JEALOUSY
Meantime, many things of great interest
to Gordon Wade happened without his knowledge.
A national election at which the previously
dominant party was defeated, was a sad blow to Senator
Rexhill, who not only suffered in prestige but in
pocket. There was no question, even in the minds
of his friends, that he frequently used his political
influence to back up the many business enterprises
in which he held an interest, and in which the greater
part of his quickly-made fortune was invested.
With the loss of his political pull, disaster came
to one after another of those enterprises, and his
successive losses were soon heavy enough to drive him
almost to desperation.
His previous successes, however, had
all been due to the audacity of his plans, for his
boldness and courage were unquestionable. For
a time he felt confident of winning again, and accordingly,
maintained his lavish expenditures and luxurious style
of living, with no word of caution to his wife and
daughter, and he continued to seek for the long chances
in business that offered the largest risks and the
greatest gains.
All the redeeming qualities of his
nature (and he had more than his enemies gave him
credit for), were shown in his family life, and it
was not surprising that Helen and her mother were
both undisturbed by the gathering storm, but continued
to live as he encouraged them to, having perfect confidence
in his ability to overcome any and all the difficulties
he might encounter.
Mrs. Rexhill continued to dream of
social distinction. Failing to see that she had
lost much of her own prestige by the Senator’s
political reverses, she continued to entertain so
extravagantly in her palatial home, that she was still
tolerated and she took infinite satisfaction in the
position she thought she occupied.
She considered Chicago the greatest
city in the world, and she dreamed of Helen as its
queen. To her mind, the easiest way to accomplish
that ambition was to persuade Helen to marry Maxwell
Frayne. He had persistently courted the girl
ever since he first met her, and he was heir to the
great Frayne fortune.
The idea was not entirely revolting
to Helen, though she had a small opinion of the elegant
young trifler who pursued her so persistently, for
she, too, had social aspirations, though being more
clear-sighted than her mother, she dreamed of wider
circles than those of Chicago. Her husband, whoever
he was to be, should take her to Paris, or at least
to New York.
Her infatuation for Gordon Wade, however,
was as strong as ever. Perhaps she was right
in thinking of it as true love, but she was greatly
annoyed by Wade’s choice of a ranchman’s
life, and by his settling down out of the world, as
she considered he had done. Her letters to him,
tender as they were, told him plainly enough of her
dissatisfaction, and thereby undoubtedly contributed
to the slow growth of his indifference.
For a time she failed to perceive
this, and enjoying the excitement of the life she
was leading, she was content to wait till Wade should
tire of the wilderness, as she fully expected him
to do, and should return to her. So she drifted,
until after a time her suspicions were aroused by
the tone of his letters, and she became anxious.
As time went on, Senator Rexhill’s
affairs became more and more involved. He realized
that he stood little chance of reelection, when his
term of office should expire, and meantime, his fortune
dwindled rapidly, though he was still careful not
to betray that fact at home.
Moran knew the situation perfectly
well, but he remained outwardly loyal to his employer,
partly because of the latter’s liberality, but
more, perhaps, because of the hope he still had of
winning Helen eventually, despite the dislike she
took no pains to hide.
Knowing how bold the Senator was in
his speculations, he came to him one day with an exciting
story.
“There’s a guy in town,”
he said, “who may be just a plain nut, but he
has the name of being a scientific sharp who knows
his business from A to Izzard, and he’s either
got something almighty big, or he’s got the
willies.
“What he says is, that he’s
found gold in a new spot and oodles of it. According
to what he tells, it beats California in ’49.
It’s so big, he says, that he’s scared
stiff, thinking he can’t grab enough of it, and
he don’t know, no more’n a baby, what to
do with it. So he’s looking for somebody
to take hold of it in a big way and give him a whack.”
“Where is this gold?” asked the Senator
incredulously.
“That’s the funny part
of it,” says Moran; “it’s in Wyoming,
and as near as I can make out, it must be close to
where that young squirt is that Helen thinks she’s
stuck on. I’m not sure but what it’s
on his place, but even if it is, there is no reason
why he should have any of it. The expense will
be pretty heavy to do the thing up right, but if you’re
game, I reckon we can hog the whole business.
We can stall this scientific nut off with promises,
and probably buy off Wade for the price of pasture
land, and then file claim on the whole dog-gone tract.”
This vision of enormous wealth was
captivating to the Senator, who had made his first
start in mining and knew something of its possibilities.
Bold as he was, however, he was also cautious, but
after several conferences with Moran, he fell in with
the scheme, first securing the services of a skilled
metallurgist and an equally capable engineer, who
were liberally paid and solemnly sworn to secrecy.
He sent them out to verify the discoverer’s
story, and sent Moran to Crawling Water, to establish
himself, and to do such preparatory work as should
be necessary. In due time, Moran reported by
letter that the gold was located, and was beyond question
abundant. He was having trouble, however, in
getting the property, as Wade refused to sell.
“Of course,” he wrote,
“we can file mining claims on the ground we know
of, and get possession that way, but we want to make
more surveys before doing that, so as to be sure of
getting all there is, and we can’t do that without
giving the whole snap away, and filling the mountains
full of prospectors. If that damn Wade won’t
sell, I’ll find some means to drive him away.”
It was just after the receipt of this
letter, which filled the Senator with hope on the
one hand, and anxiety on the other that he came on
Helen one evening, as she was entering her own sitting
room, and followed her in for a chat.
“What are you thinking of?”
he asked, presently, when she failed to notice some
trivial question he had asked, and seemed to be in
a reverie.
She looked at him with laughing eyes.
“Crawling Water.”
“Gordon Wade, eh? Well,
I wouldn’t think of him too much. Better
let that pass. You’ve outgrown it.”
“Oh, no I haven’t.”
The Senator sighed.
“Mother said to me a little
while ago, that he was probably going with other girls
and forgetting me, and it made me angry.”
“Well, I reckon your mother
is about right. Gordon is a likely looking chap,
you know. I’ve got nothing against him,
except that he isn’t good enough for you; no
man is. You don’t really care so much for
him, do you?”
“Oh, don’t I?” She
viewed her father through half closed lids, in a quizzical
way. “I care so very much for him that if
I really thought there was another girl, I would go
to Crawling Water to-morrow. You’d have
to drop everything and take me.”
Her father gently pinched her cheek.
“I would, eh? Well, maybe
I’ll have to go out there anyway. But do
you realize what Crawling Water is like, a
rough, frontier town?”
“I wouldn’t mind that for a while.”
“No, I suppose not. You’ve
got too much of your old dad in you to balk at a few
difficulties. There’s somebody else out
there who’d be mighty glad to see your pretty
face. Race Moran.”
“Mr. Moran!”
The sudden change in the girl’s
tone from tenderness to scorn caused the Senator a
twinge of uneasiness. His plans were so closely
linked with Moran’s for the present, that the
man might prove dangerous if his love for Helen were
too openly scorned. That she could scarcely tolerate
him, despite his ability and force of character, her
father knew from the past; but even in the moment
of his need he did not seek to influence her in Moran’s
favor. His love for her was genuine and very deep.
“He’s been out there for some time, as
my agent.”
“Yes, I know that. He he
has written to me, although I’ve never answered
his letters. I’ve been curious to hear from
him again, because he promised to send me some kodaks
of Crawling Water.”
“Maybe he hasn’t done
so because you’ve ignored his letters.”
Helen’s lip curled in disdain.
“He’d never let a little
thing like that stop him. But perhaps I will
answer the next one, if only to find out what is going
on out there. It’s all so very mysterious.
Do you know, father,” She playfully
shook her finger at him “this is
the first time in a long while that you haven’t
taken me into your confidence, and I think it a very
ominous sign. I’m sure you’ll be
punished for it.”
The Senator winced at the word punished,
and Helen laughed at what she thought was the effect
of her raillery.
“Why don’t you tell me?
You see, I’m so worried about Gordon. Honestly,
father, I’m serious about that. I I
love him, and I don’t want him hurt.”
“Hurt? Why, who is thinking of hurting
him?”
“Oh, I don’t know.
Moran hates him, and has referred to him once or twice
in a way that I do not understand. Do tell me
all about it.”
“Oh, well, my dear, there’s
really nothing to tell. It’s all concerned
with some homestead lands out there that I want to
get hold of for an investment. Wade will not
be hurt, no; that is, he won’t be if he beats
me out. If I win, he’ll lose.”
“He will?”
“We both can’t win, of
course. It’s to be a fight, yes, an
amicable business struggle, I hope. There’s
no reason for it to be otherwise.” The
Senator appeared strangely nervous, despite his effort
at self-control. “Wade as a man and a Westerner
doesn’t expect to be fed on pap, you know, any
more than I do. May the best man win, that’s
the way of it.”
Helen thought this over for a moment.
“Perhaps I’d better go
out there with you, after all,” she remarked,
half in jest.
Then the Senator thought that over
for a moment and left the room.
Next day Helen received a package
by mail which proved to contain a dozen clear photographs
of Crawling Water and its neighborhood.
First of all, as though Moran thought
it most important, was a snapshot of himself, which
had been taken, so he wrote on the back of the print,
by an obliging cowboy. The girl’s face was
a study in amused scorn as she looked at the photograph,
for which Moran has posed with a cigar in his mouth,
his hands in his pockets.
Then there were a number of views
of the town itself; of its main street, its hotel,
its dance-hall, and of “some of the boys”
in various poses of photographic self-consciousness.
There were also pictures of the marvelously beautiful
countryside, but as she neared the end of them, Helen
was disappointed to find none of Wade. “Of
course, he wouldn’t send me one of him,”
she said petulantly to herself, and she was rapidly
running through the remaining prints only to pause
suddenly at the very last, while a rosy tide flooded
her face and neck.
The little photograph showed a tall,
handsome, vigorous looking man, in the garb of a cattleman,
half turned in his saddle, with one hand resting on
his pony’s flank. The man was Wade.
With his other hand, he was pointing ahead, apparently
for the benefit of a girl a very good looking
girl whose fine head was thrown back, as the wind blew
her hair into pretty disorder.
Helen Rexhill had not hitherto experienced
real jealousy, but this little photograph excited
it. In the highly actinic light of Crawling Water
at noon the camera had done its work well, and the
figures of the two stood out from the distant background
with stereoscopic clearness. Wade was smiling
at the girl, who seemed to be laughing back at him,
although her face in the picture was partially turned
away, so that Helen got only an impression of charm.
But the impression was enough to rouse her jealousy.
On the back of the print, Moran had written:
“A surprise picture of Gordon
Wade and our new fellow-townswoman, Miss Dorothy Purnell,
whose beauty and general attractiveness have made her
the idol of Crawling Water.”