an
impudent swindler!” hissed the Major, convulsively.
The Colonel sniffed: “I
expected it. What of it? After all, there’s
nobody on the farm to annoy us, is there?”
“Wait!” groaned the Major “wait!”
and he toddled into the hall and fell on a chair,
beating space with his pudgy hands.
When the Colonel at length learned
the nature of the threatened calamity, he utterly
refused to credit it.
“Rubbish!” he said, calmly “rubbish!
my dear fellow; this man Munn is holding out for more
money, d’ye see? Rubbish! rubbish!
It’s blackmail, d’ye see?”
“Do you think so?” faltered
the Major, hopefully. “It isn’t possible
that they mean to come, is it? Fancy all those
fanatics shouting about under our windows ”
“Rubbish!” said the Colonel,
calmly. “I’ll write to the fellow
myself.”
All through that rainy month of May
the two old cronies had the club-house to themselves;
they slopped about together, fishing cheek by jowl
as they had fished for thirty years; at night they
sat late over their toddy, and disputed and bickered
and wagged their fingers at each other, and went to
bed with the perfect gravity of gentlemen who could
hold their own with any toddy ever brewed.
No reply came to the Colonel, but
that did not discourage him.
“They are playing a waiting
game,” he said, sagely. “This man
Munn has bought the land from O’Hara’s
daughter for a song, and he means to bleed us.
I’ll write to Sprowl; he’ll fix things.”
Early in June Dr. Lansing and his
young kinsman, De Witt Coursay, arrived at the club-house.
They, also, were of the opinion that Munn’s
object was to squeeze the club by threats.
The second week in June, Peyster Sprowl,
Master of Fox-hounds, Shadowbrook, appeared with his
wife, the celebrated beauty, Agatha Sprowl, nee
Van Guilder.
Sprowl, now immensely large and fat,
had few cares in life beyond an anxious apprehension
concerning the durability of his own digestion.
However, he was still able to make a midnight mouthful
of a Welsh rarebit on a hot mince-pie, and wash it
down with a quart of champagne, and so the world went
very well with him, even if it wabbled a trifle for
his handsome wife.
“She’s lovely enough,”
said Colonel Hyssop, gallantly, “to set every
star in heaven wabbling.” To which the bull-necked
Major assented with an ever-hopeless attempt to bend
at the waistband.
Meanwhile the Rev. Amasa Munn and
his flock, the Shining Band, arrived at Foxville in
six farm wagons, singing “Roll, Jordan!”
Of their arrival Sprowl was totally
unconscious, the Colonel having forgotten to inform
him of the threatened invasion.
II
The members of the Sagamore Club heard
the news next morning at a late breakfast. Major
Brent, who had been fishing early up-stream, bore the
news, and delivered it in an incoherent bellow.
“What d’ye mean by that?”
demanded Colonel Hyssop, setting down his cocktail
with unsteady fingers.
“Mean?” roared the Major;
“I mean that Munn and a lot o’ women are
sitting on the river-bank and singing ’Home Again’!”
The news jarred everybody, but the
effect of it upon the president, Peyster Sprowl, appeared
to be out of all proportion to its gravity. That
gentleman’s face was white as death; and the
Major noticed it.
“You’ll have to rid us
of this mob,” said the Major, slowly.
Sprowl lifted his heavy, overfed face
from his plate. “I’ll attend to it,”
he said, hoarsely, and swallowed a pint of claret.
“I think it is amusing,”
said Agatha Sprowl, looking across the table at Coursay.
“Amusing, madam!” burst
out the Major. “They’ll be doing their
laundry in our river next!”
“Soapsuds in my favorite pools!”
bawled the Colonel. “Damme if I’ll
permit it!”
“Sprowl ought to settle them,”
said Lansing, good-naturedly. “It may cost
us a few thousands, but Sprowl will do the work this
time as he did it before.”
Sprowl choked in his claret, turned
a vivid beef-color, and wiped his chin. His appetite
was ruined. He hoped the ruin would stop there.
“What harm will they do?”
asked Coursay, seriously “beyond the
soapsuds?”
“They’ll fish, they’ll
throw tin cans in the water, they’ll keep us
awake with their fanatical powwows confound
it, haven’t I seen that sort of thing?”
said the Major, passionately. “Yes, I have,
at nigger camp-meetings! And these people beat
the niggers at that sort of thing!”
“Leave ’em to me,”
repeated Peyster Sprowl, thickly, and began on another
chop from force of habit.
“About fifteen years ago,”
said the Colonel, “there was some talk about
our title. You fixed that, didn’t you, Sprowl?”
“Yes,” said Sprowl, with parched lips.
“Of course,” muttered
the Major; “it cost us a cool hundred thousand
to perfect our title. Thank God it’s settled.”
Sprowl’s immense body turned
perfectly cold; he buried his face in his glass and
drained it. Then the shrimp-color returned to
his neck and ears, and deepened to scarlet. When
the earth ceased reeling before his apoplectic eyes,
he looked around, furtively. Again the scene in
O’Hara’s death-chamber came to him; the
threat of Munn, who had got wind of the true situation,
and the bribing of Munn to silence.
But the club had given Sprowl one
hundred thousand dollars to perfect its title; and
Sprowl had reported the title perfect, all proceedings
ended, and the payment of one hundred thousand dollars
to Amasa Munn, as guardian of the child of O’Hara,
in full payment for the O’Hara claims to the
club property.
Sprowl’s coolness began to return.
If five thousand dollars had stopped Munn’s
mouth once, it might stop it again. Besides, how
could Munn know that Sprowl had kept for his own uses
ninety-five thousand dollars of his club’s money,
and had founded upon it the House of Sprowl of many
millions? He was quite cool now a trifle
anxious to know what Munn meant to ask for, but confident
that his millions were a buckler and a shield to the
honored name of Sprowl.
“I’ll see this fellow,
Munn, after breakfast,” he said, lighting an
expensive cigar.
“I’ll go with you,”
volunteered Lansing, casually, strolling out towards
the veranda.
“No, no!” called out Sprowl;
“you’ll only hamper me.” But
Lansing did not hear him outside in the sunshine.
Agatha Sprowl laid one fair, heavily
ringed hand on the table and pushed her chair back.
The Major gallantly waddled to withdraw her chair;
she rose with a gesture of thanks, and a glance which
shot the Major through and through a wound
he never could accustom himself to receive with stoicism.
Mrs. Sprowl turned carelessly away,
followed by her two Great Danes a superb
trio, woman and dogs beautifully built and groomed,
and expensive enough to please even such an amateur
as Peyster Sprowl, M.F.H.
“Gad, Sprowl!” sputtered
the Major, “your wife grows handsomer every
minute and you grow fatter.”
Sprowl, midway in a glass of claret,
said: “This simple backwoods regime is
what she and I need.”
Agatha Sprowl was certainly handsome,
but the Major’s eyesight was none of the best.
She had not been growing younger; there were lines;
also a discreet employment of tints on a very silky
skin, which was not quite as fresh as it had once
been.
Dr. Lansing, strolling on the veranda
with his pipe, met her and her big dogs turning the
corner in full sunlight. Coursay was with her,
his eager, flushed face close to hers; but he fell
back when he saw his kinsman Lansing, and presently
retired to the lawn to unreel and dry out a couple
of wet silk lines.
Agatha Sprowl sat down on the veranda
railing, exchanging a gay smile across the lawn with
Coursay; then her dark eyes met Lansing’s steel-gray
ones.
“Good-morning, once more,” she said, mockingly.
He returned her greeting, and began
to change his mist leader for a white one.
“Will you kindly let Jack Coursay
alone?” she said, in a low voice.
“No,” he replied, in the same tone.
“Are you serious?” she asked, as though
the idea amused her.
“Of course,” he replied, pleasantly.
“Is it true that you came here
because he came?” she inquired, with faint sarcasm
in her eyes.
“Yes,” he answered, with
perfect good-nature. “You see he’s
my own kin; you see I’m the old-fashioned sort a
perfect fool, Mrs. Sprowl.”
There was a silence; he unwound the
glistening leader; she flicked at shadows with her
dog-whip; the Great Danes yawned and laid their heavy
heads against her knees.
“Then you are a fool,” she concluded,
serenely.
He was young enough to redden.
Three years ago she had thought it
time to marry somebody, if she ever intended to marry
at all; so she threw over half a dozen young fellows
like Coursay, and married Sprowl. For two years
her beauty, audacity, and imprudence kept a metropolis
and two capitals in food for scandal. And now
for a year gossip was coupling her name with Coursay’s.
“I warned you at Palm Beach
that I’d stop this,” said Lansing, looking
directly into her eyes. “You see, I know
his mother.”
“Stop what?” she asked, coolly.
He went on: “Jack is a
curiously decent boy; he views his danger without
panic, but with considerable surprise. But nobody
can tell what he may do. As for me, I’m
indifferent, liberal, and reasonable in my views of
... other people’s conduct. But Jack is
not one of those ‘other people,’ you see.”
“And I am?” she suggested, serenely.
“Exactly; I’m not your keeper.”
“So you confine your attention to Jack and the
Decalogue?”
“As for the Commandments,”
observed Lansing, “any ass can shatter them
with his hind heels, so why should he? If he must
be an ass, let him be an original ass not
a cur.”
“A cur,” repeated Agatha Sprowl, unsteadily.
“An affaire de coeur
with a married woman is an affair do cur,” said
Lansing, calmly “Gallicize it as you
wish, make it smart and fashionable as you can.
I told you I was old-fashioned.... And I mean
it, madam.”
The leader had eluded him; he uncoiled
it again; she mechanically took it between her delicate
fingers and held it steady while he measured and shortened
it by six inches.
“Do you think,” she said,
between her teeth, “that it is your mission to
padlock me to that in there?”
Lansing turned, following her eyes.
She was looking at her husband.
“No,” replied Lansing,
serenely; “but I shall see that you don’t
transfer the padlock to ... that, out there” glancing
at Coursay on the lawn.
“Try it,” she breathed,
and let go of the leader, which flew up in silvery
crinkles, the cast of brightly colored flies dancing
in the sunshine.
“Oh, let him alone,” said
Lansing, wearily; “all the men in Manhattan
are drivelling about you. Let him go; he’s
a sorry trophy and there’s no natural
treachery in him; ... it’s not in our blood;
... it’s too cheap for us, and we can’t
help saying so when we’re in our right minds.”
There was a little color left in her
face when she stood up, her hands resting on the spiked
collars of her dogs. “The trouble with you,”
she said, smiling adorably, “is your innate
delicacy.”
“I know I am brutal,” he said, grimly;
“let him alone.”
She gave him a pretty salutation,
crossed the lawn, passed her husband, who had just
ridden up on a powerful sorrel, and called brightly
to Coursay: “Take me fishing, Jack, or
I’ll yawn my head off my shoulders.”
Before Lansing could recover his wits
the audacious beauty had stepped into the canoe at
the edge of the lawn, and young Coursay, eager and
radiant, gave a flourish to his paddle, and drove it
into the glittering water.
If Sprowl found anything disturbing
to his peace of mind in the proceeding, he did not
betray it. He sat hunched up on his big sorrel,
eyes fixed on the distant clearing, where the white
gable-end of O’Hara’s house rose among
the trees.
Suddenly he wheeled his mount and
galloped off up the river road; the sun glowed on
his broad back, and struck fire on his spurs, then
horse and rider were gone into the green shadows of
the woods.
To play spy was not included in Lansing’s
duties as he understood them. He gave one disgusted
glance after the canoe, shrugged, set fire to the
tobacco in his pipe, and started slowly along the river
towards O’Hara’s with a vague idea of
lending counsel, aid, and countenance to his president
during the expected interview with Munn.
At the turn of the road he met Major
Brent and old Peter, the head-keeper. The latter
stood polishing the barrels of his shot-gun with a
red bandanna; the Major was fuming and wagging his
head.
“Doctor!” he called out,
when Lansing appeared; “Peter says they raised
the devil down at O’Hara’s last night!
This can’t go on, d’ye see! No, by
Heaven!”
“What were they doing, Peter?”
asked Lansing, coming up to where the old man stood.
“Them Shinin’ Banders?
Waal, sir, they was kinder rigged out in white night-gounds robes
o’ Jordan they call ’em an’
they had rubbed some kind o’ shiny stuff like
matches all over these there night-gounds,
an’ then they sang a spell, an’ then they
all sot down on the edge o’ the river.”
“Is that all?” asked Lansing, laughing.
“Wait!” growled the Major.
“Waal,” continued old
Peter, “the shinin’ stuff on them night-gounds
was that bright that I seen the fishes swimmin’
round kinder dazed like. ‘Gosh!’
sez I to m’self, it’s like a Jack a-drawnin’
them trout yaas’r. So I hollers
out, ‘Here! You Shinin’ Band folk,
you air a-drawin’ the trout. Quit it!’
sez I, ha’sh an’ pert-like. Then that
there Munn, the Prophet, he up an’ hollers,
‘Hark how the heathen rage!’ he hollers.
An’ with that, blamed if he didn’t sling
a big net into the river, an’ all them Shinin’
Banders ketched holt an’ they drawed it
clean up-stream. ‘Quit that!’ I hollers,
‘it’s agin the game laws!’ But the
Prophet he hollers back, ‘Hark how the heathen
rage!’ Then they drawed that there net out,
an’ it were full o’ trout, big an’
little ”
“Great Heaven!” roared the Major, black
in the face.
“I think,” said Lansing,
quietly, “that I’ll walk down to O’Hara’s
and reason with our friend Munn. Sprowl may want
a man to help him in this matter.”
III
When Sprowl galloped his sorrel mare
across the bridge and up to the O’Hara house,
he saw a man and a young girl seated on the grass of
the river-bank, under the shade of an enormous elm.
Sprowl dismounted heavily, and led
his horse towards the couple under the elm. He
recognized Munn in the thin, long-haired, full-bearded
man who rose to face him; and he dropped the bridle
from his hand, freeing the sorrel mare.
The two men regarded each other in
silence; the mare strayed leisurely up-stream, cropping
the fresh grass; the young girl turned her head towards
Sprowl with a curious movement, as though listening,
rather than looking.
“Mr. Munn, I believe,” said Sprowl, in
a low voice.
“The Reverend Amasa Munn,”
corrected the Prophet, quietly. “You are
Peyster Sprowl.”
Sprowl turned and looked full at the
girl on the grass. The shadow of her big straw
hat fell across her eyes; she faced him intently.
Sprowl glanced at his mare, whistled,
and turned squarely on his heel, walking slowly along
the river-bank. The sorrel followed like a dog;
presently Munn stood up and deliberately stalked off
after Sprowl, rejoining that gentleman a few rods
down the river-bank.
“Well,” said Sprowl, turning
suddenly on Munn, “what are you doing here?”
From his lank height Munn’s
eyes were nevertheless scarcely level with the eyes
of the burly president.
“I’m here,” said Munn, “to
sell the land.”
“I thought so,” said Sprowl, curtly.
“How much?”
Munn picked a buttercup and bit off
the stem. With the blossom between his teeth
he surveyed the sky, the river, the forest, and then
the features of Sprowl.
“How much?” asked Sprowl, impatiently.
Munn named a sum that staggered Sprowl,
but Munn could perceive no tremor in the fat, blank
face before him.
“And if we refuse?” suggested Sprowl.
Munn only looked at him.
Sprowl repeated the question.
“Well,” observed Munn,
stroking his beard reflectively, “there’s
that matter of the title.”
This time Sprowl went white to his
fat ears. Munn merely glanced at him, then looked
at the river.
“I will buy the title this time,” said
Sprowl, hoarsely.
“You can’t,” said Munn.
A terrible shock struck through Sprowl;
he saw through a mist; he laid his hand on a tree-trunk
for support, mechanically facing Munn all the while.
“Can’t!” he repeated, with dry lips.
“No, you can’t buy it.”
“Why?”
“O’Hara’s daughter has it.”
“But she will sell! Won’t
she sell? Where is she?” burst out Sprowl.
“She won’t sell,” said Munn, studying
the ghastly face of the president.
“You can make her sell,” said Sprowl.
“What is your price?”
“I can’t make her sell
the title to your club property,” said Munn.
“She’ll sell this land here. Take
it or leave it.”
“If I take it will you leave?”
asked Sprowl, hoarsely.
Munn smiled, then nodded.
“And will that shut your mouth,
you dirty scoundrel?” said Sprowl, gripping
his riding-crop till his fat fingernails turned white.
“It will shut my mouth,” said Munn,
still with his fixed smile.
“How much extra to keep this
matter of the title quiet as long as I
live?”
“As long as you live?” repeated Munn,
surprised.
“Yes, I don’t care a damn
what they say of me after I’m dead,” snarled
Sprowl.
Munn watched him for a moment, plucked
another buttercup, pondered, smoothed out his rich,
brown, silky beard, and finally mentioned a second
sum.
Sprowl drew a check-book from the
breast-pocket of his coat, and filled in two checks
with a fountain pen. These he held up before Munn’s
snapping, yellowish eyes.
“This blackmail,” said
Sprowl, thickly, “is paid now for the last time.
If you come after me again you come to your death,
for I’ll smash your skull in with one blow,
and take my chances to prove insanity. And I’ve
enough money to prove it.”
Munn waited.
“I’ll buy you this last
time,” continued Sprowl, recovering his self-command.
“Now, you tell me where O’Hara’s
child is, and how you are going to prevent her from
ever pressing that suit which he dropped.”
“O’Hara’s daughter
is here. I control her,” said Munn, quietly.
“You mean she’s one of
your infernal flock?” demanded Sprowl.
“One of the Shining Band,”
said Munn, with a trace of a whine in his voice.
“Where are the papers in that
proceeding, then? You said O’Hara burned
them, you liar!”
“She has them in a box in her bedroom,”
replied Munn.
“Does she know what they mean?” asked
Sprowl, aghast.
“No but I do,” replied Munn,
with his ominous smile.
“How do you know she does not understand their
meaning?”
“Because,” replied Munn, laughing, “she
can’t read.”
Sprowl did not believe him, but he
was at his mercy. He stood with his heavy head
hanging, pondering a moment, then whistled his sorrel.
The mare came to him and laid her dusty nose on his
shoulder.
“You see these checks?” he said.
Munn assented.
“You get them when you put those
papers in my hands. Understand? And when
you bring me the deed of this cursed property here house
and all.”
“A week from to-day,”
said Munn; his voice shook in spite of him. Few
men can face sudden wealth with a yawn.
“And after that ”
began Sprowl, and glared at Munn with such a fury
that the Prophet hastily stepped backward and raised
a nervous hand to his beard.
“It’s a square deal,”
he said; and Sprowl knew that he meant it, at least
for the present.
The president mounted heavily, and
sought his bridle and stirrups.
“I’ll meet you here in
a week from to-day, hour for hour; I’ll give
you twenty-four hours after that to pack up and move,
bag and baggage.”
“Done,” said Munn.
“Then get out of my way, you
filthy beast!” growled Sprowl, swinging his
horse and driving the spurs in.
Munn fell back with a cry; the horse
plunged past, brushing him, tearing out across the
pasture, over the bridge, and far down the stony road
Munn heard the galloping. He had been close to
death; he did not quite know whether Sprowl had meant
murder or whether it was carelessness or his own fault
that the horse had not struck him and ground him into
the sod.
However it was, he conceived a new
respect for Sprowl, and promised himself that if he
ever was obliged to call again upon Sprowl for financial
assistance he would do it through a telephone.
A dozen women, dressed alike in a
rather pretty gray uniform, were singing up by the
house; he looked at them with a sneer, then walked
back along the river to where the young girl still
sat under the elm.
“I want to talk to you,”
he said, abruptly, “and I don’t want any
more refusals or reasons or sentiments. I want
to see the papers in that steel box.”
She turned towards him in that quaint,
hesitating, listening attitude.
“The Lord,” he said, more
cheerfully, “has put it into my head that we
must journey once more. I’ve had a prayerful
wrestle out yonder, and I see light. The Lord
tells me to sell this land to the strangers without
the gates, and I’m going to sell it to the glory
of God.”
“How can you sell it?” said the girl,
quietly.
“Isn’t all our holdings in common?”
demanded Munn, sharply.
“You know that I am not one of you,” said
the girl.
“Yes, you are,” said Munn;
“you don’t want to be because the light
has been denied you, but I’ve sealed you and
sanctified you to the Shining Band, and you just can’t
help being one of us. Besides,” he continued,
with an ugly smile, “I’m your legal guardian.”
This was a lie; but she did not know it.
“So I want to see those papers,” he added.
“Why?” she asked.
“Oh, legal matters; I’ve got to examine
’em or I can’t sell this land.”
“Father told me not to open
the box until ... I found an ... honest man,”
she said, steadily.
Munn glared at her. She had caught
him in a lie years ago; she never forgot it.
“Where’s the key?” he demanded.
She was silent.
“I’ll give you till supper-time
to find that key,” said Munn, confidently, and
walked on towards the house.
But before he had fairly emerged from
the shadow of the elm he met Lansing face to face,
and the young man halted him with a pleasant greeting,
asking if he were not the Reverend Doctor Munn.
“That’s my name,” said Munn, briefly.
“I was looking for Mr. Sprowl;
I thought to meet him here; we were to speak to you
about the netting of trout in the river,” said
Lansing, good-humoredly.
Munn regarded him in sulky silence.
“It won’t do,” continued
Lansing, smiling; “if you net trout you’ll
have the wardens after you.”
“Oh! and I suppose you’ll
furnish the information,” sneered Munn.
“I certainly will,” replied Lansing.
Munn had retraced his steps towards
the river. As the men passed before Eileen O’Hara,
Lansing raised his cap. She did not return his
salute; she looked towards the spot where he and Munn
had halted, and her face bore that quaint, listening
expression, almost pitifully sweet, as though she
were deaf.
“Peter, our head-keeper, saw
you netting trout in that pool last night,”
said Lansing.
Munn examined the water and muttered
that the Bible gave him his authority for that sort
of fishing.
“He’s a fake,” thought
Lansing, in sudden disgust. Involuntarily he
glanced around at the girl under the elm. The
beauty of her pale face startled him. Surely
innocence looked out of those dark-blue eyes, fixed
on him under the shadow of her straw hat. He noted
that she also wore the silvery-gray uniform of the
elect. He turned his eyes towards the house,
where a dozen women, old and young, were sitting out
under the tree, sewing and singing peacefully.
The burden of their song came sweetly across the pasture;
a golden robin, high in the elm’s feathery tip,
warbled incessant accompaniment to the breeze and the
flowing of water and the far song of the women.
“We don’t mean to annoy
you,” said Lansing, quietly; “I for one
believe that we shall find you and your community
the best of courteous neighbors.”
Munn looked at him with his cunning,
amber-yellow eyes and stroked his beard.
“What do you want, anyway?” he said.
“I’ll tell you what I
want,” said Lansing, sharply; “I want you
and your people to observe the game laws.”
“Keep your shirt on, young man,”
said Munn, coarsely, and turned on his heel.
Before he had taken the second step Lansing laid his
hand on his shoulder and spun him around, his grip
tightening like a vise.
“What y’ doing?”
snarled Munn, shrinking and squirming, terrified by
the violent grasp, the pain of which almost sickened
him.
Lansing looked at him, then shoved
him out of his path, and carefully rinsed his hands
in the stream. Then he laughed and turned around,
but Munn was making rapid time towards the house,
where the gray-clad women sat singing under the neglected
apple-trees. The young man’s eyes fell
on the girl under the elm; she was apparently watching
his every movement from those dark-blue eyes under
the straw hat.
He took off his cap and went to her,
and told her politely how amiable had been his intentions,
and how stringent the game laws were, and begged her
to believe that he intended no discourtesy to her community
when he warned them against the wholesale destruction
of the trout.
He had a pleasant, low voice, very
attractive to women; she smiled and listened, offering
no comment.
“And I want to assure you,”
he ended, “that we at the club will always respect
your boundaries as we know you will respect ours.
I fear one of our keepers was needlessly rude last
night from his own account. He’s
an old man; he supposes that all people know the game
laws.”
Lansing paused; she bent her head
a trifle. After a silence he started on, saying,
“Good-morning,” very pleasantly.
“I wish you would sit down and
talk to me,” said the girl, without raising
her head.
Lansing was too astonished to reply;
she turned her head partly towards him as though listening.
Something in the girl’s attitude arrested his
attention; he involuntarily dropped on one knee to
see her face. It was in shadow.
“I want to tell you who I am,”
she said, without looking at him. “I am
Eily O’Hara.”
Lansing received the communication
with perfect gravity. “Your father owned
this land?” he asked.
“Yes; I own it now, ... I think.”
He was silent, curious, amused.
“I think I do,” she repeated; “I
have never seen my father’s will.”
“Doubtless your lawyer has it,” he suggested.
“No; I have it. It is in
a steel box; I have the key hanging around my neck
inside my clothes. I have never opened the box.”
“But why do you not open the box?” asked
Lansing, smiling.
She hesitated; color crept into her
cheeks. “I have waited,” she said;
“I was alone; my father said that that ”
She stammered; the rich flush deepened to her neck.
Lansing, completely nonplussed, sat
watching the wonderful beauty of that young face.
“My father told me to open it
only when I found an honest man in the world,”
she said, slowly.
The undertone of pathos in her voice
drove the smile from Lansing’s lips.
“Have you found the world so
dishonest?” he asked, seriously.
“I don’t know; I came
from Notre Dame de Sainte Croix last year. Mr.
Munn was my guardian; ... said he was; ... I suppose
he is.”
Lansing looked at her in sympathy.
“I am not one of the community,”
she said. “I only stay because I have no
other home but this. I have no money, ... at least
I know of none that is mine.” Lansing was
silent and attentive.
“I I heard your voice;
... I wanted to speak to you to hear
you speak to me,” she said. A new timidity
came into her tone; she raised her head. “I somehow
when you spoke I felt that you you
were honest.” She stammered again, but
Lansing’s cool voice brought her out of her
difficulty and painful shyness.
“What is your name?” she asked.
“I’m Dr. Lansing,” he said.
“Will you open my steel box
and read my papers for me?” she inquired, innocently.
“I will if you wish,”
he said, impulsively; “if you think it wise.
But I think you had better read the papers for yourself.”
“Why, I can’t read,”
she said, apparently surprised that he should not
know it.
“You mean that you were not
taught to read in your convent school?” he asked,
incredulously.
A curious little sound escaped her
lips; she raised both slender hands and unpinned her
hat. Then she turned her head to his.
The deep-blue beauty of her eyes thrilled
him; then he started and leaned forward, closer, closer
to her exquisite face.
“My child,” he cried,
softly, “my poor child!” And she smiled
and fingered the straw hat in her lap.
“Will you read my father’s papers for
me?” she said.
“Yes yes if
you wish. Yes, indeed!” After a moment he
said: “How long have you been blind?”
IV
That evening, at dusk, Lansing came
into the club, and went directly to his room.
He carried a small, shabby satchel; and when he had
locked his door he opened the satchel and drew from
it a flat steel box.
For half an hour he sat by his open
window in the quiet starlight, considering the box,
turning it over and over in his hands. At length
he opened his trunk, placed the box inside, locked
the trunk, and noiselessly left the room.
He encountered Coursay in the hall,
and started to pass him with an abstracted nod, then
changed his mind and slipped his arm through the arm
of his young kinsman.
“Thought you meant to cut me,”
said Coursay, half laughing, half in earnest.
“Why?” Lansing stopped
short; then, “Oh, because you played the fool
with Agatha in the canoe? You two will find yourselves
in a crankier craft than that if you don’t look
sharp.”
“You have an ugly way of putting
it,” began Coursay. But Lansing scowled
and said:
“Jack, I want advice; I’m
troubled, old chap. Come into my room while I
dress for dinner. Don’t shy and stand on
your hind-legs; it’s not about Agatha Sprowl;
it’s about me, and I’m in trouble.”
The appeal flattered and touched Coursay,
who had never expected that he, a weak and spineless
back-slider, could possibly be of aid or comfort to
his self-sufficient and celebrated cousin, Dr. Lansing.
They entered Lansing’s rooms;
Coursay helped himself to some cognac, and smoked,
waiting for Lansing to emerge from his dressing-room.
Presently, bathed, shaved, and in
his shirt-sleeves, Lansing came in, tying his tie,
a cigarette unlighted between his teeth.
“Jack,” he said, “give
me advice, not as a self-centred, cautious, and orderly
citizen of Manhattan, but as a young man whose heart
leads his head every time! I want that sort of
advice; and I can’t give it to myself.”
“Do you mean it?” demanded Coursay, incredulously.
“By Heaven, I do!” returned
Lansing, biting his words short, as the snap of a
whip.
He turned his back to the mirror,
lighted his cigarette, took one puff, threw it into
the grate. Then he told Coursay what had occurred
between him and the young girl under the elm, reciting
the facts minutely and exactly as they occurred.
“I have the box in my trunk
yonder,” he went on; “the poor little thing
managed to slip out while Munn was in the barn; I was
waiting for her in the road.”
After a moment Coursay asked if the girl was stone
blind.
“No,” said Lansing; “she
can distinguish light from darkness; she can even
make out form in the dark; but a strong
light completely blinds her.”
“Can you help her?” asked Coursay, with
quick pity.
Lansing did not answer the question,
but went on: “It’s been coming on this
blindness since her fifth year; she could
always see to read better in dark corners than in
a full light. For the last two years she has
not been able to see; and she’s only twenty,
Jack only twenty.”
“Can’t you help her?”
repeated Coursay, a painful catch in his throat.
“I haven’t examined her,” said Lansing,
curtly.
“But but you are
an expert in that sort of thing,” protested his
cousin; “isn’t this in your line?”
“Yes; I sat and talked to her
half an hour and did not know she was blind.
She has a pair of magnificent deep-blue eyes; nobody,
talking to her, could suspect such a thing. Still her
eyes were shaded by her hat.”
“What kind of blindness is it?”
asked Coursay, in a shocked voice.
“I think I know,” said
Lansing. “I think there can be little doubt
that she has a rather unusual form of lamellar cataract.”
“Curable?” motioned Coursay.
“I haven’t examined her; how could I
But I’m going to do it.”
“And if you operate?” asked Coursay, hopefully.
“Operate? Yes yes,
of course. It is needling, you know, with probability
of repetition. We expect absorption to do the
work for us bar accidents and other things.”
“When will you operate?” inquired Coursay.
Lansing broke out, harshly: “God
knows! That swindler, Munn, keeps her a prisoner.
Doctors long ago urged her to submit to an operation;
Munn refused, and he and his deluded women have been
treating her by prayer for years the miserable
mountebank!”
“You mean that he won’t let you try to
help her?”
“I mean just exactly that, Jack.”
Coursay got up with his clinched hands
swinging and his eager face red as a pippin.
“Why, then,” he said, “we’ll
go and get her! Come on; I can’t sit here
and let such things happen!”
Lansing laughed the laugh of a school-boy bent on
deviltry.
“Good old Jack! That’s
the sort of advice I wanted,” he said, affectionately.
“We may see our names in the morning papers for
this; but who cares? We may be arrested for a
few unimportant and absurd things but who
cares? Munn will probably sue us; who cares?
At any rate, we’re reasonably certain of a double-leaded
column in the yellow press; but do you give a tinker’s
damn?”
“Not one!” said Coursay, calmly.
Then they went down to dinner.
Sprowl, being unwell, dined in his
own rooms; Agatha Sprowl was more witty and brilliant
and charming than ever; but Coursay did not join her
on the veranda that evening, and she sat for two hours
enduring the platitudes of Colonel Hyssop and Major
Brent, and planning serious troubles for Lansing,
to whose interference she attributed Coursay’s
non-appearance.
But Coursay and Lansing had other
business in hand that night. Fortune, too, favored
them when they arrived at the O’Hara house; for
there, leaning on the decaying gate, stood Eileen
O’Hara, her face raised to the sky as though
seeking in the soft star radiance which fell upon her
lids a celestial balm for her sightless eyes.
She was alone; she heard Lansing’s
step, and knew it, too. From within the house
came the deadened sound of women’s voices singing:
“Light of the earth and sky,
Unbind mine eyes,
Lest I in darkness lie
While my soul dies.
Blind, at Thy feet I fall,
All blindly kneel,
Fainting, Thy name I call;
Touch me and heal!”
In the throbbing hush of the starlight
a whippoorwill called three times; the breeze rose
in the forest; a little wind came fragrantly, puff
on puff, along the road, stirring the silvery dust.
She laid one slim hand in Lansing’s;
steadily and noiselessly they traversed the dew-wet
meadow, crossed the river by the second bridge, and
so came to the dark club-house under the trees.
There was nobody visible except the
steward when they entered the hall.
“Two rooms and a bath, John,”
said Lansing, quietly; and followed the steward up
the stairs, guiding his blind charge.
The rooms were on the north angle;
Lansing and Coursay inspected them carefully, gave
the steward proper direction, and dismissed him.
“Get me a telegram blank,”
said Lansing. Coursay brought one. His cousin
pencilled a despatch, and the young man took it and
left the room.
The girl was sitting on the bed, silent,
intent, following Lansing with her sightless eyes.
“Do you trust me?” he asked, pleasantly.
“Yes, ... oh, yes, with all my heart!”
He steadied his voice. “I
think I can help you I am sure I can.
I have sent to New York for Dr. Courtney Thayer.”
He drew a long breath; her beauty
almost unnerved him. “Thayer will operate;
he’s the best of all. Are you afraid?”
She lifted one hand and held it out,
hesitating. He took it.
“No, not afraid,” she said.
“You are wise; there is no need
for fear. All will come right, my child.”
She listened intently.
“It is necessary in such operations
that the patient should, above all, be cheerful and and
happy ”
“Oh, yes, ... and I am happy!
Truly! truly!” she breathed.
“ and brave, and
patient, and obedient and ”
His voice trembled a trifle. “You must
lie very still,” he ended, hastily.
“Will you be here?”
“Yes yes, of course!”
“Then I will lie very still.”
He left her curled up in an easy-chair,
smiling at him with blind eyes; he scarcely found
his way down-stairs for all his eyesight. He stumbled
to the grill-room door, felt for the knob, and flung
it open.
A flood of yellow light struck him
like a blow; through the smoke he saw the wine-flushed
faces of Colonel Hyssop and Major Brent staring at
him.
“Gad, Lansing!” said the
Major, “you’re white and shaky as a ninety-nine-cent
toy lamb. Come in and have a drink, m’boy!”
“I wanted to say,” said
Lansing, “that I have a patient in 5 and 6.
It’s an emergency case; I’ve wired for
Courtney Thayer. I wish to ask the privilege
and courtesy of the club for my patient. It’s
unusual; it’s intrusive. Absolute and urgent
necessity is my plea.”
The two old gentlemen appeared startled,
but they hastily assured Lansing that his request
would be honored; and Lansing went away to pace the
veranda until Coursay returned from the telegraph station.
In the grill-room Major Brent’s
pop eyes were fixed on the Colonel in inflamed inquiry.
“Damme!” snapped the Colonel,
“does that young man take this club for a hospital?”
“He’ll be washing bandages
in the river next; he’ll poison the trout with
his antiseptic stuffs!” suggested the Major,
shuddering.
“The club’s going to the
dogs!” said the Colonel, with a hearty oath.
But he did not know how near to the
dogs the club already was.
V
It is perfectly true that the club
and the dogs were uncomfortably close together.
A week later the crisis came when Munn, in a violent
rage, accused Sprowl of spiriting away his ward, Eileen
O’Hara. But when Sprowl at last comprehended
that the girl and the papers had really disappeared,
he turned like a maddened pig on Munn, tore the signed
checks to shreds before his eyes, and cursed him steadily
as long as he remained within hearing.
As for Munn, his game appeared to
be up. He hurried to New York, and spent a month
or two attempting to find some trace of his ward, then
his money gave out. He returned to his community
and wrote a cringing letter to Sprowl, begging him
to buy the O’Hara land for next to nothing, and
risk the legality of the transfer. To which Sprowl
paid no attention. A week later Munn and the
Shining Band left for Munnville, Maine.
It was vaguely understood at the club
that Lansing had a patient in 5 and 6.
“Probably a rich woman whom
he can’t afford to lose,” suggested Sprowl,
with a sneer; “but I’m cursed if I can
see why he should turn this club into a drug-shop
to make money in!” And the Colonel and the Major
agreed that it was indecent in the extreme.
To his face, of course, Sprowl, the
Colonel, and the Major treated Lansing with perfect
respect; but the faint odor of antiseptics from rooms
5 and 6 made them madder and madder every time they
noticed it.
Meanwhile young Coursay had a free
bridle; Lansing was never around to interfere, and
he drove and rode and fished and strolled with Agatha
Sprowl until neither he nor the shameless beauty knew
whether they were standing on their heads or their
heels. To be in love was a new sensation to Agatha
Sprowl; to believe himself in love was nothing new
to Coursay, but the flavor never palled.
What they might have done what,
perhaps, they had already decided to do nobody
but they knew. The chances are that they would
have bolted if they had not run smack into that rigid
sentinel who guards the pathway of life. The
sentinel is called Fate. And it came about in
the following manner:
Dr. Courtney Thayer arrived one cool
day early in October; Lansing met him with a quiet
smile, and, together, these eminent gentlemen entered
rooms 5 and 6.
A few moments later Courtney Thayer
came out, laughing, followed by Lansing, who also
appeared to be a prey to mirth.
“She’s charming she’s
perfectly charming!” said Courtney Thayer.
“Where the deuce do these Yankee convent people
get that elusive Continental flavor? Her father
must have been a gentleman.”
“He was an Irish lumberman,”
said Lansing. After a moment he added: “So
you won’t come back, doctor?”
“No, it’s not necessary;
you know that. I’ve an operation to-morrow
in Manhattan; I must get back to town. Wish I
could stay and shoot grouse with you, but I can’t.”
“Come up for the fall flight
of woodcock; I’ll wire you when it’s on,”
urged Lansing.
“Perhaps; good-bye.”
Lansing took his outstretched hand
in both of his. “There is no use in my
trying to tell you what you have done for me, doctor,”
he said.
Thayer regarded him keenly. “Thought
I did it for her,” he remarked.
Instantly Lansing’s face turned
red-hot. Thayer clasped the young man’s
hands and shook them till they ached.
“You’re all right, my
boy you’re all right!” he said,
heartily; and was gone down the stairs, two at a jump a
rather lively proceeding for the famous and dignified
Courtney Thayer.
Lansing turned and entered rooms 5
and 6. His patient was standing by the curtained
window. “Do you want to know your fate?”
he asked, lightly.
She turned and looked at him out of
her lovely eyes; the quaint, listening expression
in her face still remained, but she saw him,
this time.
“Am I well?” she asked, calmly.
“Yes; ... perfectly.”
She sat down by the window, her slender hands folded,
her eyes on him.
“And now,” she asked, “what am I
to do?”
He understood, and bent his head.
He had an answer ready, trembling on his lips; but
a horror of presuming on her gratitude kept him silent.
“Am I to go back ... to him?” she
said, faintly.
“God forbid!” he blurted
out. With all his keen eyesight, how could he
fail to see the adoration in her eyes, on her mute
lips’ quivering curve, in every line of her
body? But the brutality of asking for that which
her gratitude might not withhold froze him. It
was no use; he could not speak.
“Then what?
Tell me; I will do it,” she said, in a desolate
voice. “Of course I cannot stay here now.”
Something in his haggard face set
her heart beating heavily; then for a moment her heart
seemed to stop. She covered her eyes with a swift
gesture.
“Is it pain?” he asked,
quickly. “Let me see your eyes!” Her
hands covered them. He came to her; she stood
up, and he drew her fingers from her eyes and looked
into them steadily. But what he saw there he alone
knows; for he bent closer, shaking in every limb; and
both her arms crept to his shoulders and her clasped
hands tightened around his neck.
Which was doubtless an involuntary
muscular affection incident on successful operations
for lamellar or zonular cataract.
That day they opened the steel box.
She understood little of what he read to her; presently
he stopped abruptly in the middle of a sentence and
remained staring, reading on and on in absorbed silence.
Content, serene, numbed with her happiness,
she watched him sleepily.
He muttered under his breath:
“Sprowl! What a fool! What a cheap
fool! And yet not one among us even suspected
him of that!”
After a long time he looked up at
the girl, blankly at first, and with a grimace of
disgust. “You see,” he said, and gave
a curious laugh “you see that that
you own all this land of ours as
far as I can make out.”
After a long explanation she partly
understood, and laughed outright, a clear child’s
laugh without a trace of that sad undertone he knew
so well.
“But we are not going to take
it away from your club are we?” she
asked.
“No,” he said; “let
the club have the land your land!
What do we care? We will never come here again!”
He sat a moment, thinking, then sprang up. “We
will go to New York to-morrow,” he said; “and
I’ll just step out and say good-bye to Sprowl I
think he and his wife are also going to-morrow; I
think they’re going to Europe, to live!
I’m sure they are; and that they will never
come back.”
And, curiously enough, that is exactly
what they did; and they are there yet. And their
establishment in the American colony is the headquarters
for all nobility in exile, including the chivalrous
Orleans.
Which is one sort of justice the
Lansing sort; and, anyway, Coursay survived and married
an actress a year later. And the club still remains
in undisturbed possession of Eileen Lansing’s
land; and Major Brent is now its president.
As for Munn, he has permanently retired
to Munnville, Maine, where, it is reported, he has
cured several worthy and wealthy people by the simple
process of prayer.