A WAR OF WITS
“Kidnaped? Gordon Wade?”
At Dorothy’s announcement, Mrs.
Purnell sank, with a gasp, into her rocking-chair,
astonished beyond expression. She listened, with
anxiety scarce less than her daughter’s, to
the girl’s account of the event as she had it
from Trowbridge. Her mouth opened and shut aimlessly
as she picked at her gingham apron. If Wade had
been her own son, she could hardly have loved him
more. He had been as tender to her as a son, and
the news of his disappearance and probable injury was
a frightful shock.
Weakly she attempted to relieve her
own anxiety by disputing the fact of his danger.
“Oh, I guess nothing’s
happened to him nothing like that, anyway.
He may have had a fall from his horse. Or maybe
it broke away from him and ran off.”
“Bill Santry found their trail,”
Dorothy said, with a gesture so tragic that it wrung
her mother’s heart strings. “He followed
it as far as he could, then lost it.” In
any other case she would have tried to keep the bad
news from her mother, because of her nerves, but just
now the girl was too distraught to think of any one
but the man she loved. “Oh, if I could
only do something myself,” she burst out.
“It’s staying here, helpless, that is
killing me. I wish I’d gone with Lem up
into the mountains. I would have if he hadn’t
said I might better stay in town. But how can
I help? There’s nothing to do here.”
“The idea!” Mrs. Purnell
exclaimed. “They’ll be out all night.
How could you have gone with them? I don’t
believe Gordon has been kidnaped at all. It’s
a false alarm, I tell you. Who could have done
such a thing?”
“Who?” The question broke
Dorothy’s patience. “Who’s done
everything that’s abominable and contemptible
lately here in Crawling Water? That Moran did
it, of course, with Senator Rexhill behind him.
Oh!”
“Nonsense!” said her mother, indignantly.
“Lem Trowbridge thinks so. Nearly everybody
does.”
“Then he hasn’t as good
sense as I thought he had.” Mrs. Purnell
arose and moved toward the kitchen. “You
come on and help me make some waffles for supper.
Perhaps that will take such foolishness out of your
head. The idea of a Senator of the United States
going about kidnaping people.”
Dorothy obeyed her mother’s
wish, but not very ably. Her face was flushed
and her eyes hot; ordinarily she was a splendid housekeeper
and a dutiful daughter, but there are limits to human
endurance. She mixed the batter so clumsily and
with such prodigal waste that her mother had to stop
her, and she was about to put salt into the sugar bowl
when Mrs. Purnell snatched it out of her hands.
“Go into the dining-room and sit down, Dorothy,”
she exclaimed. “You’re beside yourself.”
It is frequently the way with people, who are getting
on in years and are sick, to charge their own shortcomings
on any one who may be near. Mrs. Purnell was
greatly worried.
“What’s the matter now?”
she demanded, when Dorothy left her supper untasted
on her plate.
“I was thinking.”
“Well, can’t you tell
a body what you’re thinking about? What
are you sitting there that way for?”
“I was wondering,” said
Dorothy in despair, “if Helen Rexhill knows
where Gordon is.”
Mrs. Purnell snorted in disdain.
“Land’s sakes, child,
what put that into your head? Drink your tea.
It’ll do you good.”
“Why shouldn’t she know,
if her father does?” The girl pushed her tea-cup
farther away from her. “She wouldn’t
have come all the way out here with him he
wouldn’t have brought her with him if
they weren’t working together. She must
know. But I don’t see why....”
“Dorothy Purnell, I declare
to goodness, I believe you’re going crazy.”
Mrs. Purnell dropped her fork. “All this
about Gordon is bad enough without my being worried
so....”
“I’d even give him up
to her, if she’d tell me that.” Dorothy’s
voice was unsteady, and she seemed to be talking to
herself rather than to her mother. “I know
she thinks I’ve come between her and Gordon,
but I haven’t meant to. He’s just
seemed to like me better; that’s all. But
I’d do anything to save him from Moran.”
“I should say that you might
better wait until he asks you, before you talk of
giving him up to somebody.” Mrs. Purnell
spoke with the primness that was to be expected, but
her daughter made no reply. She had never mentioned
the night in Moran’s office, and her mother knew
nothing of Wade’s kiss. But to the girl
it had meant more than any declaration in words.
She had kept her lips inviolate until that moment,
and when his kiss had fallen upon them it had fallen
upon virgin soil, from out of which had bloomed a
white flower of passion. Before then she had looked
upon Wade as a warm friend, but since that night he
had appeared to her in another guise; that of a lover,
who has come into his own. She had met him then,
a girl, and had left him a woman, and she felt that
what he had established as a fact in the one rare
moment of his kiss, belonged to him and her.
It seemed so wholly theirs that she had not been able
to bring herself to discuss it with her mother.
She had won it fairly, and she treasured it.
The thought of giving him up to Helen Rexhill, of
promising her never to see Wade again, was overwhelming,
and was to be considered only as a last resource,
but there was no suffering that she would not undertake
for his sake.
Mrs. Purnell was as keenly alive as
ever to the hope that the young ranch owner might
some day incline toward her little girl, but she was
sensitive also to the impression which the Rexhills
had made upon her. Her life with Mr. Purnell
had not brought her many luxuries, and perhaps she
over-valued their importance. She thought Miss
Rexhill a most imposing young woman and she believed
in the impeccability of the well-to-do. Her heart
was still warmed by the memory of the courtesy with
which she had been treated by the Senator’s daughter,
and was not without the gratification of feeling that
it had been a tribute to her own worth. She had
scolded Dorothy afterward for her frank speech to
Miss Rexhill at the hotel, and she felt that further
slurs on her were uncalled for.
“I’m sure that Miss Rexhill
treated us as a lady should,” she said tartly.
“She acted more like one than you did, if I do
have to say it. She was as kind and sweet as
could be. She’s got a tender heart.
I could see that when she up and gave me that blotter,
just because I remarked that it reminded me of your
childhood.”
“Oh, that old blotter!”
Dorothy exclaimed petulantly. “What did
it amount to? You talk as though it were something
worth having.” She was so seldom in a pet
that her mother now strove to make allowance for her.
“I’m not saying that it’s
of any value, Dorothy, except to me; but it was kind
of her to seem to understand why I wanted it.”
“It wasn’t kind of her.
She just did it to get rid of us, because we bored
her. Oh, mother, you’re daffy about the
Rexhills, why not admit it and be done with it?
You think they’re perfect, but I tell you they’re
not they’re not! They’ve
been behind all our troubles here. They’ve....”
Her voice broke under the stress of her emotion and
she rose to her feet.
“Dorothy, if you have no self-respect,
at least have some....”
“I won’t have that blotter
in the house.” The strain was proving more
than the girl’s nerves could stand. “I
won’t hear about it any longer. I’m
going to to tear it up!”
“Dorothy!”
For all the good that Mrs. Purnell’s
tone of authority did, it might as well have fallen
upon the wind. She hastily followed her daughter,
who had rushed from the room, and overtook her just
in time to prevent her from destroying the little
picture. Her own strength could not have sufficed
to deter the girl in her purpose, if the latter had
not realized in her heart the shameful way in which
she was treating her mother.
“Aren’t you ashamed of
yourself, child? Look in that glass at your face!
No wonder you don’t think you look like the sweet
child in the picture. You don’t look like
her now, nor act like her. That was why I wanted
the blotter, to remind me of the way you used to look.”
“I’m sorry, mother.”
Blushing deeply as she recovered her
self-control, Dorothy stole a glance at her reflection
in the looking-glass of the bureau, before which she
stood, and shyly contrasted her angry expression of
countenance with the sweet one of the child on the
blotter. Suddenly she started, and leaned toward
the mirror, staring at something she saw there.
The blood seemed driven from the surface of her skin;
her lips were parted; her eyes dilated. She drew
a swift breath of amazed exultation, and turned to
her mother, who had viewed the sudden transformation
with surprise.
“I’ll be back soon, mother.
I can’t tell you what it is.” Dorothy’s
voice rang with the suggestion of victory. “But
I’ve discovered something, wonderful!”
Before Mrs. Purnell could adjust herself
to this new mood, the girl was down the stairs and
running toward the little barn. Slipping the bridle
on her pony, she swung to its back without thought
of a saddle, and turned the willing creature into
the street. As she passed the house, she waved
her hand to her mother, at the window, and vanished
like a specter into the night.
“Oh, hurry, Gypsy, hurry!”
she breathed into the pony’s twitching ear.
Her way was not far, for she was going
first to the hotel, but that other way, into the mountains
after Gordon, would be a long journey, and no time
could be wasted now. She was going to see Helen
Rexhill, not as a suppliant bearing the olive branch,
but as a champion to wage battle in behalf of the
missing ranchman. She no longer thought of giving
him up, and the knowledge that she might now keep
the love which she had won for her very own made her
reel on the pony’s back from pure joy. She
was his as he was hers, but the Rexhills were his
enemies: she knew that positively now, and she
meant to defeat them at their own game. If they
would tell her where Gordon was, they might go free
for all she cared; if they would not, she would give
them over to the vengeance of Crawling Water, and
she would not worry about what might happen to them.
Meanwhile she thanked her lucky stars that Trowbridge
had promised to keep a man at the big pine.
She tied her pony at the hitching-rack
in front of the hotel and entered the office.
Like most of the men in the town, the proprietor was
her ardent admirer, but he had never seen her before
in such radiant mood. He took his cigar from
between his lips, and doffed his Stetson hat, which
he wore indoors and out, with elaborate grace.
“Yes, Miss, Miss Rexhill’s
in, up in the parlor, I think. Would you like
me to step up and let her know you’re here?”
“No, thank you, I’ll go
right up myself,” said Dorothy; her smile doubly
charming because of its suggestion of triumph.
Miss Rexhill, entirely unaware of
what was brewing for her, was embroidering by the
flickering light of one of the big oil lamps, with
her back to the doorway, and so did not immediately
note Dorothy’s presence in the room. Her
face flushed with annoyance and she arose, when she
recognized her visitor.
“You will please pardon me,
but I do not care to receive you,” she said
primly.
This beginning, natural enough from
Helen’s standpoint, after what her father had
told her in Moran’s office, convinced Dorothy
that she had read the writing on the blotter correctly.
She held her ground, aggressively, between Miss Rexhill
and the door.
“You must hear what I have to
say to you,” she declared quietly. “I
have not come here to make a social call.”
“Isn’t it enough for me
to tell you that I do not wish to talk to you?”
Helen lifted her brows and shrugged her shoulders.
“Surely, it should be enough. Will you
please stand aside so that I may go to my room?”
“No, I won’t! You
can’t go until you’ve heard what I’ve
got to say.” Stung by the other woman’s
contemptuous tone, and realizing that the situation
put her at a social disadvantage, Dorothy forced an
aggressive tone into her voice, ugly to the ear.
“Very well!” Miss Rexhill
shrugged her shoulders disdainfully, and resumed her
seat. “We must not engage in a vulgar row.
Since I must listen to you, I must, but at least I
need not talk to you, and I won’t.”
“You know that Gordon Wade has
disappeared?” Helen made no response to this,
and Dorothy bit her lip in anger. “I know
that you know it,” she continued. “I
know that you know where he is. Perhaps, however,
you don’t know that his life is in danger.
If you will tell me where he is, I can save him.
Will you tell me?” The low throaty note of suffering
in her voice brought a stiletto-like flash into the
eyes of the other woman, but no response.
“Miss Rexhill,” Dorothy
went on, after a short pause. “You and Mr.
Wade were friends once, if you are not now. Perhaps
you don’t realize just how serious the situation
is here in this town, where nearly everybody likes
him, and what would happen to you and your father,
if I told what I know about you. I don’t
believe he would want it to happen, even after the
way you’ve treated him. If you will only
tell me....”
Helen turned abruptly in her chair,
her face white with anger.
“I said that I would not talk
to you,” she burst out, “but your impertinence
is so so insufferable so absolutely
insufferable, that I must speak. You say you
will tell people what you know about me. What
do you know about me?” She arose to face
Dorothy, with blazing eyes.
“I am sure that you know where Gordon is.”
“You are sure of nothing of
the kind. I do not know where Mr. Wade is, and
why should I tell you if I did? Suppose I were
to tell what I know about you? I don’t
believe the whole of it is known in Crawling Water
yet. You you must be insane.”
“About me?” Dorothy’s
surprise was genuine. “There is nothing
you could tell any one about me.”
Miss Rexhill laughed scornfully, a
low, withering laugh that brought a flush to the girl’s
cheeks, even though her conscience told her that she
had nothing to be ashamed of. Dorothy stared at
the other woman with wide-open, puzzled eyes, diverted
for the moment from her own purpose.
“At least, you need not expect
me to help you,” Helen said acidulously.
“I have my own feelings. I respected Mr.
Wade at one time and valued his friendship. You
have taken from me my respect for him, and you have
taken from him his self-respect. Quite likely
you had no respect for yourself, and so you had nothing
to lose. But if you’ll stop to consider,
you may see how impertinent you are to appeal to me
so brazenly.”
“What are you talking about?”
Dorothy’s eyes, too, were blazing now, but more
in championship of Wade than of herself. She still
did not fully understand the drift of what Miss Rexhill
had said.
“Really, you are almost amusing.”
Helen looked at her through half-closed lids.
“You are quite freakish. I suppose you must
be a moral degenerate, or something of the sort.”
She waited for the insult to sink in, but Dorothy
was fairly dazed and bewildered. “Do you
want me to call things by their true names?”
“Yes,” answered Dorothy,
“I do. Tell me what you are talking about.”
“I don’t mind, I’m
sure. Plain speaking has never bothered me.
It’s the deed that’s horrible, not the
name. You were found in Mr. Moran’s office
with Mr. Wade, late at night, misbehaving yourself.
Do you dare to come now to me and....”
“That is not true!” The
denial came from Dorothy with an intensity that would
have carried conviction to any person less infuriated
than the woman who faced her. “Oh!”
Dorothy raised her hands to her throat as though struggling
for breath. “I never dreamed you meant that.
It’s a deliberate lie!”
In the grip of their emotions, neither
of the girls had noticed the entrance of Senator Rexhill.
Helen saw him first and dramatically pointed to him.
“There is my father. Ask him!”
“I do not need to ask him what
I’ve done.” Dorothy felt as though
she would suffocate. “No one would believe
that story of Gordon, whatever they might think of
me.”
“Ask me? Ask me what?”
the Senator nervously demanded. He had in his
pocket a telegram just received from Washington, stating
that the cavalry would be sent from Fort Mackenzie
only at the request of the Governor of Wyoming.
The Governor was not at all likely to make such a
request, and Rexhill was more worried than he had been
before, in years. He could only hope that Tug
Bailey would escape capture. “Who is this?”
He put on his glasses, and deliberately looked Dorothy
over. “Oh, it’s the young woman whom
Race found in his office.”
“She has come here to plead
for Gordon Wade to demand that I tell her
where he is now. I don’t know, of course;
none of us know; but I wouldn’t tell her if
I did.” Helen spoke triumphantly.
“You had better leave us,”
Rexhill said brusquely to Dorothy. “You
are not wanted here. Go home!”
While they were talking, Dorothy had
looked from one to the other with the contempt which
a good woman naturally feels when she is impugned.
Now she crossed the room and confronted the Senator.
“Did you tell your daughter
that I was caught in your office with Gordon Wade?”
she demanded; and before her steady gaze Rexhill winced.
“You don’t deny it, do you?” he
blustered.
“I don’t deny being there
with him, and I won’t deny anything else to
such a man as you. I’m too proud to.
For your own sake, however, you would have done better
not to have tried to blacken me.” She turned
swiftly to his daughter. “Perhaps you don’t
know all that I supposed you did. We were in
Moran’s office Mr. Wade and myself because
we felt sure that your father had some criminal purpose
here in Crawling Water. We were right. We
found papers showing the location of gold on Mr. Wade’s
ranch, which showed your father’s reasons for
trying to seize the land.”
Helen laughed scornfully.
“Do you expect me to believe that?”
“No, of course not,” her
father growled. “Come on up to our rooms.
Let her preach here until she is put out.”
He was on his way to the door when the vibrant command
in Dorothy’s voice halted him.
“Wait. You’d better
listen to me, for it’s the last chance you’ll
have. I have you absolutely at my mercy.
I’ve caught you! You are trapped!”
There was no doubting that the girl believed what she
said, and the Senator’s affairs were in a sufficiently
precarious state to bid him pause.
“Nonsense!” He made his
own tone as unconcerned as he could, but there was
a look of haunting dread in his eyes.
“Senator Rexhill,” Dorothy’s
voice was low, but there was a quality in it which
thrilled her hearers, “when my mother
and I visited your daughter a few days ago, she gave
my mother a blotter. There was a picture on it
that reminded my mother of me as a child; that was
why she wanted it. It has been on my mother’s
bureau ever since. I never noticed anything curious
about it until this evening.” She looked,
with a quiet smile at Helen. “Probably
you forgot that you had just blotted a letter with
it.”
Helen started and went pale, but not
so pale as her father, who went so chalk-white that
the wrinkles in his skin looked like make-up, against
its pallor.
“I was holding that blotter
before the looking-glass this evening,” Dorothy
continued, in the same low tone, “and I saw that
the ink had transferred to the blotter a part of what
you had written. I read it. It was this:
‘Father knew Santry had not killed Jensen....’”
The Senator moistened his lips with
his tongue and strove to chuckle, but the effort was
a failure. Helen, however, appeared much relieved.
“I remember now,” she
said, “and I am well repaid for my moment of
sentiment. I was writing to my mother and was
telling her of a scene that had just taken place between
Mr. Wade and my father. I did not write what
you read; rather, it was not all that I wrote.
I said ’Gordon thought that father
knew Santry had not killed Jensen.’”
“Have you posted that letter?”
her father asked, repressing as well as he could his
show of eagerness.
“No. I thought better about
sending it. I have it upstairs.”
“If you hadn’t it, of
course you could write it again, in any shape you
chose,” Dorothy observed crisply, though she
recognized, plainly enough, that the explanation was
at least plausible.
“There is nothing in that,”
Rexhill declared, when he had taken a deep breath
of relief. “Your championship of Wade is
running away with you. What other er! grave
charges have you to bring against me?”
“I have one that is much more
grave,” she retorted, so promptly that he could
not conceal a fresh start of uneasiness. “This
morning, Mr. Trowbridge and I were out for a ride.
We rode over to the place where Jensen was shot, and
Mr. Trowbridge found there a cartridge shell which
fits only one gun in Crawling Water. That gun
belongs to a man named Tug Bailey.”
By now Rexhill was thoroughly aroused,
for although he was too good a jurist not to see the
flaws in so incomplete a fabric of evidence against
him, he was impressed with the influence such a story
would exert on public opinion. If possible, this
girl’s tongue must be stopped.
“Pooh!” He made a fine
show of indifference. “Why bring such tales
to me? You’d make a very poor lawyer, young
woman, if you think that such rumors will serve to
impeach a man of my standing.”
“There is a warrant out for
Bailey,” Dorothy went on quietly. “If
he is caught, and I choose to make public what I know
and can guess, I am sure that you will never reach
a court. You underestimate the people here.
I would not have to prove what I have told you.
I need only to proclaim it, and I don’t
know what they’d do to you. It makes me
a bit sick to think about it.”
The thought made the Senator sick,
too, for of late he had seen that things were going
very badly for him. He was prepared to temporize,
but there was no need for him to contemplate surrender,
or flight, so long as Bailey remained at large.
If the man were captured, and there was likelihood
of a confession being wrung from him, then most decidedly
discretion would be the better part of valor.
“Oh, of course,” he confessed,
“I am willing to admit that in such a community
as this you might make trouble, unjustly, for me and
my daughter. I am anxious to avoid that, because
my interests are valuable here and I have my daughter’s
safety to consider.”
“Don’t think of me,”
Helen interposed quickly. Above all fear for
herself would be the shame of being beaten by Dorothy
and of having her triumph go to the making of Wade’s
happiness. The thought of that appeared far worse
to her mind than any physical suffering. “Do
what you think is right. We are not cowards.”
“But I must think of you, my
dear. I am responsible to your mother.”
He turned to Dorothy again. “How much do
you want?”
“How much? Oh!” She
flushed hotly beneath the insult, but she chose to
ignore it. “There is only one price that
will purchase my silence. Tell me where Mr. Wade
is?”
“Bless my soul, I don’t
know.” The Senator affected a display of
injured innocence, which sat oddly upon his harried
countenance. “I am willing to do what I
can to save trouble, but I can’t do the impossible.”
For a moment, in a wretched slough
of helplessness, Dorothy found her conviction wavering.
Could it really be possible that he was speaking the
truth; that he did not know? But with the dreadful
thought came also the realization that she must not
let him fathom her mind. She told herself that
she must keep her countenance, and she did so.
“There is not a man in Crawling
Water who does not believe that Race Moran is responsible
for Mr. Wade’s disappearance,” she declared.
“That is another thing that you should consider,
for it is one more link in the chain of evidence impressions,
you may call them, but they will be accepted as evidence
by Wade’s friends.”
Rexhill was considering it, and swiftly,
in the light of the visit he had had from Trowbridge.
The cattleman had left him with a distinct feeling
that every word spoken had been meant. “If
we can prove it against you, we’ll ride you
to hell on a rail.” The language was melodramatic,
but it seemed very suggestive as the Senator called
it to mind. He regretted that he had supported
Moran in his lust for revenge. The lawless spirit
of the West seemed to have poisoned his own blood,
but somehow the feeling of indifference as to suffering
personal violence had been left out, and he realized
that the West was no place for him.
“Even so,” he said pompously,
“even if what you say of Moran should prove
true, it does not follow that I know it, or am a party
to it. Race Moran is his own master.”
“He is your employee your
agent and you are responsible for what he
does in your behalf,” Dorothy retorted desperately.
“Why do you bandy words with me like this?
You may be able to do it with me, but don’t
think that you can do it with Mr. Trowbridge, and the
others, if I tell them what I know. I tell you,
you can’t. You feel safe before me alone,
but you are in much greater danger than you think.
You don’t seem to realize that I am holding
your lives in my hand.”
Helen’s cheeks blanched at this.
“I do realize it.”
There was a slight quaver in the Senator’s voice,
although he tried to speak with easy grace. “I
assure you, I do and I shall be very grateful to you” his
anxiety was crowding out his discretion “if
you will help me to save my daughter....”
“I say just what I said before,”
Helen interposed, courageous to the last. There
is, many times, in the woman a finer fiber of courage
than runs in the man.
Dorothy regarded the Senator scornfully,
her feminine intuition assuring her that he was weakening.
She no longer doubted that he knew; she was certain
of it and happy to feel that she had only to press
him harder to wring the truth from him.
“Grateful? For helping
you? I am not trying to help you. You deserve
any punishment that could be inflicted upon you, I
would say that, even if you had not insulted me and
lied about me. You are an evil man. I am
offering you your safety, so far as I can grant, only
for the sake of Mr. Wade. If it were not for
him, I should not have come here at all.”
Her sense of approaching triumph had
carried her a little too far. It aroused Helen
to bitter resentment, and when she began to speak Dorothy
was sorry that she had not kept silent.
“Father, don’t do it!”
Miss Rexhill burst out. “It is insufferable
that this woman should threaten us so. I would
rather run any risk, I don’t care what, than
give in to her. I won’t tolerate such a
thing.”
“You may be urging him to his
death,” Dorothy warned her. “I will
not stop at anything now. If I tell the cattlemen
what I know they will go wild. I mean what I
say, believe me!”
“I know you will not stop at
anything. I have seen that,” Helen admitted.
“A woman who can do what you’ve already
done....”
“Helen!” The Senator was
carrying with him a sense of gratitude toward Dorothy,
and in the light of her spirit he was a little ashamed
of the part he had played against her. “Let’s
try to forget what has past. At least, this young
woman is offering us a chance.”
“Listen!” Dorothy cried out suddenly.
Outside, in the street, a galloping
horseman was shouting to some one as he rode.
The girl ran to the window and raised the shade to
look out. The lusty voice of the horseman bore
well into the room. “They’ve caught
Bailey at Sheridan. He’ll be here to-morrow.”
“Senator Rexhill,” said
Dorothy, turning away from the window, “you’d
better take the chance I’ve offered you, while
you can. Do it for the sake of the old friendship
between you and Gordon Wade, if for no other reason.
No matter how bitter he may feel toward you, he would
not want you in Crawling Water when Tug Bailey confesses.
It would be too awful.” She shuddered at
the thought. “Tell me where he is and get
out of town at once.”
“Bailey hasn’t confessed yet,” Helen
cut in gamely.
“No; but he will,” Dorothy
declared positively. “They’ll put
a rope around his neck, and he’ll confess.
Such men always do. Try to remember the position
you are in. You’d be sorry if your father
were lynched. Go with him, while you can.
I know these people better than you do.”
The Senator swallowed hard and mopped
his damp forehead with his handkerchief. There
was nothing to do but follow the girl’s advice,
and that quickly, he knew. After all, in the
face of death, financial ruin seemed a mere bagatelle.
“So far as I have been informed,
Wade is confined at Coyote Springs, somewhere in the
mountains,” he said bluntly. “That’s
all I know of the matter. I hope you will find
him all right there. He ought to be very proud
of you.”
Dorothy caught her hands to her breast
in a little gesture of exultation, and the expression
on her face was a wonderful thing to see.
“You’ll go?”
“In the morning,” Senator Rexhill answered.
Eager as Dorothy was to reach the
big pine with her message, she could not leave without
giving Helen such a glance of triumph as made her
wince.
Then, hurrying to her pony, she rode
rapidly out of town into the black night which cloaked
the trail leading to the pine. She knew that her
mother would miss her and be anxious, but the minutes
were too precious now to be wasted even on her mother.
She did not know what peril Gordon might be in, and
her first duty was to him. She was almost wild
with anxiety lest the courier should not be at his
post, but he was there when she dashed up to the pine.
“Take me to Mr. Trowbridge. Quick!”
she panted.
“He’s somewhere between
Bald Knob and Hatchet Hill,” the man explained,
knocking the ashes from his pipe. “It’s
some dark, too, miss, for ridin’ in this country.
Can’t you wait until morning?”
“I can’t wait one second.
I have found out where Mr. Wade is, and I mean to
be with you all when you find him.”
“You have, eh?” The man,
who was one of Trowbridge’s punchers, swung
into his saddle. “That bein’ so, we’d
get there if this here night was liquid coal.”