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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/26651-8.txt b/26651-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..a62fa91 --- /dev/null +++ b/26651-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,10251 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Flaming Jewel, by Robert W. Chambers + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Flaming Jewel + +Author: Robert W. Chambers + +Release Date: September 18, 2008 [EBook #26651] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE FLAMING JEWEL *** + + + + +Produced by Suzanne Shell, Jacqueline Jeremy and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + + + + +THE FLAMING JEWEL + +ROBERT W. CHAMBERS + + + + + ROBERT W. CHAMBERS + + _The Flaming Jewel_ + + TRIANGLE BOOKS NEW YORK + + + COPYRIGHT, 1922, BY GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY + + TRIANGLE BOOKS EDITION PUBLISHED SEPTEMBER 1942 + + TRIANGLE BOOKS, 14 West Forty-ninth Street, New York, N. Y. + + PRINTED AND BOUND IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA BY THE AMERICAN + BOOK--STRATFORD PRESS, INC., N. Y. C. + + + + + TO + MY FRIEND + + R. T. HAINES-HALSEY + + WHO + UNRESERVEDLY BELIEVES + EVERYTHING I WRITE + + + + +To R. T. + + + I + + Three Guests at dinner! That's the life!-- + Wedgewood, Revere, and Duncan Phyfe! + + + II + + You sit on Duncan--when you dare,-- + And out of Wedgewood, using care, + With Paul Revere you eat your fare. + + + III + + From Paul you borrow fork and knife + To wage a gastronomic strife + In porringers; and platters rare + Of blue Historic Willow-ware. + + + IV + + Banquets with cymbal, drum and fife, + Or rose-wreathed feasts with riot rife + To your chaste suppers can't compare. + + + V + + Let those deny the truth who dare!-- + Paul, Duncan, Wedgewood! That's the life! + All else is bunk and empty air. + + + ENVOI + + The Cordon-bleu has set the pace + With Goulash, Haggis, Bouillabaisse, + Curry, Chop-suey, Kous-Kous Stew-- + I can not offer these to you,-- + Being a plain, old-fashioned cook,-- + So pray accept this scrambled book. + + R. W. C. + + + + +CONTENTS + + PAGE + + EPISODE ONE + EVE 9 + + EPISODE TWO + THE RULING PASSION 33 + + EPISODE THREE + ON STAR PEAK 56 + + EPISODE FOUR + A PRIVATE WAR 75 + + EPISODE FIVE + DROWNED VALLEY 93 + + EPISODE SIX + THE JEWEL AFLAME 110 + + EPISODE SEVEN + CLINCH'S DUMP 134 + + EPISODE EIGHT + CUP AND LIP 157 + + EPISODE NINE + THE FOREST AND MR SARD 180 + + EPISODE TEN + THE TWILIGHT OF MIKE 209 + + EPISODE ELEVEN + THE PLACE OF PINES 233 + + EPISODE TWELVE + HER HIGHNESS INTERVENES 255 + + + + +THE FLAMING JEWEL + +EPISODE ONE + +EVE + + +I + +During the last two years Fate, Chance, and Destiny had been too busy to +attend to Mike Clinch. + +But now his turn was coming in the Eternal Sequence of things. The stars +in their courses indicated the beginning of the undoing of Mike Clinch. + +From Esthonia a refugee Countess wrote to James Darragh in New York: + + "--After two years we have discovered that it was José + Quintana's band of international thieves that robbed Ricca. + Quintana has disappeared. + + "A Levantine diamond broker in New York, named Emanuel Sard, may + be in communication with him. + + "Ricca and I are going to America as soon as possible. + + "VALENTINE." + +The day Darragh received the letter he started to look up Sard. + +But that very morning Sard had received a curious letter from Rotterdam. +This was the letter: + + "Sardius--Tourmaline--Aragonite--Rhodonite * + Porphyry--Obsidian--Nugget Gold--Diaspore * + Novaculite * Yu * Nugget Silver--Amber--Matrix + Turquoise--Elaeolite * Ivory--Sardonyx * Moonstone-- + Iceland Spar--Kalpa Zircon--Eye Agate * Celonite-- + Lapis--Iolite--Nephrite--Chalcedony--Hydrolite * + Hegolite--Amethyst--Selenite * Fire Opal--Labradorite-- + Aquamarine--Malachite--Iris Stone--Natrolite-- + Garnet * Jade--Emerald--Wood Opal--Essonite-- + Lazuli * Epidote--Ruby--Onyx--Sapphire + --Indicolite--Topaz--Euclase * Indian Diamond * + Star Sapphire--African Diamond--Iceland Spar-- + Lapis Crucifer * Abalone--Turkish Turquoise * Old + Mine Stone--Natrolite--Cats Eye--Electrum * * * + 1/5 [=a] [=a]." + +That afternoon young Darragh located Sard's office and presented himself +as a customer. The weasel-faced clerk behind the wicket laid a pistol +handy and informed Darragh that Sard was away on a business trip. + +Darragh looked cautiously around the small office: + +"Can anybody hear us?" + +"Nobody. Why?" + +"I have important news concerning José Quintana," whispered Darragh; +"Where is Sard?" + +"Why, he had a letter from Quintana this very morning," replied the +clerk in a low, uneasy voice. "Mr. Sard left for Albany on the one +o'clock train. Is there any trouble?" + +"Plenty," replied Darragh coolly; "do you know Quintana?" + +"No. But Mr. Sard expects him here any day now." + +Darragh leaned closer against the grille: "Listen very carefully; if a +man comes here who calls himself José Quintana, turn him over to the +police until Mr. Sard returns. No matter what he tells you, turn him +over to the police. Do you understand?" + +"Who are you?" demanded the worried clerk. "Are you one of Quintana's +people?" + +"Young man," said Darragh, "I'm close enough to Quintana to give _you_ +orders. And give Sard orders.... And Quintana, too!" + +A great light dawned on the scared clerk: + +"_You_ are José Quintana!" he said hoarsely. + +Darragh bored him through with his dark stare: + +"Mind your business," he said. + + * * * * * + +That night in Albany Darragh picked up Sard's trail. It led to a dealer +in automobiles. Sard had bought a Comet Six, paying cash, and had +started north. + +Through Schenectady, Fonda, and Mayfield, the following day, Darragh +traced a brand new Comet Six containing one short, dark Levantine with a +parrot nose. In Northville Darragh hired a Ford. + +At Lake Pleasant Sard's car went wrong. Darragh missed him by ten +minutes; but he learned that Sard had inquired the way to Ghost Lake +Inn. + +That was sufficient. Darragh bought an axe, drove as far as Harrod's +Corners, dismissed the Ford, and walked into a forest entirely familiar +to him. + +He emerged in half an hour on a wood road two miles farther on. Here he +felled a tree across the road and sat down in the bushes to await +events. + +Toward sunset, hearing a car coming, he tied his handkerchief over his +face below the eyes, and took an automatic from his pocket. + +Sard's car stopped and Sard got out to inspect the obstruction. Darragh +sauntered out of the bushes, poked his pistol against Mr. Sard's fat +abdomen, and leisurely and thoroughly robbed him. + +In an agreeable spot near a brook Darragh lighted his pipe and sat him +down to examine the booty in detail. Two pistols, a stiletto, and a +blackjack composed the arsenal of Mr. Sard. A large wallet disclosed +more than four thousand dollars in Treasury notes--something to +reimburse Ricca when she arrived, he thought. + +Among Sard's papers he discovered a cipher letter from +Rotterdam--probably from Quintana. Cipher was rather in Darragh's line. +All ciphers are solved by similar methods, unless the key is contained +in a code book known only to sender and receiver. + +But Quintana's cipher proved to be only an easy acrostic--the very +simplest of secret messages. Within an hour Darragh had it pencilled +out: + + _Cipher_ + + "Take notice: + + "Star Pond, N. Y.... Name is Mike Clinch.... Has Flaming + Jewel.... Erosite.... I sail at once. + + "QUINTANA." + +Having served in Russia as an officer in the Military Intelligence +Department attached to the American Expeditionary Forces, Darragh had +little trouble with Quintana's letter. Even the signature was not +difficult, the fraction 1/5 was easily translated _Quint_; and the +familiar prescription symbol [=a] [=a] spelled _ana_; which gave +Quintana's name in full. + +He had heard of Erosite as the rarest and most magnificent of all gems. +Only three were known. The young Duchess Theodorica of Esthonia had +possessed one. + + * * * * * + +Darragh was immensely amused to find that the chase after Emanuel Sard +should have led him to the very borders of the great Harrod estate in +the Adirondacks. + +He gathered up his loot and walked on through the splendid forest which +once had belonged to Henry Harrod of Boston, and which now was the +property of Harrod's nephew, James Darragh. + +When he came to the first trespass notice he stood a moment to read it. +Then, slowly, he turned and looked toward Clinch's. An autumn sunset +flared like a conflagration through the pines. There was a glimmer of +water, too, where Star Pond lay. + + * * * * * + +Fate, Chance, and Destiny were becoming very busy with Mike Clinch. They +had started Quintana, Sard, and Darragh on his trail. Now they stirred +up the sovereign State of New York. + +That lank wolf, Justice, was afoot and sniffing uncomfortably close to +the heels of Mike Clinch. + + +II + +Two State Troopers drew bridles in the yellowing October forest. Their +smart drab uniforms touched with purple blended harmoniously with the +autumn woods. They were as inconspicuous as two deer in the dappled +shadow. There was a sunny clearing just ahead. The wood road they had +been travelling entered it. Beyond lay Star Pond. + +Trooper Lannis said to Trooper Stormont: "That's Mike Clinch's clearing. +Our man may be there. Now we'll see if anybody tips him off this time." + +Forest and clearing were very still in the sunshine. Nothing stirred +save gold leaves drifting down, and a hawk high in the deep blue sky +turning in narrow circles. + +Lannis was instructing Stormont, who had been transferred from the Long +Island Troop, and who was unacquainted with local matters. + +Lannis said: "Clinch's dump stands on the other edge of the clearing. +Clinch owns five hundred acres in here. He's a rat." + +"Bad?" + +"Well, he's mean. I don't know how bad he is. But he runs a rotten dump. +The forest has its slums as well as the city. This is the Hell's Kitchen +of the North Woods." + +Stormont nodded. + +"All the scum of the wilderness gathers here," went on Lannis. "Here's +where half the trouble in the North Woods hatches. We'll eat dinner at +Clinch's. His stepdaughter is a peach." + +The sturdy, sun-browned trooper glanced at his wrist watch, stretched +his legs in his stirrups. + +"Jack," he said, "I want you to get Clinch right, and I'm going to tell +you about his outfit while we watch this road. It's like a movie. Clinch +plays the lead. I'll dope out the scenario for you----" + +He turned sideways in his saddle, freeing both spurred heels and lolled +so, constructing a cigarette while he talked: + +"Way back around 1900 Mike Clinch was a guide--a decent young fellow +they say. He guided fishing parties in summer, hunters in fall and +winter. He made money and built the house. The people he guided were +wealthy. He made a lot of money and bought land. I understand he was +square and that everybody liked him. + +"About that time there came to Clinch's 'hotel' a Mr. and Mrs. Strayer. +They were 'lungers.' Strayer seemed to be a gentleman; his wife was +good looking and rather common. Both were very young. He had the consump +bad--the galloping variety. He didn't last long. A month after he died +his young wife had a baby. Clinch married her. She also died the same +year. The baby's name was Eve. Clinch became quite crazy about her and +started to make a lady of her. That was his mania." + +Lannis leaned from his saddle and carefully dropped his cigarette end +into a puddle of rain water. Then he swung one leg over and sat side +saddle. + +"Clinch had plenty of money in those days," he went on. "He could afford +to educate the child. The kid had a governess. Then he sent her to a +fancy boarding school. She had everything a young girl could want. + +"She developed into a pretty young thing at fifteen.... She's eighteen +now--and I don't know what to call her. She pulled a gun on me in July." + +"What!" + +"Sure. There was a row at Clinch's dump. A rum-runner called Jake Kloon +got shot up. I came up to get Clinch. He was sick-drunk in his bunk. +When I broke in the door Eve Strayer pulled a gun on me." + +"What happened?" inquired Stormont. + +"Nothing. I took Clinch.... But he got off as usual." + +"Acquitted?" + +Lannis nodded, rolling another cigarette: + +"Now, I'll tell you how Clinch happened to go wrong," he said. "You see +he'd always made his living by guiding. Well, some years ago Henry +Harrod, of Boston, came here and bought thousands and thousands of acres +of forest all around Clinch's----" Lannis half rose on one stirrup and, +with a comprehensive sweep of his muscular arm, ending in a flourish: +"--He bought everything for miles and miles. And that started Clinch +down hill. Harrod tried to force Clinch to sell. The millionaire tactics +you know. He was determined to oust him. Clinch got mad and wouldn't +sell at any price. Harrod kept on buying all around Clinch and posted +trespass notices. That meant ruin to Clinch. He was walled in. No +hunters care to be restricted. Clinch's little property was no good. +Business stopped. His stepdaughter's education became expensive. He was +in a bad way. Harrod offered him a big price. But Clinch turned ugly and +wouldn't budge. And that's how Clinch began to go wrong." + +"Poor devil," said Stormont. + +"Devil, all right. Poor, too. But he needed money. He was crazy to make +a lady of Eve Strayer. And there are ways of finding money, you know." + +Stormont nodded. + +"Well, Clinch found money in those ways. The Conservation Commissioner +in Albany began to hear about game law violations. The Revenue people +heard of rum-running. Clinch lost his guide's license. But nobody could +get the goods on him. + +"There was a rough backwoods bunch always drifting about Clinch's place +in those days. There were fights. And not so many miles from Clinch's +there was highway robbery and a murder or two. + +"Then the war came. The draft caught Clinch. Malone exempted him, he +being the sole support of his stepchild. + +"But the girl volunteered. She got to France, somehow--scrubbed in a +hospital, I believe--anyway, Clinch wanted to be on the same side of +the world she was on, and he went with a Forestry Regiment and cut trees +for railroad ties in southern France until the war ended and they sent +him home. + +"Eve Strayer came back too. She's there now. You'll see her at dinner +time. She sticks to Clinch. He's a rat. He's up against the dry laws and +the game laws. Government enforcement agents, game protectors, State +Constabulary, all keep an eye on Clinch. Harrod's trespass signs fence +him in. He's like a rat in a trap. Yet Clinch makes money at law +breaking and nobody can catch him red-handed. + +"He kills Harrod's deer. That's certain. I mean Harrod's nephew's deer. +Harrod's dead. Darragh's the young nephew's name. He's never been +here--he was in the army--in Russia--I don't know what became of +him--but he keeps up the Harrod preserve--game-wardens, patrols, +watchers, trespass signs and all." + +Lannis finished his second cigarette, got back into his stirrups and, +gathering bridle, began leisurely to divide curb and snaffle. + +"That's the layout, Jack," he said. "Yonder lies the Red Light district +of the North Woods. Mike Clinch is the brains of all the dirty work that +goes on. A floating population of crooks and bums--game violators, +boot-leggers, market hunters, pelt 'collectors,' rum-runners, hootch +makers, do his dirty work--and I guess there are some who'll stick you +up by starlight for a quarter and others who'll knock your block off for +a dollar.... And there's the girl, Eve Strayer. I don't get her at all, +except that she's loyal to Clinch.... And now you know what you ought +to know about this movie called 'Hell in the Woods.' And it's up to us +to keep a calm, impartial eye on the picture and try to follow the plot +they're acting out--if there is any." + +Stormont said: "Thanks, Bill; I'm posted.... And I'm getting hungry, +too." + +"I believe," said Lannis, "that you want to see that girl." + +"I do," returned the other, laughing. + +"Well, you'll see her. She's good to look at. But I don't get her at +all." + +"Why?" + +"Because she _looks_ right and yet she lives at Clinch's with him and +his bunch of bums. Would you think a straight girl could stand it?" + +"No man can tell what a straight girl can stand." + +"Straight or crooked she stands for Mike Clinch," said Lannis, "and he's +a ratty customer." + +"Maybe the girl is fond of him. It's natural." + +"I guess it's that. But I don't see how any young girl can stomach the +life at Clinch's." + +"It's a wonder what a decent woman will stand," observed Stormont. +"Ninety-nine per cent. of all wives ought to receive the D. S. O." + +"Do you think we're so rotten?" inquired Lannis, smiling. + +"Not so rotten. No. But any man knows what men are. And it's a wonder +women stick to us when they learn." + +They laughed. Lannis glanced at his watch again. + +"Well," he said, "I don't believe anybody has tipped off our man. It's +noon. Come on to dinner, Jack." + +They cantered forward into the sunlit clearing. Star Pond lay ahead. On +its edge stood Clinch's. + + +III + +Clinch, in his shirt sleeves, came out on the veranda. He had little +light grey eyes, close-clipped grey hair, and was clean shaven. + +"How are you, Clinch," inquired Lannis affably. + +"All right," replied Clinch; "you're the same, I hope." + +"Trooper Stormont, Mr. Clinch," said Lannis in his genial way. + +"Pleased to know you," said Clinch, level-eyed, unstirring. + +The troopers dismounted. Both shook hands with Clinch. Then Lannis led +the way to the barn. + +"We'll eat well," he remarked to his comrade. "Clinch cooks." + +From the care of their horses they went to a pump to wash. One or two +rough looking men slouched out of the house and glanced at them. + +"Hallo, Jake," said Lannis cheerily. + +Jake Kloon grunted acknowledgment. + +Lannis said in Stormont's ear: "Here she comes with towels. She's +pretty, isn't she?" + +A young girl in pink gingham advanced toward them across the patch of +grass. + +Lannis was very polite and presented Stormont. The girl handed them two +rough towels, glanced at Stormont again after the introduction, smiled +slightly. + +"Dinner is ready," she said. + +They dried their faces and followed her back to the house. + +It was an unpainted building, partly of log. In the dining room half a +dozen men waited silently for food. Lannis saluted all, named his +comrade, and seated himself. + +A delicious odour of johnny-cake pervaded the room. Presently Eve +Strayer appeared with the dinner. + +There was dew on her pale forehead--the heat of the kitchen, no doubt. +The girl's thick, lustrous hair was brownish gold, and so twisted up +that it revealed her ears and a very white neck. + +When she brought Stormont his dinner he caught her eyes a +moment--experienced a slight shock of pleasure at their intense +blue--the gentian-blue of the summer zenith at midday. + +Lannis remained affable, even became jocose at moments: + +"No hootch for dinner, Mike? How's that, now?" + +"The Boot-leg Express is a day late," replied Clinch, with cold humour. + +Around the table ran an odd sound--a company of catamounts feeding might +have made such a noise--if catamounts ever laugh. + +"How's the fur market, Jake?" inquired Lannis, pouring gravy over his +mashed potato. + +Kloon quoted prices with an oath. + +A mean-visaged young man named Leverett complained of the price of +traps. + +"What do you care?" inquired Lannis genially. "The other man pays. What +are you kicking about, anyway? It wasn't so long ago that muskrats were +ten cents." + +The trooper's good-humoured intimation that Earl Leverett took fur in +other men's traps was not lost on the company. Leverett's fox visage +reddened; Jake Kloon, who had only one eye, glared at the State Trooper +but said nothing. + +Clinch's pale gaze met the trooper's smiling one: "The jays and +squirrels talk too," he said slowly. "It don't mean anything. Only the +show-down counts." + +"You're quite right, Clinch. The show-down is what we pay to see. But +talk is the tune the orchestra plays before the curtain rises." + +Stormont had finished dinner. He heard a low, charming voice from behind +his chair: + +"Apple pie, lemon pie, maple cake, berry roll." + +He looked up into two gentian-blue eyes. + +"Lemon pie, please," he said, blushing. + + * * * * * + +When dinner was over and the bare little dining room empty except for +Clinch and the two State Troopers, the former folded his heavy, powerful +hands on the table's edge and turned his square face and pale-eyed gaze +on Lannis. + +"Spit it out," he said in a passionless voice. + +Lannis crossed one knee over the other, lighted a cigarette: + +"Is there a young fellow working for you named Hal Smith?" + +"No," said Clinch. + +"Sure?" + +"Sure." + +"Clinch," continued Lannis, "have you heard about a stick-up on the +wood-road out of Ghost Lake?" + +"No." + +"Well, a wealthy tourist from New York--a Mr. Sard, stopping at Ghost +Lake Inn--was held up and robbed last Saturday toward sundown." + +"Never heard of him," said Clinch, calmly. + +"The robber took four thousand dollars in bills and some private papers +from him." + +"It's no skin off my shins," remarked Clinch. + +"He's laid a complaint." + +"Yes?" + +"Have any strangers been here since Saturday evening?" + +"No." + +There was a pause. + +"We heard you had a new man named Hal Smith working around your place." + +"No." + +"He came here Saturday night." + +"Who says so?" + +"A guide from Ghost Lake." + +"He's a liar." + +"You know," said Lannis, "it won't do you any good if hold-up men can +hide here and make a getaway." + +"G'wan and search," said Clinch, calmly. + + * * * * * + +They searched the "hotel" from garret to cellar. They searched the barn, +boat-shed, out-houses. + +While this was going on, Clinch went into the kitchen. + +"Eve," he said coolly, "the State Troopers are after that fellow, Hal +Smith, who came here Saturday night. Where is he?" + +"He went into Harrod's to get us a deer," she replied in a low voice. +"What has he done?" + +"Stuck up a man on the Ghost Lake road. He ought to have told me. Do you +think you could meet up with him and tip him off?" + +"He's hunting on Owl Marsh. I'll try." + +"All right. Change your clothes and slip out the back door. And look out +for Harrod's patrols, too." + +"All right, dad," she said. "If I have to be out to-night, don't worry. +I'll get word to Smith somehow." + +Half an hour later Lannis and Stormont returned from a prowl around the +clearing. Lannis paid the reckoning; his comrade led out the horses. He +said again to Lannis: + +"I'm sure it was the girl. She wore men's clothes and she went into the +woods on a run." + +As they started to ride away, Lannis said to Clinch, who stood on the +veranda: + +"It's still blue-jay and squirrel talk between us, Mike, but the +show-down is sure to come. Better go straight while the going's good." + +"I go straight enough to suit me," said Clinch. + +"But it's the Government that is to be suited, Mike. And if it gets you +right you'll be in dutch." + +"Don't let that worry you," said Clinch. + + * * * * * + +About three o'clock the two State Troopers, riding at a walk, came to +the forks of the Ghost Lake road. + +"Now," said Lannis to Stormont, "if you really believe you saw the girl +beat it out of the back door and take to the woods, she's probably +somewhere in there----" he pointed into the western forest. "But," he +added, "what's your idea in following her?" + +"She wore men's clothes; she was in a hurry and trying to keep out of +sight. I wondered whether Clinch might have sent her to warn this +hold-up fellow." + +"That's rather a long shot, isn't it?" + +"Very long. I could go in and look about a bit, if you'll lead my +horse." + +"All right. Take your bearings. This road runs west to Ghost Lake. We +sleep at the Inn there--if you mean to cross the woods on foot." + +Stormont nodded, consulted his map and compass, pocketed both, unbuckled +his spurs. + +When he was ready he gave his bridle to Lannis. + +"I'd just like to see what she's up to," he remarked. + +"All right. If you miss me come to the Inn," said Lannis, starting on +with the led horse. + + * * * * * + +The forest was open amid a big stand of white pine and hemlock, and +Stormont travelled easily and swiftly. He had struck a line by compass +that must cross the direction taken by Eve Strayer when she left +Clinch's. But it was a wild chance that he would ever run across her. + +And probably he never would have if the man that she was looking for had +not fired a shot on the edge of that vast maze of stream, morass and +dead timber called Owl Marsh. + +Far away in the open forest Stormont heard the shot and turned in that +direction. + +But Eve already was very near when the young man who called himself Hal +Smith fired at one of Harrod's deer--a three-prong buck on the edge of +the dead water. + + * * * * * + +Smith had drawn and dressed the buck by the time the girl found him. + +He was cleaning up when she arrived, squatting by the water's edge when +he heard her voice across the swale: + +"Smith! The State Troopers are looking for you!" + +He stood up, dried his hands on his breeches. The girl picked her way +across the bog, jumping from one tussock to the next. + +When she told him what had happened he began to laugh. + +"Did you really stick up this man?" she asked incredulously. + +"I'm afraid I did, Eve," he replied, still laughing. + +The girl's entire expression altered. + +"So that's the sort you are," she said. "I thought you different. But +you're all a rotten lot----" + +"Hold on," he interrupted, "what do you mean by that?" + +"I mean that the only men who ever come to Star Pond are crooks," she +retorted bitterly. "I didn't believe you were. You look decent. But +you're as crooked as the rest of them--and it seems as if I--I couldn't +stand it--any longer----" + +"If you think me so rotten, why did you run all the way from Clinch's to +warn me?" he asked curiously. + +"I didn't do it for _you_; I did it for my father. They'll jail him if +they catch him hiding you. They've got it in for him. If they put him in +prison he'll die. He couldn't stand it. I _know_. And that's why I came +to find you and tell you to clear out----" + +The distant crack of a dry stick checked her. The next instant she +picked up his rifle, seized his arm, and fairly dragged him into a +spruce thicket. + +"Do you want to get my father into trouble!" she said fiercely. + +The rocky flank of Star Peak bordered the marsh here. + +"Come on," she whispered, jerking him along through the thicket and up +the rocks to a cleft--a hole in the sheer rock overhung by shaggy +hemlock. + +"Get in there," she said breathlessly. + +"Whoever comes," he protested, "will see the buck yonder, and will +certainly look in here----" + +"Not if I go down there and take your medicine. Creep into that cave and +lie down." + +"What do you intend to do?" he demanded, interested and amused. + +"If it's one of Harrod's game-keepers," said the girl drily, "it only +means a summons and a fine for me. And if it's a State Trooper, who is +prowling in the woods yonder hunting crooks, he'll find nobody here but +a trespasser. Keep quiet. I'll stand him off." + + +IV + +When State Trooper Stormont came out on the edge of Owl Marsh, the girl +was kneeling by the water, washing deer blood from her slender, +sun-tanned fingers. + +"What are you doing here?" she enquired, looking up over her shoulder +with a slight smile. + +"Just having a look around," he said pleasantly. "That's a nice fat buck +you have there." + +"Yes, he's nice." + +"You shot him?" asked Stormont. + +"Who else do you suppose shot him?" she enquired, smilingly. She rinsed +her fingers again and stood up, swinging her arms to dry her hands,--a +lithe, grey-shirted figure in her boyish garments, straight, supple, and +strong. + +"I saw you hurrying into the woods," said Stormont. + +"Yes, I was in a hurry. We need meat." + +"I didn't notice that you carried a rifle when I saw you leave the +house--by the back door." + +"No; it was in the woods," she said indifferently. + +"You have a hiding place for your rifle?" + +"For other things, also," she said, letting her eyes of gentian-blue +rest on the young man. + +"You seem to be very secretive." + +"Is a girl more so than a man?" she asked smilingly. + +Stormont smiled too, then became grave. + +"Who else was here with you?" he asked quietly. + +She seemed surprised. "Did you see anybody else?" + +He hesitated, flushed, pointed down at the wet sphagnum. Smith's +foot-prints were there in damning contrast to her own. Worse than that, +Smith's pipe lay on an embedded log, and a rubber tobacco pouch beside +it. + +She said with a slight catch in her breath: "It seems that somebody has +been here.... Some hunter, perhaps,--or a game warden...." + +"Or Hal Smith," said Stormont. + +A painful colour swept the girl's face and throat. The man, sorry for +her, looked away. + +After a silence: "I know something about you," he said gently. "And now +that I've seen you--heard you speak--met your eyes--I know enough about +you to form an opinion.... So I don't ask you to turn informer. But the +law won't stand for what Clinch is doing--whatever provocation he has +had. And he must not aid or abet any criminal, or harbour any +malefactor." + +The girl's features were expressionless. The passive, sullen beauty of +her troubled the trooper. + +"Trouble for Clinch means sorrow for you," he said. "I don't want you +to be unhappy. I bear Clinch no ill will. For this reason I ask him, and +I ask you too, to stand clear of this affair. + +"Hal Smith is wanted. I'm here to take him." + +As she said nothing, he looked down at the foot-print in the sphagnum. +Then his eyes moved to the next imprint; to the next. Then he moved +slowly along the water's edge, tracking the course of the man he was +following. + +The girl watched him in silence until the plain trail led him to the +spruce thicket. + +"Don't go in there!" she said sharply, with an odd tremor in her voice. + +He turned and looked at her, then stepped calmly into the thicket. And +the next instant she was among the spruces, too, confronting him with +her rifle. + +"Get out of these woods!" she said. + +He looked into the girl's deathly white face. + +"Eve," he said, "it will go hard with you if you kill me. I don't want +you to live out your life in prison." + +"I can't help it. If you send my father to prison he'll die. I'd rather +die myself. Let us alone, I tell you! The man you're after is nothing to +us. We didn't know he had stuck up anybody!" + +"If he's nothing to you, why do you point that rifle at me?" + +"I tell you he is nothing to us. But my father wouldn't betray a dog. +And I won't. That's all. Now get out of these woods and come back +to-morrow. Nobody'll interfere with you then." + +Stormont smiled: "Eve," he said, "do you really think me as yellow as +that?" + +Her blue eyes flashed a terrible warning, but, in the same instant, he +had caught her rifle, twisting it out of her grasp as it exploded. + +The detonation dazed her; then, as he flung the rifle into the water, +she caught him by neck and belt and flung him bodily into the spruces. + +But she fell with him; he held her twisting and struggling with all her +superb and supple strength; staggered to his feet, still mastering her; +and, as she struggled, sobbing, locked hot and panting in his arms, he +snapped a pair of handcuffs on her wrists and flung her aside. + +She fell on both knees, got up, shoulder deep in spruce, blood running +from her lip over her chin. + +The trooper took her by the arm. She was trembling all over. He took a +thin steel chain and padlock from his pocket, passed the links around +her steel-bound wrists, and fastened her to a young birch tree. + +Then, drawing his pistol from its holster, he went swiftly forward +through the spruces. + +When he saw the cleft in the rocky flank of Star Peak, he walked +straight to the black hole which confronted him. + +"Come out of there," he said distinctly. + +After a few seconds Smith came out. + +"Good God!" said Stormont in a low voice. "What are you doing here, +Darragh?" + +Darragh came close and rested one hand on Stormont's shoulder: + +"Don't crab my game, Stormont. I never dreamed you were in the +Constabulary or I'd have let you know." + +"Are _you_ Hal Smith?" + +"I sure am. Where's that girl?" + +"Handcuffed out yonder." + +"Then for God's sake go back and act as if you hadn't found me. Tell +Mayor Chandler that I'm after bigger game than he is." + +"Clinch?" + +"Stormont, I'm here to _protect_ Mike Clinch. Tell the Mayor not to +touch him. The men I'm after are going to try to rob him. I don't want +them to because--well, I'm going to rob him myself." + +Stormont stared. + +"You must stand by me," said Darragh. "So must the Mayor. He knows me +through and through. Tell him to forget that hold-up. I stopped that man +Sard. I frisked him. Tell the Mayor. I'll keep in touch with him." + +"Of course," said Stormont, "that settles it." + +"Thanks, old chap. Now go back to that girl and let her believe that you +never found me." + +A slight smile touched their eyes. Both instinctively saluted. Then they +shook hands; Darragh, alias Hal Smith, went back into the hemlock-shaded +hole in the rocks; Trooper Stormont walked slowly down through the +spruces. + +When Eve saw him returning empty handed, something flashed in her pallid +face like sunlight across snow. + +Stormont passed her, went to the water's edge, soaked a spicy handful of +sphagnum moss in the icy water, came back and wiped the blood from her +face. + +The girl seemed astounded; her face surged in vivid colour as he +unlocked the handcuffs and pocketed them and the little steel chain. + +Her lip was bleeding again. He washed it with wet moss, took a clean +handkerchief from the breast of his tunic and laid it against her mouth. + +"Hold it there," he said. + +Mechanically she raised her hand to support the compress. Stormont went +back to the shore, recovered her rifle from the shallow water, and +returned with it. + +As she made no motion to take it, he stood it against the tree to which +he had tied her. + +Then he came close to her where she stood holding his handkerchief +against her mouth and looking at him out of steady eyes as deeply blue +as gentian blossoms. + +"Eve," he said, "you win. But you won't forgive me.... I wish we could +be friends, some day.... We never can, now.... Good-bye." + +Neither spoke again. Then, of a sudden, the girl's eyes filled; and +Trooper Stormont caught her free hand and kissed it;--kissed it again +and again,--dropped it and went striding away through the underbrush +which was now all rosy with the rays of sunset. + + * * * * * + +After he had disappeared, the girl, Eve, went to the cleft in the rocks +above. + +"Come out," she said contemptuously. "It's a good thing you hid, because +there was a real man after you; and God help you if he ever finds you!" + +Hal Smith came out. + +"Pack in your meat," said the girl curtly, and flung his rifle across +her shoulder. + +Through the ruddy afterglow she led the way homeward, a man's +handkerchief pressed to her wounded mouth, her eyes preoccupied with +the strangest thoughts that ever had stirred her virgin mind. + +Behind her walked Darragh with his load of venison and his alias,--and +his tongue in his cheek. + +Thus began the preliminaries toward the ultimate undoing of Mike Clinch. +Fate, Chance, and Destiny had undertaken the job in earnest. + + + + +EPISODE TWO + +THE RULING PASSION + + +I + +Nobody understood how José Quintana had slipped through the Secret +Service net spread for him at every port. + +The United States authorities did not know why Quintana had come to +America. They realised merely that he arrived for no good purpose; and +they had meant to arrest and hold him for extradition if requested; for +deportation as an undesirable alien anyway. + +Only two men in America knew that Quintana had come to the United States +for the purpose of recovering the famous "Flaming Jewel," stolen by him +from the Grand Duchess Theodorica of Esthonia; and stolen from Quintana, +in turn, by a private soldier in an American Forestry Regiment, on leave +in Paris. This soldier's name, probably, was Michael Clinch. + +One of the men who knew why Quintana might come to America was James +Darragh, recently of the Military Intelligence, but now passing as a +hold-up man under the name of Hal Smith, and actually in the employment +of Clinch at his disreputable "hotel" at Star Pond in the North Woods. + +The other man who knew why Quintana had come to America was Emanuel +Sard, a Levantine diamond broker of New York, Quintana's agent in +America. + + * * * * * + +Now, as the October days passed without any report of Quintana's +detention, Darragh, known as Hal Smith at Clinch's dump, began to +suspect that Quintana had already slid into America through the meshes +of the police. + +If so, this desperate international criminal could be expected at +Clinch's under some guise or other, piloted thither by Emanuel Sard. + +So Hal Smith, whose duty was to wash dishes, do chores, and also to +supply Clinch's with "mountain beef"--or deer taken illegally--made it +convenient to prowl every day in the vicinity of the Ghost Lake road. + +He was perfectly familiar with Emanuel Sard's squat features and parrot +nose, having robbed Mr. Sard of Quintana's cipher and of $4,000 at +pistol point. And one morning, while roving around the guide's quarters +at Ghost Lake Inn, Smith beheld Sard himself on the hotel veranda, in +company with five strangers of foreign aspect. + +During the midday dinner Smith, on pretense of enquiring for a guide's +license, got a look at the Inn ledger. Sard's signature was on it, +followed by the names of Henri Picquet, Nicolas Salzar, Victor +Georgiades, Harry Beck, and José Sanchez. And Smith went back through +the wilderness to Star Pond, convinced that one of these gentlemen was +Quintana, and the remainder, Quintana's gang; and that they were here to +do murder if necessary in their remorseless quest of "The Flaming +Jewel." Two million dollars once had been offered for the Flaming Jewel; +and had been refused. + +Clinch probably possessed it. Smith was now convinced of that. But he +was there to rob Clinch of it himself. For he had promised the little +Grand Duchess to help recover her Erosite jewel; and now that he had +finally traced its probable possession to Clinch, he was wondering how +this recovery was to be accomplished. + +To arrest Clinch meant ruin to Eve Strayer. Besides he knew now that +Clinch would die in prison before revealing the hiding place of the +Flaming Jewel. + +Also, how could it be proven that Clinch had the Erosite gem? The cipher +from Quintana was not sufficient evidence. + +No; the only way was to watch Clinch, prevent any robbery by Quintana's +gang, somehow discover where the Flaming Jewel had been concealed, take +it, and restore it to the beggared young girl whose only financial +resource now lay in the possible recovery of this almost priceless gem. + + * * * * * + +Toward evening Hal Smith shot two deer near Owl Marsh. To poach on his +own property appealed to his sense of humour. And Clinch, never dreaming +that Hal Smith was the James Darragh who had inherited Harrod's vast +preserve, damned all millionaires for every buck brought in, and became +friendlier to Smith. + + +II + +Clinch's dump was the disposal plant in which collected the human sewage +of the wilderness. + +It being Saturday, the scum of the North Woods was gathering at the Star +Pond resort. A venison and chicken supper was promised--and a dance if +any women appeared. + +Jake Kloon had run in some Canadian hooch; Darragh, alias Hal Smith, +contributed two fat deer and Clinch cooked them. By ten o'clock that +morning many of the men were growing noisy; some were already drunk by +noon. Shortly after midday dinner the first fight started--extinguished +only after Clinch had beaten several of the backwoods aristocracy +insensible. + +Towering amid the wreck of battle, his light grey eyes a-glitter, Clinch +dominated, swinging his iron fists. + +When the combat ended and the fallen lay starkly where they fell, Clinch +said in his pleasant, level voice: + +"Take them out and stick their heads in the pond. And don't go for to +get me mad, boys, or I'm liable to act up rough." + +They bore forth the sleepers for immersion in Star Pond. Clinch +relighted his cigar and repeated the rulings which had caused the +fracas: + +"You gotta play square cards here or you don't play none in my house. No +living thumb-nail can nick no cards in my place and get away with it. +Three kings and two trays is better than three chickens and two eggs. If +you don't like it, g'wan home." + +He went out in his shirt sleeves to see how the knock-outs were +reviving, and met Hal Smith returning from the pond, who reported +progress toward consciousness. They walked back to the "hotel" together. + +"Say, young fella," said Clinch in his soft, agreeable way, "you want to +keep your eye peeled to-night." + +"Why?" inquired Smith. + +"Well, there'll be a lot o' folks here. There'll be strangers, too.... +Don't forget the State Troopers are looking for you." + +"Do the State Troopers ever play detective?" asked Smith, smiling. + +"Sure. They've been in here rigged out like peddlers and lumber-jacks +and timber lookers." + +"Did they ever get anything on you?" + +"Not a thing." + +"Can you always spot them, Mike?" + +"No. But when a stranger shows up here who don't know nobody, he never +sees nothing and he don't never learn nothing. He gets no hootch outa +me. No, nor no craps and no cards. He gets his supper; that's what he +gets ... and a dance, if there's ladies--and if any girl favours him. +That's all the change any stranger gets out of Mike Clinch." + +They had paused on the rough veranda in the hot October sunshine. + +"Mike," suggested Smith carelessly, "wouldn't it pay you better to go +straight?" + +Clinch's small grey eyes, which had been roaming over the prospect of +lake and forest, focussed on Smith's smiling features. + +"What's that to you?" he asked. + +"I'll be out of a job," remarked Smith, laughing, "if they ever land +you." + +Clinch's level gaze measured him; his mind was busy measuring him, too. + +"Who the hell are you, anyway?" he asked. "_I_ don't know. You stick up +a man on the Ghost Lake Road and hide out here when the State Troopers +come after you. And now you ask me if it pays better to go straight. Why +didn't _you_ go straight if you think it pays?" + +"I haven't got a daughter to worry about," explained Smith. "If they get +me it won't hurt anybody else." + +A dull red tinge came out under Clinch's tan: + +"Who asked _you_ to worry about Eve?" + +"She's a fine girl: that's all." + +Clinch's steely glare measured the young man: + +"You trying to make up to her?" he enquired gently. + +"No. She has no use for me." + +Clinch reflected, his cold tiger-gaze still fastened on Smith. + +"You're right," he said after a moment. "Eve is a good girl. Some day +I'll make a lady of her." + +"She _is_ one, Clinch." + +At that Clinch reddened heavily--the first finer emotion ever betrayed +before Smith. He did not say anything for a few moments, but his grim +mouth worked. Finally: + +"I guess you was a gentleman once before you went crooked, Hal," he +said. "You act up like you once was.... Say; there's only one thing on +God's earth I care about. You've guessed it, too." He was off again upon +his ruling passion. + +"Eve," nodded Smith. + +"Sure. She isn't my flesh and blood. But it seems like she's more, even. +I want she should be a lady. It's _all_ I want. That damned millionaire +Harrod bust me. But he couldn't stop me giving Eve her schooling. And +now all I'm livin' for is to be fixed so's to give her money to go to +the city like a lady. I don't care how I make money; all I want is to +make it. And I'm a-going to." + +Smith nodded again. + +Clinch, now obsessed by his monomania, went on with an oath: + +"I can't make no money on the level after what Harrod done to me. And I +gotta fix up Eve. What the hell do you mean by asking me would it pay me +to travel straight I dunno." + +"I was only thinking of Eve. A lady isn't supposed to have a crook for a +father." + +Clinch's grey eyes blazed for a moment, then their menacing glare +dulled, died out into wintry fixity. + +"I wan't born a crook," he said. "I ain't got no choice. And don't +worry, young fella; they ain't a-going to get me." + +"You can't go on beating the game forever, Clinch." + +"I'm beating it----" he hesitated--"and it won't be so long, neither, +before I turn over enough to let Eve live in the city like any lady, +with her autymobile and her own butler and all her swell friends, in a +big house like she is educated for----" + +He broke off abruptly as a procession approached from the lake, +escorting the battered gentry who now were able to wabble about a +little. + +One of them, a fox-faced trap thief named Earl Leverett, slunk hastily +by as though expecting another kick from Clinch. + +"G'wan inside, Earl, and act up right," said Clinch pleasantly. "You +oughter have more sense than to start a fight in my place--you and Sid +Hone and Harvey Chase. G'wan in and behave." + +He and Smith followed the procession of damaged ones into the house. + +The big unpainted room where a bar had once been was blue with cheap +cigar smoke; the air reeked with the stench of beer and spirits. A score +or more shambling forest louts in their dingy Saturday finery were +gathered there playing cards, shooting craps, lolling around tables and +tilting slopping glasses at one another. + +Heavy pleasantries were exchanged with the victims of Clinch's ponderous +fists as they re-entered the room from which they had been borne so +recently, feet first. + +"Now, boys," said Clinch kindly, "act up like swell gents and behave +friendly. And if any ladies come in for the chicken supper, why, gol +dang it, we'll have a dance!" + + +III + +Toward sundown the first woodland nymph appeared--a half-shy, half-bold, +willowy thing in the rosy light of the clearing. + +Hal Smith, washing glasses and dishes on the back porch for Eve Strayer +to dry, asked who the rustic beauty might be. + +"Harvey Chase's sister," said Eve. "She shouldn't come here, but I can't +keep her away and her brother doesn't care. She's only a child, too." + +"Is there any harm in a chicken supper and a dance?" + +Eve looked gravely at young Smith without replying. + +Other girlish shapes loomed in the evening light. Some were met by +gallants, some arrived at the veranda unescorted. + +"Where do they all come from? Do they live in trees like dryads?" asked +Smith. + +"There are always squatters in the woods," she replied indifferently. + +"Some of these girls come from Ghost Lake, I suppose." + +"Yes; waitresses at the Inn." + +"What music is there?" + +"Jim Hastings plays a fiddle. I play the melodeon if they need me." + +"What do you do when there's a fight?" he asked, with a side glance at +her pure profile. + +"What do you suppose I do? Fight, too?" + +He laughed--mirthlessly--conscious always of his secret pity for this +girl. + +"Well," he said, "when your father makes enough to quit, he'll take you +out of this. It's a vile hole for a young girl----" + +"See here," she said, flushing; "you're rather particular for a young +man who stuck up a tourist and robbed him of four thousand dollars." + +"I'm not complaining on my own account," returned Smith, laughing; +"Clinch's suits me." + +"Well, don't concern yourself on my account, Hal Smith. And you'd better +keep out of the dance, too, if there are any strangers there." + +"You think a State Trooper may happen in?" + +"It's likely. A lot of people come and go. We don't always know them." +She opened a sliding wooden shutter and looked into the bar room. After +a moment she beckoned him to her side. + +"There are strangers there now," she said, "--that thin, dark man who +looks like a Kanuk. And those two men shaking dice. I don't know who +they are. I never before saw them." + +But Smith had seen them at Ghost Lake Inn. One of them was Sard. +Quintana's gang had arrived at Clinch's dump. + +A moment later Clinch came through the pantry and kitchen and out onto +the rear porch where Smith was washing glasses in a tub filled from an +ever-flowing spring. + +"I'm a-going to get supper," he said to Eve. "There'll be twenty-three +plates." And to Smith: "Hal--you help Eve wait on the table. And if +anybody acts up rough you slam him on the jaw--don't argue, don't +wait--just slam him good, and I'll come on the hop." + +"Who are the strangers, dad?" asked Eve. + +"Don't nobody know 'em none, girlie. But they ain't State Troopers. They +talk like they was foreign. One of 'em's English--the big, bony one with +yellow hair and mustache." + +"Did they give any names?" asked Smith. + +"You bet. The stout, dark man calls himself Hongri Picket. French, I +guess. The fat beak is a fella named Sard. Sanchez is the guy with a +face like a Canada priest--José Sanchez--or something on that style. And +then the yellow skinned young man is Nicole Salzar; the Britisher, Harry +Beck; and that good lookin' dark gent with a little black Charlie +Chaplin, he's Victor Georgiades." + +"What are those foreigners doing in the North Woods, Clinch?" enquired +Smith. + +"Oh, they all give the same spiel--hire out in a lumber camp. But _they_ +ain't no lumberjacks," added Clinch contemptuously. "I don't know what +they be--hootch runners maybe--or booze bandits--or they done something +crooked som'ers r'other. It's safe to serve 'em drinks." + +Clinch himself had been drinking. He always drank when preparing to +cook. + +He turned and went into the kitchen now, rolling up his shirt sleeves +and relighting his clay pipe. + + +IV + +By nine o'clock the noisy chicken supper had ended; the table had been +cleared; Jim Hastings was tuning his fiddle in the big room; Eve had +seated herself before the battered melodeon. + +"Ladies and gents," said Clinch in his clear, pleasant voice, which +carried through the hubbub, "we're a-going to have a dance--thanks and +beholden to Jim Hastings and my daughter Eve. Eve, she don't drink and +she don't dance, so no use askin' and no hard feelin' toward nobody. + +"So act up pleasant to one and all and have a good time and no rough +stuff in no form, shape or manner, but behave like gents all and swell +dames, like you was to a swarry on Fifth Avenue. Let's go!" + +He went back to the pantry, taking no notice of the cheering. The +fiddler scraped a fox trot, and Eve's melodeon joined in. A vast +scuffling of heavily shod feet filled the momentary silence, accented by +the shrill giggle of young girls. + +"They're off," remarked Clinch to Smith, who stood at the pantry shelf +prepared to serve whiskey or beer upon previous receipt of payment. + +In the event of a sudden raid, the arrangements at Clinch's were quite +simple. Two large drain pipes emerged from the kitchen floor beside +Smith, and ended in Star Pond. In case of alarm the tub of beer was +poured down one pipe; the whiskey down the other. + +Only the trout in Star Pond would ever sample that hootch again. + +Clinch, now slightly intoxicated, leaned heavily on the pantry shelf +beside Smith, adjusting his pistol under his suspenders. + +"Young fella," he said in his agreeable voice, "you're dead right. You +sure said a face-full when you says to me, 'Eve's a lady, by God!' _You_ +oughta know. You was a gentleman yourself once. Even if you take to +stickin' up tourists you know a lady when you see one. And you called +the turn. She _is_ a lady. All I'm livin' for is to get her down to the +city and give her money to live like a lady. I'll do it yet.... Soon!... +I'd do it to-morrow--to-night--if I dared.... If I thought it sure +fire.... If I was dead certain I could get away with it.... I've _got_ +the money. _Now!_ ... Only it ain't in _money_.... Smith?" + +"Yes, Mike." + +"You know me?" + +"Sure." + +"You size me up?" + +"I do." + +"All right. If you ever tell anyone I got money that ain't money I'll +shoot you through the head." + +"Don't worry, Clinch." + +"I ain't. You're a crook; you won't talk. You're a gentleman, too. +_They_ don't sell out a pal. Say, Hal, there's only one fella I don't +want to meet." + +"Who's that, Mike?" + +"Lemme tell you," continued Clinch, resting more heavily on the shelf +while Smith, looking out through the pantry shutter at the dancing, +listened intently. + +"When I was in France in a Forestry Rig'ment," went on Clinch, lowering +his always pleasant voice, "I was to Paris on leave a few days before +they sent us home. + +"I was in the washroom of a caffy--a-cleanin' up for supper, when +dod-bang! into the place comes a-tumblin' a man with two cops pushing +and kickin' him. + +"They didn't see me in there for they locked the door on the man. He was +a swell gent, too, in full dress and silk hat and all like that, and a +opry cloak and white kid gloves, and mustache and French beard. + +"When they locked him up he stood stock still and lit a cigarette, as +cool as ice. Then he begun walkin' around looking for a way to get out; +but there wasn't no way. + +"Then he seen me and over he comes and talks English right away: 'Want +to make a thousand francs, soldier?' sez he in a quick whisper. 'You're +on,' sez I; 'show your dough.' 'Them Flics has went to get the +Commissaire for to frisk me,' sez he. 'If they find this parcel on me I +do twenty years in Noumea. Five years kills anybody out there.' 'What do +you want I should do?' sez I, havin' no love for no cops, French or +other. 'Take this packet and stick it in your overcoat,' sez he. 'Go to +13 roo Quinze Octobre and give it to the concierge for José Quintana.' +And he shoves the packet on me and a thousand-franc note. + +"Then he grabs me sudden and pulls open my collar. God, he was strong. + +"'What's the matter with you?' says I. 'Lemme go or I'll mash your mug +flat.' 'Lemme see your identification disc,' he barks. + +"Bein' in Paris for a bat, I had exchanged with my bunkie, Bill Hanson. +'Let him look,' thinks I; and he reads Bill's check. + +"'If you fool me,' says he, 'I'll folly ye and I'll do you in if it +takes the rest of my life. You understand?' 'Sure,' says I, me tongue in +me cheek. 'Bong! Allez vous en!' says he. + +"'How the hell,' sez I, 'do I get out of here?' 'You're a Yankee +soldier. The Flics don't know you were in here. You go and kick on that +door and make a holler.' + +"So I done it good; and a cop opens and swears at me, but when he sees a +Yankee soldier was locked in the wash-room by mistake, he lets me out, +you bet." + +Clinch smiled a thin smile, poured out three fingers of hooch. + +"What else?" asked Smith quietly. + +"Nothing much. I didn't go to no roo Quinze Octobre. But I don't never +want to see that fella Quintana. I've been waiting till it's safe to +sell--what was in that packet." + +"Sell what?" + +"What was in that packet," replied Clinch thickly. + +"What was in it?" + +"Sparklers--since you're so nosey." + +"Diamonds?" + +"And then some. I dunno what they're called. All I know is I'll croak +Quintana if he even turns up askin' for 'em. He frisked somebody. I +frisked him. I'll kill anybody who tries to frisk me." + +"Where do you keep them?" enquired Smith naïvely. + +Clinch looked at him, very drunk: "None o' your dinged business," he +said very softly. + +The dancing had become boisterous but not unseemly, although all the men +had been drinking too freely. + +Smith closed the pantry bar at midnight, by direction of Eve. Now he +came out into the ballroom and mixed affably with the company, even +dancing with Harvey Chase's sister once--a slender hoyden, all flushed +and dishevelled, with a tireless mania for dancing which seemed to +intoxicate her. + +She danced, danced, danced, accepting any partner offered. But Smith's +skill enraptured her and she refused to let him go when her beau, a late +arrival, one Charlie Berry, slouched up to claim her. + +Smith, always trying to keep Clinch and Quintana's men in view, took no +part in the discussion; but Berry thought he was detaining Lily Chase +and pushed him aside. + +"Hold on, young man!" exclaimed Smith sharply. "Keep your hands to +yourself. If your girl don't want to dance with you she doesn't have +to." + +Some of Quintana's gang came up to listen. Berry glared at Smith. + +"Say," he said, "I seen you before somewhere. Wasn't you in Russia?" + +"What are you talking about?" + +"Yes, you was. You was an officer! What you doing at Clinch's?" + +"What's that?" growled Clinch, shoving his way forward and shouldering +the crowd aside. + +"Who's this man, Mike?" demanded Berry. + +"Well, who do you think he is?" asked Clinch thickly. + +"I think he's gettin' the goods on you, that's what I think," yelled +Berry. + +"G'wan home, Charlie," returned Clinch. "G'wan, all o' you. The dance is +over. Go peaceable, every one. Stop that fiddle!" + +The music ceased. The dance was ended; they all understood that; but +there was grumbling and demands for drinks. + +Clinch, drunk but impassive, herded them through the door out into the +starlight. There was scuffling, horse-play, but no fighting. + +The big Englishman, Harry Beck, asked for accommodations for his party +over night. + +"Naw," said Clinch, "g'wan back to the Inn. I can't bother with you +folks to-night." And as the others, Salzar, Georgiades, Picquet and +Sanchez gathered about to insist, Clinch pushed them all out of doors in +a mass. + +"Get the hell out o' here!" he growled; and slammed the door. + +He stood for a moment with head lowered, drunk, but apparently capable +of reflection. Eve came from the melodeon and laid one slim hand on his +arm. + +"Go to bed, girlie," he said, not looking at her. + +"You also, dad." + +"No.... I got business with Hal Smith." + +Passing Smith, the girl whispered: "You look out for him and undress +him." + +Smith nodded, gravely preoccupied with coming events, and nerving +himself to meet them. + +He had no gun. Clinch's big automatic bulged under his armpit. + +When the girl had ascended the creaking stairs and her door, above, +closed, Clinch walked unsteadily to the door, opened it, fished out his +pistol. + +"Come on out," he said without turning. + +"Where?" enquired Smith. + +Clinched turned, lifted his square head; and the deadly glare in his +eyes left Smith silent. + +"You comin'?" + +"Sure," said Smith quietly. + +But Clinch gave him no chance to close in: it was death even to swerve. +Smith walked slowly out into the starlight, ahead of Clinch--slowly +forward in the luminous darkness. + +"Keep going," came Clinch's quiet voice behind him. And, after they had +entered the woods,--"Bear to the right." + +Smith knew now. The low woods were full of sink-holes. They were headed +for the nearest one. + + * * * * * + +On the edge of the thing they halted. Smith turned and faced Clinch. + +"What's the idea?" he asked without a quaver. + +"Was you in Roosia?" + +"Yes." + +"Was you an officer?" + +"I was." + +"Then you're spyin'. You're a cop." + +"You're mistaken." + +"Ah, don't hand me none like that! You're a State Trooper or a Secret +Service guy, or a plain, dirty cop. And I'm a-going to croak you." + +"I'm not in any service, now." + +"Wasn't you an army officer?" + +"Yes. Can't an officer go wrong?" + +"Soft stuff. Don't feed it to me. I told you too much anyway. I was +babblin' drunk. I'm drunk now, but I got sense. D'you think I'll run +chances of sittin' in State's Prison for the next ten years and leave +Eve out here alone? No. I gotta shoot you, Smith. And I'm a-going to do +it. G'wan and say what you want ... if you think there's some kind o' +god you can square before you croak." + +"If you go to the chair for murder, what good will it do Eve?" asked +Smith. His lips were crackling dry; he moistened them. + +"Sink holes don't talk," said Clinch. "G'wan and square yourself, if +you're the church kind." + +"Clinch," said Smith unsteadily, "if you kill me now you're as good as +dead yourself. Quintana is here." + +"Say, don't hand me that," retorted Clinch. "Do you square yourself or +no?" + +"I tell you Quintana's gang were at the dance to-night--Picquet, Salzar, +Georgiades, Sard, Beck, José Sanchez--the one who looks like a French +priest. Maybe he had a beard when you saw him in that café +wash-room----" + +"What!" shouted Clinch in sudden fury. "What yeh talkin' about, you poor +dumb dingo! Yeh fixin' to scare me? What do _you_ know about Quintana? +Are you one of Quintana's gang, too? Is that what you're up to, hidin' +out at Star Pond. Come on, now, out with it! I'll have it all out of you +now, Hal Smith, before I plug you----" + +He came lurching forward, swinging his heavy pistol as though he meant +to brain his victim, but he halted after the first step or two and stood +there, a shadowy bulk, growling, enraged, undecided. + +And, as Smith looked at him, two shadows detached themselves from the +trees behind Clinch--silently--silently glided behind--struck in utter +silence. + +Down crashed Clinch, black-jacked, his face in the ooze. His pistol flew +from his hand, struck Smith's leg; and Smith had it at the same instant +and turned it like lightning on the murderous shadows. + +"Hands up! Quick!" he cried, at bay now, and his back to the sink-hole. + +Pistol levelled, he bent one knee, pushed Clinch over on his back, lest +the ooze suffocate him. + +"Now," he said coolly, "what do you bums want of Mike Clinch?" + +"Who are you?" came a sullen voice. "This is none o' your bloody +business. We want Clinch, not you." + +"What do you want of Clinch?" + +"Take your gun off us!" + +"Answer, or I'll let go at you. What do you want of Clinch?" + +"Money. What do you think?" + +"You're here to stick up Clinch?" enquired Smith. + +"Yes. What's that to you?" + +"What has Clinch done to you?" + +"He stuck _us_ up, that's what! Now, are you going to keep out of this?" + +"No." + +"We ain't going to hurt Clinch." + +"You bet you're not. Where's the rest of your gang?" + +"What gang?" + +"Quintana's," said Smith, laughing. A wild exhilaration possessed him. +His flanks and rear were protected by the sink-hole. He had Quintana's +gang--two of them--over his pistol. + +"Turn your backs and sit down," he said. As the shadowy forms hesitated, +he picked up a stick and hurled it at them. They sat down hastily, hands +up, backs toward him. + +"You'll both die where you sit," remarked Smith, "if you yell for help." + +Clinch sighed heavily, stirred, groped on the damp leaves with his +hands. + +"I say," began the voice which Smith identified as Harry Beck's, "if +you'll come in with us on this it will pay you, young man." + +"No," drawled Smith, "I'll go it alone." + +"It can't be done, old dear. You'll see if you try it on." + +"Who'll stop me? Quintana?" + +"Come," urged Beck, "and be a good pal. You can't manage it alone. We've +got all night to make Clinch talk. We know how, too. You'll get your +share----" + +"Oh, stow it," said Smith, watching Clinch, who was reviving. He sat up +presently, and put both hands over his head. Smith touched him silently +on the shoulder and he turned his heavy, square head in a dazed way. +Blood striped his visage. He gazed dully at Smith for a little while, +then, seeming to recollect, the old glare began to light his pale eyes. + +The next instant, however, Beck spoke again, and Clinch turned in +astonishment and saw the two figures sitting there with backs toward +Smith and hands up. + +Clinch stared at the squatting forms, then slowly moved his head and +looked at Smith and his levelled pistol. + +"We know how to make a man squeal," said Harry Beck suddenly. "He'll +talk. We can make Clinch talk, no fear! Leave it to us, old pal. Are you +with us?" He started to look around over his shoulder and Smith hurled +another stick and hit him in the face. + +"Quiet there, Harry," he said. "What's my share if I go in with you?" + +"One sixth, same's we all get." + +"What's it worth?" asked Smith, with a motion of caution toward Clinch. + +"If I say a million you'll tell me I lie. But it's nearer three--or you +can have my share. Is it a go?" + +"You'll not hurt Clinch when he comes to?" + +"We'll make him talk, that's all. It may hurt him some." + +"You won't kill him?" + +"I swear by God----" + +"Wait! Isn't it better to shoot him after he squeals? Here's a lovely +sink-hole handy." + +"Right-o! We'll make him talk first and then shove him in. Are you with +us?" + +"If you turn your head I'll blow the face off you, Harry," said Smith, +cautioning Clinch to silence with a gesture. + +"All right. Only you better make up your mind. That cove is likely to +wake up now at any time," grumbled Beck. + +Clinch looked at Smith. The latter smiled, leaned over, and whispered: + +"Can you walk all right?" + +Clinch nodded. + +"Well, we'd better beat it. Quintana's whole gang is in these woods, +somewhere, hunting for you, and they might stumble on us here, at any +moment." And, to the two men in front: "Lie down flat on your faces. +Don't stir; don't speak; or it's you for the sink-hole.... Lie down, I +tell you! That's it. Don't move till I tell you to." + +Clinch got up from where he was sitting, cast one murderous glance at +the prostrate forms, then followed Smith, noiselessly, over the stretch +of sphagnum moss. + + * * * * * + +When they reached the house they saw Eve standing on the steps in her +night-dress and bare feet, holding a lantern. + +"Daddy," she whimpered, "I was frightened. I didn't know where you had +gone----" + +Clinch put his arm around her, turned his bloody face and looked at +Smith. + +"It's _this_," he said, "that I ain't forgetting, young fella. What you +done for me you done for _her_. + +"I gotta live to make a lady of her. That's why," he added thickly, "I'm +much obliged to you, Hal Smith.... Go to bed, girlie----" + +"You're bleeding, dad?" + +"Aw, a twig scratched me. I been in the woods with Hal. G'wan to bed." + +He went to the sink and washed his face, dried it, kissed the girl, and +gave her a gentle shove toward the stairs. + +"Hal and I is sittin' up talkin' business," he remarked, bolting the +door and all the shutters. + + * * * * * + +When the girl had gone, Clinch went to a closet and brought back two +Winchester rifles, two shot guns, and a box of ammunition. + +"Goin' to see it out with me, Hal?" + +"Sure," smiled Smith. + +"Aw' right. Have a drink?" + +"No." + +"Aw' right. Where'll you set?" + +"Anywhere." + +"Aw' right. Set over there. They may try the back porch. I'll jest set +here a spell, n'then I'll kind er mosey 'round.... Plug the first fella +that tries a shutter, Hal." + +"You bet." + +Clinch came over and held out his hand. + +"You said a face-full that time when you says to me, 'Clinch,' you says, +'Eve _is_ a lady.' ... I gotta fix her up. I gotta be alive to do it.... +That's why I'm greatly obliged to yeh, Hal." + +He took his rifle and walked slowly toward the pantry. + +"You bet," he muttered, "she _is_ a lady, so help me God." + + + + +EPISODE THREE + +ON STAR PEAK + + +I + +Mike Clinch regarded the jewels taken from José Quintana as legitimate +loot acquired in war. + +He was prepared to kill anybody who attempted to take the gems from him. + +At the very possibility his ruling passion blazed--his mania to make of +Eve Strayer a grand lady. + +But now, what he had feared for years had happened. Quintana had found +him,--Quintana, after all these years, had discovered the identity and +dwelling place of the obscure American soldier who had robbed him in the +wash-room of a Paris café. And Quintana was now in America, here in this +very wilderness, tracking the man who had despoiled him. + + * * * * * + +Clinch, in his shirt-sleeves, carrying a rifle, came out on the log +veranda and sat down to think it over. + +He began to realise that he was likely to have trouble with a man as +cold-blooded and as dogged as himself. + +Nor did he doubt that those with Quintana were desperate men. + +On whom could he count? On nobody unless he paid their hire. None among +the lawless men who haunted his backwoods "hotel" at Star Pond would +lift a finger to help him. Almost any among them would have robbed +him,--murdered him, probably,--if it were known that jewels were hidden +in the house. + +He could not trust Jake Kloon; Leverett was as treacherous as only a +born coward can be; Sid Hone, Harvey Chase, Blommers, Byron +Hastings,--he knew them all too well to trust them,--a sullen, +unscrupulous pack, partly cowardly, always fierce,--as are any creatures +that live furtively, feed only by their wits, and slink through life +just outside the frontiers of law. + +And yet, one of this gang had stood by him--Hal Smith--the man he +himself had been about to slay. + +Clinch got up from the bench where he had been sitting and walked down +to the pond where Hal Smith sat cleaning trout. + +"Hal," he said, "I been figuring some. Quintana don't dare call in the +constables. I can't afford to. Quintana and I've got to settle this on +our own." + +Smith slit open a ten-inch trout, stripped it, flung the entrails out +into the pond, soused the fish in water, and threw it into a milk pan. + +"Whose jewels were they in the beginning?" he enquired carelessly. + +"How do I know?" + +"If you ever found out----" + +"I don't want to. I got them in the war, anyway. And it don't make no +difference how I got 'em; Eve's going to be a lady if I go to the chair +for it. So that's that." + +Smith slit another trout, gutted it, flung away the viscera but laid +back the roe. + +"Shame to take them in October," he remarked, "but people must eat." + +"Same's me," nodded Clinch; "I don't want to kill no one, but Eve she's +gotta be a lady and ride in her own automobile with the proudest." + +"Does Eve know about the jewels?" + +Clinch's pale eyes, which had been roving over the wooded shores of Star +Pond, reverted to Smith. + +"I'd cut my throat before I'd tell her," he said softly. + +"She wouldn't stand for it?" + +"Hal, when you said to me, 'Eve's a lady, by God!' you swallered the +hull pie. That's the answer. A lady don't stand for what you and I don't +bother about." + +"Suppose she learns that you robbed the man who robbed somebody else of +these jewels." + +Clinch's pale eyes were fixed on him: "Only you and me know," he said in +his pleasant voice. + +"Quintana knows. His gang knows." + +Clinch's smile was terrifying. "I guess she ain't never likely to know +nothing, Hal." + +"What do you purpose to do, Mike?" + +"Still hunt." + +"For Quintana?" + +"I might mistake him for a deer. Them accidents is likely, too." + +"If Quintana catches you it will go hard with you, Mike." + +"Sure. I know." + +"He'll torture you to make you talk." + +"You think I'd talk, Hal?" + +Smith looked up into the light-coloured eyes. The pupils were pin +points. Then he went on cleaning fish. + +"Hal?" + +"What?" + +"If they get me,--but no matter; they ain't a-going to get me." + +"Were you going to tell me where those jewels are hidden, Mike?" +enquired the young man, still busy with his fish. He did not look around +when he spoke. Clinch's murderous gaze was fastened on the back of his +head. + +"Don't go to gettin' too damn nosey, Hal," he said in his always +agreeable voice. + +Smith soused all the fish in water again: "You'd better tell somebody if +you go gunning for Quintana." + +"Did I ask your advice?" + +"You did not," said the young man, smiling. + +"All right. Mind your business." + +Smith got up from the water's edge with his pan of trout: + +"That's what I shall do, Mike," he said, laughing. "So go on with your +private war; it's no button off _my_ pants if Quintana gets you." + +He went away toward the ice-house with the trout. Eve Strayer, doing +chamber work, watched the young man from an upper room. + +The girl's instinct was to like Smith,--but that very instinct aroused +her distrust. What was a man of his breeding and education doing at +Clinch's dump? Why was he content to hang around and do chores? A man of +his type who has gone crooked enough to stick up a tourist in an +automobile nourishes higher--though probably perverted--ambitions than a +dollar a day and board. + +She heard Clinch's light step on the uncarpeted stair; went on making +up Smith's bed; and smiled as her step-father came into the room, still +carrying his rifle. + +He had something else in his hand, too,--a flat, thin packet wrapped in +heavy paper and sealed all over with black wax. + +"Girlie," he said, "I want you should do a little errand for me this +morning. If you're spry it won't take long--time to go there and get +back to help with noon dinner." + +"Very well, dad." + +"Go git your pants on, girlie." + +"You want me to go into the woods?" + +"I want you to go to the hole in the rocks under Star Peak and lay this +packet in the hootch cache." + +She nodded, tucked in the sheets, smoothed blanket and pillow with deft +hands, went out to her own room. Clinch seated himself and turned a +blank face to the window. + +It was a sudden decision. He realised now that he couldn't keep the +jewels in his house. War was on with Quintana. The "hotel" would be the +goal for Quintana and his gang. And for Smith, too, if ever temptation +overpowered him. The house was liable to an attempt at robbery any +night, now;--any day, perhaps. It was no place for the packet he had +taken from José Quintana. + +Eve came in wearing grey shirt, breeches, and puttees. Clinch gave her +the packet. + +"What's in it, dad?" she asked smilingly. + +"Don't you get nosey, girlie. Come here." + +She went to him. He put his left arm around her. + +"You like me some, don't you, girlie?" + +"You know it, dad." + +"All right. You're all that matters to me ... since your mother went +and died ... after a year.... That was crool, girlie. Only a year. +Well, I ain't cared none for nobody since--only you, girlie." + +He touched the packet with his forefinger: + +"If I step out, that's yours. But I ain't a-going to step out. Put it +with the hootch. You know how to move that keystone?" + +"Yes, dad." + +"And watch out that no game protector and none of that damn +millionaire's wardens see you in the woods. No, nor none o' these here +fancy State Troopers. You gotta watch out _this_ time, Eve. It means +everything to us--to you, girlie--and to me. Go tip-toe. Lay low, coming +and going. Take a rifle." + +Eve ran to her bed-room and returned with her Winchester and belt. + +"You shoot to kill," said Clinch grimly, "if anyone wants to stop you. +But lay low and you won't need to shoot nobody, girlie. G'wan out the +back way; Hal's in the ice house." + + +II + +Slim and straight as a young boy in her grey shirt and breeches, Eve +continued on lightly through the woods, her rifle over her shoulder, her +eyes of gentian-blue always alert. + +The morning turned warm; she pulled off her soft felt hat, shook out her +clipped curls, stripped open the shirt at her snowy throat where sweat +glimmered like melted frost. + +The forest was lovely in the morning sunlight--lovely and still--save +for the blue-jays--for the summer birds had gone and only birds +destined to a long Northern winter remained. + +Now and then, ahead of her, she saw a ruffed grouse wandering in the +trail. These, and a single tiny grey bird with a dreary note +interminably repeated, were the only living things she saw except here +and there a summer-battered butterfly of the Vanessa tribe flitting in +some stray sunbeam. + +The haunting odour of late autumn was in the air--delicately acrid--the +scent of frost-killed brake and ripening wild grasses, of brilliant dead +leaves and black forest loam pungent with mast from beech and oak. + +Eve's tread was light on the moist trail; her quick eyes missed +nothing--not the dainty imprint of deer, fresh made, nor the sprawling +insignia of rambling raccoons--nor the big barred owl huddled on a pine +limb overhead, nor, where the swift gravelly reaches of the brook caught +sunlight, did she miss the swirl and furrowing and milling of painted +trout on the spawning beds. + +Once she took cover, hearing something stirring; but it was only a +yearling buck that came out of the witch-hazel to stare, stamp, then +wheel and trot away, displaying the danger signal. + +In her cartridge-pouch she carried the flat, sealed packet which Clinch +had trusted to her. The sack swayed gently as she strode on, slapping +her left hip at every step; and always her subconscious mind remained on +guard and aware of it; and now and then she dropped her hand to feel of +the pouch and strap. + +The character of the forest was now changing as she advanced. The first +tamaracks appeared, slim, silvery trunks, crowned with the gold of +autumn foliage, outer sentinels of that vast maze of swamp and stream +called Owl Marsh, the stronghold and refuge of forest wild +things--sometimes the sanctuary of hunted men. + +From Star Peak's left flank an icy stream clatters down to the level +floor of the woods, here; and it was here that Eve had meant to quench +her thirst with a mouthful of sweet water. + +But as she approached the tiny ford, warily, she saw a saddled horse +tied to a sapling and a man seated on a mossy log. + +The trappings of horse, the grey-green uniform of the man, left no room +for speculation; a trooper of the State Constabulary was seated there. + +His cap was off; his head rested on his palm. Elbow on knee, he sat +there gazing at the water--watching the slim fish, perhaps, darting up +stream toward their bridal-beds hidden far away at the headwaters. + +A detour was imperative. The girl, from the shelter of a pine, looked +out cautiously at the trooper. The sudden sight of him had merely +checked her; now the recognition of his uniform startled her heart out +of its tranquil rhythm and set the blood burning in her cheeks. + +There was a memory of such a man seared into the girl's very soul;--a +man whose head and shoulders resembled this man's,--who had the same +bright hair, the same slim and powerful body,--and who moved, too, as +this young man moved. + +The trooper stirred, lifted his head to relight his pipe. + +The girl knew him. Her heart stood still; then heart and blood ran riot +and she felt her knees tremble,--felt weak as she rested against the +pine's huge trunk and covered her face with unsteady fingers. + +Until the moment, Eve had never dreamed what the memory of this man +really meant to her,--never dreamed that she had capacity for emotion so +utterly overwhelming. + +Even now confusion, shame, fear were paramount. All she wanted was to +get away,--get away and still her heart's wild beating,--control the +strange tremor that possessed her, recover mind and sense and breath. + +She drew her hand from her eyes and looked upon the man she had +attempted to kill,--upon the young man who had wrestled her off her feet +and handcuffed her,--and who had bathed her bleeding mouth with +sphagnum,--and who had kissed her hands---- + +She was trembling so that she became frightened. The racket of the brook +in his ears safeguarded her in a measure. She bent over nearly double, +her rifle at a trail, and cautiously began the detour. + + * * * * * + +When at length the wide circle through the woods had been safely +accomplished and Eve was moving out through the thickening ranks of +tamarack, her heart, which seemed to suffocate her, quieted; and she +leaned against a shoulder of rock, strangely tired. + +After a while she drew from her pocket _his_ handkerchief, and looked at +it. The square of cambric bore his initials, J. S. Blood from her lip +remained on it. She had not washed out the spots. + +She put it to her lips again, mechanically. A faint odour of tobacco +still clung to it. + +By every law of loyalty, pride, self-respect, she should have held this +man her enemy. Instead, she held his handkerchief against her +lips,--crushed it there suddenly, closing her eyes while the colour +surged and surged through her skin from throat to hair. + +Then, wearily, she lifted her head and looked out into the grey and +empty vista of her life, where the dreary years seemed to stretch like +milestones away, away into an endless waste. + +She put the handkerchief into her pocket, shouldered her rifle, moved on +without looking about her,--a mistake which only the emotion of the +moment could account for in a girl so habituated to caution,--for she +had gone only a few rods before a man's strident voice halted her: + +"_Halte là! Crosse en air!_" + +"Drop that rifle!" came another voice from behind her. "You're covered! +Throw your gun on the ground!" + +She stood as though paralysed. To the right and left she heard people +trampling through the thicket toward her. + +"Down with that gun, damn you!" repeated the voice, breathless from +running. All around her men came floundering and crashing toward her +through the undergrowth. She could see some of them. + +As she stooped to place her rifle on the dead leaves, she drew the flat +packet from her cartridge sack at the same time and slid it deftly under +a rotting log. Then, calm but very pale, she stood upright to face +events. + +The first man wore a red and yellow bandanna handkerchief over the lower +half of his face, pulled tightly across a bony nose. He held a long +pistol nearly parallel to his own body; and when he came up to where she +was standing he poked the muzzle into her stomach. + +She did not flinch; he said nothing; she looked intently into the two +ratty eyes fastened on her over the edge of his bandanna. + +Five other men were surrounding her, but they all wore white masks of +vizard shape, revealing chin and mouth. + +They were different otherwise, also, wearing various sorts and patterns +of sport clothes, brand new, and giving them an odd, foreign appearance. + +What troubled her most was the silence they maintained. The man wearing +the bandanna was the only one who seemed at all a familiar +figure,--merely, perhaps, because he was American in build, clothing, +and movement. + +He took her by the shoulder, turned her around and gave her a shove +forward. She staggered a step or two; he gave her another shove and she +comprehended that she was to keep on going. + +Presently she found herself in a steep, wet deer-trail rising upward +through a gully. She knew that runway. It led up Star Peak. + +Behind her as she climbed she heard the slopping, panting tread of men; +her wind was better than theirs; she climbed lithely upward, setting a +pace which finally resulted in a violent jerk backward,--a savage, +wordless admonition to go more slowly. + +As she climbed she wondered whether she should have fired an alarm shot +on the chance of the State Trooper, Stormont, hearing it. + +But she had thought only of the packet at the moment of surprise. And +now she wondered whether, when freed, she could ever again find that +rotting log. + +Up, up, always up along the wet gully, deep with silt and +frost-splintered rock, she toiled, the heavy gasping of men behind her. +Twice she was jerked to a halt while her escort rested. + +Once, without turning, she said unsteadily: "Who are you? What have I +done to you?" + +There was no reply. + +"What are you going to do to me----" she began again, and was shaken by +the shoulder until silent. + +At last the vast arch of the eastern sky sprang out ahead, where stunted +spruces stood out against the sunshine and the intense heat of midday +fell upon a bare table-land of rock and moss and fern. + +As she came out upon the level, the man behind her took both her arms +and pulled them back and somebody bandaged her eyes. Then a hand closed +on her left arm and, so guided, she stumbled and crept forward across +the rocks for a few moments until her guide halted her and forced her +into a sitting position on a smooth, flat boulder. + +She heard the crunching of heavy feet all around her, whispering made +hoarse by breath exhausted, movement across rock and scrub, retreating +steps. + +For an interminable time she sat there alone in the hot sun, drenched to +the skin in sweat, listening, thinking, striving to find a reason for +this lawless outrage. + +After a long while she heard somebody coming across the rocks, stiffened +as she listened with some vague presentiment of evil. + +Somebody had halted beside her. After a pause she was aware of nimble +fingers busy with the bandage over her eyes. + +At first, when freed, the light blinded her. By degrees she was able to +distinguish the rocky crest of Star Peak, with the tops of tall trees +appearing level with the rocks from depths below. + +Then she turned, slowly, and looked at the man who had seated himself +beside her. + +He wore a white mask over a delicate, smoothly shaven face. + +His soft hat and sporting clothes were dark grey, evidently new. And she +noticed his hands--long, elegantly made, smooth, restless, playing with +a pencil and some sheets of paper on his knees. + +As she met his brilliant eyes behind the mask, his delicate, thin lips +grew tense in what seemed to be a smile--or a soundless sort of laugh. + +"Veree happee," he said, "to make the acquaintance. Pardon my +unceremony, miss, but onlee necissitee compels. Are you, perhaps, a +little rested?" + +"Yes." + +"Ah! Then, if you permit, we proceed with affairs of moment. You will be +sufficiently kind to write down what I say. Yes?" + +He placed paper and pencil in Eve's hand. Without demurring or +hesitation she made ready to write, her mind groping wildly for the +reason of it all. + +"Write," he said, with his silent laugh which was more like the +soundless snarl of a lynx unafraid: + +"To Mike Clinch, my fathaire, from his child, Eve.... I am hostage, +held by José Quintana. Pay what you owe him and I go free. + +"For each day delay he sends to you one finger which will be severed +from my right hand----" + +Eve's slender fingers trembled; she looked up at the masked man, stared +steadily into his brilliant eyes. + +"Proceed miss, if you are so amiable," he said softly. + +She wrote on: "--One finger for every day's delay. The whole hand at the +week's end. The other hand then, finger by finger. Then, alas! the right +foot----" + +Eve trembled. + +"Proceed," he said softly. + +She wrote: "If you agree you shall pay what you owe to José Quintana in +this manner: you shall place a stick at the edge of the Star Pond where +the Star rivulet flows out. Upon this stick you shall tie a white rag. +At the foot of the stick you shall lay the parcel which contains your +indebt to José Quintana. + +"Failing this, by to-night _one finger_ at sunset." + +The man paused: Eve waited, dumb under the surging confusion in her +brain. A sort of incredulous horror benumbed her, through which she +still heard and perceived. + +"Be kind enough to sign it with your name," said the man pleasantly. + +Eve signed. + +Then the masked man took the letter, got up, removed his hat. + +"I am Quintana," he said. "I keep my word. A thousand thanks and +apologies, miss. I trust that your detention may be brief and not too +disagreeable. I place at your feet my humble respects." + +He bowed, put on his hat, and walked quickly away. And she saw him +descend the rocks to the eastward, where the peak slopes. + +When Quintana had disappeared behind the summit scrub and rocks, Eve +slowly stood up and looked about her at the rocky pulpit so familiar. + +There was only one way out. Quintana had gone that way. His men no doubt +guarded it. Otherwise, sheer precipices confronted her. + +She walked to the western edge where a sheet of slippery reindeer moss +clothed the rock. Below the mountain fell away to the valley where she +had been made prisoner. + +She looked out over the vast panorama of wilderness and mountain, range +on range stretching blue to the horizon. She looked down into the depths +of the valley where deep under the flaming foliage of October, +somewhere, a State Trooper was sitting, cheek on hand, beside a +waterfall--or, perhaps, riding slowly through a forest which she might +never gaze upon again. + +There was a noise on the rocks behind her. A masked man came out of the +spruce scrub, laid a blanket on the rocks, placed a loaf of bread, some +cheese, and a tin pail full of water upon it, motioned her, and went +away through the dwarf spruces. + +Eve walked slowly to the blanket. She drank out of the tin pail. Then +she set aside the food, lay down, and buried her quivering face in her +arms. + + * * * * * + +The sun was half way between zenith and horizon when she heard somebody +coming, and rose to a sitting posture. Her visitor was Quintana. + +He came up to her quite close, stood with glittering eyes intent upon +her. + +After a moment he handed her a letter. + +She could scarcely unfold it, she trembled so: + +"Girlie, for God's sake give that packet to Quintana and come on home. +I'm near crazy with it all. What the hell's anything worth beside you +girlie. I don't give a damn for nothing only you, so come on quick. +Dad." + + * * * * * + +After a little while she lifted her eyes to Quintana. + +"So," he said quietly, "you are the little she-fox that has learned +tricks already." + +"What do you mean?" + +"Where is that packet?" + +"I haven't it." + +"Where is it?" + +She shook her head slightly. + +"You had a packet," he insisted fiercely. "Look here! Regard!" and he +spread out a penciled sheet in Clinch's hand: + + "José Quintana: + + "You win. She's got that stuff with her. Take your damn junk and + let my girl go. + + "MIKE CLINCH." + +"Well," said Quintana, a thin, strident edge to his tone. + +"My father is mistaken. I haven't any packet." + +The man's visage behind his mask flushed darkly. Without warning or +ceremony he caught Eve by the throat and tore open her shirt. Then, +hissing and cursing and panting with his own violence, he searched her +brutally and without mercy--flung her down and tore off her spiral +puttees and even her shoes and stockings, now apparently beside himself +with fury, puffing, gasping, always with a fierce, nasal sort of whining +undertone like an animal worrying its kill. + +"Cowardly beast!" she panted, fighting him with all her +strength--"filthy, cowardly beast!----" striking at him, wrenching his +grasp away, snatching at the disordered clothing half stripped from her. + +His hunting knife fell clattering and she fought to get it, but he +struck her with his open hand, knocking her down at his feet, and stood +glaring at her with every tooth bared. + +"So," he cried, "I give you ten minutes, make up your mind, tell me what +you do with that packet." + +He wiped the blood from his face where she had struck him. + +"You don't know José Quintana. No! You shall make his acquaintance. +Yes!" + +Eve got up on naked feet, quivering from head to foot, striving to +button the grey shirt at her throat. + +"Where?" he demanded, beside himself. + +Her mute lips only tightened. + +"Ver' well, by God!" he cried. "I go make me some fire. You like it, eh? +We shall put one toe in the fire until it burn off. Yes? Eh? How you +like it? Eh?" + +The girl's trembling hands continued busy with her clothing. + +"So!" he said, hoarsely, "you remain dumb! Well, then, in ten minutes +you shall talk!" + +He walked toward her, pushed her savagely aside, and strode on into the +spruce thicket. + +The instant he disappeared Eve caught up the knife he had dropped, knelt +down on the blanket and fell to cutting it into strips. + +The hunting knife was like a razor; the feverish business was +accomplished in a few moments, the pieces knotted, the cord strained in +a desperate test over her knee. + +And now she ran to the precipice where, ten feet below, the top of a +great pine protruded from the gulf. + +On the edge of the abyss was a spruce root. It looked dead, wedged deep +between two rocks; but with all her strength she could not pull it out. + +Sobbing, breathless, she tied her blanket rope to this, threw the other +end over the cliff's edge, and, not giving herself time to think, lay +flat, grasped the knotted line, swung off. + +Knot by knot she went down. Half-way her naked feet brushed the needles. +She looked over her shoulder, behind and down. Then, teeth clenched, she +lowered herself steadily as she had learned to do in the school +gymnasium, down, down, until her legs came astride of a pine limb. + +It bent, swayed, gave with her, letting her sag to a larger limb below. +This she clasped, letting go her rope. + +Already, from the mountain's rocky crest above, she heard excited cries. +Once, on her breakneck descent, she looked up through the foliage of the +pine; and she saw, far up against the sky, a white-masked face looking +over the edge of the precipice. + +But if it were Quintana or another of his people she could not tell. +And, again looking down, she began again the terrible descent. + + * * * * * + +An hour later, Trooper Stormont of the State Constabulary, sat his horse +in amazement to see a ragged, breathless, boyish figure speeding toward +him among the tamaracks, her naked feet splashing through pool and mire +and sphagnum. + +"Good heavens!" he exclaimed as she flung herself against his stirrup, +sobbing, hysterical, and clinging to his knee. + +"Take me back," she stammered, "--take me back to daddy! I can't--go +on--another step----" + +He leaned down, swung her up to his saddle in front, holding her cradled +in his arms. + +"Lie still," he said coolly; "you're all right now." + +For another second he sat looking down at her, at the dishevelled hair, +the gasping mouth,--at the rags clothing her, and at the flat packet +clasped convulsively to her breast. + +Then he spoke in a low voice to his horse, guiding left with one knee. + + + + +EPISODE FOUR + +A PRIVATE WAR + + +I + +When State Trooper Stormont rode up to Clinch's with Eve Strayer lying +in his arms, Mike Clinch strode out of the motley crowd around the +tavern, laid his rifle against a tree, and stretched forth his powerful +hands to receive his stepchild. + +He held her, cradled, looking down at her in silence as the men +clustered around. + +"Eve," he said hoarsely, "be you hurted?" + +The girl opened her sky-blue eyes. + +"I'm all right, dad, ... just tired.... I've got your parcel ... +safe...." + +"To hell with the gol-dinged parcel," he almost sobbed; "--did Quintana +harm you?" + +"No, dad." + +As he carried her to the veranda the packet fell from her cramped +fingers. Clinch kicked it under a chair and continued on into the house +and up the stairs to Eve's bedroom. + +Flat on the bed, the girl opened her drowsy eyes again, unsmiling. + +"Did that dirty louse misuse you?" demanded Clinch unsteadily. "G'wan +tell me, girlie." + +"He knocked me down.... He went away to get fire to make me talk. I cut +up the blanket they gave me and made a rope. Then I went over the cliff +into the big pine below. That was all, dad." + +Clinch filled a tin basin and washed the girl's torn feet. When he had +dried them he kissed them. She felt his unshaven lips trembling, heard +him whimper for the first time in his life. + +"Why the hell didn't you give Quintana the packet?" he demanded. "What +does that count for--what does any damn thing count for against you, +girlie?" + +She looked up at him out of heavy-lidded eyes: "You told me to take good +care of it." + +"It's only a little truck I'd laid by for you," he retorted unsteadily, +"--a few trifles for to make a grand lady of you when the time's ripe. +'Tain't worth a thorn in your little foot to me.... The hull gol-dinged +world full o' money ain't worth that there stone-bruise onto them little +white feet o' yourn, Eve. + +"Look at you now--my God, look at you there, all peaked an' scairt an' +bleedin'--plum tuckered out, 'n' all ragged 'n' dirty----" + +A blaze of fury flared in his small pale eyes: "--And he hit you, too, +did he?--that skunk! Quintana done that to my little girlie, did he?" + +"I don't know if it was Quintana. I don't know who he was, dad," she +murmured drowsily. + +"Masked, wa'n't he?" + +"Yes." + +Clinch's iron visage twitched and quivered. He gnawed his thin lips into +control: + +"Girlie, I gotta go out a spell. But I ain't a-leavin' you alone here. +I'll git somebody to set up with you. You jest lie snug and don't think +about nothin' till I come back." + +"Yes, dad," she sighed, closing her eyes. + +Clinch stood looking at her for a moment, then he went downstairs +heavily, and out to the veranda where State Trooper Stormont still sat +his saddle, talking to Hal Smith. On the porch a sullen crowd of +backwoods riff-raff lounged in silence, awaiting events. + +Clinch called across to Smith: "Hey, Hal, g'wan up and set with Eve a +spell while she's nappin'. Take a gun." + +Smith said to Stormont in a low voice: "Do me a favour, Jack?" + +"You bet." + +"That girl of Clinch's is in real danger if left here alone. But I've +got another job on my hands. Can you keep a watch on her till I return?" + +"Can't you tell me a little more, Jim?" + +"I will, later. Do you mind helping me out now?" + +"All right." + +Trooper Stormont swung out of his saddle and led his horse away toward +the stable. + +Hal Smith went into the bar where Clinch stood, oiling a rifle. + +"G'wan upstairs," he muttered. "I got a private war on. It's me or +Quintana, now." + +"You're going after Quintana?" inquired Smith, carelessly. + +"I be. And I want you should git your gun and set up by Evie. And I want +you should kill any living human son of a slut that comes botherin' +around this here hotel." + +"I'm going after Quintana with you, Mike." + +"B'gosh, you ain't. You're a-goin' to keep watch here." + +"No. Trooper Stormont has promised to stay with Eve. You'll need every +man to-day, Mike. This isn't a deer drive." + +Clinch let his rifle sag across the hollow of his left arm. + +"Did you beef to that trooper?" he demanded in his pleasant, misleading +way. + +"Do you think I'm crazy?" retorted Smith. + +"Well, what the hell----" + +"They all know that some man used your girl roughly. That's all I said +to him--'keep an eye on Eve until we can get back.' And I tell you, +Mike, if we drive Star Peak we won't be back till long after sundown." + +Clinch growled: "I ain't never asked no favours of no State Trooper----" + +"He did you a favour, didn't he? He brought your daughter in." + +"Yes, 'n' he'd jail us all if he got anything on us." + +"Yes; and he'll shoot to kill if any of Quintana's people come here and +try to break in." + +Clinch grunted, peeled off his coat and got into a leather vest +bristling with cartridge loops. + +Trooper Stormont came in the back door, carrying his rifle. + +"Some rough fellow been bothering your little daughter, Clinch?" he +inquired. "The child was nearly all in when she met me out by Owl +Marsh--clothes half torn off her back, bare-foot and bleeding. She's a +plucky youngster. I'll say so, Clinch. If you think the fellow may come +here to annoy her I'll keep an eye on her till you return." + +Clinch went up to Stormont, put his powerful hands on the young fellow's +shoulders. + +After a moment's glaring silence: "You _look_ clean. I guess you be, +too. I wanta tell you I'll cut the guts outa any guy that lays the heft +of a single finger onto Eve." + +"I'd do so, too, if I were you," said Stormont. + +"Would ye? Well, I guess you're a real man, too, even if you're a State +Trooper," growled Clinch. "G'wan up. She's a-nappin'. If she wakes up +you kinda talk pleasant to her. You act kind pleasant and cosy. She +ain't had no ma. You tell her to set snug and ca'm. Then you cook her a +egg if she wants it. There's pie, too. I cal'late to be back by +sundown." + +"Nearer morning," remarked Smith. + +Stormont shrugged. "I'll stay until you show up, Clinch." + +The latter took another rifle from the corner and handed it to Smith +with a loop of ammunition. + +"Come on," he grunted. + +On the veranda he strode up to the group of sullen, armed men who +regarded his advent in expressionless silence. + +Sid Hone was there, and Harvey Chase, and the Hastings boys, and +Cornelius Blommers. + +"You fellas comin'?" inquired Clinch. + +"Where?" drawled Sid Hone. + +"Me an' Hal Smith is cal'kalatin' to drive Star Peak. It ain't a deer, +neither." + +There ensued a grim interval. Clinch's wintry smile began to glimmer. + +"Booze agents or game protectors? Which?" asked Byron Hastings. "They +both look like deer--if a man gits mad enough." + +Clinch's smile became terrifying. "I shell out five hundred dollars for +every _deer_ that's dropped on Star Peak to-day," he said. "And I hope +there won't be no accidents and no mistakin' no _stranger_ for a deer," +he added, wagging his great, square head. + +"Them accidents is liable to happen," remarked Hone, reflectively. + +After another pause: "Where's Jake Kloon?" inquired Smith. + +Nobody seemed to know. + +"He was here when Mike called me into the bar," insisted Smith. "Where'd +he go?" + +Then, of a sudden, Clinch recollected the packet which he had kicked +under a veranda chair. It was no longer there. + +"Any o' you fellas seen a package here on the pyazza?" demanded Clinch +harshly. + +"Jake Kloon, he had somethin'," drawled Chase. "I supposed it was his +lunch. Mebbe 'twas, too." + +In the intense stillness Clinch glared into one face after another. + +"Boys," he said in his softly modulated voice, "I kinda guess there's a +rat amongst us. I wouldn't like for to be that there rat--no, not for a +billion hundred dollars. No, I wouldn't. Becuz that there rat has bit my +little girlie, Eve,--like that there deer bit her up onto Star Peak.... +No, I wouldn't like for to be that there rat. Fer he's a-goin' to die +like a rat, same's that there deer is a-goin' to die like a deer.... +Anyone seen which way Jake Kloon went?" + +"Now you speak of it," said Byron Hastings, "seems like I noticed Jake +and Earl Leverett down by the woods near the pond. I kinda disremembered +when you asked, but I guess I seen them." + +"Sure," said Sid Hone. "Now you mention it, I seen 'em, too. Thinks I to +m'self, they is pickin' them blackberries down to the crick. Yas, I seen +'em." + +Clinch tossed his rifle across his left shoulder. + +"Rats an' deer," he said pleasantly. "Them's the articles we're lookin' +for. Only for God's sake be careful you don't mistake a _man_ for 'em in +the woods." + +One or two men laughed. + + * * * * * + +On the edge of Owl Marsh Clinch halted in the trail, and, as his men +came up, he counted them with a cold eye. + +"Here's the runway and this here hazel bush is my station," he said. +"You fellas do the barkin'. You, Sid Hone, and you, Corny, start drivin' +from the west. Harve, you yelp 'em from the north by Lynx Brook. Jim and +Byron, you get twenty minutes to go 'round to the eastward and drive by +the Slide. And you, Hal Smith,"--he looked around--"where 'n hell be +you, Hal?----" + +Smith came up from the bog's edge. + +"Send 'em out," he said in a low voice. "I've got Jake's tracks in the +bog." + +Clinch motioned his beaters to their duty. "Twenty minutes," he reminded +Hone, Chase, and Blommers, "before you start drivin'." And, to the +Hastings boys: "If you shoot, aim low for their bellies. Don't leave no +blood around. Scrape it up. We bury what we get." + +He and Smith stood looking after the five slouching figures moving away +toward their blind trails. When all had disappeared: + +"Show me Jake's mark," he said calmly. + +Smith led him to the edge of the bog, knelt down, drew aside a branch of +witch-hopple. A man's footprint was plainly visible on the mud. + +"That's Jake," said Clinch slowly. "I know them half-soled boots o' +hisn." He lifted another branch. "There's another man's track!" + +"The other is probably Leverett's." + +"Likely. He's got thin feet." + +"I think I'd better go after them," said Smith, reflectively. + +"They'll plug you, you poor jackass--two o' them like that, and one +a-settin' up to watch out. Hell! Be you tired o' bed an' board?" + +Smith smiled: "Don't you worry, Mike." + +"Why? You think you're that smart? Jest becuz you stuck up a tourist you +think you're cock o' the North Woods--with them two foxes lyin' out for +to snap you up? Hey? Why, you poor dumb thing, Jake runs Canadian hootch +for a livin' and Leverett's a trap thief! What could _you_ do with a +pair o' foxes like that?" + +"Catch 'em," said Smith, coolly. "You mind your business, Mike." + +As he shouldered his rifle and started into the marsh, Clinch dropped a +heavy hand on his shoulder; but the young man shook it off. + +"Shut up," he said sharply. "You've a private war on your hands. So have +I. I'll take care of my own." + +"What's _your_ grievance?" demanded Clinch, surprised. + +"Jake Kloon played a dirty trick on me." + +"When was that?" + +"Not very long ago." + +"I hadn't heard," said Clinch. + +"Well, you hear it now, don't you? All right. All right; I'm going after +him." + +As he started again across the marsh, Clinch called out in a guarded +voice: "Take good care of that packet if you catch them rats. It belongs +to Eve." + +"I'll take such good care of it," replied Smith, "that its proper owner +need not worry." + + +II + +The "proper owner" of the packet was, at that moment, on the Atlantic +Ocean, travelling toward the United States. + +Four other pretended owners of the Grand Duchess Theodorica's jewels, +totally unconscious of anything impending which might impair their +several titles to the gems, were now gathered together in a wilderness +within a few miles of one another. + +José Quintana lay somewhere in the forests with his gang, fiercely +planning the recovery of the treasure of which Clinch had once robbed +him. Clinch squatted on his runway, watching the mountain flank with +murderous eyes. It was no longer the Flaming Jewel which mattered. His +master passion ruled him now. Those who had offered violence to Eve must +be reckoned with first of all. The hand that struck Eve Strayer had +offered mortal insult to Mike Clinch. + +As for the third pretender to the Flaming Jewel, Jake Kloon, he was now +travelling in a fox's circle toward Drowned Valley--that shaggy +wilderness of slime and tamarack and depthless bog which touches the +northwest base of Star Peak. He was not hurrying, having no thought of +pursuit. Behind him plodded Leverett, the trap thief, very, very busy +with his own ideas. + +To Leverett's repeated requests that Kloon halt and open the packet to +see what it contained, Kloon gruffly refused. + +"What do we care what's in it?" he said. "We get ten thousand apiece +over our rifles for it from them guys. Ain't it a good enough job for +you?" + +"Maybe we make more if we take what's inside it for ourselves," argued +Leverett. "Let's take a peek, anyway." + +"Naw. I don't want no peek nor nothin'. The ten thousand comes too easy. +More might scare us. Let that guy, Quintana, have what's his'n. All I +ask is my rake-off. You allus was a dirty, thieving mink, Earl. Let's +give him his and take ours and git. I'm going to Albany to live. You bet +I don't stay in no woods where Mike Clinch dens." + +They plodded on, arguing, toward their rendezvous with Quintana's +outpost on the edge of Drowned Valley. + + * * * * * + +The fourth pretender to the pearls, rubies, and great gem called the +Flaming Jewel, stolen from the young Grand Duchess Theodorica of +Esthonia by José Quintana, was an unconscious pretender, entirely +innocent of the rôle assigned her by Clinch. + +For Eve Strayer had never heard where the packet came from or what it +contained. All she knew was that her stepfather had told her that it +belonged to her. And the knowledge left her incurious. + + +III + +Eve slept the sleep of mental and physical exhaustion. Reaction from +fear brings a fatigue more profound than that which follows physical +overstrain. But the healthy mind, like the healthy body, disposes very +thoroughly of toxics which arise from terror and exhaustion. + +The girl slept profoundly, calmly. Her bruised young mind and body left +her undisturbed. There was neither restlessness nor fever. Sleep swept +her with its clean, sweet tide, cleansing the superb youth and health of +her with the most wonderful balm in the Divine pharmacy. + +She awoke late in the afternoon, opened her flower-blue eyes, and saw +State Trooper Stormont sitting by the window, and gazing out. + +Perhaps Eve's confused senses mistook the young man for a vision; for +she lay very still, nor stirred even her little finger. + +After a while Stormont glanced around at her. A warm, delicate colour +stained her skin slowly, evenly, from throat to hair. + +He got up and came over to the bed. + +"How do you feel?" he asked, awkwardly. + +"Where is dad?" she managed to inquire in a steady voice. + +"He won't be back till late. He asked me to stick around--in case you +needed anything----" + +The girl's clear eyes searched his. + +"Trooper Stormont?" + +"Yes, Eve." + +"Dad's gone after Quintana." + +"Is he the fellow who misused you?" + +"I think so." + +"Who is he?" + +"I don't know." + +"Is he your enemy or your stepfather's?" + +But the girl shook her head: "I can't discuss dad's affairs +with--with----" + +"With a State Trooper," smiled Stormont. "That's all right, Eve. You +don't have to." + +There was a pause; Stormont stood beside the bed, looking down at her +with his diffident, boyish smile. And the girl gazed back straight into +his eyes--eyes she had so often looked into in her dreams. + +"I'm to cook you an egg and bring you some pie," he remarked, still +smiling. + +"Did dad say I am to stay in bed?" + +"That was my inference. Do you feel very lame and sore?" + +"My feet burn." + +"You poor kid!... Would you let me look at them? I have a first-aid +packet with me." + +After a moment she nodded and turned her face on the pillow. He drew +aside the cover a little, knelt down beside the bed. + +Then he rose and went downstairs to the kitchen. There was hot water in +the kettle. He fetched it back, bathed her feet, drew out from cut and +scratch the flakes of granite-grit and brier-points that still remained +there. + +From his first-aid packet he took a capsule, dissolved it, sterilized +the torn skin, then bandaged both feet with a deliciously cool salve, +and drew the sheets into place. + +Eve had not stirred nor spoken. He washed and dried his hands and came +back, drawing his chair nearer to the bedside. + +"Sleep, if you feel like it," he said pleasantly. + +As she made no sound or movement he bent over to see if she had already +fallen asleep. And noticed that her flushed cheeks were wet with tears. + +"Are you suffering?" he asked gently. + +"No.... You are so wonderfully kind...." + +"Why shouldn't I be kind?" he said, amused and touched by the girl's +emotion. + +"I tried to shoot you once. That is why you ought to hate me." + +He began to laugh: "Is _that_ what you're thinking about?" + +"I--never can--forget----" + +"Nonsense. We're quits anyway. Do you remember what I did to _you_?" + +He was thinking of the handcuffs. Then, in her vivid blush he read what +she was thinking. And he remembered his lips on her palms. + +He, too, now was blushing brilliantly at memory of that swift, sudden +rush of romantic tenderness which this girl had witnessed that memorable +day on Owl Marsh. + +In the hot, uncomfortable silence, neither spoke. He seated himself +after a while. And, after a while, she turned on her pillow part way +toward him. + +Somehow they both understood that it was friendship which had subtly +filled the interval that separated them since that amazing day. + +"I've often thought of you," he said,--as though they had been +discussing his absence. + +No hour of the waking day that she had not thought of him. But she did +not say so now. After a little while: + +"Is yours a lonely life?" she asked in a low voice. + +"Sometimes. But I love the forest." + +"Sometimes," she said, "the forest seems like a trap that I can't +escape. Sometimes I hate it." + +"Are you lonely, Eve?" + +"As you are. You see I know what the outside world is. I miss it." + +"You were in boarding school and college." + +"Yes." + +"It must be hard for you here at Star Pond." + +The girl sighed, unconsciously: + +"There are days when I--can scarcely--stand it.... The wilderness would +be more endurable if dad and I were all alone.... But even then----" + +"You need young people of your own age,--educated companions----" + +"I need the city, Mr. Stormont. I need all it can give: I'm starving for +it. That's all." + +She turned on her pillow, and he saw that she was smiling faintly. Her +face bore no trace of the tragic truth she had uttered. But the tragedy +was plain enough to him, even without her passionless words of revolt. +The situation of this young, educated girl, aglow with youth, fettered, +body and mind, to the squalor of Clinch's dump, was perfectly plain to +anybody. + +She said, seeing his troubled expression: "I'm sorry I spoke that way." + +"I knew how you must feel, anyway." + +"It seems ungrateful," she murmured. "I love my step-father." + +"You've proven that," he remarked with a dry humour that brought the hot +flush to her face again. + +"I must have been crazy that day," she said. "It scares me to remember +what I tried to do.... What a frightful thing--if I had killed +you----How _can_ you forgive me?" + +"How can you forgive _me_, Eve?" + +She turned her head: "I do." + +"Entirely?" + +"Yes." + +He said,--a slight emotion noticeable in his voice: "Well, I forgave you +before the darned gun exploded in our hands." + +"How _could_ you?" she protested. + +"I was thinking all the while that you were acting as I'd have acted if +anything threatened _my_ father." + +"Were you thinking of _that_?" + +"Yes,--and also how to get hold of you before you shot me." He began to +laugh. + +After a moment she turned her head to look at him, and her smile +glimmered, responsive to his amusement. But she shivered slightly, too. + +"How about that egg?" he inquired. + +"I can get up----" + +"Better keep off your feet. What is there in the pantry? You must be +starved." + +"I could eat a little before supper time," she admitted. "I forgot to +take my lunch with me this morning. It is still there in the pantry on +the bread box, wrapped up in brown paper, just as I left it----" + +She half rose in bed, supported on one arm, her curly brown-gold hair +framing her face: + +"--Two cakes of sugar-milk chocolate in a flat brown packet tied with a +string," she explained, smiling at his amusement. + +So he went down to the pantry and discovered the parcel on the bread box +where she had left it that morning before starting for the cache on Owl +Marsh. + +He brought it to her, placed both pillows upright behind her, stepped +back gaily to admire the effect. Eve, with her parcel in her hands, +laughed shyly at his comedy. + +"Begin on your chocolate," he said. "I'm going back to fix you some +bread and butter and a cup of tea." + +When again he had disappeared, the girl, still smiling, began to untie +her packet, unhurriedly, slowly loosening string and wrapping. + +Her attention was not fixed on what her slender fingers were about. + +She drew from the parcel a flat morocco case with a coat of arms and +crest stamped on it in gold, black, and scarlet. + +For a few moments she stared at the object stupidly. The next moment she +heard Stormont's spurred tread on the stairs; and she thrust the morocco +case and the wrapping under the pillows behind her. + +She looked up at him in a dazed way when he came in with the tea and +bread. He set the tin tray on her bureau and came over to the bedside. + +"Eve," he said, "you look very white and ill. Have you been hurt +somewhere, and haven't you admitted it?" + +She seemed unable to speak, and he took both her hands and looked +anxiously into the lovely, pallid features. + +After a moment she turned her head and buried her face in the pillow, +trembling now in overwhelming realization of what she had endured for +the sake of two cakes of sugar-milk chocolate hidden under a bush in the +forest. + + * * * * * + +For a long while the girl lay there, the feverish flush of tears on her +partly hidden face, her nervous hands tremulous, restless, now seeking +his, convulsively, now striving to escape his clasp--eloquent, uncertain +little hands that seemed to tell so much and yet were telling him +nothing he could understand. + +"Eve, dear," he said, "are you in pain? What is it that has happened to +you? I thought you were all right. You seemed all right----" + +"I am," she said in a smothered voice. "You'll stay here with me, won't +you?" + +"Of course I will. It's just the reaction. It's all over. You're +relaxing. That's all, dear. You're safe. Nothing can harm you now----" + +"Please don't leave me." + +After a moment: "I won't leave you.... I wish I might never leave you." + +In the tense silence that followed her trembling ceased. Then his heart, +heavy, irregular, began beating so that the startled pulses in her body +awoke, wildly responsive. + +Deep emotions, new, unfamiliar, were stirring, awaking, confusing them +both. In a sudden instinct to escape, she turned and partly rose on one +elbow, gazing blindly about her out of tear-marred eyes. + +"I want my room to myself," she murmured in a breathless sort of way, +"--I want you to go out, please----" + +A boyish flush burnt his face. He got up slowly, took his rifle from +the corner, went out, closing the door, and seated himself on the +stairs. + +And there, on guard, sat Trooper Stormont, rigid, unstirring, hour after +hour, facing the first great passion of his life, and stunned by the +impact of its swift and unexpected blow. + + * * * * * + +In her chamber, on the bed's edge, sat Eve Strayer, her deep eyes fixed +on space. Vague emotions, exquisitely recurrent, new born, possessed +her. The whole world, too, all around her seemed to have become misty +and golden and all pulsating with a faint, still rhythm that indefinably +thrilled her pulses to response. + +Passion, full-armed, springs flaming from the heart of man. Woman is +slow to burn. And it was the delicate phantom of passion that Eve gazed +upon, there in her unpainted chamber, her sun-tanned fingers linked +listlessly in her lap, her little feet like bruised white flowers +drooping above the floor. + +Hour after hour she sat there dreaming, staring at the tinted ghost of +Eros, rose-hued, near-smiling, unreal, impalpable as the dusty sunbeam +that slanted from her window, gilding the boarded floor. + + * * * * * + +Three spectres, gliding near, paused to gaze at State Trooper Stormont, +on guard by the stairs. Then they looked at the closed door of Eve's +chamber. + +Then the three spectres, Fate, Chance and Destiny, whispering together, +passed on toward the depths of the sunset forest. + + + + +EPISODE FIVE + +DROWNED VALLEY + + +I + +The soft, bluish forest shadows had lengthened, and the barred sun-rays, +filtering through, were tinged with a rosy hue before Jake Kloon, the +hootch runner, and Earl Leverett, trap thief, came to Drowned Valley. + +They were still a mile distant from the most southern edge of that vast +desolation, but already tamaracks appeared in the beauty of their burnt +gold; little pools glimmered here and there; patches of amber sphagnum +and crimson pitcher-plants became frequent; and once or twice Kloon's +big boots broke through the crust of fallen leaves, soaking him to the +ankles with black silt. + +Leverett, always a coward, had pursued his devious and larcenous way +through the world, always in deadly fear of sink holes. + +His movements and paths were those of a weasel, preferring always solid +ground; but he lacked the courage of that sinuous little beast, though +he possessed all of its ferocity and far more cunning. + +Now trotting lightly and tirelessly in the broad and careless spoor of +Jake Kloon, his narrow, pointed head alert, and every fear-sharpened +instinct tensely observant, the trap-thief continued to meditate murder. + +Like all cowards, he had always been inclined to bold and ruthless +action; but inclination was all that ever had happened. + +Yet, even in his pitiable misdemeanours he slunk through life in terror +of that strength which never hesitates at violence. In his petty +pilfering he died a hundred deaths for every trapped mink or otter he +filched; he heard the game protector's tread as he slunk from the bagged +trout brook or crawled away, belly dragging, and pockets full of snared +grouse. + +Always he had dreamed of the day when, through some sudden bold and +savage stroke, he could deliver himself from a life of fear and live in +a city, grossly, replete with the pleasures of satiation, never again to +see a tree or a lonely lake or the blue peaks which, always, he had +hated because they seemed to spy on him from their sky-blue heights. + +They were spying on him now as he moved lightly, furtively at Jake +Kloon's heels, meditating once more that swift, bold stroke which +forever would free him from all care and fear. + +He looked at the back of Kloon's massive head. One shot would blow that +skull into fragments, he thought, shivering. + +One shot from behind,--and twenty thousand dollars,--or, if it proved a +better deal, the contents of the packet. For, if Quintana's bribery had +dazzled them, what effect might the contents of that secret packet have +if revealed? + +Always in his mean and busy brain he was trying to figure to himself +what that packet must contain. And, to make the bribe worth while, +Leverett had concluded that only a solid packet of thousand-dollar bills +could account for the twenty thousand offered. + +There might easily be half a million in bills pressed together in that +heavy, flat packet. Bills were absolutely safe plunder. But Kloon had +turned a deaf ear to his suggestions,--Kloon, who never entertained +ambitions beyond his hootch rake-off,--whose miserable imagination +stopped at a wretched percentage, satisfied. + +One shot! There was the back of Kloon's bushy head. One shot!--and fear, +which had shadowed him from birth, was at an end forever. Ended, too, +privation,--the bitter rigour of black winters; scorching days; bodily +squalor; ills that such as he endured in a wilderness where, like other +creatures of the wild, men stricken died or recovered by chance alone. + +A single shot would settle all problems for him.... But if he missed? +At the mere idea he trembled as he trotted on, trying to tell himself +that he couldn't miss. No use; always the coward's "if" blocked him; and +the coward's rage,--fiercest of all fury,--ravaged him, almost crazing +him with his own impotence. + + * * * * * + +Tamaracks, sphagnum, crimson pitcher-plants grew thicker; wet woods set +with little black pools stretched away on every side. + +It was still nearly a mile from Drowned Valley when Jake Kloon halted in +his tracks and seated himself on a narrow ridge of hard ground. And +Leverett came lightly up and, after nosing the whole vicinity, sat down +cautiously where Kloon would have to turn partly around to look at him. + +"Where the hell do we meet up with Quintana?" growled Kloon, tearing a +mouthful from a gnawed tobacco plug and shoving the remainder deep into +his trousers pocket. + +"We gotta travel a piece, yet.... Say, Jake, be you a man or be you a +poor dumb critter what ain't got no spunk?" + +Kloon, chewing on his cud, turned and glanced at him. Then he spat, as +answer. + +"If you got the spunk of a chipmunk you and me'll take a peek at that +there packet. I bet you it's thousand-dollar bills--more'n a billion +million dollars, likely." + +Kloon's dogged silence continued. Leverett licked his dry lips. His +rifle lay on his knees. Almost imperceptibly he moved it, moved it +again, froze stiff as Kloon spat, then, by infinitesimal degrees, +continued to edge the muzzle toward Kloon. + +"Jake?" + +"Aw, shut your head," grumbled Kloon disdainfully. "You allus was a +dirty rat--you sneakin' trap robber. Enough's enough. I ain't got no use +for no billion million dollar bills. Ten thousand'll buy me all I +cal'late to need till I'm planted. But you're like a hawg; you ain't +never had enough o' nothin' and you won't never git enough, +neither,--not if you wuz God a'mighty you wouldn't." + +"Ten thousand dollars hain't nothin' to a billion million, Jake." + +Kloon squirted a stream of tobacco at a pitcher plant and filled the +cup. Diverted and gratified by the accuracy of his aim, he took other +shots at intervals. + +Leverett moved the muzzle of his rifle a hair's width to the left, +shivered, moved it again. Under his soggy, sun-tanned skin a +pallor made his visage sickly grey. + +"Jake?" + +No answer. + +"Say, Jake?" + +No notice. + +"Jake, I wanta take a peek at them bills." + +Merely another stream of tobacco soiling the crimson pitcher. + +"I'm--I'm desprit. I gotta take a peek. I gotta--gotta----" + +Something in Leverett's unsteady voice made Kloon turn his head. + +"You gol rammed fool," he said, "what you doin' with your----" + +The loud detonation of the rifle punctuated Kloon's inquiry with a final +period. The big, soft-nosed bullet struck him full in the face, spilling +his brains and part of his skull down his back, and knocking him flat as +though he had been clubbed. + +Leverett, stunned, sat staring, motionless, clutching the rifle from the +muzzle of which a delicate stain of vapour floated and disappeared +through a rosy bar of sunshine. + +In the intense stillness of the place, suddenly the dead man made a +sound; and the trap-robber nearly fainted. + +But it was only air escaping from the slowly collapsing lungs; and +Leverett, ashy pale, shaking, got to his feet and leaned heavily against +an oak tree, his eyes never stirring from the sprawling thing on the +ground. + + * * * * * + +If it were a minute or a year he stood there he could never have +reckoned the space of time. The sun's level rays glimmered ruddy through +the woods. A green fly appeared, buzzing about the dead man. Another +zig-zagged through the sunshine, lacing it with streaks of greenish +fire. Others appeared, whirling, gyrating, filling the silence with +their humming. And still Leverett dared not budge, dared not search the +dead and take from it that for which the dead had died. + +A little breeze came by and stirred the bushy hair on Kloon's head and +fluttered the ferns around him where he lay. + +Two delicate, pure-white butterflies--rare survivors of a native species +driven from civilization into the wilderness by the advent of the +foreign white--fluttered in airy play over the dead man, drifting away +into the woodland at times, yet always returning to wage a fairy combat +above the heap of soiled clothing which once had been a man. + +Then, near in the ferns, the withering fronds twitched, and a red +squirrel sprung his startling alarm, squeaking, squealing, chattering +his opinion of murder; and Leverett, shaking with the shock, wiped icy +sweat from his face, laid aside his rifle, and took his first stiff step +toward the dead man. + +But as he bent over he changed his mind, turned, reeling a little, then +crept slowly out among the pitcher-plants, searching about him as though +sniffing. + +In a few minutes he discovered what he was looking for; took his +bearings; carefully picked his way back over a leafy crust that trembled +under his cautious tread. + +He bent over Kloon and, from the left inside coat pocket, he drew the +packet and placed it inside his own flannel shirt. + +Then, turning his back to the dead, he squatted down and clutched +Kloon's burly ankles, as a man grasps the handles of a wheelbarrow to +draw it after him. + +Dragging, rolling, bumping over roots, Jake Kloon took his last trail +through the wilderness, leaving a redder path than was left by the +setting sun through fern and moss and wastes of pitcher-plants. + +Always, as Leverett crept on, pulling the dead behind him, the floor of +the woods trembled slightly, and a black ooze wet the crust of withered +leaves. + +At the quaking edge of a little pool of water, Leverett halted. The +water was dark but scarcely an inch deep over its black bed of silt. + +Beside this sink hole the trap-thief dropped Kloon. Then he drew his +hunting knife and cut a tall, slim swamp maple. The sapling was about +twenty feet in height. Leverett thrust the butt of it into the pool. +Without any effort he pushed the entire sapling out of sight in the +depthless silt. + +He had to manoeuvre very gingerly to dump Kloon into the pool and keep +out of it himself. Finally he managed it. + +To his alarm, Kloon did not sink far. He cut another sapling and pushed +the body until only the shoes were visible above the silt. + +These, however, were very slowly sinking, now. Bubbles rose, dully +iridescent, floated, broke. Strings of blood hung suspended in the +clouding water. + +Leverett went back to the little ridge and covered with dead leaves the +spot where Kloon had lain. There were broken ferns, but he could not +straighten them. And there lay Kloon's rifle. + +For a while he hesitated, his habits of economy being ingrained; but he +remembered the packet in his shirt, and he carried the rifle to the +little pool and shoved it, muzzle first, driving it downward, out of +sight. + +As he rose from the pool's edge, somebody laid a hand on his shoulder. + +That was the most real death that Leverett ever had died. + + +II + +A coward dies many times before Old Man Death really gets him. + +The swimming minutes passed; his mind ceased to live for a space. Then, +as through the swirling waters of the last dark whirlpool, a dulled roar +of returning consciousness filled his being. + +Somebody was shaking him, shouting at him. Suddenly instinct resumed its +function, and he struggled madly to get away from the edge of the +sink-hole--fought his way, blindly, through tangled undergrowth toward +the hard ridge. No human power could have blocked the frantic creature +thrashing toward solid ground. + +But there Quintana held him in his wiry grip. + +"Fool! Mule! Crazee fellow! What you do, eh? For why you make jumps like +rabbits! Eh? You expec' Quintana? Yes? Alors!" + +Leverett, in a state of collapse, sagged back against an oak tree. +Quintana's nervous grasp fell from his arms and they swung, dangling. + +"What you do by that pond-hole? Eh? I come and touch you, and, my +God!--one would think I have stab you. Such an ass!" + +The sickly greenish hue changed in Leverett's face as the warmer tide +stirred from its stagnation. He lifted his head and tried to look at +Quintana. + +"Where Jake Kloon?" demanded the latter. + +At that the weasel wits of the trap-robber awoke to the instant crisis. +Blood and pulse began to jump. He passed one dirty hand over his mouth +to mask any twitching. + +"Where my packet, eh?" inquired Quintana. + +"Jake's got it." Leverett's voice was growing stronger. His small eyes +switched for an instant toward his rifle, where it stood against a tree +behind Quintana. + +"Where is he, then, this Jake?" repeated Quintana impatiently. + +"He got bogged." + +"Bogged? What is that, then?" + +"He got into a sink-hole." + +"What!" + +"That's all I know," said Leverett, sullenly. "Him and me was travellin' +hell-bent to meet up with you,--Jake, he was for a short cut to Drowned +Valley,--but 'no,' sez I, 'gimme a good hard ridge an' a long deetoor +when there's sink-holes into the woods----'" + +"What is it the talk you talk to me?" asked Quintana, whose perplexed +features began to darken. "Where is it, my packet?" + +"I'm tellin' you, ain't I?" retorted the other, raising a voice now +shrill with the strain of this new crisis rushing so unexpectedly upon +him: "I heard Jake give a holler. 'What the hell's the trouble?' I +yells. Then he lets out a beller, 'Save me!' he screeches, 'I'm into a +sink-hole! The quicksand's got me,' sez he. So I drop my rifle, I +did,--there she stands against that birch sapling!--and I run down into +them there pitcher-plants. + +"'Whar be ye!' I yells. Then I listens, and don't hear nothin' only a +kina wallerin' noise an' a slobber like he was gulpin' mud. + +"Then I foller them there sounds and I come out by that sink-hole. The +water was a-shakin' all over it but Jake he had went down plum out o' +sight. T'want no use. I cut a sapling an' I poked down. I was sick and +scared like, so when you come up over the moss, not makin' no noise, an' +grabbed me--God!--I guess you'd jump, too." + +Quintana's dark, tense face was expressionless when Leverett ventured to +look at him. Like most liars he realised the advisability of looking his +victim straight in the eyes. This he managed to accomplish, sustaining +the cold intensity of Quintana's gaze as long as he deemed it necessary. +Then he started toward his rifle. Quintana blocked his way. + +"Where my packet?" + +"Gol ram it! Ain't I told you? Jake had it in his pocket." + +"My packet?" + +"Yaas, yourn." + +"My packet, it is down in thee sink 'ole?" + +"You think I'm lyin'?" blustered Leverett, trying to move around +Quintana's extended arm. The arm swerved and clutched him by the collar +of his flannel shirt. + +"Wait, my frien'," said Quintana in a soft voice. "You shall explain to +me some things before you go." + +"Explain what!--you gol dinged----" + +Quintana shook him into speechlessness. + +"Listen, my frien'," he continued with a terrifying smile, "I mus' ask +you what it was, that gun-shot, which I hear while I await at Drown' +Vallee. Eh? Who fire a gun?" + +"I ain't heard no gun," replied Leverett in a strangled voice. + +"You did not shoot? No?" + +"No!--damn it all----" + +"And Jake? He did not fire?" + +"No, I tell yeh----" + +"Ah! Someone lies. It is not me, my frien'. No. Let us examine your +rifle----" + +Leverett made a rush for the gun; Quintana slung him back against the +oak tree and thrust an automatic pistol against his chin. + +"Han's up, my frien'," he said gently, "--up! high up!--or someone will +fire another shot you shall never hear.... So!... Now I search the +other pocket.... So!... Still no packet. Bah! Not in the pants, +either? Ah, bah! But wait! Tiens! What is this you hide inside your +shirt----?" + +"I was jokin'," gasped Leverett; "--I was jest a-goin' to give it to +you----" + +"Is that my packet?" + +"Yes. It was all in fun; I wan't a-going to steal it----" + +Quintana unbuttoned the grey wool shirt, thrust in his hand and drew +forth the packet for which Jake Kloon had died within the hour. + +Suddenly Leverett's knees gave way and he dropped to the ground, +grovelling at Quintana's feet in an agony of fright: + +"Don't hurt me," he screamed, "--I didn't meant no harm! Jake, he wanted +me to steal it. I told him I was honest. I fired a shot to scare him, +an' he tuk an' run off! I wan't a-goin' to steal it off you, so help me +God! I was lookin' for you--as God is my witness----" + +He got Quintana by one foot. Quintana kicked him aside and backed away. + +"Swine," he said, calmly inspecting the whimpering creature who had +started to crawl toward him. + +He hesitated, lifted his automatic, then, as though annoyed by +Leverett's deafening shriek, shrugged, hesitated, pocketed both pistol +and packet, and turned on his heel. + +By the birch sapling he paused and picked up Leverett's rifle. Something +left a red smear on his palm as he worked the ejector. It was blood. + +Quintana gazed curiously at his soiled hand. Then he stooped and picked +up the empty cartridge case which had been ejected. And, as he stooped, +he noticed more blood on a fallen leaf. + +With one foot, daintily as a game-cock scratches, he brushed away the +fallen leaves, revealing the mess underneath. + +After he had contemplated the crimson traces of murder for a few +moments, he turned and looked at Leverett with faint curiosity. + +"So," he said in his leisurely, emotionless way, "you have fight with my +frien' Jake for thee packet. Yes? Ver' amusing." He shrugged his +indifference, tossed the rifle to his shoulder and, without another +glance at the cringing creature on the ground, walked away toward +Drowned Valley, unhurriedly. + + +III + +When Quintana disappeared among the tamaracks, Leverett ventured to rise +to his knees. As he crouched there, peering after Quintana, a man came +swiftly out of the forest behind him and nearly stumbled over him. + +Recognition was instant and mutual as the man jerked the trap-robber to +his feet, stifling the muffled yell in his throat. + +"I want that packet you picked up on Clinch's veranda," said Hal Smith. + +"M-my God," stammered Leverett, "Quintana just took it off me. He ain't +been gone a minute----" + +"You lie!" + +"I ain't lyin'. Look at his foot-marks there in the mud!" + +"Quintana!" + +"Yaas, Quintana! He tuk my gun, too----" + +"Which way!" whispered Smith fiercely, shaking Leverett till his jaws +wagged. + +"Drowned Valley.... Lemme loose!--I'm chokin'----" + +Smith pushed him aside. + +"You rat," he said, "if you're lying to me I'll come back and settle +your affair. And Kloon's, too!" + +"Quintana shot Jake and stuck him into a sink-hole!" snivelled Leverett, +breaking down and sobbing; "--oh, Gawd--Gawd--he's down under all that +black mud with his brains spillin' out----" + +But Smith was already gone, running lightly along the string of +footprints which led straight away across slime and sphagnum toward the +head of Drowned Valley. + +In the first clump of hard-wood trees Smith saw Quintana. He had halted +and he was fumbling at the twine which bound a flat, paper-wrapped +packet. + +He did not start when Smith's sharp warning struck his ear: "Don't move! +I've got you over my rifle, Quintana!" + +Quintana's fingers had instantly ceased operations. Then, warily, he +lifted his head and looked into the muzzle of Smith's rifle. + +"Ah, bah!" he said tranquilly. "There were three of you, then." + +"Lay that packet on the ground." + +"My frien'----" + +"Drop it or I'll drop _you_!" + +Quintana carefully placed the packet on a bed of vivid moss. + +"Now your gun!" continued Smith. + +Quintana shrugged and laid Leverett's rifle beside the packet. + +"Kneel down with your hands up and your back toward me!" said Smith. + +"My frien'----" + +"Down with you!" + +Quintana dropped gracefully into the humiliating attitude popularly +indicative of prayerful supplication. Smith walked slowly up behind him, +relieved him of two automatics and a dirk. + +"Stay put," he said sharply, as Quintana started to turn his head. Then +he picked up the packet with its loosened string, slipped it into his +side pocket, gathered together the arsenal which had decorated Quintana, +and so, loaded with weapons, walked away a few paces and seated himself +on a fallen log. + +Here he pocketed both automatics, shoved the sheathed dirk into his +belt, placed the captured rifle handy, after examining the magazine, and +laid his own weapon across his knees. + +"You may turn around now, Quintana," he said amiably. + +Quintana lowered his arms and started to rise. + +"Sit down!" said Smith. + +Quintana seated himself on the moss, facing Smith. + +"Now, my gay and nimble thimble-rigger," said Smith genially, "while I +take ten minutes' rest we'll have a little polite conversation. Or, +rather, a monologue. Because I don't want to hear anything from you." + +He settled himself comfortably on the log: + +"Let me assemble for you, Señor Quintana, the interesting history of the +jewels which so sparklingly repose in the packet in my pocket. + +"In the first place, as you know, Monsieur Quintana, the famous Flaming +Jewel and the other gems contained in this packet of mine, belonged to +Her Highness the Grand Duchess Theodorica of Esthonia. + +"Very interesting. More interesting still--along comes Don José Quintana +and his celebrated gang of international thieves, and steals from the +Grand Duchess of Esthonia the Flaming Jewel and all her rubies, emeralds +and diamonds. Yes?" + +"Certainly," said Quintana, with a polite inclination of acknowledgment. + +"Bon! Well, then, still more interesting to relate, a gentleman named +Clinch helps himself to these famous jewels. How very careless of you, +Mr. Quintana." + +"Careless, certainly," assented Quintana politely. + +"Well," said Smith, laughing, "Clinch was more careless still. The +robber baron, Sir Jacobus Kloon, swiped,--as Froissart has it,--the +Esthonian gems, and, under agreement to deliver them to you, I suppose, +thought better of it and attempted to abscond. Do you get me, Herr +Quintana?" + +"Gewiss." + +"Yes, and you got Jake Kloon, I hear," laughed Smith. + +"No." + +"Didn't you kill Kloon?" + +"No." + +"Oh, pardon. The mistake was natural. You merely robbed Kloon and +Leverett. You should have killed them." + +"Yes," said Quintana slowly, "I should have. It was my mistake." + +"Signor Quintana, it is human for the human crook to err. Sooner or +later he always does it. And then the Piper comes around holding out two +itching palms." + +"Mr. Smith," said Quintana pleasantly, "you are an unusually agreeable +gentleman for a thief. I regret that you do not see your way to an +amalgamation of interests with myself." + +"As you say, Quintana mea, I am somewhat unusual. For example, what do +you suppose I am going to do with this packet in my pocket?" + +"Live," replied Quintana tersely. + +"Live, certainly," laughed Smith, "but not on the proceeds of this +coup-de-main. Non pas! I am going to return this packet to its rightful +owner, the Grand Duchess Theodorica of Esthonia. And what do you think +of that, Quintana?" + +Quintana smiled. + +"You do not believe me?" inquired Smith. + +Quintana smiled again. + +"Allons, bon!" exclaimed Smith, rising. "It's the unusual that happens +in life, my dear Quintana. And now we'll take a little inventory of +these marvellous gems before we part.... Sit very, very still, +Quintana,--unless you want to lie stiller still.... I'll let you take a +modest peep at the Flaming Jewel----" busily unwrapping the +packet--"just one little peep, Quintana----" + +He unwrapped the paper. Two cakes of sugar-milk chocolate lay within. + +Quintana turned white, then deeply, heavily red. Then he smiled in +ghastly fashion: + +"Yes," he said hoarsely, "as you have just said, sir, it is usually the +unusual which happens in the world." + + + + +EPISODE SIX + +THE JEWEL AFLAME + + +I + +Mike Clinch and his men "drove" Star Peak, and drew a blanket covert. + +There was a new shanty atop, camp débris, plenty of signs of recent +occupation everywhere,--hot embers in which offal still smouldered, +bottles odorous of claret dregs, and an aluminum culinary outfit, +unwashed, as though Quintana and his men had departed in haste. + +Far in the still valley below, Mike Clinch squatted beside the runway he +had chosen, a cocked rifle across his knees. + +The glare in his small, pale eyes waned and flared as distant sounds +broke the forest silence, grew vague, died out,--the fairy clatter of a +falling leaf, the sudden scurry of a squirrel, a feathery rustle of +swift wings in play or combat, the soft crash of a rotten bough sagging +earthward to enrich the soil that grew it. + +And, as Clinch squatted there, murderously intent, ever the fixed +obsession burned in his fever brain, stirring his thin lips to incessant +muttering,--a sort of soundless invocation, part chronicle, part prayer: + +"O God A'mighty, in your big, swell mansion up there, all has went +contrary with me sence you let that there damn millionaire, Harrod, come +into this here forest.... He went and built unto hisself an +habitation, and he put up a wall of law all around me where I was +earnin' a lawful livin' in Thy nice, clean wilderness.... And now comes +this here Quintana and robs my girlie.... I promised her mother I'd +make a lady of her little Eve.... I loved my wife, O Lord.... Once she +showed me a piece in the Bible,--I ain't never found it sence,--but it +said: 'And the woman she fled into the wilderness where there was a +place prepared for her of God.' ... That's what _you_ wrote into your +own Bible, O God! You can't go back on it. I seen it. + +"And now I wanta to ask, What place did you prepare for my Eve? What +spot have you reference to? You didn't mean my 'Dump,' did you? Why, +Lord, that ain't no place for no lady.... And now Quintana has went and +robbed me of what I'd saved up for Eve.... Does that go with Thee, O +Lord? No, it don't. And it don't go with me, neither. I'm a-goin' to git +Quintana. Then I'm a-goin' to git them two minks that robbed my +girlie,--I am!... Jake Kloon, he done it in cahoots with Earl Leverett; +and Quintana set 'em on. And they gotta die, O Lord of Israel, them +there Egyptians is about to hop the twig.... I ain't aimin' to be mean +to nobody. I buy hootch of them that runs it. I eat mountain mutton in +season and out. I trade with law-breakers, I do. But, Lord, I gotta get +my girlie outa here; and Harrod he walled me in with the chariots and +spears of Egypt, till I nigh went wild.... And now comes Quintana, and +here I be a-lyin' out to get him so's my girlie can become a lady, +same's them fine folks with all their butlers and automobiles and +what-not----" + +A far crash in the forest stilled his twitching lips and stiffened every +iron muscle. + +As he lifted his rifle, Sid Hone came into the glade. + +"Yahoo! Yahoo!" he called. "Where be you, Mike?" + +Clinch slowly rose, grasping his rifle, his small, grey eyes ablaze. + +"Where's Quintana?" he demanded. + +"H'ain't you seen nobody?" + +"No." + +In the intense silence other sounds broke sharply in the sunset forest; +Harvey Chase's halloo rang out from the rocks above; Blommers and the +Hastings boys came slouching through the ferns. + +Byron Hastings greeted Clinch with upflung gun: "Me and Jim heard a shot +away out on Drowned Valley," he announced. "Was you out that way, +Mike?" + +"No." + +One by one the men who had driven Star Peak lounged up in the red sunset +light, gathering around Clinch and wiping the sweat from sun-reddened +faces. + +"Someone's in Drowned Valley," repeated Byron. "Them minks slid off'n +Star in a hurry, I reckon, judgin' how they left their shanty. Phew! It +stunk! They had French hootch, too." + +"Mebby Leverett and Kloon told 'em we was fixin' to visit them," +suggested Blommers. + +"They didn't know," said Clinch. + +"Where's Hal Smith?" inquired Hone. + +Clinch made no reply. Blommers silently gnawed a new quid from the +remains of a sticky plug. + +"Well," inquired Jim Hastings finally, "do we quit, Mike, or do we +still-hunt in Drowned Valley?" + +"Not me, at night," remarked Blommers drily. + +"Not amongst them sink-holes," added Hone. + +Suddenly Clinch turned and stared at him. Then the deadly light from his +little eyes shone on the others one by one. + +"Boys," he said, "I gotta get Quintana. I can't never sleep another wink +till I get that man. Come on. Act up like gents all. Let's go." + +Nobody stirred. + +"Come on," repeated Clinch softly. But his lips shrank back, twitching. + +As they looked at him they saw his teeth. + +"All right, all right," growled Hone, shouldering his rifle with a jerk. + +The Hastings boys, young and rash, shuffled into the trail. Blommers +hesitated, glanced askance at Clinch, and instantly made up his mind to +take a chance with the sink-holes rather than with Clinch. + +"God A'mighty, Mike, what be you aimin' to do?" faltered Harvey. + +"I'm aimin' to stop the inlet and outlet to Drowned Valley, Harve," +replied Clinch in his pleasant voice. "God is a-goin' to deliver +Quintana into my hands." + +"All right. What next?" + +"Then," continued Clinch, "I cal'late to set down and wait." + +"How long?" + +"Ask God, boys. I don't know. All I know is that whatever is livin' in +Drowned Valley at this hour has gotta live and die there. For it can't +never live to come outen that there morass walkin' onto two legs like a +real man." + +He moved slowly along the file of sullen men, his rifle a-trail in one +huge fist. + +"Boys," he said, "I got first. There ain't no sink-hole deep enough to +drowned me while Eve needs me.... And my little girlie needs me bad.... +After she gits what's her'n, then I don't care no more...." He looked up +into the sky, where the last ashes of sunset faded from the zenith.... +"Then I don't care," he murmured. "Like's not I'll creep away like some +shot-up critter, n'kinda find some lone, safe spot, n'kinda fix me f'r +a long nap.... I guess that'll be the way ... when Eve's a lady down to +Noo York 'r'som'ers----" he added vaguely. + +Then, still looking up at the fading heavens, he moved forward, head +lifted, silent, unhurried, with the soundless, stealthy, and certain +tread of those who walk unseeing and asleep. + + +II + +Clinch had not taken a dozen strides before Hal Smith loomed up ahead in +the rosy dusk, driving in Leverett before him. + +An exclamation of fierce exultation burst from Clinch's thin lips as he +flung out one arm, indicating Smith and his clinking prisoner: + +"Who was that gol-dinged catamount that suspicioned Hal? I wa'nt worried +none, neither. Hal's a gent. Mebbe he sticks up folks, too, but he's a +gent. And gents is honest or they ain't gents." + +Smith came up at his easy, tireless gait, hustling Leverett along with +prods from gun-butt or muzzle, as came handiest. + +The prisoner turned a ghastly visage on Clinch, who ignored him. + +"Got my packet, Hal?" he demanded. + +Smith poked Leverett with his rifle: "Tune up," he said; "tell Clinch +your story." + +As a caged rat looks death in the face, his ratty wits working like +lightning and every atom of cunning and ferocity alert for attack or +escape, so the little, mean eyes of Earl Leverett became fixed on Clinch +like two immobile and glassy beads of jet. + +"G'wan," said Clinch softly, "spit it out." + +"Jake done it," muttered Leverett, thickly. + +"Done what?" + +"Stole that there packet o' yourn--whatever there was into it." + +"Who put him up to it?" + +"A fella called Quintana." + +"What was there in it for Jake?" inquired Clinch pleasantly. + +"Ten thousand." + +"How about you?" + +"I told 'em I wouldn't touch it. Then they pulled their guns on me, and +I was scared to squeal." + +"So that was the way?" asked Clinch in his even, reassuring voice. + +Leverett's eyes travelled stealthily around the circle of men, then +reverted to Clinch. + +"I dassn't touch it," he said, "but I dassn't squeal.... I was huntin' +onto Drowned Valley when Jake meets up with me." + +"'I got the packet,' he sez, 'and I'm a-going to double criss-cross +Quintana, I am, and beat it. Don't you wish you was whacks with me?' + +"'No,' sez I, 'honesty is my policy, no matter what they tell about me. +S'help me God, I ain't never robbed no trap and I ain't no skin thief, +whatever lies folks tell. All I ever done was run a little hootch, +same's everybody.'" + +He licked his lips furtively, his cold, bright eyes fastened on Clinch. + +"G'wan, Earl," nodded the latter, "heave her up." + +"That's all. I sez, 'Good-bye, Jake. An' if you heed my warnin', +ill-gotten gains ain't a-going to prosper nobody.' That's what I said to +Jake Kloon, the last solemn words I spoke to that there man now in his +bloody grave----" + +"Hey?" demanded Clinch. + +"That's where Jake is," repeated Leverett. "Why, so help me, I wa'nt +gone ten yards when, bang! goes a gun, and I see this here Quintana come +outen the bush, I do, and walk up to Jake and frisk him, and Jake still +a-kickin' the moss to slivers. Yessir, that's what I seen." + +"G'wan." + +"Yessir.... 'N'then Quintana he shoved Jake into a sink-hole. Thaswot I +seen with my two eyes. Yessir. 'N'then Quintana he run off, 'n'I jest +set down in the trail, I did; 'n'then Hal come up and acted like I had +stole your packet, he did; 'n'then I told him what Quintana done. +'N'Hal, he takes after Quintana, but I don't guess he meets up with him, +for he come back and ketched holt o' me, 'n'he druv me in like I was a +caaf, he did. 'N'here I be." + +The dusk in the forest had deepened so that the men's faces had become +mere blotches of grey. + +Smith said to Clinch: "That's his story, Mike. But I preferred he should +tell it to you himself, so I brought him along.... Did you drive Star +Peak?" + +"There wa'nt nothin' onto it," said Clinch very softly. Then, of a +sudden, his shadowy visage became contorted and he jerked up his rifle +and threw a cartridge into the magazine. + +"You dirty louse!" he roared at Leverett, "you was into this, too, +a-robbin' my little Eve----" + +"Run!" yelled somebody, giving Leverett a violent shove into the woods. + +In the darkness and confusion, Clinch shouldered his way out of the +circle and fired at the crackling noise that marked Leverett's +course,--fired again, lower, and again as a distant crash revealed the +frenzied flight of the trap-robber. After he had fired a fourth shot, +somebody struck up his rifle. + +"Aw," said Jim Hastings, "that ain't no good. You act up like a kid, +Mike. 'Tain't so far to Ghost Lake, n'them Troopers might hear you." + +After a silence, Clinch spoke, his voice heavy with reaction: + +"Into that there packet is my little girl's dower. It's all I got to +give her. It's all she's got to make her a lady. I'll kill any man that +robs her or that helps rob her. 'N'that's that." + +"Are you going on after Quintana?" asked Smith. + +"I am. 'N'these fellas are a-going with me. N' I want you should go back +to my Dump and look after my girlie while I'm gone." + +"How long are you going to be away?" + +"I dunno." + +There was a silence. Then, + +"All right," said Smith, briefly. He added: "Look out for sink-holes, +Mike." + +Clinch tossed his heavy rifle to his shoulder: "Let's go," he said in +his pleasant, misleading way, "--and I'll shoot the guts outa any fella +that don't show up at roll call." + + +III + +For its size there is no fiercer animal than a rat. + +Rat-like rage possessed Leverett. In his headlong flight through the +dusk, fear, instead of quenching, added to his rage; and he ran on and +on, crashing through the undergrowth, made wilder by the pain of vicious +blows from branches which flew back and struck him in the dark. + +Thorns bled him; unseen logs tripped him; he heard Clinch's bullets +whining around him; and he ran on, beginning to sob and curse in a +frenzy of fury, fear, and shame. + +Shots from Clinch's rifle ceased; the fugitive dropped into a heavy, +shuffling walk, slavering, gasping, gesticulating with his weaponless +fists in the darkness. + +"Gol ram ye, I'll fix ye!" he kept stammering in his snarling, jangling +voice, broken by sobs. "I'll learn ye, yeh poor danged thing, gol ram +ye----" + +An unseen limb struck him cruelly across the face, and a moose-bush +tripped him flat. Almost crazed, he got up, yelling in his pain, one +hand wet and sticky from blood welling up from his cheek-bone. + +He stood listening, infuriated, vindictive, but heard nothing save the +panting, animal sounds in his own throat. + +He strove to see in the ghostly obscurity around him, but could make out +little except the trees close by. + +But wood-rats are never completely lost in their native darkness; and +Leverett presently discovered the far stars shining faintly through +rifts in the phantom foliage above. + +These heavenly signals were sufficient to give him his directions. Then +the question suddenly came, _which_ direction? + +To his own shack on Stinking Lake he dared not go. He tried to believe +that it was fear of Clinch that made him shy of the home shanty; but, in +his cowering soul, he knew it was fear of another kind--the deep, +superstitious horror of Jake Kloon's empty bunk--the repugnant sight of +Kloon's spare clothing hanging from its peg--the dead man's shoes---- + +No, he could not go to Stinking Lake and sleep.... And wake with the +faint stench of sulphur in his throat.... And see the worm-like leeches +unfolding in the shallows, and the big, reddish water-lizards, livid as +skinned eels, wriggling convulsively toward their sunless lairs.... + +At the mere thought of his dead bunk-mate he sought relief in vindictive +rage--stirred up the smouldering embers again, cursed Clinch and Hal +Smith, violently searching in his inflamed brain some instant vengeance +upon these men who had driven him out from the only place on earth where +he knew how to exist--the wilderness. + +All at once he thought of Clinch's step-daughter. The thought instantly +scared him. Yet--what a revenge!--to strike Clinch through the only +creature he cared for in all the world!... What a revenge!... Clinch +was headed for Drowned Valley. Eve Strayer was alone at the Dump.... +Another thought flashed like lightning across his turbid mind;--_the +packet_! + +Bribed by Quintana, Jake Kloon, lurking at Clinch's door, had heard him +direct Eve to take a packet to Owl Marsh, and had notified Quintana. + +Wittingly or unwittingly, the girl had taken a packet of sugar-milk +chocolate instead of the priceless parcel expected. + +Again, carried in, exhausted, by a State Trooper, Jake Kloon had been +fooled; and it was the packet of sugar-milk chocolate that Jake had +purloined from the veranda where Clinch kicked it. For two cakes of +chocolate Kloon had died. For two cakes of chocolate he, Earl Leverett, +had become a man-slayer, a homeless fugitive in peril of his life. + +He stood licking his blood-dried lips there in the darkness, striving to +hatch courage out of the dull fury eating at a coward's heart. + +Somewhere in Clinch's Dump was the packet that would make him rich.... +Here was his opportunity. He had only to dare; and pain and poverty and +fear--above all else _fear_--would end forever!... + + * * * * * + +When, at last, he came out to the edge of Clinch's clearing, the dark +October heavens were but a vast wilderness of stars. + +Star Pond, set to its limpid depths with the heavenly gems, glittered +and darkled with its million diamond incrustations. The humped-up lump +of Clinch's Dump crouched like some huge and feeding night-beast on the +bank, ringed by the solemn forest. + +There was a kerosene lamp burning in Eve Strayer's rooms. Another +light--a candle--flickered in the kitchen. + +Leverett, crouching, ran rat-like down to the barn, slid in between the +ice house and corn-crib, crawled out among the wilderness of weeds and +lay flat. + +The light burned steadily from Eve's window. + + +IV + +From his form among frost-blackened rag-weeds, the trap-robber could see +only the plastered ceiling of the bed chamber. + +But the kerosene lamp cast two shadows on that--tall shadows of human +shapes that stirred at times. + +The trap-robber, scared, stiffened to immobility, but his little eyes +remained fastened on the camera obscura above. All the cunning, +patience, and murderous immobility of the rat were his. + +Not a weed stirred under the stars where he lay with tiny, unwinking +eyes intent upon the shadows on the ceiling. + + * * * * * + +The shadows on the ceiling were cast by Eve Strayer and her State +Trooper. + +Eve sat on her bed's edge, swathed in a lilac silk kimona--delicate +relic of school days. Her bandaged feet, crossed, dangled above the +rag-rug on the floor; her slim, tanned fingers were interlaced over the +book on her lap. + +Near the door stood State Trooper Stormont, spurred, booted, trig and +trim, an undecided and flushed young man, fumbling irresolutely with the +purple cord on his campaign-hat. + +The book on Eve's knees--another relic of the past--was _Sigurd the +Volsung_. Stormont had been reading to her--they having found, after the +half shy tentatives of new friends, a point d'appui in literature. And +the girl, admitting a passion for the poets, invited him to inspect the +bookcase of unpainted pine which Clinch had built into her bedroom wall. + +Here it was he discovered mutual friends among the nobler +Victorians--surprised to discover _Sigurd_ there--and, carrying it to +her bedside, looked leisurely through the half forgotten pages. + +"Would you read a little?" she ventured. + +He blushed but did his best. His was an agreeable, boyish voice, +betraying taste and understanding. Time passed quickly--not so much in +the reading but in the conversations intervening. + +And now, made uneasy by chance consultation with his wrist-watch, and +being rather a conscientious young man, he had risen and had informed +Eve that she ought to go to sleep. + +And she had denounced the idea, almost fretfully. + +"Even if you go I shan't sleep till daddy comes," she said. "Of course," +she added, smiling at him out of gentian-blue eyes, "if _you_ are sleepy +I shouldn't dream of asking you to stay." + +"I'm not intending to sleep." + +"What are you going to do?" + +"Take a chair on the landing outside your door." + +"What!" + +"Certainly. What did you expect me to do, Eve?" + +"Go to bed, of course. The beds in the guest rooms are all made up." + +"Your father didn't expect me to do that," he said, smiling. + +"I'm not afraid, as long as you're in the house," she said. + +She looked up at him again, wistfully. Perhaps he was restless, bored, +sitting there beside her half the day, and, already, half the night. Men +of that kind--active, nervous young men accustomed to the open, can't +stand caging. + +"I want you to go out and get some fresh air," she said. "It's a +wonderful night. Go and walk a while. And--if you feel like--coming back +to me----" + +"Will you sleep?" + +"No, I'll wait for you." + +Her words were natural and direct, but in their simplicity there seemed +a delicate sweetness that stirred him. + +"I'll come back to you," he said. + +Then, in his response, the girl in her turn became aware of something +beside the simple words--a vague charm about them that faintly haunted +her after he had gone away down the stairs. + +_That_ was the man she had once tried to kill! At the sudden and +terrible recollection she shivered from curly head to bandaged feet. +Then she trembled a little with the memory of his lips against her +bruised hands--bruised by handcuffs which he had fastened upon her. + +She sat very, very still now, huddled on the bed's edge, scarcely +breathing. + +For the girl was beginning to dare formulate the deepest of any thoughts +that ever had stirred her virgin mind and body. + +If it was love, then it had come suddenly, and strangely. It had come on +that day--at the very moment when he flung her against the tree and +handcuffed her--that terrible instant--if it were love. + +Or--what was it that so delicately overwhelmed her with pleasure in his +presence, in his voice, in the light, firm sound of his spurred tread on +the veranda below? + +Friendship? A lonely passion for young and decent companionship? The +clean youth of him in contrast to the mangy, surly louts who haunted +Clinch's Dump,--was that the appeal? + +Listening there where she sat clasping the book, she heard his steady +tread patrolling the veranda; caught the faint fragrance of his brier +pipe in the still night air. + +"I think--I think it's--love," she said under her breath.... "But he +couldn't ever think of me----" always listening to his spurred tread +below. + +After a while she placed both bandaged feet on the rug. It hurt her, but +she stood up, walked to the open window. She wanted to look at him--just +a moment---- + +By chance he looked up at that instant, and saw her pale face, like a +flower in the starlight. + +"Why, Eve," he said, "you ought not to be on your feet." + +"Once," she said, "you weren't so particular about my bruises." + +Her breathless little voice coming down through the starlight thrilled +him. + +"Do you remember what I did?" he asked. + +"Yes. You bruised my hands and made my mouth bleed." + +"I did penance--for your hands." + +"Yes, you kissed _them_!" + +What possessed her--what irresponsible exhilaration was inciting her to +a daring utterly foreign to her nature? She heard herself laugh, knew +that she was young, pretty, capable of provocation. And in a sudden, +breathless sort of way an overwhelming desire seized her to please, to +charm, to be noticed by such a man--whatever, on afterthought, he might +think of the step-child of Mike Clinch. + +Stormont had come directly under her window and stood looking up. + +"I dared not offer further penance," he said. + +The emotion in his voice stirred her--but she was still laughing down at +him. + +She said: "You _did_ offer further penance--you offered your +handkerchief. So--as that was _all_ you offered as reparation for--my +lips----" + +"Eve! I could have taken you into my arms----" + +"You _did_! And threw me down among the spruces. You really did +everything that a contrite heart could suggest----" + +"Good heavens!" said that rather matter-of-fact young man, "I don't +believe you have forgiven me after all." + +"I have--everything except the handkerchief----" + +"Then I'm coming up to complete my penance----" + +"I'll lock my door!" + +"Would you?" + +"I ought to.... But if you are in great spiritual distress, and if you +really and truly repent, and if you humbly desire to expiate your sin by +doing--penance----" And hesitated: "Do you so desire?" + +"Yes, I do." + +"Humbly? Contritely?" + +"Yes." + +"Very well. Say 'Mea culpa, mea maxima culpa.'" + +"Mea maxima culpa," he said so earnestly, looking up into her face that +she bent lower over the sill to see him. + +"Let me come up, Eve," he said. + +She strove to laugh, gazing down into his shadowy face--but suddenly the +desire had left her,--and all her gaiety left her, too, suddenly, +leaving only a still excitement in her breast. + +"You--you knew I was just laughing," she said unsteadily. "You +understood, didn't you?" + +"I don't know." + +After a silence: "I didn't mean you to take me seriously," she said. She +tried to laugh. It was no use. And, as she leaned there on the sill, her +heart frightened her with its loud beating. + +"Will you let me come up, Eve?" + +No answer. + +"Would you lock your door?" + +"What do you think I'd do?" she asked tremulously. + +"You know; I don't." + +"Are you so sure I know what I'd do? I don't think either of us know our +own minds.... I seem to have lost some of my wits.... Somehow...." + +"If you are not going to sleep, let me come up." + +"I want you to take a walk down by the pond. And while you're walking +there all by yourself, I want you to think very clearly, very calmly, +and make up your mind whether I should remain awake to-night, or +whether, when you return, I ought to be asleep and--and my door bolted." + +After a long pause: "All right," he said in a low voice. + + +V + +She saw him walk away--saw his shadowy, well-built form fade into the +starlit mist. + +An almost uncontrollable impulse set her throat and lips quivering with +desire to call to him through the night, "I do love you! I do love you! +Come back quickly, quickly!----" + +Fog hung over Star Pond, edging the veranda, rising in frail shreds to +her window. The lapping of the water sounded very near. An owl was very +mournful in the hemlocks. + +The girl turned from the window, looked at the door for a moment, then +her face flushed and she walked toward a chair and seated herself, +leaving the door unbolted. + +For a little while she sat upright, alert, as though a little +frightened. After a few moments she folded her hands and sat unstirring, +with lowered head, awaiting Destiny. + + * * * * * + +It came, noiselessly. And so swiftly that the rush of air from her +violently opened door was what first startled her. + +For in the same second Earl Leverett was upon her in his stockinged +feet, one bony hand gripping her mouth, the other flung around her, +pinning both arms to her sides. + +"The packet!" he panted, "--quick, yeh dirty little cat, 'r'I'll break +yeh head off'n yeh damn neck!" + +She bit at the hand that he held crushed against her mouth. He lifted +her bodily, flung her onto the bed, and, twisting sheet and quilt around +her, swathed her to the throat. + +Still controlling her violently distorted lips with his left hand and +holding her so, one knee upon her, he reached back, unsheathed his +hunting knife, and pricked her throat till the blood spurted. + +"Now, gol ram yeh!" he whispered fiercely, "where's Mike's packet? +Yell, and I'll hog-stick yeh fur fair! Where is it, you dum thing!" + +He took his left hand from her mouth. The distorted, scarlet lips +writhed back, displaying her white teeth clenched. + +"Where's Mike's bundle!" he repeated, hoarse with rage and fear. + +"You rat!" she gasped. + +At that he closed her mouth again, and again he pricked her with his +knife, cruelly. The blood welled up onto the sheets. + +"Now, by God!" he said in a ghastly voice, "answer or I'll hog-stick yeh +next time! Where is it? Where! where!" + +She only showed her teeth in answer. Her eyes flamed. + +"Where! Quick! Gol ding yeh, I'll shove this knife in behind your ear if +you don't tell! Go on. Where is it? It's in this Dump som'ers. I know it +is--don't lie! You want that I should stick you good? That what you +want--you dirty little dump-slut? Well, then, gol ram yeh--I'll fix yeh +like Quintana was aimin' at----" + +He slit the sheet downward from her imprisoned knees, seized one wounded +foot and tried to slash the bandages. + +"I'll cut a coupla toes off'n yeh," he snarled, "--I'll hamstring yeh +fur keeps!"--struggling to mutilate her while she flung her helpless and +entangled body from side to side and bit at the hand that was almost +suffocating her. + +Unable to hold her any longer, he seized a pillow, to bury the venomous +little head that writhed, biting, under his clutch. + +As he lifted it he saw a packet lying under it. + +"By God!" he panted. + +As he seized it she screamed for the first time: "Jack! Jack +Stormont!"--and fairly hurled her helpless little body at Leverett, +striking him full in the face with her head. + +Half stunned, still clutching the packet, he tried to stab her in the +stomach; but the armour of bed-clothes turned the knife, although his +violence dashed all breath out of her. + +Sick with the agony of it, speechless, she still made the effort; and, +as he stumbled to his feet and turned to escape, she struggled upright, +choking, blood running from the knife pricks in her neck. + +With the remnant of her strength, and still writhing and gasping for +breath, she tore herself from the sheets and blankets, reeled across the +room to where Stormont's rifle stood, threw in a cartridge, dragged +herself to the window. + +Dimly she saw a running figure in the night mist, flung the rifle across +the window sill and fired. Then she fired again--or thought she did. +There were two shots. + +"Eve!" came Stormont's sharp cry, "what the devil are you trying to do +to me?" + +His cry terrified her; the rifle clattered to the floor. + +The next instant he came running up the stairs, bare headed, heavy +pistol swinging, and halted, horrified at sight of her. + +"Eve! My God!" he whispered, taking her blood-wet body into his arms. + +"Go after Leverett," she gasped. "He's robbed daddy. He's running +away--out there--somewhere----" + +"Where did he hurt you, Eve--my little Eve----" + +"Oh, go! go!" she wailed,--"I'm not hurt. He only pricked me with his +knife. I'm not hurt, I tell you. Go after him! Take your pistol and +follow him and kill him!" + +"Oh," she cried hysterically, twisting and sobbing in his arms, "don't +lose time here with me! Don't stand here while he's running away with +dad's money!" And, "Oh--oh--_oh_!!" she sobbed, collapsing in his arms +and clinging to him convulsively as he carried her to her tumbled bed +and laid her there. + +He said: "I couldn't risk following anybody now, after what has happened +to you. I can't leave you alone here! Don't cry, Eve. I'll get your man +for you, I promise! Don't cry, dear. It was all my fault for leaving +this room even for a minute----" + +"No, no, no! It's my fault. I sent you away. Oh, I wish I hadn't. I wish +I had let you come back when you wanted to.... I was waiting for you.... +I left the door unbolted for you. When it opened I thought it was you. +And it was Leverett!--it was Leverett!----" + +Stormont's face grew very white: "What did he do to you, Eve? Tell me, +darling. What did he do to you?" + +"Dad's money was under my pillow," she wailed. "Leverett tried to make +me tell where it was. I wouldn't, and he hurt me----" + +"How?" + +"He pricked me with his knife. When I screamed for you he tried to choke +me with the pillow. Didn't you hear me scream?" + +"Yes. I came on the jump." + +"It was too late," she sobbed; "--too late! He saw the money packet +under my pillow and he snatched it and ran. Somehow I found your rifle +and fired. I fired twice." + +Her only bullet had torn his campaign hat from his head. But he did not +tell her. + +"Let me see your neck," he said, bending closer. + +She bared her throat, making a soft, vague complaint like a hurt +bird,--lay there whimpering under her breath while he bathed the blood +away with lint, sterilised the two cuts from his emergency packet, and +bound them. + +He was still bending low over her when her blue eyes unclosed on his. + +"That is the second time I've tried to kill you," she whispered. "I +thought it was Leverett.... I'd have died if I had killed you." + +There was a silence. + +"Lie very still," he said huskily. "I'll be back in a moment to +rebandage your feet and make you comfortable for the night." + +"I can't sleep," she repeated desolately. "Dad trusted his money to me +and I've let Leverett rob me. How can I sleep?" + +"I'll bring you something to make you sleep." + +"I can't!" + +"I promise you you will sleep. Lie still." + +He rose, went away downstairs and out to the barn, where his campaign +hat lay in the weed, drilled through by a bullet. + +There was something else lying there in the weeds,--a flat, muddy, +shoeless shape sprawling grotesquely in the foggy starlight. + +One hand clutched a hunting knife; the other a packet. + +Stormont drew the packet from the stiff fingers, then turned the body +over, and, flashing his electric torch, examined the ratty visage--what +remained of it--for his pistol bullet had crashed through from ear to +cheek-bone, almost obliterating the trap-robber's features. + + * * * * * + +Stormont came slowly into Eve's room and laid the packet on the sheet +beside her. + +"Now," he said, "there is no reason for you to lie awake any longer. +I'll fix you up for the night." + +Deftly he unbandaged, bathed, dressed, and rebandaged her slim white +feet--little wounded feet so lovely, so exquisite that his hand trembled +as he touched them. + +"They're doing fine," he said cheerily. "You've half a degree of fever +and I'm going to give you something to drink before you go to sleep----" + +He poured out a glass of water, dissolved two tablets, supported her +shoulders while she drank in a dazed way, looking always at him over the +glass. + +"Now," he said, "go to sleep. I'll be on the job outside your door until +your daddy arrives." + +"How did you get back dad's money?" she asked in an odd, emotionless way +as though too weary for further surprises. + +"I'll tell you in the morning." + +"Did you kill him? I didn't hear your pistol." + +"I'll tell you all about it in the morning. Good night, Eve." + +As he bent over her, she looked up into his eyes and put both arms +around his neck. + +It was her first kiss given to any man, except Mike Clinch. + +After Stormont had gone out and closed the door, she lay very still for +a long while. + +Then, instinctively, she touched her lips with her fingers; and, at the +contact, a blush clothed her from brow to ankle. + +The Flaming Jewel in its morocco casket under her pillow burned with no +purer fire than the enchanted flame glowing in the virgin heart of Eve +Strayer of Clinch's Dump. + +Thus they lay together, two lovely flaming jewels burning softly, +steadily through the misty splendour of the night. + +Under a million stars, Death sprawled in squalor among the trampled +weeds. Under the same high stars dark mountains waited; and there was a +silvery sound of waters stirring somewhere in the mist. + + + + +EPISODE SEVEN + +CLINCH'S DUMP + + +I + +When Mike Clinch bade Hal Smith return to the Dump and take care of Eve, +Smith already had decided to go there. + +Somewhere in Clinch's Dump was hidden the Flaming Jewel. Now was his +time to search for it. + +There were two other reasons why he should go back. One of them was that +Leverett was loose. If anything had called Trooper Stormont away, Eve +would be alone in the house. And nobody on earth could forecast what a +coward like Leverett might attempt. + +But there was another and more serious reason for returning to Clinch's. +Clinch, blood-mad, was headed for Drowned Valley with his men, to stop +both ends of that vast morass before Quintana and his gang could get +out. + +It was evident that neither Clinch nor any of his men--although their +very lives depended upon familiarity with the wilderness--knew that a +third exit from Drowned Valley existed. + +But the nephew of the late Henry Harrod knew. + +When Jake Kloon was a young man and Darragh was a boy, Kloon had shown +him the rocky, submerged game trail into Drowned Valley. Doubtless Kloon +had used it in hootch running since. If ever he had told anybody else +about it, probably he had revealed the trail to Quintana. + +And that was why Darragh, or Hal Smith, finally decided to return to +Star Pond;--because if Quintana had been told or had discovered that +circuitous way out of Drowned Valley, he might go straight to Clinch's +Dump.... And, supposing Stormont was still there, how long could one +State Trooper stand off Quintana's gang? + + * * * * * + +No sooner had Clinch and his motley followers disappeared in the dusk +than Smith unslung his basket-pack, fished out a big electric torch, +flashed it tentatively, and then, reslinging the pack and taking his +rifle in his left hand, he set off at an easy swinging stride. + +His course was not toward Star Pond; it was at right angles with that +trail. For he was taking no chances. Quintana might already have left +Drowned Valley by that third exit unknown to Clinch. + +Smith's course would now cut this unmarked trail, trodden only by game +that left no sign in the shallow mountain rivulet which was the path. + +The trail lay a long way off through the night. But if Quintana had +discovered and taken that trail, it would be longer still for him--twice +as long as the regular trail out. + +For a mile or two the forest was first growth pine, and sufficiently +open so that Smith might economise on his torch. + +He knew every foot of it. As a boy he had carried a jacob-staff in the +Geological Survey. Who better than the forest-roaming nephew of Henry +Harrod should know this blind wilderness? + +The great pines towered on every side, lofty and smooth to the feathery +canopy that crowned them under the high stars. + +There was no game here, no water, nothing to attract anybody except the +devastating lumberman. But this was a five thousand acre patch of State +land. The ugly whine of the steam-saw would never be heard here. + +On he walked at an easy, swinging stride, flashing his torch rarely, +feeling no concern about discovery by Quintana's people. + +It was only when he came into the hardwoods that the combined necessity +for caution and torch perplexed and worried him. + +Somewhere in here began an outcrop of rock running east for miles. Only +stunted cedar and berry bushes found shallow nourishment on this ridge. + +When at last he found it he travelled upon it, more slowly, constantly +obliged to employ the torch. + +After an hour, perhaps, his feet splashed in shallow water. _That_ was +what he was expecting. The water was only an inch or two deep; it was +ice cold and running north. + +Now, he must advance with every caution. For here trickled the thin flow +of that rocky rivulet which was the other entrance and exit penetrating +that immense horror of marsh and bog and depthless sink-hole known as +Drowned Valley. + + * * * * * + +For a long while he did not dare to use his torch; but now he was +obliged to. + +He shined the ground at his feet, elevated the torch with infinite +precaution, throwing a fan-shaped light over the stretch of sink he had +suspected and feared. It flanked the flat, wet path of rock on either +side. Here Death spread its slimy trap at his very feet. + +Then, as he stood taking his bearings with burning torch, far ahead in +the darkness a light flashed, went out, flashed twice more, and was +extinguished. + +Quintana! + +Smith's wits were working like lightning, but instinct guided him before +his brain took command. He levelled his torch and repeated the three +signal flashes. Then, in darkness, he came to swift conclusion. + +There were no other signals from the unknown. The stony bottom of the +rivulet was his only aid. + +In his right hand the torch hung almost touching the water. At times he +ventured sufficient pressure for a feeble glimmer, then again trusted to +his sense of contact. + +For three hundred yards, counting his strides, he continued on. Then, in +total darkness, he pocketed the torch, slid a cartridge into the breech +of his rifle, slung the weapon, pulled out a handkerchief, and tied it +across his face under the eyes. + +Now, he drew the torch from his pocket, levelled it, sent three quick +flashes out into darkness. + +Instantly, close ahead, three blinding flashes broke out. + +For Hal Smith it all had become a question of seconds. + +Death lay depthless on either hand; ahead Death blocked the trail in +silence. + +Out of the dark some unseen rifle might vomit death in his very face at +any moment. + +He continued to move forward. After a little while his ear caught a +slight splash ahead. Suddenly a glare of light enveloped him. + +"Is it you, Harry Beck?" + +Instinct led again while wits worked madly: "Harry Beck is two miles +back on guard. Where is Sard?" + +The silence became terrible. Once the glaring light in front moved, then +become fixed. There was a light splashing. Instantly Smith realised that +the man in front had set his torch in a tree-crotch and was now cowering +somewhere behind a levelled weapon. His voice came presently: + +"Hé! Drap-a that-a gun damn quick!" + +Smith bent, leisurely, and laid his rifle on a mossy rock. + +"Now! You there! Why you want Sard! Eh?" + +"I'll tell Sard, not you," retorted Smith coolly. "You listen to me, +whoever you are. I'm from Sard's office in New York. I'm Abrams. The +police are on their way here to find Quintana." + +"How I know? Eh? Why shall I believe that? You tell-a me queeck or I +blow-a your damn head off!" + +"Quintana will blow-a _your_ head off unless you take me to Sard," +drawled Smith. + +A movement might have meant death, but he calmly rummaged for a +cigarette, lighted it, blew a cloud insolently toward the white glare +ahead. Then he took another chance: + +"I guess you're Nick Salzar, aren't you?" + +"Si! I am Salzar. Who the dev' are you?" + +"I'm Eddie Abrams, Sard's lawyer. My business is to find my client. If +you stop me you'll go to prison--the whole gang of you--Sard, Quintana, +Picquet, Sanchez, Georgiades and Harry Beck,--and _you_!" + +After a dead silence: "Maybe _you'll_ go to the chair, too!" + +It was the third chance he took. + +There was a dreadful stillness in the woods. Finally came a slight +series of splashes; the crunch of heavy boots on rock. + +"For why you com-a here, eh?" demanded Salzar, in a less aggressive +manner. "What-a da matt', eh?" + +"Well," said Smith, "if you've got to know, there are people from +Esthonia in New York.... If you understand that." + +"Christi! When do they arrive?" + +"A week ago. Sard's place is in the hands of the police. I couldn't stop +them. They've got his safe and all his papers. City, State, and Federal +officers are looking for him. The Constabulary rode into Ghost Lake +yesterday. Now, don't you think you'd better lead me to Sard?" + +"Cristi!" exclaimed Salzar. "Sard he is a mile ahead with the others. +Damn! Damn! Me, how should I know what is to be done? Me, I have my +orders from Quintana. What I do, eh? Cristi! What to do? What you say I +should do, eh, Abrams?" + +A new fear had succeeded the old one--that was evident--and Salzar came +forward into the light of his own fixed torch--a well-knit figure in +slouch hat, grey shirt, and grey breeches, and wearing a red bandanna +over the lower part of his face. He carried a heavy rifle. + +He came on, sturdily, splashing through the water, and walked up to +Smith, his rifle resting on his right shoulder. + +"For me," he said excitedly, "long time I have worry in this-a damn +wood! Si! Where you say those carbinieri? Eh?" + +"At Ghost Lake. _Your_ signature is in the hotel ledger." + +"Cristi! You know where Clinch is?" + +"You know, too. He is on the way to Drowned Valley." + +"Damn! I knew it. Quintana also. You know where is Quintana? And Sard? I +tell-a you. They march ver' fast to the Dump of Clinch. Si! And there +they would discover these-a beeg-a dimon'--these-a Flame-Jewel. Si! +_Now_, you tell-a me what I do?" + +Smith said slowly: "If Quintana is marching on Clinch's he's marching +into a trap!" + +Salzar blanched above his bandanna. + +"The State Troopers are there," said Smith. "They'll get him sure." + +"Cristi," faltered Salzar, "--then they are gobble--Quintana, Sard, +everybody! Si?" + +Smith considered the man: "You can save _your_ skin anyway. You can go +back and tell Harry Beck. Then both of you can beat it for Drowned +Valley." + +He picked up his rifle, stood a moment in troubled reflection: + +"If I could overtake Quintana I'd do it," he said. "I think I'll try. If +I can't, he's done for. You tell Harry Beck that Eddie Abrams advises +him to beat it for Drowned Valley." + +Suddenly Salzar tore the bandanna from his face, flung it down and +stamped on it. + +"What I tell Quintana!" he yelled, his features distorted with rage. "I +don't-a like!--no, not me!--no, I tell-a heem, stay at those Ghost-a +Lake and watch thees-a fellow Clinch. Si! Not for me thees-a wood. No! I +spit upon it! I curse like hell! I tell Quintana I don't-a like. Now, +eet is trouble that comes and we lose-a out! Damn! _Damn!_ Me, I find me +Beck. You shall say to José Quintana how he is a damfool. Me, I am +finish--me, Nick Salzar! You hear me, Abrams! I am through! I go!" + +He glared at Smith, started to move, came back and took his torch, made +a violent gesture with it which drenched the woods with goblin light. + +"You stop-a Quintana, maybe. You tell-a heem he is the bigg-a fool! You +tell-a heem Nick Salzar is no damn fool. No! Adios, my frien' Abrams. I +beat it. I save my skin!" + +Once more Salzar turned and headed for Drowned Valley.... Where Clinch +would not fail to kill him.... The man was going to his death.... And +it was Smith who sent him. + +Suddenly it came to Smith that he could not do this thing; that this man +had no chance; that he was slaying a human being with perfect safety to +himself and without giving him a chance. + +"Salzar!" he called sharply. + +The man halted and looked around. + +"Come back!" + +Salzar hesitated, turned finally, slouched toward him. + +Smith laid aside his pack and rifle, and, as Salzar came up, he quietly +took his weapon from him and laid it beside his own. + +"What-a da matt'?" demanded Salzar, astonished. "Why you taka my gun?" + +Smith measured him. They were well matched. + +"Set your torch in that crotch," he said. + +Salzar, puzzled and impatient, demanded to know why. Smith took both +torches, set them opposite each other and drew Salzar into the white +glare. + +"Now," he said, "you dirty desperado, I am going to try to kill you +clean. Look out for yourself!" + +For a second Salzar stood rooted in blank astonishment. + +"I'm one of Clinch's men," said Smith, "but I can't stick a knife in +your back, at that! Now, take care of yourself if you can----" + +His voice died in his throat; Salzar was on him, clawing, biting, +kicking, striving to strangle him, to wrestle him off his feet. Smith +reeled, staggering under the sheer rush of the man, almost blinded by +blows, clutched, bewildered in Salzar's panther grip. + +For a moment he writhed there, searching blindly for his enemy's wrist, +striving to avoid the teeth that snapped at his throat, stifled by the +hot stench of the man's breath in his face. + +"I keel you! I keel you! Damn! Damn!" panted Salzar, in convulsive fury +as Smith freed his left arm and struck him in the face. + +Now, on the narrow, wet and slippery strip of rock they swayed to and +fro, murderously interlocked, their heavy boots splashing, battling with +limb and body. + +Twice Salzar forced Smith outward over the sink, trying to end it, but +could not free himself. + +Once, too, he managed to get at a hidden knife, drag it out and stab at +head and throat; but Smith caught the fist that wielded it, forced back +the arm, held it while Salzar screamed at him, lunging at his face with +bared teeth. + +Suddenly the end came: Salzar's body heaved upward, sprawled for an +instant in the dazzling glare, hurtled over Smith's head and fell into +the sink with a crashing splash. + +Frantically he thrashed there, spattering and floundering in darkness. +He made no outcry. Probably he had landed head first. + +In a moment only a vague heaving came from the unseen ooze. + +Smith, exhausted, drenched with sweat, leaned against a tamarack, +sickened. + +After all sound had ceased he straightened up with an effort. Presently +he bent and recovered Salzar's red bandanna and his hat, lifted his own +rifle and pack and struggled into the harness. Then, kicking Salzar's +rifle overboard, he unfastened both torches, pocketed one, and started +on in a flood of ghostly light. + +He was shaking all over and the torch quivered in his hand. He had seen +men die in the Great War. He had been near death himself. But never +before had he been near death in so horrible a form. The sodden noises +in the mud, the deadened flopping of the sinking body--mud-plastered +hands beating frantically on mud, spattering, agonising in darkness--"My +God," he breathed, "anything but that--anything but that!----" + + +II + +Before midnight he struck the hard forest. Here there was no trail at +all, only spreading outcrop of rock under dying leaves. + +He could see a few stars. Cautiously he ventured to shine his compass +close to the ground. He was still headed right. The ghastly sink country +lay behind him. + +Ahead of him, somewhere in darkness--but how far he did not +know--Quintana and his people were moving swiftly on Clinch's Dump. + +It may have been an hour later--two hours, perhaps--when from far ahead +in the forest came a sound--the faint clink of a shod heel on rock. + +Now, Smith unslung his pack, placed it between two rocks where laurel +grew. + +Salzar's red bandanna was still wet, but he tied it across his face, +leaving his eyes exposed. The dead man's hat fitted him. His own hat and +the extra torch he dropped into his basket-pack. + +Ready, now, he moved swiftly forward, trailing his rifle. And very soon +it became plain to him that the people ahead were moving without much +caution, evidently fearing no unfriendly ear or eye in that section of +the wilderness. + +Smith could hear their tread on rock and root and rotten branch, or +swishing through frosted fern and brake, or louder on newly fallen +leaves. + +At times he could even see the round white glare of a torch on the +ground--see it shift ahead, lighting up tree trunks, spread out, +fanlike, into a wide, misty glory, then vanish as darkness rushed in +from the vast ocean of the night. + +Once they halted at a brook. Their torches flashed it; he heard them +sounding its depths with their gun-butts. + +Smith knew that brook. It was the east branch of Star Brook, the inlet +to Star Pond. + +Far ahead above the trees the sky seemed luminous. It was star lustre +over the pond, turning the mist to a silvery splendour. + +Now the people ahead of him moved with more caution, crossing the brook +without splashing, and their boots made less noise in the woods. + +To keep in touch with them Smith hastened his pace until he drew near +enough to hear the low murmur of their voices. + +They were travelling in single file; he had a glimpse of them against +the ghostly radiance ahead. Indeed, so near had he approached that he +could hear the heavy, laboured breathing of the last man in the +file--some laggard who dragged his feet, plodding on doggedly, panting, +muttering. Probably the man was Sard. + +Already the forest in front was invaded by the misty radiance from the +clearing. Through the trees starlight glimmered on water. The perfume of +the open land grew in the night air,--the scent of dew-wet grass, the +smell of still water and of sedgy shores. + +Lying flat behind a rotting log, Smith could see them all now,--spectral +shapes against the light. There were five of them at the forest's edge. + +They seemed to know what was to be done and how to do it. Two went down +among the ferns and stunted willows toward the west shore of the pond; +two sheered off to the southwest, shoulder deep in blackberry and sumac. +The fifth man waited for a while, then ran down across the open pasture. + +Scarcely had he started when Smith glided to the wood's edge, crouched, +and looked down. + +Below stood Clinch's Dump, plain in the starlight, every window dark. To +the west the barn loomed, huge with its ramshackle outbuildings +straggling toward the lake. + +Straight down the slope toward the barn ran the fifth man of Quintana's +gang, and disappeared among the out-buildings. + +Smith crept after him through the sumacs; and, at the foot of the slope, +squatted low in a clump of rag-weed. + +So close to the house was he now that he could hear the dew rattling on +the veranda roof. He saw shadowy figures appear, one after another, and +take stations at the four corners of the house. The fifth man was +somewhere near the out-buildings, very silent about whatever he had on +hand. + +The stillness was absolute save for the drumming dew and a faint ripple +from the water's edge. + +Smith crouched, listened, searched the starlight with intent eyes, and +waited. + +Until something happened he could not solve the problem before him. He +could be of no use to Eve Strayer and to Stormont until he found out +what Quintana was going to do. + +He could be of little use anyway unless he got into the house, where two +rifles might hold out against five. + +There was no use in trying to get to Ghost Lake for assistance. He felt +that whatever was about to happen would come with a rush. It would be +all over before he had gone five minutes. No; the only thing to do was +to stay where he was. + +As for his pledge to the little Grand Duchess, that was always in his +mind. Sooner or later, somehow, he was going to make good his pledge. + +He knew that Quintana and his gang were here to find the Flaming Jewel. + +Had he not encountered Quintana, his own errand had been the same. For +Smith had started for Clinch's prepared to reveal himself to Stormont, +and then, masked to the eyes--and to save Eve from a broken heart, and +Clinch from States Prison--he had meant to rob the girl at +pistol-point. + +It was the only way to save Clinch; the only way to save the pride of +this blindly loyal girl. For the arrest of Clinch meant ruin to both, +and Smith realised it thoroughly. + + * * * * * + +A slight sound from one of the out-houses--a sort of +wagon-shed--attracted his attention. Through the frost-blighted +rag-weeds he peered intently, listening. + +After a few moments a faint glow appeared in the shed. There was a +crackling noise. The glow grew pinker. + + +III + +Inside Clinch's house Eve awoke with a start. Her ears were filled with +a strange, rushing, crackling noise. A rosy glare danced and shook +outside her windows. + +As she sprang to the floor on bandaged feet, a shrill scream burst out +in the ruddy darkness--unearthly, horrible; and there came a thunderous +battering from the barn. + +The girl tore open her bedroom door. "Jack!" she cried in a terrified +voice. "The barn's on fire!" + +"Good God!" he said, "--my horse!" + +He had already sprung from his chair outside her door. Now he ran +downstairs, and she heard bolt and chain clash at the kitchen door and +his spurred boots land on the porch. + +"Oh," she whimpered, snatching a blanket wrapper from a peg and +struggling into it. "Oh, the poor horse! Jack! Jack! I'm coming to help! +Don't risk your life! I'm coming--I'm coming----" + +Terror clutched her as she stumbled downstairs on bandaged feet. + +As she reached the door a great flare of light almost blinded her. + +"Jack!" + +And at the same instant she saw him struggling with three masked men in +the glare of the wagon-shed afire. + +His rifle stood in the corridor outside her door. With one bound she was +on the stairs again. There came the crash and splinter of wood and glass +from the kitchen, and a man with a handkerchief over his face caught her +on the landing. + +Twice she wrenched herself loose and her fingers almost touched +Stormont's rifle; she fought like a cornered lynx, tore the handkerchief +from her assailant's face, recognised Quintana, hurled her very body at +him, eyes flaming, small teeth bared. + +Two other men laid hold. In another moment she had tripped Quintana, and +all four fell, rolling over and over down the short flight of stairs, +landing in the kitchen, still fighting. + +Here, in darkness, she wriggled out, somehow, leaving her blanket +wrapped in their clutches. In another instant she was up the stairs +again, only to discover that the rifle was gone. + +The red glare from the wagon-house lighted her bedroom; she sprang +inside and bolted the door. + +Her chamois jacket with its loops full of cartridges hung on a peg. She +got into it, seized her rifle and ran to the window just as two masked +men, pushing Stormont before them, entered the house by the kitchen way. + +Her own door was resounding with kicks and blows, shaking, shivering +under the furious impact of boot and rifle-butt. + +She ran to the bed, thrust her hand under the pillow, pulled out the +case containing the Flaming Jewel, and placed it in the breast pocket of +her shooting jacket. + +Again she crept to the window. Only the wagon-house was burning. +Somebody, however, had led Stormont's horse from the barn, and had tied +it to a tree at a safe distance. It stood there, trembling, its +beautiful, nervous head turned toward the burning building. + +The blows upon her bedroom door had ceased; there came a loud trampling, +the sound of excited voices; Quintana's sarcastic tones, clear, +dominant: + +"Dios! The police! Why you bring me this gendarme? What am I to do with +a gentleman of the Constabulary, eh? Do you think I am fool enough to +cut his throat? Well, Señor Gendarme, what are you doing here in the +Dump of Clinch?" + +Then Stormont's voice, clear and quiet: "What are _you_ doing here? If +you've a quarrel with Clinch, he's not here. There's only a young girl +in this house." + +"So?" said Quintana. "Well, that is what I expec', my frien'. It is +thees lady upon whom I do myse'f the honour to call!" + +Eve, listening, heard Stormont's rejoinder, still, calm, and very grave: + +"The man who lays a finger on that young girl had better be dead. He's +as good as dead the moment he touches her. There won't be a chance for +him.... Nor for any of you, if you harm her." + +"Calm youse'f, my frien'," said Quintana. "I demand of thees young lady +only that she return to me the property of which I have been rob by +Monsieur Clinch." + +"I knew nothing of any theft. Nor does she----" + +"Pardon; Señor Clinch knows; and I know." His tone changed, offensively: +"Señor Gendarme, am I permit to understan' that you are a frien' of +thees young lady?--a heart-frien', per'aps----" + +"I am her friend," said Stormont bluntly. + +"Ah," said Quintana, "then you shall persuade her to return to me thees +packet of which Monsieur Clinch has rob me." + +There was a short silence, then Quintana's voice again: + +"I know thees packet is concel in thees house. Peaceably, if possible, I +would recover my property.... If she refuse----" + +Another pause. + +"Well?" inquired Stormont, coolly. + +"Ah! It is ver' painful to say. Alas, Señor Gendarme, I mus' have my +property.... If she refuse, then I mus' sever one of her pretty +fingers.... An' if she still refuse--I sever her pretty fingers, one by +one, until----" + +"You know what would happen to _you_?" interrupted Stormont, in a voice +that quivered in spite of himself. + +"I take my chance. Señor Gendarme, she is within that room. If you are +her frien', you shall advise her to return to me my property." + +After another silence: + +"Eve!" he called sharply. + +She placed her lips to the door: "Yes, Jack." + +He said: "There are five masked men out here who say that Clinch robbed +them and they are here to recover their property.... Do you know +anything about this?" + +"I know they lie. My father is not a thief.... I have my rifle and +plenty of ammunition. I shall kill every man who enters this room." + +For a moment nobody stirred or spoke. Then Quintana strode to the bolted +door and struck it with the butt of his rifle. + +"You, in there," he said in a menacing voice, "--you listen once to +_me_! You open your door and come out. I give you one minute!" He struck +the door again: "_One_ minute, señorita!--or I cut from your frien', +here, the hand from his right arm!" + +There was a deathly silence. Then the sound of bolts. The door opened. +Slowly the girl limped forward, still wearing the hunting jacket over +her night-dress. + +Quintana made her an elaborate and ironical bow, slouch hat in hand; +another masked man took her rifle. + +"Señorita," said Quintana with another sweep of his hat, "I ask pardon +that I trouble you for my packet of which your father has rob me for +ver' long time." + +Slowly the girl lifted her blue eyes to Stormont. He was standing +between two masked men. Their pistols were pressed slightly against his +stomach. + +Stormont reddened painfully: + +"It was not for myself that I let you open your door," he said. "They +would not have ventured to lay hands on _me_." + +"Ah," said Quintana with a terrifying smile, "you would not have been +the first gendarme who had--_accorded me his hand_!" + +Two of the masked men laughed loudly. + + * * * * * + +Outside in the rag-weed patch, Smith rose, stole across the grass to the +kitchen door and slipped inside. + +"Now, señorita," said Quintana gaily, "my packet, if you please,--and we +leave you to the caresses of your faithful gendarme,--who should thank +God that he still possesses two good hands to fondle you! Alons! Come +then! My packet!" + +One of the masked men said: "Take her downstairs and lock her up +somewhere or she'll shoot us from her window." + +"Lead out that gendarme, too!" added Quintana, grasping Eve by the arm. + +Down the stairs tramped the men, forcing their prisoners with them. + +In the big kitchen the glare from the burning out-house fell dimly; the +place was full of shadows. + +"Now," said Quintana, "I take my property and my leave. Where is the +packet hidden?" + +She stood for a moment with drooping head, amid the sombre shadows, +then, slowly, she drew the emblazoned morocco case from her breast +pocket. + +What followed occurred in the twinkling of an eye: for, as Quintana +extended his arm to grasp the case, a hand snatched it, a masked figure +sprang through the doorway, and ran toward the barn. + +Somebody recognised the hat and red bandanna: + +"Salzar!" he yelled. "Nick Salzar!" + +"A traitor, by God!" shouted Quintana. Even before he had reached the +door, his pistol flashed twice, deafening all in the semi-darkness, +choking them with stifling fumes. + +A masked man turned on Stormont, forcing him back into the pantry at +pistol-point. Another man pushed Eve after him, slammed the pantry door +and bolted it. + +Through the iron bars of the pantry window, Stormont saw a man, wearing +a red bandanna tied under his eyes, run up and untie his horse and fling +himself astride under a shower of bullets. + +As he wheeled the horse and swung him into the clearing toward the foot +of Star Pond, his seat and horsemanship were not to be mistaken. + +He was gone, now, the gallop stretching into a dead run; and Quintana's +men still following, shooting, hallooing in the starlight like a pack of +leaping shapes from hell. + +But Quintana had not followed far. When he had emptied his automatic he +halted. + +Something about the transaction suddenly checked his fury, stilled it, +summoned his brain into action. + +For a full minute he stood unstirring, every atom of intelligence in +terrible concentration. + +Presently he put his left hand into his pocket, fitted another clip to +his pistol, turned on his heel and walked straight back to the house. + +Between the two locked in the pantry not a word had passed. Stormont +still peered out between the iron bars, striving to catch a glimpse of +what was going on. Eve crouched at the pantry doors, her face in her +hands, listening. + +Suddenly she heard Quintana's step in the kitchen. Cautiously she turned +the pantry key from inside. + +Stormont heard her, and instantly came to her. At the same moment +Quintana unbolted the door from the outside and tried to open it. + +"Come out," he said coldly, "or it will not go well with you when my men +return." + +"You've got what you say is your property," replied. Stormont. "What do +you want now?" + +"I tell you what I want ver' damn quick. Who was he, thees man who rides +with my property on your horse away? Eh? Because it was not Nick Salzar! +No! Salzar can not ride thees way. No! Alors?" + +"I can't tell you who he was," replied Stormont. "That's your affair, +not ours." + +"No? Ah! Ver' well, then. I shall tell you, Señor Flic! He was one of +_yours_. I understan'. It is a trap, a cheat--what you call a _plant_! +Thees man who rode your horse he is disguise! Yes! He also is a +gendarme! Yes! You think I let a gendarme rob me? I got you where I want +you now. You shall write your gendarme frien' that he return to me my +property, _one day's time_, or I send him by parcel post two nice, +fresh-out right-hands--your sweetheart's and your own!" + +Stormont drew Eve's head close to his: + +"This man is blood mad or out of his mind! I'd better go out and take a +chance at him before the others come back." + +But the girl shook her head violently, caught him by the arm and drew +him toward the mouth of the tile down which Clinch always emptied his +hootch when the Dump was raided. + +But now, it appeared that the tile which protruded from the cement floor +was removable. + +In silence she began to unscrew it, and he, seeing what she was trying +to do, helped her. + +Together they lifted the heavy tile and laid it on the floor. + +"You open thees door!" shouted Quintana in a paroxysm of fury. "I give +you one minute! Then, by God, I kill you both!" + +Eve lifted a screen of wood through which the tile had been set. Under +it a black hole yawned. It was a tunnel made of three-foot aqueduct +tiles; and it led straight into Star Pond, two hundred feet away. + +Now, as she straightened up and looked silently at Stormont, they heard +the trample of boots in the kitchen, voices, the bang of gun-stocks. + +"Does that drain lead into the lake?" whispered Stormont. + +She nodded. + +"Will you follow me, Eve?" + +She pushed him aside, indicating that he was to follow her. + +As she stripped the hunting jacket from her, a hot colour swept her +face. But she dropped on both knees, crept straight into the tile and +slipped out of sight. + +As she disappeared, Quintana shouted something in Portuguese, and fired +at the lock. + +With the smash of splintering wood in his ears, Stormont slid into the +smooth tunnel. + +In an instant he was shooting down a polished toboggan slide, and in +another moment was under the icy water of Star Pond. + +Shocked, blinded, fighting his way to the surface, he felt his spurred +boots dragging at him like a ton of iron. Then to him came her helping +hand. + +"I can make it," he gasped. + +But his clothing and his boots and the icy water began to tell on him in +mid-lake. + +Swimming without effort beside him, watching his every stroke, presently +she sank a little and glided under him and a little ahead, so that his +hands fell upon her shoulders. + +He let them rest, so, aware now that it was no burden to such a +swimmer. Supple and silent as a swimming otter, the girl slipped lithely +through the chilled water, which washed his body to the nostrils and +numbed his legs till he could scarcely move them. + +And now, of a sudden, his feet touched gravel. He stumbled forward in +the shadow of overhanging trees and saw her wading shoreward, a +dripping, silvery shape on the shoal. + +Then, as he staggered up to her, breathless, where she was standing on +the pebbled shore, he saw her join both hands, cup-shape, and lift them +to her lips. + +And out of her mouth poured diamond, sapphire, and emerald in a dazzling +stream,--and, among them, one great, flashing gem blazing in the +starlight,--the Flaming Jewel! + +Like a naiad of the lake she stood, white, slim, silent, the heaped gems +glittering in her snowy hands, her face framed by the curling masses of +her wet hair. + +Then, slowly she turned her head to Stormont. + +"These are what Quintana came for," she said. "Could you put them into +your pocket?" + + + + +EPISODE EIGHT + +CUP AND LIP + + +I + +Two miles beyond Clinch's Dump, Hal Smith pulled Stormont's horse to a +walk. He was tremendously excited. + +With naïve sincerity he believed that what he had done on the spur of +the moment had been the only thing to do. + +By snatching the Flaming Jewel from Quintana's very fingers he had +diverted that vindictive bandit's fury from Eve, from Clinch, from +Stormont, and had centred it upon himself. + +More than that, he had sown the seeds of suspicion among Quintana's own +people. They never could discover Salzar's body. Always they must +believe that it was Nicolas Salzar and no other who so treacherously +robbed them, and who rode away in a rain of bullets, shaking the +emblazoned morocco case above his masked head in triumph, derision and +defiance. + +At the recollection of what had happened, Hal Smith drew bridle, and, +sitting his saddle there in the false dawn, threw back his handsome head +and laughed until the fading stars overhead swam in his eyes through +tears of sheerest mirth. + +For he was still young enough to have had the time of his life. Nothing +in the Great War had so thrilled him. For, in what had just happened, +there was humour. There had been none in the Great Grim Drama. + +Still, Smith began to realise that he had taken the long, long chance of +the opportunist who rolls the bones with Death. He had kept his pledge +to the little Grand Duchess. It was a clean job. It was even good +drama---- + +The picturesque angle of the affair shook Hal Smith with renewed +laughter. As a moving picture hero he thought himself the funniest thing +on earth. + +From the time he had poked a pistol against Sard's fat paunch, to this +bullet-pelted ride for life, life had become one ridiculously exciting +episode after another. + +He had come through like the hero in a best-seller.... Lacking only a +heroine.... If there had been any heroine it was Eve Strayer. Drama had +gone wrong in that detail.... So perhaps, after all, it was real life +he had been living and not drama. Drama, for the masses, must have a +definite beginning and ending. Real life lacks the latter. In life +nothing is finished. It is always a premature curtain which is yanked by +that doddering old stage-hand, Johnny Death. + + * * * * * + +Smith sat his saddle, thinking, beginning to be sobered now by the +inevitable reaction which follows excitement and mirth as relentlessly +as care dogs the horseman. + +He had had a fine time,--save for the horror of the Rocktrail.... He +shuddered.... Anyway, at worst he had not shirked a clean deal in that +ghastly game.... It was God's mercy that he was not lying where Salzar +lay, ten feet--twenty--a hundred deep, perhaps--in immemorial slime---- + +He shook himself in his saddle as though to be rid of the creeping +horror, and wiped his clammy face. + +Now, in the false dawn, a blue-jay awoke somewhere among the oaks and +filled the misty silence with harsh grace-notes. + +Then reaction, setting in like a tide, stirred more sombre depths in the +heart of this young man. + +He thought of Riga; and of the Red Terror; of murder at noon-day, and +outrage by night. He remembered his only encounter with a lovely +child--once Grand Duchess of Esthonia--then a destitute refugee in +silken rags. + +What a day that had been.... Only one day and one evening.... And +never had he been so near in love in all his life.... + +That one day and evening had been enough for her to confide to an +American officer her entire life's history.... Enough for him to pledge +himself to her service while life endured.... And if emotion had swept +every atom of reason out of his youthful head, there in the turmoil and +alarm--there in the terrified, riotous city jammed with refugees, +reeking with disease, half frantic from famine and the filthy, rising +flood of war--if really it all had been merely romantic impulse, ardour +born of overwrought sentimentalism, nevertheless, what he had pledged +that day to a little Grand Duchess in rags, he had fulfilled to the +letter within the hour. + +As the false dawn began to fade, he loosened hunting coat and cartridge +sling, drew from his shirt-bosom the morocco case. + +It bore the arms and crest of the Grand Duchess Theodorica of Esthonia. + +His fingers trembled slightly as he pressed the jewelled spring. It +opened on an empty casket. + +In the sudden shock of horror and astonishment, his convulsive clutch on +the spring started a tiny bell ringing. Then, under his very nose, the +empty tray slid aside revealing another tray underneath, set solidly +with brilliants. A rainbow glitter streamed from the unset gems in the +silken tray. Like an incredulous child he touched them. They were +magnificently real. + +In the centre lay blazing the great Erosite gem,--the Flaming Jewel +itself. Priceless diamonds, sapphires, emeralds ringed it. In his hands +he held nearly four millions of dollars. + +Gingerly he balanced the emblazoned case, fascinated. Then he replaced +the empty tray, closed the box, thrust it into the bosom of his flannel +shirt and buttoned it in. + +Now there was little more for this excited young man to do. He was +through with Clinch. Hal Smith, hold-up man and dish-washer at Clinch's +Dump, had ended his career. The time had now arrived for him to vanish +and make room for James Darragh. + +Because there still remained a very agreeable rôle for Darragh to play. +And he meant to eat it up--as Broadway has it. + +For by this time the Grand Duchess of Esthonia--Ricca, as she was called +by her companion, Valentine, the pretty Countess Orloff-Strelwitz--must +have arrived in New York. + +At the big hunting lodge of the late Henry Harrod--now inherited by +Darragh--there might be a letter--perhaps a telegram--the cue for Hal +Smith to vanish and for James Darragh to enter, play his brief but +glittering part, and---- + +Darragh's sequence of pleasing meditations halted abruptly.... To walk +out of the life of the little Grand Duchess did not seem to suit his +ideas--indefinite and hazy as they were, so far. + +He lifted the bridle from the horse's neck, divided curb and snaffle +thoughtfully, touched the splendid animal with heel and knee. + +As he cantered on into the wide forest road that led to his late uncle's +abode, curiosity led him to wheel into a narrower trail running east +along Star Pond, and from whence he could take a farewell view of +Clinch's Dump. + +He smiled to think of Eve and Stormont there together, and now in safety +behind bolted doors and shutters. + +He grinned to think of Quintana and his precious crew, blood-crazy, +baffled, probably already distrusting one another, yet running wild +through the night like starving wolves galloping at hazard across a +famine-stricken waste. + +"Only wait till Stormont makes his report," he thought, grinning more +broadly still. "Every State Trooper north of Albany will be after Señor +Quintana. Some hunting! And, if he could understand, Mike Clinch might +thank his stars that what I've done this night has saved him his skin +and Eve a broken heart!" + +He drew his horse to a walk, now, for the path began to run closer to +Star Pond, skirting the pebbled shallows in the open just ahead. + +Alders still concealed the house across the lake, but the trail was +already coming out into the starlight. + +Suddenly his horse stopped short, trembling, its ears pricked forward. + +Darragh sat listening intently for a moment. Then with infinite +caution, he leaned over the cantle and gently parted the alders. + +On the pebbled beach, full in the starlight, stood two figures, one +white and slim, the other dark. + +The arm of the dark figure clasped the waist of the white and slender +one. + +Evidently they had heard his horse, for they stood motionless, looking +directly at the alders behind which his horse had halted. + +To turn might mean a shot in the back as far as Darragh knew. He was +still masked with Salzar's red bandanna. He raised his rifle, slid a +cartridge into the breech, pressed his horse forward with a slight touch +of heel and knee, and rode slowly out into the star-dusk. + +What Stormont saw was a masked man, riding his own horse, with menacing +rifle half lifted for a shot! What Eve Strayer thought she saw was too +terrible for words. And before Stormont could prevent her she sprang in +front of him, covering his body with her own. + +At that the horseman tore off his red mask: + +"Eve! Jack Stormont! What the devil are you doing over _here_?" + +Stormont walked slowly up to his own horse, laid one unsteady hand on +its silky nose, kept it there while dusty, velvet lips mumbled and +caressed his fingers. + +"I knew it was a cavalryman," he said quietly. "I suspected you, Jim. It +was the sort of crazy thing you were likely to do.... I don't ask you +what you're up to, where you've been, what your plans may be. If you +needed me you'd have told me. + +"But I've got to have my horse for Eve. Her feet are wounded. She's in +her night-dress and wringing wet. I've got to set her on my horse and +try to take her through to Ghost Lake." + +Darragh stared at Stormont, at the ghostly figure of the girl who had +sunk down on the sand at the lake's edge. Then he scrambled out of the +saddle and handed over the bridle. + +"Quintana came back," said Stormont. "I hope to reckon with him some +day.... I believe he came back to harm Eve.... We got out of the +house.... We swam the lake.... I'd have gone under except for her----" + +In his distress and overwhelming mortification, Darragh stood miserable, +mute, irresolute. + +Stormont seemed to understand: "What you did, Jim, was well meant," he +said. "I understand. Eve will understand when I tell her. But that +fellow Quintana is a devil. You can't draw a herring across any trail he +follows. I tell you, Jim, this fellow Quintana is either blood-mad or +just plain crazy. Somebody will have to put him out of the way. I'll do +it if I ever find him." + +"Yes.... Your people ought to do that.... Or, if you like, I'll +volunteer.... I've a little business to transact in New York, first.... +Jack, your tunic and breeches are soaked; I'll be glad to chip in +something for Eve.... Wait a moment----" + +He stepped into cover, drew the morocco box from his grey shirt, shoved +it into his hip pocket. + +Then he threw off his cartridge belt and hunting coat, pulled the grey +shirt over his head and came out in his undershirt and breeches, with +the other garments hanging over his arm. + +"Give her these," he said. "She can button the coat around her waist +for a skirt. She'd better go somewhere and get out of that soaking-wet +night-dress----" + +Eve, crouched on the sand, trying to wring out and twist up her drenched +hair, looked up at Stormont as he came toward her holding out Darragh's +dry clothing. + +"You'd better do what you can with these," he said, trying to speak +carelessly.... "_He_ says you'd better chuck--what you're wearing----" + +She nodded in flushed comprehension. Stormont walked back to his horse, +his boots slopping water at every stride. + +"I don't know any place nearer than Ghost Lake Inn," he said ... "except +Harrod's." + +"That's where we're going, Jack," said Darragh cheerfully. + +"That's _your_ place, isn't it?" + +"It is. But I don't want Eve to know it.... I think it better she +should not know me except as Hal Smith--for the present, anyway. You'll +see to that, won't you?" + +"As you wish, Jim.... Only, if we go to your own house----" + +"We're not going to the main house. She wouldn't, anyway. Clinch has +taught that girl to hate the very name of Harrod--hate every foot of +forest that the Harrod game keepers patrol. She wouldn't cross my +threshold to save her life." + +"I don't understand, but--it's all right--whatever _you_ say, Jim." + +"I'll tell you the whole business some day. But where I'm going to take +you now is into a brand new camp which I ordered built last spring. It's +within a mile of the State Forest border. Eve won't know that it's +Harrod property. I've a hatchery there and the State lets me have a man +in exchange for free fry. When I get there I'll post my man.... It will +be a roof for to-night, anyway, and breakfast in the morning, whenever +you're ready." + +"How far is it?" + +"Only about three miles east of here." + +"That's the thing to do, then," said Stormont bluntly. + +He dropped one sopping-wet sleeve over his horse's neck, taking care not +to touch the saddle. He was thinking of the handful of gems in his +pocket; and he wondered why Darragh had said nothing about the empty +case for which he had so recklessly risked his life. + +What this whole business was about Stormont had no notion. But he knew +Darragh. That was sufficient to leave him tranquil, and perfectly +certain that whatever Darragh was doing must be the right thing to do. + +Yet--Eve had swum Star Pond with her mouth filled with jewels. + +When she had handed the morocco box to Quintana, Stormont now realised +that she must have played her last card on the utterly desperate chance +that Quintana might go away without examining the case. + +Evidently she had emptied the case before she left her room. He +recollected that, during all that followed, Eve had not uttered a single +word. He knew why, now. How could she speak with her mouth full of +diamonds? + +A slight sound from the shore caused him to turn. Eve was coming toward +him in the dusk, moving painfully on her wounded feet. Darragh's flannel +shirt and his hunting coat buttoned around her slender waist clothed +her. + +The next instant he was beside her, lifting her in both arms. + +As he placed her in the saddle and adjusted one stirrup to her bandaged +foot, she turned and quietly thanked Darragh for the clothing. + +"And that was a brave thing you did," she added, "--to risk your life +for my father's property. Because the morocco case which you saved +proved to be empty does not make what you did any the less loyal and +gallant." + +Darragh gazed at her, astounded; took the hand she stretched out to him; +held it with a silly expression on his features. + +"Hal Smith," she said with perceptible emotion, "I take back what I once +said to you on Owl Marsh. No man is a real crook by nature who did what +you have done. That is 'faithfulness unto death'--the supreme +offer--loyalty----" + +Her voice broke; she pressed Darragh's hand convulsively and her lip +quivered. + +Darragh, with the morocco case full of jewels buttoned into his hip +pocket, stood motionless, mutely swallowing his amazement. + +What in the world did this girl mean, talking about an _empty_ case? + +But this was no time to unravel that sort of puzzle. He turned to +Stormont who, as perplexed as he, had been listening in silence. + +"Lead your horse forward," he said. "I know the trail. All you need do +is to follow me." And, shouldering his rifle, he walked leisurely into +the woods, the cartridge belt sagging _en bandouliere_ across his +woollen undershirt. + + +II + +When Stormont gently halted his horse it was dawn, and Eve, sagging +against him with one arm around his neck, sat huddled up on her saddle +fast asleep. + +In a birch woods, on the eastern slope of the divide, stood the log +camp, dimly visible in the silvery light of early morning. + +Darragh, cautioning Stormont with a slight gesture, went forward, +mounted the rustic veranda, and knocked at a lighted window. + +A man, already dressed, came and peered out at him, then hurried to open +the door. + +"I didn't know you, Captain Darragh----" he began, but fell silent under +the warning gesture that checked him. + +"I've a guest outside. She's Clinch's step-daughter, Eve Strayer. She +knows me by the name of Hal Smith. Do you understand?" + +"Yes, sir----" + +"Cut _that_ out, too. I'm Hal Smith to you, also. State Trooper Stormont +is out there with Eve Strayer. He was a comrade of mine in Russia. I'm +Hal Smith to him, by mutual agreement. _Now_ do you get me, Ralph?" + +"Sure, Hal. Go on; spit it out!" + +They both grinned. + +"You're a hootch runner," said Darragh. "This is your shack. The +hatchery is only a blind. That's all you have to know, Ralph. So put +that girl into my room and let her sleep till she wakes of her own +accord. + +"Stormont and I will take two of the guest-bunks in the _L._ And for +heaven's sake make us some coffee when you make your own. But first come +out and take the horse." + +They went out together. Stormont lifted Eve out of the saddle. She did +not wake. Darragh led the way into the log house and along a corridor to +his own room. + +"Turn down the sheets," whispered Stormont. And, when the bed was ready: +"Can you get a bath towel, Jim?" + +Darragh fetched one from the connecting bath-room. + +"Wrap it around her wet hair," whispered Stormont. "Good heavens, I wish +there were a woman here." + +"I wish so too," said Darragh; "she's chilled to the bone. You'll have +to wake her. She can't sleep in what she's wearing; it's almost as damp +as her hair----" + +He went to the closet and returned with a man's morning robe, as soft as +fleece. + +"Somehow or other she's got to get into that," he said. + +There was a silence. + +"Very well," said Stormont, reddening.... "If you'll step out +I'll--manage...." He looked Darragh straight in the eyes: "I have asked +her to marry me," he said. + + * * * * * + +When Stormont came out a great fire of birch-logs was blazing in the +living-room, and Darragh stood there, his elbow on the rough stone +mantel-shelf. + +Stormont came straight to the fire and set one spurred boot on the +fender. + +"She's warm and dry and sound asleep," he said. "I'll wake her again if +you think she ought to swallow something hot." + +At that moment the fish-culturist came in with a pot of steaming coffee. + +"This is my friend, Ralph Wier," said Darragh. "I think you'd better +give Eve a cup of coffee." And, to Wier, "Fill a couple of hot water +bags, old chap. We don't want any pneumonia in this house." + +When breakfast was ready Eve once more lay asleep with a slight dew of +perspiration on her brow. + +Darragh was half starved: Stormont ate little. Neither spoke at all +until, satisfied, they rose, ready for sleep. + +At the door of his room Stormont took Darragh's offered hand, +understanding what it implied: + +"Thanks, Jim.... Hers is the loveliest character I have ever known.... +If I weren't as poor as a homeless dog I'd marry her to-morrow.... I'll +do it anyway, I think.... I _can't_ let her go back to Clinch's Dump!" + +"After all," said Darragh, smiling, "if it's only money that worries +you, why not talk about a job to _me_!" + +Stormont flushed heavily: "That's rather wonderful of you, Jim----" + +"Why? You're the best officer I had. Why the devil did you go into the +Constabulary without talking to me?" + +Stormont's upper lip seemed inclined to twitch but he controlled it and +scowled at space. + +"Go to bed, you darned fool," said Darragh, carelessly. "You'll find dry +things ready. Ralph will take care of your uniform and boots." + +Then he went into his own quarters to read two letters which, conforming +to arrangements made with Mrs. Ray the day he had robbed Emanuel Sard, +were to be sent to Trout Lodge to await his arrival. + +Both, written from the Ritz, bore the date of the day before: the first +he opened was from the Countess Orloff-Strelwitz: + + "Dear Captain Darragh, + + "--You are so wonderful! Your messenger, with the _ten_ thousand + dollars which you say you already have recovered from those + miscreants who robbed Ricca, came aboard our ship before we + landed. It was a godsend; we were nearly penniless,--and oh, + _so_ shabby! + + "Instantly, my friend, we shopped, Ricca and I. Fifth Avenue + enchanted us. All misery was forgotten in the magic of that + paradise for women. + + "Yet, spendthrifts that we naturally are, we were not silly + enough to be extravagant. Ricca was wild for American + sport-clothes. I, also. Yet--only _two_ gowns apiece, excepting + our sport clothes. And other necessaries. Don't you think we + were economical?" + + "Furthermore, dear Captain Darragh, we are hastening to follow + your instructions. We are leaving to-day for your château in the + wonderful forest, of which you told us that + never-to-be-forgotten day in Riga. + + "Your agent is politeness, consideration and kindness itself. We + have our accommodations. We leave New York at midnight. + + "Ricca is so excited that it is difficult for her to restrain + her happiness. God knows the child has seen enough unhappiness + to quench the gaiety of anybody! + + "Well, all things end. Even tears. Even the Red Terror shall + pass from our beloved Russia. For, after all, Monsieur, God + still lives. + + "VALENTINE." + + "P. S. Ricca has written to you. I have read the letter. I have + let it go uncensored." + +Darragh went to the door of his room: + +"Ralph! Ralph!" he called. And, when Wier hurriedly appeared: + +"What time does the midnight train from New York get into Five Lakes?" + +"A little before nine----" + +"You can make it in the flivver, can't you?" + +"Yes, if I start _now_." + +"All right. Two ladies. You're to bring them to the _house_, not +_here_. Mrs. Ray knows about them. And--get back here as soon as you +can." + +He closed his door again, sat down on the bed and opened the other +letter. His hand shook as he unfolded it. He was so scared and excited +that he could scarcely decipher the angular, girlish penmanship: + + "To dear Captain Darragh, our champion and friend-- + + "It is difficult for me, Monsieur, to express my happiness and + my deep gratitude in the so cold formality of the written page. + + "Alas, sir, it will be still more difficult to find words for it + when again I have the happiness of greeting you in proper + person. + + "Valentine has told you everything, she warns me, and I am, + therefore, somewhat at a loss to know what I should write to + you. + + "Yet, I know very well what I would write if I dare. It is this: + that I wish you to know--although it may not pass the + censor--that I am most impatient to see you, Monsieur. _Not_ + because of kindness past, nor with an unworthy expectation of + benefits to come. But because of friendship,--_the deepest, + sincerest of my_ WHOLE LIFE. + + "Is it not modest of a young girl to say this? Yes, surely all + the world which was once _en régle_, formal, artificial, has + been burnt out of our hearts by this so frightful calamity which + has overwhelmed the world with fire and blood. + + "If ever on earth there was a time when we might venture to + express with candour what is hidden within our minds and hearts, + it would seem, Monsieur, that the time is now. + + "True, I have known you only for one day and one evening. Yet, + what happened to the world in that brief space of time--and to + us, Monsieur--brought _us_ together as though our meeting were + but a blessed reunion after the happy intimacy of many years.... + I speak, Monsieur, for myself. May I hope that I speak, also, + for you? + + "With a heart too full to thank you, and with expectations + indescribable--but with courage, always, for any event,--I take + my leave of you at the foot of this page. Like death--I + trust--my adieu is not the end, but the beginning. It is not + farewell; it is a greeting to him whom I most honour in all the + world.... And would willingly obey if he shall command. And + otherwise--_all_ else that in his mind--and heart--he might + desire. + + "THEODORICA." + +It was the most beautiful love-letter any man ever received in all the +history of love. + +And it had passed the censor. + + +III + +It was afternoon when Darragh awoke in his bunk, stiff, sore, confused +in mind and battered in body. + +However, when he recollected where he was he got out of bed in a hurry +and jerked aside the window curtains. + +The day was magnificent; a sky of royal azure overhead, and everywhere +the silver pillars of the birches supporting their splendid canopy of +ochre, orange, and burnt-gold. + +Wier, hearing him astir, came in. + +"How long have you been back! Did you meet the ladies with your +flivver?" demanded Darragh, impatiently. + +"I got to Five Lakes station just as the train came in. The young ladies +were the only passengers who got out. I waited to get their two steamer +trunks and then I drove them to Harrod Place----" + +"How did they seem, Ralph--worn-out--worried--ill?" + +Wier laughed: "No, sir, they looked very pretty and lively to me. They +seemed delighted to get here. They talked to each other in some foreign +tongue--Russian, I should say--at least, it sounded like what we heard +over in Siberia, Captain----" + +"It _was_ Russian.... You go on and tell me while I take another hot +bath!----" + +Wier followed him into the bath-room and vaulted to a seat on the deep +set window-sill: + +"--When they weren't talking Russian and laughing they talked to me and +admired the woods and mountains. I had to tell them everything--they +wanted to see buffalo and Indians. And when I told them there weren't +any, enquired for bears and panthers. + +"We saw two deer on the Scaur, and a woodchuck near the house; I thought +they'd jump out of the flivver----" + +He began to laugh at the recollection: "No, sir, they didn't act tired +and sad; they said they were crazy to get into their knickerbockers and +go to look for you----" + +"Where did you say I was?" asked Darragh, drying himself vigorously. + +"Out in the woods, somewhere. The last I saw of them, Mrs. Ray had their +hand-bags and Jerry and Tom were shouldering their trunks." + +"I'm going up there right away," interrupted Darragh excitedly. "--Good +heavens, Ralph, I haven't any clothes here, have I?" + +"No, sir. But those you wore last night are dry----" + +"Confound it! I meant to send some decent clothes here---- All right; +get me those duds I wore yesterday--and a bite to eat! I'm in a hurry, +Ralph----" + +He ate while dressing, disgustedly arraying himself in the grey shirt, +breeches, and laced boots which weather, water, rock, and brier had not +improved. + +In a pathetic attempt to spruce up, he knotted the red bandanna around +his neck and pinched Salzar's slouch hat into a peak. + +"I look like a hootch-running Wop," he said. "Maybe I can get into the +house before I meet the ladies----" + +"You look like one of Clinch's bums," remarked Wier with native honesty. + +Darragh, chagrined, went to his bunk, pulled the morocco case from under +the pillow, and shoved it into the bosom of his flannel shirt. + +"That's the main thing anyway," he thought. Then, turning to Wier, he +asked whether Eve and Stormont had awakened. + +It appeared that Trooper Stormont had saddled up and cantered away +shortly after sunrise, leaving word that he must hunt up his comrade, +Trooper Lannis, at Ghost Lake. + +"They're coming back this evening," added Wier. "He asked you to look +out for Clinch's step-daughter." + +"She's all right here. Can't you keep an eye on her, Ralph?" + +"I'm stripping trout, sir. I'll be around here to cook dinner for her +when she wakes up." + +Darragh glanced across the brook at the hatchery. It was only a few +yards away. He nodded and started for the veranda: + +"That'll be all right," he said. "Nobody is coming here to bother +her.... And don't let her leave, Ralph, till I get back----" + +"Very well, sir. But suppose she takes it into her head to leave----" + +Darragh called back, gaily: "She can't: she hasn't any clothes!" And +away he strode in the gorgeous sunshine of a magnificent autumn day, all +the clean and vigorous youth of him afire in anticipation of a reunion +which the letter from his lady-love had transfigured into a tryst. + +For, in that amazing courtship of a single day, he never dreamed that he +had won the heart of that sad, white-faced, hungry child in rags--silken +tatters still stained with the blood of massacre,--the very soles of her +shoes still charred by the embers of her own home. + +Yet, that is what must have happened in a single day and evening. Life +passes swiftly during such periods. Minutes lengthen into days; hours +into years. The soul finds itself. + +Then mind and heart become twin prophets,--clairvoyant concerning what +hides behind the veil; comprehending with divine clair-audience what the +Three Sisters whisper there--hearing even the whirr of the spindle--the +very snipping of the Eternal Shears! + + * * * * * + +The soul finds itself; the mind knows itself; the heart perfectly +understands. + +He had not spoken to this young girl of love. The blood of friends and +servants was still rusty on her skirt's ragged hem. + +Yet, that night, when at last in safety she had said good-bye to the man +who had secured it for her, he knew that he was in love with her. And, +at such crises, the veil that hides hearts becomes transparent. + +At that instant he had seen and known. Afterward he had dared not +believe that he had known. + +But hers had been a purer courage. + + * * * * * + +As he strode on, the comprehension of her candour, her honesty, the +sweet bravery that had conceived, created, and sent that letter, +thrilled this young man until his heavy boots sprouted wings, and the +trail he followed was but a path of rosy clouds over which he floated +heavenward. + + * * * * * + +About half an hour later he came to his senses with a distinct shock. + +Straight ahead of him on the trail, and coming directly toward him, +moved a figure in knickers and belted tweed. + +Flecked sunlight slanted on the stranger's cheek and burnished hair, +dappling face and figure with moving, golden spots. + +Instantly Darragh knew and trembled. + +But Theodorica of Esthonia had known him only in his uniform. + +As she came toward him, lovely in her lithe and rounded grace, only +friendly curiosity gazed at him from her blue eyes. + +Suddenly she knew him, went scarlet to her yellow hair, then white: and +tried to speak--but had no control of the short, rosy upper lip which +only quivered as he took her hands. + +The forest was dead still around them save for the whisper of painted +leaves sifting down from a sunlit vault above. + +Finally she said in a ghost of a voice: "My--friend...." + +"If you accept his friendship...." + +"Friendship is to be shared.... Ours mingled--on that day.... Your +share is--as much as pleases you." + +"All you have to give me, then." + +"Take it ... all I have...." Her blue eyes met his with a little +effort. All courage is an effort. + +Then that young man dropped on both knees at her feet and laid his lips +to her soft hands. + +In trembling silence she stood for a moment, then slowly sank on both +knees to face him across their clasped hands. + +So, in the gilded cathedral of the woods, pillared with silver, and +azure-domed, the betrothal of these two was sealed with clasp and lip. + +Awed, a little fearful, she looked into her lover's eyes with a gaze so +chaste, so oblivious to all things earthly, that the still purity of her +face seemed a sacrament, and he scarcely dared touch the childish lips +she offered. + +But when the sacrament of the kiss had been accomplished, she rested one +hand on his shoulder and rose, and drew him with her. + +Then _his_ moment came: he drew the emblazoned case from his breast, +opened it, and, in silence, laid it in her hands. The blaze of the +jewels in the sunshine almost blinded them. + +That was _his_ moment. + +The next moment was Quintana's. + + * * * * * + +Darragh hadn't a chance. Out of the bushes two pistols were thrust hard +against his stomach. Quintana's face was behind them. He wore no mask, +but the three men with him watched him over the edges of +handkerchiefs,--over the sights of levelled rifles, too. + +The youthful Grand Duchess had turned deadly white. One of Quintana's +men took the morocco case from her hands and shoved her aside without +ceremony. + +Quintana leered at Darragh over his levelled weapons: + +"My frien' Smith!" he exclaimed softly. "So it is you, then, who have +twice try to rob me of my property! + +"Ah! You recollec'? Yes? How you have rob me of a pacquet which contain +only some chocolate?" + +Darragh's face was burning with helpless rage. + +"My frien', Smith," repeated Quintana, "do you recollec' what it was you +say to me? Yes?... How often it is the onexpected which so usually +happen? You are quite correc', l'ami Smith. It has happen." + +He glanced at the open jewel box which one of the masked men held, then, +like lightning, his sinister eyes focussed on Darragh. + +"So," he said, "it was also you who rob me las' night of my property.... +What you do to Nick Salzar, eh?" + +"Killed him," said Darragh, dry lipped, nerved for death. "I ought to +have killed you, too, when I had the chance. But--_I'm_ white, you see." + +At the insult flung into his face over the muzzles of his own pistols, +Quintana burst into laughter. + +"Ah! You _should_ have shot me! You are quite right, my frien'. I mus' +say you have behave ver' foolish." + +He laughed again so hard that Darragh felt his pistols shaking against +his body. + +"So you have kill Nick Salzar, eh?" continued Quintana with perfect good +humour. "My frien', I am oblige to you for what you do. You are +surprise? Eh? It is ver' simple, my frien' Smith. What I want of a man +who can be kill? Eh? Of what use is he to me? Voilà!" + +He laughed, patted Darragh on the shoulder with one of his pistols. + +"You, now--_you_ could be of use. Why? Because you are a better man than +was Nick Salzar. He who kills is better than the dead." + +Then, swiftly his dark features altered: + +"My frien' Smith," he said, "I have come here for my property, not to +kill. I have recover my property. Why shall I kill you? To say that I am +a better man? Yes, perhaps. But also I should be oblige to say that also +I am a fool. Yaas! A poor damfool." + +Without shifting his eyes he made a motion with one pistol to his men. +As they turned and entered the thicket, Quintana's intent gaze became +murderous. + +"If I mus' kill you I shall do so. Otherwise I have sufficient trouble +to keep me from ennui. My frien', I am going home to enjoy my property. +If you live or die it signifies nothing to me. No! Why, for the pleasure +of killing you, should I bring your dirty gendarmes on my heels?" + +He backed away to the edge of the thicket, venturing one swift and evil +glance at the girl who stood as though dazed. + +"Listen attentively," he said to Darragh. "One of my men remains hidden +very near. He is a dead shot. His aim is at your--sweetheart's--body. +You understan'?" + +"Yes." + +"Ver' well. You shall not go away for one hour time. After that----" he +took off his slouch hat with a sweeping bow--"you may go to hell!" + +Behind him the bushes parted, closed. + +José Quintana had made his adieux. + + + + +EPISODE NINE + +THE FOREST AND MR. SARD + + +I + +When at last José Quintana had secured what he had been after for years, +his troubles really began. + +In his pocket he had two million dollars worth of gems, including the +Flaming Jewel. + +But he was in the middle of a wilderness ringed in by hostile men, and +obliged to rely for aid on a handful of the most desperate criminals in +Europe. + +Those openly hostile to him had a wide net spread around him--wide of +mesh too, perhaps; and it was through a mesh he meant to wriggle, but +the net was intact from Canada to New York. + +Canadian police and secret agents held it on the north: this he had +learned from Jake Kloon long since. + +East, west and south he knew he had the troopers of the New York State +Constabulary to deal with, and in addition every game warden and fire +warden in the State Forests, a swarm of plain clothes men from the +Metropolis, and the rural constabulary of every town along the edges of +the vast reservation. + +Just who was responsible for this enormous conspiracy to rob him of what +he considered his own legitimate loot Quintana did not know. + +Sard's attorney, Eddie Abrams, believed that the French police +instigated it through agents of the United States Secret Service. + +Of one thing Quintana was satisfied, Mike Clinch had nothing to do with +stirring up the authorities. Law-breakers of his sort don't shout for +the police or invoke State or Government aid. + +As for the status of Darragh--or Hal Smith, as he supposed him to +be--Quintana took him for what he seemed to be, a well-born young man +gone wrong. Europe was full of that kind. To Quintana there was nothing +suspicious about Hal Smith. On the contrary, his clever recklessness +confirmed that polished bandit's opinion that Smith was a gentleman +degenerated into a crook. It takes an educated imagination for a man to +do what Smith had done to him. If the common crook has any imagination +at all it never is educated. + +Another matter worried José Quintana: he was not only short on +provisions, but what remained was cached in Drowned Valley; and Mike +Clinch and his men were guarding every outlet to that sinister region, +excepting only the rocky and submerged trail by which he had made his +exit. + +That was annoying; it cut off provisions and liquor from Canada, for +which he had arranged with Jake Kloon. For Kloon's hootch-runners now +would be stopped by Clinch; and not one among them knew about the rocky +trail in. + +All these matters were disquieting enough: but what really and most +deeply troubled Quintana was his knowledge of his own men. + +He did not trust one among them. Of international crookdom they were +the cream. Not one of them but would have murdered his fellow if the +loot were worth it and the chances of escape sufficient. + +There was no loyalty to him, none to one another, no "honour among +thieves"--and it was José Quintana who knew that only in romance such a +thing existed. + +No, he could not trust a single man. Only hope of plunder attached these +marauders to him, and merely because he had education and imagination +enough to provide what they wanted. + +Anyone among them would murder and rob him if opportunity presented. + +Now, how to keep his loot; how to get back to Europe with it, was the +problem that confronted Quintana after robbing Darragh. And he +determined to settle part of that question at once. + +About five miles from Harrod Place, within a hundred rods of which he +had held up Hal Smith, Quintana halted, seated himself on a rotting log, +and waited until his men came up and gathered around him. + +For a little while, in utter silence, his keen eyes travelled from one +visage to the next, from Henri Picquet to Victor Georgiades, to Sanchez, +to Sard. His intent scrutiny focussed on Sard; lingered. + +If there were anybody he might trust, a little way, it would be Sard. + +Then a polite, untroubled smile smoothed the pale, dark features of José +Quintana: + +"Bien, messieurs, the coup has been success. Yes? Ver' well; in turn, +then, en accord with our custom, I shall dispose myse'f to listen to +your good advice." + +He looked at Henri Picquet, smiled and nodded invitation to speak. + +Picquet shrugged: "For me, mon capitaine, eet ees ver' simple. We are +five. Therefore, divide into five ze gems. After zat, each one for +himself to make his way out----" + +"Nick Salzar and Harry Beck are in the Drowned Valley," interrupted +Quintana. + +Picquet shrugged again; Sanchez laughed, saying: "If they are there it +is their misfortune. Also, we others are in a hurry." + +Picquet added: "Also five shares are sufficient division." + +"It is propose, then, that we abandon our comrades Beck and Salzar to +the rifle of Mike Clinch?" + +"Why not?" demanded Georgiades sullenly;--"we shall have worse to face +before we see the Place de l'Opéra." + +"There remains, also, Eddie Abrams," remarked Quintana. + +Crooks never betray their attorney. Everybody expressed a willingness to +have the five shares of plunder properly assessed to satisfy the fee due +to Mr. Abrams. + +"Ver' well," nodded Quintana, "are you satisfy, messieurs, to divide an' +disperse?" + +Sard said, heavily, that they ought to stick together until they arrived +in New York. + +Sanchez sneered, accusing Sard of wanting a bodyguard to escort him to +his own home. "In this accursed forest," he insisted, "five of us would +attract attention where one alone, with sufficient stealth, can slip +through into the open country." + +"Two by two is better," said Picquet. "You, Sanchez, shall travel alone +if you desire----" + +"Divide the gems first," growled Georgiades, "and then let each do what +pleases him." + +"That," nodded Quintana, "is also my opinion. It is so settle. +Attention!" Two pistols were in his hands as by magic. With a slight +smile he laid them on the moss beside him. + +He then spread a large white handkerchief flat on the ground; and, from +his pockets, he poured out the glittering cascade. Yet, like a feeding +panther, every sense remained alert to the slightest sound or movement +elsewhere; and when Georgiades grunted from excess emotion, Quintana's +right hand held a pistol before the grunt had ceased. + +It was a serious business, this division of loot; every reckless visage +reflected the strain of the situation. + +Quintana, both pistols in his hands, looked down at the scintillating +heap of jewels. + +"I estimate two and one quartaire million of dollaires," he said simply. +"It has been agree that I accep' for me the erosite gem known as The +Flaming Jewel. In addition, messieurs, it has been agree that I accep' +for myse'f one part in five of the remainder." + +A fierce silence reigned. Every wolfish eye was on the leader. He +smiled, rested his pair of pistols on either knee. + +"Is there," he asked softly, "any gentleman who shall objec'?" + +"Who," demanded Georgiades hoarsely, "is to divide for us?" + +"It is for such purpose," explained Quintana suavely, "that my frien', +Emanuel Sard, has arrive. Monsieur Sard is a brokaire of diamon's, as +all know ver' well. Therefore, it shall be our frien' Sard who will +divide for us what we have gain to-day by our--industry." + +The savage tension broke with a laugh at the word chosen by Quintana to +express their efforts of the morning. + +Sard had been standing with one fat hand flat against the trunk of a +tree. Now, at a nod from Quintana, he squatted down, and, with the same +hand that had been resting against the tree, he spread out the pile of +jewels into a flat layer. + +As he began to divide this into five parts, still using the flat of his +pudgy hand, something poked him lightly in the ribs. It was the muzzle +of one of Quintana's pistols. + +Sard, ghastly pale, looked up. His palm, sticky with balsam gum, +quivered in Quintana's grasp. + +"I was going to scrape it off," he gasped. "The tree was sticky----" + +Quintana, with the muzzle of his pistol, detached half a dozen diamonds +and rubies that clung to the gum on Mr. Sard's palm. + +"Wash!" he said drily. + +Sard, sweating with fear, washed his right hand with whiskey from his +pocket-flask, and dried it for general inspection. + +"My God," he protested tremulously, "it was accidental, gentlemen. Do +you think I'd try to get away with anything like that----" + +Quintana coolly shoved him aside and with the barrel of his pistol he +pushed the flat pile of gems into five separate heaps. Only he and +Georgiades knew that a magnificent diamond had been lodged in the muzzle +of his pistol. The eyes of the Greek flamed with rage at the trick, but +he awaited the division before he should come to any conclusion. + +Quintana coolly picked out The Flaming Jewel and pocketed it. Then, to +each man he indicated the heap which was to be his portion. + +A snarling wrangle instantly began, Sanchez objecting to rubies and +demanding more emeralds, and Picquet complaining violently concerning +the smallness of the diamonds allotted him. + +Sard's trained eyes appraised every allotment. Without weighing, and, +lacking time and paraphernalia for expert examination, he was inclined +to think the division fair enough. + +Quintana got to his feet lithely. + +"For me," he said, "it is finish. With my frien' Sard I shall now +depart. Messieurs, I embrace and salute you. A bientôt in Paris--if it +be God's will! Donc--au revoir, les amis, et à la bonheur! Allons! Each +for himself and gar' aux flics!" + +Sard, seized with a sort of still terror, regarded Quintana with +enormous eyes. Torn between dismay of being left alone in the +wilderness, and a very natural fear of any single companion, he did not +know what to say or do. + +En masse, the gang were too distrustful of one another to unite on +robbing any individual. But any individual might easily rob a companion +when alone with him. + +"Why--why can't we all go together," he stammered. "It is safer, +surer----" + +"I go with Quintana and you," interrupted Georgiades, smilingly; his +mind on the diamond in the muzzle of Quintana's pistol. + +"I do not invite you," said Quintana. "But come if it pleases you." + +"I also prefer to come with you others," growled Sanchez. "To roam alone +in this filthy forest does not suit me." + +Picquet shrugged his shoulders, turned on his heel in silence. They +watched him moving away all alone, eastward. When he had disappeared +among the trees, Quintana looked inquiringly at the others. + +"Eh, bien, non alors!" snarled Georgiades suddenly. "There are too many +in your trupeau, mon capitaine. Bonne chance!" + +He turned and started noisily in the direction taken by Picquet. + +They watched him out of sight; listened to his careless trample after he +was lost to view. When at length the last distant sound of his retreat +had died away in the stillness, Quintana touched Sard with the point of +his pistol. + +"Go first," he said suavely. + +"For God's sake, be a little careful of your gun----" + +"I am, my dear frien'. It is of _you_ I may become careless. You will +mos' kin'ly face south, and you will be kin' sufficient to start +immediate. Tha's what I mean.... I thank you.... Now, my frien', +Sanchez! Tha's correc'! You shall follow my frien' Sard ver' close. Me, +I march in the rear. So we shall pass to the eas' of thees Star Pon', +then between the cross-road an' Ghos' Lake; an' then we shall repose; +an' one of us, en vidette, shall discover if the Constabulary have +patrol beyon'.... Allons! March!" + + +II + +Guided by Quintana's directions, the three had made a wide detour to the +east, steering by compass for the cross-roads beyond Star Pond. + +In a dense growth of cedars, on a little ridge traversing wet land, +Quintana halted to listen. + +Sard and Sanchez, supposing him to be at their heels, continued on, +pushing their way blindly through the cedars, clinging to the hard ridge +in terror of sink-holes. But their progress was very slow; and they were +still in sight, fighting a painful path amid the evergreens, when +Quintana suddenly squatted close to the moist earth behind a juniper +bush. + +At first, except for the threshing of Sard and Sanchez through the +massed obstructions ahead, there was not a sound in the woods. + +After a little while there _was_ a sound--very, very slight. No dry +stick cracked; no dry leaves rustled; no swish of foliage; no whipping +sound of branches disturbed the intense silence. + +But, presently, came a soft, swift rhythm like the pace of a forest +creature in haste--a discreetly hurrying tread which was more a series +of light earth-shocks than sound. + +Quintana, kneeling on one knee, lifted his pistol. He already felt the +slight vibration of the ground on the hard ridge. The cedars were moving +just beyond him now. He waited until, through the parted foliage, a face +appeared. + +The loud report of his pistol struck Sard with the horror of paralysis. +Sanchez faced about with one spring, snarling, a weapon in either hand. + +In the terrible silence they could hear something heavy floundering in +the bushes, choking, moaning, thudding on the ground. + +Sanchez began to creep back; Sard, more dead than alive, crawled at his +heels. Presently they saw Quintana, waist deep in juniper, looking down +at something. + +And when they drew closer they saw Georgiades lying on his back under a +cedar, the whole front of his shirt from chest to belly a sopping mess +of blood. + +There seemed no need of explanation. The dead Greek lay there where he +had not been expected, and his two pistols lay beside him where they had +fallen. + +Sanchez looked stealthily at Quintana, who said softly: + +"Bien sure.... In his left side pocket, I believe." + +Sanchez laid a cool hand on the dead man's heart; then, satisfied, +rummaged until he found Georgiades' share of the loot. + +Sard, hurriedly displaying a pair of clean but shaky hands, made the +division. + +When the three men had silently pocketed what was allotted to each, +Quintana pushed curiously at the dead man with the toe of his shoe. + +"Peste!" he remarked. "I had place, for security, a ver' large +diamon' in my pistol barrel. Now it is within the interior of this +gentleman...." He turned to Sanchez: "I sell him to you. One sapphire. +Yes?" + +Sanchez shook his head with a slight sneer: "We wait--if you want your +diamond, mon capitaine." + +Quintana hesitated, then made a grimace and shook his head. + +"No," he said, "he has swallow. Let him digest. Allons! March!" + +But after they had gone on--two hundred yards, perhaps--Sanchez stopped. + +"Well?" inquired Quintana. Then, with a sneer: "I now recollec' that +once you have been a butcher in Madrid.... Suit your tas'e, l'ami +Sanchez." + +Sard gazed at Sanchez out of sickened eyes. + +"You keep away from me until you've washed yourself," he burst out, +revolted. "Don't you come near me till you're clean!" + +Quintana laughed and seated himself. Sanchez, with a hang-dog glance at +him, turned and sneaked back on the trail they had traversed. Before he +was out of sight Sard saw him fish out a Spanish knife from his hip +pocket and unclasp it. + +Almost nauseated, he turned on Quintana in a sort of frightened fury: + +"Come on!" he said hoarsely. "I don't want to travel with that man! I +won't associate with a ghoul! My God, I'm a respectable business +man----" + +"Yaas," drawled Quintana, "tha's what I saw always myse'f; my frien' +Sard he is ver' respec'able, an' I trus' him like I trus' myse'f." + +However, after a moment, Quintana got up from the fallen tree where he +had been seated. + +As he passed Sard he looked curiously into the man's frightened eyes. +There was not the slightest doubt that Sard was a coward. + +"You shall walk behin' me," remarked Quintana carelessly. "If Sanchez +fin' us, it is well; if he shall not, that also is ver' well.... We go, +now." + + * * * * * + +Sanchez made no effort to find them. They had been gone half an hour +before he had finished the business that had turned him back. + +After that he wandered about hunting for water--a rivulet, a puddle, +anything. But the wet ground proved wet only on the surface moss. +Sanchez needed more than damp moss for his toilet. Casting about him, +hither and thither, for some depression that might indicate a stream, he +came to a heavily wooded slope, and descended it. + +There was a bog at the foot. With his fouled hands he dug out a basin +which filled up full of reddish water, discoloured by alders. + +But the water was redder still when his toilet ended. + +As he stood there, examining his clothing, and washing what he could of +the ominous stains from sleeve and shoe, very far away to the north he +heard a curious noise--a far, faint sound such as he never before had +heard. + +If it were a voice of any sort there was nothing human about it.... +Probably some sort of unknown bird.... Perhaps a bird of prey.... That +was natural, considering the attraction that Georgiades would have for +such creatures.... If it were a bird it must be a large one, he +thought.... Because there was a certain volume to the cry.... Perhaps +it was a beast, after all.... Some unknown beast of the forest.... + +Sanchez was suddenly afraid. Scarcely knowing what he was doing he began +to run along the edge of the bog. + +First growth timber skirted it; running was unobstructed by underbrush. + +With his startled ears full of the alarming and unknown sound, he ran +through the woods under gigantic pines which spread a soft green +twilight around him. + +He was tired, or thought he was, but the alarming sounds were filling +his ears now; the entire forest seemed full of them, echoing in all +directions, coming in upon him from everywhere, so that he knew not in +which direction to run. + +But he could not stop. Demoralised, he darted this way and that; terror +winged his feet; the air vibrated above and around him with the +dreadful, unearthly sounds. + +The next instant he fell headlong over a ledge, struck water, felt +himself whirled around in the icy, rushing current, rolled over, tumbled +through rapids, blinded, deafened, choked, swept helplessly in a vast +green wall of water toward something that thundered in his brain an +instant, then dashed it into roaring chaos. + + * * * * * + +Half a mile down the turbulent outlet of Star Pond,--where a great sheet +of green water pours thirty feet into the tossing foam below,--and +spinning, dipping, diving, bobbing up like a lost log after the drive, +the body of Señor Sanchez danced all alone in the wilderness, spilling +from soggy pockets diamonds, sapphires, rubies, emeralds, into crystal +caves where only the shadows of slim trout stirred. + + * * * * * + +Very far away to the eastward Quintana stood listening, clutching Sard +by one sleeve to silence him. + +Presently he said: "My frien', somebody is hunting with houn's in this +fores'. + +"Maybe they are not hunting _us_.... _Maybe._... But, for me, I shall +seek running water. Go you your own way! Houp! Vamose!" + +He turned westward; but he had taken scarcely a dozen strides when Sard +came panting after him: + +"Don't leave me!" gasped the terrified diamond broker. "I don't know +where to go----" + +Quintana faced him abruptly--with a terrifying smile and glimmer of +white teeth--and shoved a pistol into the fold of fat beneath Sard's +double chin. + +"You hear those dogs? Yes? Ver' well; I also. Run, now. I say to you run +ver' damn quick. Hé! Houp! Allez vous en! Beat eet!" + +He struck Sard a stinging blow on his fleshy ear with the pistol barrel, +and Sard gave a muffled shriek which was more like the squeak of a +frightened animal. + +"My God, Quintana----" he sobbed. Then Quintana's eyes blazed murder: +and Sard turned and ran lumbering through the thicket like a stampeded +ox, crashing on amid withered brake, white birch scrub and brier, not +knowing whither he was headed, crazed with terror. + +Quintana watched his flight for a moment, then, pistol swinging, he ran +in the opposite direction, eastward, speeding lithely as a cat down a +long, wooded slope which promised running water at the foot. + + * * * * * + +Sard could not run very far. He could scarcely stand when he pulled up +and clung to the trunk of a tree. + +More dead than alive he embraced the tree, gulping horribly for air, +every fat-incrusted organ labouring, his senses swimming. + +As he sagged there, gripping his support on shaking knees, by degrees +his senses began to return. + +He could hear the dogs, now, vaguely as in a nightmare. But after a +little while he began to believe that their hysterical yelping was +really growing more distant. + +Then this man whose every breath was an outrage on God, prayed. + +He prayed that the hounds would follow Quintana, come up with him, drag +him down, worry him, tear him to shreds of flesh and clothing. + +He listened and prayed alternately. After a while he no longer prayed +but concentrated on his ears. + +Surely, surely, the diabolical sound was growing less distinct.... It +was changing direction too. But whether in Quintana's direction or not +Sard could not tell. He was no woodsman. He was completely turned +around. + +He looked upward through a dense yellow foliage, but all was grey in the +sky--very grey and still;--and there seemed to be no traces of the sun +that had been shining. + +He looked fearfully around: trees, trees, and more trees. No break, no +glimmer, nothing to guide him, teach him. He could see, perhaps, fifty +feet; no further. + +In panic he started to move on. That is what fright invariably does to +those ignorant of the forest. Terror starts them moving. + + * * * * * + +Sobbing, frightened almost witless, he had been floundering forward for +over an hour, and had made circle after circle without knowing, when, by +chance, he set foot in a perfectly plain trail. + +Emotion overpowered him. He was too overcome to stir for a while. At +length, however, he tottered off down the trail, oblivious as to what +direction he was taking, animated only by a sort of madness--horror of +trees--an insane necessity to see open ground, get into it, and lie down +on it. + +And now, directly ahead, he saw clear grey sky low through the trees. +The wood's edge! + +He began to run. + +As he emerged from the edge of the woods, waist-deep in brush and weeds, +wide before his blood-shot eyes spread Star Pond. + +Even in his half-stupefied brain there was memory enough left for +recognition. + +He remembered the lake. His gaze travelled to the westward; and he saw +Clinch's Dump standing below, stark, silent, the doors swinging open in +the wind. + +When terror had subsided in a measure and some of his trembling strength +returned, he got up out of the clump of rag-weeds where he had lain +down, and earnestly nosed the unpainted house, listening with all his +ears. + +There was not a sound save the soughing of autumn winds and the delicate +rattle of falling leaves in the woods behind him. + +He needed food and rest. He gazed earnestly at the house. Nothing +stirred there save the open doors swinging idly in every vagrant wind. + +He ventured down a little way--near enough to see the black cinders of +the burned barn, and close enough to hear the lake waters slapping the +sandy shore. + +If he dared---- + +And after a long while he ventured to waddle nearer, slinking through +brush and frosted weed, creeping behind boulders, edging always closer +and closer to that silent house where nothing moved except the +wind-blown door. + +And now, at last, he set a furtive foot upon the threshold, stood +listening, tip-toed in, peered here and there, sidled to the +dining-room, peered in. + + * * * * * + +When, at length, Emanuel Sard discovered that Clinch's Dump was +tenantless, he made straight for the pantry. Here was cheese, crackers, +an apple pie, half a dozen bottles of home-brewed beer. + +He loaded his arms with all they could carry, stole through the +dance-hall out to the veranda, which overlooked the lake. + +Here, hidden in the doorway, he could watch the road from Ghost Lake and +survey the hillside down which an intruder must come from the forest. + +And here Sard slaked his raging thirst and satiated the gnawing appetite +of the obese, than which there is no crueller torment to an inert liver +and distended paunch. + +Munching, guzzling, watching, Sard squatted just within the veranda +doorway, anxiously considering his chances. + +He knew where he was. At the foot of the lake, and eastward, he had been +robbed by a highwayman on the forest road branching from the main +highway. Southwest lay Ghost Lake and the Inn. + +Somewhere between these two points he must try to cross the State +Road.... After that, comparative safety. For the miles that still +would lie between him and distant civilisation seemed as nothing to +the horror of that hell of trees. + +He looked up now at the shaggy fringing woods, shuddered, opened another +bottle of beer. + +In all that panorama of forest, swale, and water the only thing that had +alarmed him at all by moving was something in the water. When first he +noticed it he almost swooned, for he took it to be a swimming dog. + +In his agitation he had risen to his feet; and then the swimming +creature almost frightened Sard out of his senses, for it tilted +suddenly and went down with a report like the crack of a pistol. + +However, when Sard regained control of his wits he realised that a +swimming dog doesn't dive and doesn't whack the water with its tail. + +He dimly remembered hearing that beavers behaved that way. + +Watching the water he saw the thing out there in the lake again, +swimming in erratic circles, its big, dog-like head well out of the +water. + +It certainly was no dog. A beaver, maybe. Whatever it was, Sard didn't +care any longer. + +Idly he watched it. Sometimes, when it swam very near, he made a sudden +motion with his fat arm; and crack!--with a pistol-shot report down it +dived. But always it reappeared. + +What had a creature like that to do with him? Sard watched it with +failing interest, thinking of other things--of Quintana and the chances +that the dogs had caught him,--of Sanchez, the Ghoul, hoping that dire +misfortune might overtake him, too;--of the dead man sprawling under the +cedar-tree, all sopping crimson---- Faugh! + +Shivering, Sard filled his mouth with apple-pie and cheese and pulled +the cork from another bottle of home-brewed beer. + + +III + +About that time, a mile and a half to the southward, James Darragh came +out on the rocky and rushing outlet to Star Pond. + +Over his shoulder was a rifle, and all around him ran dogs,--big, +powerful dogs, built like foxhounds but with the rough, wiry coats of +Airedales, even rougher of ear and features. + +The dogs,--half a dozen or so in number,--seemed very tired. All ran +down eagerly to the water and drank and slobbered and panted, lolling +their tongues, and slaking their thirst again and again along the +swirling edge of a deep trout pool. + +Darragh's rifle lay in the hollow of his left arm; his khaki waistcoat +was set with loops full of cartridges. From his left wrist hung a +raw-hide whip. + +Now he laid aside his rifle and whip, took from the pocket of his +shooting coat three or four leather dog-leashes, went down among the +dogs and coupled them up. + +They followed him back to the bank above. Here he sat down on a rock and +inspected his watch. + +He had been seated there for ten minutes, possibly, with his tired dogs +lying around him, when just above him he saw a State Trooper emerge from +the woods on foot, carrying a rifle over one shoulder. + +"Jack!" he called in a guarded voice. + +Trooper Stormont turned, caught sight of Darragh, made a signal of +recognition, and came toward him. + +Darragh said: "Your mate, Trooper Lannis, is down stream. I've two of my +own game wardens at the cross-roads, two more on the Ghost Lake Road, +and two foresters and an inspector out toward Owl Marsh." + +Stormont nodded, looked down at the dogs. + +"This isn't the State Forest," said Darragh, smiling. Then his face grew +grave: "How is Eve?" he asked. + +"She's feeling better," replied Stormont. "I telephoned to Ghost Lake +Inn for the hotel physician.... I was afraid of pneumonia, Jim. Eve had +chills last night.... But Dr. Claybourn thinks she's all right.... So +I left her in care of your housekeeper." + +"Mrs. Ray will look out for her.... You haven't told Eve who I am, have +you?" + +"No." + +"I'll tell her myself to-night. I don't know how she'll take it when she +learns I'm the heir to the mortal enemy of Mike Clinch." + +"I don't know either," said Stormont. + +There was a silence; the State Trooper looked down at the dogs: + +"What are they, Jim?" + +"Otter-hounds," said Darragh, "--a breed of my own.... But that's _all_ +they are capable of hunting, I guess," he added grimly. + +Stormont's gaze questioned him. + +Darragh said: "After I telephoned you this morning that a guest of mine +at Harrod Place, and I, had been stuck up and robbed by Quintana's +outfit, what did you do, Jack?" + +"I called up Bill Lannis first," said Stormont, "--then the doctor. +After he came, Mrs. Ray arrived with a maid. Then I went in and spoke to +Eve. Then I did what you suggested--I crossed the forest diagonally +toward The Scaur, zig-zagged north, turned by the rock hog-back south of +Drowned Valley, came southeast, circled west, and came out here as you +asked me to." + +"Almost on the minute," nodded Darragh.... "You saw no signs of +Quintana's gang?" + +"None." + +"Well," said Darragh, "I left my two guests at Harrod Place to amuse +each other, got out three couple of my otter-hounds and started +them,--as I hoped and supposed,--on Quintana's trail." + +"What happened?" inquired Stormont curiously. + +"Well--I don't know. I think they were following some of Quintana's +gang--for a while, anyway. After that, God knows,--deer, hare, +cotton-tail,--_I_ don't know. They yelled their bally heads off--I on +the run--they're slow dogs, you know--and whatever they were after +either fooled them or there were too many trails.... I made a mistake, +that's all. These poor beasts don't know anything except an otter. I +just _hoped_ they might take Quintana's trail if I put them on it." + +"Well," said Stormont, "it can't be helped now.... I told Bill Lannis +that we'd rendezvous at Clinch's Dump." + +"All right," nodded Darragh. "Let's keep to the open; my dogs are +leashed couples." + +They had been walking for twenty minutes, possibly, exchanging scarcely +a word, and they were now nearing the hilly basin where Star Pond lay, +when Darragh said abruptly: + +"I'm going to tell you about things, Jack. You've taken my word so far +that it's all right----" + +"Naturally," said Stormont simply. + +The two men, who had been brother officers in the Great War, glanced at +each other, slightly smiling. + +"Here it is then," said Darragh. "When I was on duty in Riga for the +Intelligence Department, I met two ladies in dire distress, whose +mansion had been burned and looted, supposedly by the Bolsheviki. + +"They were actually hungry and penniless; the only clothing they +possessed they were wearing. These ladies were the Countess +Orloff-Strelwitz, and a young girl, Theodorica, Grand Duchess of +Esthonia.... I did what I could for them. After a while, in the course +of other duty, I found out that the Bolsheviki had had nothing to do +with the arson and robbery, but that the crime had been perpetrated by +José Quintana's gang of international crooks masquerading as +Bolsheviki." + +Stormont nodded: "I also came across similar cases," he remarked. + +"Well, this was a flagrant example. Quintana had burnt the château and +had made off with over two million dollars worth of the little Grand +Duchess's jewels--among them the famous Erosite gem known as The Flaming +Jewel." + +"I've heard of it." + +"There are only two others known.... Well, I did what I could with the +Esthonian police, who didn't believe me. + +"But a short time ago the Countess Orloff sent me word that Quintana +really was the guilty one, and that he had started for America. + +"I've been after him ever since.... But, Jack, until this morning +Quintana did not possess these stolen jewels. _Clinch did!_" + +"What!" + +"Clinch served over-seas in a Forestry Regiment. In Paris he robbed +Quintana of these jewels. That's why I've been hanging around Clinch." + +Stormont's face was flushed and incredulous. Then it lost colour as he +thought of the jewels that Eve had concealed--the gems for which she had +risked her life. + +He said: "But you tell me Quintana robbed you this morning." + +"He did. The little Grand Duchess and the Countess Orloff-Strelwitz are +my guests at Harrod Place. + +"Last night I snatched the case containing these gems from Quintana's +fingers. This morning, as I offered them to the Grand Duchess, Quintana +coolly stepped between us----" + +His voice became bitter and his features reddened with rage poorly +controlled: + +"By God, Jack, I should have shot Quintana when the opportunity offered. +Twice I've had the chance. The next time I shall kill him any way I +can.... Legitimately." + +"Of course," said Stormont gravely. But his mind was full of the jewels +which Eve had. What and whose were they,--if Quintana again had the +Esthonian gems in his possession? + +"Had you recovered all the jewels for the Grand Duchess?" he asked +Darragh. + +"Every one, Jack.... Quintana has done me a terrible injury. I shan't +let it go. I mean to hunt that man to the end." + +Stormont, terribly perplexed, nodded. + +A few minutes later, as they came out among the willows and alders on +the northeast side of Star Pond, Stormont touched his comrade's arm. + +"Look at that enormous dog-otter out there in the lake!" + +"Grab those dogs! They'll strangle each other," cried Darragh quickly. +"That's it--unleash them, Jack, and let them go!"--he was struggling +with the other two couples while speaking. + +And now the hounds, unleashed, lifted frantic voices. The very sky +seemed full of the discordant tumult; wood and shore reverberated with +the volume of convulsive and dissonant baying. + +"Damn it," said Darragh, disgusted, "--that's what they've been trailing +all the while across-woods,--that devilish dog-otter yonder.... And I +had hoped they were on Quintana's trail----" + +A mass rush and scurry of crazed dogs nearly swept him off his feet, and +both men caught a glimpse of a large bitch-otter taking to the lake from +a ledge of rock just beyond. + +Now the sky vibrated with the deafening outcry of the dogs, some taking +to water, others racing madly along shore. + +Crack! The echo of the dog-otter's blow on the water came across to them +as the beast dived. + +"Well, I'm in for it now," muttered Darragh, starting along the bank +toward Clinch's Dump, to keep an eye on his dogs. + +Stormont followed more leisurely. + + +IV + +A few minutes before Darragh and Stormont had come out on the farther +edge of Star Pond, Sard, who had heard from Quintana about the big drain +pipe which led from Clinch's pantry into the lake, decided to go in and +take a look at it. + +He had been told all about its uses,--how Clinch,--in the event of a +raid by State Troopers or Government enforcement agents,--could empty +his contraband hootch into the lake if necessary,--and even could slide +a barrel of ale or a keg of rum, intact, into the great tile tunnel and +recover the liquor at his leisure. + +Also, and grimly, Quintana had admitted that through this drain Eve +Strayer and the State Trooper, Stormont, had escaped from Clinch's Dump. + +So now Sard, full of curiosity, went back into the pantry to look at it +for himself. + +Almost instantly the idea occurred to him to make use of the drain for +his own safety and comfort. + +Why shouldn't he sleep in the pantry, lock the door, and, in case of +intrusion,--other exits being unavailable,--why shouldn't he feel +entirely safe with such an avenue of escape open? + +For swimming was Sard's single accomplishment. He wasn't afraid of the +water; he simply couldn't sink. Swimming was the only sport he ever had +indulged in. He adored it. + +Also, the mere idea of sleeping alone amid that hell of trees terrified +Sard. Never had he known such horror as when Quintana abandoned him in +the woods. Never again could he gaze upon a tree without malignant +hatred. Never again did he desire to lay eyes upon even a bush. The very +sight, now, of the dusky forest filled him with loathing. Why should he +not risk one night in this deserted house,--sleep well and warmly, feed +well, drink his bellyfull of Clinch's beer, before attempting the +dead-line southward, where he was only too sure that patrols were riding +and hiding on the lookout for the fancy gentlemen of José Quintana's +selected company of malefactors? + +Well, here in the snug pantry were pies, crullers, bread, cheeses, +various dried meats, tinned vegetables, ham, bacon, fuel and range to +prepare what he desired. + +Here was beer, too; and doubtless ardent spirits if he could nose out +the hidden demijohns and bottles. + +He peered out of the pantry window at the forest, shuddered, cursed +it and every separate tree in it; cursed Quintana, too, wishing him +black mischance. No; it was settled. He'd take his chance here in the +pantry.... And there must be a mattress somewhere upstairs. + +He climbed the staircase, cautiously, discovered Clinch's bedroom, took +the mattress and blankets from the bed, dragged them to the pantry. + +Could any honest man be more tight and snug in this perilous world of +the desperate and undeserving? Sard thought not. But one matter troubled +him: the lock of the pantry door had been shattered. To remedy this he +moused around until he discovered some long nails and a claw-hammer. +When he was ready to go to sleep he'd nail himself in. And in the +morning he'd pry the door loose. That was simple. Sard chuckled for the +first time since he had set eyes upon the accursed region. + +And now the sun came out from behind a low bank of solid grey cloud, and +fell upon the countenance of Emanuel Sard. It warmed his parrot-nose +agreeably; it cheered and enlivened him. + +Not for him a night of terrors in that horrible forest which he could +see through the pantry window. + +A sense of security and of well-being pervaded Sard to his muddy shoes. +He even curled his fat toes in them with animal contentment. + +A little snack before cooking a heavily satisfactory dinner? Certainly. + +So he tucked a couple of bottles of beer under one arm, a loaf of bread +and a chunk of cheese under the other, and waddled out to the veranda +door. + +And at that instant the very heavens echoed with that awful tumult which +had first paralysed, then crazed him in the woods. + +Bottles, bread, cheese fell from his grasp and his knees nearly +collapsed under him. In the bushes on the lake shore he saw animals +leaping and racing, but, in his terror, he did not recognise them for +dogs. + +Then, suddenly, he saw a man, close to the house, running: and another +man not far behind. _That_ he understood, and it electrified him into +action. + +It was too late to escape from the house now. He understood that +instantly. + +He ran back through the dance-hall and dining-room to the pantry; but he +dared not let these intruders hear the noise of hammering. + +In an agony of indecision he stood trembling, listening to the infernal +racket of the dogs, and waiting for the first footstep within the house. + +No step came. But, chancing to look over his shoulder, he saw a man +peering through the pantry window at him. + +Ungovernable terror seized Sard. Scarcely aware what he was about, he +seized the edges of the big drain-pipe and crowded his obese body into +it head first. He was so fat and heavy that he filled the tile. To start +himself down he pulled with both hands and kicked himself forward, +tortoise-like, down the slanting tunnel, sticking now and then, dragging +himself on and downward. + +Now he began to gain momentum; he felt himself sliding, not fast but +steadily. + +There came a hitch somewhere; his heavy body stuck on the steep incline. + +Then, as he lifted his bewildered head and strove to peer into the +blackness in front, he saw four balls of green fire close to him in +darkness. + +He began to slide at the same instant, and flung out both hands to check +himself. But his palms slid in the slime and his body slid after. + +He shrieked once as his face struck a furry obstruction where four balls +of green fire flamed horribly and a fury of murderous teeth tore his +face and throat to bloody tatters as he slid lower, lower, settling +through crimson-dyed waters into the icy depths of Star Pond. + + * * * * * + +Stormont, down by the lake, called to Darragh, who appeared on the +veranda: + +"Oh, Jim! Both otters crawled into the drain! I think your dogs must +have killed one of them under water. There's a big patch of blood +spreading off shore." + +"Yes," said Darragh, "something has just been killed, somewhere ... +Jack!" + +"Yes?" + +"Pull both your guns and come up here, quick!" + + + + +EPISODE TEN + +THE TWILIGHT OF MIKE + + +I + +When Quintana turned like an enraged snake on Sard and drove him to his +destruction, he would have killed and robbed the frightened diamond +broker had he dared risk the shot. He had intended to do this anyway, +sooner or later. But with the noise of the hunting dogs filling the +forest, Quintana was afraid to fire. Yet, even then he followed Sard +stealthily for a few minutes, afraid yet murderously desirous of the +gems, confused by the tumult of the hounds, timid and ferocious at the +same time, and loath to leave his fat, perspiring, and demoralised +victim. + +But the racket of the dogs proved too much for Quintana. He sheered away +toward the South, leaving Sard floundering on ahead, unconscious of the +treachery that had followed furtively in his panic-stricken tracks. + +About an hour later Quintana was seen, challenged, chased and shot at by +State Trooper Lannis. + +Quintana ran. And what with the dense growth of seedling beech and oak +and the heavily falling birch and poplar leaves, Lannis first lost +Quintana and then his trail. + +The State Trooper had left his horse at the cross-roads near the scene +of Darragh's masked exploit, where he had stopped and robbed Sard--and +now Lannis hastened back to find and mount his horse, and gallop +straight into the first growth timber. + +Through dim aisles of giant pine he spurred to a dead run on the chance +of cutting Quintana from the eastward edge of the forest and forcing him +back toward the north or west, where patrols were more than likely to +hold him. + +The State Trooper rode with all the reckless indifference and grace of +the Western cavalryman, and he seemed to be part of the superb animal he +rode--part of its bone and muscle, its litheness, its supple power--part +of its vertebræ and ribs and limbs, so perfect was their bodily +co-ordination. + +Rifle and eyes intently alert, the rider scarce noticed his rushing +mount; and if he guided with wrist and knee it was instinctive and as +though the horse were guiding them both. + +And now, far ahead through this primeval stand of pine, sunshine +glimmered, warning of a clearing. And here Trooper Lannis pulled in his +horse at the edge of what seemed to be a broad, flat meadow, vividly +green. + +But it was the intense, arsenical green of hair-fine grass that covers +with its false velvet those quaking bogs where only a thin, crust-like +skin of root-fibre and vegetation cover infinite depths of silt. + +The silt had no more substance than a drop of ink colouring the water in +a tumbler. + +Sitting his fast-breathing mount, Lannis searched this wide, flat +expanse of brilliant green. Nothing moved on it save a great heron +picking its deliberate way on stilt-like legs. It was well for Quintana +that he had not attempted it. + +Very cautiously Lannis walked his horse along the hard ground which +edged this marsh on the west. Nowhere was there any sign that Quintana +had come down to the edge among the shrubs and swale grasses. + +Beyond the marsh another trooper patrolled; and when at length he and +Lannis perceived each other and exchanged signals, the latter wheeled +his horse and retraced his route at an easy canter, satisfied that +Quintana had not yet broken cover. + +Back through the first growth he cantered, his rifle at a ready, +carefully scanning the more open woodlands, and so came again to the +cross-roads. + +And here stood a State Game Inspector, with a report that some sort of +beagle-pack was hunting in the forest to the northwest; and very curious +to investigate. + +So it was arranged that the Inspector should turn road-patrol and the +Trooper become the rover. + +There was no sound of dogs when Lannis rode in on the narrow, spotted +trail whence he had flushed Quintana into the dense growth of saplings +that bordered it. + +His horse made little noise on the moist layer of leaves and forest +mould; he listened hard for the sound of hounds as he rode; heard +nothing save the chirr of red squirrels, the shriek of a watching jay, +or the startling noise of falling acorns rapping and knocking on great +limbs in their descent to the forest floor. + +Once, very, very far away westward in the direction of Star Pond he +fancied he heard a faint vibration in the air that might have been +hounds baying. + +He was right. And at that very moment Sard was dying, horribly, among +two trapped otters as big and fierce as the dogs that had driven them +into the drain. + +But Lannis knew nothing of that as he moved on, mounted, along the +spotted trail, now all a yellow glory of birch and poplar which made the +woodland brilliant as though lighted by yellow lanterns. + +Somewhere among the birches, between him and Star Pond, was Harrod +Place. And the idea occurred to him that Quintana might have ventured to +ask food and shelter there. Yet, that was not likely because Trooper +Stormont had called him that morning on the telephone from the Hatchery +Lodge. + +No; the only logical retreat for Quintana was northward to the +mountains, where patrols were plenty and fire-wardens on duty in every +watch-tower. Or, the fugitive could make for Drowned Valley by a blind +trail which, Stormont informed him, existed but which Lannis never had +heard of. + +However, to reassure himself, Lannis rode as far as Harrod Place, and +found game wardens on duty along the line. + +Then he turned west and trotted his mount down to the hatchery, where he +saw Ralph Wier, the Superintendent, standing outside the lodge talking +to his assistant, George Fry. + +When Lannis rode up on the opposite side of the brook, he called across +to Wier: + +"You haven't seen anything of any crooked outfit around here, have you, +Ralph? I'm looking for that kind." + +"See here," said the Superintendent, "I don't know but George Fry may +have seen one of your guys. Come over and he'll tell you what happened +an hour ago." + +Trooper Lannis pivotted his horse and put him to the brook with scarcely +any take-off; and the splendid animal cleared the water like a deer and +came cantering up to the door of the lodge. + +Fry's boyish face seemed agitated; he looked up at the State Trooper +with the flush of tears in his gaze and pointed at the rifle Lannis +carried: + +"If I'd had _that_," he said excitedly, "I'd have brought in a crook, +you bet!" + +"Where did you see him?" inquired Lannis. + +"Jest west of the Scaur, about an hour and a half ago. Wier and me was +stockin' the head of Scaur Brook with fingerlings. There's more good +water--two miles of it--to the east, and all it needed was a fish-ladder +around Scaur Falls. + +"So I toted in cement and sand and grub last week, and I built me a +shanty on the Scaur, and I been laying up a fish-way around the falls. +So that's how I come there----" He clicked his teeth and darted a +furious glance at the woods. "By God," he said, "I was such a fool I +didn't take no rifle. All I had was an axe and a few traps.... I wasn't +going to let the mink get our trout whatever you fellows say," he added +defiantly, "--and law or no law----" + +"Get along with your story, young man," interrupted Lannis; "--you can +spill the rest out to the Commissioner." + +"All right, then. This is the way it happened down to the Scaur. I was +eating lunch by the fish-stairs, looking up at 'em and kind of planning +how to save cement, and not thinking about anybody being near me, when +_something_ made me turn my head.... You know how it is in the woods.... +I kinda _felt_ somebody near. And, by cracky!--there stood a man with a +big, black automatic pistol, and he had a bead on my belly. + +"'Well,' said I, 'what's troubling _you_ and your gun, my friend?'--I +was that astonished. + +"He was a slim-built, powerful guy with a foreign face and voice and +way. He wanted to know if he had the honour--as he put it--to introduce +himself to a detective or game constable, or a friend of Mike Clinch. + +"I told him I wasn't any of these, and that I worked in a private +hatchery; and he called me a liar." + +Young Fry's face flushed and his voice began to quiver: + +"That's the way he misused me: and he backed me into the shanty and I +had to sit down with both hands up. Then he filled my pack-basket with +grub, and took my axe, and strapped my kit onto his back.... And +talking all the time in his mean, sneery, foreign way--and I guess he +thought he was funny, for he laughed at his own jokes. + +"He told me his name was Quintana, and that he ought to shoot me for a +rat, but wouldn't because of the stink. Then he said he was going to do +a quick job that the police were too cowardly to do;--that he was +a-going to find Mike Clinch down to Drowned Valley and kill him; and if +he could catch Mike's daughter, too, he'd spoil her face for life----" + +The boy was breathing so hard and his rage made him so incoherent that +Lannis took him by the shoulder and shook him: + +"What next?" demanded the Trooper impatiently. "Tell your story and quit +thinking how you were misused!" + +"He told me to stay in the shanty for an hour or he'd do for me good," +cried Fry.... "Once I got up and went to the door; and there he stood +by the brook, wolfing my lunch with both hands. I tell you he cursed and +drove me, like a dog, inside with his big pistol--my God--like a dog.... + +"Then, the next time I took a chance he was gone.... And I beat it here +to get me a rifle----" The boy broke down and sobbed: "He drove me +around--like a dog--he did----" + +"You leave that to me," interrupted Lannis sharply. And, to Wier: "You +and George had better get a gun apiece. That fellow _might_ come back +here or go to Harrod Place if we starve him out." + +Wier said to Fry: "Go up to Harrod Place and tell Jansen your story and +bring back two 45-70's.... And quit snivelling.... You may get a shot +at him yet." + +Lannis had already ridden down to the brook. Now he jumped his horse +across, pulled up, called back to Wier: + +"I think our man is making for Drowned Valley, all right. My mate, +Stormont, telephoned me that some of his gang are there, and that Mike +Clinch and his gang have them stopped on the other side! Keep your eye +on Harrod Place!" + +And away he cantered into the North. + + * * * * * + +Behind the curtains of her open window Eve Strayer, lying on her bed, +had heard every word. + +Crouched there beside her pillow she peered out and saw Trooper Lannis +ride away; saw the Fry boy start toward Harrod Place on a run; saw Ralph +Wier watch them out of sight and then turn and re-enter the lodge. + +Wrapped in Darragh's big blanket robe she got off the bed and opened her +chamber door as Wier was passing through the living-room. + +"Please--I'd like to speak to you a moment," she called. + +Wier turned instantly and came to the partly open door. + +"I want to know," she said, "where I am." + +"Ma'am?" + +"What is this place?" + +"It's a hatchery----" + +"Whose?" + +"Ma'am?" + +"Whose lodge is this? Does it belong to Harrod Place?" + +"We're h-hootch runners, Miss----" stammered Wier, mindful of +instructions, but making a poor business of deception; "--I and Hal +Smith, we run a 'Easy One,' and we strip trout for a blind and sell to +Harrod Place--Hal and I----" + +"_Who_ is Hal Smith?" she asked. + +"Ma'am?" + +The girl's flower-blue eyes turned icy: "Who is the man who calls +himself Hal Smith?" she repeated. + +Wier looked at her, red and dumb. + +"Is he a Trooper in plain clothes?" she demanded in a bitter voice. "Is +he one of the Commissioner's spies? Are _you_ one, too?" + +Wier gazed miserably at her, unable to formulate a convincing lie. + +She flushed swiftly as a terrible suspicion seized her: + +"Is this Harrod property? Is Hal Smith old Harrod's heir? _Is_ he?" + +"My God, Miss----" + +"He _is_!" + +"Listen, Miss----" + +She flung open the door and came out into the living-room. + +"Hal Smith is that nephew of old Harrod," she said calmly. "His name is +Darragh. And you are one of his wardens.... And I can't stay here. Do +you understand?" + +Wier wiped his hot face and waited. The cat was out; there was a hole in +the bag; and he knew there was no use in such lies as he could tell. + +He said: "All I know, Miss, is that I was to look after you and get you +whatever you want----" + +"I want my clothes!" + +"Ma'am?" + +"My _clothes_!" she repeated impatiently. "I've _got_ to have them!" + +"Where are they, ma'am?" asked the bewildered man. + +At the same moment the girl's eyes fell on a pile of men's sporting +clothing--garments sent down from Harrod Place to the Lodge--lying on a +leather lounge near a gun-rack. + +Without a glance at Wier, Eve went to the heap of clothing, tossed it +about, selected cords, two pairs of woollen socks, grey shirt, puttees, +shoes, flung the garments through the door into her own room, followed +them, and locked herself in. + + * * * * * + +When she was dressed--the two heavy pairs of socks helping to fit her +feet to the shoes--she emptied her handful of diamonds, sapphires and +emeralds, including the Flaming Jewel, into the pockets of her breeches. + +Now she was ready. She unlocked her door and went out, scarcely limping +at all, now. + +Wier gazed at her helplessly as she coolly chose a rifle and +cartridge-belt at the gun-rack. + +Then she turned on him as still and dangerous as a young puma: + +"Tell Darragh he'd better keep clear of Clinch's," she said. "Tell him I +always thought he was a rat. Now I know he's one." + +She plunged one slim hand into her pocket and drew out a diamond. + +"Here," she said insolently. "This will pay your _gentleman_ for his gun +and clothing." + +She tossed the gem onto a table, where it rolled, glittering. + +"For heaven's sake, Miss----" burst out Wier, horrified, but she cut him +short: + +"--He may keep the change," she said. "We're no swindlers at Clinch's +Dump!" + +Wier started forward as though to intercept her. Eve's eyes flamed. And +he stood still. She wrenched open the door and walked out among the +silver birches. + +At the edge of the brook she stood a moment, coolly loading the magazine +of her rifle. Then, with one swift glance of hatred, flung at the place +that Harrod's money had built, she sprang across the brook, tossed her +rifle to her shoulder, and passed lithely into the golden wilderness of +poplar and silver birch. + + +II + +Quintana, on a fox-trot along the rock-trail into Drowned Valley, now +thoroughly understood that it was the only sanctuary left him for the +moment. Egress to the southward was closed; to the eastward, also; and +he was too wary to venture westward toward Ghost Lake. + +No, the only temporary safety lay in the swamps of Drowned Valley. + +And there, he decided as he jogged along, if worse came to worst and +starvation drove him out, he'd settle matters with Mike Clinch and break +through to the north. + +He meant to settle matters with Mike Clinch anyway. He was not afraid of +Clinch; not really afraid of anybody. It had been the dogs that +demoralised Quintana. He'd had no experience with hunting hounds,--did +not know what to expect,--how to manoeuvre. If only he could have +_seen_ these beasts that filled the forest with their hob-goblin +outcries--if he could have had a good look at the creatures who gave +forth that weird, crazed, melancholy volume of sound!---- + +"Bon!" he said coolly to himself. "It was a crisis of nerves which I +experience. Yes.... I should have shot him, that fat Sard. Yes.... +Only those damn dog---- And now he shall die an' rot--that fat Sard--all +by himse'f, parbleu!--like one big dead thing all alone in the wood.... +A puddle of guts full of diamonds! Ah!--mon dieu!--a million francs in +gems that shine like festering stars in this damn wood till the world +end. Ah, bah--nome de dieu de----" + +"Halte là!" came a sharp voice from the cedar fringe in front. A pause, +then recognition; and Henri Picquet walked out on the hard ridge beyond +and stood leaning on his rifle and looking sullenly at his leader. + +Quintana came forward, carelessly, a disagreeable expression in his +eyes and on his narrow lips, and continued on past Picquet. + +The latter slouched after his leader, who had walked over to the lean-to +before which a pile of charred logs lay in cold ashes. + +As Picquet came up, Quintana turned on him, with a gesture toward the +extinguished fire: "It is cold like hell," he said. "Why do you not have +some fire?" + +"Not for me, non," growled Picquet, and jerked a dirty thumb in the +direction of the lean-to. + +And there Quintana saw a pair of muddy boots protruding from a blanket. + +"It is Harry Beck, yes?" he inquired. Then _something_ about the boots +and the blanket silenced him. He kept his eyes on them for a full +minute, then walked into the lean-to. The blanket also covered Harry +Beck's features and there was a stain on it where it outlined the +prostrate man's features, making a ridge over the bony nose. + +After a moment Quintana looked around at Picquet: + +"So. He is dead. Yes?" + +Picquet shrugged: "Since noon, mon capitaine." + +"Comment?" + +"How shall I know? It was the fire, perhaps,--green wood or wet--it is +no matter now.... I said to him, 'Pay attention, Henri; your wood makes +too much smoke.' To me he reply I shall go to hell.... Well, there was +too much smoke for me. I arise to search for wood more dry, when, +crack!--they begin to shoot out there----" He waved a dirty hand toward +the forest. + +"'Bon,' said I, 'Clinch, he have seen your damn smoke!' + +"'What shall I care?' he make reply, Henri Beck, to me. 'Clinch he +shall shoot and be damn to him. I cook me my déjeûner all the same.' + +"I make representations to that Johnbull; he say to me that I am a frog, +and other injuries, while he lay yet more wood on his sacré fire. + +"Then crack! crack! crack! and zing-gg!--whee-ee! come the big bullets +of Clinch and his voyous yonder. + +"'Bon,' I say, 'me, I make my excuse to retire.' + +"Then Henri Beck he laugh and say, 'Hop it, frog!' And that is all he +has find time to say, when crack! spat! Bien droit he has it--tenez, mon +capitaine--here, over the left eye!... Like a beef surprise he go over, +crash! thump! And like a beef that dies, the air bellows out from his +big lungs----" + +Picquet looked down at the dead comrade in a sort of weary compassion +for such stupidity. + +"--So he pass, this ros-biff goddam Johnbull.... Me, I roll him in +there.... Je ne sais pas pourquoi.... Then I put out the fire and +leave." + +Quintana let his sneering glance rest on the dead a moment, and his thin +lip curled immemorial contempt for the Anglo-Saxon. + +Then he divested himself of the basket-pack which he had stolen from the +Fry boy. + +"Alors," he said calmly, "it has been Mike Clinch who shoot my frien' +Beck. Bien." + +He threw a cartridge into the breech of his rifle, adjusted his +ammunition belt _en bandoulière_, carelessly. + +Then, in a quiet voice: "My frien' Picquet, the time has now arrive when +it become ver' necessary that we go from here away. Donc--I shall now +go kill me my frien' Mike Clinch." + +Picquet, unastonished, gave him a heavy, bovine look of inquiry. + +Quintana said softly: "Me, I have enough already of this damn woods. Why +shall we starve here when there lies our path?" He pointed north; his +arm remained outstretched for a while. + +"Clinch, he is there," growled Picquet. + +"Also our path, l'ami Henri.... And, behind us, they hunt us now with +_dogs_." + +Picquet bared his big white teeth in fierce surprise. "Dogs?" he +repeated with a sort of snarl. + +"That is how they now hunt us, my frien'--like they hunt the hare in the +Côte d'Or.... Me, I shall now reconnoitre--_that_ way!" And he looked +where he was pointing, into the north--with smouldering eyes. Then he +turned calmly to Picquet: "An' you, l'ami?" + +"At orders, mon capitaine." + +"C'est bien. Venez." + +They walked leisurely forward with rifles shouldered, following the hard +ridge out across a vast and flooded land where the bark of trees +glimmered with wet mosses. + +After a quarter of a mile the ridge broadened and split into two, one +hog-back branching northeast! They, however, continued north. + +About twenty minutes later Picquet, creeping along on Quintana's left, +and some sixty yards distant, discovered something moving in the woods +beyond, and fired at it. Instantly two unseen rifles spoke from the +woods ahead. Picquet was jerked clear around, lost his balance and +nearly fell. Blood was spurting from his right arm, between elbow and +shoulder. + +He tried to lift and level his rifle; his arm collapsed and dangled +broken and powerless; his rifle clattered to the forest floor. + +For a moment he stood there in plain view, dumb, deathly white; then he +began screaming with fury while the big, soft-nosed bullets came +streaming in all around him. His broken arm was hit again. His screaming +ceased; he dragged out his big clasp-knife with his left hand and +started running toward the shooting. + +As he ran, his mangled arm flopping like a broken wing, Byron Hastings +stepped out from behind a tree and coolly shot him down at close +quarters. + +Then Quintana's rifle exploded twice very quickly, and the Hastings boy +stumbled sideways and fell sprawling. He managed to rise to his knees +again; he even was trying to stand up when Quintana, taking his time, +deliberately began to empty his magazine into the boy, riddling him limb +and body and head. + +Down once more, he still moved his arms. Sid Hone reached out from +behind a fallen log to grasp the dying lad's ankle and draw him into +shelter, but Quintana reloaded swiftly and smashed Hone's left hand with +the first shot. + +Then Jim Hastings, kneeling behind a bunch of juniper, fired a +high-velocity bullet into the tree behind which Quintana stood; but +before he could fire again Quintana's shot in reply came ripping through +the juniper and tore a ghastly hole in the calf of his left leg, +striking a blow that knocked young Hastings flat and paralysed as a dead +flounder. + +A mile to the north, blocking the other exit from Drowned Valley, Mike +Clinch, Harvey Chase, Cornelius Blommers, and Dick Berry stood listening +to the shooting. + +"B'gosh," blurted out Chase, "it sounds like they was goin' through, +Mike. B'gosh, it does!" + +Clinch's little pale eyes blazed, but he said in his soft, agreeable +voice: + +"Stay right here, boys. Like as not some of 'em will come this way." + +The shooting below ceased. Clinch's nostrils expanded and flattened with +every breath, as he stood glaring into the woods. + +"Harve," he said presently, "you an' Corny go down there an' kinda look +around. And you signal if I'm wanted. G'wan, both o' you. Git!" + +They started, running heavily, but their feet made little noise on the +moss. + +Berry came over and stood near Clinch. For ten minutes neither man +moved. Clinch stared at the woods in front of him. The younger man's +nervous glance flickered like a snake's tongue in every direction, and +he kept moistening his lips with his tongue. + +Presently two shots came from the south. A pause; a rattle of shots from +hastily emptied magazines. + +"G'wan down there, Dick!" said Clinch. + +"You'll be alone, Mike----" + +"Au' right. You do like I say; git along quick!" + +Berry walked southward a little way. He had turned very white under his +tan. + +"Gol ding ye!" shouted Clinch, "take it on a lope or I'll kick the pants +off'n ye!" + +Berry began to run, carrying his rifle at a trail. + +For half an hour there was not a sound in the forests of Drowned Valley +except in the dead timber where unseen woodpeckers hammered fitfully at +the ghosts of ancient trees. + +Always Clinch's little pale eyes searched the forest twilight in front +of him; not a falling leaf escaped him; not a chipmunk. + +And all the while Clinch talked to himself; his lips moved a little now +and then, but uttered no sound: + +"All I want God should do," he repeated again and again, "is to just let +Quintana come _my_ way. 'Tain't for because he robbed my girlie. 'Tain't +for the stuff he carries onto him.... No, God, 'tain't them things. But +it's what that there skunk done to my Evie.... O God, be you listenin'? +He _hurt_ her, Quintana did. That's it. He misused her.... God, if you +had seen my girlie's little bleeding feet!---- _That's_ the reason.... +'Tain't the stuff. I can work. I can save for to make my Evie a lady +same's them high-steppers on Fifth Avenoo. I can moil and toil and slave +an' run hootch--hootch---- They wuz wine 'n' fixin's into the Bible. It +ain't you, God, it's them fanatics.... Nobody in my Dump wanted I +should sell 'em more'n a bottle o' beer before this here prohybishun set +us all crazy. 'Tain't right.... O God, don't hold a little hootch agin +me when all I want of you is to let Quintana----" + +The slightest noise behind him. He waited, turned slowly. Eve stood +there. + +Hell died in his pale eyes as she came to him, rested silently in his +gentle embrace, returned his kiss, laid her flushed, sweet cheek against +his unshaven face. + +"Dad, darling?" + +"Yes, my baby----" + +"You're watching to kill Quintana. But there's no use watching any +longer." + +"Have the boys below got him?" he demanded. + +"They got one of his gang. Byron Hastings is dead. Jim is badly hurt; +Sid Hone, too,--not so badly----" + +"Where's Quintana?" + +"Dad, he's gone.... But it don't matter. See here!----" She dug her +slender hand into her breeches' pocket and pulled out a little +fistful of gems. + +Clinch, his powerful arm closing her shoulders, looked dully at the +jewels. + +"You see, dad, there's no use killing Quintana. These are the things he +robbed you of." + +"'Tain't them that matter.... I'm glad you got 'em. I allus wanted you +should be a great lady, girlie. Them's the tickets of admission. You put +'em in your pants. I gotta stay here a spell----" + +"Dad! Take them!" + +He took them, smiled, shoved them into his pocket. + +"What is it, girlie?" he asked absently, his pale eyes searching the +woods ahead. + +"I've just told you," she said, "that the boys went in as far as +Quintana's shanty. There was a dead man there, too; but Quintana has +gone." + +Clinch said,--not removing his eyes from the forest: "If any o' them +boys has let Quintana crawl through I'll kill _him_, too.... G'wan +home, girlie. I gotta mosey--I gotta kinda loaf around f'r a spell----" + +"Dad, I want you to come back with me----" + +"You go home; you hear me, Eve? Tell Corny and Dick Berry to hook it for +Owl Marsh and stop the Star Peak trails--both on 'em.... Can Sid and +Jimmy walk?" + +"Jim can't----" + +"Well, let Harve take him on his back. You go too. You help fix Jimmy up +at the house. He's a little fella, Jimmy Hastings is. Harve can tote +him. And you go along----" + +"Dad, Quintana says he means to kill you! What is the use of hurting +him? You have what he took----" + +"I gotta have more'n he took. But even that ain't enough. He couldn't +pay for all he ever done to me, girlie.... I'm aimin' to draw on him on +sight----" + +Clinch's set visage relaxed into an alarming smile which flickered, +faded, died in the wintry ferocity of his eyes. + +"Dad----" + +"G'wan home!" he interrupted harshly. "You want that Hastings boy to +bleed to death?" + +She came up to him, not uttering a word, yet asking him with all the +tenderness and eloquence of her eyes to leave this blood-trail where it +lay and hunt no more. + +He kissed her mouth, infinitely tender, smiled; then, again prim and +scowling: + +"G'wan home, you little scut, an' do what I told ye, or, by God, I'll +cut a switch that'll learn ye good! Never a word, now! On yer way! +G'wan!" + + * * * * * + +Twice she turned to look back. The second time, Clinch was slowly +walking into the woods straight ahead of him. She waited; saw him go in; +waited. After a while she continued on her way. + +When she sighted the men below she called to Blommers and Dick Berry: + +"Dad says you're to stop Star Peak trail by Owl Marsh." + +Jimmy Hastings sat on a log, crying and looking down at his dead +brother, over whose head somebody had spread a coat. + +Blommers had made a tourniquet for Jimmy out of a bandanna and a peeled +stick. + +The girl examined it, loosened it for a moment, twisted it again, and +bade Harvey Chase take him on his back and start for Clinch's. + +The boy began to sob that he didn't want his brother to be left out +there all alone; but Chase promised to come back and bring him in before +night. + +Sid Hone came up, haggard from pain and loss of blood, resting his +mangled hand in the sling of his cartridge-belt. + +Berry and Blommers were already starting across toward Owl Marsh; and +the latter, passing by, asked Eve where Mike was. + +"He went into Drowned Valley by the upper outlet," she said. + +"He'll never find no one in them logans an' sinks," muttered Chase, +squatting to hoist Jimmy Hastings to his broad back. + +"I guess he'll be over Star Peak side by sundown," nodded Blommers. + +Eve watched him slouching off into the woods, followed sullenly by +Berry. Then she looked down at the dead man in silence. + +"Be you ready, Eve?" grunted Chase. + +She turned with a heavy heart to the home trail; but her mind was +passionately with Clinch in the spectral forests of Drowned Valley. + + +III + +And Clinch's mind was on her. All else--his watchfulness, his stealthy +advance--all the alertness of eye and ear, all the subtlety, the +cunning, the infinite caution--were purely instinctive mechanics. + +Somewhere in this flooded twilight of gigantic trees was José Quintana. +Knowing that, he dismissed that fact from his mind and turned his +thoughts to Eve. + +Sometimes his lips moved. They usually did when he was arguing with God +or calling his Creator's attention to the justice of his case. His _two_ +cases--each, to him, a cause célèbre; the matter of Harrod; the affair +of Quintana. + +Many a time he had pleaded these two causes before the Most High. + +But now his thoughts were chiefly concerned with Eve--with the problem +of her future--his master passion--this daughter of the dead wife he had +loved. + +He sighed unconsciously; halted. + +"Well, Lord," he concluded, in his wordless way, "my girlie has gotta +have a chance if I gotta go to hell for it. That's sure as shootin'.... +Amen." + +At that instant he saw Quintana. + +Recognition was instant and mutual. Neither man stirred. Quintana was +standing beside a giant hemlock. His pack lay at his feet. + +Clinch had halted--always the mechanics!--close to a great ironwood +tree. + +Probably both men knew that they could cover themselves before the other +moved a muscle. Clinch's small, light eyes were blazing; Quintana's +black eyes had become two slits. + +Finally: "You--dirty--skunk," drawled Clinch in his agreeably misleading +voice, "by Jesus Christ I got you now." + +"Ah--h," said Quintana, "thees has happen ver' nice like I expec'.... +Always I say myse'f, yet a little patience, José, an' one day you shall +meet thees fellow Clinch, who has rob you.... I am ver' thankful to the +good God----" + +He had made the slightest of movements: instantly both men were behind +their trees. Clinch, in the ferocious pride of woodcraft, laughed +exultingly--filled the dim and spectral forest with his roar of +laughter. + +"Quintana," he called out, "you're a-going to cash in. Savvy? You're +a-going to hop off. An' first you gotta hear why. 'Tain't for the stuff. +Naw! I hooked it off'n you; you hooked it off'n me; now I got it again. +_That's_ all square.... No, 'tain't _that_ grudge, you green-livered +whelp of a cross-bred, still-born slut! No! It's becuz you laid the heft +o' your dirty little finger onto my girlie. 'N' now you gotta hop!" + +Quintana's sinister laughter was his retort. Then: "You damfool Clinch," +he said, "I got in my pocket what you rob of me. Now I kill you, and +then I feel ver' well. I go home, live like some kings; yes. But you," +he sneered, "you shall not go home never no more. No. You shall remain +in thees damn wood like ver' dead old rat that is all wormy.... Hé! I +got a million dollaire--five million franc in my pocket. You shall learn +what it cost to rob José Quintana! Unnerstan'?" + +"You liar," said Clinch contemptuously, "I got them jools in my pants +pocket----" + +Quintana's derisive laugh cut him short: "I give you thee Flaming Jewel +if you show me you got my gems in you pants pocket!" + +"I'll show you. Lay down your rifle so's I see the stock." + +"First you, my frien' Mike," said Quintana cautiously. + +Clinch took his rifle by the muzzle and shoved the stock into view so +that Quintana could see it without moving. + +To his surprise, Quintana did the same, then coolly stepped a pace +outside the shelter of his hemlock stump. + +"You show me now!" he called across the swamp. + +Clinch stepped into view, dug into his pocket, and, cupping both hands, +displayed a glittering heap of gems. + +"I wanted you should know who's gottem," he said, "before you hop. It'll +give you something to think over in hell." + +Quintana's eyes had become slits again. Neither man stirred. Then: + +"So you are buzzard, eh, Clinch? You feed on dead man's pockets, eh? You +find Sard somewhere an' you feed." He held up the morocco case, +emblazoned with the arms of the Grand Duchess of Esthonia, and shook it +at Clinch. + +"In there is my share.... Not all. Ver' quick, now, I take yours, +too----" + +Clinch vanished and so did his rifle; and Quintana's first bullet struck +the moss where the stock had rested. + +"You black crow!" jeered Clinch, laughing, "--I need that empty case of +yours. And I'm going after it.... But it's because your filthy claw +touched my girlie that you gotta hop!" + + * * * * * + +Twilight lay over the phantom wood, touching with pallid tints the +flooded forest. + +So far only that one shot had been fired. Both men were still +manoeuvring, always creeping in circles and always lining some great +tree for shelter. + +Now, the gathering dusk was making them bolder and swifter; and twice, +already, Clinch caught the shadow of a fading edge of something that +vanished against the shadows too swiftly for a shot. + +Now Quintana, keeping a tree in line, brushed with his lithe back a +leafless moose-bush that stood swaying as he avoided it. + +Instantly a stealthy hope seized him: he slipped out of his coat, spread +it on the bush, set the naked branches swaying, and darted to his tree. + +Waiting, he saw that the grey blot his coat made in the dusk was still +moving a little--just vibrating a little bit in the twilight. He touched +the bush with his rifle barrel, then crouched almost flat. + +Suddenly the red crash of a rifle lit up Clinch's visage for a fraction +of a second. And Quintana's bullet smashed Clinch between the eyes. + + * * * * * + +After a long while Quintana ventured to rise and creep forward. + +Night, too, came creeping like an assassin amid the ghostly trees. + +So twilight died in the stillness of Drowned Valley and the pall of +night lay over all things,--living and dead alike. + + + + +EPISODE ELEVEN + +THE PLACE OF PINES + + +I + +The last sound that Mike Clinch heard on earth was the detonation of his +own rifle. Probably it was an agreeable sound to him. He lay there with +a pleasant expression on his massive features. His watch had fallen out +of his pocket. + +Quintana shined him with an electric torch; picked up the watch. Then, +holding the torch in one hand, he went through the dead man's pockets +very thoroughly. + +When Quintana had finished, both trays of the flat morocco case were +full of jewels. And Quintana was full of wonder and suspicion. + +Unquietly he looked upon the dead--upon the glittering contents of the +jewel-box,--but always his gaze reverted to the dead. The faintest +shadow of a smile edged Clinch's lips. Quintana's lips grew graver. He +said slowly, like one who does his thinking aloud: + +"What is it you have done to me, l'ami Clinch?... Are there truly then +two sets of precious stones?--_two_ Flaming Jewels?--two gems of Erosite +like there never has been in all thees worl' excep' only two more?... +Or is one set false?... Have I here one set of paste facsimiles?... My +frien' Clinch, why do you lie there an' smile at me so ver' funny ... +like you are amuse?... I am wondering what you may have done to me, my +frien' Clinch...." + +For a while he remained kneeling beside the dead. Then: "Ah, bah," he +said, pocketing the morocco case and getting to his feet. + +He moved a little way toward the open trail, stopped, came back, stood +his rifle against a tree. + +For a while he was busy with his sharp Spanish clasp knife, whittling +and fitting together two peeled twigs. A cross was the ultimate result. +Then he placed Clinch's hands palm to palm upon his chest, laid the +cross on his breast, and shined the result with complacency. + +Then Quintana took off his hat. + +"L'ami Mike," he said, "you were a _man_!... Adios!" + + * * * * * + +Quintana put on his hat. The path was free. The world lay open before +José Quintana once more;--the world, his hunting ground. + +"But," he thought uneasily, "what is it that I bring home this time? How +much is paste? My God, how droll that smile of Clinch.... Which is the +false--his jewels or mine? Dieu que j'étais bête!---- Me who have not +suspec' that there are _two_ trays within my jewel-box!... I +unnerstan'. It is ver' simple. In the top tray the false gems. Ah! Paste +on top to deceive a thief!... Alors.... Then what I have recover of +Clinch is the _real_!... Nom de Dieu!... How should I know? His smile +is so ver' funny.... I think thees dead man make mock of me--all inside +himse'f----" + +So, in darkness, prowling south by west, shining the trail furtively, +and loaded rifle ready, Quintana moved with stealthy, unhurried tread +out of the wilderness that had trapped him and toward the tangled +border of that outer world which led to safe, obscure, uncharted +labyrinths--old-world mazes, immemorial hunting grounds--haunted by +men who prey. + + * * * * * + +The night had turned frosty. Quintana, wet to the knees and very tired, +moved slowly, not daring to leave the trail because of sink-holes. + +However, the trail led to Clinch's Dump, and sooner or later he must +leave it. + +What he had to have was a fire; he realised that. Somewhere off the +trail, in big timber if possible, he must build a fire and master this +deadly chill that was slowly paralysing all power of movement. + +He knew that a fire in the forest, particularly in big timber, could be +seen only a little way. He must take his chances with sink-holes and +find some spot in the forest to build that fire. + +Who could discover him except by accident? + +Who would prowl the midnight wilderness? At thirty yards the fire +would not be visible. And, as for the odour--well, he'd be gone +before dawn.... Meanwhile, he must have that fire. He could wait no +longer. + +He cut a pole first. Then he left the trail where a little spring flowed +west, and turned to the right, shining the forest floor as he moved and +sounding with his pole every wet stretch of moss, every strip of mud, +every tiniest glimmer of water. + +At last he came to a place of pines, first growth giants towering into +night, and, looking up, saw stars, infinitely distant, ... where +perhaps those things called souls drifted like wisps of vapour. + +When the fire took, Quintana's thin dark hands had become nearly useless +from cold. He could not have crooked finger to trigger. + +For a long time he sat close to the blaze, slowly massaging his torpid +limbs, but did not dare strip off his foot-gear. + +Steam rose from puttee and heavy shoe and from the sodden woollen +breeches. Warmth slowly penetrated. There was little smoke; the big dry +branches were dead and bleached and he let the fire eat into them +without using his axe. + +Once or twice he sighed, "Oh, my God," in a weary demi-voice, as though +the content of well-being were permeating him. + +Later he ate and drank languidly, looking up at the stars, speculating +as to the possible presence of Mike Clinch up there. + +"Ah, the dirty thief," he murmured; "--nevertheless a man. Quel homme! +Mais bête à faire pleurer! Je l'ai bien triché, moi! Ha!" + +Quintana smiled palely as he thought of the coat and the gently-swaying +bush--of the red glare of Clinch's shot, of the death-echo of his own +shot. + +Then, uneasy, he drew out the morocco case and gazed at the two trays +full of gems. + +The jewels blazed in the firelight. He touched them, moved them about, +picked up several and examined them, testing the unset edges against his +under lip as an expert tests jade. + +But he couldn't tell; there was no knowing. He replaced them, closed +the case, pocketed it. When he had a chance he could try boiling water +for one sort of trick. He could scratch one or two.... Sard would know. +He wondered whether Sard had got away, not concerned except selfishly. +However, there were others in Paris whom he could trust--at a price.... + +Quintana rested both elbows on his knees and framed his dark face +between both bony hands. + +What a chase Clinch had led him after the Flaming Jewel. And now Clinch +lay dead in the forest--faintly smiling. At _what_? + +In a very low, passionless voice, Quintana cursed monotonously as he +gazed into the fire. In Spanish, French, Portuguese, Italian, he cursed +Clinch. After a little while he remembered Clinch's daughter, and he +cursed her, elaborately, thoroughly, wishing her black mischance awake +and asleep, living or dead. + +Darragh, too, he remembered in his curses, and did not slight him. And +the trooper, Stormont--ah, he should have killed all of them when he had +the chance.... And those two Baltic Russians, also, the girl duchess +and her friend. Why on earth hadn't he made a clean job of it? +Over-caution. A wary disinclination to stir up civilization by needless +murder. But after all, old maxims, old beliefs, old truths are the best, +God knows. The dead don't talk! And that's the wisest wisdom of all. + +"If," murmured Quintana fervently, "God gives me further opportunity to +acquire a little property to comfort me in my old age, I shall leave no +gossiping fool to do me harm with his tongue. No! I kill. + +"And though they raise a hue and cry, dead tongues can not wag and I +save myse'f much annoyance in the end." + +He leaned his back against the trunk of a massive pine. + +Presently Quintana slept after his own fashion--that is to say, looking +closely at him one could discover a glimmer under his lowered eyelids. +And he listened always in that kind of sleep. As though a shadowy part +of him were detached from his body, and mounted guard over it. + +The inaudible movement of a wood-mouse venturing into the firelit circle +awoke Quintana. Again a dropping leaf amid distant birches awoke him. +Such things. And so he slept with wet feet to the fire and his rifle +across his knees; and dreamed of Eve and of murder, and that the Flaming +Jewel was but a mass of glass. + + * * * * * + +At that moment the girl of whose white throat Quintana was dreaming, and +whining faintly in his dreams, stood alone outside Clinch's Dump, rifle +in hand, listening, fighting the creeping dread that touched her slender +body at times--seemed to touch her very heart with frost. + +Clinch's men had gone on to Ghost Lake with their wounded and dead, +where there was fitter shelter for both. All had gone on; nobody +remained to await Clinch's home-coming except Eve Strayer. + +Black Care, that tireless squire of dames, had followed her from the +time she had left Clinch, facing the spectral forests of Drowned Valley. + +An odd, unusual dread weighted her heart--something in emotions that she +never before had experienced in time of danger. In it there was the +deathly unease of premonition. But of what it was born she did not +understand,--perhaps of the strain of dangers passed--of the shock of +discovery concerning Smith's identity with Darragh--Darragh!--the hated +kinsman of Harrod the abhorred. + +Fiercely she wondered how much her lover knew about this miserable +masquerade. Was Stormont involved in this deception--Stormont, the +object of her first girl's passion--Stormont, for whom she would have +died? + +Wretched, perplexed, fiercely enraged at Darragh, deadly anxious +concerning Clinch, she had gone about cooking supper. + +The supper, kept warm on the range, still awaited the man who had no +more need of meat and drink. + + * * * * * + +Of the tragedy of Sard Eve knew nothing. There were no traces save in +the disorder in the pantry and the bottles and chair on the veranda. + +Who had visited the place excepting those from whom she and Stormont had +fled, did not appear. She had no idea why her step-father's mattress and +bed-quilt lay in the pantry. + +Her heart heavy with ceaseless anxiety, Eve carried mattress and +bed-clothes to Clinch's chamber, re-made his bed, wandered through the +house setting it in order; then, in the kitchen, seated herself and +waited until the strange dread that possessed her drove her out into the +starlight to stand and listen and stare at the dark forest where all her +dread seemed concentrated. + + * * * * * + +It was not yet dawn, but the girl could endure the strain no longer. + +With electric torch and rifle she started for the forest, almost running +at first; then, among the first trees, moving with caution and in +silence along the trail over which Clinch should long since have +journeyed homeward. + +In soft places, when she ventured to flash her torch, foot-prints cast +curious shadows, and it was hard to make out tracks so oddly distorted +by the light. Prints mingled and partly obliterated other prints. She +identified her own tracks leading south, and guessed at the others, +pointing north and south, where they had carried in the wounded and had +gone back to bring in the dead. + +But nowhere could she discover any impression resembling her +step-father's,--that great, firm stride and solid imprint which so often +she had tracked through moss and swale and which she knew so well. + +Once when she got up from her knees after close examination of the muddy +trail, she became aware of the slightest taint in the night air--stood +with delicate nostrils quivering--advanced, still conscious of the +taint, listening, wary, every stealthy instinct alert. + +She had not been mistaken: somewhere in the forest there was smoke. +Somewhere a fire was burning. It might not be very far away; it might be +distant. _Whose fire?_ Her father's? Would a hunter of men build a fire? + +The girl stood shivering in the darkness. There was not a sound. + +Now, keeping her cautious feet in the trail by sense of touch alone, she +moved on. Gradually, as she advanced, the odour of smoke became more +distinct. She heard nothing, saw nothing; but there was a near reek of +smoke in her nostrils and she stopped short. + +After a little while in the intense silence of the forest she ventured +to touch the switch of her torch, very cautiously. + +In the faint, pale lustre she saw a tiny rivulet flowing westward from a +spring, and, beside it, in the mud, imprints of a man's feet. + +The tracks were small, narrow, slimmer than imprints made by any man she +could think of. Under the glimmer of her torch they seemed quite fresh; +contours were still sharp, some ready to crumble, and water stood in the +heels. + +A little way she traced them, saw where their maker had cut a pole, +peeled it; saw, farther on, where this unknown man had probed in moss +and mud--peppered some particularly suspicious swale with a series of +holes as though a giant woodcock had been "boring" there. + +Who was this man wandering all alone at night off the Drowned Valley +trail and probing the darkness with a pole? + +She knew it was not her father. She knew that no native--none of her +father's men--would behave in such a manner. Nor could any of these have +left such narrow, almost delicate tracks. + +As she stole along, dimly shining the tracks, lifting her head +incessantly to listen and peer into the darkness, her quick eye caught +something ahead--something very slightly different from the wall of +black obscurity--a vague hint of colour--the very vaguest tint scarcely +perceptible at all. + +But she knew it was firelight touching the trunk of an unseen tree. + +Now, soundlessly over damp pine needles she crept. The scent of smoke +grew strong in nostril and throat; the pale tint became palely reddish. +All about her the blackness seemed palpable--seemed to touch her body +with its weight; but, ahead, a ruddy glow stained two huge pines. And +presently she saw the fire, burning low, but redly alive. And, after a +long, long while, she saw a man. + +He had left the fire circle. His pack and belted mackinaw still lay +there at the foot of a great tree. But when, finally, she discovered +him, he was scarcely visible where he crouched in the shadow of a +tree-trunk, with his rifle half lowered at a ready. + +Had he heard her? It did not seem possible. Had he been crouching there +since he made his fire? Why had he made it then--for its warmth could +not reach him there. And why was he so stealthily watching--silent, +unstirring, crouched in the shadows? + +She strained her eyes; but distance and obscurity made recognition +impossible. And yet, somehow, every quivering instinct within her was +telling her that the crouched and shadowy watcher beyond the fire was +Quintana. + +And every concentrated instinct was telling her that he'd kill her if he +caught sight of her; her heart clamoured it; her pulses thumped it in +her ears. + +Had the girl been capable of it she could have killed him where he +crouched. She thought of it, but knew it was not in her to do it. And +yet Quintana had boasted that he meant to kill her father. That was what +terribly concerned her. And there must be a way to stop that +danger--some way to stop it short of murder,--a way to render this man +harmless to her and hers. + +No, she could not kill him this way. Except in extremes she could not +bring herself to fire upon any human creature. And yet this man must be +rendered harmless--somehow--somehow--ah!---- + +As the problem presented itself its solution flashed into her mind. Men +of the wilderness knew how to take dangerous creatures alive. To take a +dangerous and reasoning human was even less difficult, because reason +makes more mistakes than does instinct. + +Stealthily, without a sound, the girl crept back through the shadows +over the damp pine needles, until, peering fearfully over her shoulder, +she saw the last ghost-tint of Quintana's fire die out in the terrific +dark behind. + +Slowly, still, she moved until her sensitive feet felt the trodden path +from Drowned Valley. + +Now, with torch flaring, she ran, carrying her rifle at a trail. Before +her, here and there, little night creatures fled--a humped-up raccoon, +dazzled by the glare, a barred owl still struggling with its wood-rat +kill. + +She ran easily,--an agile, tireless young thing, part of the swiftness +and silence of the woods--part of the darkness, the sinuous celerity, +the ominous hush of wide, still places--part of its very blood and pulse +and hot, sweet breath. + +Even when she came out among the birches by Clinch's Dump she was +breathing evenly and without distress. She ran to the kitchen door but +did not enter. On pegs under the porch a score or more of rusty traps +hung. She unhooked the largest, wound the chain around it, tucked it +under her left arm and started back. + + * * * * * + +When at last she arrived at the place of pines again, and saw the far, +spectral glimmer of Quintana's fire, the girl was almost breathless. But +dawn was not very far away and there remained little time for the +taking alive of a dangerous man. + +Where two enormous pines grew close together near a sapling, she knelt +down, and, with both hands, scooped out a big hollow in the immemorial +layers of pine needles. Here she placed her trap. It took all her +strength and skill to set it; to fasten the chain around the base of the +sapling pine. + +And now, working with only the faintest glimmer of her torch, she +covered everything with pine needles. + +It was not possible to restore the forest floor; the place remained +visible--a darker, rougher patch on the bronzed carpet of needles beaten +smooth by decades of rain and snow. No animal would have trodden that +suspicious space. But it was with man she had to deal--a dangerous but +reasoning man with few and atrophied instincts--and with no experience +in traps; and, therefore, in no dread of them. + + * * * * * + +Before she started she had thrown a cartridge into the breech of her +rifle. + +Now she pocketed her torch and seated herself between the two big pines +and about three feet behind the hidden trap. + +Dawn was not far away. She looked upward through high pine-tops where +stars shone; and saw no sign of dawn. But the watcher by the fire beyond +was astir, now, in the imminence of dawn, and evidently meant to warm +himself before leaving. + +Eve could hear him piling dry wood on the fire; the light on the tree +trunks grew redder; a pungent reek of smoke was drawn through the +forest aisles. She sniffed it, listened, and watched, her rifle across +her knees. + +Eve never had been afraid of anything. She was not afraid of this man. +If it came to combat she would have to kill. It never entered her mind +to fear Quintana's rifle. Even Clinch was not as swift with a rifle as +she.... Only Stormont had been swifter--thank God!---- + +She thought of Stormont--sat there in the terrific darkness loving him, +her heart of a child tremulous with adoration. + +Then the memory of Darragh pushed in and hot hatred possessed her. +Always, in her heart, she had distrusted the man. + +Instinct had warned her. A spy! What evil had he worked already? +Where was her father? Evidently Quintana had escaped him at Drowned +Valley.... Quintana was yonder by his fire, preparing to flee the +wilderness where men hunted him.... But where was Clinch? Had this +sneak, Darragh, betrayed him? Was Clinch already in the clutch of +the State Troopers? Was he in _jail_? + +At the thought the girl felt slightly faint, then a rush of angry blood +stung her face in the darkness. Except for game and excise violations +the stories they told about Clinch were lies. + +He had nothing to fear, nothing to be ashamed of. Harrod had driven him +to lawlessness; the Government took away what was left him to make a +living. He had to live. What if he did break laws made by millionaire +and fanatic! What of it? He had her love and her respect--and her deep, +deep pity. And these were enough for any girl to fight for. + +Dawn spread a silvery light above the pines, but Quintana's fire still +reddened the tree trunks; and she could hear him feeding it at +intervals. + +Finally she saw him. He came out on the edge of the ruddy ring of light +and stood peering around at the woods where already a vague greyness was +revealing nearer trees. + +When, finally, he turned his back and looked at his fire, Eve rose and +stood between the two big pines. Behind one of them she placed her +rifle. + +It was growing lighter in the woods. She could see Quintana in the fire +ring and outside,--saw him go to the spring rivulet, lie flat, drink, +then, on his knees, wash face and hands in the icy water. + +It became plain to her that he was nearly ready to depart. She watched +him preparing. And now she could see him plainly, and knew him to be +Quintana and no other. + +He had a light basket pack. He put some articles into it, stretched +himself and yawned, pulled on his hat, hoisted the pack and fastened it +to his back, stood staring at the fire for a long time; then, with a +sudden upward look at the zenith where a slight flush stained a cloud, +he picked up his rifle. + +At that moment Eve called to him in a clear and steady voice. + +The effect on Quintana was instant; he was behind a tree before her +voice ceased. + +"Hallo! Hi! You over there!" she called again. "This is Eve Strayer. I'm +looking for Clinch! He hasn't been home all night. Have you seen him?" + +After a moment she saw Quintana's head watching her,--not at the +shoulder-height of a man but close to the ground and just above the tree +roots. + +"Hey!" she cried. "What's the matter with you over there? I'm asking you +who you are and if you've seen my father?" + +After a while she saw Quintana coming toward her, circling, creeping +swiftly from tree to tree. + +As he flitted through the shadows the trees between which she was +standing hid her from him a moment. Instantly she placed her rifle on +the ground and kicked the pine needles over it. + +As Quintana continued his encircling manoeuvres Eve, apparently +perplexed, walked out into the clear space, putting the concealed trap +between her and Quintana, who now came stealthily toward her from the +rear. + +It was evident that he had reconnoitred sufficiently to satisfy himself +that the girl was alone and that no trick, no ambuscade, threatened him. + +And now, from behind a pine, and startlingly near her, came Quintana, +moving with confident grace yet holding his rifle ready for any +emergency. + +Eve's horrified stare was natural; she had not realised that any man +could wear so evil a smile. + +Quintana stopped short a dozen paces away. The dramatic in him demanded +of the moment its full value. He swept off his hat with a flourish, +bowed deeply where he stood. + +"Ah!" he cried gaily, "the happy encounter, Señorita. God is too good to +us. And it was but a moment since my thoughts were of you! I swear +it!----" + +It was not fear; it was a sort of slow horror of this man that began to +creep over the girl. She stared at his brilliant eyes, at his thick +mouth, too red--shuddered slightly. But the toe of her right foot +touched the stock of her rifle under the pine needles. + +She held herself under control. + +"So it's you," she said unsteadily. "I thought our people had caught +you." + +Quintana laughed: "Charming child," he said, "it is _I_ who have caught +your people. And now, my God!--I catch _you_!... It is ver' funny. Is +it not?" + +She looked straight into Quintana's black eyes, but the look he returned +sent the shamed blood surging into her face. + +"By God," he said between his white, even teeth,--"by God!" + +Staring at her he slowly disengaged his pack, let it fall behind him on +the pine needles; rested his rifle on it; slipped out of his mackinaw +and laid that across his rifle--always keeping his brilliant eyes on +her. + +His lips tightened, the muscles in his dark face grew tense; his eyes +became a blazing insult. + +For an instant he stood there, unencumbered, a wiry, graceful shape in +his woollen breeches, leggings, and grey shirt open at the throat. Then +he took a step toward her. And the girl watched him, fascinated. + +One pace, two, a third, a fourth--the girl's involuntary cry echoed the +stumbling crash of the man thrashing, clawing, scrambling in the +clenched jaws of the bear-trap amid a whirl of flying pine needles. + +He screamed once, tried to rise, turned blindly to seize the jaws that +clutched him; and suddenly crouched, loose-jointed, cringing like a +trapped wolf--the true fatalist among our lesser brothers. + +Eve picked up her rifle. She was trembling violently. Then, mastering +her emotion, she walked over to the pack, placed Quintana's rifle and +mackinaw in it, coolly hoisted it to her shoulders and buckled it there. + +Over her shoulder she kept an eye on Quintana who crouched where he had +fallen, unstirring, his deadly eyes watching her. + +She placed the muzzle of her rifle against his stomach, rested it so, +holding it with one hand, and her finger at the trigger. + +At her brief order he turned out both breeches pockets. She herself +stooped and drew the Spanish clasp-knife from its sheath at his belt, +took a pistol from the holster, another out of his hip pocket. Reaching +up and behind her, she dropped these into the pack. + +"Maybe," she said slowly, "your ankle is broken. I'll send somebody from +Ghost Lake to find you. But whether you've a broken bone or not you'll +not go very far, Quintana.... After I'm gone you'll be able to free +yourself. But you can't get away. You'll be followed and caught.... So +if you can walk at all you'd better go in to Ghost Lake and give +yourself up.... It's that or starvation.... You've got a watch.... +Don't stir or touch that trap for half an hour.... And that's all." + +As she moved away toward the Drowned Valley trail she looked back at +him. His face was bloodless but his black eyes blazed. + +"If ever you come into this forest again," she said, "my father will +surely kill you." + +To her horror Quintana slowly grinned at her. Then, still grinning, he +placed the forefinger of his left hand between his teeth and bit it. + +Whatever he meant by the gesture it seemed unclean, horrible; and the +girl hurried on, seized with an overwhelming loathing through which a +sort of terror pulsated like evil premonition in a heavy and tortured +heart. + +Straight into the fire of dawn she sped. A pale primrose light glimmered +through the woods; trees, bushes, undergrowth turned a dusky purple. +Already the few small clouds overhead were edged with fiery rose. + +Then, of a sudden, a shaft of flame played over the forest. The sun had +risen. + +Hastening, she searched the soft path for any imprint of her father's +foot. And even in the vain search she hoped to find him at home--hurried +on burdened with two rifles and a pack, still all nervous and aquiver +from her encounter with Quintana. + +Surely, surely, she thought, if he had missed Quintana in Drowned Valley +he would not linger in that ghastly place; he'd come home, call in his +men, take counsel perhaps---- + + * * * * * + +Mist over Star Pond was dissolving to a golden powder in the blinding +glory of the sun. The eastern window-panes in Clinch's Dump glittered as +though the rooms inside were all on fire. + +Down through withered weeds and scrub she hurried, ran across the grass +to the kitchen door which swung ajar under its porch. + +"Dad!" she called, "Dad!" + +Only her own frightened voice echoed in the empty house. She climbed +the stairs to his room. The bed lay undisturbed as she had made it. He +was not in any of the rooms; there were no signs of him. + +Slowly she descended to the kitchen. He was not there. The food she had +prepared for him had become cold on a chilled range. + +For a long while she stood staring through the window at the sunlight +outside. Probably, since Quintana had eluded him, he'd come home for +something to eat.... Surely, now that Quintana had escaped, Clinch +would come back for some breakfast. + +Eve slipped the pack from her back and laid it on the kitchen table. +There was kindling in the wood-box. She shook down the cinders, laid a +fire, soaked it with kerosene, lighted it, filled the kettle with fresh +water. + +In the pantry she cut some ham, and found eggs, condensed milk, butter, +bread, and an apple pie. After she had ground the coffee she placed all +these on a tray and carried them into the kitchen. + +Now there was nothing more to do until her father came, and she sat down +by the kitchen table to wait. + +Outside the sunlight was becoming warm and vivid. There had been no +frost after all--or, at most, merely a white trace in the shadow--on a +fallen plank here and there--but not enough to freeze the ground. And, +in the sunshine, it all quickly turned to dew, and glittered and +sparkled in a million hues and tints like gems--like that handful of +jewels she had poured into her father's joined palms--yesterday--there +at the ghostly edge of Drowned Valley. + +At the memory, and quite mechanically, she turned in her chair and drew +Quintana's basket pack toward her. + +First she lifted out his rifle, examined it, set it against the window +sill. Then, one by one, she drew out two pistols, loaded; the murderous +Spanish clasp-knife; an axe; a fry-pan and a tin pail, and the rolled-up +mackinaw. + +Under these the pack seemed to contain nothing except food and +ammunition; staples in sacks and a few cans--lard, salt, tea--such +things. + +The cartridge boxes she piled up on the table; the food she tossed into +a tin swill bucket. + +About the effects of this man it seemed to her as though something +unclean lingered. She could scarcely bear to handle them,--threw them +from her with disgust. + +The garment, also--the heavy brown and green mackinaw--she disliked to +touch. To throw it out doors was her intention; but, as she lifted the +coat, it unrolled and some things fell from the pockets to the kitchen +table,--money, keys, a watch, a flat leather case---- + +She looked stupidly at the case. It had a coat of arms emblazoned on it. + +Still, stupidly and as though dazed, she laid one hand on it, drew it to +her, opened it. + +The Flaming Jewel blazed in her face amid a heap of glittering gems. + +Still she seemed slow to comprehend--as though understanding were +paralysed. + +It was when her eyes fell upon the watch that her heart seemed to stop. +Suddenly her stunned senses were lighted as by an infernal flare.... +Under the awful blow she swayed upright to her feet, sick with fright, +her eyes fixed on her father's watch. + +It was still ticking. + +She did not know whether she cried out in anguish or was dumb under it. +The house seemed to reel around her; under foot too. + +When she came to her senses she found herself outside the house, running +with her rifle, already entering the woods. But, inside the barrier of +trees, something blocked her way, stopped her,--a man--_her_ man! + +"Eve! In God's name!----" he said as she struggled in his arms; but she +fought him and strove to tear her body from his embrace: + +"They've killed Dad!" she panted,--"Quintana killed him. I didn't +know--oh, I didn't know!--and I let Quintana go! Oh, Jack, Jack, he's at +the Place of Pines! I'm going there to shoot him! Let me go!--he's +killed Dad, I tell you! He had Dad's watch--and the case of jewels--they +were in his pack on the kitchen table----" + +"Eve!" + +"Let me go!----" + +"_Eve!_" He held her rigid a moment in his powerful grip, compelled her +dazed, half-crazed eyes to meet his own: + +"You must come to your senses," he said. "Listen to what I say: they are +_bringing in your father_." + +Her dilated blue eyes never moved from his. + +"We found him in Drowned Valley at sunrise," said Stormont quietly. "The +men are only a few rods behind me. They are carrying him out." + +Her lips made a word without sound. + +"Yes," said Stormont in a low voice. + +There was a sound in the woods behind them. Stormont turned. Far away +down the trail the men came into sight. + +Then the State Trooper turned the girl very gently and placed one arm +around her shoulders. + +Very slowly they descended the hill together. His equipment was shining +in the morning sun: and the sun fell on Eve's drooping head, turning her +chestnut hair to fiery gold. + + * * * * * + +An hour later Trooper Stormont was at the Place of Pines. + +There was nothing there except an empty trap and the ashes of the dying +fire beyond. + + + + +EPISODE TWELVE + +HER HIGHNESS INTERVENES + + +I + +Toward noon the wind changed, and about one o'clock it began to snow. + +Eve, exhausted, lay on the sofa in her bedroom. Her step-father lay on a +table in the dance hall below, covered by a sheet from his own bed. And +beside him sat Trooper Stormont, waiting. + +It was snowing heavily when Mr. Lyken, the little undertaker from Ghost +Lake, arrived with several assistants, a casket, and what he called +"swell trimmings." + +Long ago Mike Clinch had selected his own mortuary site and had driven a +section of iron pipe into the ground on a ferny knoll overlooking Star +Pond. In explanation he grimly remarked to Eve that after death he +preferred to be planted where he could see that Old Harrod's ghost +didn't trespass. + +Here two of Mr. Lyken's able assistants dug a grave while the digging +was still good; for if Mike Clinch was to lie underground that season +there might be need of haste--no weather prophet ever having +successfully forecast Adirondack weather. + +Eve, exhausted by shock and a sleepless night, was spared the more +harrowing details of the coroner's visit and the subsequent jaunty +activities of Mr. Lyken and his efficient assistants. + +She had managed to dress herself in a black wool gown, intending to +watch by Mike, but Stormont's blunt authority prevailed and she lay down +for an hour's rest. + +The hour lengthened into many hours; the girl slept heavily on her sofa +under blankets laid over her by Stormont. + +All that dark, snowy day she slept, mercifully unconscious of the +proceedings below. + +In its own mysterious way the news penetrated the wilderness; and out of +the desolation of forest and swamp and mountain drifted the people who +somehow existed there--a few shy, half wild young girls, a dozen silent, +lank men, two or three of Clinch's own people, who stood silently about +in the falling snow and lent a hand whenever requested. + +One long shanked youth cut hemlock to line the grave; others erected a +little fence of silver birch around it, making of the enclosure a +"plot." + +A gaunt old woman from God knows where aided Mr. Lyken at intervals: a +pretty, sulky-eyed girl with her slovenly, red-headed sister cooked for +anybody who desired nourishment. + +When Mike was ready to hold the inevitable reception everybody filed +into the dance hall. Mr. Lyken was master of ceremonies; Trooper +Stormont stood very tall and straight by the head of the casket. + +Clinch wore a vague, indefinable smile and his best clothes,--that same +smile which had so troubled José Quintana. + +Light was fading fast in the room when the last visitor took silent +leave of Clinch and rejoined the groups in the kitchen, where were the +funeral baked meats. + +Eve still slept. Descending again from his reconnaissance, Trooper +Stormont encountered Trooper Lannis below. + +"Has anybody picked up Quintana's tracks?" inquired the former. + +"Not so far. An Inspector and two State Game Protectors are out beyond +Owl Marsh. The Troopers from Five Lakes are on the job, and we have +enforcement men along Drowned Valley from The Scaur to Harrod Place." + +"Does Darragh know?" + +"Yes. He's in there with Mike. He brought a lot of flowers from Harrod +Place." + +The two troopers went into the dance hall where Darragh was arranging +the flowers from his greenhouses. + +Stormont said quietly: "All right, Jim, but Eve must not know that they +came from Harrod's." + +Darragh nodded: "How is she, Jack?" + +"All in." + +"Do you know the story?" + +"Yes. Mike went into Drowned Valley early last evening after Quintana. +He didn't come back. Before dawn this morning Eve located Quintana, set +a bear-trap for him, and caught him with the goods----" + +"What goods?" demanded Darragh sharply. + +"Well, she got his pack and found Mike's watch and jewelry in it----" + +"What jewelry?" + +"The jewels Quintana was after. But that was after she'd arrived at the +Dump, here, leaving Quintana to get free of the trap and beat it. + +"That's how I met her--half crazed, going to find Quintana again. We'd +found Mike in Drowned Valley and were bringing him out when I ran into +Eve.... I brought her back here and called Ghost Lake.... They haven't +picked up Quintana's tracks so far." + +After a silence: "Too bad this snow came so late," remarked Trooper +Lannis. "But we ought to get Quintana anyway." + +Darragh went over and looked silently at Mike Clinch. + +"I liked you," he said under his breath. "It wasn't your fault. And it +wasn't mine, Mike.... I'll try to square things. Don't worry." + +He came back slowly to where Stormont was standing near the door: + +"Jack," he said, "you can't marry Eve on a Trooper's pay. Why not quit +and take over the Harrod estate?... You and I can go into business +together later if you like." + +After a pause: "That's rather wonderful of you, Jim," said Stormont, +"but you don't know what sort of business man I'd make----" + +"I know what sort of officer you made.... I'm taking no chance.... And +I'll make my peace with Eve--or somebody will do it for me.... Is it +settled then?" + +"Thanks," said Trooper Stormont, reddening. They clasped hands. Then +Stormont went about and lighted the candles in the room. Clinch's face, +again revealed, was still faintly amused at something or other. The dead +have much to be amused at. + +As Darragh was about to go, Stormont said: "We're burying Clinch at +eleven to-morrow morning. The Ghost Lake Pilot officiates." + +"I'll come if it won't upset Eve," said Darragh. + +"She won't notice anybody, I fancy," remarked Stormont. + +He stood by the veranda and watched Darragh take the Lake Trail through +the snow. Finally the glimmer of his swinging lantern was lost in the +woods and Stormont mounted the stairs once more, stood silently by Eve's +open door, realised she was still heavily asleep, and seated himself on +a chair outside her door to watch and wait. + + * * * * * + +All night long it snowed hard over the Star Pond country, and the late +grey light of morning revealed a blinding storm pelting a white robed +world. + +Toward ten o'clock, Stormont, on guard, noticed that Eve was growing +restless. + +Downstairs the flotsam of the forest had gathered again: Mr. Lyken was +there in black gloves; the Reverend Laomi Smatter had arrived in a +sleigh from Ghost Lake. Both were breakfasting heavily. + +The pretty, sulky-faced girl fetched a tray and placed Eve's breakfast +on it; and Trooper Stormont carried it to her room. + +She was awake when he entered. He set the tray on the table. She put +both arms around his neck. + +"Jack," she murmured, her eyes tremulous with tears. + +"Everything has been done," he said. "Will you be ready by eleven? I'll +come for you." + +She clung to him in silence for a while. + + * * * * * + +At eleven he knocked on her door. She opened it. She wore her black wool +gown and a black fur turban. Some of her pallor remained,--traces of +tears and bluish smears under both eyes. But her voice was steady. + +"Could I see Dad a moment alone?" + +"Of course." + +She took his arm: they descended the stairs. There seemed to be many +people about but she did not lift her eyes until her lover led her into +the dance hall where Clinch lay smiling his mysterious smile. + +Then Stormont left her alone there and closed the door. + + * * * * * + +In a terrific snow-storm they buried Mike Clinch on the spot he had +selected, in order that he might keep a watchful eye upon the +trespassing ghost of old man Harrod. + +It blew and stormed and stormed, and the thin, nasal voice of "Rev. +Smatter" was utterly lost in the wind. The slanting lances of snow drove +down on the casket, building a white mound over the flowers, blotting +the hemlock boughs from sight. + +There was no time to be lost now; the ground was freezing under a +veering and bitter wind out of the west. Mr. Lyken's talented assistants +had some difficulty in shaping the mound which snow began to make into a +white and flawless monument. + +The last slap of the spade rang with a metallic jar across the lake, +where snow already blotted the newly forming film of ice; the human +denizens of the wilderness filtered back into it one by one; "Rev. +Smatter" got into his sleigh, plainly concerned about the road; Mr. +Lyken betrayed unprofessional haste in loading his wagon with his +talented assistants and starting for Ghost Lake. + +A Game Protector or two put on snow-shoes when they departed. Trooper +Lannis led out his horse and Stormont's, and got into the saddle. + +"I'd better get these beasts into Ghost Lake while I can," he said. +"You'll follow on snow-shoes, won't you, Jack?" + +"I don't know. I may need a sleigh for Eve. She can't remain here all +alone. I'll telephone the Inn." + +Darragh, in blanket outfit, a pair of snow-shoes on his back, a rifle in +his mittened hand, came trudging up from the lake. He and Stormont +watched Lannis riding away with the two horses. + +"He'll make it all right, but it's time he started," said the latter. + +Darragh nodded: "Some storm. Where is Eve?" + +"In her room." + +"What is she going to do, Jack?" + +"Marry me as soon as possible. She wants to stay here for a few days but +I can't leave her here alone. I think I'll telephone to Ghost Lake for a +sleigh." + +"Let me talk to her," said Darragh in a low voice. + +"Do you think you'd better--at such a time?" + +"I think it's a good time. It will divert her mind, anyway. I want her +to come to Harrod Place." + +"She won't," said Stormont grimly. + +"She might. Let me talk to her." + +"Do you realise how she feels toward you, Jim?" + +"I do, indeed. And I don't blame her. But let me tell you; Eve Strayer +is the most honest and fair-minded girl I ever knew.... Except one.... +I'll take a chance that she'll listen to me.... Sooner or later she +will be obliged to hear what I have to tell her.... But it will be +easier for her--for everybody--if I speak to her now. Let me try, +Jack." + +Stormont hesitated, looked at him, nodded. Darragh stood his rifle +against the bench on the kitchen porch. They entered the house slowly. +And met Eve descending the stairs. + +The girl looked at Darragh, astonished, then her pale face flushed with +anger. + +"What are you doing in this house?" she demanded unsteadily. "Have you +no decency, no shame?" + +"Yes," he said, "I am ashamed of what my kinsman has done to you and +yours. That is partly why I am here." + +"You came here as a spy," she said with hot contempt. "You lied about +your name; you lied about your purpose. You came here to betray Dad! If +he'd known it he would have killed you!" + +"Yes, he would have. But--do you know why I came here, Eve?" + +"I've told you!" + +"And you are wrong. I didn't come here to betray Mike Clinch: I came to +save him." + +"Do you suppose I believe a man who has lied to Dad?" she cried. + +"I don't ask you to, Eve. I shall let somebody else prove what I say. I +don't blame you for your attitude. God knows I don't blame Mike Clinch. +He stood up like a man to Henry Harrod.... All I ask is to undo some of +the rotten things that my uncle did to you and yours. And that is partly +why I came here." + +The girl said passionately: "Neither Dad nor I want anything from Harrod +Place or from you! Do you suppose you can come here after Dad is dead +and pretend you want to make amends for what your uncle did to us?" + +"Eve," said Darragh gravely, "I've made some amends already. You don't +know it, but I have.... You may not believe it, but I liked your +father. He was a real man. Had anybody done to me what Henry Harrod did +to your father I'd have behaved as your father behaved; I'd never have +budged from this spot; I'd have hunted where I chose; I'd have borne an +implacable hatred against Henry Harrod and Harrod Place, and every soul +in it!" + +The girl, silenced, looked at him without belief. + +He said: "I am not surprised that you distrust what I say. But the man +you are going to marry was a junior officer in my command. I have no +closer friend than Jack Stormont. Ask him whether I am to be believed." + +Astounded, the girl turned a flushed, incredulous face to Stormont. + +He said: "You may trust Darragh as you trust me. I don't know what he +has to say to you, dear. But whatever he says will be the truth." + +Darragh said, gravely: "Through a misunderstanding your father came into +possession of stolen property, Eve. He did not know it had been stolen. +I did. But Mike Clinch would not have believed me if I had told him that +the case of jewels in his possession had been stolen from a woman.... +Quintana stole them. By accident they came into your father's +possession. I learned of this. I had promised this woman to recover her +jewels. + +"I came here for that purpose, Eve. And for two reasons: first, because +I learned that Quintana also was coming here to rob your father of these +gems; second, because, when I knew your father, and knew _you_, I +concluded that it would be an outrage to call on the police. It would +mean prison for Clinch, misery and ruin for you, Eve. So--I tried to +steal the jewels ... to save you both." + +He looked at Stormont, who seemed astonished. + +"To whom do these jewels belong, Jim?" demanded the trooper. + +"To the young Grand Duchess of Esthonia.... Do you remember that I +befriended her over there?" + +"Yes." + +"Do you remember that the Reds were accused of burning her château and +looting it?" + +"Yes, I remember." + +"Well, it was Quintana and his gang of international criminals who did +that," said Darragh drily. + +And, to Eve: "By accident this case of jewels, emblazoned with the coat +of arms of the Grand Duchess of Esthonia, came into your father's +possession. That is the story, Eve." + +There was a silence. The girl looked at Stormont, flushed painfully, +looked at Darragh. + +Then, without a word, she turned, ascended the stairs, and reappeared +immediately carrying the leather case. + +"Thank you, Mr. Darragh," she said simply; and laid the case in his +hand. + +"But," said Darragh, "I want you to do a little more, Eve. The owner of +these gems is my guest at Harrod Place. I want you to give them to her +yourself." + +"I--I can't go to Harrod Place," stammered the girl. + +"Please don't visit the sins of Henry Harrod on me, Eve." + +"I--don't. But--but that place----" + +After a silence: "If Eve feels that way," began Stormont awkwardly, "I +couldn't become associated with you in business, Jim----" + +"I'd rather sell Harrod Place than lose you!" retorted Darragh almost +sharply. "I want to go into business with you, Jack--if Eve will permit +me----" + +She stood looking at Stormont, the heightened colour playing in her +cheeks as she began to comprehend the comradeship between these two men. + +Slowly she turned to Darragh, offered her hand: + +"I'll go to Harrod Place," she said in a low voice. + +Darragh's quick smile brightened the sombre gravity of his face. + +"Eve," he said, "when I came over here this morning from Harrod Place I +was afraid you would refuse to listen to me; I was afraid you would not +even see me. And so I brought with me--somebody--to whom I felt certain +you would listen.... I brought with me a young girl--a poor refugee +from Russia, once wealthy, to-day almost penniless.... Her name is +Theodorica.... Once she was Grand Duchess of Esthonia.... But this +morning a clergyman from Five Lakes changed her name.... To such +friends as you and Jack she is Ricca Darragh now ... and she's having a +wonderful time on her new snow-shoes----" + +He took Eve by one hand and Stormont by the other, and drew them to the +kitchen door and kicked it open. + +Through the swirling snow, over on the lake-slope at the timber edge, a +graceful, boyish figure in scarlet and white wool moved swiftly over the +drifts with all the naïve delight of a child with a brand new toy. + +As Darragh strode out into the open the distant figure flung up one arm +in salutation and came racing over the drifts, her brilliant scarf +flying. + +All aglow and a trifle breathless, she met Darragh just beyond the +veranda, rested one mittened hand on his shoulder while he knelt and +unbuckled her snow-shoes, stepped lightly from them and came forward to +Eve with out-stretched hand and a sudden winning gravity in her lovely +face. + +"We shall be friends, surely," she said in her quick, winning +voice;--"because my husband has told me--and I am so grieved for +you--and I need a girl friend----" + +Holding both Eve's hands, her mittens dangling from her wrist, she +looked into her eyes very steadily. + +Slowly Eve's eyes filled; more slowly still Ricca kissed her on both +cheeks, framed her face in both hands, kissed her lightly on the lips. + +Then, still holding Eve's hands, she turned and looked at Stormont. + +"I remember you now," she said. "You were with my husband in Riga." + +She freed her right hand and held it out to Stormont. He had the grace +to kiss it and did it very well for a Yankee. + +Together they entered the kitchen door and turned into the dining room +on the left, where were chairs around the plain pine table. + +Darragh said: "The new mistress of Harrod Place has selected your +quarters, Eve. They adjoin the quarters of her friend, the Countess +Orloff-Strelwitz." + +"Valentine begged me," said Ricca, smiling. "She is going to be lonely +without me. All hours of day and night we were trotting into one +another's rooms----" She looked gravely at Eve: "You will like +Valentine; and she will like you very much.... As for me--I already +love you." + +She put one arm around Eve's shoulders: "How could you even think of +remaining here all alone? Why, I should never close my eyes for thinking +of you, dear." + +Eve's head drooped; she said in a stifled voice: "I'll go with you.... +I want to.... I'm very--tired." + +"We had better go now," said Darragh. "Your things can be brought over +later. If you'll dress for snow-shoeing, Jack can pack what clothes you +need.... Are there snow-shoes for him, too?" + +Eve turned tragically to her lover: "In Dad's closet----" she said, +choking; then turned and went up the stairs, still clinging to Ricca's +hand and drawing her with her. + +Stormont followed, entered Clinch's quarters, and presently came +downstairs again, carrying Clinch's snow-shoes and a basket pack. + +He seated himself near Darragh. After a silence: "Your wife is +beautiful, Jim.... Her character seems to be even more beautiful.... +She's like God's own messenger to Eve.... And--you're rather wonderful +yourself----" + +"Nonsense," said Darragh, "I've given my wife her first American friend +and I've done a shrewd stroke of business in nabbing the best business +associate I ever heard of----" + +"You're crazy but kind.... I hope I'll be some good.... One thing; +I'll never get over what you've done for Eve in this crisis----" + +"There'll be no crisis, Jack. Marry, and hook up with me in business. +That solves everything.... Lord!--what a life Eve has had! But you'll +make it all up to her ... all this loneliness and shame and misery of +Clinch's Dump----" + +Stormont touched his arm in caution: Eve and Ricca came down the +stairs--the former now in the grey wool snow-shoe dress, and carrying +her snow-shoes, black gown, and toilet articles. + +Stormont began to stow away her effects in the basket pack; Darragh went +over to her and took her hand. + +"I'm so glad we are to be friends," he said. "It hurt a lot to know you +held me in contempt. But I had to go about it that way." + +Eve nodded. Then, suddenly recollecting: "Oh," she exclaimed, reddening, +"I forgot the jewel case! It's under my pillow----" + +She turned and sped upstairs and reappeared almost instantly, carrying +the jewel-case. + +Breathless, flushed, thankful and happy in the excitement of +restitution, she placed the leather case in Ricca's hands. + +"My jewels!" cried the girl, astounded. Then, with a little cry of +delight, she placed the case upon the table, stripped open the +emblazoned cover, and emptied the two trays. All over the table rolled +the jewels, flashing, scintillating, ablaze with blinding light. + +And at the same instant the outer door crashed open and Quintana covered +them with Darragh's rifle. + +"Now, by Christ!" he shouted, "who stirs a finger shall go to God in one +jump! You, my gendarme frien'--_you_, my frien' Smith--turn your damn +backs--han's up high!--tha's the way!--now, ladies!--back away +there--get back or I kill!--sure, by Jesus, I kill you like I would some +white little mice!----" + +With incredible quickness he stepped forward and swept the jewels into +one hand--filled the pocket of his trousers, caught up every stray stone +and pocketed them. + +"You gendarme," he cried in a menacing voice, "you think you shall +follow in my track. Yes? I blow your damn head off if you stir before +the hour.... After that--well, follow and be damn!" + +Even as he spoke he stepped outside and slammed the door; and Darragh +and Stormont leaped for it. Then the loud detonation of Quintana's rifle +was echoed by the splintering rip of bullets tearing through the closed +door; and both men halted in the face of the leaden hail. + +Eve ran to the pantry window and saw Quintana in somebody's stolen +lumber-sledge, lash a big pair of horses to a gallop and go floundering +past into the Ghost Lake road. + +As he sped by in a whirl of snow he fired five times at the house, then, +rising and swinging his whip, he flogged the frantic horses into the +woods. + +In the dining room, Stormont, red with rage and shame, and having found +his rifle in the corridor outside Eve's bedroom, was trying to open the +shutters for a shot; and Darragh, empty-handed, searched the house +frantically for a weapon. + +Eve, terribly excited, came from the pantry: + +"He's gone!" she cried furiously. "He's in somebody's lumber-sledge with +a pair of horses and he's driving west like the devil!" + +Stormont ran to the tap-room telephone, cranked it, and warned the +constabulary at Five Lakes. + +"Good God!" he exclaimed, turning to Darragh, scarlet with +mortification, "what a ghastly business! I never dreamed he was within +miles of Clinch's! It's the most shameful thing that ever happened to +me----" + +"What could anybody do under that rifle?" said Eve hotly. "That beast +would have murdered the first person who stirred!" + +Darragh, exasperated and dreadfully humiliated, looked miserably at his +brand-new wife. + +Eve and Stormont also looked at her. She had come forward from the rear +of the stairway where Quintana had brutally driven her. Now she stood +with one hand on the empty leather jewel case, looking at everybody out +of pretty, bewildered eyes. + +To Darragh, in a perplexed, unsteady voice: "Is it the same bandit who +robbed us before?" + +"Yes; Quintana," he said wretchedly. Rage began to redden his features. +"Ricca," he said, "I promised I'd find your jewels.... I promise you +again that I'll never drop this business until your gems--and the +Flaming Jewel--are in your possession----" + +"But, Jim----" + +"I swear it!" he exclaimed violently. "I'm not such a stupid fool as I +seem----" + +"Dear!" she protested excitedly, "you _have_ done what you promised. My +gems _are_ in my possession--I believe----" + +She caught up the emblazoned case, stripped out the first tray, then the +second, and flung them aside. Then, searching with the delicate tip of +her forefinger in the empty case, she suddenly pressed the bottom +hard,--thumb, middle finger and little finger forming the three apexes +of an equilateral triangle. + +There came a clear, tiny sound like the ringing of the alarm in a +repeating watch. Very gently the false bottom of the case detached +itself and came away in the palm of her hand. + +And there, each embedded in its own shaped compartment of chamois, lay +the Esthonian jewels--the true ones--deep hidden, always doubly guarded +by two sets of perfect imitations lining the two visible trays above. + +And, in the centre, blazed the Erosite gem--the magnificent Flaming +Jewel, a glory of living, blinding fire. + +Nobody stirred or spoke. Darragh blinked at the crystalline blaze as +though stunned. + +Then the young girl who had once been Her Serene Highness Theodorica, +Grand Duchess of Esthonia, looked up at her brand-new husband and +laughed. + +"Did you really suppose it was these that brought me across the ocean? +Did you suppose it was a passion for these that filled my heart? Did you +think it was for these that I followed you?" + +She laughed again, turned to Eve: + +"_You_ understand. Tell him that if he had been in rags I would have +followed him like a gypsy.... They say there is gypsy blood in us.... +God knows.... I think perhaps there is a little of it in all real +women----" Still laughing she placed her hand lightly upon her +heart--"In all women--perhaps--a Flaming Jewel imbedded here----" + +Her eyes, tender, and mocking, met his; she lifted the jewel-case, +closed it, and placed it in his hands. + +"Now," she said, "you have everything in your possession; and we are +safe--we are quite safe, now, my jewels and I." + +Then she went to Eve and rested both hands on her shoulders. + +"Shall we put on our snow-shoes and go--home?" + +Stormont flung open the bullet-splintered door. Outside in the snow he +dropped on both knees to buckle on Eve's snow-shoes. + +Darragh was performing a like office for his wife, and the State +Trooper, being unobserved, took Eve's slim hands and kissed them, +looking up at her where he was kneeling. + +Her pale face blushed as it had that day in the woods on Owl Marsh, so +long, so long ago, when this man's lips first touched her hands. + +As their eyes met both remembered. Then she smiled at her lover with the +shy girl's soul of her gazing out at him through eyes as blue as the +wild blind-gentians that grow among the ferns and mosses of Star Pond. + + * * * * * + +Far away in the northwestern forests Quintana still lashed his horses +through the primeval pines. + +Triumphant, reckless, resourceful, dangerous, he felt that now nothing +could stop him, nothing bar his way to freedom. + +Out of the wilderness lay his road and his destiny; out of it he must +win his way, by strategy, by cunning, by violence--creep out, lie his +way out, shoot his way out--it scarcely mattered. He was going out! He +was going back to life once more. Who could forbid him? Who stop him? +Who deny him, now, when, in his pockets, he held all that was worth +living for--the keys to power, to pleasure,--the key to everything on +earth! + +In fierce exultation he slapped the glass jewels in his pocket and +laughed aloud. + +"The keys to the world!" he cried. "Let him stop me and take them who is +a better man than I!" Then his long whip whistled and he cursed his +horses. + +Then, of a sudden, close by in the snowy road ahead, he saw a State +Trooper on snow-shoes,--saw the upflung arm warning him--screamed curses +at his horses, flogged them forward to crush this thing to death that +dared menace him--this object that suddenly rose up out of nowhere to +snatch from him the keys of the world---- + + * * * * * + +For a moment the State Trooper looked after the runaway horses. There +was no use following; they'd have to run till they dropped. + +Then he lowered the levelled rifle from his shoulder, looked grimly at +the limp thing which had tumbled from the sledge into the snowy road and +which sprawled there crimsoning the spotless flakes that fell upon it. + +THE END + + + + +_Novels by_ ROBERT W. CHAMBERS + + + THE FLAMING JEWEL THE TREE OF HEAVEN + THE LITTLE RED FOOT THE MOONLIT WAY + THE SLAYER OF SOULS IN SECRET + THE CRIMSON TIDE CARDIGAN + THE LAUGHING GIRL THE RECKONING + THE RESTLESS SEX THE MAID-AT-ARMS + BARBARIANS AILSA PAIGE + THE DARK STAR SPECIAL MESSENGER + THE GIRL PHILIPPA THE HAUNTS OF MEN + WHO GOES THERE! LORRAINE + ATHALIE MAIDS OF PARADISE + THE BUSINESS OF LIFE ASHES OF EMPIRE + THE GAY REBELLION THE RED REPUBLIC + THE STREETS OF ASCALON BLUE-BIRD WEATHER + THE COMMON LAW A YOUNG MAN IN A HURRY + THE FIGHTING CHANCE THE GREEN MOUSE + THE YOUNGER SET IOLE + THE DANGER MARK THE MYSTERY OF CHOICE + THE FIRING LINE THE CAMBRIC MASK + JAPONETTE THE MAKER OF MOONS + QUICK ACTION THE KING IN YELLOW + THE ADVENTURES OF A MODEST MAN IN SEARCH OF THE UNKNOWN + ANNE'S BRIDGE THE TRACER OF LOST PERSONS + BETWEEN FRIENDS THE CONSPIRATORS + THE BETTER MAN A KING AND A FEW DUKES + POLICE!!! THE HIDDEN CHILDREN + SOME LADIES IN HASTE IN THE QUARTER + OUTSIDERS + + + + + +------------------------------------------------------------------+ + |Transcriber's Note: | + | | + |[=a] is a macron | + | | + |Page 14 "Stormond nodded" changed to "Stormont nodded" | + | 40 Double close quotation mark added after "have a dance!" | + | 95 "seated hmiself" changed to "seated himself" | + | 96 "pallour" changed to "pallor" | + | 103 Open bracket removed from "Ah, bah! (But wait!" | + | 112 Double close quotation mark added after "that way, Mike."| + | 118 Double close quotation mark added after "at roll call." | + | 197 "swiming" changed to "swimming" | + | 226 "her breeches pocket" changed to "her breeches' pocket | + | 258 Double open quotation mark added to "But we ought to" | + | | + |All other inconsistencies in spelling, hyphenation and dialect | + |have been retained as they appear in the original book. | + +------------------------------------------------------------------+ + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Flaming Jewel, by Robert W. 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Chambers + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Flaming Jewel + +Author: Robert W. Chambers + +Release Date: September 18, 2008 [EBook #26651] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: UTF-8 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE FLAMING JEWEL *** + + + + +Produced by Suzanne Shell, Jacqueline Jeremy and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + +</pre> + + +<div class="head"> +<h1 class="right"><span class="u">THE FLAMING JEWEL</span><br /> +<small>ROBERT W. CHAMBERS</small></h1> +</div> + +<div class="titleb"> +<p class="title"><span class="author">ROBERT W. CHAMBERS</span><br /> +<br /> +<span class="title2"><em>The Flaming Jewel</em></span></p> + +<div class="left"> +<img src="images/logo.jpg" width="150" height="141" alt="Publisher's Logo" title="" /> +</div> + +<p class="title"><span class="pub">TRIANGLE · BOOKS NEW YORK</span></p> +</div> + + +<h5>COPYRIGHT, 1922, BY GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY<br /> +<br /> +<span class="smcap">Triangle Books Edition Published September 1942</span><br /> +<br /><br /><br /> +<span class="smcap">Triangle Books</span>, 14 West Forty-ninth Street,<br /> +New York, N. Y.<br /> +<br /><br /><br /> +PRINTED AND BOUND IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA BY THE AMERICAN +BOOK—STRATFORD PRESS, INC., N. Y. C. +</h5> + +<hr /> + + +<p class="ack"><small>TO</small><br /> +<br /> +MY FRIEND<br /> +R. T. HAINES-HALSEY +<br /><br /> +<small>WHO<br /> +UNRESERVEDLY BELIEVES<br /> +EVERYTHING I WRITE</small></p> + +<hr /> + +<div class="ack2"> +<h3>To R. T.</h3> + + +<h3>I</h3> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Three Guests at dinner! That's the life!—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Wedgewood, Revere, and Duncan Phyfe!<br /></span> +</div></div> + + +<h3>II</h3> + + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">You sit on Duncan—when you dare,—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And out of Wedgewood, using care,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">With Paul Revere you eat your fare.<br /></span> +</div></div> + + +<h3>III</h3> + + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">From Paul you borrow fork and knife<br /></span> +<span class="i0">To wage a gastronomic strife<br /></span> +<span class="i0">In porringers; and platters rare<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Of blue Historic Willow-ware.<br /></span> +</div></div> + + +<h3>IV</h3> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Banquets with cymbal, drum and fife,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Or rose-wreathed feasts with riot rife<br /></span> +<span class="i0">To your chaste suppers can't compare.<br /></span> +</div></div> + + +<h3>V</h3> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Let those deny the truth who dare!—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Paul, Duncan, Wedgewood! That's the life!<br /></span> +<span class="i0">All else is bunk and empty air.<br /></span> +</div></div> + + +<h3>ENVOI</h3> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">The Cordon-bleu has set the pace<br /></span> +<span class="i0">With Goulash, Haggis, Bouillabaisse,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Curry, Chop-suey, Kous-Kous Stew—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I can not offer these to you,—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Being a plain, old-fashioned cook,—<br /></span> +<span class="i0">So pray accept this scrambled book.<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p class="right"><big><strong>R. W. C.</strong></big></p> +</div> + + +<hr /> + +<h2><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS"></a>CONTENTS</h2> + +<table summary="Table of Contents"> + +<tr> +<th class="th" colspan="2"><small>PAGE</small></th> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdc" colspan="2"><small>EPISODE ONE</small></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Eve</span></td> +<td class="tdr"><a href="#i">9</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdc" colspan="2"><small>EPISODE TWO</small></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Ruling Passion</span></td> +<td class="tdr"><a href="#ii">33</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdc" colspan="2"><small>EPISODE THREE</small></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">On Star Peak</span></td> +<td class="tdr"><a href="#iii">56</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdc" colspan="2"><small>EPISODE FOUR</small></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Private War</span></td> +<td class="tdr"><a href="#iv">75</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdc" colspan="2"><small>EPISODE FIVE</small></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Drowned Valley</span></td> +<td class="tdr"><a href="#v">93</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdc" colspan="2"><small>EPISODE SIX</small></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Jewel Aflame</span></td> +<td class="tdr"><a href="#vi">110</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdc" colspan="2"><small>EPISODE SEVEN</small></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Clinch's Dump</span></td> +<td class="tdr"><a href="#vii">134</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdc" colspan="2"><small>EPISODE EIGHT</small></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Cup and Lip</span></td> +<td class="tdr"><a href="#viii">157</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdc" colspan="2"><small>EPISODE NINE</small></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Forest and Mr Sard</span></td> +<td class="tdr"><a href="#ix">180</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdc" colspan="2"><small>EPISODE TEN</small></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Twilight of Mike</span></td> +<td class="tdr"><a href="#x">209</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdc" colspan="2"><small>EPISODE ELEVEN</small></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Place of Pines</span></td> +<td class="tdr"><a href="#xi">233</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdc" colspan="2"><small>EPISODE TWELVE</small></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Her Highness Intervenes</span></td> +<td class="tdr"><a href="#xii">255</a></td> +</tr> +</table> + +<hr /> + + + +<h2><a name="i" id="i"></a>THE FLAMING JEWEL</h2> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span> +<small><span class="smcap">Episode One</span></small></h2> + +<h2>EVE</h2> + + +<h3>I</h3> + +<p class="cap">DURING the last two years Fate, Chance, and Destiny had been too busy to +attend to Mike Clinch.</p> + +<p>But now his turn was coming in the Eternal Sequence of things. The stars +in their courses indicated the beginning of the undoing of Mike Clinch.</p> + +<p>From Esthonia a refugee Countess wrote to James Darragh in New York:</p> + +<div class="blockquot"> +<p>"—After two years we have discovered that it was José Quintana's band +of international thieves that robbed Ricca. Quintana has disappeared.</p> + +<p>"A Levantine diamond broker in New York, named Emanuel Sard, may be in +communication with him.</p> + +<p>"Ricca and I are going to America as soon as possible.</p> + +<p class="close">"<span class="smcap">Valentine.</span>"</p></div> + +<p>The day Darragh received the letter he started to look up Sard.</p> + +<p>But that very morning Sard had received a curious letter from Rotterdam. +This was the letter:</p> + +<div class="blockquot"> +<p>"Sardius—Tourmaline—Aragonite—Rhodonite * +Porphyry—Obsidian—Nugget Gold—Diaspore<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span> * +Novaculite * Yu * Nugget Silver—Amber—Matrix +Turquoise—Elaeolite * Ivory—Sardonyx * Moonstone—Iceland Spar—Kalpa Zircon—Eye Agate * Celonite— +Lapis—Iolite—Nephrite—Chalcedony—Hydrolite * +Hegolite—Amethyst—Selenite * Fire Opal—Labradorite—Aquamarine—Malachite—Iris Stone—Natrolite—Garnet * Jade—Emerald—Wood Opal—Essonite—Lazuli * Epidote—Ruby—Onyx—Sapphire—Indicolite—Topaz—Euclase * Indian Diamond * +Star Sapphire—African Diamond—Iceland Spar—Lapis Crucifer * Abalone—Turkish Turquoise * Old +Mine Stone—Natrolite—Cats Eye—Electrum * * * +<span class="frac"><sup>1</sup>⁄<sub>5</sub></span>  <ins title="a macron, a macron">ā  ā</ins>."</p></div> + +<p>That afternoon young Darragh located Sard's office and presented himself +as a customer. The weasel-faced clerk behind the wicket laid a pistol +handy and informed Darragh that Sard was away on a business trip.</p> + +<p>Darragh looked cautiously around the small office:</p> + +<p>"Can anybody hear us?"</p> + +<p>"Nobody. Why?"</p> + +<p>"I have important news concerning José Quintana," whispered Darragh; +"Where is Sard?"</p> + +<p>"Why, he had a letter from Quintana this very morning," replied the +clerk in a low, uneasy voice. "Mr. Sard left for Albany on the one +o'clock train. Is there any trouble?"</p> + +<p>"Plenty," replied Darragh coolly; "do you know Quintana?"</p> + +<p>"No. But Mr. Sard expects him here any day now."</p> + +<p>Darragh leaned closer against the grille: "Listen very carefully; if a +man comes here who calls himself José Quintana, turn him over to the +police until Mr. Sard returns. No matter what he tells you, turn him +over to the police. Do you understand?"</p> + +<p>"Who are you?" demanded the worried clerk. "Are you one of Quintana's +people?"</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>"Young man," said Darragh, "I'm close enough to Quintana to give <em>you</em> +orders. And give Sard orders.... And Quintana, too!"</p> + +<p>A great light dawned on the scared clerk:</p> + +<p>"<em>You</em> are José Quintana!" he said hoarsely.</p> + +<p>Darragh bored him through with his dark stare:</p> + +<p>"Mind your business," he said.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>That night in Albany Darragh picked up Sard's trail. It led to a dealer +in automobiles. Sard had bought a Comet Six, paying cash, and had +started north.</p> + +<p>Through Schenectady, Fonda, and Mayfield, the following day, Darragh +traced a brand new Comet Six containing one short, dark Levantine with a +parrot nose. In Northville Darragh hired a Ford.</p> + +<p>At Lake Pleasant Sard's car went wrong. Darragh missed him by ten +minutes; but he learned that Sard had inquired the way to Ghost Lake +Inn.</p> + +<p>That was sufficient. Darragh bought an axe, drove as far as Harrod's +Corners, dismissed the Ford, and walked into a forest entirely familiar +to him.</p> + +<p>He emerged in half an hour on a wood road two miles farther on. Here he +felled a tree across the road and sat down in the bushes to await +events.</p> + +<p>Toward sunset, hearing a car coming, he tied his handkerchief over his +face below the eyes, and took an automatic from his pocket.</p> + +<p>Sard's car stopped and Sard got out to inspect the obstruction. Darragh +sauntered out of the bushes, poked his pistol against Mr. Sard's fat +abdomen, and leisurely and thoroughly robbed him.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>In an agreeable spot near a brook Darragh lighted his pipe and sat him +down to examine the booty in detail. Two pistols, a stiletto, and a +blackjack composed the arsenal of Mr. Sard. A large wallet disclosed +more than four thousand dollars in Treasury notes—something to +reimburse Ricca when she arrived, he thought.</p> + +<p>Among Sard's papers he discovered a cipher letter from +Rotterdam—probably from Quintana. Cipher was rather in Darragh's line. +All ciphers are solved by similar methods, unless the key is contained +in a code book known only to sender and receiver.</p> + +<p>But Quintana's cipher proved to be only an easy acrostic—the very +simplest of secret messages. Within an hour Darragh had it pencilled +out:</p> + +<div class="blockquot"> +<p class="center"><em>Cipher</em></p> + +<p class="noi">"Take notice:</p> + +<p>"Star Pond, N. Y.... Name is Mike Clinch.... Has Flaming +Jewel.... Erosite.... I sail at once.</p> + +<p class="close">"<span class="smcap">Quintana.</span>"</p></div> + +<p>Having served in Russia as an officer in the Military Intelligence +Department attached to the American Expeditionary Forces, Darragh had +little trouble with Quintana's letter. Even the signature was not +difficult, the fraction <span class="frac"><sup>1</sup>⁄<sub>5</sub></span> was +easily translated <em>Quint</em> ; and the +familiar prescription symbol <ins title="a macron, a macron">ā ā</ins> spelled <em>ana</em> ; which gave +Quintana's name in full.</p> + +<p>He had heard of Erosite as the rarest and most magnificent of all gems. +Only three were known. The young Duchess Theodorica of Esthonia had +possessed one.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>Darragh was immensely amused to find that the chase after Emanuel Sard +should have led him to the very borders of the great Harrod estate in +the Adirondacks.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>He gathered up his loot and walked on through the splendid forest which +once had belonged to Henry Harrod of Boston, and which now was the +property of Harrod's nephew, James Darragh.</p> + +<p>When he came to the first trespass notice he stood a moment to read it. +Then, slowly, he turned and looked toward Clinch's. An autumn sunset +flared like a conflagration through the pines. There was a glimmer of +water, too, where Star Pond lay.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>Fate, Chance, and Destiny were becoming very busy with Mike Clinch. They +had started Quintana, Sard, and Darragh on his trail. Now they stirred +up the sovereign State of New York.</p> + +<p>That lank wolf, Justice, was afoot and sniffing uncomfortably close to +the heels of Mike Clinch.</p> + + +<h3>II</h3> + +<p>Two State Troopers drew bridles in the yellowing October forest. Their +smart drab uniforms touched with purple blended harmoniously with the +autumn woods. They were as inconspicuous as two deer in the dappled +shadow. There was a sunny clearing just ahead. The wood road they had +been travelling entered it. Beyond lay Star Pond.</p> + +<p>Trooper Lannis said to Trooper Stormont: "That's Mike Clinch's clearing. +Our man may be there. Now we'll see if anybody tips him off this time."</p> + +<p>Forest and clearing were very still in the sunshine. Nothing stirred +save gold leaves drifting down, and a hawk high in the deep blue sky +turning in narrow circles.</p> + +<p>Lannis was instructing Stormont, who had been transferred<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span> from the Long +Island Troop, and who was unacquainted with local matters.</p> + +<p>Lannis said: "Clinch's dump stands on the other edge of the clearing. +Clinch owns five hundred acres in here. He's a rat."</p> + +<p>"Bad?"</p> + +<p>"Well, he's mean. I don't know how bad he is. But he runs a rotten dump. +The forest has its slums as well as the city. This is the Hell's Kitchen +of the North Woods."</p> + +<p><a name="stormont" id="stormont"></a><ins title="original had Stormond">Stormont</ins> nodded.</p> + +<p>"All the scum of the wilderness gathers here," went on Lannis. "Here's +where half the trouble in the North Woods hatches. We'll eat dinner at +Clinch's. His stepdaughter is a peach."</p> + +<p>The sturdy, sun-browned trooper glanced at his wrist watch, stretched +his legs in his stirrups.</p> + +<p>"Jack," he said, "I want you to get Clinch right, and I'm going to tell +you about his outfit while we watch this road. It's like a movie. Clinch +plays the lead. I'll dope out the scenario for you<span class="nowrap"><span class="nowrap">——</span></span>"</p> + +<p>He turned sideways in his saddle, freeing both spurred heels and lolled +so, constructing a cigarette while he talked:</p> + +<p>"Way back around 1900 Mike Clinch was a guide—a decent young fellow +they say. He guided fishing parties in summer, hunters in fall and +winter. He made money and built the house. The people he guided were +wealthy. He made a lot of money and bought land. I understand he was +square and that everybody liked him.</p> + +<p>"About that time there came to Clinch's 'hotel' a Mr. and Mrs. Strayer. +They were 'lungers.' Strayer seemed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span> to be a gentleman; his wife was +good looking and rather common. Both were very young. He had the consump +bad—the galloping variety. He didn't last long. A month after he died +his young wife had a baby. Clinch married her. She also died the same +year. The baby's name was Eve. Clinch became quite crazy about her and +started to make a lady of her. That was his mania."</p> + +<p>Lannis leaned from his saddle and carefully dropped his cigarette end +into a puddle of rain water. Then he swung one leg over and sat side +saddle.</p> + +<p>"Clinch had plenty of money in those days," he went on. "He could afford +to educate the child. The kid had a governess. Then he sent her to a +fancy boarding school. She had everything a young girl could want.</p> + +<p>"She developed into a pretty young thing at fifteen.... She's eighteen +now—and I don't know what to call her. She pulled a gun on me in July."</p> + +<p>"What!"</p> + +<p>"Sure. There was a row at Clinch's dump. A rum-runner called Jake Kloon +got shot up. I came up to get Clinch. He was sick-drunk in his bunk. +When I broke in the door Eve Strayer pulled a gun on me."</p> + +<p>"What happened?" inquired Stormont.</p> + +<p>"Nothing. I took Clinch.... But he got off as usual."</p> + +<p>"Acquitted?"</p> + +<p>Lannis nodded, rolling another cigarette:</p> + +<p>"Now, I'll tell you how Clinch happened to go wrong," he said. "You see +he'd always made his living by guiding. Well, some years ago Henry +Harrod, of Boston, came here and bought thousands and thousands of acres +of forest all around Clinch's<span class="nowrap"><span class="nowrap">——</span></span>" Lannis half rose on one stirrup and,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span> +with a comprehensive sweep of his muscular arm, ending in a flourish: +"—He bought everything for miles and miles. And that started Clinch +down hill. Harrod tried to force Clinch to sell. The millionaire tactics +you know. He was determined to oust him. Clinch got mad and wouldn't +sell at any price. Harrod kept on buying all around Clinch and posted +trespass notices. That meant ruin to Clinch. He was walled in. No +hunters care to be restricted. Clinch's little property was no good. +Business stopped. His stepdaughter's education became expensive. He was +in a bad way. Harrod offered him a big price. But Clinch turned ugly and +wouldn't budge. And that's how Clinch began to go wrong."</p> + +<p>"Poor devil," said Stormont.</p> + +<p>"Devil, all right. Poor, too. But he needed money. He was crazy to make +a lady of Eve Strayer. And there are ways of finding money, you know."</p> + +<p>Stormont nodded.</p> + +<p>"Well, Clinch found money in those ways. The Conservation Commissioner +in Albany began to hear about game law violations. The Revenue people +heard of rum-running. Clinch lost his guide's license. But nobody could +get the goods on him.</p> + +<p>"There was a rough backwoods bunch always drifting about Clinch's place +in those days. There were fights. And not so many miles from Clinch's +there was highway robbery and a murder or two.</p> + +<p>"Then the war came. The draft caught Clinch. Malone exempted him, he +being the sole support of his stepchild.</p> + +<p>"But the girl volunteered. She got to France, somehow—scrubbed in a +hospital, I believe—anyway, Clinch wanted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span> to be on the same side of +the world she was on, and he went with a Forestry Regiment and cut trees +for railroad ties in southern France until the war ended and they sent +him home.</p> + +<p>"Eve Strayer came back too. She's there now. You'll see her at dinner +time. She sticks to Clinch. He's a rat. He's up against the dry laws and +the game laws. Government enforcement agents, game protectors, State +Constabulary, all keep an eye on Clinch. Harrod's trespass signs fence +him in. He's like a rat in a trap. Yet Clinch makes money at law +breaking and nobody can catch him red-handed.</p> + +<p>"He kills Harrod's deer. That's certain. I mean Harrod's nephew's deer. +Harrod's dead. Darragh's the young nephew's name. He's never been +here—he was in the army—in Russia—I don't know what became of +him—but he keeps up the Harrod preserve—game-wardens, patrols, +watchers, trespass signs and all."</p> + +<p>Lannis finished his second cigarette, got back into his stirrups and, +gathering bridle, began leisurely to divide curb and snaffle.</p> + +<p>"That's the layout, Jack," he said. "Yonder lies the Red Light district +of the North Woods. Mike Clinch is the brains of all the dirty work that +goes on. A floating population of crooks and bums—game violators, +boot-leggers, market hunters, pelt 'collectors,' rum-runners, hootch +makers, do his dirty work—and I guess there are some who'll stick you +up by starlight for a quarter and others who'll knock your block off for +a dollar.... And there's the girl, Eve Strayer. I don't get her at all, +except that she's loyal to Clinch.... And now you know what you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span> ought +to know about this movie called 'Hell in the Woods.' And it's up to us +to keep a calm, impartial eye on the picture and try to follow the plot +they're acting out—if there is any."</p> + +<p>Stormont said: "Thanks, Bill; I'm posted.... And I'm getting hungry, +too."</p> + +<p>"I believe," said Lannis, "that you want to see that girl."</p> + +<p>"I do," returned the other, laughing.</p> + +<p>"Well, you'll see her. She's good to look at. But I don't get her at +all."</p> + +<p>"Why?"</p> + +<p>"Because she <em>looks</em> right and yet she lives at Clinch's with him and +his bunch of bums. Would you think a straight girl could stand it?"</p> + +<p>"No man can tell what a straight girl can stand."</p> + +<p>"Straight or crooked she stands for Mike Clinch," said Lannis, "and he's +a ratty customer."</p> + +<p>"Maybe the girl is fond of him. It's natural."</p> + +<p>"I guess it's that. But I don't see how any young girl can stomach the +life at Clinch's."</p> + +<p>"It's a wonder what a decent woman will stand," observed Stormont. +"Ninety-nine per cent. of all wives ought to receive the D. S. O."</p> + +<p>"Do you think we're so rotten?" inquired Lannis, smiling.</p> + +<p>"Not so rotten. No. But any man knows what men are. And it's a wonder +women stick to us when they learn."</p> + +<p>They laughed. Lannis glanced at his watch again.</p> + +<p>"Well," he said, "I don't believe anybody has tipped off our man. It's +noon. Come on to dinner, Jack."</p> + +<p>They cantered forward into the sunlit clearing. Star Pond lay ahead. On +its edge stood Clinch's.</p> + + +<h3><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>III</h3> + +<p>Clinch, in his shirt sleeves, came out on the veranda. He had little +light grey eyes, close-clipped grey hair, and was clean shaven.</p> + +<p>"How are you, Clinch," inquired Lannis affably.</p> + +<p>"All right," replied Clinch; "you're the same, I hope."</p> + +<p>"Trooper Stormont, Mr. Clinch," said Lannis in his genial way.</p> + +<p>"Pleased to know you," said Clinch, level-eyed, unstirring.</p> + +<p>The troopers dismounted. Both shook hands with Clinch. Then Lannis led +the way to the barn.</p> + +<p>"We'll eat well," he remarked to his comrade. "Clinch cooks."</p> + +<p>From the care of their horses they went to a pump to wash. One or two +rough looking men slouched out of the house and glanced at them.</p> + +<p>"Hallo, Jake," said Lannis cheerily.</p> + +<p>Jake Kloon grunted acknowledgment.</p> + +<p>Lannis said in Stormont's ear: "Here she comes with towels. She's +pretty, isn't she?"</p> + +<p>A young girl in pink gingham advanced toward them across the patch of +grass.</p> + +<p>Lannis was very polite and presented Stormont. The girl handed them two +rough towels, glanced at Stormont again after the introduction, smiled +slightly.</p> + +<p>"Dinner is ready," she said.</p> + +<p>They dried their faces and followed her back to the house.</p> + +<p>It was an unpainted building, partly of log. In the dining room half a +dozen men waited silently for food. Lannis saluted all, named his +comrade, and seated himself.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>A delicious odour of johnny-cake pervaded the room. Presently Eve +Strayer appeared with the dinner.</p> + +<p>There was dew on her pale forehead—the heat of the kitchen, no doubt. +The girl's thick, lustrous hair was brownish gold, and so twisted up +that it revealed her ears and a very white neck.</p> + +<p>When she brought Stormont his dinner he caught her eyes a +moment—experienced a slight shock of pleasure at their intense +blue—the gentian-blue of the summer zenith at midday.</p> + +<p>Lannis remained affable, even became jocose at moments:</p> + +<p>"No hootch for dinner, Mike? How's that, now?"</p> + +<p>"The Boot-leg Express is a day late," replied Clinch, with cold humour.</p> + +<p>Around the table ran an odd sound—a company of catamounts feeding might +have made such a noise—if catamounts ever laugh.</p> + +<p>"How's the fur market, Jake?" inquired Lannis, pouring gravy over his +mashed potato.</p> + +<p>Kloon quoted prices with an oath.</p> + +<p>A mean-visaged young man named Leverett complained of the price of +traps.</p> + +<p>"What do you care?" inquired Lannis genially. "The other man pays. What +are you kicking about, anyway? It wasn't so long ago that muskrats were +ten cents."</p> + +<p>The trooper's good-humoured intimation that Earl Leverett took fur in +other men's traps was not lost on the company. Leverett's fox visage +reddened; Jake Kloon, who had only one eye, glared at the State Trooper +but said nothing.</p> + +<p>Clinch's pale gaze met the trooper's smiling one: "The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span> jays and +squirrels talk too," he said slowly. "It don't mean anything. Only the +show-down counts."</p> + +<p>"You're quite right, Clinch. The show-down is what we pay to see. But +talk is the tune the orchestra plays before the curtain rises."</p> + +<p>Stormont had finished dinner. He heard a low, charming voice from behind +his chair:</p> + +<p>"Apple pie, lemon pie, maple cake, berry roll."</p> + +<p>He looked up into two gentian-blue eyes.</p> + +<p>"Lemon pie, please," he said, blushing.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>When dinner was over and the bare little dining room empty except for +Clinch and the two State Troopers, the former folded his heavy, powerful +hands on the table's edge and turned his square face and pale-eyed gaze +on Lannis.</p> + +<p>"Spit it out," he said in a passionless voice.</p> + +<p>Lannis crossed one knee over the other, lighted a cigarette:</p> + +<p>"Is there a young fellow working for you named Hal Smith?"</p> + +<p>"No," said Clinch.</p> + +<p>"Sure?"</p> + +<p>"Sure."</p> + +<p>"Clinch," continued Lannis, "have you heard about a stick-up on the +wood-road out of Ghost Lake?"</p> + +<p>"No."</p> + +<p>"Well, a wealthy tourist from New York—a Mr. Sard, stopping at Ghost +Lake Inn—was held up and robbed last Saturday toward sundown."</p> + +<p>"Never heard of him," said Clinch, calmly.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>"The robber took four thousand dollars in bills and some private papers +from him."</p> + +<p>"It's no skin off my shins," remarked Clinch.</p> + +<p>"He's laid a complaint."</p> + +<p>"Yes?"</p> + +<p>"Have any strangers been here since Saturday evening?"</p> + +<p>"No."</p> + +<p>There was a pause.</p> + +<p>"We heard you had a new man named Hal Smith working around your place."</p> + +<p>"No."</p> + +<p>"He came here Saturday night."</p> + +<p>"Who says so?"</p> + +<p>"A guide from Ghost Lake."</p> + +<p>"He's a liar."</p> + +<p>"You know," said Lannis, "it won't do you any good if hold-up men can +hide here and make a getaway."</p> + +<p>"G'wan and search," said Clinch, calmly.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>They searched the "hotel" from garret to cellar. They searched the barn, +boat-shed, out-houses.</p> + +<p>While this was going on, Clinch went into the kitchen.</p> + +<p>"Eve," he said coolly, "the State Troopers are after that fellow, Hal +Smith, who came here Saturday night. Where is he?"</p> + +<p>"He went into Harrod's to get us a deer," she replied in a low voice. +"What has he done?"</p> + +<p>"Stuck up a man on the Ghost Lake road. He ought to have told me. Do you +think you could meet up with him and tip him off?"</p> + +<p>"He's hunting on Owl Marsh. I'll try."</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>"All right. Change your clothes and slip out the back door. And look out +for Harrod's patrols, too."</p> + +<p>"All right, dad," she said. "If I have to be out to-night, don't worry. +I'll get word to Smith somehow."</p> + +<p>Half an hour later Lannis and Stormont returned from a prowl around the +clearing. Lannis paid the reckoning; his comrade led out the horses. He +said again to Lannis:</p> + +<p>"I'm sure it was the girl. She wore men's clothes and she went into the +woods on a run."</p> + +<p>As they started to ride away, Lannis said to Clinch, who stood on the +veranda:</p> + +<p>"It's still blue-jay and squirrel talk between us, Mike, but the +show-down is sure to come. Better go straight while the going's good."</p> + +<p>"I go straight enough to suit me," said Clinch.</p> + +<p>"But it's the Government that is to be suited, Mike. And if it gets you +right you'll be in dutch."</p> + +<p>"Don't let that worry you," said Clinch.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>About three o'clock the two State Troopers, riding at a walk, came to +the forks of the Ghost Lake road.</p> + +<p>"Now," said Lannis to Stormont, "if you really believe you saw the girl +beat it out of the back door and take to the woods, she's probably +somewhere in there<span class="nowrap"><span class="nowrap">——</span></span>" he pointed into the western forest. "But," he +added, "what's your idea in following her?"</p> + +<p>"She wore men's clothes; she was in a hurry and trying to keep out of +sight. I wondered whether Clinch might have sent her to warn this +hold-up fellow."</p> + +<p>"That's rather a long shot, isn't it?"</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>"Very long. I could go in and look about a bit, if you'll lead my +horse."</p> + +<p>"All right. Take your bearings. This road runs west to Ghost Lake. We +sleep at the Inn there—if you mean to cross the woods on foot."</p> + +<p>Stormont nodded, consulted his map and compass, pocketed both, unbuckled +his spurs.</p> + +<p>When he was ready he gave his bridle to Lannis.</p> + +<p>"I'd just like to see what she's up to," he remarked.</p> + +<p>"All right. If you miss me come to the Inn," said Lannis, starting on +with the led horse.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>The forest was open amid a big stand of white pine and hemlock, and +Stormont travelled easily and swiftly. He had struck a line by compass +that must cross the direction taken by Eve Strayer when she left +Clinch's. But it was a wild chance that he would ever run across her.</p> + +<p>And probably he never would have if the man that she was looking for had +not fired a shot on the edge of that vast maze of stream, morass and +dead timber called Owl Marsh.</p> + +<p>Far away in the open forest Stormont heard the shot and turned in that +direction.</p> + +<p>But Eve already was very near when the young man who called himself Hal +Smith fired at one of Harrod's deer—a three-prong buck on the edge of +the dead water.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>Smith had drawn and dressed the buck by the time the girl found him.</p> + +<p>He was cleaning up when she arrived, squatting by the water's edge when +he heard her voice across the swale:</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>"Smith! The State Troopers are looking for you!"</p> + +<p>He stood up, dried his hands on his breeches. The girl picked her way +across the bog, jumping from one tussock to the next.</p> + +<p>When she told him what had happened he began to laugh.</p> + +<p>"Did you really stick up this man?" she asked incredulously.</p> + +<p>"I'm afraid I did, Eve," he replied, still laughing.</p> + +<p>The girl's entire expression altered.</p> + +<p>"So that's the sort you are," she said. "I thought you different. But +you're all a rotten lot<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Hold on," he interrupted, "what do you mean by that?"</p> + +<p>"I mean that the only men who ever come to Star Pond are crooks," she +retorted bitterly. "I didn't believe you were. You look decent. But +you're as crooked as the rest of them—and it seems as if I—I couldn't +stand it—any longer<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"If you think me so rotten, why did you run all the way from Clinch's to +warn me?" he asked curiously.</p> + +<p>"I didn't do it for <em>you</em> ; I did it for my father. They'll jail him if +they catch him hiding you. They've got it in for him. If they put him in +prison he'll die. He couldn't stand it. I <em>know</em> . And that's why I came +to find you and tell you to clear out<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>The distant crack of a dry stick checked her. The next instant she +picked up his rifle, seized his arm, and fairly dragged him into a +spruce thicket.</p> + +<p>"Do you want to get my father into trouble!" she said fiercely.</p> + +<p>The rocky flank of Star Peak bordered the marsh here.</p> + +<p>"Come on," she whispered, jerking him along through the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span> thicket and up +the rocks to a cleft—a hole in the sheer rock overhung by shaggy +hemlock.</p> + +<p>"Get in there," she said breathlessly.</p> + +<p>"Whoever comes," he protested, "will see the buck yonder, and will +certainly look in here<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Not if I go down there and take your medicine. Creep into that cave and +lie down."</p> + +<p>"What do you intend to do?" he demanded, interested and amused.</p> + +<p>"If it's one of Harrod's game-keepers," said the girl drily, "it only +means a summons and a fine for me. And if it's a State Trooper, who is +prowling in the woods yonder hunting crooks, he'll find nobody here but +a trespasser. Keep quiet. I'll stand him off."</p> + + +<h3>IV</h3> + +<p>When State Trooper Stormont came out on the edge of Owl Marsh, the girl +was kneeling by the water, washing deer blood from her slender, +sun-tanned fingers.</p> + +<p>"What are you doing here?" she enquired, looking up over her shoulder +with a slight smile.</p> + +<p>"Just having a look around," he said pleasantly. "That's a nice fat buck +you have there."</p> + +<p>"Yes, he's nice."</p> + +<p>"You shot him?" asked Stormont.</p> + +<p>"Who else do you suppose shot him?" she enquired, smilingly. She rinsed +her fingers again and stood up, swinging her arms to dry her hands,—a +lithe, grey-shirted figure in her boyish garments, straight, supple, and +strong.</p> + +<p>"I saw you hurrying into the woods," said Stormont.</p> + +<p>"Yes, I was in a hurry. We need meat."</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>"I didn't notice that you carried a rifle when I saw you leave the +house—by the back door."</p> + +<p>"No; it was in the woods," she said indifferently.</p> + +<p>"You have a hiding place for your rifle?"</p> + +<p>"For other things, also," she said, letting her eyes of gentian-blue +rest on the young man.</p> + +<p>"You seem to be very secretive."</p> + +<p>"Is a girl more so than a man?" she asked smilingly.</p> + +<p>Stormont smiled too, then became grave.</p> + +<p>"Who else was here with you?" he asked quietly.</p> + +<p>She seemed surprised. "Did you see anybody else?"</p> + +<p>He hesitated, flushed, pointed down at the wet sphagnum. Smith's +foot-prints were there in damning contrast to her own. Worse than that, +Smith's pipe lay on an embedded log, and a rubber tobacco pouch beside +it.</p> + +<p>She said with a slight catch in her breath: "It seems that somebody has +been here.... Some hunter, perhaps,—or a game warden...."</p> + +<p>"Or Hal Smith," said Stormont.</p> + +<p>A painful colour swept the girl's face and throat. The man, sorry for +her, looked away.</p> + +<p>After a silence: "I know something about you," he said gently. "And now +that I've seen you—heard you speak—met your eyes—I know enough about +you to form an opinion.... So I don't ask you to turn informer. But the +law won't stand for what Clinch is doing—whatever provocation he has +had. And he must not aid or abet any criminal, or harbour any +malefactor."</p> + +<p>The girl's features were expressionless. The passive, sullen beauty of +her troubled the trooper.</p> + +<p>"Trouble for Clinch means sorrow for you," he said. "I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span> don't want you +to be unhappy. I bear Clinch no ill will. For this reason I ask him, and +I ask you too, to stand clear of this affair.</p> + +<p>"Hal Smith is wanted. I'm here to take him."</p> + +<p>As she said nothing, he looked down at the foot-print in the sphagnum. +Then his eyes moved to the next imprint; to the next. Then he moved +slowly along the water's edge, tracking the course of the man he was +following.</p> + +<p>The girl watched him in silence until the plain trail led him to the +spruce thicket.</p> + +<p>"Don't go in there!" she said sharply, with an odd tremor in her voice.</p> + +<p>He turned and looked at her, then stepped calmly into the thicket. And +the next instant she was among the spruces, too, confronting him with +her rifle.</p> + +<p>"Get out of these woods!" she said.</p> + +<p>He looked into the girl's deathly white face.</p> + +<p>"Eve," he said, "it will go hard with you if you kill me. I don't want +you to live out your life in prison."</p> + +<p>"I can't help it. If you send my father to prison he'll die. I'd rather +die myself. Let us alone, I tell you! The man you're after is nothing to +us. We didn't know he had stuck up anybody!"</p> + +<p>"If he's nothing to you, why do you point that rifle at me?"</p> + +<p>"I tell you he is nothing to us. But my father wouldn't betray a dog. +And I won't. That's all. Now get out of these woods and come back +to-morrow. Nobody'll interfere with you then."</p> + +<p>Stormont smiled: "Eve," he said, "do you really think me as yellow as +that?"</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>Her blue eyes flashed a terrible warning, but, in the same instant, he +had caught her rifle, twisting it out of her grasp as it exploded.</p> + +<p>The detonation dazed her; then, as he flung the rifle into the water, +she caught him by neck and belt and flung him bodily into the spruces.</p> + +<p>But she fell with him; he held her twisting and struggling with all her +superb and supple strength; staggered to his feet, still mastering her; +and, as she struggled, sobbing, locked hot and panting in his arms, he +snapped a pair of handcuffs on her wrists and flung her aside.</p> + +<p>She fell on both knees, got up, shoulder deep in spruce, blood running +from her lip over her chin.</p> + +<p>The trooper took her by the arm. She was trembling all over. He took a +thin steel chain and padlock from his pocket, passed the links around +her steel-bound wrists, and fastened her to a young birch tree.</p> + +<p>Then, drawing his pistol from its holster, he went swiftly forward +through the spruces.</p> + +<p>When he saw the cleft in the rocky flank of Star Peak, he walked +straight to the black hole which confronted him.</p> + +<p>"Come out of there," he said distinctly.</p> + +<p>After a few seconds Smith came out.</p> + +<p>"Good God!" said Stormont in a low voice. "What are you doing here, +Darragh?"</p> + +<p>Darragh came close and rested one hand on Stormont's shoulder:</p> + +<p>"Don't crab my game, Stormont. I never dreamed you were in the +Constabulary or I'd have let you know."</p> + +<p>"Are <em>you</em> Hal Smith?"</p> + +<p>"I sure am. Where's that girl?"</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>"Handcuffed out yonder."</p> + +<p>"Then for God's sake go back and act as if you hadn't found me. Tell +Mayor Chandler that I'm after bigger game than he is."</p> + +<p>"Clinch?"</p> + +<p>"Stormont, I'm here to <em>protect</em> Mike Clinch. Tell the Mayor not to +touch him. The men I'm after are going to try to rob him. I don't want +them to because—well, I'm going to rob him myself."</p> + +<p>Stormont stared.</p> + +<p>"You must stand by me," said Darragh. "So must the Mayor. He knows me +through and through. Tell him to forget that hold-up. I stopped that man +Sard. I frisked him. Tell the Mayor. I'll keep in touch with him."</p> + +<p>"Of course," said Stormont, "that settles it."</p> + +<p>"Thanks, old chap. Now go back to that girl and let her believe that you +never found me."</p> + +<p>A slight smile touched their eyes. Both instinctively saluted. Then they +shook hands; Darragh, alias Hal Smith, went back into the hemlock-shaded +hole in the rocks; Trooper Stormont walked slowly down through the +spruces.</p> + +<p>When Eve saw him returning empty handed, something flashed in her pallid +face like sunlight across snow.</p> + +<p>Stormont passed her, went to the water's edge, soaked a spicy handful of +sphagnum moss in the icy water, came back and wiped the blood from her +face.</p> + +<p>The girl seemed astounded; her face surged in vivid colour as he +unlocked the handcuffs and pocketed them and the little steel chain.</p> + +<p>Her lip was bleeding again. He washed it with wet moss,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span> took a clean +handkerchief from the breast of his tunic and laid it against her mouth.</p> + +<p>"Hold it there," he said.</p> + +<p>Mechanically she raised her hand to support the compress. Stormont went +back to the shore, recovered her rifle from the shallow water, and +returned with it.</p> + +<p>As she made no motion to take it, he stood it against the tree to which +he had tied her.</p> + +<p>Then he came close to her where she stood holding his handkerchief +against her mouth and looking at him out of steady eyes as deeply blue +as gentian blossoms.</p> + +<p>"Eve," he said, "you win. But you won't forgive me.... I wish we could +be friends, some day.... We never can, now.... Good-bye."</p> + +<p>Neither spoke again. Then, of a sudden, the girl's eyes filled; and +Trooper Stormont caught her free hand and kissed it;—kissed it again +and again,—dropped it and went striding away through the underbrush +which was now all rosy with the rays of sunset.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>After he had disappeared, the girl, Eve, went to the cleft in the rocks +above.</p> + +<p>"Come out," she said contemptuously. "It's a good thing you hid, because +there was a real man after you; and God help you if he ever finds you!"</p> + +<p>Hal Smith came out.</p> + +<p>"Pack in your meat," said the girl curtly, and flung his rifle across +her shoulder.</p> + +<p>Through the ruddy afterglow she led the way homeward, a man's +handkerchief pressed to her wounded mouth, her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span> eyes preoccupied with +the strangest thoughts that ever had stirred her virgin mind.</p> + +<p>Behind her walked Darragh with his load of venison and his alias,—and +his tongue in his cheek.</p> + +<p>Thus began the preliminaries toward the ultimate undoing of Mike Clinch. +Fate, Chance, and Destiny had undertaken the job in earnest.</p> + + + +<hr /> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span><a name="ii" id="ii"></a> +<small><span class="smcap">Episode Two</span></small></h2> + +<h2>THE RULING PASSION</h2> + + +<h3>I</h3> + +<p class="cap">NOBODY understood how José Quintana had slipped through the Secret +Service net spread for him at every port.</p> + +<p>The United States authorities did not know why Quintana had come to +America. They realised merely that he arrived for no good purpose; and +they had meant to arrest and hold him for extradition if requested; for +deportation as an undesirable alien anyway.</p> + +<p>Only two men in America knew that Quintana had come to the United States +for the purpose of recovering the famous "Flaming Jewel," stolen by him +from the Grand Duchess Theodorica of Esthonia; and stolen from Quintana, +in turn, by a private soldier in an American Forestry Regiment, on leave +in Paris. This soldier's name, probably, was Michael Clinch.</p> + +<p>One of the men who knew why Quintana might come to America was James +Darragh, recently of the Military Intelligence, but now passing as a +hold-up man under the name of Hal Smith, and actually in the employment +of Clinch at his disreputable "hotel" at Star Pond in the North Woods.</p> + +<p>The other man who knew why Quintana had come to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span> America was Emanuel +Sard, a Levantine diamond broker of New York, Quintana's agent in +America.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>Now, as the October days passed without any report of Quintana's +detention, Darragh, known as Hal Smith at Clinch's dump, began to +suspect that Quintana had already slid into America through the meshes +of the police.</p> + +<p>If so, this desperate international criminal could be expected at +Clinch's under some guise or other, piloted thither by Emanuel Sard.</p> + +<p>So Hal Smith, whose duty was to wash dishes, do chores, and also to +supply Clinch's with "mountain beef"—or deer taken illegally—made it +convenient to prowl every day in the vicinity of the Ghost Lake road.</p> + +<p>He was perfectly familiar with Emanuel Sard's squat features and parrot +nose, having robbed Mr. Sard of Quintana's cipher and of $4,000 at +pistol point. And one morning, while roving around the guide's quarters +at Ghost Lake Inn, Smith beheld Sard himself on the hotel veranda, in +company with five strangers of foreign aspect.</p> + +<p>During the midday dinner Smith, on pretense of enquiring for a guide's +license, got a look at the Inn ledger. Sard's signature was on it, +followed by the names of Henri Picquet, Nicolas Salzar, Victor +Georgiades, Harry Beck, and José Sanchez. And Smith went back through +the wilderness to Star Pond, convinced that one of these gentlemen was +Quintana, and the remainder, Quintana's gang; and that they were here to +do murder if necessary in their remorseless quest of "The Flaming +Jewel." Two million dollars once had been offered for the Flaming Jewel; +and had been refused.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>Clinch probably possessed it. Smith was now convinced of that. But he +was there to rob Clinch of it himself. For he had promised the little +Grand Duchess to help recover her Erosite jewel; and now that he had +finally traced its probable possession to Clinch, he was wondering how +this recovery was to be accomplished.</p> + +<p>To arrest Clinch meant ruin to Eve Strayer. Besides he knew now that +Clinch would die in prison before revealing the hiding place of the +Flaming Jewel.</p> + +<p>Also, how could it be proven that Clinch had the Erosite gem? The cipher +from Quintana was not sufficient evidence.</p> + +<p>No; the only way was to watch Clinch, prevent any robbery by Quintana's +gang, somehow discover where the Flaming Jewel had been concealed, take +it, and restore it to the beggared young girl whose only financial +resource now lay in the possible recovery of this almost priceless gem.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>Toward evening Hal Smith shot two deer near Owl Marsh. To poach on his +own property appealed to his sense of humour. And Clinch, never dreaming +that Hal Smith was the James Darragh who had inherited Harrod's vast +preserve, damned all millionaires for every buck brought in, and became +friendlier to Smith.</p> + + +<h3>II</h3> + +<p>Clinch's dump was the disposal plant in which collected the human sewage +of the wilderness.</p> + +<p>It being Saturday, the scum of the North Woods was gathering at the Star +Pond resort. A venison and chicken supper was promised—and a dance if +any women appeared.</p> + +<p>Jake Kloon had run in some Canadian hooch; Darragh,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span> alias Hal Smith, +contributed two fat deer and Clinch cooked them. By ten o'clock that +morning many of the men were growing noisy; some were already drunk by +noon. Shortly after midday dinner the first fight started—extinguished +only after Clinch had beaten several of the backwoods aristocracy +insensible.</p> + +<p>Towering amid the wreck of battle, his light grey eyes a-glitter, Clinch +dominated, swinging his iron fists.</p> + +<p>When the combat ended and the fallen lay starkly where they fell, Clinch +said in his pleasant, level voice:</p> + +<p>"Take them out and stick their heads in the pond. And don't go for to +get me mad, boys, or I'm liable to act up rough."</p> + +<p>They bore forth the sleepers for immersion in Star Pond. Clinch +relighted his cigar and repeated the rulings which had caused the +fracas:</p> + +<p>"You gotta play square cards here or you don't play none in my house. No +living thumb-nail can nick no cards in my place and get away with it. +Three kings and two trays is better than three chickens and two eggs. If +you don't like it, g'wan home."</p> + +<p>He went out in his shirt sleeves to see how the knock-outs were +reviving, and met Hal Smith returning from the pond, who reported +progress toward consciousness. They walked back to the "hotel" together.</p> + +<p>"Say, young fella," said Clinch in his soft, agreeable way, "you want to +keep your eye peeled to-night."</p> + +<p>"Why?" inquired Smith.</p> + +<p>"Well, there'll be a lot o' folks here. There'll be strangers, too.... +Don't forget the State Troopers are looking for you."</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>"Do the State Troopers ever play detective?" asked Smith, smiling.</p> + +<p>"Sure. They've been in here rigged out like peddlers and lumber-jacks +and timber lookers."</p> + +<p>"Did they ever get anything on you?"</p> + +<p>"Not a thing."</p> + +<p>"Can you always spot them, Mike?"</p> + +<p>"No. But when a stranger shows up here who don't know nobody, he never +sees nothing and he don't never learn nothing. He gets no hootch outa +me. No, nor no craps and no cards. He gets his supper; that's what he +gets ... and a dance, if there's ladies—and if any girl favours him. +That's all the change any stranger gets out of Mike Clinch."</p> + +<p>They had paused on the rough veranda in the hot October sunshine.</p> + +<p>"Mike," suggested Smith carelessly, "wouldn't it pay you better to go +straight?"</p> + +<p>Clinch's small grey eyes, which had been roaming over the prospect of +lake and forest, focussed on Smith's smiling features.</p> + +<p>"What's that to you?" he asked.</p> + +<p>"I'll be out of a job," remarked Smith, laughing, "if they ever land +you."</p> + +<p>Clinch's level gaze measured him; his mind was busy measuring him, too.</p> + +<p>"Who the hell are you, anyway?" he asked. "<em>I</em> don't know. You stick up +a man on the Ghost Lake Road and hide out here when the State Troopers +come after you. And now you ask me if it pays better to go straight. Why +didn't <em>you</em> go straight if you think it pays?"</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>"I haven't got a daughter to worry about," explained Smith. "If they get +me it won't hurt anybody else."</p> + +<p>A dull red tinge came out under Clinch's tan:</p> + +<p>"Who asked <em>you</em> to worry about Eve?"</p> + +<p>"She's a fine girl: that's all."</p> + +<p>Clinch's steely glare measured the young man:</p> + +<p>"You trying to make up to her?" he enquired gently.</p> + +<p>"No. She has no use for me."</p> + +<p>Clinch reflected, his cold tiger-gaze still fastened on Smith.</p> + +<p>"You're right," he said after a moment. "Eve is a good girl. Some day +I'll make a lady of her."</p> + +<p>"She <em>is</em> one, Clinch."</p> + +<p>At that Clinch reddened heavily—the first finer emotion ever betrayed +before Smith. He did not say anything for a few moments, but his grim +mouth worked. Finally:</p> + +<p>"I guess you was a gentleman once before you went crooked, Hal," he +said. "You act up like you once was.... Say; there's only one thing on +God's earth I care about. You've guessed it, too." He was off again upon +his ruling passion.</p> + +<p>"Eve," nodded Smith.</p> + +<p>"Sure. She isn't my flesh and blood. But it seems like she's more, even. +I want she should be a lady. It's <em>all</em> I want. That damned millionaire +Harrod bust me. But he couldn't stop me giving Eve her schooling. And +now all I'm livin' for is to be fixed so's to give her money to go to +the city like a lady. I don't care how I make money; all I want is to +make it. And I'm a-going to."</p> + +<p>Smith nodded again.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>Clinch, now obsessed by his monomania, went on with an oath:</p> + +<p>"I can't make no money on the level after what Harrod done to me. And I +gotta fix up Eve. What the hell do you mean by asking me would it pay me +to travel straight I dunno."</p> + +<p>"I was only thinking of Eve. A lady isn't supposed to have a crook for a +father."</p> + +<p>Clinch's grey eyes blazed for a moment, then their menacing glare +dulled, died out into wintry fixity.</p> + +<p>"I wan't born a crook," he said. "I ain't got no choice. And don't +worry, young fella; they ain't a-going to get me."</p> + +<p>"You can't go on beating the game forever, Clinch."</p> + +<p>"I'm beating it<span class="nowrap">——"</span> he hesitated—"and it won't be so long, neither, +before I turn over enough to let Eve live in the city like any lady, +with her autymobile and her own butler and all her swell friends, in a +big house like she is educated for<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>He broke off abruptly as a procession approached from the lake, +escorting the battered gentry who now were able to wabble about a +little.</p> + +<p>One of them, a fox-faced trap thief named Earl Leverett, slunk hastily +by as though expecting another kick from Clinch.</p> + +<p>"G'wan inside, Earl, and act up right," said Clinch pleasantly. "You +oughter have more sense than to start a fight in my place—you and Sid +Hone and Harvey Chase. G'wan in and behave."</p> + +<p>He and Smith followed the procession of damaged ones into the house.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>The big unpainted room where a bar had once been was blue with cheap +cigar smoke; the air reeked with the stench of beer and spirits. A score +or more shambling forest louts in their dingy Saturday finery were +gathered there playing cards, shooting craps, lolling around tables and +tilting slopping glasses at one another.</p> + +<p>Heavy pleasantries were exchanged with the victims of Clinch's ponderous +fists as they re-entered the room from which they had been borne so +recently, feet first.</p> + +<p>"Now, boys," said Clinch kindly, "act up like swell gents and behave +friendly. And if any ladies come in for the chicken supper, why, gol +dang it, we'll <a name="dance" id="dance"></a>have a <ins title="missing closing quotation mark">dance!"</ins></p> + + +<h3>III</h3> + +<p>Toward sundown the first woodland nymph appeared—a half-shy, half-bold, +willowy thing in the rosy light of the clearing.</p> + +<p>Hal Smith, washing glasses and dishes on the back porch for Eve Strayer +to dry, asked who the rustic beauty might be.</p> + +<p>"Harvey Chase's sister," said Eve. "She shouldn't come here, but I can't +keep her away and her brother doesn't care. She's only a child, too."</p> + +<p>"Is there any harm in a chicken supper and a dance?"</p> + +<p>Eve looked gravely at young Smith without replying.</p> + +<p>Other girlish shapes loomed in the evening light. Some were met by +gallants, some arrived at the veranda unescorted.</p> + +<p>"Where do they all come from? Do they live in trees like dryads?" asked +Smith.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>"There are always squatters in the woods," she replied indifferently.</p> + +<p>"Some of these girls come from Ghost Lake, I suppose."</p> + +<p>"Yes; waitresses at the Inn."</p> + +<p>"What music is there?"</p> + +<p>"Jim Hastings plays a fiddle. I play the melodeon if they need me."</p> + +<p>"What do you do when there's a fight?" he asked, with a side glance at +her pure profile.</p> + +<p>"What do you suppose I do? Fight, too?"</p> + +<p>He laughed—mirthlessly—conscious always of his secret pity for this +girl.</p> + +<p>"Well," he said, "when your father makes enough to quit, he'll take you +out of this. It's a vile hole for a young girl<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"See here," she said, flushing; "you're rather particular for a young +man who stuck up a tourist and robbed him of four thousand dollars."</p> + +<p>"I'm not complaining on my own account," returned Smith, laughing; +"Clinch's suits me."</p> + +<p>"Well, don't concern yourself on my account, Hal Smith. And you'd better +keep out of the dance, too, if there are any strangers there."</p> + +<p>"You think a State Trooper may happen in?"</p> + +<p>"It's likely. A lot of people come and go. We don't always know them." +She opened a sliding wooden shutter and looked into the bar room. After +a moment she beckoned him to her side.</p> + +<p>"There are strangers there now," she said, "—that thin, dark man who +looks like a Kanuk. And those two men<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span> shaking dice. I don't know who +they are. I never before saw them."</p> + +<p>But Smith had seen them at Ghost Lake Inn. One of them was Sard. +Quintana's gang had arrived at Clinch's dump.</p> + +<p>A moment later Clinch came through the pantry and kitchen and out onto +the rear porch where Smith was washing glasses in a tub filled from an +ever-flowing spring.</p> + +<p>"I'm a-going to get supper," he said to Eve. "There'll be twenty-three +plates." And to Smith: "Hal—you help Eve wait on the table. And if +anybody acts up rough you slam him on the jaw—don't argue, don't +wait—just slam him good, and I'll come on the hop."</p> + +<p>"Who are the strangers, dad?" asked Eve.</p> + +<p>"Don't nobody know 'em none, girlie. But they ain't State Troopers. They +talk like they was foreign. One of 'em's English—the big, bony one with +yellow hair and mustache."</p> + +<p>"Did they give any names?" asked Smith.</p> + +<p>"You bet. The stout, dark man calls himself Hongri Picket. French, I +guess. The fat beak is a fella named Sard. Sanchez is the guy with a +face like a Canada priest—José Sanchez—or something on that style. And +then the yellow skinned young man is Nicole Salzar; the Britisher, Harry +Beck; and that good lookin' dark gent with a little black Charlie +Chaplin, he's Victor Georgiades."</p> + +<p>"What are those foreigners doing in the North Woods, Clinch?" enquired +Smith.</p> + +<p>"Oh, they all give the same spiel—hire out in a lumber camp. But <em>they</em> +ain't no lumberjacks," added Clinch contemptuously. "I don't know what +they be—hootch runners<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span> maybe—or booze bandits—or they done something +crooked som'ers r'other. It's safe to serve 'em drinks."</p> + +<p>Clinch himself had been drinking. He always drank when preparing to +cook.</p> + +<p>He turned and went into the kitchen now, rolling up his shirt sleeves +and relighting his clay pipe.</p> + + +<h3>IV</h3> + +<p>By nine o'clock the noisy chicken supper had ended; the table had been +cleared; Jim Hastings was tuning his fiddle in the big room; Eve had +seated herself before the battered melodeon.</p> + +<p>"Ladies and gents," said Clinch in his clear, pleasant voice, which +carried through the hubbub, "we're a-going to have a dance—thanks and +beholden to Jim Hastings and my daughter Eve. Eve, she don't drink and +she don't dance, so no use askin' and no hard feelin' toward nobody.</p> + +<p>"So act up pleasant to one and all and have a good time and no rough +stuff in no form, shape or manner, but behave like gents all and swell +dames, like you was to a swarry on Fifth Avenue. Let's go!"</p> + +<p>He went back to the pantry, taking no notice of the cheering. The +fiddler scraped a fox trot, and Eve's melodeon joined in. A vast +scuffling of heavily shod feet filled the momentary silence, accented by +the shrill giggle of young girls.</p> + +<p>"They're off," remarked Clinch to Smith, who stood at the pantry shelf +prepared to serve whiskey or beer upon previous receipt of payment.</p> + +<p>In the event of a sudden raid, the arrangements at Clinch's were quite +simple. Two large drain pipes emerged from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span> the kitchen floor beside +Smith, and ended in Star Pond. In case of alarm the tub of beer was +poured down one pipe; the whiskey down the other.</p> + +<p>Only the trout in Star Pond would ever sample that hootch again.</p> + +<p>Clinch, now slightly intoxicated, leaned heavily on the pantry shelf +beside Smith, adjusting his pistol under his suspenders.</p> + +<p>"Young fella," he said in his agreeable voice, "you're dead right. You +sure said a face-full when you says to me, 'Eve's a lady, by God!' <em>You</em> +oughta know. You was a gentleman yourself once. Even if you take to +stickin' up tourists you know a lady when you see one. And you called +the turn. She <em>is</em> a lady. All I'm livin' for is to get her down to the +city and give her money to live like a lady. I'll do it yet.... Soon!... +I'd do it to-morrow—to-night—if I dared.... If I thought it sure +fire.... If I was dead certain I could get away with it.... I've <em>got</em> +the money. <em>Now!</em> ... Only it ain't in <em>money</em>.... Smith?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, Mike."</p> + +<p>"You know me?"</p> + +<p>"Sure."</p> + +<p>"You size me up?"</p> + +<p>"I do."</p> + +<p>"All right. If you ever tell anyone I got money that ain't money I'll +shoot you through the head."</p> + +<p>"Don't worry, Clinch."</p> + +<p>"I ain't. You're a crook; you won't talk. You're a gentleman, too. +<em>They</em> don't sell out a pal. Say, Hal, there's only one fella I don't +want to meet."</p> + +<p>"Who's that, Mike?"</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>"Lemme tell you," continued Clinch, resting more heavily on the shelf +while Smith, looking out through the pantry shutter at the dancing, +listened intently.</p> + +<p>"When I was in France in a Forestry Rig'ment," went on Clinch, lowering +his always pleasant voice, "I was to Paris on leave a few days before +they sent us home.</p> + +<p>"I was in the washroom of a caffy—a-cleanin' up for supper, when +dod-bang! into the place comes a-tumblin' a man with two cops pushing +and kickin' him.</p> + +<p>"They didn't see me in there for they locked the door on the man. He was +a swell gent, too, in full dress and silk hat and all like that, and a +opry cloak and white kid gloves, and mustache and French beard.</p> + +<p>"When they locked him up he stood stock still and lit a cigarette, as +cool as ice. Then he begun walkin' around looking for a way to get out; +but there wasn't no way.</p> + +<p>"Then he seen me and over he comes and talks English right away: 'Want +to make a thousand francs, soldier?' sez he in a quick whisper. 'You're +on,' sez I; 'show your dough.' 'Them Flics has went to get the +Commissaire for to frisk me,' sez he. 'If they find this parcel on me I +do twenty years in Noumea. Five years kills anybody out there.' 'What do +you want I should do?' sez I, havin' no love for no cops, French or +other. 'Take this packet and stick it in your overcoat,' sez he. 'Go to +13 roo Quinze Octobre and give it to the concierge for José Quintana.' +And he shoves the packet on me and a thousand-franc note.</p> + +<p>"Then he grabs me sudden and pulls open my collar. God, he was strong.</p> + +<p>"'What's the matter with you?' says I. 'Lemme go or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span> I'll mash your mug +flat.' 'Lemme see your identification disc,' he barks.</p> + +<p>"Bein' in Paris for a bat, I had exchanged with my bunkie, Bill Hanson. +'Let him look,' thinks I; and he reads Bill's check.</p> + +<p>"'If you fool me,' says he, 'I'll folly ye and I'll do you in if it +takes the rest of my life. You understand?' 'Sure,' says I, me tongue in +me cheek. 'Bong! Allez vous en!' says he.</p> + +<p>"'How the hell,' sez I, 'do I get out of here?' 'You're a Yankee +soldier. The Flics don't know you were in here. You go and kick on that +door and make a holler.'</p> + +<p>"So I done it good; and a cop opens and swears at me, but when he sees a +Yankee soldier was locked in the wash-room by mistake, he lets me out, +you bet."</p> + +<p>Clinch smiled a thin smile, poured out three fingers of hooch.</p> + +<p>"What else?" asked Smith quietly.</p> + +<p>"Nothing much. I didn't go to no roo Quinze Octobre. But I don't never +want to see that fella Quintana. I've been waiting till it's safe to +sell—what was in that packet."</p> + +<p>"Sell what?"</p> + +<p>"What was in that packet," replied Clinch thickly.</p> + +<p>"What was in it?"</p> + +<p>"Sparklers—since you're so nosey."</p> + +<p>"Diamonds?"</p> + +<p>"And then some. I dunno what they're called. All I know is I'll croak +Quintana if he even turns up askin' for 'em. He frisked somebody. I +frisked him. I'll kill anybody who tries to frisk me."</p> + +<p>"Where do you keep them?" enquired Smith naïvely.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>Clinch looked at him, very drunk: "None o' your dinged business," he +said very softly.</p> + +<p>The dancing had become boisterous but not unseemly, although all the men +had been drinking too freely.</p> + +<p>Smith closed the pantry bar at midnight, by direction of Eve. Now he +came out into the ballroom and mixed affably with the company, even +dancing with Harvey Chase's sister once—a slender hoyden, all flushed +and dishevelled, with a tireless mania for dancing which seemed to +intoxicate her.</p> + +<p>She danced, danced, danced, accepting any partner offered. But Smith's +skill enraptured her and she refused to let him go when her beau, a late +arrival, one Charlie Berry, slouched up to claim her.</p> + +<p>Smith, always trying to keep Clinch and Quintana's men in view, took no +part in the discussion; but Berry thought he was detaining Lily Chase +and pushed him aside.</p> + +<p>"Hold on, young man!" exclaimed Smith sharply. "Keep your hands to +yourself. If your girl don't want to dance with you she doesn't have +to."</p> + +<p>Some of Quintana's gang came up to listen. Berry glared at Smith.</p> + +<p>"Say," he said, "I seen you before somewhere. Wasn't you in Russia?"</p> + +<p>"What are you talking about?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, you was. You was an officer! What you doing at Clinch's?"</p> + +<p>"What's that?" growled Clinch, shoving his way forward and shouldering +the crowd aside.</p> + +<p>"Who's this man, Mike?" demanded Berry.</p> + +<p>"Well, who do you think he is?" asked Clinch thickly.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>"I think he's gettin' the goods on you, that's what I think," yelled +Berry.</p> + +<p>"G'wan home, Charlie," returned Clinch. "G'wan, all o' you. The dance is +over. Go peaceable, every one. Stop that fiddle!"</p> + +<p>The music ceased. The dance was ended; they all understood that; but +there was grumbling and demands for drinks.</p> + +<p>Clinch, drunk but impassive, herded them through the door out into the +starlight. There was scuffling, horse-play, but no fighting.</p> + +<p>The big Englishman, Harry Beck, asked for accommodations for his party +over night.</p> + +<p>"Naw," said Clinch, "g'wan back to the Inn. I can't bother with you +folks to-night." And as the others, Salzar, Georgiades, Picquet and +Sanchez gathered about to insist, Clinch pushed them all out of doors in +a mass.</p> + +<p>"Get the hell out o' here!" he growled; and slammed the door.</p> + +<p>He stood for a moment with head lowered, drunk, but apparently capable +of reflection. Eve came from the melodeon and laid one slim hand on his +arm.</p> + +<p>"Go to bed, girlie," he said, not looking at her.</p> + +<p>"You also, dad."</p> + +<p>"No.... I got business with Hal Smith."</p> + +<p>Passing Smith, the girl whispered: "You look out for him and undress +him."</p> + +<p>Smith nodded, gravely preoccupied with coming events, and nerving +himself to meet them.</p> + +<p>He had no gun. Clinch's big automatic bulged under his armpit.</p> + +<p>When the girl had ascended the creaking stairs and her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span> door, above, +closed, Clinch walked unsteadily to the door, opened it, fished out his +pistol.</p> + +<p>"Come on out," he said without turning.</p> + +<p>"Where?" enquired Smith.</p> + +<p>Clinched turned, lifted his square head; and the deadly glare in his +eyes left Smith silent.</p> + +<p>"You comin'?"</p> + +<p>"Sure," said Smith quietly.</p> + +<p>But Clinch gave him no chance to close in: it was death even to swerve. +Smith walked slowly out into the starlight, ahead of Clinch—slowly +forward in the luminous darkness.</p> + +<p>"Keep going," came Clinch's quiet voice behind him. And, after they had +entered the woods,—"Bear to the right."</p> + +<p>Smith knew now. The low woods were full of sink-holes. They were headed +for the nearest one.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>On the edge of the thing they halted. Smith turned and faced Clinch.</p> + +<p>"What's the idea?" he asked without a quaver.</p> + +<p>"Was you in Roosia?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"Was you an officer?"</p> + +<p>"I was."</p> + +<p>"Then you're spyin'. You're a cop."</p> + +<p>"You're mistaken."</p> + +<p>"Ah, don't hand me none like that! You're a State Trooper or a Secret +Service guy, or a plain, dirty cop. And I'm a-going to croak you."</p> + +<p>"I'm not in any service, now."</p> + +<p>"Wasn't you an army officer?"</p> + +<p>"Yes. Can't an officer go wrong?"</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>"Soft stuff. Don't feed it to me. I told you too much anyway. I was +babblin' drunk. I'm drunk now, but I got sense. D'you think I'll run +chances of sittin' in State's Prison for the next ten years and leave +Eve out here alone? No. I gotta shoot you, Smith. And I'm a-going to do +it. G'wan and say what you want ... if you think there's some kind o' +god you can square before you croak."</p> + +<p>"If you go to the chair for murder, what good will it do Eve?" asked +Smith. His lips were crackling dry; he moistened them.</p> + +<p>"Sink holes don't talk," said Clinch. "G'wan and square yourself, if +you're the church kind."</p> + +<p>"Clinch," said Smith unsteadily, "if you kill me now you're as good as +dead yourself. Quintana is here."</p> + +<p>"Say, don't hand me that," retorted Clinch. "Do you square yourself or +no?"</p> + +<p>"I tell you Quintana's gang were at the dance to-night—Picquet, Salzar, +Georgiades, Sard, Beck, José Sanchez—the one who looks like a French +priest. Maybe he had a beard when you saw him in that café +wash-room<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"What!" shouted Clinch in sudden fury. "What yeh talkin' about, you poor +dumb dingo! Yeh fixin' to scare me? What do <em>you</em> know about Quintana? +Are you one of Quintana's gang, too? Is that what you're up to, hidin' +out at Star Pond. Come on, now, out with it! I'll have it all out of you +now, Hal Smith, before I plug you<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>He came lurching forward, swinging his heavy pistol as though he meant +to brain his victim, but he halted after the first step or two and stood +there, a shadowy bulk, growling, enraged, undecided.</p> + +<p>And, as Smith looked at him, two shadows detached themselves<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span> from the +trees behind Clinch—silently—silently glided behind—struck in utter +silence.</p> + +<p>Down crashed Clinch, black-jacked, his face in the ooze. His pistol flew +from his hand, struck Smith's leg; and Smith had it at the same instant +and turned it like lightning on the murderous shadows.</p> + +<p>"Hands up! Quick!" he cried, at bay now, and his back to the sink-hole.</p> + +<p>Pistol levelled, he bent one knee, pushed Clinch over on his back, lest +the ooze suffocate him.</p> + +<p>"Now," he said coolly, "what do you bums want of Mike Clinch?"</p> + +<p>"Who are you?" came a sullen voice. "This is none o' your bloody +business. We want Clinch, not you."</p> + +<p>"What do you want of Clinch?"</p> + +<p>"Take your gun off us!"</p> + +<p>"Answer, or I'll let go at you. What do you want of Clinch?"</p> + +<p>"Money. What do you think?"</p> + +<p>"You're here to stick up Clinch?" enquired Smith.</p> + +<p>"Yes. What's that to you?"</p> + +<p>"What has Clinch done to you?"</p> + +<p>"He stuck <em>us</em> up, that's what! Now, are you going to keep out of this?"</p> + +<p>"No."</p> + +<p>"We ain't going to hurt Clinch."</p> + +<p>"You bet you're not. Where's the rest of your gang?"</p> + +<p>"What gang?"</p> + +<p>"Quintana's," said Smith, laughing. A wild exhilaration possessed him. +His flanks and rear were protected by the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span> sink-hole. He had Quintana's +gang—two of them—over his pistol.</p> + +<p>"Turn your backs and sit down," he said. As the shadowy forms hesitated, +he picked up a stick and hurled it at them. They sat down hastily, hands +up, backs toward him.</p> + +<p>"You'll both die where you sit," remarked Smith, "if you yell for help."</p> + +<p>Clinch sighed heavily, stirred, groped on the damp leaves with his +hands.</p> + +<p>"I say," began the voice which Smith identified as Harry Beck's, "if +you'll come in with us on this it will pay you, young man."</p> + +<p>"No," drawled Smith, "I'll go it alone."</p> + +<p>"It can't be done, old dear. You'll see if you try it on."</p> + +<p>"Who'll stop me? Quintana?"</p> + +<p>"Come," urged Beck, "and be a good pal. You can't manage it alone. We've +got all night to make Clinch talk. We know how, too. You'll get your +share<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Oh, stow it," said Smith, watching Clinch, who was reviving. He sat up +presently, and put both hands over his head. Smith touched him silently +on the shoulder and he turned his heavy, square head in a dazed way. +Blood striped his visage. He gazed dully at Smith for a little while, +then, seeming to recollect, the old glare began to light his pale eyes.</p> + +<p>The next instant, however, Beck spoke again, and Clinch turned in +astonishment and saw the two figures sitting there with backs toward +Smith and hands up.</p> + +<p>Clinch stared at the squatting forms, then slowly moved his head and +looked at Smith and his levelled pistol.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>"We know how to make a man squeal," said Harry Beck suddenly. "He'll +talk. We can make Clinch talk, no fear! Leave it to us, old pal. Are you +with us?" He started to look around over his shoulder and Smith hurled +another stick and hit him in the face.</p> + +<p>"Quiet there, Harry," he said. "What's my share if I go in with you?"</p> + +<p>"One sixth, same's we all get."</p> + +<p>"What's it worth?" asked Smith, with a motion of caution toward Clinch.</p> + +<p>"If I say a million you'll tell me I lie. But it's nearer three—or you +can have my share. Is it a go?"</p> + +<p>"You'll not hurt Clinch when he comes to?"</p> + +<p>"We'll make him talk, that's all. It may hurt him some."</p> + +<p>"You won't kill him?"</p> + +<p>"I swear by God<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Wait! Isn't it better to shoot him after he squeals? Here's a lovely +sink-hole handy."</p> + +<p>"Right-o! We'll make him talk first and then shove him in. Are you with +us?"</p> + +<p>"If you turn your head I'll blow the face off you, Harry," said Smith, +cautioning Clinch to silence with a gesture.</p> + +<p>"All right. Only you better make up your mind. That cove is likely to +wake up now at any time," grumbled Beck.</p> + +<p>Clinch looked at Smith. The latter smiled, leaned over, and whispered:</p> + +<p>"Can you walk all right?"</p> + +<p>Clinch nodded.</p> + +<p>"Well, we'd better beat it. Quintana's whole gang is in these woods, +somewhere, hunting for you, and they might stumble on us here, at any +moment." And, to the two men<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span> in front: "Lie down flat on your faces. +Don't stir; don't speak; or it's you for the sink-hole.... Lie down, I +tell you! That's it. Don't move till I tell you to."</p> + +<p>Clinch got up from where he was sitting, cast one murderous glance at +the prostrate forms, then followed Smith, noiselessly, over the stretch +of sphagnum moss.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>When they reached the house they saw Eve standing on the steps in her +night-dress and bare feet, holding a lantern.</p> + +<p>"Daddy," she whimpered, "I was frightened. I didn't know where you had +gone<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>Clinch put his arm around her, turned his bloody face and looked at +Smith.</p> + +<p>"It's <em>this</em> ," he said, "that I ain't forgetting, young fella. What you +done for me you done for <em>her</em> .</p> + +<p>"I gotta live to make a lady of her. That's why," he added thickly, "I'm +much obliged to you, Hal Smith.... Go to bed, girlie<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"You're bleeding, dad?"</p> + +<p>"Aw, a twig scratched me. I been in the woods with Hal. G'wan to bed."</p> + +<p>He went to the sink and washed his face, dried it, kissed the girl, and +gave her a gentle shove toward the stairs.</p> + +<p>"Hal and I is sittin' up talkin' business," he remarked, bolting the +door and all the shutters.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>When the girl had gone, Clinch went to a closet and brought back two +Winchester rifles, two shot guns, and a box of ammunition.</p> + +<p>"Goin' to see it out with me, Hal?"</p> + +<p>"Sure," smiled Smith.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>"Aw' right. Have a drink?"</p> + +<p>"No."</p> + +<p>"Aw' right. Where'll you set?"</p> + +<p>"Anywhere."</p> + +<p>"Aw' right. Set over there. They may try the back porch. I'll jest set +here a spell, n'then I'll kind er mosey 'round.... Plug the first fella +that tries a shutter, Hal."</p> + +<p>"You bet."</p> + +<p>Clinch came over and held out his hand.</p> + +<p>"You said a face-full that time when you says to me, 'Clinch,' you says, +'Eve <em>is</em> a lady.' ... I gotta fix her up. I gotta be alive to do it.... +That's why I'm greatly obliged to yeh, Hal."</p> + +<p>He took his rifle and walked slowly toward the pantry.</p> + +<p>"You bet," he muttered, "she <em>is</em> a lady, so help me God."</p> + + + +<hr /> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span><a name="iii" id="iii"></a> +<small><span class="smcap">Episode Three</span></small></h2> + +<h2>ON STAR PEAK</h2> + + +<h3>I</h3> + +<p class="cap">MIKE CLINCH regarded the jewels taken from José Quintana as legitimate +loot acquired in war.</p> + +<p>He was prepared to kill anybody who attempted to take the gems from him.</p> + +<p>At the very possibility his ruling passion blazed—his mania to make of +Eve Strayer a grand lady.</p> + +<p>But now, what he had feared for years had happened. Quintana had found +him,—Quintana, after all these years, had discovered the identity and +dwelling place of the obscure American soldier who had robbed him in the +wash-room of a Paris café. And Quintana was now in America, here in this +very wilderness, tracking the man who had despoiled him.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>Clinch, in his shirt-sleeves, carrying a rifle, came out on the log +veranda and sat down to think it over.</p> + +<p>He began to realise that he was likely to have trouble with a man as +cold-blooded and as dogged as himself.</p> + +<p>Nor did he doubt that those with Quintana were desperate men.</p> + +<p>On whom could he count? On nobody unless he paid their hire. None among +the lawless men who haunted his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span> backwoods "hotel" at Star Pond would +lift a finger to help him. Almost any among them would have robbed +him,—murdered him, probably,—if it were known that jewels were hidden +in the house.</p> + +<p>He could not trust Jake Kloon; Leverett was as treacherous as only a +born coward can be; Sid Hone, Harvey Chase, Blommers, Byron +Hastings,—he knew them all too well to trust them,—a sullen, +unscrupulous pack, partly cowardly, always fierce,—as are any creatures +that live furtively, feed only by their wits, and slink through life +just outside the frontiers of law.</p> + +<p>And yet, one of this gang had stood by him—Hal Smith—the man he +himself had been about to slay.</p> + +<p>Clinch got up from the bench where he had been sitting and walked down +to the pond where Hal Smith sat cleaning trout.</p> + +<p>"Hal," he said, "I been figuring some. Quintana don't dare call in the +constables. I can't afford to. Quintana and I've got to settle this on +our own."</p> + +<p>Smith slit open a ten-inch trout, stripped it, flung the entrails out +into the pond, soused the fish in water, and threw it into a milk pan.</p> + +<p>"Whose jewels were they in the beginning?" he enquired carelessly.</p> + +<p>"How do I know?"</p> + +<p>"If you ever found out<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"I don't want to. I got them in the war, anyway. And it don't make no +difference how I got 'em; Eve's going to be a lady if I go to the chair +for it. So that's that."</p> + +<p>Smith slit another trout, gutted it, flung away the viscera but laid +back the roe.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>"Shame to take them in October," he remarked, "but people must eat."</p> + +<p>"Same's me," nodded Clinch; "I don't want to kill no one, but Eve she's +gotta be a lady and ride in her own automobile with the proudest."</p> + +<p>"Does Eve know about the jewels?"</p> + +<p>Clinch's pale eyes, which had been roving over the wooded shores of Star +Pond, reverted to Smith.</p> + +<p>"I'd cut my throat before I'd tell her," he said softly.</p> + +<p>"She wouldn't stand for it?"</p> + +<p>"Hal, when you said to me, 'Eve's a lady, by God!' you swallered the +hull pie. That's the answer. A lady don't stand for what you and I don't +bother about."</p> + +<p>"Suppose she learns that you robbed the man who robbed somebody else of +these jewels."</p> + +<p>Clinch's pale eyes were fixed on him: "Only you and me know," he said in +his pleasant voice.</p> + +<p>"Quintana knows. His gang knows."</p> + +<p>Clinch's smile was terrifying. "I guess she ain't never likely to know +nothing, Hal."</p> + +<p>"What do you purpose to do, Mike?"</p> + +<p>"Still hunt."</p> + +<p>"For Quintana?"</p> + +<p>"I might mistake him for a deer. Them accidents is likely, too."</p> + +<p>"If Quintana catches you it will go hard with you, Mike."</p> + +<p>"Sure. I know."</p> + +<p>"He'll torture you to make you talk."</p> + +<p>"You think I'd talk, Hal?"</p> + +<p>Smith looked up into the light-coloured eyes. The pupils were pin +points. Then he went on cleaning fish.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>"Hal?"</p> + +<p>"What?"</p> + +<p>"If they get me,—but no matter; they ain't a-going to get me."</p> + +<p>"Were you going to tell me where those jewels are hidden, Mike?" +enquired the young man, still busy with his fish. He did not look around +when he spoke. Clinch's murderous gaze was fastened on the back of his +head.</p> + +<p>"Don't go to gettin' too damn nosey, Hal," he said in his always +agreeable voice.</p> + +<p>Smith soused all the fish in water again: "You'd better tell somebody if +you go gunning for Quintana."</p> + +<p>"Did I ask your advice?"</p> + +<p>"You did not," said the young man, smiling.</p> + +<p>"All right. Mind your business."</p> + +<p>Smith got up from the water's edge with his pan of trout:</p> + +<p>"That's what I shall do, Mike," he said, laughing. "So go on with your +private war; it's no button off <em>my</em> pants if Quintana gets you."</p> + +<p>He went away toward the ice-house with the trout. Eve Strayer, doing +chamber work, watched the young man from an upper room.</p> + +<p>The girl's instinct was to like Smith,—but that very instinct aroused +her distrust. What was a man of his breeding and education doing at +Clinch's dump? Why was he content to hang around and do chores? A man of +his type who has gone crooked enough to stick up a tourist in an +automobile nourishes higher—though probably perverted—ambitions than a +dollar a day and board.</p> + +<p>She heard Clinch's light step on the uncarpeted stair;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span> went on making +up Smith's bed; and smiled as her step-father came into the room, still +carrying his rifle.</p> + +<p>He had something else in his hand, too,—a flat, thin packet wrapped in +heavy paper and sealed all over with black wax.</p> + +<p>"Girlie," he said, "I want you should do a little errand for me this +morning. If you're spry it won't take long—time to go there and get +back to help with noon dinner."</p> + +<p>"Very well, dad."</p> + +<p>"Go git your pants on, girlie."</p> + +<p>"You want me to go into the woods?"</p> + +<p>"I want you to go to the hole in the rocks under Star Peak and lay this +packet in the hootch cache."</p> + +<p>She nodded, tucked in the sheets, smoothed blanket and pillow with deft +hands, went out to her own room. Clinch seated himself and turned a +blank face to the window.</p> + +<p>It was a sudden decision. He realised now that he couldn't keep the +jewels in his house. War was on with Quintana. The "hotel" would be the +goal for Quintana and his gang. And for Smith, too, if ever temptation +overpowered him. The house was liable to an attempt at robbery any +night, now;—any day, perhaps. It was no place for the packet he had +taken from José Quintana.</p> + +<p>Eve came in wearing grey shirt, breeches, and puttees. Clinch gave her +the packet.</p> + +<p>"What's in it, dad?" she asked smilingly.</p> + +<p>"Don't you get nosey, girlie. Come here."</p> + +<p>She went to him. He put his left arm around her.</p> + +<p>"You like me some, don't you, girlie?"</p> + +<p>"You know it, dad."</p> + +<p>"All right. You're all that matters to me ... since your<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span> mother went +and died ... after a year.... That was crool, girlie. Only a year. +Well, I ain't cared none for nobody since—only you, girlie."</p> + +<p>He touched the packet with his forefinger:</p> + +<p>"If I step out, that's yours. But I ain't a-going to step out. Put it +with the hootch. You know how to move that keystone?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, dad."</p> + +<p>"And watch out that no game protector and none of that damn +millionaire's wardens see you in the woods. No, nor none o' these here +fancy State Troopers. You gotta watch out <em>this</em> time, Eve. It means +everything to us—to you, girlie—and to me. Go tip-toe. Lay low, coming +and going. Take a rifle."</p> + +<p>Eve ran to her bed-room and returned with her Winchester and belt.</p> + +<p>"You shoot to kill," said Clinch grimly, "if anyone wants to stop you. +But lay low and you won't need to shoot nobody, girlie. G'wan out the +back way; Hal's in the ice house."</p> + + +<h3>II</h3> + +<p>Slim and straight as a young boy in her grey shirt and breeches, Eve +continued on lightly through the woods, her rifle over her shoulder, her +eyes of gentian-blue always alert.</p> + +<p>The morning turned warm; she pulled off her soft felt hat, shook out her +clipped curls, stripped open the shirt at her snowy throat where sweat +glimmered like melted frost.</p> + +<p>The forest was lovely in the morning sunlight—lovely and still—save +for the blue-jays—for the summer birds<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span> had gone and only birds +destined to a long Northern winter remained.</p> + +<p>Now and then, ahead of her, she saw a ruffed grouse wandering in the +trail. These, and a single tiny grey bird with a dreary note +interminably repeated, were the only living things she saw except here +and there a summer-battered butterfly of the Vanessa tribe flitting in +some stray sunbeam.</p> + +<p>The haunting odour of late autumn was in the air—delicately acrid—the +scent of frost-killed brake and ripening wild grasses, of brilliant dead +leaves and black forest loam pungent with mast from beech and oak.</p> + +<p>Eve's tread was light on the moist trail; her quick eyes missed +nothing—not the dainty imprint of deer, fresh made, nor the sprawling +insignia of rambling raccoons—nor the big barred owl huddled on a pine +limb overhead, nor, where the swift gravelly reaches of the brook caught +sunlight, did she miss the swirl and furrowing and milling of painted +trout on the spawning beds.</p> + +<p>Once she took cover, hearing something stirring; but it was only a +yearling buck that came out of the witch-hazel to stare, stamp, then +wheel and trot away, displaying the danger signal.</p> + +<p>In her cartridge-pouch she carried the flat, sealed packet which Clinch +had trusted to her. The sack swayed gently as she strode on, slapping +her left hip at every step; and always her subconscious mind remained on +guard and aware of it; and now and then she dropped her hand to feel of +the pouch and strap.</p> + +<p>The character of the forest was now changing as she advanced. The first +tamaracks appeared, slim, silvery<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span> trunks, crowned with the gold of +autumn foliage, outer sentinels of that vast maze of swamp and stream +called Owl Marsh, the stronghold and refuge of forest wild +things—sometimes the sanctuary of hunted men.</p> + +<p>From Star Peak's left flank an icy stream clatters down to the level +floor of the woods, here; and it was here that Eve had meant to quench +her thirst with a mouthful of sweet water.</p> + +<p>But as she approached the tiny ford, warily, she saw a saddled horse +tied to a sapling and a man seated on a mossy log.</p> + +<p>The trappings of horse, the grey-green uniform of the man, left no room +for speculation; a trooper of the State Constabulary was seated there.</p> + +<p>His cap was off; his head rested on his palm. Elbow on knee, he sat +there gazing at the water—watching the slim fish, perhaps, darting up +stream toward their bridal-beds hidden far away at the headwaters.</p> + +<p>A detour was imperative. The girl, from the shelter of a pine, looked +out cautiously at the trooper. The sudden sight of him had merely +checked her; now the recognition of his uniform startled her heart out +of its tranquil rhythm and set the blood burning in her cheeks.</p> + +<p>There was a memory of such a man seared into the girl's very soul;—a +man whose head and shoulders resembled this man's,—who had the same +bright hair, the same slim and powerful body,—and who moved, too, as +this young man moved.</p> + +<p>The trooper stirred, lifted his head to relight his pipe.</p> + +<p>The girl knew him. Her heart stood still; then heart and blood ran riot +and she felt her knees tremble,—felt weak as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span> she rested against the +pine's huge trunk and covered her face with unsteady fingers.</p> + +<p>Until the moment, Eve had never dreamed what the memory of this man +really meant to her,—never dreamed that she had capacity for emotion so +utterly overwhelming.</p> + +<p>Even now confusion, shame, fear were paramount. All she wanted was to +get away,—get away and still her heart's wild beating,—control the +strange tremor that possessed her, recover mind and sense and breath.</p> + +<p>She drew her hand from her eyes and looked upon the man she had +attempted to kill,—upon the young man who had wrestled her off her feet +and handcuffed her,—and who had bathed her bleeding mouth with +sphagnum,—and who had kissed her hands<span class="nowrap">——</span></p> + +<p>She was trembling so that she became frightened. The racket of the brook +in his ears safeguarded her in a measure. She bent over nearly double, +her rifle at a trail, and cautiously began the detour.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>When at length the wide circle through the woods had been safely +accomplished and Eve was moving out through the thickening ranks of +tamarack, her heart, which seemed to suffocate her, quieted; and she +leaned against a shoulder of rock, strangely tired.</p> + +<p>After a while she drew from her pocket <em>his</em> handkerchief, and looked at +it. The square of cambric bore his initials, J. S. Blood from her lip +remained on it. She had not washed out the spots.</p> + +<p>She put it to her lips again, mechanically. A faint odour of tobacco +still clung to it.</p> + +<p>By every law of loyalty, pride, self-respect, she should<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span> have held this +man her enemy. Instead, she held his handkerchief against her +lips,—crushed it there suddenly, closing her eyes while the colour +surged and surged through her skin from throat to hair.</p> + +<p>Then, wearily, she lifted her head and looked out into the grey and +empty vista of her life, where the dreary years seemed to stretch like +milestones away, away into an endless waste.</p> + +<p>She put the handkerchief into her pocket, shouldered her rifle, moved on +without looking about her,—a mistake which only the emotion of the +moment could account for in a girl so habituated to caution,—for she +had gone only a few rods before a man's strident voice halted her:</p> + +<p>"<em>Halte là! Crosse en air!</em> "</p> + +<p>"Drop that rifle!" came another voice from behind her. "You're covered! +Throw your gun on the ground!"</p> + +<p>She stood as though paralysed. To the right and left she heard people +trampling through the thicket toward her.</p> + +<p>"Down with that gun, damn you!" repeated the voice, breathless from +running. All around her men came floundering and crashing toward her +through the undergrowth. She could see some of them.</p> + +<p>As she stooped to place her rifle on the dead leaves, she drew the flat +packet from her cartridge sack at the same time and slid it deftly under +a rotting log. Then, calm but very pale, she stood upright to face +events.</p> + +<p>The first man wore a red and yellow bandanna handkerchief over the lower +half of his face, pulled tightly across a bony nose. He held a long +pistol nearly parallel to his own body; and when he came up to where she +was standing he poked the muzzle into her stomach.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>She did not flinch; he said nothing; she looked intently into the two +ratty eyes fastened on her over the edge of his bandanna.</p> + +<p>Five other men were surrounding her, but they all wore white masks of +vizard shape, revealing chin and mouth.</p> + +<p>They were different otherwise, also, wearing various sorts and patterns +of sport clothes, brand new, and giving them an odd, foreign appearance.</p> + +<p>What troubled her most was the silence they maintained. The man wearing +the bandanna was the only one who seemed at all a familiar +figure,—merely, perhaps, because he was American in build, clothing, +and movement.</p> + +<p>He took her by the shoulder, turned her around and gave her a shove +forward. She staggered a step or two; he gave her another shove and she +comprehended that she was to keep on going.</p> + +<p>Presently she found herself in a steep, wet deer-trail rising upward +through a gully. She knew that runway. It led up Star Peak.</p> + +<p>Behind her as she climbed she heard the slopping, panting tread of men; +her wind was better than theirs; she climbed lithely upward, setting a +pace which finally resulted in a violent jerk backward,—a savage, +wordless admonition to go more slowly.</p> + +<p>As she climbed she wondered whether she should have fired an alarm shot +on the chance of the State Trooper, Stormont, hearing it.</p> + +<p>But she had thought only of the packet at the moment of surprise. And +now she wondered whether, when freed, she could ever again find that +rotting log.</p> + +<p>Up, up, always up along the wet gully, deep with silt and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span> +frost-splintered rock, she toiled, the heavy gasping of men behind her. +Twice she was jerked to a halt while her escort rested.</p> + +<p>Once, without turning, she said unsteadily: "Who are you? What have I +done to you?"</p> + +<p>There was no reply.</p> + +<p>"What are you going to do to me<span class="nowrap">——"</span> she began again, and was shaken by +the shoulder until silent.</p> + +<p>At last the vast arch of the eastern sky sprang out ahead, where stunted +spruces stood out against the sunshine and the intense heat of midday +fell upon a bare table-land of rock and moss and fern.</p> + +<p>As she came out upon the level, the man behind her took both her arms +and pulled them back and somebody bandaged her eyes. Then a hand closed +on her left arm and, so guided, she stumbled and crept forward across +the rocks for a few moments until her guide halted her and forced her +into a sitting position on a smooth, flat boulder.</p> + +<p>She heard the crunching of heavy feet all around her, whispering made +hoarse by breath exhausted, movement across rock and scrub, retreating +steps.</p> + +<p>For an interminable time she sat there alone in the hot sun, drenched to +the skin in sweat, listening, thinking, striving to find a reason for +this lawless outrage.</p> + +<p>After a long while she heard somebody coming across the rocks, stiffened +as she listened with some vague presentiment of evil.</p> + +<p>Somebody had halted beside her. After a pause she was aware of nimble +fingers busy with the bandage over her eyes.</p> + +<p>At first, when freed, the light blinded her. By degrees she was able to +distinguish the rocky crest of Star Peak,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span> with the tops of tall trees +appearing level with the rocks from depths below.</p> + +<p>Then she turned, slowly, and looked at the man who had seated himself +beside her.</p> + +<p>He wore a white mask over a delicate, smoothly shaven face.</p> + +<p>His soft hat and sporting clothes were dark grey, evidently new. And she +noticed his hands—long, elegantly made, smooth, restless, playing with +a pencil and some sheets of paper on his knees.</p> + +<p>As she met his brilliant eyes behind the mask, his delicate, thin lips +grew tense in what seemed to be a smile—or a soundless sort of laugh.</p> + +<p>"Veree happee," he said, "to make the acquaintance. Pardon my +unceremony, miss, but onlee necissitee compels. Are you, perhaps, a +little rested?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"Ah! Then, if you permit, we proceed with affairs of moment. You will be +sufficiently kind to write down what I say. Yes?"</p> + +<p>He placed paper and pencil in Eve's hand. Without demurring or +hesitation she made ready to write, her mind groping wildly for the +reason of it all.</p> + +<p>"Write," he said, with his silent laugh which was more like the +soundless snarl of a lynx unafraid:</p> + +<p>"To Mike Clinch, my fathaire, from his child, Eve.... I am hostage, +held by José Quintana. Pay what you owe him and I go free.</p> + +<p>"For each day delay he sends to you one finger which will be severed +from my right hand<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>Eve's slender fingers trembled; she looked up at the masked man, stared +steadily into his brilliant eyes.</p> + +<p>"Proceed miss, if you are so amiable," he said softly.</p> + +<p>She wrote on: "—One finger for every day's delay. The whole hand at the +week's end. The other hand then, finger by finger. Then, alas! the right +foot<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>Eve trembled.</p> + +<p>"Proceed," he said softly.</p> + +<p>She wrote: "If you agree you shall pay what you owe to José Quintana in +this manner: you shall place a stick at the edge of the Star Pond where +the Star rivulet flows out. Upon this stick you shall tie a white rag. +At the foot of the stick you shall lay the parcel which contains your +indebt to José Quintana.</p> + +<p>"Failing this, by to-night <em>one finger</em> at sunset."</p> + +<p>The man paused: Eve waited, dumb under the surging confusion in her +brain. A sort of incredulous horror benumbed her, through which she +still heard and perceived.</p> + +<p>"Be kind enough to sign it with your name," said the man pleasantly.</p> + +<p>Eve signed.</p> + +<p>Then the masked man took the letter, got up, removed his hat.</p> + +<p>"I am Quintana," he said. "I keep my word. A thousand thanks and +apologies, miss. I trust that your detention may be brief and not too +disagreeable. I place at your feet my humble respects."</p> + +<p>He bowed, put on his hat, and walked quickly away. And she saw him +descend the rocks to the eastward, where the peak slopes.</p> + +<p>When Quintana had disappeared behind the summit scrub<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span> and rocks, Eve +slowly stood up and looked about her at the rocky pulpit so familiar.</p> + +<p>There was only one way out. Quintana had gone that way. His men no doubt +guarded it. Otherwise, sheer precipices confronted her.</p> + +<p>She walked to the western edge where a sheet of slippery reindeer moss +clothed the rock. Below the mountain fell away to the valley where she +had been made prisoner.</p> + +<p>She looked out over the vast panorama of wilderness and mountain, range +on range stretching blue to the horizon. She looked down into the depths +of the valley where deep under the flaming foliage of October, +somewhere, a State Trooper was sitting, cheek on hand, beside a +waterfall—or, perhaps, riding slowly through a forest which she might +never gaze upon again.</p> + +<p>There was a noise on the rocks behind her. A masked man came out of the +spruce scrub, laid a blanket on the rocks, placed a loaf of bread, some +cheese, and a tin pail full of water upon it, motioned her, and went +away through the dwarf spruces.</p> + +<p>Eve walked slowly to the blanket. She drank out of the tin pail. Then +she set aside the food, lay down, and buried her quivering face in her +arms.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>The sun was half way between zenith and horizon when she heard somebody +coming, and rose to a sitting posture. Her visitor was Quintana.</p> + +<p>He came up to her quite close, stood with glittering eyes intent upon +her.</p> + +<p>After a moment he handed her a letter.</p> + +<p>She could scarcely unfold it, she trembled so:</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>"Girlie, for God's sake give that packet to Quintana and come on home. +I'm near crazy with it all. What the hell's anything worth beside you +girlie. I don't give a damn for nothing only you, so come on quick. +Dad."</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>After a little while she lifted her eyes to Quintana.</p> + +<p>"So," he said quietly, "you are the little she-fox that has learned +tricks already."</p> + +<p>"What do you mean?"</p> + +<p>"Where is that packet?"</p> + +<p>"I haven't it."</p> + +<p>"Where is it?"</p> + +<p>She shook her head slightly.</p> + +<p>"You had a packet," he insisted fiercely. "Look here! Regard!" and he +spread out a penciled sheet in Clinch's hand:</p> + +<div class="blockquot"> +<p class="noi">"José Quintana:</p> + +<p>"You win. She's got that stuff with her. Take your damn junk and +let my girl go.</p> + +<p class="close">"<span class="smcap">Mike Clinch</span>."</p> +</div> + +<p>"Well," said Quintana, a thin, strident edge to his tone.</p> + +<p>"My father is mistaken. I haven't any packet."</p> + +<p>The man's visage behind his mask flushed darkly. Without warning or +ceremony he caught Eve by the throat and tore open her shirt. Then, +hissing and cursing and panting with his own violence, he searched her +brutally and without mercy—flung her down and tore off her spiral +puttees and even her shoes and stockings, now apparently beside himself +with fury, puffing, gasping, always with a fierce, nasal sort of whining +undertone like an animal worrying its kill.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>"Cowardly beast!" she panted, fighting him with all her +strength—"filthy, cowardly beast!<span class="nowrap">——"</span> striking at him, wrenching his +grasp away, snatching at the disordered clothing half stripped from her.</p> + +<p>His hunting knife fell clattering and she fought to get it, but he +struck her with his open hand, knocking her down at his feet, and stood +glaring at her with every tooth bared.</p> + +<p>"So," he cried, "I give you ten minutes, make up your mind, tell me what +you do with that packet."</p> + +<p>He wiped the blood from his face where she had struck him.</p> + +<p>"You don't know José Quintana. No! You shall make his acquaintance. +Yes!"</p> + +<p>Eve got up on naked feet, quivering from head to foot, striving to +button the grey shirt at her throat.</p> + +<p>"Where?" he demanded, beside himself.</p> + +<p>Her mute lips only tightened.</p> + +<p>"Ver' well, by God!" he cried. "I go make me some fire. You like it, eh? +We shall put one toe in the fire until it burn off. Yes? Eh? How you +like it? Eh?"</p> + +<p>The girl's trembling hands continued busy with her clothing.</p> + +<p>"So!" he said, hoarsely, "you remain dumb! Well, then, in ten minutes +you shall talk!"</p> + +<p>He walked toward her, pushed her savagely aside, and strode on into the +spruce thicket.</p> + +<p>The instant he disappeared Eve caught up the knife he had dropped, knelt +down on the blanket and fell to cutting it into strips.</p> + +<p>The hunting knife was like a razor; the feverish business<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span> was +accomplished in a few moments, the pieces knotted, the cord strained in +a desperate test over her knee.</p> + +<p>And now she ran to the precipice where, ten feet below, the top of a +great pine protruded from the gulf.</p> + +<p>On the edge of the abyss was a spruce root. It looked dead, wedged deep +between two rocks; but with all her strength she could not pull it out.</p> + +<p>Sobbing, breathless, she tied her blanket rope to this, threw the other +end over the cliff's edge, and, not giving herself time to think, lay +flat, grasped the knotted line, swung off.</p> + +<p>Knot by knot she went down. Half-way her naked feet brushed the needles. +She looked over her shoulder, behind and down. Then, teeth clenched, she +lowered herself steadily as she had learned to do in the school +gymnasium, down, down, until her legs came astride of a pine limb.</p> + +<p>It bent, swayed, gave with her, letting her sag to a larger limb below. +This she clasped, letting go her rope.</p> + +<p>Already, from the mountain's rocky crest above, she heard excited cries. +Once, on her breakneck descent, she looked up through the foliage of the +pine; and she saw, far up against the sky, a white-masked face looking +over the edge of the precipice.</p> + +<p>But if it were Quintana or another of his people she could not tell. +And, again looking down, she began again the terrible descent.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>An hour later, Trooper Stormont of the State Constabulary, sat his horse +in amazement to see a ragged, breathless, boyish figure speeding toward +him among the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span> tamaracks, her naked feet splashing through pool and mire +and sphagnum.</p> + +<p>"Good heavens!" he exclaimed as she flung herself against his stirrup, +sobbing, hysterical, and clinging to his knee.</p> + +<p>"Take me back," she stammered, "—take me back to daddy! I can't—go +on—another step<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>He leaned down, swung her up to his saddle in front, holding her cradled +in his arms.</p> + +<p>"Lie still," he said coolly; "you're all right now."</p> + +<p>For another second he sat looking down at her, at the dishevelled hair, +the gasping mouth,—at the rags clothing her, and at the flat packet +clasped convulsively to her breast.</p> + +<p>Then he spoke in a low voice to his horse, guiding left with one knee.</p> + + + +<hr /> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span><a name="iv" id="iv"></a> +<small><span class="smcap">Episode Four</span></small></h2> + +<h2>A PRIVATE WAR</h2> + + +<h3>I</h3> + +<p class="cap">WHEN State Trooper Stormont rode up to Clinch's with Eve Strayer lying +in his arms, Mike Clinch strode out of the motley crowd around the +tavern, laid his rifle against a tree, and stretched forth his powerful +hands to receive his stepchild.</p> + +<p>He held her, cradled, looking down at her in silence as the men +clustered around.</p> + +<p>"Eve," he said hoarsely, "be you hurted?"</p> + +<p>The girl opened her sky-blue eyes.</p> + +<p>"I'm all right, dad, ... just tired.... I've got your parcel ... +safe...."</p> + +<p>"To hell with the gol-dinged parcel," he almost sobbed; "—did Quintana +harm you?"</p> + +<p>"No, dad."</p> + +<p>As he carried her to the veranda the packet fell from her cramped +fingers. Clinch kicked it under a chair and continued on into the house +and up the stairs to Eve's bedroom.</p> + +<p>Flat on the bed, the girl opened her drowsy eyes again, unsmiling.</p> + +<p>"Did that dirty louse misuse you?" demanded Clinch unsteadily. "G'wan +tell me, girlie."</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>"He knocked me down.... He went away to get fire to make me talk. I cut +up the blanket they gave me and made a rope. Then I went over the cliff +into the big pine below. That was all, dad."</p> + +<p>Clinch filled a tin basin and washed the girl's torn feet. When he had +dried them he kissed them. She felt his unshaven lips trembling, heard +him whimper for the first time in his life.</p> + +<p>"Why the hell didn't you give Quintana the packet?" he demanded. "What +does that count for—what does any damn thing count for against you, +girlie?"</p> + +<p>She looked up at him out of heavy-lidded eyes: "You told me to take good +care of it."</p> + +<p>"It's only a little truck I'd laid by for you," he retorted unsteadily, +"—a few trifles for to make a grand lady of you when the time's ripe. +'Tain't worth a thorn in your little foot to me.... The hull gol-dinged +world full o' money ain't worth that there stone-bruise onto them little +white feet o' yourn, Eve.</p> + +<p>"Look at you now—my God, look at you there, all peaked an' scairt an' +bleedin'—plum tuckered out, 'n' all ragged 'n' dirty<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>A blaze of fury flared in his small pale eyes: "—And he hit you, too, +did he?—that skunk! Quintana done that to my little girlie, did he?"</p> + +<p>"I don't know if it was Quintana. I don't know who he was, dad," she +murmured drowsily.</p> + +<p>"Masked, wa'n't he?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>Clinch's iron visage twitched and quivered. He gnawed his thin lips into +control:</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>"Girlie, I gotta go out a spell. But I ain't a-leavin' you alone here. +I'll git somebody to set up with you. You jest lie snug and don't think +about nothin' till I come back."</p> + +<p>"Yes, dad," she sighed, closing her eyes.</p> + +<p>Clinch stood looking at her for a moment, then he went downstairs +heavily, and out to the veranda where State Trooper Stormont still sat +his saddle, talking to Hal Smith. On the porch a sullen crowd of +backwoods riff-raff lounged in silence, awaiting events.</p> + +<p>Clinch called across to Smith: "Hey, Hal, g'wan up and set with Eve a +spell while she's nappin'. Take a gun."</p> + +<p>Smith said to Stormont in a low voice: "Do me a favour, Jack?"</p> + +<p>"You bet."</p> + +<p>"That girl of Clinch's is in real danger if left here alone. But I've +got another job on my hands. Can you keep a watch on her till I return?"</p> + +<p>"Can't you tell me a little more, Jim?"</p> + +<p>"I will, later. Do you mind helping me out now?"</p> + +<p>"All right."</p> + +<p>Trooper Stormont swung out of his saddle and led his horse away toward +the stable.</p> + +<p>Hal Smith went into the bar where Clinch stood, oiling a rifle.</p> + +<p>"G'wan upstairs," he muttered. "I got a private war on. It's me or +Quintana, now."</p> + +<p>"You're going after Quintana?" inquired Smith, carelessly.</p> + +<p>"I be. And I want you should git your gun and set up by Evie. And I want +you should kill any living human son of a slut that comes botherin' +around this here hotel."</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>"I'm going after Quintana with you, Mike."</p> + +<p>"B'gosh, you ain't. You're a-goin' to keep watch here."</p> + +<p>"No. Trooper Stormont has promised to stay with Eve. You'll need every +man to-day, Mike. This isn't a deer drive."</p> + +<p>Clinch let his rifle sag across the hollow of his left arm.</p> + +<p>"Did you beef to that trooper?" he demanded in his pleasant, misleading +way.</p> + +<p>"Do you think I'm crazy?" retorted Smith.</p> + +<p>"Well, what the hell<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"They all know that some man used your girl roughly. That's all I said +to him—'keep an eye on Eve until we can get back.' And I tell you, +Mike, if we drive Star Peak we won't be back till long after sundown."</p> + +<p>Clinch growled: "I ain't never asked no favours of no State Trooper<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"He did you a favour, didn't he? He brought your daughter in."</p> + +<p>"Yes, 'n' he'd jail us all if he got anything on us."</p> + +<p>"Yes; and he'll shoot to kill if any of Quintana's people come here and +try to break in."</p> + +<p>Clinch grunted, peeled off his coat and got into a leather vest +bristling with cartridge loops.</p> + +<p>Trooper Stormont came in the back door, carrying his rifle.</p> + +<p>"Some rough fellow been bothering your little daughter, Clinch?" he +inquired. "The child was nearly all in when she met me out by Owl +Marsh—clothes half torn off her back, bare-foot and bleeding. She's a +plucky youngster. I'll say so, Clinch. If you think the fellow may come +here to annoy her I'll keep an eye on her till you return."</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>Clinch went up to Stormont, put his powerful hands on the young fellow's +shoulders.</p> + +<p>After a moment's glaring silence: "You <em>look</em> clean. I guess you be, +too. I wanta tell you I'll cut the guts outa any guy that lays the heft +of a single finger onto Eve."</p> + +<p>"I'd do so, too, if I were you," said Stormont.</p> + +<p>"Would ye? Well, I guess you're a real man, too, even if you're a State +Trooper," growled Clinch. "G'wan up. She's a-nappin'. If she wakes up +you kinda talk pleasant to her. You act kind pleasant and cosy. She +ain't had no ma. You tell her to set snug and ca'm. Then you cook her a +egg if she wants it. There's pie, too. I cal'late to be back by +sundown."</p> + +<p>"Nearer morning," remarked Smith.</p> + +<p>Stormont shrugged. "I'll stay until you show up, Clinch."</p> + +<p>The latter took another rifle from the corner and handed it to Smith +with a loop of ammunition.</p> + +<p>"Come on," he grunted.</p> + +<p>On the veranda he strode up to the group of sullen, armed men who +regarded his advent in expressionless silence.</p> + +<p>Sid Hone was there, and Harvey Chase, and the Hastings boys, and +Cornelius Blommers.</p> + +<p>"You fellas comin'?" inquired Clinch.</p> + +<p>"Where?" drawled Sid Hone.</p> + +<p>"Me an' Hal Smith is cal'kalatin' to drive Star Peak. It ain't a deer, +neither."</p> + +<p>There ensued a grim interval. Clinch's wintry smile began to glimmer.</p> + +<p>"Booze agents or game protectors? Which?" asked<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span> Byron Hastings. "They +both look like deer—if a man gits mad enough."</p> + +<p>Clinch's smile became terrifying. "I shell out five hundred dollars for +every <em>deer</em> that's dropped on Star Peak to-day," he said. "And I hope +there won't be no accidents and no mistakin' no <em>stranger</em> for a deer," +he added, wagging his great, square head.</p> + +<p>"Them accidents is liable to happen," remarked Hone, reflectively.</p> + +<p>After another pause: "Where's Jake Kloon?" inquired Smith.</p> + +<p>Nobody seemed to know.</p> + +<p>"He was here when Mike called me into the bar," insisted Smith. "Where'd +he go?"</p> + +<p>Then, of a sudden, Clinch recollected the packet which he had kicked +under a veranda chair. It was no longer there.</p> + +<p>"Any o' you fellas seen a package here on the pyazza?" demanded Clinch +harshly.</p> + +<p>"Jake Kloon, he had somethin'," drawled Chase. "I supposed it was his +lunch. Mebbe 'twas, too."</p> + +<p>In the intense stillness Clinch glared into one face after another.</p> + +<p>"Boys," he said in his softly modulated voice, "I kinda guess there's a +rat amongst us. I wouldn't like for to be that there rat—no, not for a +billion hundred dollars. No, I wouldn't. Becuz that there rat has bit my +little girlie, Eve,—like that there deer bit her up onto Star Peak.... +No, I wouldn't like for to be that there rat. Fer he's a-goin' to die +like a rat, same's that there deer is a-goin' to die like a deer.... +Anyone seen which way Jake Kloon went?"</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>"Now you speak of it," said Byron Hastings, "seems like I noticed Jake +and Earl Leverett down by the woods near the pond. I kinda disremembered +when you asked, but I guess I seen them."</p> + +<p>"Sure," said Sid Hone. "Now you mention it, I seen 'em, too. Thinks I to +m'self, they is pickin' them blackberries down to the crick. Yas, I seen +'em."</p> + +<p>Clinch tossed his rifle across his left shoulder.</p> + +<p>"Rats an' deer," he said pleasantly. "Them's the articles we're lookin' +for. Only for God's sake be careful you don't mistake a <em>man</em> for 'em in +the woods."</p> + +<p>One or two men laughed.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>On the edge of Owl Marsh Clinch halted in the trail, and, as his men +came up, he counted them with a cold eye.</p> + +<p>"Here's the runway and this here hazel bush is my station," he said. +"You fellas do the barkin'. You, Sid Hone, and you, Corny, start drivin' +from the west. Harve, you yelp 'em from the north by Lynx Brook. Jim and +Byron, you get twenty minutes to go 'round to the eastward and drive by +the Slide. And you, Hal Smith,"—he looked around—"where 'n hell be +you, Hal?<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>Smith came up from the bog's edge.</p> + +<p>"Send 'em out," he said in a low voice. "I've got Jake's tracks in the +bog."</p> + +<p>Clinch motioned his beaters to their duty. "Twenty minutes," he reminded +Hone, Chase, and Blommers, "before you start drivin'." And, to the +Hastings boys: "If you shoot, aim low for their bellies. Don't leave no +blood around. Scrape it up. We bury what we get."</p> + +<p>He and Smith stood looking after the five slouching<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span> figures moving away +toward their blind trails. When all had disappeared:</p> + +<p>"Show me Jake's mark," he said calmly.</p> + +<p>Smith led him to the edge of the bog, knelt down, drew aside a branch of +witch-hopple. A man's footprint was plainly visible on the mud.</p> + +<p>"That's Jake," said Clinch slowly. "I know them half-soled boots o' +hisn." He lifted another branch. "There's another man's track!"</p> + +<p>"The other is probably Leverett's."</p> + +<p>"Likely. He's got thin feet."</p> + +<p>"I think I'd better go after them," said Smith, reflectively.</p> + +<p>"They'll plug you, you poor jackass—two o' them like that, and one +a-settin' up to watch out. Hell! Be you tired o' bed an' board?"</p> + +<p>Smith smiled: "Don't you worry, Mike."</p> + +<p>"Why? You think you're that smart? Jest becuz you stuck up a tourist you +think you're cock o' the North Woods—with them two foxes lyin' out for +to snap you up? Hey? Why, you poor dumb thing, Jake runs Canadian hootch +for a livin' and Leverett's a trap thief! What could <em>you</em> do with a +pair o' foxes like that?"</p> + +<p>"Catch 'em," said Smith, coolly. "You mind your business, Mike."</p> + +<p>As he shouldered his rifle and started into the marsh, Clinch dropped a +heavy hand on his shoulder; but the young man shook it off.</p> + +<p>"Shut up," he said sharply. "You've a private war on your hands. So have +I. I'll take care of my own."</p> + +<p>"What's <em>your</em> grievance?" demanded Clinch, surprised.</p> + +<p>"Jake Kloon played a dirty trick on me."</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>"When was that?"</p> + +<p>"Not very long ago."</p> + +<p>"I hadn't heard," said Clinch.</p> + +<p>"Well, you hear it now, don't you? All right. All right; I'm going after +him."</p> + +<p>As he started again across the marsh, Clinch called out in a guarded +voice: "Take good care of that packet if you catch them rats. It belongs +to Eve."</p> + +<p>"I'll take such good care of it," replied Smith, "that its proper owner +need not worry."</p> + + +<h3>II</h3> + +<p>The "proper owner" of the packet was, at that moment, on the Atlantic +Ocean, travelling toward the United States.</p> + +<p>Four other pretended owners of the Grand Duchess Theodorica's jewels, +totally unconscious of anything impending which might impair their +several titles to the gems, were now gathered together in a wilderness +within a few miles of one another.</p> + +<p>José Quintana lay somewhere in the forests with his gang, fiercely +planning the recovery of the treasure of which Clinch had once robbed +him. Clinch squatted on his runway, watching the mountain flank with +murderous eyes. It was no longer the Flaming Jewel which mattered. His +master passion ruled him now. Those who had offered violence to Eve must +be reckoned with first of all. The hand that struck Eve Strayer had +offered mortal insult to Mike Clinch.</p> + +<p>As for the third pretender to the Flaming Jewel, Jake Kloon, he was now +travelling in a fox's circle toward Drowned Valley—that shaggy +wilderness of slime and tamarack<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span> and depthless bog which touches the +northwest base of Star Peak. He was not hurrying, having no thought of +pursuit. Behind him plodded Leverett, the trap thief, very, very busy +with his own ideas.</p> + +<p>To Leverett's repeated requests that Kloon halt and open the packet to +see what it contained, Kloon gruffly refused.</p> + +<p>"What do we care what's in it?" he said. "We get ten thousand apiece +over our rifles for it from them guys. Ain't it a good enough job for +you?"</p> + +<p>"Maybe we make more if we take what's inside it for ourselves," argued +Leverett. "Let's take a peek, anyway."</p> + +<p>"Naw. I don't want no peek nor nothin'. The ten thousand comes too easy. +More might scare us. Let that guy, Quintana, have what's his'n. All I +ask is my rake-off. You allus was a dirty, thieving mink, Earl. Let's +give him his and take ours and git. I'm going to Albany to live. You bet +I don't stay in no woods where Mike Clinch dens."</p> + +<p>They plodded on, arguing, toward their rendezvous with Quintana's +outpost on the edge of Drowned Valley.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>The fourth pretender to the pearls, rubies, and great gem called the +Flaming Jewel, stolen from the young Grand Duchess Theodorica of +Esthonia by José Quintana, was an unconscious pretender, entirely +innocent of the rôle assigned her by Clinch.</p> + +<p>For Eve Strayer had never heard where the packet came from or what it +contained. All she knew was that her stepfather had told her that it +belonged to her. And the knowledge left her incurious.</p> + + + +<h3><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>III</h3> + +<p>Eve slept the sleep of mental and physical exhaustion. Reaction from +fear brings a fatigue more profound than that which follows physical +overstrain. But the healthy mind, like the healthy body, disposes very +thoroughly of toxics which arise from terror and exhaustion.</p> + +<p>The girl slept profoundly, calmly. Her bruised young mind and body left +her undisturbed. There was neither restlessness nor fever. Sleep swept +her with its clean, sweet tide, cleansing the superb youth and health of +her with the most wonderful balm in the Divine pharmacy.</p> + +<p>She awoke late in the afternoon, opened her flower-blue eyes, and saw +State Trooper Stormont sitting by the window, and gazing out.</p> + +<p>Perhaps Eve's confused senses mistook the young man for a vision; for +she lay very still, nor stirred even her little finger.</p> + +<p>After a while Stormont glanced around at her. A warm, delicate colour +stained her skin slowly, evenly, from throat to hair.</p> + +<p>He got up and came over to the bed.</p> + +<p>"How do you feel?" he asked, awkwardly.</p> + +<p>"Where is dad?" she managed to inquire in a steady voice.</p> + +<p>"He won't be back till late. He asked me to stick around—in case you +needed anything<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>The girl's clear eyes searched his.</p> + +<p>"Trooper Stormont?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, Eve."</p> + +<p>"Dad's gone after Quintana."</p> + +<p>"Is he the fellow who misused you?"</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>"I think so."</p> + +<p>"Who is he?"</p> + +<p>"I don't know."</p> + +<p>"Is he your enemy or your stepfather's?"</p> + +<p>But the girl shook her head: "I can't discuss dad's affairs +with—with<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"With a State Trooper," smiled Stormont. "That's all right, Eve. You +don't have to."</p> + +<p>There was a pause; Stormont stood beside the bed, looking down at her +with his diffident, boyish smile. And the girl gazed back straight into +his eyes—eyes she had so often looked into in her dreams.</p> + +<p>"I'm to cook you an egg and bring you some pie," he remarked, still +smiling.</p> + +<p>"Did dad say I am to stay in bed?"</p> + +<p>"That was my inference. Do you feel very lame and sore?"</p> + +<p>"My feet burn."</p> + +<p>"You poor kid!... Would you let me look at them? I have a first-aid +packet with me."</p> + +<p>After a moment she nodded and turned her face on the pillow. He drew +aside the cover a little, knelt down beside the bed.</p> + +<p>Then he rose and went downstairs to the kitchen. There was hot water in +the kettle. He fetched it back, bathed her feet, drew out from cut and +scratch the flakes of granite-grit and brier-points that still remained +there.</p> + +<p>From his first-aid packet he took a capsule, dissolved it, sterilized +the torn skin, then bandaged both feet with a deliciously cool salve, +and drew the sheets into place.</p> + +<p>Eve had not stirred nor spoken. He washed and dried<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span> his hands and came +back, drawing his chair nearer to the bedside.</p> + +<p>"Sleep, if you feel like it," he said pleasantly.</p> + +<p>As she made no sound or movement he bent over to see if she had already +fallen asleep. And noticed that her flushed cheeks were wet with tears.</p> + +<p>"Are you suffering?" he asked gently.</p> + +<p>"No.... You are so wonderfully kind...."</p> + +<p>"Why shouldn't I be kind?" he said, amused and touched by the girl's +emotion.</p> + +<p>"I tried to shoot you once. That is why you ought to hate me."</p> + +<p>He began to laugh: "Is <em>that</em> what you're thinking about?"</p> + +<p>"I—never can—forget<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Nonsense. We're quits anyway. Do you remember what I did to <em>you</em> ?"</p> + +<p>He was thinking of the handcuffs. Then, in her vivid blush he read what +she was thinking. And he remembered his lips on her palms.</p> + +<p>He, too, now was blushing brilliantly at memory of that swift, sudden +rush of romantic tenderness which this girl had witnessed that memorable +day on Owl Marsh.</p> + +<p>In the hot, uncomfortable silence, neither spoke. He seated himself +after a while. And, after a while, she turned on her pillow part way +toward him.</p> + +<p>Somehow they both understood that it was friendship which had subtly +filled the interval that separated them since that amazing day.</p> + +<p>"I've often thought of you," he said,—as though they had been +discussing his absence.</p> + +<p>No hour of the waking day that she had not thought of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span> him. But she did +not say so now. After a little while:</p> + +<p>"Is yours a lonely life?" she asked in a low voice.</p> + +<p>"Sometimes. But I love the forest."</p> + +<p>"Sometimes," she said, "the forest seems like a trap that I can't +escape. Sometimes I hate it."</p> + +<p>"Are you lonely, Eve?"</p> + +<p>"As you are. You see I know what the outside world is. I miss it."</p> + +<p>"You were in boarding school and college."</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"It must be hard for you here at Star Pond."</p> + +<p>The girl sighed, unconsciously:</p> + +<p>"There are days when I—can scarcely—stand it.... The wilderness would +be more endurable if dad and I were all alone.... But even then<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"You need young people of your own age,—educated companions<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"I need the city, Mr. Stormont. I need all it can give: I'm starving for +it. That's all."</p> + +<p>She turned on her pillow, and he saw that she was smiling faintly. Her +face bore no trace of the tragic truth she had uttered. But the tragedy +was plain enough to him, even without her passionless words of revolt. +The situation of this young, educated girl, aglow with youth, fettered, +body and mind, to the squalor of Clinch's dump, was perfectly plain to +anybody.</p> + +<p>She said, seeing his troubled expression: "I'm sorry I spoke that way."</p> + +<p>"I knew how you must feel, anyway."</p> + +<p>"It seems ungrateful," she murmured. "I love my step-father."</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>"You've proven that," he remarked with a dry humour that brought the hot +flush to her face again.</p> + +<p>"I must have been crazy that day," she said. "It scares me to remember +what I tried to do.... What a frightful thing—if I had killed +you<span class="nowrap">——</span>How <em>can</em> you forgive me?"</p> + +<p>"How can you forgive <em>me</em> , Eve?"</p> + +<p>She turned her head: "I do."</p> + +<p>"Entirely?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>He said,—a slight emotion noticeable in his voice: "Well, I forgave you +before the darned gun exploded in our hands."</p> + +<p>"How <em>could</em> you?" she protested.</p> + +<p>"I was thinking all the while that you were acting as I'd have acted if +anything threatened <em>my</em> father."</p> + +<p>"Were you thinking of <em>that</em> ?"</p> + +<p>"Yes,—and also how to get hold of you before you shot me." He began to +laugh.</p> + +<p>After a moment she turned her head to look at him, and her smile +glimmered, responsive to his amusement. But she shivered slightly, too.</p> + +<p>"How about that egg?" he inquired.</p> + +<p>"I can get up<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Better keep off your feet. What is there in the pantry? You must be +starved."</p> + +<p>"I could eat a little before supper time," she admitted. "I forgot to +take my lunch with me this morning. It is still there in the pantry on +the bread box, wrapped up in brown paper, just as I left it<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>She half rose in bed, supported on one arm, her curly brown-gold hair +framing her face:</p> + +<p>"—Two cakes of sugar-milk chocolate in a flat brown<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span> packet tied with a +string," she explained, smiling at his amusement.</p> + +<p>So he went down to the pantry and discovered the parcel on the bread box +where she had left it that morning before starting for the cache on Owl +Marsh.</p> + +<p>He brought it to her, placed both pillows upright behind her, stepped +back gaily to admire the effect. Eve, with her parcel in her hands, +laughed shyly at his comedy.</p> + +<p>"Begin on your chocolate," he said. "I'm going back to fix you some +bread and butter and a cup of tea."</p> + +<p>When again he had disappeared, the girl, still smiling, began to untie +her packet, unhurriedly, slowly loosening string and wrapping.</p> + +<p>Her attention was not fixed on what her slender fingers were about.</p> + +<p>She drew from the parcel a flat morocco case with a coat of arms and +crest stamped on it in gold, black, and scarlet.</p> + +<p>For a few moments she stared at the object stupidly. The next moment she +heard Stormont's spurred tread on the stairs; and she thrust the morocco +case and the wrapping under the pillows behind her.</p> + +<p>She looked up at him in a dazed way when he came in with the tea and +bread. He set the tin tray on her bureau and came over to the bedside.</p> + +<p>"Eve," he said, "you look very white and ill. Have you been hurt +somewhere, and haven't you admitted it?"</p> + +<p>She seemed unable to speak, and he took both her hands and looked +anxiously into the lovely, pallid features.</p> + +<p>After a moment she turned her head and buried her face in the pillow, +trembling now in overwhelming realization of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span> what she had endured for +the sake of two cakes of sugar-milk chocolate hidden under a bush in the +forest.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>For a long while the girl lay there, the feverish flush of tears on her +partly hidden face, her nervous hands tremulous, restless, now seeking +his, convulsively, now striving to escape his clasp—eloquent, uncertain +little hands that seemed to tell so much and yet were telling him +nothing he could understand.</p> + +<p>"Eve, dear," he said, "are you in pain? What is it that has happened to +you? I thought you were all right. You seemed all right<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"I am," she said in a smothered voice. "You'll stay here with me, won't +you?"</p> + +<p>"Of course I will. It's just the reaction. It's all over. You're +relaxing. That's all, dear. You're safe. Nothing can harm you now<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Please don't leave me."</p> + +<p>After a moment: "I won't leave you.... I wish I might never leave you."</p> + +<p>In the tense silence that followed her trembling ceased. Then his heart, +heavy, irregular, began beating so that the startled pulses in her body +awoke, wildly responsive.</p> + +<p>Deep emotions, new, unfamiliar, were stirring, awaking, confusing them +both. In a sudden instinct to escape, she turned and partly rose on one +elbow, gazing blindly about her out of tear-marred eyes.</p> + +<p>"I want my room to myself," she murmured in a breathless sort of way, +"—I want you to go out, please<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>A boyish flush burnt his face. He got up slowly, took<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span> his rifle from +the corner, went out, closing the door, and seated himself on the +stairs.</p> + +<p>And there, on guard, sat Trooper Stormont, rigid, unstirring, hour after +hour, facing the first great passion of his life, and stunned by the +impact of its swift and unexpected blow.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>In her chamber, on the bed's edge, sat Eve Strayer, her deep eyes fixed +on space. Vague emotions, exquisitely recurrent, new born, possessed +her. The whole world, too, all around her seemed to have become misty +and golden and all pulsating with a faint, still rhythm that indefinably +thrilled her pulses to response.</p> + +<p>Passion, full-armed, springs flaming from the heart of man. Woman is +slow to burn. And it was the delicate phantom of passion that Eve gazed +upon, there in her unpainted chamber, her sun-tanned fingers linked +listlessly in her lap, her little feet like bruised white flowers +drooping above the floor.</p> + +<p>Hour after hour she sat there dreaming, staring at the tinted ghost of +Eros, rose-hued, near-smiling, unreal, impalpable as the dusty sunbeam +that slanted from her window, gilding the boarded floor.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>Three spectres, gliding near, paused to gaze at State Trooper Stormont, +on guard by the stairs. Then they looked at the closed door of Eve's +chamber.</p> + +<p>Then the three spectres, Fate, Chance and Destiny, whispering together, +passed on toward the depths of the sunset forest.</p> + + +<hr /> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span><a name="v" id="v"></a> +<small><span class="smcap">Episode Five</span></small></h2> + +<h2>DROWNED VALLEY</h2> + + +<h3>I</h3> + +<p class="cap">THE soft, bluish forest shadows had lengthened, and the barred sun-rays, +filtering through, were tinged with a rosy hue before Jake Kloon, the +hootch runner, and Earl Leverett, trap thief, came to Drowned Valley.</p> + +<p>They were still a mile distant from the most southern edge of that vast +desolation, but already tamaracks appeared in the beauty of their burnt +gold; little pools glimmered here and there; patches of amber sphagnum +and crimson pitcher-plants became frequent; and once or twice Kloon's +big boots broke through the crust of fallen leaves, soaking him to the +ankles with black silt.</p> + +<p>Leverett, always a coward, had pursued his devious and larcenous way +through the world, always in deadly fear of sink holes.</p> + +<p>His movements and paths were those of a weasel, preferring always solid +ground; but he lacked the courage of that sinuous little beast, though +he possessed all of its ferocity and far more cunning.</p> + +<p>Now trotting lightly and tirelessly in the broad and careless spoor of +Jake Kloon, his narrow, pointed head alert, and every fear-sharpened +instinct tensely observant, the trap-thief continued to meditate murder.</p> + +<p>Like all cowards, he had always been inclined to bold and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span> ruthless +action; but inclination was all that ever had happened.</p> + +<p>Yet, even in his pitiable misdemeanours he slunk through life in terror +of that strength which never hesitates at violence. In his petty +pilfering he died a hundred deaths for every trapped mink or otter he +filched; he heard the game protector's tread as he slunk from the bagged +trout brook or crawled away, belly dragging, and pockets full of snared +grouse.</p> + +<p>Always he had dreamed of the day when, through some sudden bold and +savage stroke, he could deliver himself from a life of fear and live in +a city, grossly, replete with the pleasures of satiation, never again to +see a tree or a lonely lake or the blue peaks which, always, he had +hated because they seemed to spy on him from their sky-blue heights.</p> + +<p>They were spying on him now as he moved lightly, furtively at Jake +Kloon's heels, meditating once more that swift, bold stroke which +forever would free him from all care and fear.</p> + +<p>He looked at the back of Kloon's massive head. One shot would blow that +skull into fragments, he thought, shivering.</p> + +<p>One shot from behind,—and twenty thousand dollars,—or, if it proved a +better deal, the contents of the packet. For, if Quintana's bribery had +dazzled them, what effect might the contents of that secret packet have +if revealed?</p> + +<p>Always in his mean and busy brain he was trying to figure to himself +what that packet must contain. And, to make the bribe worth while, +Leverett had concluded that only a solid packet of thousand-dollar bills +could account for the twenty thousand offered.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>There might easily be half a million in bills pressed together in that +heavy, flat packet. Bills were absolutely safe plunder. But Kloon had +turned a deaf ear to his suggestions,—Kloon, who never entertained +ambitions beyond his hootch rake-off,—whose miserable imagination +stopped at a wretched percentage, satisfied.</p> + +<p>One shot! There was the back of Kloon's bushy head. One shot!—and fear, +which had shadowed him from birth, was at an end forever. Ended, too, +privation,—the bitter rigour of black winters; scorching days; bodily +squalor; ills that such as he endured in a wilderness where, like other +creatures of the wild, men stricken died or recovered by chance alone.</p> + +<p>A single shot would settle all problems for him.... But if he missed? +At the mere idea he trembled as he trotted on, trying to tell himself +that he couldn't miss. No use; always the coward's "if" blocked him; and +the coward's rage,—fiercest of all fury,—ravaged him, almost crazing +him with his own impotence.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>Tamaracks, sphagnum, crimson pitcher-plants grew thicker; wet woods set +with little black pools stretched away on every side.</p> + +<p>It was still nearly a mile from Drowned Valley when Jake Kloon halted in +his tracks and seated <a name="himself" id="himself"></a><ins title="original had hmiself">himself</ins> on a narrow ridge of hard ground. And +Leverett came lightly up and, after nosing the whole vicinity, sat down +cautiously where Kloon would have to turn partly around to look at him.</p> + +<p>"Where the hell do we meet up with Quintana?" growled<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span> Kloon, tearing a +mouthful from a gnawed tobacco plug and shoving the remainder deep into +his trousers pocket.</p> + +<p>"We gotta travel a piece, yet.... Say, Jake, be you a man or be you a +poor dumb critter what ain't got no spunk?"</p> + +<p>Kloon, chewing on his cud, turned and glanced at him. Then he spat, as +answer.</p> + +<p>"If you got the spunk of a chipmunk you and me'll take a peek at that +there packet. I bet you it's thousand-dollar bills—more'n a billion +million dollars, likely."</p> + +<p>Kloon's dogged silence continued. Leverett licked his dry lips. His +rifle lay on his knees. Almost imperceptibly he moved it, moved it +again, froze stiff as Kloon spat, then, by infinitesimal degrees, +continued to edge the muzzle toward Kloon.</p> + +<p>"Jake?"</p> + +<p>"Aw, shut your head," grumbled Kloon disdainfully. "You allus was a +dirty rat—you sneakin' trap robber. Enough's enough. I ain't got no use +for no billion million dollar bills. Ten thousand'll buy me all I +cal'late to need till I'm planted. But you're like a hawg; you ain't +never had enough o' nothin' and you won't never git enough, +neither,—not if you wuz God a'mighty you wouldn't."</p> + +<p>"Ten thousand dollars hain't nothin' to a billion million, Jake."</p> + +<p>Kloon squirted a stream of tobacco at a pitcher plant and filled the +cup. Diverted and gratified by the accuracy of his aim, he took other +shots at intervals.</p> + +<p>Leverett moved the muzzle of his rifle a hair's width to the left, +shivered, moved it again. Under his soggy, sun-tanned skin a +<a name="pallor" id="pallor"></a><ins title="original had pallour">pallor</ins> made his visage sickly grey.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>"Jake?"</p> + +<p>No answer.</p> + +<p>"Say, Jake?"</p> + +<p>No notice.</p> + +<p>"Jake, I wanta take a peek at them bills."</p> + +<p>Merely another stream of tobacco soiling the crimson pitcher.</p> + +<p>"I'm—I'm desprit. I gotta take a peek. I gotta—gotta<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>Something in Leverett's unsteady voice made Kloon turn his head.</p> + +<p>"You gol rammed fool," he said, "what you doin' with your<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>The loud detonation of the rifle punctuated Kloon's inquiry with a final +period. The big, soft-nosed bullet struck him full in the face, spilling +his brains and part of his skull down his back, and knocking him flat as +though he had been clubbed.</p> + +<p>Leverett, stunned, sat staring, motionless, clutching the rifle from the +muzzle of which a delicate stain of vapour floated and disappeared +through a rosy bar of sunshine.</p> + +<p>In the intense stillness of the place, suddenly the dead man made a +sound; and the trap-robber nearly fainted.</p> + +<p>But it was only air escaping from the slowly collapsing lungs; and +Leverett, ashy pale, shaking, got to his feet and leaned heavily against +an oak tree, his eyes never stirring from the sprawling thing on the +ground.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>If it were a minute or a year he stood there he could never have +reckoned the space of time. The sun's level rays glimmered ruddy through +the woods. A green fly appeared,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span> buzzing about the dead man. Another +zig-zagged through the sunshine, lacing it with streaks of greenish +fire. Others appeared, whirling, gyrating, filling the silence with +their humming. And still Leverett dared not budge, dared not search the +dead and take from it that for which the dead had died.</p> + +<p>A little breeze came by and stirred the bushy hair on Kloon's head and +fluttered the ferns around him where he lay.</p> + +<p>Two delicate, pure-white butterflies—rare survivors of a native species +driven from civilization into the wilderness by the advent of the +foreign white—fluttered in airy play over the dead man, drifting away +into the woodland at times, yet always returning to wage a fairy combat +above the heap of soiled clothing which once had been a man.</p> + +<p>Then, near in the ferns, the withering fronds twitched, and a red +squirrel sprung his startling alarm, squeaking, squealing, chattering +his opinion of murder; and Leverett, shaking with the shock, wiped icy +sweat from his face, laid aside his rifle, and took his first stiff step +toward the dead man.</p> + +<p>But as he bent over he changed his mind, turned, reeling a little, then +crept slowly out among the pitcher-plants, searching about him as though +sniffing.</p> + +<p>In a few minutes he discovered what he was looking for; took his +bearings; carefully picked his way back over a leafy crust that trembled +under his cautious tread.</p> + +<p>He bent over Kloon and, from the left inside coat pocket, he drew the +packet and placed it inside his own flannel shirt.</p> + +<p>Then, turning his back to the dead, he squatted down and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span> clutched +Kloon's burly ankles, as a man grasps the handles of a wheelbarrow to +draw it after him.</p> + +<p>Dragging, rolling, bumping over roots, Jake Kloon took his last trail +through the wilderness, leaving a redder path than was left by the +setting sun through fern and moss and wastes of pitcher-plants.</p> + +<p>Always, as Leverett crept on, pulling the dead behind him, the floor of +the woods trembled slightly, and a black ooze wet the crust of withered +leaves.</p> + +<p>At the quaking edge of a little pool of water, Leverett halted. The +water was dark but scarcely an inch deep over its black bed of silt.</p> + +<p>Beside this sink hole the trap-thief dropped Kloon. Then he drew his +hunting knife and cut a tall, slim swamp maple. The sapling was about +twenty feet in height. Leverett thrust the butt of it into the pool. +Without any effort he pushed the entire sapling out of sight in the +depthless silt.</p> + +<p>He had to manœuvre very gingerly to dump Kloon into the pool and keep +out of it himself. Finally he managed it.</p> + +<p>To his alarm, Kloon did not sink far. He cut another sapling and pushed +the body until only the shoes were visible above the silt.</p> + +<p>These, however, were very slowly sinking, now. Bubbles rose, dully +iridescent, floated, broke. Strings of blood hung suspended in the +clouding water.</p> + +<p>Leverett went back to the little ridge and covered with dead leaves the +spot where Kloon had lain. There were broken ferns, but he could not +straighten them. And there lay Kloon's rifle.</p> + +<p>For a while he hesitated, his habits of economy being ingrained; but he +remembered the packet in his shirt, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span> he carried the rifle to the +little pool and shoved it, muzzle first, driving it downward, out of +sight.</p> + +<p>As he rose from the pool's edge, somebody laid a hand on his shoulder.</p> + +<p>That was the most real death that Leverett ever had died.</p> + + +<h3>II</h3> + +<p>A coward dies many times before Old Man Death really gets him.</p> + +<p>The swimming minutes passed; his mind ceased to live for a space. Then, +as through the swirling waters of the last dark whirlpool, a dulled roar +of returning consciousness filled his being.</p> + +<p>Somebody was shaking him, shouting at him. Suddenly instinct resumed its +function, and he struggled madly to get away from the edge of the +sink-hole—fought his way, blindly, through tangled undergrowth toward +the hard ridge. No human power could have blocked the frantic creature +thrashing toward solid ground.</p> + +<p>But there Quintana held him in his wiry grip.</p> + +<p>"Fool! Mule! Crazee fellow! What you do, eh? For why you make jumps like +rabbits! Eh? You expec' Quintana? Yes? Alors!"</p> + +<p>Leverett, in a state of collapse, sagged back against an oak tree. +Quintana's nervous grasp fell from his arms and they swung, dangling.</p> + +<p>"What you do by that pond-hole? Eh? I come and touch you, and, my +God!—one would think I have stab you. Such an ass!"</p> + +<p>The sickly greenish hue changed in Leverett's face as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span> the warmer tide +stirred from its stagnation. He lifted his head and tried to look at +Quintana.</p> + +<p>"Where Jake Kloon?" demanded the latter.</p> + +<p>At that the weasel wits of the trap-robber awoke to the instant crisis. +Blood and pulse began to jump. He passed one dirty hand over his mouth +to mask any twitching.</p> + +<p>"Where my packet, eh?" inquired Quintana.</p> + +<p>"Jake's got it." Leverett's voice was growing stronger. His small eyes +switched for an instant toward his rifle, where it stood against a tree +behind Quintana.</p> + +<p>"Where is he, then, this Jake?" repeated Quintana impatiently.</p> + +<p>"He got bogged."</p> + +<p>"Bogged? What is that, then?"</p> + +<p>"He got into a sink-hole."</p> + +<p>"What!"</p> + +<p>"That's all I know," said Leverett, sullenly. "Him and me was travellin' +hell-bent to meet up with you,—Jake, he was for a short cut to Drowned +Valley,—but 'no,' sez I, 'gimme a good hard ridge an' a long deetoor +when there's sink-holes into the woods<span class="nowrap">——</span>'"</p> + +<p>"What is it the talk you talk to me?" asked Quintana, whose perplexed +features began to darken. "Where is it, my packet?"</p> + +<p>"I'm tellin' you, ain't I?" retorted the other, raising a voice now +shrill with the strain of this new crisis rushing so unexpectedly upon +him: "I heard Jake give a holler. 'What the hell's the trouble?' I +yells. Then he lets out a beller, 'Save me!' he screeches, 'I'm into a +sink-hole! The quicksand's got me,' sez he. So I drop my rifle, I +did,—there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span> she stands against that birch sapling!—and I run down into +them there pitcher-plants.</p> + +<p>"'Whar be ye!' I yells. Then I listens, and don't hear nothin' only a +kina wallerin' noise an' a slobber like he was gulpin' mud.</p> + +<p>"Then I foller them there sounds and I come out by that sink-hole. The +water was a-shakin' all over it but Jake he had went down plum out o' +sight. T'want no use. I cut a sapling an' I poked down. I was sick and +scared like, so when you come up over the moss, not makin' no noise, an' +grabbed me—God!—I guess you'd jump, too."</p> + +<p>Quintana's dark, tense face was expressionless when Leverett ventured to +look at him. Like most liars he realised the advisability of looking his +victim straight in the eyes. This he managed to accomplish, sustaining +the cold intensity of Quintana's gaze as long as he deemed it necessary. +Then he started toward his rifle. Quintana blocked his way.</p> + +<p>"Where my packet?"</p> + +<p>"Gol ram it! Ain't I told you? Jake had it in his pocket."</p> + +<p>"My packet?"</p> + +<p>"Yaas, yourn."</p> + +<p>"My packet, it is down in thee sink 'ole?"</p> + +<p>"You think I'm lyin'?" blustered Leverett, trying to move around +Quintana's extended arm. The arm swerved and clutched him by the collar +of his flannel shirt.</p> + +<p>"Wait, my frien'," said Quintana in a soft voice. "You shall explain to +me some things before you go."</p> + +<p>"Explain what!—you gol dinged<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>Quintana shook him into speechlessness.</p> + +<p>"Listen, my frien'," he continued with a terrifying smile,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span> "I mus' ask +you what it was, that gun-shot, which I hear while I await at Drown' +Vallee. Eh? Who fire a gun?"</p> + +<p>"I ain't heard no gun," replied Leverett in a strangled voice.</p> + +<p>"You did not shoot? No?"</p> + +<p>"No!—damn it all<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"And Jake? He did not fire?"</p> + +<p>"No, I tell yeh<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Ah! Someone lies. It is not me, my frien'. No. Let us examine your +rifle<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>Leverett made a rush for the gun; Quintana slung him back against the +oak tree and thrust an automatic pistol against his chin.</p> + +<p>"Han's up, my frien'," he said gently, "—up! high up!—or someone will +fire another shot you shall never hear.... So!... Now I search the +other pocket.... So!... Still no packet. Bah! Not in the pants, +either? Ah, bah! <a name="but" id="but"></a><ins title="original had open bracket">But</ins> wait! Tiens! What is this you hide inside your +shirt<span class="nowrap">——</span>?"</p> + +<p>"I was jokin'," gasped Leverett; "—I was jest a-goin' to give it to +you<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Is that my packet?"</p> + +<p>"Yes. It was all in fun; I wan't a-going to steal it<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>Quintana unbuttoned the grey wool shirt, thrust in his hand and drew +forth the packet for which Jake Kloon had died within the hour.</p> + +<p>Suddenly Leverett's knees gave way and he dropped to the ground, +grovelling at Quintana's feet in an agony of fright:</p> + +<p>"Don't hurt me," he screamed, "—I didn't meant no harm! Jake, he wanted +me to steal it. I told him I was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span> honest. I fired a shot to scare him, +an' he tuk an' run off! I wan't a-goin' to steal it off you, so help me +God! I was lookin' for you—as God is my witness<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>He got Quintana by one foot. Quintana kicked him aside and backed away.</p> + +<p>"Swine," he said, calmly inspecting the whimpering creature who had +started to crawl toward him.</p> + +<p>He hesitated, lifted his automatic, then, as though annoyed by +Leverett's deafening shriek, shrugged, hesitated, pocketed both pistol +and packet, and turned on his heel.</p> + +<p>By the birch sapling he paused and picked up Leverett's rifle. Something +left a red smear on his palm as he worked the ejector. It was blood.</p> + +<p>Quintana gazed curiously at his soiled hand. Then he stooped and picked +up the empty cartridge case which had been ejected. And, as he stooped, +he noticed more blood on a fallen leaf.</p> + +<p>With one foot, daintily as a game-cock scratches, he brushed away the +fallen leaves, revealing the mess underneath.</p> + +<p>After he had contemplated the crimson traces of murder for a few +moments, he turned and looked at Leverett with faint curiosity.</p> + +<p>"So," he said in his leisurely, emotionless way, "you have fight with my +frien' Jake for thee packet. Yes? Ver' amusing." He shrugged his +indifference, tossed the rifle to his shoulder and, without another +glance at the cringing creature on the ground, walked away toward +Drowned Valley, unhurriedly.</p> + + +<h3><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>III</h3> + +<p>When Quintana disappeared among the tamaracks, Leverett ventured to rise +to his knees. As he crouched there, peering after Quintana, a man came +swiftly out of the forest behind him and nearly stumbled over him.</p> + +<p>Recognition was instant and mutual as the man jerked the trap-robber to +his feet, stifling the muffled yell in his throat.</p> + +<p>"I want that packet you picked up on Clinch's veranda," said Hal Smith.</p> + +<p>"M-my God," stammered Leverett, "Quintana just took it off me. He ain't +been gone a minute<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"You lie!"</p> + +<p>"I ain't lyin'. Look at his foot-marks there in the mud!"</p> + +<p>"Quintana!"</p> + +<p>"Yaas, Quintana! He tuk my gun, too<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Which way!" whispered Smith fiercely, shaking Leverett till his jaws +wagged.</p> + +<p>"Drowned Valley.... Lemme loose!—I'm chokin'<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>Smith pushed him aside.</p> + +<p>"You rat," he said, "if you're lying to me I'll come back and settle +your affair. And Kloon's, too!"</p> + +<p>"Quintana shot Jake and stuck him into a sink-hole!" snivelled Leverett, +breaking down and sobbing; "—oh, Gawd—Gawd—he's down under all that +black mud with his brains spillin' out<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>But Smith was already gone, running lightly along the string of +footprints which led straight away across slime and sphagnum toward the +head of Drowned Valley.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>In the first clump of hard-wood trees Smith saw Quintana. He had halted +and he was fumbling at the twine which bound a flat, paper-wrapped +packet.</p> + +<p>He did not start when Smith's sharp warning struck his ear: "Don't move! +I've got you over my rifle, Quintana!"</p> + +<p>Quintana's fingers had instantly ceased operations. Then, warily, he +lifted his head and looked into the muzzle of Smith's rifle.</p> + +<p>"Ah, bah!" he said tranquilly. "There were three of you, then."</p> + +<p>"Lay that packet on the ground."</p> + +<p>"My frien'<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Drop it or I'll drop <em>you</em> !"</p> + +<p>Quintana carefully placed the packet on a bed of vivid moss.</p> + +<p>"Now your gun!" continued Smith.</p> + +<p>Quintana shrugged and laid Leverett's rifle beside the packet.</p> + +<p>"Kneel down with your hands up and your back toward me!" said Smith.</p> + +<p>"My frien'<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Down with you!"</p> + +<p>Quintana dropped gracefully into the humiliating attitude popularly +indicative of prayerful supplication. Smith walked slowly up behind him, +relieved him of two automatics and a dirk.</p> + +<p>"Stay put," he said sharply, as Quintana started to turn his head. Then +he picked up the packet with its loosened string, slipped it into his +side pocket, gathered together the arsenal which had decorated Quintana, +and so, loaded with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span> weapons, walked away a few paces and seated himself +on a fallen log.</p> + +<p>Here he pocketed both automatics, shoved the sheathed dirk into his +belt, placed the captured rifle handy, after examining the magazine, and +laid his own weapon across his knees.</p> + +<p>"You may turn around now, Quintana," he said amiably.</p> + +<p>Quintana lowered his arms and started to rise.</p> + +<p>"Sit down!" said Smith.</p> + +<p>Quintana seated himself on the moss, facing Smith.</p> + +<p>"Now, my gay and nimble thimble-rigger," said Smith genially, "while I +take ten minutes' rest we'll have a little polite conversation. Or, +rather, a monologue. Because I don't want to hear anything from you."</p> + +<p>He settled himself comfortably on the log:</p> + +<p>"Let me assemble for you, Señor Quintana, the interesting history of the +jewels which so sparklingly repose in the packet in my pocket.</p> + +<p>"In the first place, as you know, Monsieur Quintana, the famous Flaming +Jewel and the other gems contained in this packet of mine, belonged to +Her Highness the Grand Duchess Theodorica of Esthonia.</p> + +<p>"Very interesting. More interesting still—along comes Don José Quintana +and his celebrated gang of international thieves, and steals from the +Grand Duchess of Esthonia the Flaming Jewel and all her rubies, emeralds +and diamonds. Yes?"</p> + +<p>"Certainly," said Quintana, with a polite inclination of acknowledgment.</p> + +<p>"Bon! Well, then, still more interesting to relate, a gentleman<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span> named +Clinch helps himself to these famous jewels. How very careless of you, +Mr. Quintana."</p> + +<p>"Careless, certainly," assented Quintana politely.</p> + +<p>"Well," said Smith, laughing, "Clinch was more careless still. The +robber baron, Sir Jacobus Kloon, swiped,—as Froissart has it,—the +Esthonian gems, and, under agreement to deliver them to you, I suppose, +thought better of it and attempted to abscond. Do you get me, Herr +Quintana?"</p> + +<p>"Gewiss."</p> + +<p>"Yes, and you got Jake Kloon, I hear," laughed Smith.</p> + +<p>"No."</p> + +<p>"Didn't you kill Kloon?"</p> + +<p>"No."</p> + +<p>"Oh, pardon. The mistake was natural. You merely robbed Kloon and +Leverett. You should have killed them."</p> + +<p>"Yes," said Quintana slowly, "I should have. It was my mistake."</p> + +<p>"Signor Quintana, it is human for the human crook to err. Sooner or +later he always does it. And then the Piper comes around holding out two +itching palms."</p> + +<p>"Mr. Smith," said Quintana pleasantly, "you are an unusually agreeable +gentleman for a thief. I regret that you do not see your way to an +amalgamation of interests with myself."</p> + +<p>"As you say, Quintana mea, I am somewhat unusual. For example, what do +you suppose I am going to do with this packet in my pocket?"</p> + +<p>"Live," replied Quintana tersely.</p> + +<p>"Live, certainly," laughed Smith, "but not on the proceeds of this +coup-de-main. Non pas! I am going to return<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span> this packet to its rightful +owner, the Grand Duchess Theodorica of Esthonia. And what do you think +of that, Quintana?"</p> + +<p>Quintana smiled.</p> + +<p>"You do not believe me?" inquired Smith.</p> + +<p>Quintana smiled again.</p> + +<p>"Allons, bon!" exclaimed Smith, rising. "It's the unusual that happens +in life, my dear Quintana. And now we'll take a little inventory of +these marvellous gems before we part.... Sit very, very still, +Quintana,—unless you want to lie stiller still.... I'll let you take a +modest peep at the Flaming Jewel<span class="nowrap">——"</span> busily unwrapping the +packet—"just one little peep, Quintana<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>He unwrapped the paper. Two cakes of sugar-milk chocolate lay within.</p> + +<p>Quintana turned white, then deeply, heavily red. Then he smiled in +ghastly fashion:</p> + +<p>"Yes," he said hoarsely, "as you have just said, sir, it is usually the +unusual which happens in the world."</p> + + +<hr /> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span><a name="vi" id="vi"></a> +<small><span class="smcap">Episode Six</span></small></h2> + +<h2>THE JEWEL AFLAME</h2> + + +<h3>I</h3> + +<p class="cap">MIKE CLINCH and his men "drove" Star Peak, and drew a blanket covert.</p> + +<p>There was a new shanty atop, camp débris, plenty of signs of recent +occupation everywhere,—hot embers in which offal still smouldered, +bottles odorous of claret dregs, and an aluminum culinary outfit, +unwashed, as though Quintana and his men had departed in haste.</p> + +<p>Far in the still valley below, Mike Clinch squatted beside the runway he +had chosen, a cocked rifle across his knees.</p> + +<p>The glare in his small, pale eyes waned and flared as distant sounds +broke the forest silence, grew vague, died out,—the fairy clatter of a +falling leaf, the sudden scurry of a squirrel, a feathery rustle of +swift wings in play or combat, the soft crash of a rotten bough sagging +earthward to enrich the soil that grew it.</p> + +<p>And, as Clinch squatted there, murderously intent, ever the fixed +obsession burned in his fever brain, stirring his thin lips to incessant +muttering,—a sort of soundless invocation, part chronicle, part prayer:</p> + +<p>"O God A'mighty, in your big, swell mansion up there, all has went +contrary with me sence you let that there damn millionaire, Harrod, come +into this here forest.... He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span> went and built unto hisself an +habitation, and he put up a wall of law all around me where I was +earnin' a lawful livin' in Thy nice, clean wilderness.... And now comes +this here Quintana and robs my girlie.... I promised her mother I'd +make a lady of her little Eve.... I loved my wife, O Lord.... Once she +showed me a piece in the Bible,—I ain't never found it sence,—but it +said: 'And the woman she fled into the wilderness where there was a +place prepared for her of God.' ... That's what <em>you</em> wrote into your +own Bible, O God! You can't go back on it. I seen it.</p> + +<p>"And now I wanta to ask, What place did you prepare for my Eve? What +spot have you reference to? You didn't mean my 'Dump,' did you? Why, +Lord, that ain't no place for no lady.... And now Quintana has went and +robbed me of what I'd saved up for Eve.... Does that go with Thee, O +Lord? No, it don't. And it don't go with me, neither. I'm a-goin' to git +Quintana. Then I'm a-goin' to git them two minks that robbed my +girlie,—I am!... Jake Kloon, he done it in cahoots with Earl Leverett; +and Quintana set 'em on. And they gotta die, O Lord of Israel, them +there Egyptians is about to hop the twig.... I ain't aimin' to be mean +to nobody. I buy hootch of them that runs it. I eat mountain mutton in +season and out. I trade with law-breakers, I do. But, Lord, I gotta get +my girlie outa here; and Harrod he walled me in with the chariots and +spears of Egypt, till I nigh went wild.... And now comes Quintana, and +here I be a-lyin' out to get him so's my girlie can become a lady, +same's them fine folks with all their butlers and automobiles and +what-not<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>A far crash in the forest stilled his twitching lips and stiffened every +iron muscle.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>As he lifted his rifle, Sid Hone came into the glade.</p> + +<p>"Yahoo! Yahoo!" he called. "Where be you, Mike?"</p> + +<p>Clinch slowly rose, grasping his rifle, his small, grey eyes ablaze.</p> + +<p>"Where's Quintana?" he demanded.</p> + +<p>"H'ain't you seen nobody?"</p> + +<p>"No."</p> + +<p>In the intense silence other sounds broke sharply in the sunset forest; +Harvey Chase's halloo rang out from the rocks above; Blommers and the +Hastings boys came slouching through the ferns.</p> + +<p>Byron Hastings greeted Clinch with upflung gun: "Me and Jim heard a shot +away out on Drowned Valley," he announced. "Was you out that way, +<a name="mike" id="mike"></a><ins title="original omitted closing quotation mark">Mike?"</ins></p> + +<p>"No."</p> + +<p>One by one the men who had driven Star Peak lounged up in the red sunset +light, gathering around Clinch and wiping the sweat from sun-reddened +faces.</p> + +<p>"Someone's in Drowned Valley," repeated Byron. "Them minks slid off'n +Star in a hurry, I reckon, judgin' how they left their shanty. Phew! It +stunk! They had French hootch, too."</p> + +<p>"Mebby Leverett and Kloon told 'em we was fixin' to visit them," +suggested Blommers.</p> + +<p>"They didn't know," said Clinch.</p> + +<p>"Where's Hal Smith?" inquired Hone.</p> + +<p>Clinch made no reply. Blommers silently gnawed a new quid from the +remains of a sticky plug.</p> + +<p>"Well," inquired Jim Hastings finally, "do we quit, Mike, or do we +still-hunt in Drowned Valley?"</p> + +<p>"Not me, at night," remarked Blommers drily.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>"Not amongst them sink-holes," added Hone.</p> + +<p>Suddenly Clinch turned and stared at him. Then the deadly light from his +little eyes shone on the others one by one.</p> + +<p>"Boys," he said, "I gotta get Quintana. I can't never sleep another wink +till I get that man. Come on. Act up like gents all. Let's go."</p> + +<p>Nobody stirred.</p> + +<p>"Come on," repeated Clinch softly. But his lips shrank back, twitching.</p> + +<p>As they looked at him they saw his teeth.</p> + +<p>"All right, all right," growled Hone, shouldering his rifle with a jerk.</p> + +<p>The Hastings boys, young and rash, shuffled into the trail. Blommers +hesitated, glanced askance at Clinch, and instantly made up his mind to +take a chance with the sink-holes rather than with Clinch.</p> + +<p>"God A'mighty, Mike, what be you aimin' to do?" faltered Harvey.</p> + +<p>"I'm aimin' to stop the inlet and outlet to Drowned Valley, Harve," +replied Clinch in his pleasant voice. "God is a-goin' to deliver +Quintana into my hands."</p> + +<p>"All right. What next?"</p> + +<p>"Then," continued Clinch, "I cal'late to set down and wait."</p> + +<p>"How long?"</p> + +<p>"Ask God, boys. I don't know. All I know is that whatever is livin' in +Drowned Valley at this hour has gotta live and die there. For it can't +never live to come outen that there morass walkin' onto two legs like a +real man."</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>He moved slowly along the file of sullen men, his rifle a-trail in one +huge fist.</p> + +<p>"Boys," he said, "I got first. There ain't no sink-hole deep enough to +drowned me while Eve needs me.... And my little girlie needs me bad.... +After she gits what's her'n, then I don't care no more...." He looked up +into the sky, where the last ashes of sunset faded from the zenith.... +"Then I don't care," he murmured. "Like's not I'll creep away like some +shot-up critter, n'kinda find some lone, safe spot, n'kinda fix me f'r +a long nap.... I guess that'll be the way ... when Eve's a lady down to +Noo York 'r'som'ers<span class="nowrap">——"</span> he added vaguely.</p> + +<p>Then, still looking up at the fading heavens, he moved forward, head +lifted, silent, unhurried, with the soundless, stealthy, and certain +tread of those who walk unseeing and asleep.</p> + + +<h3>II</h3> + +<p>Clinch had not taken a dozen strides before Hal Smith loomed up ahead in +the rosy dusk, driving in Leverett before him.</p> + +<p>An exclamation of fierce exultation burst from Clinch's thin lips as he +flung out one arm, indicating Smith and his clinking prisoner:</p> + +<p>"Who was that gol-dinged catamount that suspicioned Hal? I wa'nt worried +none, neither. Hal's a gent. Mebbe he sticks up folks, too, but he's a +gent. And gents is honest or they ain't gents."</p> + +<p>Smith came up at his easy, tireless gait, hustling Leverett along with +prods from gun-butt or muzzle, as came handiest.</p> + +<p>The prisoner turned a ghastly visage on Clinch, who ignored him.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>"Got my packet, Hal?" he demanded.</p> + +<p>Smith poked Leverett with his rifle: "Tune up," he said; "tell Clinch +your story."</p> + +<p>As a caged rat looks death in the face, his ratty wits working like +lightning and every atom of cunning and ferocity alert for attack or +escape, so the little, mean eyes of Earl Leverett became fixed on Clinch +like two immobile and glassy beads of jet.</p> + +<p>"G'wan," said Clinch softly, "spit it out."</p> + +<p>"Jake done it," muttered Leverett, thickly.</p> + +<p>"Done what?"</p> + +<p>"Stole that there packet o' yourn—whatever there was into it."</p> + +<p>"Who put him up to it?"</p> + +<p>"A fella called Quintana."</p> + +<p>"What was there in it for Jake?" inquired Clinch pleasantly.</p> + +<p>"Ten thousand."</p> + +<p>"How about you?"</p> + +<p>"I told 'em I wouldn't touch it. Then they pulled their guns on me, and +I was scared to squeal."</p> + +<p>"So that was the way?" asked Clinch in his even, reassuring voice.</p> + +<p>Leverett's eyes travelled stealthily around the circle of men, then +reverted to Clinch.</p> + +<p>"I dassn't touch it," he said, "but I dassn't squeal.... I was huntin' +onto Drowned Valley when Jake meets up with me."</p> + +<p>"'I got the packet,' he sez, 'and I'm a-going to double criss-cross +Quintana, I am, and beat it. Don't you wish you was whacks with me?'</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>"'No,' sez I, 'honesty is my policy, no matter what they tell about me. +S'help me God, I ain't never robbed no trap and I ain't no skin thief, +whatever lies folks tell. All I ever done was run a little hootch, +same's everybody.'"</p> + +<p>He licked his lips furtively, his cold, bright eyes fastened on Clinch.</p> + +<p>"G'wan, Earl," nodded the latter, "heave her up."</p> + +<p>"That's all. I sez, 'Good-bye, Jake. An' if you heed my warnin', +ill-gotten gains ain't a-going to prosper nobody.' That's what I said to +Jake Kloon, the last solemn words I spoke to that there man now in his +bloody grave<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Hey?" demanded Clinch.</p> + +<p>"That's where Jake is," repeated Leverett. "Why, so help me, I wa'nt +gone ten yards when, bang! goes a gun, and I see this here Quintana come +outen the bush, I do, and walk up to Jake and frisk him, and Jake still +a-kickin' the moss to slivers. Yessir, that's what I seen."</p> + +<p>"G'wan."</p> + +<p>"Yessir.... 'N'then Quintana he shoved Jake into a sink-hole. Thaswot I +seen with my two eyes. Yessir. 'N'then Quintana he run off, 'n'I jest +set down in the trail, I did; 'n'then Hal come up and acted like I had +stole your packet, he did; 'n'then I told him what Quintana done. +'N'Hal, he takes after Quintana, but I don't guess he meets up with him, +for he come back and ketched holt o' me, 'n'he druv me in like I was a +caaf, he did. 'N'here I be."</p> + +<p>The dusk in the forest had deepened so that the men's faces had become +mere blotches of grey.</p> + +<p>Smith said to Clinch: "That's his story, Mike. But I preferred he should +tell it to you himself, so I brought him along.... Did you drive Star +Peak?"</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>"There wa'nt nothin' onto it," said Clinch very softly. Then, of a +sudden, his shadowy visage became contorted and he jerked up his rifle +and threw a cartridge into the magazine.</p> + +<p>"You dirty louse!" he roared at Leverett, "you was into this, too, +a-robbin' my little Eve<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Run!" yelled somebody, giving Leverett a violent shove into the woods.</p> + +<p>In the darkness and confusion, Clinch shouldered his way out of the +circle and fired at the crackling noise that marked Leverett's +course,—fired again, lower, and again as a distant crash revealed the +frenzied flight of the trap-robber. After he had fired a fourth shot, +somebody struck up his rifle.</p> + +<p>"Aw," said Jim Hastings, "that ain't no good. You act up like a kid, +Mike. 'Tain't so far to Ghost Lake, n'them Troopers might hear you."</p> + +<p>After a silence, Clinch spoke, his voice heavy with reaction:</p> + +<p>"Into that there packet is my little girl's dower. It's all I got to +give her. It's all she's got to make her a lady. I'll kill any man that +robs her or that helps rob her. 'N'that's that."</p> + +<p>"Are you going on after Quintana?" asked Smith.</p> + +<p>"I am. 'N'these fellas are a-going with me. N' I want you should go back +to my Dump and look after my girlie while I'm gone."</p> + +<p>"How long are you going to be away?"</p> + +<p>"I dunno."</p> + +<p>There was a silence. Then,</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>"All right," said Smith, briefly. He added: "Look out for sink-holes, +Mike."</p> + +<p>Clinch tossed his heavy rifle to his shoulder: "Let's go," he said in +his pleasant, misleading way, "—and I'll shoot the guts outa any fella +that don't show up at roll <a name="call" id="call"></a><ins title="original omitted closing quotation mark">call."</ins></p> + + +<h3>III</h3> + +<p>For its size there is no fiercer animal than a rat.</p> + +<p>Rat-like rage possessed Leverett. In his headlong flight through the +dusk, fear, instead of quenching, added to his rage; and he ran on and +on, crashing through the undergrowth, made wilder by the pain of vicious +blows from branches which flew back and struck him in the dark.</p> + +<p>Thorns bled him; unseen logs tripped him; he heard Clinch's bullets +whining around him; and he ran on, beginning to sob and curse in a +frenzy of fury, fear, and shame.</p> + +<p>Shots from Clinch's rifle ceased; the fugitive dropped into a heavy, +shuffling walk, slavering, gasping, gesticulating with his weaponless +fists in the darkness.</p> + +<p>"Gol ram ye, I'll fix ye!" he kept stammering in his snarling, jangling +voice, broken by sobs. "I'll learn ye, yeh poor danged thing, gol ram +ye<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>An unseen limb struck him cruelly across the face, and a moose-bush +tripped him flat. Almost crazed, he got up, yelling in his pain, one +hand wet and sticky from blood welling up from his cheek-bone.</p> + +<p>He stood listening, infuriated, vindictive, but heard nothing save the +panting, animal sounds in his own throat.</p> + +<p>He strove to see in the ghostly obscurity around him, but could make out +little except the trees close by.</p> + +<p>But wood-rats are never completely lost in their native<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span> darkness; and +Leverett presently discovered the far stars shining faintly through +rifts in the phantom foliage above.</p> + +<p>These heavenly signals were sufficient to give him his directions. Then +the question suddenly came, <em>which</em> direction?</p> + +<p>To his own shack on Stinking Lake he dared not go. He tried to believe +that it was fear of Clinch that made him shy of the home shanty; but, in +his cowering soul, he knew it was fear of another kind—the deep, +superstitious horror of Jake Kloon's empty bunk—the repugnant sight of +Kloon's spare clothing hanging from its peg—the dead man's shoes<span class="nowrap">——</span></p> + +<p>No, he could not go to Stinking Lake and sleep.... And wake with the +faint stench of sulphur in his throat.... And see the worm-like leeches +unfolding in the shallows, and the big, reddish water-lizards, livid as +skinned eels, wriggling convulsively toward their sunless lairs....</p> + +<p>At the mere thought of his dead bunk-mate he sought relief in vindictive +rage—stirred up the smouldering embers again, cursed Clinch and Hal +Smith, violently searching in his inflamed brain some instant vengeance +upon these men who had driven him out from the only place on earth where +he knew how to exist—the wilderness.</p> + +<p>All at once he thought of Clinch's step-daughter. The thought instantly +scared him. Yet—what a revenge!—to strike Clinch through the only +creature he cared for in all the world!... What a revenge!... Clinch +was headed for Drowned Valley. Eve Strayer was alone at the Dump.... +Another thought flashed like lightning across his turbid mind;—<em>the +packet</em> !</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>Bribed by Quintana, Jake Kloon, lurking at Clinch's door, had heard him +direct Eve to take a packet to Owl Marsh, and had notified Quintana.</p> + +<p>Wittingly or unwittingly, the girl had taken a packet of sugar-milk +chocolate instead of the priceless parcel expected.</p> + +<p>Again, carried in, exhausted, by a State Trooper, Jake Kloon had been +fooled; and it was the packet of sugar-milk chocolate that Jake had +purloined from the veranda where Clinch kicked it. For two cakes of +chocolate Kloon had died. For two cakes of chocolate he, Earl Leverett, +had become a man-slayer, a homeless fugitive in peril of his life.</p> + +<p>He stood licking his blood-dried lips there in the darkness, striving to +hatch courage out of the dull fury eating at a coward's heart.</p> + +<p>Somewhere in Clinch's Dump was the packet that would make him rich.... +Here was his opportunity. He had only to dare; and pain and poverty and +fear—above all else <em>fear</em> —would end forever!...</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>When, at last, he came out to the edge of Clinch's clearing, the dark +October heavens were but a vast wilderness of stars.</p> + +<p>Star Pond, set to its limpid depths with the heavenly gems, glittered +and darkled with its million diamond incrustations. The humped-up lump +of Clinch's Dump crouched like some huge and feeding night-beast on the +bank, ringed by the solemn forest.</p> + +<p>There was a kerosene lamp burning in Eve Strayer's rooms. Another +light—a candle—flickered in the kitchen.</p> + +<p>Leverett, crouching, ran rat-like down to the barn, slid in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span> between the +ice house and corn-crib, crawled out among the wilderness of weeds and +lay flat.</p> + +<p>The light burned steadily from Eve's window.</p> + + +<h3>IV</h3> + +<p>From his form among frost-blackened rag-weeds, the trap-robber could see +only the plastered ceiling of the bed chamber.</p> + +<p>But the kerosene lamp cast two shadows on that—tall shadows of human +shapes that stirred at times.</p> + +<p>The trap-robber, scared, stiffened to immobility, but his little eyes +remained fastened on the camera obscura above. All the cunning, +patience, and murderous immobility of the rat were his.</p> + +<p>Not a weed stirred under the stars where he lay with tiny, unwinking +eyes intent upon the shadows on the ceiling.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>The shadows on the ceiling were cast by Eve Strayer and her State +Trooper.</p> + +<p>Eve sat on her bed's edge, swathed in a lilac silk kimona—delicate +relic of school days. Her bandaged feet, crossed, dangled above the +rag-rug on the floor; her slim, tanned fingers were interlaced over the +book on her lap.</p> + +<p>Near the door stood State Trooper Stormont, spurred, booted, trig and +trim, an undecided and flushed young man, fumbling irresolutely with the +purple cord on his campaign-hat.</p> + +<p>The book on Eve's knees—another relic of the past—was <em>Sigurd the +Volsung</em> . Stormont had been reading to her—they having found, after the +half shy tentatives of new friends, a point d'appui in literature. And +the girl, admitting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span> a passion for the poets, invited him to inspect the +bookcase of unpainted pine which Clinch had built into her bedroom wall.</p> + +<p>Here it was he discovered mutual friends among the nobler +Victorians—surprised to discover <em>Sigurd</em> there—and, carrying it to +her bedside, looked leisurely through the half forgotten pages.</p> + +<p>"Would you read a little?" she ventured.</p> + +<p>He blushed but did his best. His was an agreeable, boyish voice, +betraying taste and understanding. Time passed quickly—not so much in +the reading but in the conversations intervening.</p> + +<p>And now, made uneasy by chance consultation with his wrist-watch, and +being rather a conscientious young man, he had risen and had informed +Eve that she ought to go to sleep.</p> + +<p>And she had denounced the idea, almost fretfully.</p> + +<p>"Even if you go I shan't sleep till daddy comes," she said. "Of course," +she added, smiling at him out of gentian-blue eyes, "if <em>you</em> are sleepy +I shouldn't dream of asking you to stay."</p> + +<p>"I'm not intending to sleep."</p> + +<p>"What are you going to do?"</p> + +<p>"Take a chair on the landing outside your door."</p> + +<p>"What!"</p> + +<p>"Certainly. What did you expect me to do, Eve?"</p> + +<p>"Go to bed, of course. The beds in the guest rooms are all made up."</p> + +<p>"Your father didn't expect me to do that," he said, smiling.</p> + +<p>"I'm not afraid, as long as you're in the house," she said.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>She looked up at him again, wistfully. Perhaps he was restless, bored, +sitting there beside her half the day, and, already, half the night. Men +of that kind—active, nervous young men accustomed to the open, can't +stand caging.</p> + +<p>"I want you to go out and get some fresh air," she said. "It's a +wonderful night. Go and walk a while. And—if you feel like—coming back +to me<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Will you sleep?"</p> + +<p>"No, I'll wait for you."</p> + +<p>Her words were natural and direct, but in their simplicity there seemed +a delicate sweetness that stirred him.</p> + +<p>"I'll come back to you," he said.</p> + +<p>Then, in his response, the girl in her turn became aware of something +beside the simple words—a vague charm about them that faintly haunted +her after he had gone away down the stairs.</p> + +<p><em>That</em> was the man she had once tried to kill! At the sudden and +terrible recollection she shivered from curly head to bandaged feet. +Then she trembled a little with the memory of his lips against her +bruised hands—bruised by handcuffs which he had fastened upon her.</p> + +<p>She sat very, very still now, huddled on the bed's edge, scarcely +breathing.</p> + +<p>For the girl was beginning to dare formulate the deepest of any thoughts +that ever had stirred her virgin mind and body.</p> + +<p>If it was love, then it had come suddenly, and strangely. It had come on +that day—at the very moment when he flung her against the tree and +handcuffed her—that terrible instant—if it were love.</p> + +<p>Or—what was it that so delicately overwhelmed her with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span> pleasure in his +presence, in his voice, in the light, firm sound of his spurred tread on +the veranda below?</p> + +<p>Friendship? A lonely passion for young and decent companionship? The +clean youth of him in contrast to the mangy, surly louts who haunted +Clinch's Dump,—was that the appeal?</p> + +<p>Listening there where she sat clasping the book, she heard his steady +tread patrolling the veranda; caught the faint fragrance of his brier +pipe in the still night air.</p> + +<p>"I think—I think it's—love," she said under her breath.... "But he +couldn't ever think of me<span class="nowrap">——"</span> always listening to his spurred tread +below.</p> + +<p>After a while she placed both bandaged feet on the rug. It hurt her, but +she stood up, walked to the open window. She wanted to look at him—just +a moment<span class="nowrap">——</span></p> + +<p>By chance he looked up at that instant, and saw her pale face, like a +flower in the starlight.</p> + +<p>"Why, Eve," he said, "you ought not to be on your feet."</p> + +<p>"Once," she said, "you weren't so particular about my bruises."</p> + +<p>Her breathless little voice coming down through the starlight thrilled +him.</p> + +<p>"Do you remember what I did?" he asked.</p> + +<p>"Yes. You bruised my hands and made my mouth bleed."</p> + +<p>"I did penance—for your hands."</p> + +<p>"Yes, you kissed <em>them</em> !"</p> + +<p>What possessed her—what irresponsible exhilaration was inciting her to +a daring utterly foreign to her nature? She heard herself laugh, knew +that she was young, pretty, capable of provocation. And in a sudden, +breathless sort<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span> of way an overwhelming desire seized her to please, to +charm, to be noticed by such a man—whatever, on afterthought, he might +think of the step-child of Mike Clinch.</p> + +<p>Stormont had come directly under her window and stood looking up.</p> + +<p>"I dared not offer further penance," he said.</p> + +<p>The emotion in his voice stirred her—but she was still laughing down at +him.</p> + +<p>She said: "You <em>did</em> offer further penance—you offered your +handkerchief. So—as that was <em>all</em> you offered as reparation for—my +lips<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Eve! I could have taken you into my arms<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"You <em>did</em> ! And threw me down among the spruces. You really did +everything that a contrite heart could suggest<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Good heavens!" said that rather matter-of-fact young man, "I don't +believe you have forgiven me after all."</p> + +<p>"I have—everything except the handkerchief<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Then I'm coming up to complete my penance<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"I'll lock my door!"</p> + +<p>"Would you?"</p> + +<p>"I ought to.... But if you are in great spiritual distress, and if you +really and truly repent, and if you humbly desire to expiate your sin by +doing—penance<span class="nowrap">——"</span> And hesitated: "Do you so desire?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, I do."</p> + +<p>"Humbly? Contritely?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"Very well. Say 'Mea culpa, mea maxima culpa.'"</p> + +<p>"Mea maxima culpa," he said so earnestly, looking up into her face that +she bent lower over the sill to see him.</p> + +<p>"Let me come up, Eve," he said.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>She strove to laugh, gazing down into his shadowy face—but suddenly the +desire had left her,—and all her gaiety left her, too, suddenly, +leaving only a still excitement in her breast.</p> + +<p>"You—you knew I was just laughing," she said unsteadily. "You +understood, didn't you?"</p> + +<p>"I don't know."</p> + +<p>After a silence: "I didn't mean you to take me seriously," she said. She +tried to laugh. It was no use. And, as she leaned there on the sill, her +heart frightened her with its loud beating.</p> + +<p>"Will you let me come up, Eve?"</p> + +<p>No answer.</p> + +<p>"Would you lock your door?"</p> + +<p>"What do you think I'd do?" she asked tremulously.</p> + +<p>"You know; I don't."</p> + +<p>"Are you so sure I know what I'd do? I don't think either of us know our +own minds.... I seem to have lost some of my wits.... Somehow...."</p> + +<p>"If you are not going to sleep, let me come up."</p> + +<p>"I want you to take a walk down by the pond. And while you're walking +there all by yourself, I want you to think very clearly, very calmly, +and make up your mind whether I should remain awake to-night, or +whether, when you return, I ought to be asleep and—and my door bolted."</p> + +<p>After a long pause: "All right," he said in a low voice.</p> + + +<h3>V</h3> + +<p>She saw him walk away—saw his shadowy, well-built form fade into the +starlit mist.</p> + +<p>An almost uncontrollable impulse set her throat and lips<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span> quivering with +desire to call to him through the night, "I do love you! I do love you! +Come back quickly, quickly!——"</p> + +<p>Fog hung over Star Pond, edging the veranda, rising in frail shreds to +her window. The lapping of the water sounded very near. An owl was very +mournful in the hemlocks.</p> + +<p>The girl turned from the window, looked at the door for a moment, then +her face flushed and she walked toward a chair and seated herself, +leaving the door unbolted.</p> + +<p>For a little while she sat upright, alert, as though a little +frightened. After a few moments she folded her hands and sat unstirring, +with lowered head, awaiting Destiny.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>It came, noiselessly. And so swiftly that the rush of air from her +violently opened door was what first startled her.</p> + +<p>For in the same second Earl Leverett was upon her in his stockinged +feet, one bony hand gripping her mouth, the other flung around her, +pinning both arms to her sides.</p> + +<p>"The packet!" he panted, "—quick, yeh dirty little cat, 'r'I'll break +yeh head off'n yeh damn neck!"</p> + +<p>She bit at the hand that he held crushed against her mouth. He lifted +her bodily, flung her onto the bed, and, twisting sheet and quilt around +her, swathed her to the throat.</p> + +<p>Still controlling her violently distorted lips with his left hand and +holding her so, one knee upon her, he reached back, unsheathed his +hunting knife, and pricked her throat till the blood spurted.</p> + +<p>"Now, gol ram yeh!" he whispered fiercely, "where's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span> Mike's packet? +Yell, and I'll hog-stick yeh fur fair! Where is it, you dum thing!"</p> + +<p>He took his left hand from her mouth. The distorted, scarlet lips +writhed back, displaying her white teeth clenched.</p> + +<p>"Where's Mike's bundle!" he repeated, hoarse with rage and fear.</p> + +<p>"You rat!" she gasped.</p> + +<p>At that he closed her mouth again, and again he pricked her with his +knife, cruelly. The blood welled up onto the sheets.</p> + +<p>"Now, by God!" he said in a ghastly voice, "answer or I'll hog-stick yeh +next time! Where is it? Where! where!"</p> + +<p>She only showed her teeth in answer. Her eyes flamed.</p> + +<p>"Where! Quick! Gol ding yeh, I'll shove this knife in behind your ear if +you don't tell! Go on. Where is it? It's in this Dump som'ers. I know it +is—don't lie! You want that I should stick you good? That what you +want—you dirty little dump-slut? Well, then, gol ram yeh—I'll fix yeh +like Quintana was aimin' at<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>He slit the sheet downward from her imprisoned knees, seized one wounded +foot and tried to slash the bandages.</p> + +<p>"I'll cut a coupla toes off'n yeh," he snarled, "—I'll hamstring yeh +fur keeps!"—struggling to mutilate her while she flung her helpless and +entangled body from side to side and bit at the hand that was almost +suffocating her.</p> + +<p>Unable to hold her any longer, he seized a pillow, to bury the venomous +little head that writhed, biting, under his clutch.</p> + +<p>As he lifted it he saw a packet lying under it.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>"By God!" he panted.</p> + +<p>As he seized it she screamed for the first time: "Jack! Jack +Stormont!"—and fairly hurled her helpless little body at Leverett, +striking him full in the face with her head.</p> + +<p>Half stunned, still clutching the packet, he tried to stab her in the +stomach; but the armour of bed-clothes turned the knife, although his +violence dashed all breath out of her.</p> + +<p>Sick with the agony of it, speechless, she still made the effort; and, +as he stumbled to his feet and turned to escape, she struggled upright, +choking, blood running from the knife pricks in her neck.</p> + +<p>With the remnant of her strength, and still writhing and gasping for +breath, she tore herself from the sheets and blankets, reeled across the +room to where Stormont's rifle stood, threw in a cartridge, dragged +herself to the window.</p> + +<p>Dimly she saw a running figure in the night mist, flung the rifle across +the window sill and fired. Then she fired again—or thought she did. +There were two shots.</p> + +<p>"Eve!" came Stormont's sharp cry, "what the devil are you trying to do +to me?"</p> + +<p>His cry terrified her; the rifle clattered to the floor.</p> + +<p>The next instant he came running up the stairs, bare headed, heavy +pistol swinging, and halted, horrified at sight of her.</p> + +<p>"Eve! My God!" he whispered, taking her blood-wet body into his arms.</p> + +<p>"Go after Leverett," she gasped. "He's robbed daddy. He's running +away—out there—somewhere<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Where did he hurt you, Eve—my little Eve<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Oh, go! go!" she wailed,—"I'm not hurt. He only pricked me with his +knife. I'm not hurt, I tell you. Go<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span> after him! Take your pistol and +follow him and kill him!"</p> + +<p>"Oh," she cried hysterically, twisting and sobbing in his arms, "don't +lose time here with me! Don't stand here while he's running away with +dad's money!" And, "Oh—oh—<em>oh</em> !!" she sobbed, collapsing in his arms +and clinging to him convulsively as he carried her to her tumbled bed +and laid her there.</p> + +<p>He said: "I couldn't risk following anybody now, after what has happened +to you. I can't leave you alone here! Don't cry, Eve. I'll get your man +for you, I promise! Don't cry, dear. It was all my fault for leaving +this room even for a minute<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"No, no, no! It's my fault. I sent you away. Oh, I wish I hadn't. I wish +I had let you come back when you wanted to.... I was waiting for you.... +I left the door unbolted for you. When it opened I thought it was you. +And it was Leverett!—it was Leverett!——"</p> + +<p>Stormont's face grew very white: "What did he do to you, Eve? Tell me, +darling. What did he do to you?"</p> + +<p>"Dad's money was under my pillow," she wailed. "Leverett tried to make +me tell where it was. I wouldn't, and he hurt me<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"How?"</p> + +<p>"He pricked me with his knife. When I screamed for you he tried to choke +me with the pillow. Didn't you hear me scream?"</p> + +<p>"Yes. I came on the jump."</p> + +<p>"It was too late," she sobbed; "—too late! He saw the money packet +under my pillow and he snatched it and ran. Somehow I found your rifle +and fired. I fired twice."</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>Her only bullet had torn his campaign hat from his head. But he did not +tell her.</p> + +<p>"Let me see your neck," he said, bending closer.</p> + +<p>She bared her throat, making a soft, vague complaint like a hurt +bird,—lay there whimpering under her breath while he bathed the blood +away with lint, sterilised the two cuts from his emergency packet, and +bound them.</p> + +<p>He was still bending low over her when her blue eyes unclosed on his.</p> + +<p>"That is the second time I've tried to kill you," she whispered. "I +thought it was Leverett.... I'd have died if I had killed you."</p> + +<p>There was a silence.</p> + +<p>"Lie very still," he said huskily. "I'll be back in a moment to +rebandage your feet and make you comfortable for the night."</p> + +<p>"I can't sleep," she repeated desolately. "Dad trusted his money to me +and I've let Leverett rob me. How can I sleep?"</p> + +<p>"I'll bring you something to make you sleep."</p> + +<p>"I can't!"</p> + +<p>"I promise you you will sleep. Lie still."</p> + +<p>He rose, went away downstairs and out to the barn, where his campaign +hat lay in the weed, drilled through by a bullet.</p> + +<p>There was something else lying there in the weeds,—a flat, muddy, +shoeless shape sprawling grotesquely in the foggy starlight.</p> + +<p>One hand clutched a hunting knife; the other a packet.</p> + +<p>Stormont drew the packet from the stiff fingers, then turned the body +over, and, flashing his electric torch, examined the ratty visage—what +remained of it—for his pistol<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span> bullet had crashed through from ear to +cheek-bone, almost obliterating the trap-robber's features.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>Stormont came slowly into Eve's room and laid the packet on the sheet +beside her.</p> + +<p>"Now," he said, "there is no reason for you to lie awake any longer. +I'll fix you up for the night."</p> + +<p>Deftly he unbandaged, bathed, dressed, and rebandaged her slim white +feet—little wounded feet so lovely, so exquisite that his hand trembled +as he touched them.</p> + +<p>"They're doing fine," he said cheerily. "You've half a degree of fever +and I'm going to give you something to drink before you go to sleep<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>He poured out a glass of water, dissolved two tablets, supported her +shoulders while she drank in a dazed way, looking always at him over the +glass.</p> + +<p>"Now," he said, "go to sleep. I'll be on the job outside your door until +your daddy arrives."</p> + +<p>"How did you get back dad's money?" she asked in an odd, emotionless way +as though too weary for further surprises.</p> + +<p>"I'll tell you in the morning."</p> + +<p>"Did you kill him? I didn't hear your pistol."</p> + +<p>"I'll tell you all about it in the morning. Good night, Eve."</p> + +<p>As he bent over her, she looked up into his eyes and put both arms +around his neck.</p> + +<p>It was her first kiss given to any man, except Mike Clinch.</p> + +<p>After Stormont had gone out and closed the door, she lay very still for +a long while.</p> + +<p>Then, instinctively, she touched her lips with her fingers;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span> and, at the +contact, a blush clothed her from brow to ankle.</p> + +<p>The Flaming Jewel in its morocco casket under her pillow burned with no +purer fire than the enchanted flame glowing in the virgin heart of Eve +Strayer of Clinch's Dump.</p> + +<p>Thus they lay together, two lovely flaming jewels burning softly, +steadily through the misty splendour of the night.</p> + +<p>Under a million stars, Death sprawled in squalor among the trampled +weeds. Under the same high stars dark mountains waited; and there was a +silvery sound of waters stirring somewhere in the mist.</p> + + +<hr /> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span><a name="vii" id="vii"></a> +<small><span class="smcap">Episode Seven</span></small></h2> + +<h2>CLINCH'S DUMP</h2> + + +<h3>I</h3> + +<p class="cap">WHEN Mike Clinch bade Hal Smith return to the Dump and take care of Eve, +Smith already had decided to go there.</p> + +<p>Somewhere in Clinch's Dump was hidden the Flaming Jewel. Now was his +time to search for it.</p> + +<p>There were two other reasons why he should go back. One of them was that +Leverett was loose. If anything had called Trooper Stormont away, Eve +would be alone in the house. And nobody on earth could forecast what a +coward like Leverett might attempt.</p> + +<p>But there was another and more serious reason for returning to Clinch's. +Clinch, blood-mad, was headed for Drowned Valley with his men, to stop +both ends of that vast morass before Quintana and his gang could get +out.</p> + +<p>It was evident that neither Clinch nor any of his men—although their +very lives depended upon familiarity with the wilderness—knew that a +third exit from Drowned Valley existed.</p> + +<p>But the nephew of the late Henry Harrod knew.</p> + +<p>When Jake Kloon was a young man and Darragh was a boy, Kloon had shown +him the rocky, submerged game trail into Drowned Valley. Doubtless Kloon +had used it in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span> hootch running since. If ever he had told anybody else +about it, probably he had revealed the trail to Quintana.</p> + +<p>And that was why Darragh, or Hal Smith, finally decided to return to +Star Pond;—because if Quintana had been told or had discovered that +circuitous way out of Drowned Valley, he might go straight to Clinch's +Dump.... And, supposing Stormont was still there, how long could one +State Trooper stand off Quintana's gang?</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>No sooner had Clinch and his motley followers disappeared in the dusk +than Smith unslung his basket-pack, fished out a big electric torch, +flashed it tentatively, and then, reslinging the pack and taking his +rifle in his left hand, he set off at an easy swinging stride.</p> + +<p>His course was not toward Star Pond; it was at right angles with that +trail. For he was taking no chances. Quintana might already have left +Drowned Valley by that third exit unknown to Clinch.</p> + +<p>Smith's course would now cut this unmarked trail, trodden only by game +that left no sign in the shallow mountain rivulet which was the path.</p> + +<p>The trail lay a long way off through the night. But if Quintana had +discovered and taken that trail, it would be longer still for him—twice +as long as the regular trail out.</p> + +<p>For a mile or two the forest was first growth pine, and sufficiently +open so that Smith might economise on his torch.</p> + +<p>He knew every foot of it. As a boy he had carried a jacob-staff in the +Geological Survey. Who better than the forest-roaming nephew of Henry +Harrod should know this blind wilderness?</p> + +<p>The great pines towered on every side, lofty and smooth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span> to the feathery +canopy that crowned them under the high stars.</p> + +<p>There was no game here, no water, nothing to attract anybody except the +devastating lumberman. But this was a five thousand acre patch of State +land. The ugly whine of the steam-saw would never be heard here.</p> + +<p>On he walked at an easy, swinging stride, flashing his torch rarely, +feeling no concern about discovery by Quintana's people.</p> + +<p>It was only when he came into the hardwoods that the combined necessity +for caution and torch perplexed and worried him.</p> + +<p>Somewhere in here began an outcrop of rock running east for miles. Only +stunted cedar and berry bushes found shallow nourishment on this ridge.</p> + +<p>When at last he found it he travelled upon it, more slowly, constantly +obliged to employ the torch.</p> + +<p>After an hour, perhaps, his feet splashed in shallow water. <em>That</em> was +what he was expecting. The water was only an inch or two deep; it was +ice cold and running north.</p> + +<p>Now, he must advance with every caution. For here trickled the thin flow +of that rocky rivulet which was the other entrance and exit penetrating +that immense horror of marsh and bog and depthless sink-hole known as +Drowned Valley.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>For a long while he did not dare to use his torch; but now he was +obliged to.</p> + +<p>He shined the ground at his feet, elevated the torch with infinite +precaution, throwing a fan-shaped light over the stretch of sink he had +suspected and feared. It flanked the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span> flat, wet path of rock on either +side. Here Death spread its slimy trap at his very feet.</p> + +<p>Then, as he stood taking his bearings with burning torch, far ahead in +the darkness a light flashed, went out, flashed twice more, and was +extinguished.</p> + +<p>Quintana!</p> + +<p>Smith's wits were working like lightning, but instinct guided him before +his brain took command. He levelled his torch and repeated the three +signal flashes. Then, in darkness, he came to swift conclusion.</p> + +<p>There were no other signals from the unknown. The stony bottom of the +rivulet was his only aid.</p> + +<p>In his right hand the torch hung almost touching the water. At times he +ventured sufficient pressure for a feeble glimmer, then again trusted to +his sense of contact.</p> + +<p>For three hundred yards, counting his strides, he continued on. Then, in +total darkness, he pocketed the torch, slid a cartridge into the breech +of his rifle, slung the weapon, pulled out a handkerchief, and tied it +across his face under the eyes.</p> + +<p>Now, he drew the torch from his pocket, levelled it, sent three quick +flashes out into darkness.</p> + +<p>Instantly, close ahead, three blinding flashes broke out.</p> + +<p>For Hal Smith it all had become a question of seconds.</p> + +<p>Death lay depthless on either hand; ahead Death blocked the trail in +silence.</p> + +<p>Out of the dark some unseen rifle might vomit death in his very face at +any moment.</p> + +<p>He continued to move forward. After a little while his ear caught a +slight splash ahead. Suddenly a glare of light enveloped him.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>"Is it you, Harry Beck?"</p> + +<p>Instinct led again while wits worked madly: "Harry Beck is two miles +back on guard. Where is Sard?"</p> + +<p>The silence became terrible. Once the glaring light in front moved, then +become fixed. There was a light splashing. Instantly Smith realised that +the man in front had set his torch in a tree-crotch and was now cowering +somewhere behind a levelled weapon. His voice came presently:</p> + +<p>"Hé! Drap-a that-a gun damn quick!"</p> + +<p>Smith bent, leisurely, and laid his rifle on a mossy rock.</p> + +<p>"Now! You there! Why you want Sard! Eh?"</p> + +<p>"I'll tell Sard, not you," retorted Smith coolly. "You listen to me, +whoever you are. I'm from Sard's office in New York. I'm Abrams. The +police are on their way here to find Quintana."</p> + +<p>"How I know? Eh? Why shall I believe that? You tell-a me queeck or I +blow-a your damn head off!"</p> + +<p>"Quintana will blow-a <em>your</em> head off unless you take me to Sard," +drawled Smith.</p> + +<p>A movement might have meant death, but he calmly rummaged for a +cigarette, lighted it, blew a cloud insolently toward the white glare +ahead. Then he took another chance:</p> + +<p>"I guess you're Nick Salzar, aren't you?"</p> + +<p>"Si! I am Salzar. Who the dev' are you?"</p> + +<p>"I'm Eddie Abrams, Sard's lawyer. My business is to find my client. If +you stop me you'll go to prison—the whole gang of you—Sard, Quintana, +Picquet, Sanchez, Georgiades and Harry Beck,—and <em>you</em> !"</p> + +<p>After a dead silence: "Maybe <em>you'll</em> go to the chair, too!"</p> + +<p>It was the third chance he took.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>There was a dreadful stillness in the woods. Finally came a slight +series of splashes; the crunch of heavy boots on rock.</p> + +<p>"For why you com-a here, eh?" demanded Salzar, in a less aggressive +manner. "What-a da matt', eh?"</p> + +<p>"Well," said Smith, "if you've got to know, there are people from +Esthonia in New York.... If you understand that."</p> + +<p>"Christi! When do they arrive?"</p> + +<p>"A week ago. Sard's place is in the hands of the police. I couldn't stop +them. They've got his safe and all his papers. City, State, and Federal +officers are looking for him. The Constabulary rode into Ghost Lake +yesterday. Now, don't you think you'd better lead me to Sard?"</p> + +<p>"Cristi!" exclaimed Salzar. "Sard he is a mile ahead with the others. +Damn! Damn! Me, how should I know what is to be done? Me, I have my +orders from Quintana. What I do, eh? Cristi! What to do? What you say I +should do, eh, Abrams?"</p> + +<p>A new fear had succeeded the old one—that was evident—and Salzar came +forward into the light of his own fixed torch—a well-knit figure in +slouch hat, grey shirt, and grey breeches, and wearing a red bandanna +over the lower part of his face. He carried a heavy rifle.</p> + +<p>He came on, sturdily, splashing through the water, and walked up to +Smith, his rifle resting on his right shoulder.</p> + +<p>"For me," he said excitedly, "long time I have worry in this-a damn +wood! Si! Where you say those carbinieri? Eh?"</p> + +<p>"At Ghost Lake. <em>Your</em> signature is in the hotel ledger."</p> + +<p>"Cristi! You know where Clinch is?"</p> + +<p>"You know, too. He is on the way to Drowned Valley."</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>"Damn! I knew it. Quintana also. You know where is Quintana? And Sard? I +tell-a you. They march ver' fast to the Dump of Clinch. Si! And there +they would discover these-a beeg-a dimon'—these-a Flame-Jewel. Si! +<em>Now</em> , you tell-a me what I do?"</p> + +<p>Smith said slowly: "If Quintana is marching on Clinch's he's marching +into a trap!"</p> + +<p>Salzar blanched above his bandanna.</p> + +<p>"The State Troopers are there," said Smith. "They'll get him sure."</p> + +<p>"Cristi," faltered Salzar, "—then they are gobble—Quintana, Sard, +everybody! Si?"</p> + +<p>Smith considered the man: "You can save <em>your</em> skin anyway. You can go +back and tell Harry Beck. Then both of you can beat it for Drowned +Valley."</p> + +<p>He picked up his rifle, stood a moment in troubled reflection:</p> + +<p>"If I could overtake Quintana I'd do it," he said. "I think I'll try. If +I can't, he's done for. You tell Harry Beck that Eddie Abrams advises +him to beat it for Drowned Valley."</p> + +<p>Suddenly Salzar tore the bandanna from his face, flung it down and +stamped on it.</p> + +<p>"What I tell Quintana!" he yelled, his features distorted with rage. "I +don't-a like!—no, not me!—no, I tell-a heem, stay at those Ghost-a +Lake and watch thees-a fellow Clinch. Si! Not for me thees-a wood. No! I +spit upon it! I curse like hell! I tell Quintana I don't-a like. Now, +eet is trouble that comes and we lose-a out! Damn! <em>Damn!</em> Me, I find me +Beck. You shall say to José Quintana how he is a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span> damfool. Me, I am +finish—me, Nick Salzar! You hear me, Abrams! I am through! I go!"</p> + +<p>He glared at Smith, started to move, came back and took his torch, made +a violent gesture with it which drenched the woods with goblin light.</p> + +<p>"You stop-a Quintana, maybe. You tell-a heem he is the bigg-a fool! You +tell-a heem Nick Salzar is no damn fool. No! Adios, my frien' Abrams. I +beat it. I save my skin!"</p> + +<p>Once more Salzar turned and headed for Drowned Valley.... Where Clinch +would not fail to kill him.... The man was going to his death.... And +it was Smith who sent him.</p> + +<p>Suddenly it came to Smith that he could not do this thing; that this man +had no chance; that he was slaying a human being with perfect safety to +himself and without giving him a chance.</p> + +<p>"Salzar!" he called sharply.</p> + +<p>The man halted and looked around.</p> + +<p>"Come back!"</p> + +<p>Salzar hesitated, turned finally, slouched toward him.</p> + +<p>Smith laid aside his pack and rifle, and, as Salzar came up, he quietly +took his weapon from him and laid it beside his own.</p> + +<p>"What-a da matt'?" demanded Salzar, astonished. "Why you taka my gun?"</p> + +<p>Smith measured him. They were well matched.</p> + +<p>"Set your torch in that crotch," he said.</p> + +<p>Salzar, puzzled and impatient, demanded to know why. Smith took both +torches, set them opposite each other and drew Salzar into the white +glare.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>"Now," he said, "you dirty desperado, I am going to try to kill you +clean. Look out for yourself!"</p> + +<p>For a second Salzar stood rooted in blank astonishment.</p> + +<p>"I'm one of Clinch's men," said Smith, "but I can't stick a knife in +your back, at that! Now, take care of yourself if you can<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>His voice died in his throat; Salzar was on him, clawing, biting, +kicking, striving to strangle him, to wrestle him off his feet. Smith +reeled, staggering under the sheer rush of the man, almost blinded by +blows, clutched, bewildered in Salzar's panther grip.</p> + +<p>For a moment he writhed there, searching blindly for his enemy's wrist, +striving to avoid the teeth that snapped at his throat, stifled by the +hot stench of the man's breath in his face.</p> + +<p>"I keel you! I keel you! Damn! Damn!" panted Salzar, in convulsive fury +as Smith freed his left arm and struck him in the face.</p> + +<p>Now, on the narrow, wet and slippery strip of rock they swayed to and +fro, murderously interlocked, their heavy boots splashing, battling with +limb and body.</p> + +<p>Twice Salzar forced Smith outward over the sink, trying to end it, but +could not free himself.</p> + +<p>Once, too, he managed to get at a hidden knife, drag it out and stab at +head and throat; but Smith caught the fist that wielded it, forced back +the arm, held it while Salzar screamed at him, lunging at his face with +bared teeth.</p> + +<p>Suddenly the end came: Salzar's body heaved upward, sprawled for an +instant in the dazzling glare, hurtled over Smith's head and fell into +the sink with a crashing splash.</p> + +<p>Frantically he thrashed there, spattering and floundering<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span> in darkness. +He made no outcry. Probably he had landed head first.</p> + +<p>In a moment only a vague heaving came from the unseen ooze.</p> + +<p>Smith, exhausted, drenched with sweat, leaned against a tamarack, +sickened.</p> + +<p>After all sound had ceased he straightened up with an effort. Presently +he bent and recovered Salzar's red bandanna and his hat, lifted his own +rifle and pack and struggled into the harness. Then, kicking Salzar's +rifle overboard, he unfastened both torches, pocketed one, and started +on in a flood of ghostly light.</p> + +<p>He was shaking all over and the torch quivered in his hand. He had seen +men die in the Great War. He had been near death himself. But never +before had he been near death in so horrible a form. The sodden noises +in the mud, the deadened flopping of the sinking body—mud-plastered +hands beating frantically on mud, spattering, agonising in darkness—"My +God," he breathed, "anything but that—anything but that!——"</p> + + +<h3>II</h3> + +<p>Before midnight he struck the hard forest. Here there was no trail at +all, only spreading outcrop of rock under dying leaves.</p> + +<p>He could see a few stars. Cautiously he ventured to shine his compass +close to the ground. He was still headed right. The ghastly sink country +lay behind him.</p> + +<p>Ahead of him, somewhere in darkness—but how far he did not +know—Quintana and his people were moving swiftly on Clinch's Dump.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>It may have been an hour later—two hours, perhaps—when from far ahead +in the forest came a sound—the faint clink of a shod heel on rock.</p> + +<p>Now, Smith unslung his pack, placed it between two rocks where laurel +grew.</p> + +<p>Salzar's red bandanna was still wet, but he tied it across his face, +leaving his eyes exposed. The dead man's hat fitted him. His own hat and +the extra torch he dropped into his basket-pack.</p> + +<p>Ready, now, he moved swiftly forward, trailing his rifle. And very soon +it became plain to him that the people ahead were moving without much +caution, evidently fearing no unfriendly ear or eye in that section of +the wilderness.</p> + +<p>Smith could hear their tread on rock and root and rotten branch, or +swishing through frosted fern and brake, or louder on newly fallen +leaves.</p> + +<p>At times he could even see the round white glare of a torch on the +ground—see it shift ahead, lighting up tree trunks, spread out, +fanlike, into a wide, misty glory, then vanish as darkness rushed in +from the vast ocean of the night.</p> + +<p>Once they halted at a brook. Their torches flashed it; he heard them +sounding its depths with their gun-butts.</p> + +<p>Smith knew that brook. It was the east branch of Star Brook, the inlet +to Star Pond.</p> + +<p>Far ahead above the trees the sky seemed luminous. It was star lustre +over the pond, turning the mist to a silvery splendour.</p> + +<p>Now the people ahead of him moved with more caution, crossing the brook +without splashing, and their boots made less noise in the woods.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>To keep in touch with them Smith hastened his pace until he drew near +enough to hear the low murmur of their voices.</p> + +<p>They were travelling in single file; he had a glimpse of them against +the ghostly radiance ahead. Indeed, so near had he approached that he +could hear the heavy, laboured breathing of the last man in the +file—some laggard who dragged his feet, plodding on doggedly, panting, +muttering. Probably the man was Sard.</p> + +<p>Already the forest in front was invaded by the misty radiance from the +clearing. Through the trees starlight glimmered on water. The perfume of +the open land grew in the night air,—the scent of dew-wet grass, the +smell of still water and of sedgy shores.</p> + +<p>Lying flat behind a rotting log, Smith could see them all now,—spectral +shapes against the light. There were five of them at the forest's edge.</p> + +<p>They seemed to know what was to be done and how to do it. Two went down +among the ferns and stunted willows toward the west shore of the pond; +two sheered off to the southwest, shoulder deep in blackberry and sumac. +The fifth man waited for a while, then ran down across the open pasture.</p> + +<p>Scarcely had he started when Smith glided to the wood's edge, crouched, +and looked down.</p> + +<p>Below stood Clinch's Dump, plain in the starlight, every window dark. To +the west the barn loomed, huge with its ramshackle outbuildings +straggling toward the lake.</p> + +<p>Straight down the slope toward the barn ran the fifth man of Quintana's +gang, and disappeared among the out-buildings.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>Smith crept after him through the sumacs; and, at the foot of the slope, +squatted low in a clump of rag-weed.</p> + +<p>So close to the house was he now that he could hear the dew rattling on +the veranda roof. He saw shadowy figures appear, one after another, and +take stations at the four corners of the house. The fifth man was +somewhere near the out-buildings, very silent about whatever he had on +hand.</p> + +<p>The stillness was absolute save for the drumming dew and a faint ripple +from the water's edge.</p> + +<p>Smith crouched, listened, searched the starlight with intent eyes, and +waited.</p> + +<p>Until something happened he could not solve the problem before him. He +could be of no use to Eve Strayer and to Stormont until he found out +what Quintana was going to do.</p> + +<p>He could be of little use anyway unless he got into the house, where two +rifles might hold out against five.</p> + +<p>There was no use in trying to get to Ghost Lake for assistance. He felt +that whatever was about to happen would come with a rush. It would be +all over before he had gone five minutes. No; the only thing to do was +to stay where he was.</p> + +<p>As for his pledge to the little Grand Duchess, that was always in his +mind. Sooner or later, somehow, he was going to make good his pledge.</p> + +<p>He knew that Quintana and his gang were here to find the Flaming Jewel.</p> + +<p>Had he not encountered Quintana, his own errand had been the same. For +Smith had started for Clinch's prepared to reveal himself to Stormont, +and then, masked to the eyes—and to save Eve from a broken heart, and +Clinch from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span> States Prison—he had meant to rob the girl at +pistol-point.</p> + +<p>It was the only way to save Clinch; the only way to save the pride of +this blindly loyal girl. For the arrest of Clinch meant ruin to both, +and Smith realised it thoroughly.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>A slight sound from one of the out-houses—a sort of +wagon-shed—attracted his attention. Through the frost-blighted +rag-weeds he peered intently, listening.</p> + +<p>After a few moments a faint glow appeared in the shed. There was a +crackling noise. The glow grew pinker.</p> + + +<h3>III</h3> + +<p>Inside Clinch's house Eve awoke with a start. Her ears were filled with +a strange, rushing, crackling noise. A rosy glare danced and shook +outside her windows.</p> + +<p>As she sprang to the floor on bandaged feet, a shrill scream burst out +in the ruddy darkness—unearthly, horrible; and there came a thunderous +battering from the barn.</p> + +<p>The girl tore open her bedroom door. "Jack!" she cried in a terrified +voice. "The barn's on fire!"</p> + +<p>"Good God!" he said, "—my horse!"</p> + +<p>He had already sprung from his chair outside her door. Now he ran +downstairs, and she heard bolt and chain clash at the kitchen door and +his spurred boots land on the porch.</p> + +<p>"Oh," she whimpered, snatching a blanket wrapper from a peg and +struggling into it. "Oh, the poor horse! Jack! Jack! I'm coming to help! +Don't risk your life! I'm coming—I'm coming<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>Terror clutched her as she stumbled downstairs on bandaged feet.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>As she reached the door a great flare of light almost blinded her.</p> + +<p>"Jack!"</p> + +<p>And at the same instant she saw him struggling with three masked men in +the glare of the wagon-shed afire.</p> + +<p>His rifle stood in the corridor outside her door. With one bound she was +on the stairs again. There came the crash and splinter of wood and glass +from the kitchen, and a man with a handkerchief over his face caught her +on the landing.</p> + +<p>Twice she wrenched herself loose and her fingers almost touched +Stormont's rifle; she fought like a cornered lynx, tore the handkerchief +from her assailant's face, recognised Quintana, hurled her very body at +him, eyes flaming, small teeth bared.</p> + +<p>Two other men laid hold. In another moment she had tripped Quintana, and +all four fell, rolling over and over down the short flight of stairs, +landing in the kitchen, still fighting.</p> + +<p>Here, in darkness, she wriggled out, somehow, leaving her blanket +wrapped in their clutches. In another instant she was up the stairs +again, only to discover that the rifle was gone.</p> + +<p>The red glare from the wagon-house lighted her bedroom; she sprang +inside and bolted the door.</p> + +<p>Her chamois jacket with its loops full of cartridges hung on a peg. She +got into it, seized her rifle and ran to the window just as two masked +men, pushing Stormont before them, entered the house by the kitchen way.</p> + +<p>Her own door was resounding with kicks and blows, shaking, shivering +under the furious impact of boot and rifle-butt.</p> + +<p>She ran to the bed, thrust her hand under the pillow,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span> pulled out the +case containing the Flaming Jewel, and placed it in the breast pocket of +her shooting jacket.</p> + +<p>Again she crept to the window. Only the wagon-house was burning. +Somebody, however, had led Stormont's horse from the barn, and had tied +it to a tree at a safe distance. It stood there, trembling, its +beautiful, nervous head turned toward the burning building.</p> + +<p>The blows upon her bedroom door had ceased; there came a loud trampling, +the sound of excited voices; Quintana's sarcastic tones, clear, +dominant:</p> + +<p>"Dios! The police! Why you bring me this gendarme? What am I to do with +a gentleman of the Constabulary, eh? Do you think I am fool enough to +cut his throat? Well, Señor Gendarme, what are you doing here in the +Dump of Clinch?"</p> + +<p>Then Stormont's voice, clear and quiet: "What are <em>you</em> doing here? If +you've a quarrel with Clinch, he's not here. There's only a young girl +in this house."</p> + +<p>"So?" said Quintana. "Well, that is what I expec', my frien'. It is +thees lady upon whom I do myse'f the honour to call!"</p> + +<p>Eve, listening, heard Stormont's rejoinder, still, calm, and very grave:</p> + +<p>"The man who lays a finger on that young girl had better be dead. He's +as good as dead the moment he touches her. There won't be a chance for +him.... Nor for any of you, if you harm her."</p> + +<p>"Calm youse'f, my frien'," said Quintana. "I demand of thees young lady +only that she return to me the property of which I have been rob by +Monsieur Clinch."</p> + +<p>"I knew nothing of any theft. Nor does she<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>"Pardon; Señor Clinch knows; and I know." His tone changed, offensively: +"Señor Gendarme, am I permit to understan' that you are a frien' of +thees young lady?—a heart-frien', per'aps<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"I am her friend," said Stormont bluntly.</p> + +<p>"Ah," said Quintana, "then you shall persuade her to return to me thees +packet of which Monsieur Clinch has rob me."</p> + +<p>There was a short silence, then Quintana's voice again:</p> + +<p>"I know thees packet is concel in thees house. Peaceably, if possible, I +would recover my property.... If she refuse<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>Another pause.</p> + +<p>"Well?" inquired Stormont, coolly.</p> + +<p>"Ah! It is ver' painful to say. Alas, Señor Gendarme, I mus' have my +property.... If she refuse, then I mus' sever one of her pretty +fingers.... An' if she still refuse—I sever her pretty fingers, one by +one, until<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"You know what would happen to <em>you</em> ?" interrupted Stormont, in a voice +that quivered in spite of himself.</p> + +<p>"I take my chance. Señor Gendarme, she is within that room. If you are +her frien', you shall advise her to return to me my property."</p> + +<p>After another silence:</p> + +<p>"Eve!" he called sharply.</p> + +<p>She placed her lips to the door: "Yes, Jack."</p> + +<p>He said: "There are five masked men out here who say that Clinch robbed +them and they are here to recover their property.... Do you know +anything about this?"</p> + +<p>"I know they lie. My father is not a thief.... I have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span> my rifle and +plenty of ammunition. I shall kill every man who enters this room."</p> + +<p>For a moment nobody stirred or spoke. Then Quintana strode to the bolted +door and struck it with the butt of his rifle.</p> + +<p>"You, in there," he said in a menacing voice, "—you listen once to +<em>me</em> ! You open your door and come out. I give you one minute!" He struck +the door again: "<em>One</em> minute, señorita!—or I cut from your frien', +here, the hand from his right arm!"</p> + +<p>There was a deathly silence. Then the sound of bolts. The door opened. +Slowly the girl limped forward, still wearing the hunting jacket over +her night-dress.</p> + +<p>Quintana made her an elaborate and ironical bow, slouch hat in hand; +another masked man took her rifle.</p> + +<p>"Señorita," said Quintana with another sweep of his hat, "I ask pardon +that I trouble you for my packet of which your father has rob me for +ver' long time."</p> + +<p>Slowly the girl lifted her blue eyes to Stormont. He was standing +between two masked men. Their pistols were pressed slightly against his +stomach.</p> + +<p>Stormont reddened painfully:</p> + +<p>"It was not for myself that I let you open your door," he said. "They +would not have ventured to lay hands on <em>me</em> ."</p> + +<p>"Ah," said Quintana with a terrifying smile, "you would not have been +the first gendarme who had—<em>accorded me his hand</em> !"</p> + +<p>Two of the masked men laughed loudly.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>Outside in the rag-weed patch, Smith rose, stole across the grass to the +kitchen door and slipped inside.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>"Now, señorita," said Quintana gaily, "my packet, if you please,—and we +leave you to the caresses of your faithful gendarme,—who should thank +God that he still possesses two good hands to fondle you! Alons! Come +then! My packet!"</p> + +<p>One of the masked men said: "Take her downstairs and lock her up +somewhere or she'll shoot us from her window."</p> + +<p>"Lead out that gendarme, too!" added Quintana, grasping Eve by the arm.</p> + +<p>Down the stairs tramped the men, forcing their prisoners with them.</p> + +<p>In the big kitchen the glare from the burning out-house fell dimly; the +place was full of shadows.</p> + +<p>"Now," said Quintana, "I take my property and my leave. Where is the +packet hidden?"</p> + +<p>She stood for a moment with drooping head, amid the sombre shadows, +then, slowly, she drew the emblazoned morocco case from her breast +pocket.</p> + +<p>What followed occurred in the twinkling of an eye: for, as Quintana +extended his arm to grasp the case, a hand snatched it, a masked figure +sprang through the doorway, and ran toward the barn.</p> + +<p>Somebody recognised the hat and red bandanna:</p> + +<p>"Salzar!" he yelled. "Nick Salzar!"</p> + +<p>"A traitor, by God!" shouted Quintana. Even before he had reached the +door, his pistol flashed twice, deafening all in the semi-darkness, +choking them with stifling fumes.</p> + +<p>A masked man turned on Stormont, forcing him back into the pantry at +pistol-point. Another man pushed Eve after him, slammed the pantry door +and bolted it.</p> + +<p>Through the iron bars of the pantry window, Stormont<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span> saw a man, wearing +a red bandanna tied under his eyes, run up and untie his horse and fling +himself astride under a shower of bullets.</p> + +<p>As he wheeled the horse and swung him into the clearing toward the foot +of Star Pond, his seat and horsemanship were not to be mistaken.</p> + +<p>He was gone, now, the gallop stretching into a dead run; and Quintana's +men still following, shooting, hallooing in the starlight like a pack of +leaping shapes from hell.</p> + +<p>But Quintana had not followed far. When he had emptied his automatic he +halted.</p> + +<p>Something about the transaction suddenly checked his fury, stilled it, +summoned his brain into action.</p> + +<p>For a full minute he stood unstirring, every atom of intelligence in +terrible concentration.</p> + +<p>Presently he put his left hand into his pocket, fitted another clip to +his pistol, turned on his heel and walked straight back to the house.</p> + +<p>Between the two locked in the pantry not a word had passed. Stormont +still peered out between the iron bars, striving to catch a glimpse of +what was going on. Eve crouched at the pantry doors, her face in her +hands, listening.</p> + +<p>Suddenly she heard Quintana's step in the kitchen. Cautiously she turned +the pantry key from inside.</p> + +<p>Stormont heard her, and instantly came to her. At the same moment +Quintana unbolted the door from the outside and tried to open it.</p> + +<p>"Come out," he said coldly, "or it will not go well with you when my men +return."</p> + +<p>"You've got what you say is your property," replied. Stormont. "What do +you want now?"</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>"I tell you what I want ver' damn quick. Who was he, thees man who rides +with my property on your horse away? Eh? Because it was not Nick Salzar! +No! Salzar can not ride thees way. No! Alors?"</p> + +<p>"I can't tell you who he was," replied Stormont. "That's your affair, +not ours."</p> + +<p>"No? Ah! Ver' well, then. I shall tell you, Señor Flic! He was one of +<em>yours</em> . I understan'. It is a trap, a cheat—what you call a <em>plant</em> ! +Thees man who rode your horse he is disguise! Yes! He also is a +gendarme! Yes! You think I let a gendarme rob me? I got you where I want +you now. You shall write your gendarme frien' that he return to me my +property, <em>one day's time</em> , or I send him by parcel post two nice, +fresh-out right-hands—your sweetheart's and your own!"</p> + +<p>Stormont drew Eve's head close to his:</p> + +<p>"This man is blood mad or out of his mind! I'd better go out and take a +chance at him before the others come back."</p> + +<p>But the girl shook her head violently, caught him by the arm and drew +him toward the mouth of the tile down which Clinch always emptied his +hootch when the Dump was raided.</p> + +<p>But now, it appeared that the tile which protruded from the cement floor +was removable.</p> + +<p>In silence she began to unscrew it, and he, seeing what she was trying +to do, helped her.</p> + +<p>Together they lifted the heavy tile and laid it on the floor.</p> + +<p>"You open thees door!" shouted Quintana in a paroxysm of fury. "I give +you one minute! Then, by God, I kill you both!"</p> + +<p>Eve lifted a screen of wood through which the tile had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span> been set. Under +it a black hole yawned. It was a tunnel made of three-foot aqueduct +tiles; and it led straight into Star Pond, two hundred feet away.</p> + +<p>Now, as she straightened up and looked silently at Stormont, they heard +the trample of boots in the kitchen, voices, the bang of gun-stocks.</p> + +<p>"Does that drain lead into the lake?" whispered Stormont.</p> + +<p>She nodded.</p> + +<p>"Will you follow me, Eve?"</p> + +<p>She pushed him aside, indicating that he was to follow her.</p> + +<p>As she stripped the hunting jacket from her, a hot colour swept her +face. But she dropped on both knees, crept straight into the tile and +slipped out of sight.</p> + +<p>As she disappeared, Quintana shouted something in Portuguese, and fired +at the lock.</p> + +<p>With the smash of splintering wood in his ears, Stormont slid into the +smooth tunnel.</p> + +<p>In an instant he was shooting down a polished toboggan slide, and in +another moment was under the icy water of Star Pond.</p> + +<p>Shocked, blinded, fighting his way to the surface, he felt his spurred +boots dragging at him like a ton of iron. Then to him came her helping +hand.</p> + +<p>"I can make it," he gasped.</p> + +<p>But his clothing and his boots and the icy water began to tell on him in +mid-lake.</p> + +<p>Swimming without effort beside him, watching his every stroke, presently +she sank a little and glided under him and a little ahead, so that his +hands fell upon her shoulders.</p> + +<p>He let them rest, so, aware now that it was no burden to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span> such a +swimmer. Supple and silent as a swimming otter, the girl slipped lithely +through the chilled water, which washed his body to the nostrils and +numbed his legs till he could scarcely move them.</p> + +<p>And now, of a sudden, his feet touched gravel. He stumbled forward in +the shadow of overhanging trees and saw her wading shoreward, a +dripping, silvery shape on the shoal.</p> + +<p>Then, as he staggered up to her, breathless, where she was standing on +the pebbled shore, he saw her join both hands, cup-shape, and lift them +to her lips.</p> + +<p>And out of her mouth poured diamond, sapphire, and emerald in a dazzling +stream,—and, among them, one great, flashing gem blazing in the +starlight,—the Flaming Jewel!</p> + +<p>Like a naiad of the lake she stood, white, slim, silent, the heaped gems +glittering in her snowy hands, her face framed by the curling masses of +her wet hair.</p> + +<p>Then, slowly she turned her head to Stormont.</p> + +<p>"These are what Quintana came for," she said. "Could you put them into +your pocket?"</p> + + +<hr /> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span><a name="viii" id="viii"></a> +<small><span class="smcap">Episode Eight</span></small></h2> + +<h2>CUP AND LIP</h2> + + +<h3>I</h3> + +<p class="cap">TWO miles beyond Clinch's Dump, Hal Smith pulled Stormont's horse to a +walk. He was tremendously excited.</p> + +<p>With naïve sincerity he believed that what he had done on the spur of +the moment had been the only thing to do.</p> + +<p>By snatching the Flaming Jewel from Quintana's very fingers he had +diverted that vindictive bandit's fury from Eve, from Clinch, from +Stormont, and had centred it upon himself.</p> + +<p>More than that, he had sown the seeds of suspicion among Quintana's own +people. They never could discover Salzar's body. Always they must +believe that it was Nicolas Salzar and no other who so treacherously +robbed them, and who rode away in a rain of bullets, shaking the +emblazoned morocco case above his masked head in triumph, derision and +defiance.</p> + +<p>At the recollection of what had happened, Hal Smith drew bridle, and, +sitting his saddle there in the false dawn, threw back his handsome head +and laughed until the fading stars overhead swam in his eyes through +tears of sheerest mirth.</p> + +<p>For he was still young enough to have had the time of his life. Nothing +in the Great War had so thrilled him. For, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span> what had just happened, +there was humour. There had been none in the Great Grim Drama.</p> + +<p>Still, Smith began to realise that he had taken the long, long chance of +the opportunist who rolls the bones with Death. He had kept his pledge +to the little Grand Duchess. It was a clean job. It was even good +drama<span class="nowrap">——</span></p> + +<p>The picturesque angle of the affair shook Hal Smith with renewed +laughter. As a moving picture hero he thought himself the funniest thing +on earth.</p> + +<p>From the time he had poked a pistol against Sard's fat paunch, to this +bullet-pelted ride for life, life had become one ridiculously exciting +episode after another.</p> + +<p>He had come through like the hero in a best-seller.... Lacking only a +heroine.... If there had been any heroine it was Eve Strayer. Drama had +gone wrong in that detail.... So perhaps, after all, it was real life +he had been living and not drama. Drama, for the masses, must have a +definite beginning and ending. Real life lacks the latter. In life +nothing is finished. It is always a premature curtain which is yanked by +that doddering old stage-hand, Johnny Death.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>Smith sat his saddle, thinking, beginning to be sobered now by the +inevitable reaction which follows excitement and mirth as relentlessly +as care dogs the horseman.</p> + +<p>He had had a fine time,—save for the horror of the Rocktrail.... He +shuddered.... Anyway, at worst he had not shirked a clean deal in that +ghastly game.... It was God's mercy that he was not lying where Salzar +lay, ten feet—twenty—a hundred deep, perhaps—in immemorial slime——</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>He shook himself in his saddle as though to be rid of the creeping +horror, and wiped his clammy face.</p> + +<p>Now, in the false dawn, a blue-jay awoke somewhere among the oaks and +filled the misty silence with harsh grace-notes.</p> + +<p>Then reaction, setting in like a tide, stirred more sombre depths in the +heart of this young man.</p> + +<p>He thought of Riga; and of the Red Terror; of murder at noon-day, and +outrage by night. He remembered his only encounter with a lovely +child—once Grand Duchess of Esthonia—then a destitute refugee in +silken rags.</p> + +<p>What a day that had been.... Only one day and one evening.... And +never had he been so near in love in all his life....</p> + +<p>That one day and evening had been enough for her to confide to an +American officer her entire life's history.... Enough for him to pledge +himself to her service while life endured.... And if emotion had swept +every atom of reason out of his youthful head, there in the turmoil and +alarm—there in the terrified, riotous city jammed with refugees, +reeking with disease, half frantic from famine and the filthy, rising +flood of war—if really it all had been merely romantic impulse, ardour +born of overwrought sentimentalism, nevertheless, what he had pledged +that day to a little Grand Duchess in rags, he had fulfilled to the +letter within the hour.</p> + +<p>As the false dawn began to fade, he loosened hunting coat and cartridge +sling, drew from his shirt-bosom the morocco case.</p> + +<p>It bore the arms and crest of the Grand Duchess Theodorica of Esthonia.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>His fingers trembled slightly as he pressed the jewelled spring. It +opened on an empty casket.</p> + +<p>In the sudden shock of horror and astonishment, his convulsive clutch on +the spring started a tiny bell ringing. Then, under his very nose, the +empty tray slid aside revealing another tray underneath, set solidly +with brilliants. A rainbow glitter streamed from the unset gems in the +silken tray. Like an incredulous child he touched them. They were +magnificently real.</p> + +<p>In the centre lay blazing the great Erosite gem,—the Flaming Jewel +itself. Priceless diamonds, sapphires, emeralds ringed it. In his hands +he held nearly four millions of dollars.</p> + +<p>Gingerly he balanced the emblazoned case, fascinated. Then he replaced +the empty tray, closed the box, thrust it into the bosom of his flannel +shirt and buttoned it in.</p> + +<p>Now there was little more for this excited young man to do. He was +through with Clinch. Hal Smith, hold-up man and dish-washer at Clinch's +Dump, had ended his career. The time had now arrived for him to vanish +and make room for James Darragh.</p> + +<p>Because there still remained a very agreeable rôle for Darragh to play. +And he meant to eat it up—as Broadway has it.</p> + +<p>For by this time the Grand Duchess of Esthonia—Ricca, as she was called +by her companion, Valentine, the pretty Countess Orloff-Strelwitz—must +have arrived in New York.</p> + +<p>At the big hunting lodge of the late Henry Harrod—now inherited by +Darragh—there might be a letter—perhaps a telegram—the cue for Hal +Smith to vanish and for James Darragh to enter, play his brief but +glittering part, and——</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>Darragh's sequence of pleasing meditations halted abruptly.... To walk +out of the life of the little Grand Duchess did not seem to suit his +ideas—indefinite and hazy as they were, so far.</p> + +<p>He lifted the bridle from the horse's neck, divided curb and snaffle +thoughtfully, touched the splendid animal with heel and knee.</p> + +<p>As he cantered on into the wide forest road that led to his late uncle's +abode, curiosity led him to wheel into a narrower trail running east +along Star Pond, and from whence he could take a farewell view of +Clinch's Dump.</p> + +<p>He smiled to think of Eve and Stormont there together, and now in safety +behind bolted doors and shutters.</p> + +<p>He grinned to think of Quintana and his precious crew, blood-crazy, +baffled, probably already distrusting one another, yet running wild +through the night like starving wolves galloping at hazard across a +famine-stricken waste.</p> + +<p>"Only wait till Stormont makes his report," he thought, grinning more +broadly still. "Every State Trooper north of Albany will be after Señor +Quintana. Some hunting! And, if he could understand, Mike Clinch might +thank his stars that what I've done this night has saved him his skin +and Eve a broken heart!"</p> + +<p>He drew his horse to a walk, now, for the path began to run closer to +Star Pond, skirting the pebbled shallows in the open just ahead.</p> + +<p>Alders still concealed the house across the lake, but the trail was +already coming out into the starlight.</p> + +<p>Suddenly his horse stopped short, trembling, its ears pricked forward.</p> + +<p>Darragh sat listening intently for a moment. Then<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span> with infinite +caution, he leaned over the cantle and gently parted the alders.</p> + +<p>On the pebbled beach, full in the starlight, stood two figures, one +white and slim, the other dark.</p> + +<p>The arm of the dark figure clasped the waist of the white and slender +one.</p> + +<p>Evidently they had heard his horse, for they stood motionless, looking +directly at the alders behind which his horse had halted.</p> + +<p>To turn might mean a shot in the back as far as Darragh knew. He was +still masked with Salzar's red bandanna. He raised his rifle, slid a +cartridge into the breech, pressed his horse forward with a slight touch +of heel and knee, and rode slowly out into the star-dusk.</p> + +<p>What Stormont saw was a masked man, riding his own horse, with menacing +rifle half lifted for a shot! What Eve Strayer thought she saw was too +terrible for words. And before Stormont could prevent her she sprang in +front of him, covering his body with her own.</p> + +<p>At that the horseman tore off his red mask:</p> + +<p>"Eve! Jack Stormont! What the devil are you doing over <em>here</em> ?"</p> + +<p>Stormont walked slowly up to his own horse, laid one unsteady hand on +its silky nose, kept it there while dusty, velvet lips mumbled and +caressed his fingers.</p> + +<p>"I knew it was a cavalryman," he said quietly. "I suspected you, Jim. It +was the sort of crazy thing you were likely to do.... I don't ask you +what you're up to, where you've been, what your plans may be. If you +needed me you'd have told me.</p> + +<p>"But I've got to have my horse for Eve. Her feet are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span> wounded. She's in +her night-dress and wringing wet. I've got to set her on my horse and +try to take her through to Ghost Lake."</p> + +<p>Darragh stared at Stormont, at the ghostly figure of the girl who had +sunk down on the sand at the lake's edge. Then he scrambled out of the +saddle and handed over the bridle.</p> + +<p>"Quintana came back," said Stormont. "I hope to reckon with him some +day.... I believe he came back to harm Eve.... We got out of the +house.... We swam the lake.... I'd have gone under except for her<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>In his distress and overwhelming mortification, Darragh stood miserable, +mute, irresolute.</p> + +<p>Stormont seemed to understand: "What you did, Jim, was well meant," he +said. "I understand. Eve will understand when I tell her. But that +fellow Quintana is a devil. You can't draw a herring across any trail he +follows. I tell you, Jim, this fellow Quintana is either blood-mad or +just plain crazy. Somebody will have to put him out of the way. I'll do +it if I ever find him."</p> + +<p>"Yes.... Your people ought to do that.... Or, if you like, I'll +volunteer.... I've a little business to transact in New York, first.... +Jack, your tunic and breeches are soaked; I'll be glad to chip in +something for Eve.... Wait a moment<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>He stepped into cover, drew the morocco box from his grey shirt, shoved +it into his hip pocket.</p> + +<p>Then he threw off his cartridge belt and hunting coat, pulled the grey +shirt over his head and came out in his undershirt and breeches, with +the other garments hanging over his arm.</p> + +<p>"Give her these," he said. "She can button the coat<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span> around her waist +for a skirt. She'd better go somewhere and get out of that soaking-wet +night-dress<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>Eve, crouched on the sand, trying to wring out and twist up her drenched +hair, looked up at Stormont as he came toward her holding out Darragh's +dry clothing.</p> + +<p>"You'd better do what you can with these," he said, trying to speak +carelessly.... "<em>He</em> says you'd better chuck—what you're wearing<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>She nodded in flushed comprehension. Stormont walked back to his horse, +his boots slopping water at every stride.</p> + +<p>"I don't know any place nearer than Ghost Lake Inn," he said ... "except +Harrod's."</p> + +<p>"That's where we're going, Jack," said Darragh cheerfully.</p> + +<p>"That's <em>your</em> place, isn't it?"</p> + +<p>"It is. But I don't want Eve to know it.... I think it better she +should not know me except as Hal Smith—for the present, anyway. You'll +see to that, won't you?"</p> + +<p>"As you wish, Jim.... Only, if we go to your own house<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"We're not going to the main house. She wouldn't, anyway. Clinch has +taught that girl to hate the very name of Harrod—hate every foot of +forest that the Harrod game keepers patrol. She wouldn't cross my +threshold to save her life."</p> + +<p>"I don't understand, but—it's all right—whatever <em>you</em> say, Jim."</p> + +<p>"I'll tell you the whole business some day. But where I'm going to take +you now is into a brand new camp which I ordered built last spring. It's +within a mile of the State Forest border. Eve won't know that it's +Harrod property.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span> I've a hatchery there and the State lets me have a man +in exchange for free fry. When I get there I'll post my man.... It will +be a roof for to-night, anyway, and breakfast in the morning, whenever +you're ready."</p> + +<p>"How far is it?"</p> + +<p>"Only about three miles east of here."</p> + +<p>"That's the thing to do, then," said Stormont bluntly.</p> + +<p>He dropped one sopping-wet sleeve over his horse's neck, taking care not +to touch the saddle. He was thinking of the handful of gems in his +pocket; and he wondered why Darragh had said nothing about the empty +case for which he had so recklessly risked his life.</p> + +<p>What this whole business was about Stormont had no notion. But he knew +Darragh. That was sufficient to leave him tranquil, and perfectly +certain that whatever Darragh was doing must be the right thing to do.</p> + +<p>Yet—Eve had swum Star Pond with her mouth filled with jewels.</p> + +<p>When she had handed the morocco box to Quintana, Stormont now realised +that she must have played her last card on the utterly desperate chance +that Quintana might go away without examining the case.</p> + +<p>Evidently she had emptied the case before she left her room. He +recollected that, during all that followed, Eve had not uttered a single +word. He knew why, now. How could she speak with her mouth full of +diamonds?</p> + +<p>A slight sound from the shore caused him to turn. Eve was coming toward +him in the dusk, moving painfully on her wounded feet. Darragh's flannel +shirt and his hunting coat buttoned around her slender waist clothed +her.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>The next instant he was beside her, lifting her in both arms.</p> + +<p>As he placed her in the saddle and adjusted one stirrup to her bandaged +foot, she turned and quietly thanked Darragh for the clothing.</p> + +<p>"And that was a brave thing you did," she added, "—to risk your life +for my father's property. Because the morocco case which you saved +proved to be empty does not make what you did any the less loyal and +gallant."</p> + +<p>Darragh gazed at her, astounded; took the hand she stretched out to him; +held it with a silly expression on his features.</p> + +<p>"Hal Smith," she said with perceptible emotion, "I take back what I once +said to you on Owl Marsh. No man is a real crook by nature who did what +you have done. That is 'faithfulness unto death'—the supreme +offer—loyalty<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>Her voice broke; she pressed Darragh's hand convulsively and her lip +quivered.</p> + +<p>Darragh, with the morocco case full of jewels buttoned into his hip +pocket, stood motionless, mutely swallowing his amazement.</p> + +<p>What in the world did this girl mean, talking about an <em>empty</em> case?</p> + +<p>But this was no time to unravel that sort of puzzle. He turned to +Stormont who, as perplexed as he, had been listening in silence.</p> + +<p>"Lead your horse forward," he said. "I know the trail. All you need do +is to follow me." And, shouldering his rifle, he walked leisurely into +the woods, the cartridge belt sagging <em>en bandouliere</em> across his +woollen undershirt.</p> + + +<h3>II</h3> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>When Stormont gently halted his horse it was dawn, and Eve, sagging +against him with one arm around his neck, sat huddled up on her saddle +fast asleep.</p> + +<p>In a birch woods, on the eastern slope of the divide, stood the log +camp, dimly visible in the silvery light of early morning.</p> + +<p>Darragh, cautioning Stormont with a slight gesture, went forward, +mounted the rustic veranda, and knocked at a lighted window.</p> + +<p>A man, already dressed, came and peered out at him, then hurried to open +the door.</p> + +<p>"I didn't know you, Captain Darragh<span class="nowrap">——"</span> he began, but fell silent under +the warning gesture that checked him.</p> + +<p>"I've a guest outside. She's Clinch's step-daughter, Eve Strayer. She +knows me by the name of Hal Smith. Do you understand?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, sir<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Cut <em>that</em> out, too. I'm Hal Smith to you, also. State Trooper Stormont +is out there with Eve Strayer. He was a comrade of mine in Russia. I'm +Hal Smith to him, by mutual agreement. <em>Now</em> do you get me, Ralph?"</p> + +<p>"Sure, Hal. Go on; spit it out!"</p> + +<p>They both grinned.</p> + +<p>"You're a hootch runner," said Darragh. "This is your shack. The +hatchery is only a blind. That's all you have to know, Ralph. So put +that girl into my room and let her sleep till she wakes of her own +accord.</p> + +<p>"Stormont and I will take two of the guest-bunks in the <em>L.</em> And for +heaven's sake make us some coffee when you make your own. But first come +out and take the horse."</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>They went out together. Stormont lifted Eve out of the saddle. She did +not wake. Darragh led the way into the log house and along a corridor to +his own room.</p> + +<p>"Turn down the sheets," whispered Stormont. And, when the bed was ready: +"Can you get a bath towel, Jim?"</p> + +<p>Darragh fetched one from the connecting bath-room.</p> + +<p>"Wrap it around her wet hair," whispered Stormont. "Good heavens, I wish +there were a woman here."</p> + +<p>"I wish so too," said Darragh; "she's chilled to the bone. You'll have +to wake her. She can't sleep in what she's wearing; it's almost as damp +as her hair<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>He went to the closet and returned with a man's morning robe, as soft as +fleece.</p> + +<p>"Somehow or other she's got to get into that," he said.</p> + +<p>There was a silence.</p> + +<p>"Very well," said Stormont, reddening.... "If you'll step out +I'll—manage...." He looked Darragh straight in the eyes: "I have asked +her to marry me," he said.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>When Stormont came out a great fire of birch-logs was blazing in the +living-room, and Darragh stood there, his elbow on the rough stone +mantel-shelf.</p> + +<p>Stormont came straight to the fire and set one spurred boot on the +fender.</p> + +<p>"She's warm and dry and sound asleep," he said. "I'll wake her again if +you think she ought to swallow something hot."</p> + +<p>At that moment the fish-culturist came in with a pot of steaming coffee.</p> + +<p>"This is my friend, Ralph Wier," said Darragh. "I think you'd better +give Eve a cup of coffee." And, to Wier,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span> "Fill a couple of hot water +bags, old chap. We don't want any pneumonia in this house."</p> + +<p>When breakfast was ready Eve once more lay asleep with a slight dew of +perspiration on her brow.</p> + +<p>Darragh was half starved: Stormont ate little. Neither spoke at all +until, satisfied, they rose, ready for sleep.</p> + +<p>At the door of his room Stormont took Darragh's offered hand, +understanding what it implied:</p> + +<p>"Thanks, Jim.... Hers is the loveliest character I have ever known.... +If I weren't as poor as a homeless dog I'd marry her to-morrow.... I'll +do it anyway, I think.... I <em>can't</em> let her go back to Clinch's Dump!"</p> + +<p>"After all," said Darragh, smiling, "if it's only money that worries +you, why not talk about a job to <em>me</em> !"</p> + +<p>Stormont flushed heavily: "That's rather wonderful of you, Jim<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Why? You're the best officer I had. Why the devil did you go into the +Constabulary without talking to me?"</p> + +<p>Stormont's upper lip seemed inclined to twitch but he controlled it and +scowled at space.</p> + +<p>"Go to bed, you darned fool," said Darragh, carelessly. "You'll find dry +things ready. Ralph will take care of your uniform and boots."</p> + +<p>Then he went into his own quarters to read two letters which, conforming +to arrangements made with Mrs. Ray the day he had robbed Emanuel Sard, +were to be sent to Trout Lodge to await his arrival.</p> + +<p>Both, written from the Ritz, bore the date of the day before: the first +he opened was from the Countess Orloff-Strelwitz:</p> + +<div class="blockquot"> +<p class="noi">"Dear Captain Darragh,</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>"—You are so wonderful! Your messenger, with the <em>ten</em> thousand +dollars which you say you already have recovered from those +miscreants who robbed Ricca, came aboard our ship before we +landed. It was a godsend; we were nearly penniless,—and oh, +<em>so</em> shabby!</p> + +<p>"Instantly, my friend, we shopped, Ricca and I. Fifth Avenue +enchanted us. All misery was forgotten in the magic of that +paradise for women.</p> + +<p>"Yet, spendthrifts that we naturally are, we were not silly +enough to be extravagant. Ricca was wild for American +sport-clothes. I, also. Yet—only <em>two</em> gowns apiece, excepting +our sport clothes. And other necessaries. Don't you think we +were economical?"</p> + +<p>"Furthermore, dear Captain Darragh, we are hastening to follow +your instructions. We are leaving to-day for your château in the +wonderful forest, of which you told us that +never-to-be-forgotten day in Riga.</p> + +<p>"Your agent is politeness, consideration and kindness itself. We +have our accommodations. We leave New York at midnight.</p> + +<p>"Ricca is so excited that it is difficult for her to restrain +her happiness. God knows the child has seen enough unhappiness +to quench the gaiety of anybody!</p> + +<p>"Well, all things end. Even tears. Even the Red Terror shall +pass from our beloved Russia. For, after all, Monsieur, God +still lives.</p> + +<p class="close"> +"<span class="smcap">Valentine.</span>"<br /> +</p> + +<p class="noi">"P. S. Ricca has written to you. I have read the letter. I have +let it go uncensored."</p></div> + +<p>Darragh went to the door of his room:</p> + +<p>"Ralph! Ralph!" he called. And, when Wier hurriedly appeared:</p> + +<p>"What time does the midnight train from New York get into Five Lakes?"</p> + +<p>"A little before nine<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"You can make it in the flivver, can't you?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, if I start <em>now</em> ."</p> + +<p>"All right. Two ladies. You're to bring them to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span> <em>house</em> , not +<em>here</em> . Mrs. Ray knows about them. And—get back here as soon as you +can."</p> + +<p>He closed his door again, sat down on the bed and opened the other +letter. His hand shook as he unfolded it. He was so scared and excited +that he could scarcely decipher the angular, girlish penmanship:</p> + +<div class="blockquot"> +<p class="noi">"To dear Captain Darragh, our champion and friend—</p> + +<p>"It is difficult for me, Monsieur, to express my happiness and +my deep gratitude in the so cold formality of the written page.</p> + +<p>"Alas, sir, it will be still more difficult to find words for it +when again I have the happiness of greeting you in proper +person.</p> + +<p>"Valentine has told you everything, she warns me, and I am, +therefore, somewhat at a loss to know what I should write to +you.</p> + +<p>"Yet, I know very well what I would write if I dare. It is this: +that I wish you to know—although it may not pass the +censor—that I am most impatient to see you, Monsieur. <em>Not</em> +because of kindness past, nor with an unworthy expectation of +benefits to come. But because of friendship,—<em>the deepest, +sincerest of my</em> <span class="smcap">whole life</span>.</p> + +<p>"Is it not modest of a young girl to say this? Yes, surely all +the world which was once <em>en régle</em> , formal, artificial, has +been burnt out of our hearts by this so frightful calamity which +has overwhelmed the world with fire and blood.</p> + +<p>"If ever on earth there was a time when we might venture to +express with candour what is hidden within our minds and hearts, +it would seem, Monsieur, that the time is now.</p> + +<p>"True, I have known you only for one day and one evening. Yet, +what happened to the world in that brief space of time—and to +us, Monsieur—brought <em>us</em> together as though our meeting were +but a blessed reunion after the happy intimacy of many years.... +I speak, Monsieur, for myself. May I hope that I speak, also, +for you?</p> + +<p>"With a heart too full to thank you, and with expectations +indescribable—but with courage, always, for any event,—I take +my leave of you at the foot of this page. Like death—I +trust—my adieu is not the end, but the beginning. It is not +farewell; it is a greeting to him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span> whom I most honour in all the +world.... And would willingly obey if he shall command. And +otherwise—<em>all</em> else that in his mind—and heart—he might +desire.</p> + +<p class="close"> +"<span class="smcap">Theodorica</span>."<br /> +</p> +</div> + +<p>It was the most beautiful love-letter any man ever received in all the +history of love.</p> + +<p>And it had passed the censor.</p> + + +<h3>III</h3> + +<p>It was afternoon when Darragh awoke in his bunk, stiff, sore, confused +in mind and battered in body.</p> + +<p>However, when he recollected where he was he got out of bed in a hurry +and jerked aside the window curtains.</p> + +<p>The day was magnificent; a sky of royal azure overhead, and everywhere +the silver pillars of the birches supporting their splendid canopy of +ochre, orange, and burnt-gold.</p> + +<p>Wier, hearing him astir, came in.</p> + +<p>"How long have you been back! Did you meet the ladies with your +flivver?" demanded Darragh, impatiently.</p> + +<p>"I got to Five Lakes station just as the train came in. The young ladies +were the only passengers who got out. I waited to get their two steamer +trunks and then I drove them to Harrod Place<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"How did they seem, Ralph—worn-out—worried—ill?"</p> + +<p>Wier laughed: "No, sir, they looked very pretty and lively to me. They +seemed delighted to get here. They talked to each other in some foreign +tongue—Russian, I should say—at least, it sounded like what we heard +over in Siberia, Captain<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"It <em>was</em> Russian.... You go on and tell me while I take another hot +bath!——"</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>Wier followed him into the bath-room and vaulted to a seat on the deep +set window-sill:</p> + +<p>"—When they weren't talking Russian and laughing they talked to me and +admired the woods and mountains. I had to tell them everything—they +wanted to see buffalo and Indians. And when I told them there weren't +any, enquired for bears and panthers.</p> + +<p>"We saw two deer on the Scaur, and a woodchuck near the house; I thought +they'd jump out of the flivver<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>He began to laugh at the recollection: "No, sir, they didn't act tired +and sad; they said they were crazy to get into their knickerbockers and +go to look for you<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Where did you say I was?" asked Darragh, drying himself vigorously.</p> + +<p>"Out in the woods, somewhere. The last I saw of them, Mrs. Ray had their +hand-bags and Jerry and Tom were shouldering their trunks."</p> + +<p>"I'm going up there right away," interrupted Darragh excitedly. "—Good +heavens, Ralph, I haven't any clothes here, have I?"</p> + +<p>"No, sir. But those you wore last night are dry<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Confound it! I meant to send some decent clothes here<span class="nowrap">——</span> All right; +get me those duds I wore yesterday—and a bite to eat! I'm in a hurry, +Ralph<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>He ate while dressing, disgustedly arraying himself in the grey shirt, +breeches, and laced boots which weather, water, rock, and brier had not +improved.</p> + +<p>In a pathetic attempt to spruce up, he knotted the red bandanna around +his neck and pinched Salzar's slouch hat into a peak.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>"I look like a hootch-running Wop," he said. "Maybe I can get into the +house before I meet the ladies<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"You look like one of Clinch's bums," remarked Wier with native honesty.</p> + +<p>Darragh, chagrined, went to his bunk, pulled the morocco case from under +the pillow, and shoved it into the bosom of his flannel shirt.</p> + +<p>"That's the main thing anyway," he thought. Then, turning to Wier, he +asked whether Eve and Stormont had awakened.</p> + +<p>It appeared that Trooper Stormont had saddled up and cantered away +shortly after sunrise, leaving word that he must hunt up his comrade, +Trooper Lannis, at Ghost Lake.</p> + +<p>"They're coming back this evening," added Wier. "He asked you to look +out for Clinch's step-daughter."</p> + +<p>"She's all right here. Can't you keep an eye on her, Ralph?"</p> + +<p>"I'm stripping trout, sir. I'll be around here to cook dinner for her +when she wakes up."</p> + +<p>Darragh glanced across the brook at the hatchery. It was only a few +yards away. He nodded and started for the veranda:</p> + +<p>"That'll be all right," he said. "Nobody is coming here to bother +her.... And don't let her leave, Ralph, till I get back<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Very well, sir. But suppose she takes it into her head to leave<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>Darragh called back, gaily: "She can't: she hasn't any clothes!" And +away he strode in the gorgeous sunshine of a magnificent autumn day, all +the clean and vigorous youth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span> of him afire in anticipation of a reunion +which the letter from his lady-love had transfigured into a tryst.</p> + +<p>For, in that amazing courtship of a single day, he never dreamed that he +had won the heart of that sad, white-faced, hungry child in rags—silken +tatters still stained with the blood of massacre,—the very soles of her +shoes still charred by the embers of her own home.</p> + +<p>Yet, that is what must have happened in a single day and evening. Life +passes swiftly during such periods. Minutes lengthen into days; hours +into years. The soul finds itself.</p> + +<p>Then mind and heart become twin prophets,—clairvoyant concerning what +hides behind the veil; comprehending with divine clair-audience what the +Three Sisters whisper there—hearing even the whirr of the spindle—the +very snipping of the Eternal Shears!</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>The soul finds itself; the mind knows itself; the heart perfectly +understands.</p> + +<p>He had not spoken to this young girl of love. The blood of friends and +servants was still rusty on her skirt's ragged hem.</p> + +<p>Yet, that night, when at last in safety she had said good-bye to the man +who had secured it for her, he knew that he was in love with her. And, +at such crises, the veil that hides hearts becomes transparent.</p> + +<p>At that instant he had seen and known. Afterward he had dared not +believe that he had known.</p> + +<p>But hers had been a purer courage.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>As he strode on, the comprehension of her candour, her honesty, the +sweet bravery that had conceived, created, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span> sent that letter, +thrilled this young man until his heavy boots sprouted wings, and the +trail he followed was but a path of rosy clouds over which he floated +heavenward.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>About half an hour later he came to his senses with a distinct shock.</p> + +<p>Straight ahead of him on the trail, and coming directly toward him, +moved a figure in knickers and belted tweed.</p> + +<p>Flecked sunlight slanted on the stranger's cheek and burnished hair, +dappling face and figure with moving, golden spots.</p> + +<p>Instantly Darragh knew and trembled.</p> + +<p>But Theodorica of Esthonia had known him only in his uniform.</p> + +<p>As she came toward him, lovely in her lithe and rounded grace, only +friendly curiosity gazed at him from her blue eyes.</p> + +<p>Suddenly she knew him, went scarlet to her yellow hair, then white: and +tried to speak—but had no control of the short, rosy upper lip which +only quivered as he took her hands.</p> + +<p>The forest was dead still around them save for the whisper of painted +leaves sifting down from a sunlit vault above.</p> + +<p>Finally she said in a ghost of a voice: "My—friend...."</p> + +<p>"If you accept his friendship...."</p> + +<p>"Friendship is to be shared.... Ours mingled—on that day.... Your +share is—as much as pleases you."</p> + +<p>"All you have to give me, then."</p> + +<p>"Take it ... all I have...." Her blue eyes met his with a little +effort. All courage is an effort.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>Then that young man dropped on both knees at her feet and laid his lips +to her soft hands.</p> + +<p>In trembling silence she stood for a moment, then slowly sank on both +knees to face him across their clasped hands.</p> + +<p>So, in the gilded cathedral of the woods, pillared with silver, and +azure-domed, the betrothal of these two was sealed with clasp and lip.</p> + +<p>Awed, a little fearful, she looked into her lover's eyes with a gaze so +chaste, so oblivious to all things earthly, that the still purity of her +face seemed a sacrament, and he scarcely dared touch the childish lips +she offered.</p> + +<p>But when the sacrament of the kiss had been accomplished, she rested one +hand on his shoulder and rose, and drew him with her.</p> + +<p>Then <em>his</em> moment came: he drew the emblazoned case from his breast, +opened it, and, in silence, laid it in her hands. The blaze of the +jewels in the sunshine almost blinded them.</p> + +<p>That was <em>his</em> moment.</p> + +<p>The next moment was Quintana's.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>Darragh hadn't a chance. Out of the bushes two pistols were thrust hard +against his stomach. Quintana's face was behind them. He wore no mask, +but the three men with him watched him over the edges of +handkerchiefs,—over the sights of levelled rifles, too.</p> + +<p>The youthful Grand Duchess had turned deadly white. One of Quintana's +men took the morocco case from her hands and shoved her aside without +ceremony.</p> + +<p>Quintana leered at Darragh over his levelled weapons:</p> + +<p>"My frien' Smith!" he exclaimed softly. "So it is you, then, who have +twice try to rob me of my property!</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>"Ah! You recollec'? Yes? How you have rob me of a pacquet which contain +only some chocolate?"</p> + +<p>Darragh's face was burning with helpless rage.</p> + +<p>"My frien', Smith," repeated Quintana, "do you recollec' what it was you +say to me? Yes?... How often it is the onexpected which so usually +happen? You are quite correc', l'ami Smith. It has happen."</p> + +<p>He glanced at the open jewel box which one of the masked men held, then, +like lightning, his sinister eyes focussed on Darragh.</p> + +<p>"So," he said, "it was also you who rob me las' night of my property.... +What you do to Nick Salzar, eh?"</p> + +<p>"Killed him," said Darragh, dry lipped, nerved for death. "I ought to +have killed you, too, when I had the chance. But—<em>I'm</em> white, you see."</p> + +<p>At the insult flung into his face over the muzzles of his own pistols, +Quintana burst into laughter.</p> + +<p>"Ah! You <em>should</em> have shot me! You are quite right, my frien'. I mus' +say you have behave ver' foolish."</p> + +<p>He laughed again so hard that Darragh felt his pistols shaking against +his body.</p> + +<p>"So you have kill Nick Salzar, eh?" continued Quintana with perfect good +humour. "My frien', I am oblige to you for what you do. You are +surprise? Eh? It is ver' simple, my frien' Smith. What I want of a man +who can be kill? Eh? Of what use is he to me? Voilà!"</p> + +<p>He laughed, patted Darragh on the shoulder with one of his pistols.</p> + +<p>"You, now—<em>you</em> could be of use. Why? Because you are a better man than +was Nick Salzar. He who kills is better than the dead."</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>Then, swiftly his dark features altered:</p> + +<p>"My frien' Smith," he said, "I have come here for my property, not to +kill. I have recover my property. Why shall I kill you? To say that I am +a better man? Yes, perhaps. But also I should be oblige to say that also +I am a fool. Yaas! A poor damfool."</p> + +<p>Without shifting his eyes he made a motion with one pistol to his men. +As they turned and entered the thicket, Quintana's intent gaze became +murderous.</p> + +<p>"If I mus' kill you I shall do so. Otherwise I have sufficient trouble +to keep me from ennui. My frien', I am going home to enjoy my property. +If you live or die it signifies nothing to me. No! Why, for the pleasure +of killing you, should I bring your dirty gendarmes on my heels?"</p> + +<p>He backed away to the edge of the thicket, venturing one swift and evil +glance at the girl who stood as though dazed.</p> + +<p>"Listen attentively," he said to Darragh. "One of my men remains hidden +very near. He is a dead shot. His aim is at your—sweetheart's—body. +You understan'?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"Ver' well. You shall not go away for one hour time. After that<span class="nowrap">——"</span> he +took off his slouch hat with a sweeping bow—"you may go to hell!"</p> + +<p>Behind him the bushes parted, closed.</p> + +<p>José Quintana had made his adieux.</p> + + +<hr /> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span><a name="ix" id="ix"></a> +<small><span class="smcap">Episode Nine</span></small></h2> + +<h2>THE FOREST AND MR. SARD</h2> + + +<h3>I</h3> + +<p class="cap">WHEN at last José Quintana had secured what he had been after for years, +his troubles really began.</p> + +<p>In his pocket he had two million dollars worth of gems, including the +Flaming Jewel.</p> + +<p>But he was in the middle of a wilderness ringed in by hostile men, and +obliged to rely for aid on a handful of the most desperate criminals in +Europe.</p> + +<p>Those openly hostile to him had a wide net spread around him—wide of +mesh too, perhaps; and it was through a mesh he meant to wriggle, but +the net was intact from Canada to New York.</p> + +<p>Canadian police and secret agents held it on the north: this he had +learned from Jake Kloon long since.</p> + +<p>East, west and south he knew he had the troopers of the New York State +Constabulary to deal with, and in addition every game warden and fire +warden in the State Forests, a swarm of plain clothes men from the +Metropolis, and the rural constabulary of every town along the edges of +the vast reservation.</p> + +<p>Just who was responsible for this enormous conspiracy to rob him of what +he considered his own legitimate loot Quintana did not know.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>Sard's attorney, Eddie Abrams, believed that the French police +instigated it through agents of the United States Secret Service.</p> + +<p>Of one thing Quintana was satisfied, Mike Clinch had nothing to do with +stirring up the authorities. Law-breakers of his sort don't shout for +the police or invoke State or Government aid.</p> + +<p>As for the status of Darragh—or Hal Smith, as he supposed him to +be—Quintana took him for what he seemed to be, a well-born young man +gone wrong. Europe was full of that kind. To Quintana there was nothing +suspicious about Hal Smith. On the contrary, his clever recklessness +confirmed that polished bandit's opinion that Smith was a gentleman +degenerated into a crook. It takes an educated imagination for a man to +do what Smith had done to him. If the common crook has any imagination +at all it never is educated.</p> + +<p>Another matter worried José Quintana: he was not only short on +provisions, but what remained was cached in Drowned Valley; and Mike +Clinch and his men were guarding every outlet to that sinister region, +excepting only the rocky and submerged trail by which he had made his +exit.</p> + +<p>That was annoying; it cut off provisions and liquor from Canada, for +which he had arranged with Jake Kloon. For Kloon's hootch-runners now +would be stopped by Clinch; and not one among them knew about the rocky +trail in.</p> + +<p>All these matters were disquieting enough: but what really and most +deeply troubled Quintana was his knowledge of his own men.</p> + +<p>He did not trust one among them. Of international<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span> crookdom they were +the cream. Not one of them but would have murdered his fellow if the +loot were worth it and the chances of escape sufficient.</p> + +<p>There was no loyalty to him, none to one another, no "honour among +thieves"—and it was José Quintana who knew that only in romance such a +thing existed.</p> + +<p>No, he could not trust a single man. Only hope of plunder attached these +marauders to him, and merely because he had education and imagination +enough to provide what they wanted.</p> + +<p>Anyone among them would murder and rob him if opportunity presented.</p> + +<p>Now, how to keep his loot; how to get back to Europe with it, was the +problem that confronted Quintana after robbing Darragh. And he +determined to settle part of that question at once.</p> + +<p>About five miles from Harrod Place, within a hundred rods of which he +had held up Hal Smith, Quintana halted, seated himself on a rotting log, +and waited until his men came up and gathered around him.</p> + +<p>For a little while, in utter silence, his keen eyes travelled from one +visage to the next, from Henri Picquet to Victor Georgiades, to Sanchez, +to Sard. His intent scrutiny focussed on Sard; lingered.</p> + +<p>If there were anybody he might trust, a little way, it would be Sard.</p> + +<p>Then a polite, untroubled smile smoothed the pale, dark features of José +Quintana:</p> + +<p>"Bien, messieurs, the coup has been success. Yes? Ver' well; in turn, +then, en accord with our custom, I shall dispose myse'f to listen to +your good advice."</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>He looked at Henri Picquet, smiled and nodded invitation to speak.</p> + +<p>Picquet shrugged: "For me, mon capitaine, eet ees ver' simple. We are +five. Therefore, divide into five ze gems. After zat, each one for +himself to make his way out<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Nick Salzar and Harry Beck are in the Drowned Valley," interrupted +Quintana.</p> + +<p>Picquet shrugged again; Sanchez laughed, saying: "If they are there it +is their misfortune. Also, we others are in a hurry."</p> + +<p>Picquet added: "Also five shares are sufficient division."</p> + +<p>"It is propose, then, that we abandon our comrades Beck and Salzar to +the rifle of Mike Clinch?"</p> + +<p>"Why not?" demanded Georgiades sullenly;—"we shall have worse to face +before we see the Place de l'Opéra."</p> + +<p>"There remains, also, Eddie Abrams," remarked Quintana.</p> + +<p>Crooks never betray their attorney. Everybody expressed a willingness to +have the five shares of plunder properly assessed to satisfy the fee due +to Mr. Abrams.</p> + +<p>"Ver' well," nodded Quintana, "are you satisfy, messieurs, to divide an' +disperse?"</p> + +<p>Sard said, heavily, that they ought to stick together until they arrived +in New York.</p> + +<p>Sanchez sneered, accusing Sard of wanting a bodyguard to escort him to +his own home. "In this accursed forest," he insisted, "five of us would +attract attention where one alone, with sufficient stealth, can slip +through into the open country."</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>"Two by two is better," said Picquet. "You, Sanchez, shall travel alone +if you desire<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Divide the gems first," growled Georgiades, "and then let each do what +pleases him."</p> + +<p>"That," nodded Quintana, "is also my opinion. It is so settle. +Attention!" Two pistols were in his hands as by magic. With a slight +smile he laid them on the moss beside him.</p> + +<p>He then spread a large white handkerchief flat on the ground; and, from +his pockets, he poured out the glittering cascade. Yet, like a feeding +panther, every sense remained alert to the slightest sound or movement +elsewhere; and when Georgiades grunted from excess emotion, Quintana's +right hand held a pistol before the grunt had ceased.</p> + +<p>It was a serious business, this division of loot; every reckless visage +reflected the strain of the situation.</p> + +<p>Quintana, both pistols in his hands, looked down at the scintillating +heap of jewels.</p> + +<p>"I estimate two and one quartaire million of dollaires," he said simply. +"It has been agree that I accep' for me the erosite gem known as The +Flaming Jewel. In addition, messieurs, it has been agree that I accep' +for myse'f one part in five of the remainder."</p> + +<p>A fierce silence reigned. Every wolfish eye was on the leader. He +smiled, rested his pair of pistols on either knee.</p> + +<p>"Is there," he asked softly, "any gentleman who shall objec'?"</p> + +<p>"Who," demanded Georgiades hoarsely, "is to divide for us?"</p> + +<p>"It is for such purpose," explained Quintana suavely, "that my frien', +Emanuel Sard, has arrive. Monsieur Sard<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span> is a brokaire of diamon's, as +all know ver' well. Therefore, it shall be our frien' Sard who will +divide for us what we have gain to-day by our—industry."</p> + +<p>The savage tension broke with a laugh at the word chosen by Quintana to +express their efforts of the morning.</p> + +<p>Sard had been standing with one fat hand flat against the trunk of a +tree. Now, at a nod from Quintana, he squatted down, and, with the same +hand that had been resting against the tree, he spread out the pile of +jewels into a flat layer.</p> + +<p>As he began to divide this into five parts, still using the flat of his +pudgy hand, something poked him lightly in the ribs. It was the muzzle +of one of Quintana's pistols.</p> + +<p>Sard, ghastly pale, looked up. His palm, sticky with balsam gum, +quivered in Quintana's grasp.</p> + +<p>"I was going to scrape it off," he gasped. "The tree was sticky<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>Quintana, with the muzzle of his pistol, detached half a dozen diamonds +and rubies that clung to the gum on Mr. Sard's palm.</p> + +<p>"Wash!" he said drily.</p> + +<p>Sard, sweating with fear, washed his right hand with whiskey from his +pocket-flask, and dried it for general inspection.</p> + +<p>"My God," he protested tremulously, "it was accidental, gentlemen. Do +you think I'd try to get away with anything like that<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>Quintana coolly shoved him aside and with the barrel of his pistol he +pushed the flat pile of gems into five separate heaps. Only he and +Georgiades knew that a magnificent diamond had been lodged in the muzzle +of his pistol. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span> eyes of the Greek flamed with rage at the trick, but +he awaited the division before he should come to any conclusion.</p> + +<p>Quintana coolly picked out The Flaming Jewel and pocketed it. Then, to +each man he indicated the heap which was to be his portion.</p> + +<p>A snarling wrangle instantly began, Sanchez objecting to rubies and +demanding more emeralds, and Picquet complaining violently concerning +the smallness of the diamonds allotted him.</p> + +<p>Sard's trained eyes appraised every allotment. Without weighing, and, +lacking time and paraphernalia for expert examination, he was inclined +to think the division fair enough.</p> + +<p>Quintana got to his feet lithely.</p> + +<p>"For me," he said, "it is finish. With my frien' Sard I shall now +depart. Messieurs, I embrace and salute you. A bientôt in Paris—if it +be God's will! Donc—au revoir, les amis, et à la bonheur! Allons! Each +for himself and gar' aux flics!"</p> + +<p>Sard, seized with a sort of still terror, regarded Quintana with +enormous eyes. Torn between dismay of being left alone in the +wilderness, and a very natural fear of any single companion, he did not +know what to say or do.</p> + +<p>En masse, the gang were too distrustful of one another to unite on +robbing any individual. But any individual might easily rob a companion +when alone with him.</p> + +<p>"Why—why can't we all go together," he stammered. "It is safer, +surer<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"I go with Quintana and you," interrupted Georgiades,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span> smilingly; his +mind on the diamond in the muzzle of Quintana's pistol.</p> + +<p>"I do not invite you," said Quintana. "But come if it pleases you."</p> + +<p>"I also prefer to come with you others," growled Sanchez. "To roam alone +in this filthy forest does not suit me."</p> + +<p>Picquet shrugged his shoulders, turned on his heel in silence. They +watched him moving away all alone, eastward. When he had disappeared +among the trees, Quintana looked inquiringly at the others.</p> + +<p>"Eh, bien, non alors!" snarled Georgiades suddenly. "There are too many +in your trupeau, mon capitaine. Bonne chance!"</p> + +<p>He turned and started noisily in the direction taken by Picquet.</p> + +<p>They watched him out of sight; listened to his careless trample after he +was lost to view. When at length the last distant sound of his retreat +had died away in the stillness, Quintana touched Sard with the point of +his pistol.</p> + +<p>"Go first," he said suavely.</p> + +<p>"For God's sake, be a little careful of your gun<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"I am, my dear frien'. It is of <em>you</em> I may become careless. You will +mos' kin'ly face south, and you will be kin' sufficient to start +immediate. Tha's what I mean.... I thank you.... Now, my frien', +Sanchez! Tha's correc'! You shall follow my frien' Sard ver' close. Me, +I march in the rear. So we shall pass to the eas' of thees Star Pon', +then between the cross-road an' Ghos' Lake; an' then we shall repose; +an' one of us, en vidette, shall discover if the Constabulary have +patrol beyon'.... Allons! March!"</p> + + +<h3>II</h3> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>Guided by Quintana's directions, the three had made a wide detour to the +east, steering by compass for the cross-roads beyond Star Pond.</p> + +<p>In a dense growth of cedars, on a little ridge traversing wet land, +Quintana halted to listen.</p> + +<p>Sard and Sanchez, supposing him to be at their heels, continued on, +pushing their way blindly through the cedars, clinging to the hard ridge +in terror of sink-holes. But their progress was very slow; and they were +still in sight, fighting a painful path amid the evergreens, when +Quintana suddenly squatted close to the moist earth behind a juniper +bush.</p> + +<p>At first, except for the threshing of Sard and Sanchez through the +massed obstructions ahead, there was not a sound in the woods.</p> + +<p>After a little while there <em>was</em> a sound—very, very slight. No dry +stick cracked; no dry leaves rustled; no swish of foliage; no whipping +sound of branches disturbed the intense silence.</p> + +<p>But, presently, came a soft, swift rhythm like the pace of a forest +creature in haste—a discreetly hurrying tread which was more a series +of light earth-shocks than sound.</p> + +<p>Quintana, kneeling on one knee, lifted his pistol. He already felt the +slight vibration of the ground on the hard ridge. The cedars were moving +just beyond him now. He waited until, through the parted foliage, a face +appeared.</p> + +<p>The loud report of his pistol struck Sard with the horror of paralysis. +Sanchez faced about with one spring, snarling, a weapon in either hand.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>In the terrible silence they could hear something heavy floundering in +the bushes, choking, moaning, thudding on the ground.</p> + +<p>Sanchez began to creep back; Sard, more dead than alive, crawled at his +heels. Presently they saw Quintana, waist deep in juniper, looking down +at something.</p> + +<p>And when they drew closer they saw Georgiades lying on his back under a +cedar, the whole front of his shirt from chest to belly a sopping mess +of blood.</p> + +<p>There seemed no need of explanation. The dead Greek lay there where he +had not been expected, and his two pistols lay beside him where they had +fallen.</p> + +<p>Sanchez looked stealthily at Quintana, who said softly:</p> + +<p>"Bien sure.... In his left side pocket, I believe."</p> + +<p>Sanchez laid a cool hand on the dead man's heart; then, satisfied, +rummaged until he found Georgiades' share of the loot.</p> + +<p>Sard, hurriedly displaying a pair of clean but shaky hands, made the +division.</p> + +<p>When the three men had silently pocketed what was allotted to each, +Quintana pushed curiously at the dead man with the toe of his shoe.</p> + +<p>"Peste!" he remarked. "I had place, for security, a ver' large +diamon' in my pistol barrel. Now it is within the interior of this +gentleman...." He turned to Sanchez: "I sell him to you. One sapphire. +Yes?"</p> + +<p>Sanchez shook his head with a slight sneer: "We wait—if you want your +diamond, mon capitaine."</p> + +<p>Quintana hesitated, then made a grimace and shook his head.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>"No," he said, "he has swallow. Let him digest. Allons! March!"</p> + +<p>But after they had gone on—two hundred yards, perhaps—Sanchez stopped.</p> + +<p>"Well?" inquired Quintana. Then, with a sneer: "I now recollec' that +once you have been a butcher in Madrid.... Suit your tas'e, l'ami +Sanchez."</p> + +<p>Sard gazed at Sanchez out of sickened eyes.</p> + +<p>"You keep away from me until you've washed yourself," he burst out, +revolted. "Don't you come near me till you're clean!"</p> + +<p>Quintana laughed and seated himself. Sanchez, with a hang-dog glance at +him, turned and sneaked back on the trail they had traversed. Before he +was out of sight Sard saw him fish out a Spanish knife from his hip +pocket and unclasp it.</p> + +<p>Almost nauseated, he turned on Quintana in a sort of frightened fury:</p> + +<p>"Come on!" he said hoarsely. "I don't want to travel with that man! I +won't associate with a ghoul! My God, I'm a respectable business +man<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Yaas," drawled Quintana, "tha's what I saw always myse'f; my frien' +Sard he is ver' respec'able, an' I trus' him like I trus' myse'f."</p> + +<p>However, after a moment, Quintana got up from the fallen tree where he +had been seated.</p> + +<p>As he passed Sard he looked curiously into the man's frightened eyes. +There was not the slightest doubt that Sard was a coward.</p> + +<p>"You shall walk behin' me," remarked Quintana carelessly.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span> "If Sanchez +fin' us, it is well; if he shall not, that also is ver' well.... We go, +now."</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>Sanchez made no effort to find them. They had been gone half an hour +before he had finished the business that had turned him back.</p> + +<p>After that he wandered about hunting for water—a rivulet, a puddle, +anything. But the wet ground proved wet only on the surface moss. +Sanchez needed more than damp moss for his toilet. Casting about him, +hither and thither, for some depression that might indicate a stream, he +came to a heavily wooded slope, and descended it.</p> + +<p>There was a bog at the foot. With his fouled hands he dug out a basin +which filled up full of reddish water, discoloured by alders.</p> + +<p>But the water was redder still when his toilet ended.</p> + +<p>As he stood there, examining his clothing, and washing what he could of +the ominous stains from sleeve and shoe, very far away to the north he +heard a curious noise—a far, faint sound such as he never before had +heard.</p> + +<p>If it were a voice of any sort there was nothing human about it.... +Probably some sort of unknown bird.... Perhaps a bird of prey.... That +was natural, considering the attraction that Georgiades would have for +such creatures.... If it were a bird it must be a large one, he +thought.... Because there was a certain volume to the cry.... Perhaps +it was a beast, after all.... Some unknown beast of the forest....</p> + +<p>Sanchez was suddenly afraid. Scarcely knowing what he was doing he began +to run along the edge of the bog.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>First growth timber skirted it; running was unobstructed by underbrush.</p> + +<p>With his startled ears full of the alarming and unknown sound, he ran +through the woods under gigantic pines which spread a soft green +twilight around him.</p> + +<p>He was tired, or thought he was, but the alarming sounds were filling +his ears now; the entire forest seemed full of them, echoing in all +directions, coming in upon him from everywhere, so that he knew not in +which direction to run.</p> + +<p>But he could not stop. Demoralised, he darted this way and that; terror +winged his feet; the air vibrated above and around him with the +dreadful, unearthly sounds.</p> + +<p>The next instant he fell headlong over a ledge, struck water, felt +himself whirled around in the icy, rushing current, rolled over, tumbled +through rapids, blinded, deafened, choked, swept helplessly in a vast +green wall of water toward something that thundered in his brain an +instant, then dashed it into roaring chaos.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>Half a mile down the turbulent outlet of Star Pond,—where a great sheet +of green water pours thirty feet into the tossing foam below,—and +spinning, dipping, diving, bobbing up like a lost log after the drive, +the body of Señor Sanchez danced all alone in the wilderness, spilling +from soggy pockets diamonds, sapphires, rubies, emeralds, into crystal +caves where only the shadows of slim trout stirred.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>Very far away to the eastward Quintana stood listening, clutching Sard +by one sleeve to silence him.</p> + +<p>Presently he said: "My frien', somebody is hunting with houn's in this +fores'.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>"Maybe they are not hunting <em>us</em>.... <em>Maybe.</em>... But, for me, I shall +seek running water. Go you your own way! Houp! Vamose!"</p> + +<p>He turned westward; but he had taken scarcely a dozen strides when Sard +came panting after him:</p> + +<p>"Don't leave me!" gasped the terrified diamond broker. "I don't know +where to go<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>Quintana faced him abruptly—with a terrifying smile and glimmer of +white teeth—and shoved a pistol into the fold of fat beneath Sard's +double chin.</p> + +<p>"You hear those dogs? Yes? Ver' well; I also. Run, now. I say to you run +ver' damn quick. Hé! Houp! Allez vous en! Beat eet!"</p> + +<p>He struck Sard a stinging blow on his fleshy ear with the pistol barrel, +and Sard gave a muffled shriek which was more like the squeak of a +frightened animal.</p> + +<p>"My God, Quintana<span class="nowrap">——"</span> he sobbed. Then Quintana's eyes blazed murder: +and Sard turned and ran lumbering through the thicket like a stampeded +ox, crashing on amid withered brake, white birch scrub and brier, not +knowing whither he was headed, crazed with terror.</p> + +<p>Quintana watched his flight for a moment, then, pistol swinging, he ran +in the opposite direction, eastward, speeding lithely as a cat down a +long, wooded slope which promised running water at the foot.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>Sard could not run very far. He could scarcely stand when he pulled up +and clung to the trunk of a tree.</p> + +<p>More dead than alive he embraced the tree, gulping horribly for air, +every fat-incrusted organ labouring, his senses swimming.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>As he sagged there, gripping his support on shaking knees, by degrees +his senses began to return.</p> + +<p>He could hear the dogs, now, vaguely as in a nightmare. But after a +little while he began to believe that their hysterical yelping was +really growing more distant.</p> + +<p>Then this man whose every breath was an outrage on God, prayed.</p> + +<p>He prayed that the hounds would follow Quintana, come up with him, drag +him down, worry him, tear him to shreds of flesh and clothing.</p> + +<p>He listened and prayed alternately. After a while he no longer prayed +but concentrated on his ears.</p> + +<p>Surely, surely, the diabolical sound was growing less distinct.... It +was changing direction too. But whether in Quintana's direction or not +Sard could not tell. He was no woodsman. He was completely turned +around.</p> + +<p>He looked upward through a dense yellow foliage, but all was grey in the +sky—very grey and still;—and there seemed to be no traces of the sun +that had been shining.</p> + +<p>He looked fearfully around: trees, trees, and more trees. No break, no +glimmer, nothing to guide him, teach him. He could see, perhaps, fifty +feet; no further.</p> + +<p>In panic he started to move on. That is what fright invariably does to +those ignorant of the forest. Terror starts them moving.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>Sobbing, frightened almost witless, he had been floundering forward for +over an hour, and had made circle after circle without knowing, when, by +chance, he set foot in a perfectly plain trail.</p> + +<p>Emotion overpowered him. He was too overcome to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span> stir for a while. At +length, however, he tottered off down the trail, oblivious as to what +direction he was taking, animated only by a sort of madness—horror of +trees—an insane necessity to see open ground, get into it, and lie down +on it.</p> + +<p>And now, directly ahead, he saw clear grey sky low through the trees. +The wood's edge!</p> + +<p>He began to run.</p> + +<p>As he emerged from the edge of the woods, waist-deep in brush and weeds, +wide before his blood-shot eyes spread Star Pond.</p> + +<p>Even in his half-stupefied brain there was memory enough left for +recognition.</p> + +<p>He remembered the lake. His gaze travelled to the westward; and he saw +Clinch's Dump standing below, stark, silent, the doors swinging open in +the wind.</p> + +<p>When terror had subsided in a measure and some of his trembling strength +returned, he got up out of the clump of rag-weeds where he had lain +down, and earnestly nosed the unpainted house, listening with all his +ears.</p> + +<p>There was not a sound save the soughing of autumn winds and the delicate +rattle of falling leaves in the woods behind him.</p> + +<p>He needed food and rest. He gazed earnestly at the house. Nothing +stirred there save the open doors swinging idly in every vagrant wind.</p> + +<p>He ventured down a little way—near enough to see the black cinders of +the burned barn, and close enough to hear the lake waters slapping the +sandy shore.</p> + +<p>If he dared<span class="nowrap">——</span></p> + +<p>And after a long while he ventured to waddle nearer,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span> slinking through +brush and frosted weed, creeping behind boulders, edging always closer +and closer to that silent house where nothing moved except the +wind-blown door.</p> + +<p>And now, at last, he set a furtive foot upon the threshold, stood +listening, tip-toed in, peered here and there, sidled to the +dining-room, peered in.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>When, at length, Emanuel Sard discovered that Clinch's Dump was +tenantless, he made straight for the pantry. Here was cheese, crackers, +an apple pie, half a dozen bottles of home-brewed beer.</p> + +<p>He loaded his arms with all they could carry, stole through the +dance-hall out to the veranda, which overlooked the lake.</p> + +<p>Here, hidden in the doorway, he could watch the road from Ghost Lake and +survey the hillside down which an intruder must come from the forest.</p> + +<p>And here Sard slaked his raging thirst and satiated the gnawing appetite +of the obese, than which there is no crueller torment to an inert liver +and distended paunch.</p> + +<p>Munching, guzzling, watching, Sard squatted just within the veranda +doorway, anxiously considering his chances.</p> + +<p>He knew where he was. At the foot of the lake, and eastward, he had been +robbed by a highwayman on the forest road branching from the main +highway. Southwest lay Ghost Lake and the Inn.</p> + +<p>Somewhere between these two points he must try to cross the State +Road.... After that, comparative safety. For the miles that still +would lie between him and distant civilisation seemed as nothing to +the horror of that hell of trees.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>He looked up now at the shaggy fringing woods, shuddered, opened another +bottle of beer.</p> + +<p>In all that panorama of forest, swale, and water the only thing that had +alarmed him at all by moving was something in the water. When first he +noticed it he almost swooned, for he took it to be a swimming dog.</p> + +<p>In his agitation he had risen to his feet; and then the swimming +creature almost frightened Sard out of his senses, for it tilted +suddenly and went down with a report like the crack of a pistol.</p> + +<p>However, when Sard regained control of his wits he realised that a +swimming dog doesn't dive and doesn't whack the water with its tail.</p> + +<p>He dimly remembered hearing that beavers behaved that way.</p> + +<p>Watching the water he saw the thing out there in the lake again, +<a name="swimming" id="swimming"></a><ins title="original had swiming">swimming</ins> in erratic circles, its big, dog-like head well out of the +water.</p> + +<p>It certainly was no dog. A beaver, maybe. Whatever it was, Sard didn't +care any longer.</p> + +<p>Idly he watched it. Sometimes, when it swam very near, he made a sudden +motion with his fat arm; and crack!—with a pistol-shot report down it +dived. But always it reappeared.</p> + +<p>What had a creature like that to do with him? Sard watched it with +failing interest, thinking of other things—of Quintana and the chances +that the dogs had caught him,—of Sanchez, the Ghoul, hoping that dire +misfortune might overtake him, too;—of the dead man sprawling under the +cedar-tree, all sopping crimson<span class="nowrap">——</span> Faugh!</p> + +<p>Shivering, Sard filled his mouth with apple-pie and cheese<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span> and pulled +the cork from another bottle of home-brewed beer.</p> + + +<h3>III</h3> + +<p>About that time, a mile and a half to the southward, James Darragh came +out on the rocky and rushing outlet to Star Pond.</p> + +<p>Over his shoulder was a rifle, and all around him ran dogs,—big, +powerful dogs, built like foxhounds but with the rough, wiry coats of +Airedales, even rougher of ear and features.</p> + +<p>The dogs,—half a dozen or so in number,—seemed very tired. All ran +down eagerly to the water and drank and slobbered and panted, lolling +their tongues, and slaking their thirst again and again along the +swirling edge of a deep trout pool.</p> + +<p>Darragh's rifle lay in the hollow of his left arm; his khaki waistcoat +was set with loops full of cartridges. From his left wrist hung a +raw-hide whip.</p> + +<p>Now he laid aside his rifle and whip, took from the pocket of his +shooting coat three or four leather dog-leashes, went down among the +dogs and coupled them up.</p> + +<p>They followed him back to the bank above. Here he sat down on a rock and +inspected his watch.</p> + +<p>He had been seated there for ten minutes, possibly, with his tired dogs +lying around him, when just above him he saw a State Trooper emerge from +the woods on foot, carrying a rifle over one shoulder.</p> + +<p>"Jack!" he called in a guarded voice.</p> + +<p>Trooper Stormont turned, caught sight of Darragh, made a signal of +recognition, and came toward him.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>Darragh said: "Your mate, Trooper Lannis, is down stream. I've two of my +own game wardens at the cross-roads, two more on the Ghost Lake Road, +and two foresters and an inspector out toward Owl Marsh."</p> + +<p>Stormont nodded, looked down at the dogs.</p> + +<p>"This isn't the State Forest," said Darragh, smiling. Then his face grew +grave: "How is Eve?" he asked.</p> + +<p>"She's feeling better," replied Stormont. "I telephoned to Ghost Lake +Inn for the hotel physician.... I was afraid of pneumonia, Jim. Eve had +chills last night.... But Dr. Claybourn thinks she's all right.... So +I left her in care of your housekeeper."</p> + +<p>"Mrs. Ray will look out for her.... You haven't told Eve who I am, have +you?"</p> + +<p>"No."</p> + +<p>"I'll tell her myself to-night. I don't know how she'll take it when she +learns I'm the heir to the mortal enemy of Mike Clinch."</p> + +<p>"I don't know either," said Stormont.</p> + +<p>There was a silence; the State Trooper looked down at the dogs:</p> + +<p>"What are they, Jim?"</p> + +<p>"Otter-hounds," said Darragh, "—a breed of my own.... But that's <em>all</em> +they are capable of hunting, I guess," he added grimly.</p> + +<p>Stormont's gaze questioned him.</p> + +<p>Darragh said: "After I telephoned you this morning that a guest of mine +at Harrod Place, and I, had been stuck up and robbed by Quintana's +outfit, what did you do, Jack?"</p> + +<p>"I called up Bill Lannis first," said Stormont, "—then<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span> the doctor. +After he came, Mrs. Ray arrived with a maid. Then I went in and spoke to +Eve. Then I did what you suggested—I crossed the forest diagonally +toward The Scaur, zig-zagged north, turned by the rock hog-back south of +Drowned Valley, came southeast, circled west, and came out here as you +asked me to."</p> + +<p>"Almost on the minute," nodded Darragh.... "You saw no signs of +Quintana's gang?"</p> + +<p>"None."</p> + +<p>"Well," said Darragh, "I left my two guests at Harrod Place to amuse +each other, got out three couple of my otter-hounds and started +them,—as I hoped and supposed,—on Quintana's trail."</p> + +<p>"What happened?" inquired Stormont curiously.</p> + +<p>"Well—I don't know. I think they were following some of Quintana's +gang—for a while, anyway. After that, God knows,—deer, hare, +cotton-tail,—<em>I</em> don't know. They yelled their bally heads off—I on +the run—they're slow dogs, you know—and whatever they were after +either fooled them or there were too many trails.... I made a mistake, +that's all. These poor beasts don't know anything except an otter. I +just <em>hoped</em> they might take Quintana's trail if I put them on it."</p> + +<p>"Well," said Stormont, "it can't be helped now.... I told Bill Lannis +that we'd rendezvous at Clinch's Dump."</p> + +<p>"All right," nodded Darragh. "Let's keep to the open; my dogs are +leashed couples."</p> + +<p>They had been walking for twenty minutes, possibly, exchanging scarcely +a word, and they were now nearing the hilly basin where Star Pond lay, +when Darragh said abruptly:</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>"I'm going to tell you about things, Jack. You've taken my word so far +that it's all right<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Naturally," said Stormont simply.</p> + +<p>The two men, who had been brother officers in the Great War, glanced at +each other, slightly smiling.</p> + +<p>"Here it is then," said Darragh. "When I was on duty in Riga for the +Intelligence Department, I met two ladies in dire distress, whose +mansion had been burned and looted, supposedly by the Bolsheviki.</p> + +<p>"They were actually hungry and penniless; the only clothing they +possessed they were wearing. These ladies were the Countess +Orloff-Strelwitz, and a young girl, Theodorica, Grand Duchess of +Esthonia.... I did what I could for them. After a while, in the course +of other duty, I found out that the Bolsheviki had had nothing to do +with the arson and robbery, but that the crime had been perpetrated by +José Quintana's gang of international crooks masquerading as +Bolsheviki."</p> + +<p>Stormont nodded: "I also came across similar cases," he remarked.</p> + +<p>"Well, this was a flagrant example. Quintana had burnt the château and +had made off with over two million dollars worth of the little Grand +Duchess's jewels—among them the famous Erosite gem known as The Flaming +Jewel."</p> + +<p>"I've heard of it."</p> + +<p>"There are only two others known.... Well, I did what I could with the +Esthonian police, who didn't believe me.</p> + +<p>"But a short time ago the Countess Orloff sent me word that Quintana +really was the guilty one, and that he had started for America.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>"I've been after him ever since.... But, Jack, until this morning +Quintana did not possess these stolen jewels. <em>Clinch did!</em> "</p> + +<p>"What!"</p> + +<p>"Clinch served over-seas in a Forestry Regiment. In Paris he robbed +Quintana of these jewels. That's why I've been hanging around Clinch."</p> + +<p>Stormont's face was flushed and incredulous. Then it lost colour as he +thought of the jewels that Eve had concealed—the gems for which she had +risked her life.</p> + +<p>He said: "But you tell me Quintana robbed you this morning."</p> + +<p>"He did. The little Grand Duchess and the Countess Orloff-Strelwitz are +my guests at Harrod Place.</p> + +<p>"Last night I snatched the case containing these gems from Quintana's +fingers. This morning, as I offered them to the Grand Duchess, Quintana +coolly stepped between us<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>His voice became bitter and his features reddened with rage poorly +controlled:</p> + +<p>"By God, Jack, I should have shot Quintana when the opportunity offered. +Twice I've had the chance. The next time I shall kill him any way I +can.... Legitimately."</p> + +<p>"Of course," said Stormont gravely. But his mind was full of the jewels +which Eve had. What and whose were they,—if Quintana again had the +Esthonian gems in his possession?</p> + +<p>"Had you recovered all the jewels for the Grand Duchess?" he asked +Darragh.</p> + +<p>"Every one, Jack.... Quintana has done me a terrible<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span> injury. I shan't +let it go. I mean to hunt that man to the end."</p> + +<p>Stormont, terribly perplexed, nodded.</p> + +<p>A few minutes later, as they came out among the willows and alders on +the northeast side of Star Pond, Stormont touched his comrade's arm.</p> + +<p>"Look at that enormous dog-otter out there in the lake!"</p> + +<p>"Grab those dogs! They'll strangle each other," cried Darragh quickly. +"That's it—unleash them, Jack, and let them go!"—he was struggling +with the other two couples while speaking.</p> + +<p>And now the hounds, unleashed, lifted frantic voices. The very sky +seemed full of the discordant tumult; wood and shore reverberated with +the volume of convulsive and dissonant baying.</p> + +<p>"Damn it," said Darragh, disgusted, "—that's what they've been trailing +all the while across-woods,—that devilish dog-otter yonder.... And I +had hoped they were on Quintana's trail<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>A mass rush and scurry of crazed dogs nearly swept him off his feet, and +both men caught a glimpse of a large bitch-otter taking to the lake from +a ledge of rock just beyond.</p> + +<p>Now the sky vibrated with the deafening outcry of the dogs, some taking +to water, others racing madly along shore.</p> + +<p>Crack! The echo of the dog-otter's blow on the water came across to them +as the beast dived.</p> + +<p>"Well, I'm in for it now," muttered Darragh, starting along the bank +toward Clinch's Dump, to keep an eye on his dogs.</p> + +<p>Stormont followed more leisurely.</p> + + +<h3>IV</h3> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>A few minutes before Darragh and Stormont had come out on the farther +edge of Star Pond, Sard, who had heard from Quintana about the big drain +pipe which led from Clinch's pantry into the lake, decided to go in and +take a look at it.</p> + +<p>He had been told all about its uses,—how Clinch,—in the event of a +raid by State Troopers or Government enforcement agents,—could empty +his contraband hootch into the lake if necessary,—and even could slide +a barrel of ale or a keg of rum, intact, into the great tile tunnel and +recover the liquor at his leisure.</p> + +<p>Also, and grimly, Quintana had admitted that through this drain Eve +Strayer and the State Trooper, Stormont, had escaped from Clinch's Dump.</p> + +<p>So now Sard, full of curiosity, went back into the pantry to look at it +for himself.</p> + +<p>Almost instantly the idea occurred to him to make use of the drain for +his own safety and comfort.</p> + +<p>Why shouldn't he sleep in the pantry, lock the door, and, in case of +intrusion,—other exits being unavailable,—why shouldn't he feel +entirely safe with such an avenue of escape open?</p> + +<p>For swimming was Sard's single accomplishment. He wasn't afraid of the +water; he simply couldn't sink. Swimming was the only sport he ever had +indulged in. He adored it.</p> + +<p>Also, the mere idea of sleeping alone amid that hell of trees terrified +Sard. Never had he known such horror as when Quintana abandoned him in +the woods. Never again<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span> could he gaze upon a tree without malignant +hatred. Never again did he desire to lay eyes upon even a bush. The very +sight, now, of the dusky forest filled him with loathing. Why should he +not risk one night in this deserted house,—sleep well and warmly, feed +well, drink his bellyfull of Clinch's beer, before attempting the +dead-line southward, where he was only too sure that patrols were riding +and hiding on the lookout for the fancy gentlemen of José Quintana's +selected company of malefactors?</p> + +<p>Well, here in the snug pantry were pies, crullers, bread, cheeses, +various dried meats, tinned vegetables, ham, bacon, fuel and range to +prepare what he desired.</p> + +<p>Here was beer, too; and doubtless ardent spirits if he could nose out +the hidden demijohns and bottles.</p> + +<p>He peered out of the pantry window at the forest, shuddered, cursed +it and every separate tree in it; cursed Quintana, too, wishing him +black mischance. No; it was settled. He'd take his chance here in the +pantry.... And there must be a mattress somewhere upstairs.</p> + +<p>He climbed the staircase, cautiously, discovered Clinch's bedroom, took +the mattress and blankets from the bed, dragged them to the pantry.</p> + +<p>Could any honest man be more tight and snug in this perilous world of +the desperate and undeserving? Sard thought not. But one matter troubled +him: the lock of the pantry door had been shattered. To remedy this he +moused around until he discovered some long nails and a claw-hammer. +When he was ready to go to sleep he'd nail himself in. And in the +morning he'd pry the door loose. That was simple. Sard chuckled for the +first time since he had set eyes upon the accursed region.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>And now the sun came out from behind a low bank of solid grey cloud, and +fell upon the countenance of Emanuel Sard. It warmed his parrot-nose +agreeably; it cheered and enlivened him.</p> + +<p>Not for him a night of terrors in that horrible forest which he could +see through the pantry window.</p> + +<p>A sense of security and of well-being pervaded Sard to his muddy shoes. +He even curled his fat toes in them with animal contentment.</p> + +<p>A little snack before cooking a heavily satisfactory dinner? Certainly.</p> + +<p>So he tucked a couple of bottles of beer under one arm, a loaf of bread +and a chunk of cheese under the other, and waddled out to the veranda +door.</p> + +<p>And at that instant the very heavens echoed with that awful tumult which +had first paralysed, then crazed him in the woods.</p> + +<p>Bottles, bread, cheese fell from his grasp and his knees nearly +collapsed under him. In the bushes on the lake shore he saw animals +leaping and racing, but, in his terror, he did not recognise them for +dogs.</p> + +<p>Then, suddenly, he saw a man, close to the house, running: and another +man not far behind. <em>That</em> he understood, and it electrified him into +action.</p> + +<p>It was too late to escape from the house now. He understood that +instantly.</p> + +<p>He ran back through the dance-hall and dining-room to the pantry; but he +dared not let these intruders hear the noise of hammering.</p> + +<p>In an agony of indecision he stood trembling, listening<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span> to the infernal +racket of the dogs, and waiting for the first footstep within the house.</p> + +<p>No step came. But, chancing to look over his shoulder, he saw a man +peering through the pantry window at him.</p> + +<p>Ungovernable terror seized Sard. Scarcely aware what he was about, he +seized the edges of the big drain-pipe and crowded his obese body into +it head first. He was so fat and heavy that he filled the tile. To start +himself down he pulled with both hands and kicked himself forward, +tortoise-like, down the slanting tunnel, sticking now and then, dragging +himself on and downward.</p> + +<p>Now he began to gain momentum; he felt himself sliding, not fast but +steadily.</p> + +<p>There came a hitch somewhere; his heavy body stuck on the steep incline.</p> + +<p>Then, as he lifted his bewildered head and strove to peer into the +blackness in front, he saw four balls of green fire close to him in +darkness.</p> + +<p>He began to slide at the same instant, and flung out both hands to check +himself. But his palms slid in the slime and his body slid after.</p> + +<p>He shrieked once as his face struck a furry obstruction where four balls +of green fire flamed horribly and a fury of murderous teeth tore his +face and throat to bloody tatters as he slid lower, lower, settling +through crimson-dyed waters into the icy depths of Star Pond.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>Stormont, down by the lake, called to Darragh, who appeared on the +veranda:</p> + +<p>"Oh, Jim! Both otters crawled into the drain! I think<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span> your dogs must +have killed one of them under water. There's a big patch of blood +spreading off shore."</p> + +<p>"Yes," said Darragh, "something has just been killed, somewhere ... +Jack!"</p> + +<p>"Yes?"</p> + +<p>"Pull both your guns and come up here, quick!"</p> + + + +<hr /> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span><a name="x" id="x"></a> +<small><span class="smcap">Episode Ten</span></small></h2> + +<h2>THE TWILIGHT OF MIKE</h2> + + +<h3>I</h3> + +<p class="cap">WHEN Quintana turned like an enraged snake on Sard and drove him to his +destruction, he would have killed and robbed the frightened diamond +broker had he dared risk the shot. He had intended to do this anyway, +sooner or later. But with the noise of the hunting dogs filling the +forest, Quintana was afraid to fire. Yet, even then he followed Sard +stealthily for a few minutes, afraid yet murderously desirous of the +gems, confused by the tumult of the hounds, timid and ferocious at the +same time, and loath to leave his fat, perspiring, and demoralised +victim.</p> + +<p>But the racket of the dogs proved too much for Quintana. He sheered away +toward the South, leaving Sard floundering on ahead, unconscious of the +treachery that had followed furtively in his panic-stricken tracks.</p> + +<p>About an hour later Quintana was seen, challenged, chased and shot at by +State Trooper Lannis.</p> + +<p>Quintana ran. And what with the dense growth of seedling beech and oak +and the heavily falling birch and poplar leaves, Lannis first lost +Quintana and then his trail.</p> + +<p>The State Trooper had left his horse at the cross-roads near the scene +of Darragh's masked exploit, where he had stopped and robbed Sard—and +now Lannis hastened back<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span> to find and mount his horse, and gallop +straight into the first growth timber.</p> + +<p>Through dim aisles of giant pine he spurred to a dead run on the chance +of cutting Quintana from the eastward edge of the forest and forcing him +back toward the north or west, where patrols were more than likely to +hold him.</p> + +<p>The State Trooper rode with all the reckless indifference and grace of +the Western cavalryman, and he seemed to be part of the superb animal he +rode—part of its bone and muscle, its litheness, its supple power—part +of its vertebræ and ribs and limbs, so perfect was their bodily +co-ordination.</p> + +<p>Rifle and eyes intently alert, the rider scarce noticed his rushing +mount; and if he guided with wrist and knee it was instinctive and as +though the horse were guiding them both.</p> + +<p>And now, far ahead through this primeval stand of pine, sunshine +glimmered, warning of a clearing. And here Trooper Lannis pulled in his +horse at the edge of what seemed to be a broad, flat meadow, vividly +green.</p> + +<p>But it was the intense, arsenical green of hair-fine grass that covers +with its false velvet those quaking bogs where only a thin, crust-like +skin of root-fibre and vegetation cover infinite depths of silt.</p> + +<p>The silt had no more substance than a drop of ink colouring the water in +a tumbler.</p> + +<p>Sitting his fast-breathing mount, Lannis searched this wide, flat +expanse of brilliant green. Nothing moved on it save a great heron +picking its deliberate way on stilt-like legs. It was well for Quintana +that he had not attempted it.</p> + +<p>Very cautiously Lannis walked his horse along the hard<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span> ground which +edged this marsh on the west. Nowhere was there any sign that Quintana +had come down to the edge among the shrubs and swale grasses.</p> + +<p>Beyond the marsh another trooper patrolled; and when at length he and +Lannis perceived each other and exchanged signals, the latter wheeled +his horse and retraced his route at an easy canter, satisfied that +Quintana had not yet broken cover.</p> + +<p>Back through the first growth he cantered, his rifle at a ready, +carefully scanning the more open woodlands, and so came again to the +cross-roads.</p> + +<p>And here stood a State Game Inspector, with a report that some sort of +beagle-pack was hunting in the forest to the northwest; and very curious +to investigate.</p> + +<p>So it was arranged that the Inspector should turn road-patrol and the +Trooper become the rover.</p> + +<p>There was no sound of dogs when Lannis rode in on the narrow, spotted +trail whence he had flushed Quintana into the dense growth of saplings +that bordered it.</p> + +<p>His horse made little noise on the moist layer of leaves and forest +mould; he listened hard for the sound of hounds as he rode; heard +nothing save the chirr of red squirrels, the shriek of a watching jay, +or the startling noise of falling acorns rapping and knocking on great +limbs in their descent to the forest floor.</p> + +<p>Once, very, very far away westward in the direction of Star Pond he +fancied he heard a faint vibration in the air that might have been +hounds baying.</p> + +<p>He was right. And at that very moment Sard was dying, horribly, among +two trapped otters as big and fierce as the dogs that had driven them +into the drain.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>But Lannis knew nothing of that as he moved on, mounted, along the +spotted trail, now all a yellow glory of birch and poplar which made the +woodland brilliant as though lighted by yellow lanterns.</p> + +<p>Somewhere among the birches, between him and Star Pond, was Harrod +Place. And the idea occurred to him that Quintana might have ventured to +ask food and shelter there. Yet, that was not likely because Trooper +Stormont had called him that morning on the telephone from the Hatchery +Lodge.</p> + +<p>No; the only logical retreat for Quintana was northward to the +mountains, where patrols were plenty and fire-wardens on duty in every +watch-tower. Or, the fugitive could make for Drowned Valley by a blind +trail which, Stormont informed him, existed but which Lannis never had +heard of.</p> + +<p>However, to reassure himself, Lannis rode as far as Harrod Place, and +found game wardens on duty along the line.</p> + +<p>Then he turned west and trotted his mount down to the hatchery, where he +saw Ralph Wier, the Superintendent, standing outside the lodge talking +to his assistant, George Fry.</p> + +<p>When Lannis rode up on the opposite side of the brook, he called across +to Wier:</p> + +<p>"You haven't seen anything of any crooked outfit around here, have you, +Ralph? I'm looking for that kind."</p> + +<p>"See here," said the Superintendent, "I don't know but George Fry may +have seen one of your guys. Come over and he'll tell you what happened +an hour ago."</p> + +<p>Trooper Lannis pivotted his horse and put him to the brook with scarcely +any take-off; and the splendid animal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span> cleared the water like a deer and +came cantering up to the door of the lodge.</p> + +<p>Fry's boyish face seemed agitated; he looked up at the State Trooper +with the flush of tears in his gaze and pointed at the rifle Lannis +carried:</p> + +<p>"If I'd had <em>that</em> ," he said excitedly, "I'd have brought in a crook, +you bet!"</p> + +<p>"Where did you see him?" inquired Lannis.</p> + +<p>"Jest west of the Scaur, about an hour and a half ago. Wier and me was +stockin' the head of Scaur Brook with fingerlings. There's more good +water—two miles of it—to the east, and all it needed was a fish-ladder +around Scaur Falls.</p> + +<p>"So I toted in cement and sand and grub last week, and I built me a +shanty on the Scaur, and I been laying up a fish-way around the falls. +So that's how I come there<span class="nowrap">——"</span> He clicked his teeth and darted a +furious glance at the woods. "By God," he said, "I was such a fool I +didn't take no rifle. All I had was an axe and a few traps.... I wasn't +going to let the mink get our trout whatever you fellows say," he added +defiantly, "—and law or no law<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Get along with your story, young man," interrupted Lannis; "—you can +spill the rest out to the Commissioner."</p> + +<p>"All right, then. This is the way it happened down to the Scaur. I was +eating lunch by the fish-stairs, looking up at 'em and kind of planning +how to save cement, and not thinking about anybody being near me, when +<em>something</em> made me turn my head.... You know how it is in the woods.... +I kinda <em>felt</em> somebody near. And, by cracky!—there stood a man with a +big, black automatic pistol, and he had a bead on my belly.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>"'Well,' said I, 'what's troubling <em>you</em> and your gun, my friend?'—I +was that astonished.</p> + +<p>"He was a slim-built, powerful guy with a foreign face and voice and +way. He wanted to know if he had the honour—as he put it—to introduce +himself to a detective or game constable, or a friend of Mike Clinch.</p> + +<p>"I told him I wasn't any of these, and that I worked in a private +hatchery; and he called me a liar."</p> + +<p>Young Fry's face flushed and his voice began to quiver:</p> + +<p>"That's the way he misused me: and he backed me into the shanty and I +had to sit down with both hands up. Then he filled my pack-basket with +grub, and took my axe, and strapped my kit onto his back.... And +talking all the time in his mean, sneery, foreign way—and I guess he +thought he was funny, for he laughed at his own jokes.</p> + +<p>"He told me his name was Quintana, and that he ought to shoot me for a +rat, but wouldn't because of the stink. Then he said he was going to do +a quick job that the police were too cowardly to do;—that he was +a-going to find Mike Clinch down to Drowned Valley and kill him; and if +he could catch Mike's daughter, too, he'd spoil her face for life<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>The boy was breathing so hard and his rage made him so incoherent that +Lannis took him by the shoulder and shook him:</p> + +<p>"What next?" demanded the Trooper impatiently. "Tell your story and quit +thinking how you were misused!"</p> + +<p>"He told me to stay in the shanty for an hour or he'd do for me good," +cried Fry.... "Once I got up and went to the door; and there he stood +by the brook, wolfing my lunch with both hands. I tell you he cursed and +drove me,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span> like a dog, inside with his big pistol—my God—like a dog....</p> + +<p>"Then, the next time I took a chance he was gone.... And I beat it here +to get me a rifle<span class="nowrap">——"</span> The boy broke down and sobbed: "He drove me +around—like a dog—he did<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"You leave that to me," interrupted Lannis sharply. And, to Wier: "You +and George had better get a gun apiece. That fellow <em>might</em> come back +here or go to Harrod Place if we starve him out."</p> + +<p>Wier said to Fry: "Go up to Harrod Place and tell Jansen your story and +bring back two 45-70's.... And quit snivelling.... You may get a shot +at him yet."</p> + +<p>Lannis had already ridden down to the brook. Now he jumped his horse +across, pulled up, called back to Wier:</p> + +<p>"I think our man is making for Drowned Valley, all right. My mate, +Stormont, telephoned me that some of his gang are there, and that Mike +Clinch and his gang have them stopped on the other side! Keep your eye +on Harrod Place!"</p> + +<p>And away he cantered into the North.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>Behind the curtains of her open window Eve Strayer, lying on her bed, +had heard every word.</p> + +<p>Crouched there beside her pillow she peered out and saw Trooper Lannis +ride away; saw the Fry boy start toward Harrod Place on a run; saw Ralph +Wier watch them out of sight and then turn and re-enter the lodge.</p> + +<p>Wrapped in Darragh's big blanket robe she got off the bed and opened her +chamber door as Wier was passing through the living-room.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>"Please—I'd like to speak to you a moment," she called.</p> + +<p>Wier turned instantly and came to the partly open door.</p> + +<p>"I want to know," she said, "where I am."</p> + +<p>"Ma'am?"</p> + +<p>"What is this place?"</p> + +<p>"It's a hatchery<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Whose?"</p> + +<p>"Ma'am?"</p> + +<p>"Whose lodge is this? Does it belong to Harrod Place?"</p> + +<p>"We're h-hootch runners, Miss<span class="nowrap">——"</span> stammered Wier, mindful of +instructions, but making a poor business of deception; "—I and Hal +Smith, we run a 'Easy One,' and we strip trout for a blind and sell to +Harrod Place—Hal and I<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"<em>Who</em> is Hal Smith?" she asked.</p> + +<p>"Ma'am?"</p> + +<p>The girl's flower-blue eyes turned icy: "Who is the man who calls +himself Hal Smith?" she repeated.</p> + +<p>Wier looked at her, red and dumb.</p> + +<p>"Is he a Trooper in plain clothes?" she demanded in a bitter voice. "Is +he one of the Commissioner's spies? Are <em>you</em> one, too?"</p> + +<p>Wier gazed miserably at her, unable to formulate a convincing lie.</p> + +<p>She flushed swiftly as a terrible suspicion seized her:</p> + +<p>"Is this Harrod property? Is Hal Smith old Harrod's heir? <em>Is</em> he?"</p> + +<p>"My God, Miss<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"He <em>is</em> !"</p> + +<p>"Listen, Miss<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>She flung open the door and came out into the living-room.</p> + +<p>"Hal Smith is that nephew of old Harrod," she said calmly. "His name is +Darragh. And you are one of his wardens.... And I can't stay here. Do +you understand?"</p> + +<p>Wier wiped his hot face and waited. The cat was out; there was a hole in +the bag; and he knew there was no use in such lies as he could tell.</p> + +<p>He said: "All I know, Miss, is that I was to look after you and get you +whatever you want<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"I want my clothes!"</p> + +<p>"Ma'am?"</p> + +<p>"My <em>clothes</em> !" she repeated impatiently. "I've <em>got</em> to have them!"</p> + +<p>"Where are they, ma'am?" asked the bewildered man.</p> + +<p>At the same moment the girl's eyes fell on a pile of men's sporting +clothing—garments sent down from Harrod Place to the Lodge—lying on a +leather lounge near a gun-rack.</p> + +<p>Without a glance at Wier, Eve went to the heap of clothing, tossed it +about, selected cords, two pairs of woollen socks, grey shirt, puttees, +shoes, flung the garments through the door into her own room, followed +them, and locked herself in.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>When she was dressed—the two heavy pairs of socks helping to fit her +feet to the shoes—she emptied her handful of diamonds, sapphires and +emeralds, including the Flaming Jewel, into the pockets of her breeches.</p> + +<p>Now she was ready. She unlocked her door and went out, scarcely limping +at all, now.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>Wier gazed at her helplessly as she coolly chose a rifle and +cartridge-belt at the gun-rack.</p> + +<p>Then she turned on him as still and dangerous as a young puma:</p> + +<p>"Tell Darragh he'd better keep clear of Clinch's," she said. "Tell him I +always thought he was a rat. Now I know he's one."</p> + +<p>She plunged one slim hand into her pocket and drew out a diamond.</p> + +<p>"Here," she said insolently. "This will pay your <em>gentleman</em> for his gun +and clothing."</p> + +<p>She tossed the gem onto a table, where it rolled, glittering.</p> + +<p>"For heaven's sake, Miss<span class="nowrap">——"</span> burst out Wier, horrified, but she cut him +short:</p> + +<p>"—He may keep the change," she said. "We're no swindlers at Clinch's +Dump!"</p> + +<p>Wier started forward as though to intercept her. Eve's eyes flamed. And +he stood still. She wrenched open the door and walked out among the +silver birches.</p> + +<p>At the edge of the brook she stood a moment, coolly loading the magazine +of her rifle. Then, with one swift glance of hatred, flung at the place +that Harrod's money had built, she sprang across the brook, tossed her +rifle to her shoulder, and passed lithely into the golden wilderness of +poplar and silver birch.</p> + + +<h3>II</h3> + +<p>Quintana, on a fox-trot along the rock-trail into Drowned Valley, now +thoroughly understood that it was the only<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span> sanctuary left him for the +moment. Egress to the southward was closed; to the eastward, also; and +he was too wary to venture westward toward Ghost Lake.</p> + +<p>No, the only temporary safety lay in the swamps of Drowned Valley.</p> + +<p>And there, he decided as he jogged along, if worse came to worst and +starvation drove him out, he'd settle matters with Mike Clinch and break +through to the north.</p> + +<p>He meant to settle matters with Mike Clinch anyway. He was not afraid of +Clinch; not really afraid of anybody. It had been the dogs that +demoralised Quintana. He'd had no experience with hunting hounds,—did +not know what to expect,—how to manœuvre. If only he could have +<em>seen</em> these beasts that filled the forest with their hob-goblin +outcries—if he could have had a good look at the creatures who gave +forth that weird, crazed, melancholy volume of sound!<span class="nowrap">——</span></p> + +<p>"Bon!" he said coolly to himself. "It was a crisis of nerves which I +experience. Yes.... I should have shot him, that fat Sard. Yes.... +Only those damn dog<span class="nowrap">——</span> And now he shall die an' rot—that fat Sard—all +by himse'f, parbleu!—like one big dead thing all alone in the wood.... +A puddle of guts full of diamonds! Ah!—mon dieu!—a million francs in +gems that shine like festering stars in this damn wood till the world +end. Ah, bah—nome de dieu de<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Halte là!" came a sharp voice from the cedar fringe in front. A pause, +then recognition; and Henri Picquet walked out on the hard ridge beyond +and stood leaning on his rifle and looking sullenly at his leader.</p> + +<p>Quintana came forward, carelessly, a disagreeable expression<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span> in his +eyes and on his narrow lips, and continued on past Picquet.</p> + +<p>The latter slouched after his leader, who had walked over to the lean-to +before which a pile of charred logs lay in cold ashes.</p> + +<p>As Picquet came up, Quintana turned on him, with a gesture toward the +extinguished fire: "It is cold like hell," he said. "Why do you not have +some fire?"</p> + +<p>"Not for me, non," growled Picquet, and jerked a dirty thumb in the +direction of the lean-to.</p> + +<p>And there Quintana saw a pair of muddy boots protruding from a blanket.</p> + +<p>"It is Harry Beck, yes?" he inquired. Then <em>something</em> about the boots +and the blanket silenced him. He kept his eyes on them for a full +minute, then walked into the lean-to. The blanket also covered Harry +Beck's features and there was a stain on it where it outlined the +prostrate man's features, making a ridge over the bony nose.</p> + +<p>After a moment Quintana looked around at Picquet:</p> + +<p>"So. He is dead. Yes?"</p> + +<p>Picquet shrugged: "Since noon, mon capitaine."</p> + +<p>"Comment?"</p> + +<p>"How shall I know? It was the fire, perhaps,—green wood or wet—it is +no matter now.... I said to him, 'Pay attention, Henri; your wood makes +too much smoke.' To me he reply I shall go to hell.... Well, there was +too much smoke for me. I arise to search for wood more dry, when, +crack!—they begin to shoot out there<span class="nowrap">——"</span> He waved a dirty hand toward +the forest.</p> + +<p>"'Bon,' said I, 'Clinch, he have seen your damn smoke!'</p> + +<p>"'What shall I care?' he make reply, Henri Beck, to me.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span> 'Clinch he +shall shoot and be damn to him. I cook me my déjeûner all the same.'</p> + +<p>"I make representations to that Johnbull; he say to me that I am a frog, +and other injuries, while he lay yet more wood on his sacré fire.</p> + +<p>"Then crack! crack! crack! and zing-gg!—whee-ee! come the big bullets +of Clinch and his voyous yonder.</p> + +<p>"'Bon,' I say, 'me, I make my excuse to retire.'</p> + +<p>"Then Henri Beck he laugh and say, 'Hop it, frog!' And that is all he +has find time to say, when crack! spat! Bien droit he has it—tenez, mon +capitaine—here, over the left eye!... Like a beef surprise he go over, +crash! thump! And like a beef that dies, the air bellows out from his +big lungs<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>Picquet looked down at the dead comrade in a sort of weary compassion +for such stupidity.</p> + +<p>"—So he pass, this ros-biff goddam Johnbull.... Me, I roll him in +there.... Je ne sais pas pourquoi.... Then I put out the fire and +leave."</p> + +<p>Quintana let his sneering glance rest on the dead a moment, and his thin +lip curled immemorial contempt for the Anglo-Saxon.</p> + +<p>Then he divested himself of the basket-pack which he had stolen from the +Fry boy.</p> + +<p>"Alors," he said calmly, "it has been Mike Clinch who shoot my frien' +Beck. Bien."</p> + +<p>He threw a cartridge into the breech of his rifle, adjusted his +ammunition belt <em>en bandoulière</em> , carelessly.</p> + +<p>Then, in a quiet voice: "My frien' Picquet, the time has now arrive when +it become ver' necessary that we go from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span> here away. Donc—I shall now +go kill me my frien' Mike Clinch."</p> + +<p>Picquet, unastonished, gave him a heavy, bovine look of inquiry.</p> + +<p>Quintana said softly: "Me, I have enough already of this damn woods. Why +shall we starve here when there lies our path?" He pointed north; his +arm remained outstretched for a while.</p> + +<p>"Clinch, he is there," growled Picquet.</p> + +<p>"Also our path, l'ami Henri.... And, behind us, they hunt us now with +<em>dogs</em> ."</p> + +<p>Picquet bared his big white teeth in fierce surprise. "Dogs?" he +repeated with a sort of snarl.</p> + +<p>"That is how they now hunt us, my frien'—like they hunt the hare in the +Côte d'Or.... Me, I shall now reconnoitre—<em>that</em> way!" And he looked +where he was pointing, into the north—with smouldering eyes. Then he +turned calmly to Picquet: "An' you, l'ami?"</p> + +<p>"At orders, mon capitaine."</p> + +<p>"C'est bien. Venez."</p> + +<p>They walked leisurely forward with rifles shouldered, following the hard +ridge out across a vast and flooded land where the bark of trees +glimmered with wet mosses.</p> + +<p>After a quarter of a mile the ridge broadened and split into two, one +hog-back branching northeast! They, however, continued north.</p> + +<p>About twenty minutes later Picquet, creeping along on Quintana's left, +and some sixty yards distant, discovered something moving in the woods +beyond, and fired at it. Instantly two unseen rifles spoke from the +woods ahead. Picquet was jerked clear around, lost his balance and +nearly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span> fell. Blood was spurting from his right arm, between elbow and +shoulder.</p> + +<p>He tried to lift and level his rifle; his arm collapsed and dangled +broken and powerless; his rifle clattered to the forest floor.</p> + +<p>For a moment he stood there in plain view, dumb, deathly white; then he +began screaming with fury while the big, soft-nosed bullets came +streaming in all around him. His broken arm was hit again. His screaming +ceased; he dragged out his big clasp-knife with his left hand and +started running toward the shooting.</p> + +<p>As he ran, his mangled arm flopping like a broken wing, Byron Hastings +stepped out from behind a tree and coolly shot him down at close +quarters.</p> + +<p>Then Quintana's rifle exploded twice very quickly, and the Hastings boy +stumbled sideways and fell sprawling. He managed to rise to his knees +again; he even was trying to stand up when Quintana, taking his time, +deliberately began to empty his magazine into the boy, riddling him limb +and body and head.</p> + +<p>Down once more, he still moved his arms. Sid Hone reached out from +behind a fallen log to grasp the dying lad's ankle and draw him into +shelter, but Quintana reloaded swiftly and smashed Hone's left hand with +the first shot.</p> + +<p>Then Jim Hastings, kneeling behind a bunch of juniper, fired a +high-velocity bullet into the tree behind which Quintana stood; but +before he could fire again Quintana's shot in reply came ripping through +the juniper and tore a ghastly hole in the calf of his left leg, +striking a blow that knocked young Hastings flat and paralysed as a dead +flounder.</p> + +<p>A mile to the north, blocking the other exit from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span> Drowned Valley, Mike +Clinch, Harvey Chase, Cornelius Blommers, and Dick Berry stood listening +to the shooting.</p> + +<p>"B'gosh," blurted out Chase, "it sounds like they was goin' through, +Mike. B'gosh, it does!"</p> + +<p>Clinch's little pale eyes blazed, but he said in his soft, agreeable +voice:</p> + +<p>"Stay right here, boys. Like as not some of 'em will come this way."</p> + +<p>The shooting below ceased. Clinch's nostrils expanded and flattened with +every breath, as he stood glaring into the woods.</p> + +<p>"Harve," he said presently, "you an' Corny go down there an' kinda look +around. And you signal if I'm wanted. G'wan, both o' you. Git!"</p> + +<p>They started, running heavily, but their feet made little noise on the +moss.</p> + +<p>Berry came over and stood near Clinch. For ten minutes neither man +moved. Clinch stared at the woods in front of him. The younger man's +nervous glance flickered like a snake's tongue in every direction, and +he kept moistening his lips with his tongue.</p> + +<p>Presently two shots came from the south. A pause; a rattle of shots from +hastily emptied magazines.</p> + +<p>"G'wan down there, Dick!" said Clinch.</p> + +<p>"You'll be alone, Mike<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Au' right. You do like I say; git along quick!"</p> + +<p>Berry walked southward a little way. He had turned very white under his +tan.</p> + +<p>"Gol ding ye!" shouted Clinch, "take it on a lope or I'll kick the pants +off'n ye!"</p> + +<p>Berry began to run, carrying his rifle at a trail.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>For half an hour there was not a sound in the forests of Drowned Valley +except in the dead timber where unseen woodpeckers hammered fitfully at +the ghosts of ancient trees.</p> + +<p>Always Clinch's little pale eyes searched the forest twilight in front +of him; not a falling leaf escaped him; not a chipmunk.</p> + +<p>And all the while Clinch talked to himself; his lips moved a little now +and then, but uttered no sound:</p> + +<p>"All I want God should do," he repeated again and again, "is to just let +Quintana come <em>my</em> way. 'Tain't for because he robbed my girlie. 'Tain't +for the stuff he carries onto him.... No, God, 'tain't them things. But +it's what that there skunk done to my Evie.... O God, be you listenin'? +He <em>hurt</em> her, Quintana did. That's it. He misused her.... God, if you +had seen my girlie's little bleeding feet!<span class="nowrap">——</span> <em>That's</em> the reason.... +'Tain't the stuff. I can work. I can save for to make my Evie a lady +same's them high-steppers on Fifth Avenoo. I can moil and toil and slave +an' run hootch—hootch<span class="nowrap">——</span> They wuz wine 'n' fixin's into the Bible. It +ain't you, God, it's them fanatics.... Nobody in my Dump wanted I +should sell 'em more'n a bottle o' beer before this here prohybishun set +us all crazy. 'Tain't right.... O God, don't hold a little hootch agin +me when all I want of you is to let Quintana<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>The slightest noise behind him. He waited, turned slowly. Eve stood +there.</p> + +<p>Hell died in his pale eyes as she came to him, rested silently in his +gentle embrace, returned his kiss, laid her flushed, sweet cheek against +his unshaven face.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>"Dad, darling?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, my baby<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"You're watching to kill Quintana. But there's no use watching any +longer."</p> + +<p>"Have the boys below got him?" he demanded.</p> + +<p>"They got one of his gang. Byron Hastings is dead. Jim is badly hurt; +Sid Hone, too,—not so badly<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Where's Quintana?"</p> + +<p>"Dad, he's gone.... But it don't matter. See here!——" She dug her +slender hand into her <a name="breeches" id="breeches"></a><ins title="missing ownership apostrophe in original">breeches'</ins> pocket and pulled out a little +fistful of gems.</p> + +<p>Clinch, his powerful arm closing her shoulders, looked dully at the +jewels.</p> + +<p>"You see, dad, there's no use killing Quintana. These are the things he +robbed you of."</p> + +<p>"'Tain't them that matter.... I'm glad you got 'em. I allus wanted you +should be a great lady, girlie. Them's the tickets of admission. You put +'em in your pants. I gotta stay here a spell<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Dad! Take them!"</p> + +<p>He took them, smiled, shoved them into his pocket.</p> + +<p>"What is it, girlie?" he asked absently, his pale eyes searching the +woods ahead.</p> + +<p>"I've just told you," she said, "that the boys went in as far as +Quintana's shanty. There was a dead man there, too; but Quintana has +gone."</p> + +<p>Clinch said,—not removing his eyes from the forest: "If any o' them +boys has let Quintana crawl through I'll kill <em>him</em> , too.... G'wan +home, girlie. I gotta mosey—I gotta kinda loaf around f'r a spell<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Dad, I want you to come back with me<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>"You go home; you hear me, Eve? Tell Corny and Dick Berry to hook it for +Owl Marsh and stop the Star Peak trails—both on 'em.... Can Sid and +Jimmy walk?"</p> + +<p>"Jim can't<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Well, let Harve take him on his back. You go too. You help fix Jimmy up +at the house. He's a little fella, Jimmy Hastings is. Harve can tote +him. And you go along<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Dad, Quintana says he means to kill you! What is the use of hurting +him? You have what he took<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"I gotta have more'n he took. But even that ain't enough. He couldn't +pay for all he ever done to me, girlie.... I'm aimin' to draw on him on +sight<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>Clinch's set visage relaxed into an alarming smile which flickered, +faded, died in the wintry ferocity of his eyes.</p> + +<p>"Dad<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"G'wan home!" he interrupted harshly. "You want that Hastings boy to +bleed to death?"</p> + +<p>She came up to him, not uttering a word, yet asking him with all the +tenderness and eloquence of her eyes to leave this blood-trail where it +lay and hunt no more.</p> + +<p>He kissed her mouth, infinitely tender, smiled; then, again prim and +scowling:</p> + +<p>"G'wan home, you little scut, an' do what I told ye, or, by God, I'll +cut a switch that'll learn ye good! Never a word, now! On yer way! +G'wan!"</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>Twice she turned to look back. The second time, Clinch was slowly +walking into the woods straight ahead of him. She waited; saw him go in; +waited. After a while she continued on her way.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>When she sighted the men below she called to Blommers and Dick Berry:</p> + +<p>"Dad says you're to stop Star Peak trail by Owl Marsh."</p> + +<p>Jimmy Hastings sat on a log, crying and looking down at his dead +brother, over whose head somebody had spread a coat.</p> + +<p>Blommers had made a tourniquet for Jimmy out of a bandanna and a peeled +stick.</p> + +<p>The girl examined it, loosened it for a moment, twisted it again, and +bade Harvey Chase take him on his back and start for Clinch's.</p> + +<p>The boy began to sob that he didn't want his brother to be left out +there all alone; but Chase promised to come back and bring him in before +night.</p> + +<p>Sid Hone came up, haggard from pain and loss of blood, resting his +mangled hand in the sling of his cartridge-belt.</p> + +<p>Berry and Blommers were already starting across toward Owl Marsh; and +the latter, passing by, asked Eve where Mike was.</p> + +<p>"He went into Drowned Valley by the upper outlet," she said.</p> + +<p>"He'll never find no one in them logans an' sinks," muttered Chase, +squatting to hoist Jimmy Hastings to his broad back.</p> + +<p>"I guess he'll be over Star Peak side by sundown," nodded Blommers.</p> + +<p>Eve watched him slouching off into the woods, followed sullenly by +Berry. Then she looked down at the dead man in silence.</p> + +<p>"Be you ready, Eve?" grunted Chase.</p> + +<p>She turned with a heavy heart to the home trail; but her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span> mind was +passionately with Clinch in the spectral forests of Drowned Valley.</p> + + +<h3>III</h3> + +<p>And Clinch's mind was on her. All else—his watchfulness, his stealthy +advance—all the alertness of eye and ear, all the subtlety, the +cunning, the infinite caution—were purely instinctive mechanics.</p> + +<p>Somewhere in this flooded twilight of gigantic trees was José Quintana. +Knowing that, he dismissed that fact from his mind and turned his +thoughts to Eve.</p> + +<p>Sometimes his lips moved. They usually did when he was arguing with God +or calling his Creator's attention to the justice of his case. His <em>two</em> +cases—each, to him, a cause célèbre; the matter of Harrod; the affair +of Quintana.</p> + +<p>Many a time he had pleaded these two causes before the Most High.</p> + +<p>But now his thoughts were chiefly concerned with Eve—with the problem +of her future—his master passion—this daughter of the dead wife he had +loved.</p> + +<p>He sighed unconsciously; halted.</p> + +<p>"Well, Lord," he concluded, in his wordless way, "my girlie has gotta +have a chance if I gotta go to hell for it. That's sure as shootin'.... +Amen."</p> + +<p>At that instant he saw Quintana.</p> + +<p>Recognition was instant and mutual. Neither man stirred. Quintana was +standing beside a giant hemlock. His pack lay at his feet.</p> + +<p>Clinch had halted—always the mechanics!—close to a great ironwood +tree.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>Probably both men knew that they could cover themselves before the other +moved a muscle. Clinch's small, light eyes were blazing; Quintana's +black eyes had become two slits.</p> + +<p>Finally: "You—dirty—skunk," drawled Clinch in his agreeably misleading +voice, "by Jesus Christ I got you now."</p> + +<p>"Ah—h," said Quintana, "thees has happen ver' nice like I expec'.... +Always I say myse'f, yet a little patience, José, an' one day you shall +meet thees fellow Clinch, who has rob you.... I am ver' thankful to the +good God<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>He had made the slightest of movements: instantly both men were behind +their trees. Clinch, in the ferocious pride of woodcraft, laughed +exultingly—filled the dim and spectral forest with his roar of +laughter.</p> + +<p>"Quintana," he called out, "you're a-going to cash in. Savvy? You're +a-going to hop off. An' first you gotta hear why. 'Tain't for the stuff. +Naw! I hooked it off'n you; you hooked it off'n me; now I got it again. +<em>That's</em> all square.... No, 'tain't <em>that</em> grudge, you green-livered +whelp of a cross-bred, still-born slut! No! It's becuz you laid the heft +o' your dirty little finger onto my girlie. 'N' now you gotta hop!"</p> + +<p>Quintana's sinister laughter was his retort. Then: "You damfool Clinch," +he said, "I got in my pocket what you rob of me. Now I kill you, and +then I feel ver' well. I go home, live like some kings; yes. But you," +he sneered, "you shall not go home never no more. No. You shall remain +in thees damn wood like ver' dead old rat that is all wormy.... Hé! I +got a million dollaire—five million franc in my pocket. You shall learn +what it cost to rob José Quintana! Unnerstan'?"</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>"You liar," said Clinch contemptuously, "I got them jools in my pants +pocket<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>Quintana's derisive laugh cut him short: "I give you thee Flaming Jewel +if you show me you got my gems in you pants pocket!"</p> + +<p>"I'll show you. Lay down your rifle so's I see the stock."</p> + +<p>"First you, my frien' Mike," said Quintana cautiously.</p> + +<p>Clinch took his rifle by the muzzle and shoved the stock into view so +that Quintana could see it without moving.</p> + +<p>To his surprise, Quintana did the same, then coolly stepped a pace +outside the shelter of his hemlock stump.</p> + +<p>"You show me now!" he called across the swamp.</p> + +<p>Clinch stepped into view, dug into his pocket, and, cupping both hands, +displayed a glittering heap of gems.</p> + +<p>"I wanted you should know who's gottem," he said, "before you hop. It'll +give you something to think over in hell."</p> + +<p>Quintana's eyes had become slits again. Neither man stirred. Then:</p> + +<p>"So you are buzzard, eh, Clinch? You feed on dead man's pockets, eh? You +find Sard somewhere an' you feed." He held up the morocco case, +emblazoned with the arms of the Grand Duchess of Esthonia, and shook it +at Clinch.</p> + +<p>"In there is my share.... Not all. Ver' quick, now, I take yours, +too<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>Clinch vanished and so did his rifle; and Quintana's first bullet struck +the moss where the stock had rested.</p> + +<p>"You black crow!" jeered Clinch, laughing, "—I need that empty case of +yours. And I'm going after it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>.... But it's because your filthy claw +touched my girlie that you gotta hop!"</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>Twilight lay over the phantom wood, touching with pallid tints the +flooded forest.</p> + +<p>So far only that one shot had been fired. Both men were still +manœuvring, always creeping in circles and always lining some great +tree for shelter.</p> + +<p>Now, the gathering dusk was making them bolder and swifter; and twice, +already, Clinch caught the shadow of a fading edge of something that +vanished against the shadows too swiftly for a shot.</p> + +<p>Now Quintana, keeping a tree in line, brushed with his lithe back a +leafless moose-bush that stood swaying as he avoided it.</p> + +<p>Instantly a stealthy hope seized him: he slipped out of his coat, spread +it on the bush, set the naked branches swaying, and darted to his tree.</p> + +<p>Waiting, he saw that the grey blot his coat made in the dusk was still +moving a little—just vibrating a little bit in the twilight. He touched +the bush with his rifle barrel, then crouched almost flat.</p> + +<p>Suddenly the red crash of a rifle lit up Clinch's visage for a fraction +of a second. And Quintana's bullet smashed Clinch between the eyes.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>After a long while Quintana ventured to rise and creep forward.</p> + +<p>Night, too, came creeping like an assassin amid the ghostly trees.</p> + +<p>So twilight died in the stillness of Drowned Valley and the pall of +night lay over all things,—living and dead alike.</p> + + +<hr /> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span><a name="xi" id="xi"></a> +<small><span class="smcap">Episode Eleven</span></small></h2> + +<h2>THE PLACE OF PINES</h2> + + +<h3>I</h3> + +<p class="cap">THE last sound that Mike Clinch heard on earth was the detonation of his +own rifle. Probably it was an agreeable sound to him. He lay there with +a pleasant expression on his massive features. His watch had fallen out +of his pocket.</p> + +<p>Quintana shined him with an electric torch; picked up the watch. Then, +holding the torch in one hand, he went through the dead man's pockets +very thoroughly.</p> + +<p>When Quintana had finished, both trays of the flat morocco case were +full of jewels. And Quintana was full of wonder and suspicion.</p> + +<p>Unquietly he looked upon the dead—upon the glittering contents of the +jewel-box,—but always his gaze reverted to the dead. The faintest +shadow of a smile edged Clinch's lips. Quintana's lips grew graver. He +said slowly, like one who does his thinking aloud:</p> + +<p>"What is it you have done to me, l'ami Clinch?... Are there truly then +two sets of precious stones?—<em>two</em> Flaming Jewels?—two gems of Erosite +like there never has been in all thees worl' excep' only two more?... +Or is one set false?... Have I here one set of paste facsimiles?... My +frien' Clinch, why do you lie there an' smile at me so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span> ver' funny ... +like you are amuse?... I am wondering what you may have done to me, my +frien' Clinch...."</p> + +<p>For a while he remained kneeling beside the dead. Then: "Ah, bah," he +said, pocketing the morocco case and getting to his feet.</p> + +<p>He moved a little way toward the open trail, stopped, came back, stood +his rifle against a tree.</p> + +<p>For a while he was busy with his sharp Spanish clasp knife, whittling +and fitting together two peeled twigs. A cross was the ultimate result. +Then he placed Clinch's hands palm to palm upon his chest, laid the +cross on his breast, and shined the result with complacency.</p> + +<p>Then Quintana took off his hat.</p> + +<p>"L'ami Mike," he said, "you were a <em>man</em> !... Adios!"</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>Quintana put on his hat. The path was free. The world lay open before +José Quintana once more;—the world, his hunting ground.</p> + +<p>"But," he thought uneasily, "what is it that I bring home this time? How +much is paste? My God, how droll that smile of Clinch.... Which is the +false—his jewels or mine? Dieu que j'étais bête!<span class="nowrap">——</span> Me who have not +suspec' that there are <em>two</em> trays within my jewel-box!... I +unnerstan'. It is ver' simple. In the top tray the false gems. Ah! Paste +on top to deceive a thief!... Alors.... Then what I have recover of +Clinch is the <em>real</em> !... Nom de Dieu!... How should I know? His smile +is so ver' funny.... I think thees dead man make mock of me—all inside +himse'f<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>So, in darkness, prowling south by west, shining the trail furtively, +and loaded rifle ready, Quintana moved with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span> stealthy, unhurried tread +out of the wilderness that had trapped him and toward the tangled +border of that outer world which led to safe, obscure, uncharted +labyrinths—old-world mazes, immemorial hunting grounds—haunted by +men who prey.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>The night had turned frosty. Quintana, wet to the knees and very tired, +moved slowly, not daring to leave the trail because of sink-holes.</p> + +<p>However, the trail led to Clinch's Dump, and sooner or later he must +leave it.</p> + +<p>What he had to have was a fire; he realised that. Somewhere off the +trail, in big timber if possible, he must build a fire and master this +deadly chill that was slowly paralysing all power of movement.</p> + +<p>He knew that a fire in the forest, particularly in big timber, could be +seen only a little way. He must take his chances with sink-holes and +find some spot in the forest to build that fire.</p> + +<p>Who could discover him except by accident?</p> + +<p>Who would prowl the midnight wilderness? At thirty yards the fire +would not be visible. And, as for the odour—well, he'd be gone +before dawn.... Meanwhile, he must have that fire. He could wait no +longer.</p> + +<p>He cut a pole first. Then he left the trail where a little spring flowed +west, and turned to the right, shining the forest floor as he moved and +sounding with his pole every wet stretch of moss, every strip of mud, +every tiniest glimmer of water.</p> + +<p>At last he came to a place of pines, first growth giants towering into +night, and, looking up, saw stars, infinitely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span> distant, ... where +perhaps those things called souls drifted like wisps of vapour.</p> + +<p>When the fire took, Quintana's thin dark hands had become nearly useless +from cold. He could not have crooked finger to trigger.</p> + +<p>For a long time he sat close to the blaze, slowly massaging his torpid +limbs, but did not dare strip off his foot-gear.</p> + +<p>Steam rose from puttee and heavy shoe and from the sodden woollen +breeches. Warmth slowly penetrated. There was little smoke; the big dry +branches were dead and bleached and he let the fire eat into them +without using his axe.</p> + +<p>Once or twice he sighed, "Oh, my God," in a weary demi-voice, as though +the content of well-being were permeating him.</p> + +<p>Later he ate and drank languidly, looking up at the stars, speculating +as to the possible presence of Mike Clinch up there.</p> + +<p>"Ah, the dirty thief," he murmured; "—nevertheless a man. Quel homme! +Mais bête à faire pleurer! Je l'ai bien triché, moi! Ha!"</p> + +<p>Quintana smiled palely as he thought of the coat and the gently-swaying +bush—of the red glare of Clinch's shot, of the death-echo of his own +shot.</p> + +<p>Then, uneasy, he drew out the morocco case and gazed at the two trays +full of gems.</p> + +<p>The jewels blazed in the firelight. He touched them, moved them about, +picked up several and examined them, testing the unset edges against his +under lip as an expert tests jade.</p> + +<p>But he couldn't tell; there was no knowing. He replaced<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span> them, closed +the case, pocketed it. When he had a chance he could try boiling water +for one sort of trick. He could scratch one or two.... Sard would know. +He wondered whether Sard had got away, not concerned except selfishly. +However, there were others in Paris whom he could trust—at a price....</p> + +<p>Quintana rested both elbows on his knees and framed his dark face +between both bony hands.</p> + +<p>What a chase Clinch had led him after the Flaming Jewel. And now Clinch +lay dead in the forest—faintly smiling. At <em>what</em> ?</p> + +<p>In a very low, passionless voice, Quintana cursed monotonously as he +gazed into the fire. In Spanish, French, Portuguese, Italian, he cursed +Clinch. After a little while he remembered Clinch's daughter, and he +cursed her, elaborately, thoroughly, wishing her black mischance awake +and asleep, living or dead.</p> + +<p>Darragh, too, he remembered in his curses, and did not slight him. And +the trooper, Stormont—ah, he should have killed all of them when he had +the chance.... And those two Baltic Russians, also, the girl duchess +and her friend. Why on earth hadn't he made a clean job of it? +Over-caution. A wary disinclination to stir up civilization by needless +murder. But after all, old maxims, old beliefs, old truths are the best, +God knows. The dead don't talk! And that's the wisest wisdom of all.</p> + +<p>"If," murmured Quintana fervently, "God gives me further opportunity to +acquire a little property to comfort me in my old age, I shall leave no +gossiping fool to do me harm with his tongue. No! I kill.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>"And though they raise a hue and cry, dead tongues can not wag and I +save myse'f much annoyance in the end."</p> + +<p>He leaned his back against the trunk of a massive pine.</p> + +<p>Presently Quintana slept after his own fashion—that is to say, looking +closely at him one could discover a glimmer under his lowered eyelids. +And he listened always in that kind of sleep. As though a shadowy part +of him were detached from his body, and mounted guard over it.</p> + +<p>The inaudible movement of a wood-mouse venturing into the firelit circle +awoke Quintana. Again a dropping leaf amid distant birches awoke him. +Such things. And so he slept with wet feet to the fire and his rifle +across his knees; and dreamed of Eve and of murder, and that the Flaming +Jewel was but a mass of glass.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>At that moment the girl of whose white throat Quintana was dreaming, and +whining faintly in his dreams, stood alone outside Clinch's Dump, rifle +in hand, listening, fighting the creeping dread that touched her slender +body at times—seemed to touch her very heart with frost.</p> + +<p>Clinch's men had gone on to Ghost Lake with their wounded and dead, +where there was fitter shelter for both. All had gone on; nobody +remained to await Clinch's home-coming except Eve Strayer.</p> + +<p>Black Care, that tireless squire of dames, had followed her from the +time she had left Clinch, facing the spectral forests of Drowned Valley.</p> + +<p>An odd, unusual dread weighted her heart—something in emotions that she +never before had experienced in time of danger. In it there was the +deathly unease of premonition. But of what it was born she did not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span> +understand,—perhaps of the strain of dangers passed—of the shock of +discovery concerning Smith's identity with Darragh—Darragh!—the hated +kinsman of Harrod the abhorred.</p> + +<p>Fiercely she wondered how much her lover knew about this miserable +masquerade. Was Stormont involved in this deception—Stormont, the +object of her first girl's passion—Stormont, for whom she would have +died?</p> + +<p>Wretched, perplexed, fiercely enraged at Darragh, deadly anxious +concerning Clinch, she had gone about cooking supper.</p> + +<p>The supper, kept warm on the range, still awaited the man who had no +more need of meat and drink.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>Of the tragedy of Sard Eve knew nothing. There were no traces save in +the disorder in the pantry and the bottles and chair on the veranda.</p> + +<p>Who had visited the place excepting those from whom she and Stormont had +fled, did not appear. She had no idea why her step-father's mattress and +bed-quilt lay in the pantry.</p> + +<p>Her heart heavy with ceaseless anxiety, Eve carried mattress and +bed-clothes to Clinch's chamber, re-made his bed, wandered through the +house setting it in order; then, in the kitchen, seated herself and +waited until the strange dread that possessed her drove her out into the +starlight to stand and listen and stare at the dark forest where all her +dread seemed concentrated.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>It was not yet dawn, but the girl could endure the strain no longer.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span>With electric torch and rifle she started for the forest, almost running +at first; then, among the first trees, moving with caution and in +silence along the trail over which Clinch should long since have +journeyed homeward.</p> + +<p>In soft places, when she ventured to flash her torch, foot-prints cast +curious shadows, and it was hard to make out tracks so oddly distorted +by the light. Prints mingled and partly obliterated other prints. She +identified her own tracks leading south, and guessed at the others, +pointing north and south, where they had carried in the wounded and had +gone back to bring in the dead.</p> + +<p>But nowhere could she discover any impression resembling her +step-father's,—that great, firm stride and solid imprint which so often +she had tracked through moss and swale and which she knew so well.</p> + +<p>Once when she got up from her knees after close examination of the muddy +trail, she became aware of the slightest taint in the night air—stood +with delicate nostrils quivering—advanced, still conscious of the +taint, listening, wary, every stealthy instinct alert.</p> + +<p>She had not been mistaken: somewhere in the forest there was smoke. +Somewhere a fire was burning. It might not be very far away; it might be +distant. <em>Whose fire?</em> Her father's? Would a hunter of men build a fire?</p> + +<p>The girl stood shivering in the darkness. There was not a sound.</p> + +<p>Now, keeping her cautious feet in the trail by sense of touch alone, she +moved on. Gradually, as she advanced, the odour of smoke became more +distinct. She heard nothing, saw nothing; but there was a near reek of +smoke in her nostrils and she stopped short.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>After a little while in the intense silence of the forest she ventured +to touch the switch of her torch, very cautiously.</p> + +<p>In the faint, pale lustre she saw a tiny rivulet flowing westward from a +spring, and, beside it, in the mud, imprints of a man's feet.</p> + +<p>The tracks were small, narrow, slimmer than imprints made by any man she +could think of. Under the glimmer of her torch they seemed quite fresh; +contours were still sharp, some ready to crumble, and water stood in the +heels.</p> + +<p>A little way she traced them, saw where their maker had cut a pole, +peeled it; saw, farther on, where this unknown man had probed in moss +and mud—peppered some particularly suspicious swale with a series of +holes as though a giant woodcock had been "boring" there.</p> + +<p>Who was this man wandering all alone at night off the Drowned Valley +trail and probing the darkness with a pole?</p> + +<p>She knew it was not her father. She knew that no native—none of her +father's men—would behave in such a manner. Nor could any of these have +left such narrow, almost delicate tracks.</p> + +<p>As she stole along, dimly shining the tracks, lifting her head +incessantly to listen and peer into the darkness, her quick eye caught +something ahead—something very slightly different from the wall of +black obscurity—a vague hint of colour—the very vaguest tint scarcely +perceptible at all.</p> + +<p>But she knew it was firelight touching the trunk of an unseen tree.</p> + +<p>Now, soundlessly over damp pine needles she crept. The scent of smoke +grew strong in nostril and throat; the pale tint became palely reddish. +All about her the blackness seemed palpable—seemed to touch her body +with its weight;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span> but, ahead, a ruddy glow stained two huge pines. And +presently she saw the fire, burning low, but redly alive. And, after a +long, long while, she saw a man.</p> + +<p>He had left the fire circle. His pack and belted mackinaw still lay +there at the foot of a great tree. But when, finally, she discovered +him, he was scarcely visible where he crouched in the shadow of a +tree-trunk, with his rifle half lowered at a ready.</p> + +<p>Had he heard her? It did not seem possible. Had he been crouching there +since he made his fire? Why had he made it then—for its warmth could +not reach him there. And why was he so stealthily watching—silent, +unstirring, crouched in the shadows?</p> + +<p>She strained her eyes; but distance and obscurity made recognition +impossible. And yet, somehow, every quivering instinct within her was +telling her that the crouched and shadowy watcher beyond the fire was +Quintana.</p> + +<p>And every concentrated instinct was telling her that he'd kill her if he +caught sight of her; her heart clamoured it; her pulses thumped it in +her ears.</p> + +<p>Had the girl been capable of it she could have killed him where he +crouched. She thought of it, but knew it was not in her to do it. And +yet Quintana had boasted that he meant to kill her father. That was what +terribly concerned her. And there must be a way to stop that +danger—some way to stop it short of murder,—a way to render this man +harmless to her and hers.</p> + +<p>No, she could not kill him this way. Except in extremes she could not +bring herself to fire upon any human creature. And yet this man must be +rendered harmless—somehow—somehow—ah!——</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>As the problem presented itself its solution flashed into her mind. Men +of the wilderness knew how to take dangerous creatures alive. To take a +dangerous and reasoning human was even less difficult, because reason +makes more mistakes than does instinct.</p> + +<p>Stealthily, without a sound, the girl crept back through the shadows +over the damp pine needles, until, peering fearfully over her shoulder, +she saw the last ghost-tint of Quintana's fire die out in the terrific +dark behind.</p> + +<p>Slowly, still, she moved until her sensitive feet felt the trodden path +from Drowned Valley.</p> + +<p>Now, with torch flaring, she ran, carrying her rifle at a trail. Before +her, here and there, little night creatures fled—a humped-up raccoon, +dazzled by the glare, a barred owl still struggling with its wood-rat +kill.</p> + +<p>She ran easily,—an agile, tireless young thing, part of the swiftness +and silence of the woods—part of the darkness, the sinuous celerity, +the ominous hush of wide, still places—part of its very blood and pulse +and hot, sweet breath.</p> + +<p>Even when she came out among the birches by Clinch's Dump she was +breathing evenly and without distress. She ran to the kitchen door but +did not enter. On pegs under the porch a score or more of rusty traps +hung. She unhooked the largest, wound the chain around it, tucked it +under her left arm and started back.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>When at last she arrived at the place of pines again, and saw the far, +spectral glimmer of Quintana's fire, the girl was almost breathless. But +dawn was not very far away<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span> and there remained little time for the +taking alive of a dangerous man.</p> + +<p>Where two enormous pines grew close together near a sapling, she knelt +down, and, with both hands, scooped out a big hollow in the immemorial +layers of pine needles. Here she placed her trap. It took all her +strength and skill to set it; to fasten the chain around the base of the +sapling pine.</p> + +<p>And now, working with only the faintest glimmer of her torch, she +covered everything with pine needles.</p> + +<p>It was not possible to restore the forest floor; the place remained +visible—a darker, rougher patch on the bronzed carpet of needles beaten +smooth by decades of rain and snow. No animal would have trodden that +suspicious space. But it was with man she had to deal—a dangerous but +reasoning man with few and atrophied instincts—and with no experience +in traps; and, therefore, in no dread of them.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>Before she started she had thrown a cartridge into the breech of her +rifle.</p> + +<p>Now she pocketed her torch and seated herself between the two big pines +and about three feet behind the hidden trap.</p> + +<p>Dawn was not far away. She looked upward through high pine-tops where +stars shone; and saw no sign of dawn. But the watcher by the fire beyond +was astir, now, in the imminence of dawn, and evidently meant to warm +himself before leaving.</p> + +<p>Eve could hear him piling dry wood on the fire; the light on the tree +trunks grew redder; a pungent reek of smoke<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span> was drawn through the +forest aisles. She sniffed it, listened, and watched, her rifle across +her knees.</p> + +<p>Eve never had been afraid of anything. She was not afraid of this man. +If it came to combat she would have to kill. It never entered her mind +to fear Quintana's rifle. Even Clinch was not as swift with a rifle as +she.... Only Stormont had been swifter—thank God!<span class="nowrap">——</span></p> + +<p>She thought of Stormont—sat there in the terrific darkness loving him, +her heart of a child tremulous with adoration.</p> + +<p>Then the memory of Darragh pushed in and hot hatred possessed her. +Always, in her heart, she had distrusted the man.</p> + +<p>Instinct had warned her. A spy! What evil had he worked already? +Where was her father? Evidently Quintana had escaped him at Drowned +Valley.... Quintana was yonder by his fire, preparing to flee the +wilderness where men hunted him.... But where was Clinch? Had this +sneak, Darragh, betrayed him? Was Clinch already in the clutch of +the State Troopers? Was he in <em>jail</em> ?</p> + +<p>At the thought the girl felt slightly faint, then a rush of angry blood +stung her face in the darkness. Except for game and excise violations +the stories they told about Clinch were lies.</p> + +<p>He had nothing to fear, nothing to be ashamed of. Harrod had driven him +to lawlessness; the Government took away what was left him to make a +living. He had to live. What if he did break laws made by millionaire +and fanatic! What of it? He had her love and her respect—and her deep, +deep pity. And these were enough for any girl to fight for.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>Dawn spread a silvery light above the pines, but Quintana's fire still +reddened the tree trunks; and she could hear him feeding it at +intervals.</p> + +<p>Finally she saw him. He came out on the edge of the ruddy ring of light +and stood peering around at the woods where already a vague greyness was +revealing nearer trees.</p> + +<p>When, finally, he turned his back and looked at his fire, Eve rose and +stood between the two big pines. Behind one of them she placed her +rifle.</p> + +<p>It was growing lighter in the woods. She could see Quintana in the fire +ring and outside,—saw him go to the spring rivulet, lie flat, drink, +then, on his knees, wash face and hands in the icy water.</p> + +<p>It became plain to her that he was nearly ready to depart. She watched +him preparing. And now she could see him plainly, and knew him to be +Quintana and no other.</p> + +<p>He had a light basket pack. He put some articles into it, stretched +himself and yawned, pulled on his hat, hoisted the pack and fastened it +to his back, stood staring at the fire for a long time; then, with a +sudden upward look at the zenith where a slight flush stained a cloud, +he picked up his rifle.</p> + +<p>At that moment Eve called to him in a clear and steady voice.</p> + +<p>The effect on Quintana was instant; he was behind a tree before her +voice ceased.</p> + +<p>"Hallo! Hi! You over there!" she called again. "This is Eve Strayer. I'm +looking for Clinch! He hasn't been home all night. Have you seen him?"</p> + +<p>After a moment she saw Quintana's head watching her,—not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span> at the +shoulder-height of a man but close to the ground and just above the tree +roots.</p> + +<p>"Hey!" she cried. "What's the matter with you over there? I'm asking you +who you are and if you've seen my father?"</p> + +<p>After a while she saw Quintana coming toward her, circling, creeping +swiftly from tree to tree.</p> + +<p>As he flitted through the shadows the trees between which she was +standing hid her from him a moment. Instantly she placed her rifle on +the ground and kicked the pine needles over it.</p> + +<p>As Quintana continued his encircling manœuvres Eve, apparently +perplexed, walked out into the clear space, putting the concealed trap +between her and Quintana, who now came stealthily toward her from the +rear.</p> + +<p>It was evident that he had reconnoitred sufficiently to satisfy himself +that the girl was alone and that no trick, no ambuscade, threatened him.</p> + +<p>And now, from behind a pine, and startlingly near her, came Quintana, +moving with confident grace yet holding his rifle ready for any +emergency.</p> + +<p>Eve's horrified stare was natural; she had not realised that any man +could wear so evil a smile.</p> + +<p>Quintana stopped short a dozen paces away. The dramatic in him demanded +of the moment its full value. He swept off his hat with a flourish, +bowed deeply where he stood.</p> + +<p>"Ah!" he cried gaily, "the happy encounter, Señorita. God is too good to +us. And it was but a moment since my thoughts were of you! I swear +it!——"</p> + +<p>It was not fear; it was a sort of slow horror of this man<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span> that began to +creep over the girl. She stared at his brilliant eyes, at his thick +mouth, too red—shuddered slightly. But the toe of her right foot +touched the stock of her rifle under the pine needles.</p> + +<p>She held herself under control.</p> + +<p>"So it's you," she said unsteadily. "I thought our people had caught +you."</p> + +<p>Quintana laughed: "Charming child," he said, "it is <em>I</em> who have caught +your people. And now, my God!—I catch <em>you</em> !... It is ver' funny. Is +it not?"</p> + +<p>She looked straight into Quintana's black eyes, but the look he returned +sent the shamed blood surging into her face.</p> + +<p>"By God," he said between his white, even teeth,—"by God!"</p> + +<p>Staring at her he slowly disengaged his pack, let it fall behind him on +the pine needles; rested his rifle on it; slipped out of his mackinaw +and laid that across his rifle—always keeping his brilliant eyes on +her.</p> + +<p>His lips tightened, the muscles in his dark face grew tense; his eyes +became a blazing insult.</p> + +<p>For an instant he stood there, unencumbered, a wiry, graceful shape in +his woollen breeches, leggings, and grey shirt open at the throat. Then +he took a step toward her. And the girl watched him, fascinated.</p> + +<p>One pace, two, a third, a fourth—the girl's involuntary cry echoed the +stumbling crash of the man thrashing, clawing, scrambling in the +clenched jaws of the bear-trap amid a whirl of flying pine needles.</p> + +<p>He screamed once, tried to rise, turned blindly to seize the jaws that +clutched him; and suddenly crouched, loose-jointed,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span> cringing like a +trapped wolf—the true fatalist among our lesser brothers.</p> + +<p>Eve picked up her rifle. She was trembling violently. Then, mastering +her emotion, she walked over to the pack, placed Quintana's rifle and +mackinaw in it, coolly hoisted it to her shoulders and buckled it there.</p> + +<p>Over her shoulder she kept an eye on Quintana who crouched where he had +fallen, unstirring, his deadly eyes watching her.</p> + +<p>She placed the muzzle of her rifle against his stomach, rested it so, +holding it with one hand, and her finger at the trigger.</p> + +<p>At her brief order he turned out both breeches pockets. She herself +stooped and drew the Spanish clasp-knife from its sheath at his belt, +took a pistol from the holster, another out of his hip pocket. Reaching +up and behind her, she dropped these into the pack.</p> + +<p>"Maybe," she said slowly, "your ankle is broken. I'll send somebody from +Ghost Lake to find you. But whether you've a broken bone or not you'll +not go very far, Quintana.... After I'm gone you'll be able to free +yourself. But you can't get away. You'll be followed and caught.... So +if you can walk at all you'd better go in to Ghost Lake and give +yourself up.... It's that or starvation.... You've got a watch.... +Don't stir or touch that trap for half an hour.... And that's all."</p> + +<p>As she moved away toward the Drowned Valley trail she looked back at +him. His face was bloodless but his black eyes blazed.</p> + +<p>"If ever you come into this forest again," she said, "my father will +surely kill you."</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>To her horror Quintana slowly grinned at her. Then, still grinning, he +placed the forefinger of his left hand between his teeth and bit it.</p> + +<p>Whatever he meant by the gesture it seemed unclean, horrible; and the +girl hurried on, seized with an overwhelming loathing through which a +sort of terror pulsated like evil premonition in a heavy and tortured +heart.</p> + +<p>Straight into the fire of dawn she sped. A pale primrose light glimmered +through the woods; trees, bushes, undergrowth turned a dusky purple. +Already the few small clouds overhead were edged with fiery rose.</p> + +<p>Then, of a sudden, a shaft of flame played over the forest. The sun had +risen.</p> + +<p>Hastening, she searched the soft path for any imprint of her father's +foot. And even in the vain search she hoped to find him at home—hurried +on burdened with two rifles and a pack, still all nervous and aquiver +from her encounter with Quintana.</p> + +<p>Surely, surely, she thought, if he had missed Quintana in Drowned Valley +he would not linger in that ghastly place; he'd come home, call in his +men, take counsel perhaps<span class="nowrap">——</span></p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>Mist over Star Pond was dissolving to a golden powder in the blinding +glory of the sun. The eastern window-panes in Clinch's Dump glittered as +though the rooms inside were all on fire.</p> + +<p>Down through withered weeds and scrub she hurried, ran across the grass +to the kitchen door which swung ajar under its porch.</p> + +<p>"Dad!" she called, "Dad!"</p> + +<p>Only her own frightened voice echoed in the empty house.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span> She climbed +the stairs to his room. The bed lay undisturbed as she had made it. He +was not in any of the rooms; there were no signs of him.</p> + +<p>Slowly she descended to the kitchen. He was not there. The food she had +prepared for him had become cold on a chilled range.</p> + +<p>For a long while she stood staring through the window at the sunlight +outside. Probably, since Quintana had eluded him, he'd come home for +something to eat.... Surely, now that Quintana had escaped, Clinch +would come back for some breakfast.</p> + +<p>Eve slipped the pack from her back and laid it on the kitchen table. +There was kindling in the wood-box. She shook down the cinders, laid a +fire, soaked it with kerosene, lighted it, filled the kettle with fresh +water.</p> + +<p>In the pantry she cut some ham, and found eggs, condensed milk, butter, +bread, and an apple pie. After she had ground the coffee she placed all +these on a tray and carried them into the kitchen.</p> + +<p>Now there was nothing more to do until her father came, and she sat down +by the kitchen table to wait.</p> + +<p>Outside the sunlight was becoming warm and vivid. There had been no +frost after all—or, at most, merely a white trace in the shadow—on a +fallen plank here and there—but not enough to freeze the ground. And, +in the sunshine, it all quickly turned to dew, and glittered and +sparkled in a million hues and tints like gems—like that handful of +jewels she had poured into her father's joined palms—yesterday—there +at the ghostly edge of Drowned Valley.</p> + +<p>At the memory, and quite mechanically, she turned in her chair and drew +Quintana's basket pack toward her.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>First she lifted out his rifle, examined it, set it against the window +sill. Then, one by one, she drew out two pistols, loaded; the murderous +Spanish clasp-knife; an axe; a fry-pan and a tin pail, and the rolled-up +mackinaw.</p> + +<p>Under these the pack seemed to contain nothing except food and +ammunition; staples in sacks and a few cans—lard, salt, tea—such +things.</p> + +<p>The cartridge boxes she piled up on the table; the food she tossed into +a tin swill bucket.</p> + +<p>About the effects of this man it seemed to her as though something +unclean lingered. She could scarcely bear to handle them,—threw them +from her with disgust.</p> + +<p>The garment, also—the heavy brown and green mackinaw—she disliked to +touch. To throw it out doors was her intention; but, as she lifted the +coat, it unrolled and some things fell from the pockets to the kitchen +table,—money, keys, a watch, a flat leather case<span class="nowrap">——</span></p> + +<p>She looked stupidly at the case. It had a coat of arms emblazoned on it.</p> + +<p>Still, stupidly and as though dazed, she laid one hand on it, drew it to +her, opened it.</p> + +<p>The Flaming Jewel blazed in her face amid a heap of glittering gems.</p> + +<p>Still she seemed slow to comprehend—as though understanding were +paralysed.</p> + +<p>It was when her eyes fell upon the watch that her heart seemed to stop. +Suddenly her stunned senses were lighted as by an infernal flare.... +Under the awful blow she swayed upright to her feet, sick with fright, +her eyes fixed on her father's watch.</p> + +<p>It was still ticking.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>She did not know whether she cried out in anguish or was dumb under it. +The house seemed to reel around her; under foot too.</p> + +<p>When she came to her senses she found herself outside the house, running +with her rifle, already entering the woods. But, inside the barrier of +trees, something blocked her way, stopped her,—a man—<em>her</em> man!</p> + +<p>"Eve! In God's name!——" he said as she struggled in his arms; but she +fought him and strove to tear her body from his embrace:</p> + +<p>"They've killed Dad!" she panted,—"Quintana killed him. I didn't +know—oh, I didn't know!—and I let Quintana go! Oh, Jack, Jack, he's at +the Place of Pines! I'm going there to shoot him! Let me go!—he's +killed Dad, I tell you! He had Dad's watch—and the case of jewels—they +were in his pack on the kitchen table<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Eve!"</p> + +<p>"Let me go!——"</p> + +<p>"<em>Eve!</em> " He held her rigid a moment in his powerful grip, compelled her +dazed, half-crazed eyes to meet his own:</p> + +<p>"You must come to your senses," he said. "Listen to what I say: they are +<em>bringing in your father</em> ."</p> + +<p>Her dilated blue eyes never moved from his.</p> + +<p>"We found him in Drowned Valley at sunrise," said Stormont quietly. "The +men are only a few rods behind me. They are carrying him out."</p> + +<p>Her lips made a word without sound.</p> + +<p>"Yes," said Stormont in a low voice.</p> + +<p>There was a sound in the woods behind them. Stormont turned. Far away +down the trail the men came into sight.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span>Then the State Trooper turned the girl very gently and placed one arm +around her shoulders.</p> + +<p>Very slowly they descended the hill together. His equipment was shining +in the morning sun: and the sun fell on Eve's drooping head, turning her +chestnut hair to fiery gold.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>An hour later Trooper Stormont was at the Place of Pines.</p> + +<p>There was nothing there except an empty trap and the ashes of the dying +fire beyond.</p> + + +<hr /> + +<h2><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span><a name="xii" id="xii"></a> +<small><span class="smcap">Episode Twelve</span></small></h2> + +<h2>HER HIGHNESS INTERVENES</h2> + + +<h3>I</h3> + +<p class="cap">Toward noon the wind changed, and about one o'clock it began to snow.</p> + +<p>Eve, exhausted, lay on the sofa in her bedroom. Her step-father lay on a +table in the dance hall below, covered by a sheet from his own bed. And +beside him sat Trooper Stormont, waiting.</p> + +<p>It was snowing heavily when Mr. Lyken, the little undertaker from Ghost +Lake, arrived with several assistants, a casket, and what he called +"swell trimmings."</p> + +<p>Long ago Mike Clinch had selected his own mortuary site and had driven a +section of iron pipe into the ground on a ferny knoll overlooking Star +Pond. In explanation he grimly remarked to Eve that after death he +preferred to be planted where he could see that Old Harrod's ghost +didn't trespass.</p> + +<p>Here two of Mr. Lyken's able assistants dug a grave while the digging +was still good; for if Mike Clinch was to lie underground that season +there might be need of haste—no weather prophet ever having +successfully forecast Adirondack weather.</p> + +<p>Eve, exhausted by shock and a sleepless night, was spared the more +harrowing details of the coroner's visit and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span> subsequent jaunty +activities of Mr. Lyken and his efficient assistants.</p> + +<p>She had managed to dress herself in a black wool gown, intending to +watch by Mike, but Stormont's blunt authority prevailed and she lay down +for an hour's rest.</p> + +<p>The hour lengthened into many hours; the girl slept heavily on her sofa +under blankets laid over her by Stormont.</p> + +<p>All that dark, snowy day she slept, mercifully unconscious of the +proceedings below.</p> + +<p>In its own mysterious way the news penetrated the wilderness; and out of +the desolation of forest and swamp and mountain drifted the people who +somehow existed there—a few shy, half wild young girls, a dozen silent, +lank men, two or three of Clinch's own people, who stood silently about +in the falling snow and lent a hand whenever requested.</p> + +<p>One long shanked youth cut hemlock to line the grave; others erected a +little fence of silver birch around it, making of the enclosure a +"plot."</p> + +<p>A gaunt old woman from God knows where aided Mr. Lyken at intervals: a +pretty, sulky-eyed girl with her slovenly, red-headed sister cooked for +anybody who desired nourishment.</p> + +<p>When Mike was ready to hold the inevitable reception everybody filed +into the dance hall. Mr. Lyken was master of ceremonies; Trooper +Stormont stood very tall and straight by the head of the casket.</p> + +<p>Clinch wore a vague, indefinable smile and his best clothes,—that same +smile which had so troubled José Quintana.</p> + +<p>Light was fading fast in the room when the last visitor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span> took silent +leave of Clinch and rejoined the groups in the kitchen, where were the +funeral baked meats.</p> + +<p>Eve still slept. Descending again from his reconnaissance, Trooper +Stormont encountered Trooper Lannis below.</p> + +<p>"Has anybody picked up Quintana's tracks?" inquired the former.</p> + +<p>"Not so far. An Inspector and two State Game Protectors are out beyond +Owl Marsh. The Troopers from Five Lakes are on the job, and we have +enforcement men along Drowned Valley from The Scaur to Harrod Place."</p> + +<p>"Does Darragh know?"</p> + +<p>"Yes. He's in there with Mike. He brought a lot of flowers from Harrod +Place."</p> + +<p>The two troopers went into the dance hall where Darragh was arranging +the flowers from his greenhouses.</p> + +<p>Stormont said quietly: "All right, Jim, but Eve must not know that they +came from Harrod's."</p> + +<p>Darragh nodded: "How is she, Jack?"</p> + +<p>"All in."</p> + +<p>"Do you know the story?"</p> + +<p>"Yes. Mike went into Drowned Valley early last evening after Quintana. +He didn't come back. Before dawn this morning Eve located Quintana, set +a bear-trap for him, and caught him with the goods<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"What goods?" demanded Darragh sharply.</p> + +<p>"Well, she got his pack and found Mike's watch and jewelry in it<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"What jewelry?"</p> + +<p>"The jewels Quintana was after. But that was after she'd arrived at the +Dump, here, leaving Quintana to get free of the trap and beat it.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>"That's how I met her—half crazed, going to find Quintana again. We'd +found Mike in Drowned Valley and were bringing him out when I ran into +Eve.... I brought her back here and called Ghost Lake.... They haven't +picked up Quintana's tracks so far."</p> + +<p>After a silence: "Too bad this snow came so late," remarked Trooper +Lannis. <a name="but2" id="but2"></a><ins title="original omitted opening quotation mark">"But</ins> we ought to get Quintana anyway."</p> + +<p>Darragh went over and looked silently at Mike Clinch.</p> + +<p>"I liked you," he said under his breath. "It wasn't your fault. And it +wasn't mine, Mike.... I'll try to square things. Don't worry."</p> + +<p>He came back slowly to where Stormont was standing near the door:</p> + +<p>"Jack," he said, "you can't marry Eve on a Trooper's pay. Why not quit +and take over the Harrod estate?... You and I can go into business +together later if you like."</p> + +<p>After a pause: "That's rather wonderful of you, Jim," said Stormont, +"but you don't know what sort of business man I'd make<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"I know what sort of officer you made.... I'm taking no chance.... And +I'll make my peace with Eve—or somebody will do it for me.... Is it +settled then?"</p> + +<p>"Thanks," said Trooper Stormont, reddening. They clasped hands. Then +Stormont went about and lighted the candles in the room. Clinch's face, +again revealed, was still faintly amused at something or other. The dead +have much to be amused at.</p> + +<p>As Darragh was about to go, Stormont said: "We're burying Clinch at +eleven to-morrow morning. The Ghost Lake Pilot officiates."</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span>"I'll come if it won't upset Eve," said Darragh.</p> + +<p>"She won't notice anybody, I fancy," remarked Stormont.</p> + +<p>He stood by the veranda and watched Darragh take the Lake Trail through +the snow. Finally the glimmer of his swinging lantern was lost in the +woods and Stormont mounted the stairs once more, stood silently by Eve's +open door, realised she was still heavily asleep, and seated himself on +a chair outside her door to watch and wait.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>All night long it snowed hard over the Star Pond country, and the late +grey light of morning revealed a blinding storm pelting a white robed +world.</p> + +<p>Toward ten o'clock, Stormont, on guard, noticed that Eve was growing +restless.</p> + +<p>Downstairs the flotsam of the forest had gathered again: Mr. Lyken was +there in black gloves; the Reverend Laomi Smatter had arrived in a +sleigh from Ghost Lake. Both were breakfasting heavily.</p> + +<p>The pretty, sulky-faced girl fetched a tray and placed Eve's breakfast +on it; and Trooper Stormont carried it to her room.</p> + +<p>She was awake when he entered. He set the tray on the table. She put +both arms around his neck.</p> + +<p>"Jack," she murmured, her eyes tremulous with tears.</p> + +<p>"Everything has been done," he said. "Will you be ready by eleven? I'll +come for you."</p> + +<p>She clung to him in silence for a while.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>At eleven he knocked on her door. She opened it. She wore her black wool +gown and a black fur turban. Some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span> of her pallor remained,—traces of +tears and bluish smears under both eyes. But her voice was steady.</p> + +<p>"Could I see Dad a moment alone?"</p> + +<p>"Of course."</p> + +<p>She took his arm: they descended the stairs. There seemed to be many +people about but she did not lift her eyes until her lover led her into +the dance hall where Clinch lay smiling his mysterious smile.</p> + +<p>Then Stormont left her alone there and closed the door.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>In a terrific snow-storm they buried Mike Clinch on the spot he had +selected, in order that he might keep a watchful eye upon the +trespassing ghost of old man Harrod.</p> + +<p>It blew and stormed and stormed, and the thin, nasal voice of "Rev. +Smatter" was utterly lost in the wind. The slanting lances of snow drove +down on the casket, building a white mound over the flowers, blotting +the hemlock boughs from sight.</p> + +<p>There was no time to be lost now; the ground was freezing under a +veering and bitter wind out of the west. Mr. Lyken's talented assistants +had some difficulty in shaping the mound which snow began to make into a +white and flawless monument.</p> + +<p>The last slap of the spade rang with a metallic jar across the lake, +where snow already blotted the newly forming film of ice; the human +denizens of the wilderness filtered back into it one by one; "Rev. +Smatter" got into his sleigh, plainly concerned about the road; Mr. +Lyken betrayed unprofessional haste in loading his wagon with his +talented assistants and starting for Ghost Lake.</p> + +<p>A Game Protector or two put on snow-shoes when they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span> departed. Trooper +Lannis led out his horse and Stormont's, and got into the saddle.</p> + +<p>"I'd better get these beasts into Ghost Lake while I can," he said. +"You'll follow on snow-shoes, won't you, Jack?"</p> + +<p>"I don't know. I may need a sleigh for Eve. She can't remain here all +alone. I'll telephone the Inn."</p> + +<p>Darragh, in blanket outfit, a pair of snow-shoes on his back, a rifle in +his mittened hand, came trudging up from the lake. He and Stormont +watched Lannis riding away with the two horses.</p> + +<p>"He'll make it all right, but it's time he started," said the latter.</p> + +<p>Darragh nodded: "Some storm. Where is Eve?"</p> + +<p>"In her room."</p> + +<p>"What is she going to do, Jack?"</p> + +<p>"Marry me as soon as possible. She wants to stay here for a few days but +I can't leave her here alone. I think I'll telephone to Ghost Lake for a +sleigh."</p> + +<p>"Let me talk to her," said Darragh in a low voice.</p> + +<p>"Do you think you'd better—at such a time?"</p> + +<p>"I think it's a good time. It will divert her mind, anyway. I want her +to come to Harrod Place."</p> + +<p>"She won't," said Stormont grimly.</p> + +<p>"She might. Let me talk to her."</p> + +<p>"Do you realise how she feels toward you, Jim?"</p> + +<p>"I do, indeed. And I don't blame her. But let me tell you; Eve Strayer +is the most honest and fair-minded girl I ever knew.... Except one.... +I'll take a chance that she'll listen to me.... Sooner or later she +will be obliged to hear what I have to tell her.... But it will be +easier<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span> for her—for everybody—if I speak to her now. Let me try, +Jack."</p> + +<p>Stormont hesitated, looked at him, nodded. Darragh stood his rifle +against the bench on the kitchen porch. They entered the house slowly. +And met Eve descending the stairs.</p> + +<p>The girl looked at Darragh, astonished, then her pale face flushed with +anger.</p> + +<p>"What are you doing in this house?" she demanded unsteadily. "Have you +no decency, no shame?"</p> + +<p>"Yes," he said, "I am ashamed of what my kinsman has done to you and +yours. That is partly why I am here."</p> + +<p>"You came here as a spy," she said with hot contempt. "You lied about +your name; you lied about your purpose. You came here to betray Dad! If +he'd known it he would have killed you!"</p> + +<p>"Yes, he would have. But—do you know why I came here, Eve?"</p> + +<p>"I've told you!"</p> + +<p>"And you are wrong. I didn't come here to betray Mike Clinch: I came to +save him."</p> + +<p>"Do you suppose I believe a man who has lied to Dad?" she cried.</p> + +<p>"I don't ask you to, Eve. I shall let somebody else prove what I say. I +don't blame you for your attitude. God knows I don't blame Mike Clinch. +He stood up like a man to Henry Harrod.... All I ask is to undo some of +the rotten things that my uncle did to you and yours. And that is partly +why I came here."</p> + +<p>The girl said passionately: "Neither Dad nor I want anything from Harrod +Place or from you! Do you suppose<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span> you can come here after Dad is dead +and pretend you want to make amends for what your uncle did to us?"</p> + +<p>"Eve," said Darragh gravely, "I've made some amends already. You don't +know it, but I have.... You may not believe it, but I liked your +father. He was a real man. Had anybody done to me what Henry Harrod did +to your father I'd have behaved as your father behaved; I'd never have +budged from this spot; I'd have hunted where I chose; I'd have borne an +implacable hatred against Henry Harrod and Harrod Place, and every soul +in it!"</p> + +<p>The girl, silenced, looked at him without belief.</p> + +<p>He said: "I am not surprised that you distrust what I say. But the man +you are going to marry was a junior officer in my command. I have no +closer friend than Jack Stormont. Ask him whether I am to be believed."</p> + +<p>Astounded, the girl turned a flushed, incredulous face to Stormont.</p> + +<p>He said: "You may trust Darragh as you trust me. I don't know what he +has to say to you, dear. But whatever he says will be the truth."</p> + +<p>Darragh said, gravely: "Through a misunderstanding your father came into +possession of stolen property, Eve. He did not know it had been stolen. +I did. But Mike Clinch would not have believed me if I had told him that +the case of jewels in his possession had been stolen from a woman.... +Quintana stole them. By accident they came into your father's +possession. I learned of this. I had promised this woman to recover her +jewels.</p> + +<p>"I came here for that purpose, Eve. And for two reasons: first, because +I learned that Quintana also was coming here to rob your father of these +gems; second, because, when I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span> knew your father, and knew <em>you</em> , I +concluded that it would be an outrage to call on the police. It would +mean prison for Clinch, misery and ruin for you, Eve. So—I tried to +steal the jewels ... to save you both."</p> + +<p>He looked at Stormont, who seemed astonished.</p> + +<p>"To whom do these jewels belong, Jim?" demanded the trooper.</p> + +<p>"To the young Grand Duchess of Esthonia.... Do you remember that I +befriended her over there?"</p> + +<p>"Yes."</p> + +<p>"Do you remember that the Reds were accused of burning her château and +looting it?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, I remember."</p> + +<p>"Well, it was Quintana and his gang of international criminals who did +that," said Darragh drily.</p> + +<p>And, to Eve: "By accident this case of jewels, emblazoned with the coat +of arms of the Grand Duchess of Esthonia, came into your father's +possession. That is the story, Eve."</p> + +<p>There was a silence. The girl looked at Stormont, flushed painfully, +looked at Darragh.</p> + +<p>Then, without a word, she turned, ascended the stairs, and reappeared +immediately carrying the leather case.</p> + +<p>"Thank you, Mr. Darragh," she said simply; and laid the case in his +hand.</p> + +<p>"But," said Darragh, "I want you to do a little more, Eve. The owner of +these gems is my guest at Harrod Place. I want you to give them to her +yourself."</p> + +<p>"I—I can't go to Harrod Place," stammered the girl.</p> + +<p>"Please don't visit the sins of Henry Harrod on me, Eve."</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>"I—don't. But—but that place<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>After a silence: "If Eve feels that way," began Stormont awkwardly, "I +couldn't become associated with you in business, Jim<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"I'd rather sell Harrod Place than lose you!" retorted Darragh almost +sharply. "I want to go into business with you, Jack—if Eve will permit +me<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>She stood looking at Stormont, the heightened colour playing in her +cheeks as she began to comprehend the comradeship between these two men.</p> + +<p>Slowly she turned to Darragh, offered her hand:</p> + +<p>"I'll go to Harrod Place," she said in a low voice.</p> + +<p>Darragh's quick smile brightened the sombre gravity of his face.</p> + +<p>"Eve," he said, "when I came over here this morning from Harrod Place I +was afraid you would refuse to listen to me; I was afraid you would not +even see me. And so I brought with me—somebody—to whom I felt certain +you would listen.... I brought with me a young girl—a poor refugee +from Russia, once wealthy, to-day almost penniless.... Her name is +Theodorica.... Once she was Grand Duchess of Esthonia.... But this +morning a clergyman from Five Lakes changed her name.... To such +friends as you and Jack she is Ricca Darragh now ... and she's having a +wonderful time on her new snow-shoes<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>He took Eve by one hand and Stormont by the other, and drew them to the +kitchen door and kicked it open.</p> + +<p>Through the swirling snow, over on the lake-slope at the timber edge, a +graceful, boyish figure in scarlet and white wool moved swiftly over the +drifts with all the naïve delight of a child with a brand new toy.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span>As Darragh strode out into the open the distant figure flung up one arm +in salutation and came racing over the drifts, her brilliant scarf +flying.</p> + +<p>All aglow and a trifle breathless, she met Darragh just beyond the +veranda, rested one mittened hand on his shoulder while he knelt and +unbuckled her snow-shoes, stepped lightly from them and came forward to +Eve with out-stretched hand and a sudden winning gravity in her lovely +face.</p> + +<p>"We shall be friends, surely," she said in her quick, winning +voice;—"because my husband has told me—and I am so grieved for +you—and I need a girl friend<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>Holding both Eve's hands, her mittens dangling from her wrist, she +looked into her eyes very steadily.</p> + +<p>Slowly Eve's eyes filled; more slowly still Ricca kissed her on both +cheeks, framed her face in both hands, kissed her lightly on the lips.</p> + +<p>Then, still holding Eve's hands, she turned and looked at Stormont.</p> + +<p>"I remember you now," she said. "You were with my husband in Riga."</p> + +<p>She freed her right hand and held it out to Stormont. He had the grace +to kiss it and did it very well for a Yankee.</p> + +<p>Together they entered the kitchen door and turned into the dining room +on the left, where were chairs around the plain pine table.</p> + +<p>Darragh said: "The new mistress of Harrod Place has selected your +quarters, Eve. They adjoin the quarters of her friend, the Countess +Orloff-Strelwitz."</p> + +<p>"Valentine begged me," said Ricca, smiling. "She is going to be lonely +without me. All hours of day and night<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span> we were trotting into one +another's rooms<span class="nowrap">——"</span> She looked gravely at Eve: "You will like +Valentine; and she will like you very much.... As for me—I already +love you."</p> + +<p>She put one arm around Eve's shoulders: "How could you even think of +remaining here all alone? Why, I should never close my eyes for thinking +of you, dear."</p> + +<p>Eve's head drooped; she said in a stifled voice: "I'll go with you.... +I want to.... I'm very—tired."</p> + +<p>"We had better go now," said Darragh. "Your things can be brought over +later. If you'll dress for snow-shoeing, Jack can pack what clothes you +need.... Are there snow-shoes for him, too?"</p> + +<p>Eve turned tragically to her lover: "In Dad's closet<span class="nowrap">——"</span> she said, +choking; then turned and went up the stairs, still clinging to Ricca's +hand and drawing her with her.</p> + +<p>Stormont followed, entered Clinch's quarters, and presently came +downstairs again, carrying Clinch's snow-shoes and a basket pack.</p> + +<p>He seated himself near Darragh. After a silence: "Your wife is +beautiful, Jim.... Her character seems to be even more beautiful.... +She's like God's own messenger to Eve.... And—you're rather wonderful +yourself<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Nonsense," said Darragh, "I've given my wife her first American friend +and I've done a shrewd stroke of business in nabbing the best business +associate I ever heard of<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"You're crazy but kind.... I hope I'll be some good.... One thing; +I'll never get over what you've done for Eve in this crisis<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"There'll be no crisis, Jack. Marry, and hook up with me in business. +That solves everything.... Lord!—what a life Eve has had! But you'll +make it all up to her ... all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span> this loneliness and shame and misery of +Clinch's Dump<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>Stormont touched his arm in caution: Eve and Ricca came down the +stairs—the former now in the grey wool snow-shoe dress, and carrying +her snow-shoes, black gown, and toilet articles.</p> + +<p>Stormont began to stow away her effects in the basket pack; Darragh went +over to her and took her hand.</p> + +<p>"I'm so glad we are to be friends," he said. "It hurt a lot to know you +held me in contempt. But I had to go about it that way."</p> + +<p>Eve nodded. Then, suddenly recollecting: "Oh," she exclaimed, reddening, +"I forgot the jewel case! It's under my pillow<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>She turned and sped upstairs and reappeared almost instantly, carrying +the jewel-case.</p> + +<p>Breathless, flushed, thankful and happy in the excitement of +restitution, she placed the leather case in Ricca's hands.</p> + +<p>"My jewels!" cried the girl, astounded. Then, with a little cry of +delight, she placed the case upon the table, stripped open the +emblazoned cover, and emptied the two trays. All over the table rolled +the jewels, flashing, scintillating, ablaze with blinding light.</p> + +<p>And at the same instant the outer door crashed open and Quintana covered +them with Darragh's rifle.</p> + +<p>"Now, by Christ!" he shouted, "who stirs a finger shall go to God in one +jump! You, my gendarme frien'—<em>you</em> , my frien' Smith—turn your damn +backs—han's up high!—tha's the way!—now, ladies!—back away +there—get back or I kill!—sure, by Jesus, I kill you like I would some +white little mice!——"</p> + +<p>With incredible quickness he stepped forward and swept<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span> the jewels into +one hand—filled the pocket of his trousers, caught up every stray stone +and pocketed them.</p> + +<p>"You gendarme," he cried in a menacing voice, "you think you shall +follow in my track. Yes? I blow your damn head off if you stir before +the hour.... After that—well, follow and be damn!"</p> + +<p>Even as he spoke he stepped outside and slammed the door; and Darragh +and Stormont leaped for it. Then the loud detonation of Quintana's rifle +was echoed by the splintering rip of bullets tearing through the closed +door; and both men halted in the face of the leaden hail.</p> + +<p>Eve ran to the pantry window and saw Quintana in somebody's stolen +lumber-sledge, lash a big pair of horses to a gallop and go floundering +past into the Ghost Lake road.</p> + +<p>As he sped by in a whirl of snow he fired five times at the house, then, +rising and swinging his whip, he flogged the frantic horses into the +woods.</p> + +<p>In the dining room, Stormont, red with rage and shame, and having found +his rifle in the corridor outside Eve's bedroom, was trying to open the +shutters for a shot; and Darragh, empty-handed, searched the house +frantically for a weapon.</p> + +<p>Eve, terribly excited, came from the pantry:</p> + +<p>"He's gone!" she cried furiously. "He's in somebody's lumber-sledge with +a pair of horses and he's driving west like the devil!"</p> + +<p>Stormont ran to the tap-room telephone, cranked it, and warned the +constabulary at Five Lakes.</p> + +<p>"Good God!" he exclaimed, turning to Darragh, scarlet with +mortification, "what a ghastly business! I never<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span> dreamed he was within +miles of Clinch's! It's the most shameful thing that ever happened to +me<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"What could anybody do under that rifle?" said Eve hotly. "That beast +would have murdered the first person who stirred!"</p> + +<p>Darragh, exasperated and dreadfully humiliated, looked miserably at his +brand-new wife.</p> + +<p>Eve and Stormont also looked at her. She had come forward from the rear +of the stairway where Quintana had brutally driven her. Now she stood +with one hand on the empty leather jewel case, looking at everybody out +of pretty, bewildered eyes.</p> + +<p>To Darragh, in a perplexed, unsteady voice: "Is it the same bandit who +robbed us before?"</p> + +<p>"Yes; Quintana," he said wretchedly. Rage began to redden his features. +"Ricca," he said, "I promised I'd find your jewels.... I promise you +again that I'll never drop this business until your gems—and the +Flaming Jewel—are in your possession<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"But, Jim<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"I swear it!" he exclaimed violently. "I'm not such a stupid fool as I +seem<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>"Dear!" she protested excitedly, "you <em>have</em> done what you promised. My +gems <em>are</em> in my possession—I believe<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>She caught up the emblazoned case, stripped out the first tray, then the +second, and flung them aside. Then, searching with the delicate tip of +her forefinger in the empty case, she suddenly pressed the bottom +hard,—thumb, middle finger and little finger forming the three apexes +of an equilateral triangle.</p> + +<p>There came a clear, tiny sound like the ringing of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span> alarm in a +repeating watch. Very gently the false bottom of the case detached +itself and came away in the palm of her hand.</p> + +<p>And there, each embedded in its own shaped compartment of chamois, lay +the Esthonian jewels—the true ones—deep hidden, always doubly guarded +by two sets of perfect imitations lining the two visible trays above.</p> + +<p>And, in the centre, blazed the Erosite gem—the magnificent Flaming +Jewel, a glory of living, blinding fire.</p> + +<p>Nobody stirred or spoke. Darragh blinked at the crystalline blaze as +though stunned.</p> + +<p>Then the young girl who had once been Her Serene Highness Theodorica, +Grand Duchess of Esthonia, looked up at her brand-new husband and +laughed.</p> + +<p>"Did you really suppose it was these that brought me across the ocean? +Did you suppose it was a passion for these that filled my heart? Did you +think it was for these that I followed you?"</p> + +<p>She laughed again, turned to Eve:</p> + +<p>"<em>You</em> understand. Tell him that if he had been in rags I would have +followed him like a gypsy.... They say there is gypsy blood in us.... +God knows.... I think perhaps there is a little of it in all real +women<span class="nowrap">——"</span> Still laughing she placed her hand lightly upon her +heart—"In all women—perhaps—a Flaming Jewel imbedded here<span class="nowrap">——"</span></p> + +<p>Her eyes, tender, and mocking, met his; she lifted the jewel-case, +closed it, and placed it in his hands.</p> + +<p>"Now," she said, "you have everything in your possession; and we are +safe—we are quite safe, now, my jewels and I."</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span>Then she went to Eve and rested both hands on her shoulders.</p> + +<p>"Shall we put on our snow-shoes and go—home?"</p> + +<p>Stormont flung open the bullet-splintered door. Outside in the snow he +dropped on both knees to buckle on Eve's snow-shoes.</p> + +<p>Darragh was performing a like office for his wife, and the State +Trooper, being unobserved, took Eve's slim hands and kissed them, +looking up at her where he was kneeling.</p> + +<p>Her pale face blushed as it had that day in the woods on Owl Marsh, so +long, so long ago, when this man's lips first touched her hands.</p> + +<p>As their eyes met both remembered. Then she smiled at her lover with the +shy girl's soul of her gazing out at him through eyes as blue as the +wild blind-gentians that grow among the ferns and mosses of Star Pond.</p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>Far away in the northwestern forests Quintana still lashed his horses +through the primeval pines.</p> + +<p>Triumphant, reckless, resourceful, dangerous, he felt that now nothing +could stop him, nothing bar his way to freedom.</p> + +<p>Out of the wilderness lay his road and his destiny; out of it he must +win his way, by strategy, by cunning, by violence—creep out, lie his +way out, shoot his way out—it scarcely mattered. He was going out! He +was going back to life once more. Who could forbid him? Who stop him? +Who deny him, now, when, in his pockets, he held all that was worth +living for—the keys to power, to pleasure,—the key to everything on +earth!</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>In fierce exultation he slapped the glass jewels in his pocket and +laughed aloud.</p> + +<p>"The keys to the world!" he cried. "Let him stop me and take them who is +a better man than I!" Then his long whip whistled and he cursed his +horses.</p> + +<p>Then, of a sudden, close by in the snowy road ahead, he saw a State +Trooper on snow-shoes,—saw the upflung arm warning him—screamed curses +at his horses, flogged them forward to crush this thing to death that +dared menace him—this object that suddenly rose up out of nowhere to +snatch from him the keys of the world<span class="nowrap">——</span></p> + +<hr class="hr2" /> + +<p>For a moment the State Trooper looked after the runaway horses. There +was no use following; they'd have to run till they dropped.</p> + +<p>Then he lowered the levelled rifle from his shoulder, looked grimly at +the limp thing which had tumbled from the sledge into the snowy road and +which sprawled there crimsoning the spotless flakes that fell upon it.</p> + +<h3>THE END</h3> + + + +<hr /> + +<h3><small><em>Novels by</em></small> ROBERT W. CHAMBERS</h3> + + +<table summary="Novels"> +<tr> +<td class="tdl2 border pad">THE FLAMING JEWEL</td> +<td class="tdl3 border pad">THE TREE OF HEAVEN</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl2">THE LITTLE RED FOOT</td> +<td class="tdl3">THE MOONLIT WAY</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl2">THE SLAYER OF SOULS</td> +<td class="tdl3">IN SECRET</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl2">THE CRIMSON TIDE</td> +<td class="tdl3">CARDIGAN</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl2">THE LAUGHING GIRL</td> +<td class="tdl3">THE RECKONING</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl2">THE RESTLESS SEX</td> +<td class="tdl3">THE MAID-AT-ARMS</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl2">BARBARIANS</td> +<td class="tdl3">AILSA PAIGE</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl2">THE DARK STAR</td> +<td class="tdl3">SPECIAL MESSENGER</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl2">THE GIRL PHILIPPA</td> +<td class="tdl3">THE HAUNTS OF MEN</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl2">WHO GOES THERE!</td> +<td class="tdl3">LORRAINE</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl2">ATHALIE</td> +<td class="tdl3">MAIDS OF PARADISE</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl2">THE BUSINESS OF LIFE</td> +<td class="tdl3">ASHES OF EMPIRE</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl2">THE GAY REBELLION</td> +<td class="tdl3">THE RED REPUBLIC</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl2">THE STREETS OF ASCALON</td> +<td class="tdl3">BLUE-BIRD WEATHER</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl2">THE COMMON LAW</td> +<td class="tdl3">A YOUNG MAN IN A HURRY</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl2">THE FIGHTING CHANCE</td> +<td class="tdl3">THE GREEN MOUSE</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl2">THE YOUNGER SET</td> +<td class="tdl3">IOLE</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl2">THE DANGER MARK</td> +<td class="tdl3">THE MYSTERY OF CHOICE</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl2">THE FIRING LINE</td> +<td class="tdl3">THE CAMBRIC MASK</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl2">JAPONETTE</td> +<td class="tdl3">THE MAKER OF MOONS</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl2">QUICK ACTION</td> +<td class="tdl3">THE KING IN YELLOW</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl2">THE ADVENTURES OF A MODEST MAN</td> +<td class="tdl3">IN SEARCH OF THE UNKNOWN</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl2">ANNE'S BRIDGEL</td> +<td class="tdl3">THE TRACER OF LOST PERSONS</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl2">BETWEEN FRIENDS</td> +<td class="tdl3">THE CONSPIRATORS</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl2">THE BETTER MAN</td> +<td class="tdl3">A KING AND A FEW DUKES</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl2">POLICE!!!L</td> +<td class="tdl3">THE HIDDEN CHILDREN</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl2">SOME LADIES IN HASTEL</td> +<td class="tdl3">IN THE QUARTER</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tdl2 border2 pad2" colspan="2">OUTSIDERS</td> +</tr> +</table> + + +<div class="tn"> +<p class="center"><strong>Transcriber's Note:</strong></p> + +<p class="noi">Page 14 <a href="#stormont">Stormond</a> changed to Stormont<br /> + +Page 40 Double close quotation mark added after <a href="#dance">have a dance!</a><br /> + +Page 95 <a href="#himself">hmiself</a> changed to himself<br /> + +Page 96 <a href="#pallor">pallour</a> changed to pallor<br /> + +Page 103 Open bracket removed from <a href="#but">(But wait!</a><br /> + +Page 112 Double close quotation mark added after <a href="#mike">that way, Mike.</a><br /> + +Page 118 Double close quotation mark added after <a href="#call">at roll call.</a><br /> + +Page 197 <a href="#swimming">swiming</a> changed to swimming<br /> + +Page 226 <a href="#breeches">breeches</a> changed to breeches'<br /> + +Page 258 Double open quotation mark added before <a href="#but2">But</a></p> + +<p class="noi">All other inconsistencies in spelling, hyphenation and dialect +have been retained as they appear in the original book.</p> +</div> + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Flaming Jewel, by Robert W. 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Robert W. Chambers + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Flaming Jewel + +Author: Robert W. Chambers + +Release Date: September 18, 2008 [EBook #26651] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE FLAMING JEWEL *** + + + + +Produced by Suzanne Shell, Jacqueline Jeremy and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + + + + +THE FLAMING JEWEL + +ROBERT W. CHAMBERS + + + + + ROBERT W. CHAMBERS + + _The Flaming Jewel_ + + TRIANGLE BOOKS NEW YORK + + + COPYRIGHT, 1922, BY GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY + + TRIANGLE BOOKS EDITION PUBLISHED SEPTEMBER 1942 + + TRIANGLE BOOKS, 14 West Forty-ninth Street, New York, N. Y. + + PRINTED AND BOUND IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA BY THE AMERICAN + BOOK--STRATFORD PRESS, INC., N. Y. C. + + + + + TO + MY FRIEND + + R. T. HAINES-HALSEY + + WHO + UNRESERVEDLY BELIEVES + EVERYTHING I WRITE + + + + +To R. T. + + + I + + Three Guests at dinner! That's the life!-- + Wedgewood, Revere, and Duncan Phyfe! + + + II + + You sit on Duncan--when you dare,-- + And out of Wedgewood, using care, + With Paul Revere you eat your fare. + + + III + + From Paul you borrow fork and knife + To wage a gastronomic strife + In porringers; and platters rare + Of blue Historic Willow-ware. + + + IV + + Banquets with cymbal, drum and fife, + Or rose-wreathed feasts with riot rife + To your chaste suppers can't compare. + + + V + + Let those deny the truth who dare!-- + Paul, Duncan, Wedgewood! That's the life! + All else is bunk and empty air. + + + ENVOI + + The Cordon-bleu has set the pace + With Goulash, Haggis, Bouillabaisse, + Curry, Chop-suey, Kous-Kous Stew-- + I can not offer these to you,-- + Being a plain, old-fashioned cook,-- + So pray accept this scrambled book. + + R. W. C. + + + + +CONTENTS + + PAGE + + EPISODE ONE + EVE 9 + + EPISODE TWO + THE RULING PASSION 33 + + EPISODE THREE + ON STAR PEAK 56 + + EPISODE FOUR + A PRIVATE WAR 75 + + EPISODE FIVE + DROWNED VALLEY 93 + + EPISODE SIX + THE JEWEL AFLAME 110 + + EPISODE SEVEN + CLINCH'S DUMP 134 + + EPISODE EIGHT + CUP AND LIP 157 + + EPISODE NINE + THE FOREST AND MR SARD 180 + + EPISODE TEN + THE TWILIGHT OF MIKE 209 + + EPISODE ELEVEN + THE PLACE OF PINES 233 + + EPISODE TWELVE + HER HIGHNESS INTERVENES 255 + + + + +THE FLAMING JEWEL + +EPISODE ONE + +EVE + + +I + +During the last two years Fate, Chance, and Destiny had been too busy to +attend to Mike Clinch. + +But now his turn was coming in the Eternal Sequence of things. The stars +in their courses indicated the beginning of the undoing of Mike Clinch. + +From Esthonia a refugee Countess wrote to James Darragh in New York: + + "--After two years we have discovered that it was Jose + Quintana's band of international thieves that robbed Ricca. + Quintana has disappeared. + + "A Levantine diamond broker in New York, named Emanuel Sard, may + be in communication with him. + + "Ricca and I are going to America as soon as possible. + + "VALENTINE." + +The day Darragh received the letter he started to look up Sard. + +But that very morning Sard had received a curious letter from Rotterdam. +This was the letter: + + "Sardius--Tourmaline--Aragonite--Rhodonite * + Porphyry--Obsidian--Nugget Gold--Diaspore * + Novaculite * Yu * Nugget Silver--Amber--Matrix + Turquoise--Elaeolite * Ivory--Sardonyx * Moonstone-- + Iceland Spar--Kalpa Zircon--Eye Agate * Celonite-- + Lapis--Iolite--Nephrite--Chalcedony--Hydrolite * + Hegolite--Amethyst--Selenite * Fire Opal--Labradorite-- + Aquamarine--Malachite--Iris Stone--Natrolite-- + Garnet * Jade--Emerald--Wood Opal--Essonite-- + Lazuli * Epidote--Ruby--Onyx--Sapphire + --Indicolite--Topaz--Euclase * Indian Diamond * + Star Sapphire--African Diamond--Iceland Spar-- + Lapis Crucifer * Abalone--Turkish Turquoise * Old + Mine Stone--Natrolite--Cats Eye--Electrum * * * + 1/5 [=a] [=a]." + +That afternoon young Darragh located Sard's office and presented himself +as a customer. The weasel-faced clerk behind the wicket laid a pistol +handy and informed Darragh that Sard was away on a business trip. + +Darragh looked cautiously around the small office: + +"Can anybody hear us?" + +"Nobody. Why?" + +"I have important news concerning Jose Quintana," whispered Darragh; +"Where is Sard?" + +"Why, he had a letter from Quintana this very morning," replied the +clerk in a low, uneasy voice. "Mr. Sard left for Albany on the one +o'clock train. Is there any trouble?" + +"Plenty," replied Darragh coolly; "do you know Quintana?" + +"No. But Mr. Sard expects him here any day now." + +Darragh leaned closer against the grille: "Listen very carefully; if a +man comes here who calls himself Jose Quintana, turn him over to the +police until Mr. Sard returns. No matter what he tells you, turn him +over to the police. Do you understand?" + +"Who are you?" demanded the worried clerk. "Are you one of Quintana's +people?" + +"Young man," said Darragh, "I'm close enough to Quintana to give _you_ +orders. And give Sard orders.... And Quintana, too!" + +A great light dawned on the scared clerk: + +"_You_ are Jose Quintana!" he said hoarsely. + +Darragh bored him through with his dark stare: + +"Mind your business," he said. + + * * * * * + +That night in Albany Darragh picked up Sard's trail. It led to a dealer +in automobiles. Sard had bought a Comet Six, paying cash, and had +started north. + +Through Schenectady, Fonda, and Mayfield, the following day, Darragh +traced a brand new Comet Six containing one short, dark Levantine with a +parrot nose. In Northville Darragh hired a Ford. + +At Lake Pleasant Sard's car went wrong. Darragh missed him by ten +minutes; but he learned that Sard had inquired the way to Ghost Lake +Inn. + +That was sufficient. Darragh bought an axe, drove as far as Harrod's +Corners, dismissed the Ford, and walked into a forest entirely familiar +to him. + +He emerged in half an hour on a wood road two miles farther on. Here he +felled a tree across the road and sat down in the bushes to await +events. + +Toward sunset, hearing a car coming, he tied his handkerchief over his +face below the eyes, and took an automatic from his pocket. + +Sard's car stopped and Sard got out to inspect the obstruction. Darragh +sauntered out of the bushes, poked his pistol against Mr. Sard's fat +abdomen, and leisurely and thoroughly robbed him. + +In an agreeable spot near a brook Darragh lighted his pipe and sat him +down to examine the booty in detail. Two pistols, a stiletto, and a +blackjack composed the arsenal of Mr. Sard. A large wallet disclosed +more than four thousand dollars in Treasury notes--something to +reimburse Ricca when she arrived, he thought. + +Among Sard's papers he discovered a cipher letter from +Rotterdam--probably from Quintana. Cipher was rather in Darragh's line. +All ciphers are solved by similar methods, unless the key is contained +in a code book known only to sender and receiver. + +But Quintana's cipher proved to be only an easy acrostic--the very +simplest of secret messages. Within an hour Darragh had it pencilled +out: + + _Cipher_ + + "Take notice: + + "Star Pond, N. Y.... Name is Mike Clinch.... Has Flaming + Jewel.... Erosite.... I sail at once. + + "QUINTANA." + +Having served in Russia as an officer in the Military Intelligence +Department attached to the American Expeditionary Forces, Darragh had +little trouble with Quintana's letter. Even the signature was not +difficult, the fraction 1/5 was easily translated _Quint_; and the +familiar prescription symbol [=a] [=a] spelled _ana_; which gave +Quintana's name in full. + +He had heard of Erosite as the rarest and most magnificent of all gems. +Only three were known. The young Duchess Theodorica of Esthonia had +possessed one. + + * * * * * + +Darragh was immensely amused to find that the chase after Emanuel Sard +should have led him to the very borders of the great Harrod estate in +the Adirondacks. + +He gathered up his loot and walked on through the splendid forest which +once had belonged to Henry Harrod of Boston, and which now was the +property of Harrod's nephew, James Darragh. + +When he came to the first trespass notice he stood a moment to read it. +Then, slowly, he turned and looked toward Clinch's. An autumn sunset +flared like a conflagration through the pines. There was a glimmer of +water, too, where Star Pond lay. + + * * * * * + +Fate, Chance, and Destiny were becoming very busy with Mike Clinch. They +had started Quintana, Sard, and Darragh on his trail. Now they stirred +up the sovereign State of New York. + +That lank wolf, Justice, was afoot and sniffing uncomfortably close to +the heels of Mike Clinch. + + +II + +Two State Troopers drew bridles in the yellowing October forest. Their +smart drab uniforms touched with purple blended harmoniously with the +autumn woods. They were as inconspicuous as two deer in the dappled +shadow. There was a sunny clearing just ahead. The wood road they had +been travelling entered it. Beyond lay Star Pond. + +Trooper Lannis said to Trooper Stormont: "That's Mike Clinch's clearing. +Our man may be there. Now we'll see if anybody tips him off this time." + +Forest and clearing were very still in the sunshine. Nothing stirred +save gold leaves drifting down, and a hawk high in the deep blue sky +turning in narrow circles. + +Lannis was instructing Stormont, who had been transferred from the Long +Island Troop, and who was unacquainted with local matters. + +Lannis said: "Clinch's dump stands on the other edge of the clearing. +Clinch owns five hundred acres in here. He's a rat." + +"Bad?" + +"Well, he's mean. I don't know how bad he is. But he runs a rotten dump. +The forest has its slums as well as the city. This is the Hell's Kitchen +of the North Woods." + +Stormont nodded. + +"All the scum of the wilderness gathers here," went on Lannis. "Here's +where half the trouble in the North Woods hatches. We'll eat dinner at +Clinch's. His stepdaughter is a peach." + +The sturdy, sun-browned trooper glanced at his wrist watch, stretched +his legs in his stirrups. + +"Jack," he said, "I want you to get Clinch right, and I'm going to tell +you about his outfit while we watch this road. It's like a movie. Clinch +plays the lead. I'll dope out the scenario for you----" + +He turned sideways in his saddle, freeing both spurred heels and lolled +so, constructing a cigarette while he talked: + +"Way back around 1900 Mike Clinch was a guide--a decent young fellow +they say. He guided fishing parties in summer, hunters in fall and +winter. He made money and built the house. The people he guided were +wealthy. He made a lot of money and bought land. I understand he was +square and that everybody liked him. + +"About that time there came to Clinch's 'hotel' a Mr. and Mrs. Strayer. +They were 'lungers.' Strayer seemed to be a gentleman; his wife was +good looking and rather common. Both were very young. He had the consump +bad--the galloping variety. He didn't last long. A month after he died +his young wife had a baby. Clinch married her. She also died the same +year. The baby's name was Eve. Clinch became quite crazy about her and +started to make a lady of her. That was his mania." + +Lannis leaned from his saddle and carefully dropped his cigarette end +into a puddle of rain water. Then he swung one leg over and sat side +saddle. + +"Clinch had plenty of money in those days," he went on. "He could afford +to educate the child. The kid had a governess. Then he sent her to a +fancy boarding school. She had everything a young girl could want. + +"She developed into a pretty young thing at fifteen.... She's eighteen +now--and I don't know what to call her. She pulled a gun on me in July." + +"What!" + +"Sure. There was a row at Clinch's dump. A rum-runner called Jake Kloon +got shot up. I came up to get Clinch. He was sick-drunk in his bunk. +When I broke in the door Eve Strayer pulled a gun on me." + +"What happened?" inquired Stormont. + +"Nothing. I took Clinch.... But he got off as usual." + +"Acquitted?" + +Lannis nodded, rolling another cigarette: + +"Now, I'll tell you how Clinch happened to go wrong," he said. "You see +he'd always made his living by guiding. Well, some years ago Henry +Harrod, of Boston, came here and bought thousands and thousands of acres +of forest all around Clinch's----" Lannis half rose on one stirrup and, +with a comprehensive sweep of his muscular arm, ending in a flourish: +"--He bought everything for miles and miles. And that started Clinch +down hill. Harrod tried to force Clinch to sell. The millionaire tactics +you know. He was determined to oust him. Clinch got mad and wouldn't +sell at any price. Harrod kept on buying all around Clinch and posted +trespass notices. That meant ruin to Clinch. He was walled in. No +hunters care to be restricted. Clinch's little property was no good. +Business stopped. His stepdaughter's education became expensive. He was +in a bad way. Harrod offered him a big price. But Clinch turned ugly and +wouldn't budge. And that's how Clinch began to go wrong." + +"Poor devil," said Stormont. + +"Devil, all right. Poor, too. But he needed money. He was crazy to make +a lady of Eve Strayer. And there are ways of finding money, you know." + +Stormont nodded. + +"Well, Clinch found money in those ways. The Conservation Commissioner +in Albany began to hear about game law violations. The Revenue people +heard of rum-running. Clinch lost his guide's license. But nobody could +get the goods on him. + +"There was a rough backwoods bunch always drifting about Clinch's place +in those days. There were fights. And not so many miles from Clinch's +there was highway robbery and a murder or two. + +"Then the war came. The draft caught Clinch. Malone exempted him, he +being the sole support of his stepchild. + +"But the girl volunteered. She got to France, somehow--scrubbed in a +hospital, I believe--anyway, Clinch wanted to be on the same side of +the world she was on, and he went with a Forestry Regiment and cut trees +for railroad ties in southern France until the war ended and they sent +him home. + +"Eve Strayer came back too. She's there now. You'll see her at dinner +time. She sticks to Clinch. He's a rat. He's up against the dry laws and +the game laws. Government enforcement agents, game protectors, State +Constabulary, all keep an eye on Clinch. Harrod's trespass signs fence +him in. He's like a rat in a trap. Yet Clinch makes money at law +breaking and nobody can catch him red-handed. + +"He kills Harrod's deer. That's certain. I mean Harrod's nephew's deer. +Harrod's dead. Darragh's the young nephew's name. He's never been +here--he was in the army--in Russia--I don't know what became of +him--but he keeps up the Harrod preserve--game-wardens, patrols, +watchers, trespass signs and all." + +Lannis finished his second cigarette, got back into his stirrups and, +gathering bridle, began leisurely to divide curb and snaffle. + +"That's the layout, Jack," he said. "Yonder lies the Red Light district +of the North Woods. Mike Clinch is the brains of all the dirty work that +goes on. A floating population of crooks and bums--game violators, +boot-leggers, market hunters, pelt 'collectors,' rum-runners, hootch +makers, do his dirty work--and I guess there are some who'll stick you +up by starlight for a quarter and others who'll knock your block off for +a dollar.... And there's the girl, Eve Strayer. I don't get her at all, +except that she's loyal to Clinch.... And now you know what you ought +to know about this movie called 'Hell in the Woods.' And it's up to us +to keep a calm, impartial eye on the picture and try to follow the plot +they're acting out--if there is any." + +Stormont said: "Thanks, Bill; I'm posted.... And I'm getting hungry, +too." + +"I believe," said Lannis, "that you want to see that girl." + +"I do," returned the other, laughing. + +"Well, you'll see her. She's good to look at. But I don't get her at +all." + +"Why?" + +"Because she _looks_ right and yet she lives at Clinch's with him and +his bunch of bums. Would you think a straight girl could stand it?" + +"No man can tell what a straight girl can stand." + +"Straight or crooked she stands for Mike Clinch," said Lannis, "and he's +a ratty customer." + +"Maybe the girl is fond of him. It's natural." + +"I guess it's that. But I don't see how any young girl can stomach the +life at Clinch's." + +"It's a wonder what a decent woman will stand," observed Stormont. +"Ninety-nine per cent. of all wives ought to receive the D. S. O." + +"Do you think we're so rotten?" inquired Lannis, smiling. + +"Not so rotten. No. But any man knows what men are. And it's a wonder +women stick to us when they learn." + +They laughed. Lannis glanced at his watch again. + +"Well," he said, "I don't believe anybody has tipped off our man. It's +noon. Come on to dinner, Jack." + +They cantered forward into the sunlit clearing. Star Pond lay ahead. On +its edge stood Clinch's. + + +III + +Clinch, in his shirt sleeves, came out on the veranda. He had little +light grey eyes, close-clipped grey hair, and was clean shaven. + +"How are you, Clinch," inquired Lannis affably. + +"All right," replied Clinch; "you're the same, I hope." + +"Trooper Stormont, Mr. Clinch," said Lannis in his genial way. + +"Pleased to know you," said Clinch, level-eyed, unstirring. + +The troopers dismounted. Both shook hands with Clinch. Then Lannis led +the way to the barn. + +"We'll eat well," he remarked to his comrade. "Clinch cooks." + +From the care of their horses they went to a pump to wash. One or two +rough looking men slouched out of the house and glanced at them. + +"Hallo, Jake," said Lannis cheerily. + +Jake Kloon grunted acknowledgment. + +Lannis said in Stormont's ear: "Here she comes with towels. She's +pretty, isn't she?" + +A young girl in pink gingham advanced toward them across the patch of +grass. + +Lannis was very polite and presented Stormont. The girl handed them two +rough towels, glanced at Stormont again after the introduction, smiled +slightly. + +"Dinner is ready," she said. + +They dried their faces and followed her back to the house. + +It was an unpainted building, partly of log. In the dining room half a +dozen men waited silently for food. Lannis saluted all, named his +comrade, and seated himself. + +A delicious odour of johnny-cake pervaded the room. Presently Eve +Strayer appeared with the dinner. + +There was dew on her pale forehead--the heat of the kitchen, no doubt. +The girl's thick, lustrous hair was brownish gold, and so twisted up +that it revealed her ears and a very white neck. + +When she brought Stormont his dinner he caught her eyes a +moment--experienced a slight shock of pleasure at their intense +blue--the gentian-blue of the summer zenith at midday. + +Lannis remained affable, even became jocose at moments: + +"No hootch for dinner, Mike? How's that, now?" + +"The Boot-leg Express is a day late," replied Clinch, with cold humour. + +Around the table ran an odd sound--a company of catamounts feeding might +have made such a noise--if catamounts ever laugh. + +"How's the fur market, Jake?" inquired Lannis, pouring gravy over his +mashed potato. + +Kloon quoted prices with an oath. + +A mean-visaged young man named Leverett complained of the price of +traps. + +"What do you care?" inquired Lannis genially. "The other man pays. What +are you kicking about, anyway? It wasn't so long ago that muskrats were +ten cents." + +The trooper's good-humoured intimation that Earl Leverett took fur in +other men's traps was not lost on the company. Leverett's fox visage +reddened; Jake Kloon, who had only one eye, glared at the State Trooper +but said nothing. + +Clinch's pale gaze met the trooper's smiling one: "The jays and +squirrels talk too," he said slowly. "It don't mean anything. Only the +show-down counts." + +"You're quite right, Clinch. The show-down is what we pay to see. But +talk is the tune the orchestra plays before the curtain rises." + +Stormont had finished dinner. He heard a low, charming voice from behind +his chair: + +"Apple pie, lemon pie, maple cake, berry roll." + +He looked up into two gentian-blue eyes. + +"Lemon pie, please," he said, blushing. + + * * * * * + +When dinner was over and the bare little dining room empty except for +Clinch and the two State Troopers, the former folded his heavy, powerful +hands on the table's edge and turned his square face and pale-eyed gaze +on Lannis. + +"Spit it out," he said in a passionless voice. + +Lannis crossed one knee over the other, lighted a cigarette: + +"Is there a young fellow working for you named Hal Smith?" + +"No," said Clinch. + +"Sure?" + +"Sure." + +"Clinch," continued Lannis, "have you heard about a stick-up on the +wood-road out of Ghost Lake?" + +"No." + +"Well, a wealthy tourist from New York--a Mr. Sard, stopping at Ghost +Lake Inn--was held up and robbed last Saturday toward sundown." + +"Never heard of him," said Clinch, calmly. + +"The robber took four thousand dollars in bills and some private papers +from him." + +"It's no skin off my shins," remarked Clinch. + +"He's laid a complaint." + +"Yes?" + +"Have any strangers been here since Saturday evening?" + +"No." + +There was a pause. + +"We heard you had a new man named Hal Smith working around your place." + +"No." + +"He came here Saturday night." + +"Who says so?" + +"A guide from Ghost Lake." + +"He's a liar." + +"You know," said Lannis, "it won't do you any good if hold-up men can +hide here and make a getaway." + +"G'wan and search," said Clinch, calmly. + + * * * * * + +They searched the "hotel" from garret to cellar. They searched the barn, +boat-shed, out-houses. + +While this was going on, Clinch went into the kitchen. + +"Eve," he said coolly, "the State Troopers are after that fellow, Hal +Smith, who came here Saturday night. Where is he?" + +"He went into Harrod's to get us a deer," she replied in a low voice. +"What has he done?" + +"Stuck up a man on the Ghost Lake road. He ought to have told me. Do you +think you could meet up with him and tip him off?" + +"He's hunting on Owl Marsh. I'll try." + +"All right. Change your clothes and slip out the back door. And look out +for Harrod's patrols, too." + +"All right, dad," she said. "If I have to be out to-night, don't worry. +I'll get word to Smith somehow." + +Half an hour later Lannis and Stormont returned from a prowl around the +clearing. Lannis paid the reckoning; his comrade led out the horses. He +said again to Lannis: + +"I'm sure it was the girl. She wore men's clothes and she went into the +woods on a run." + +As they started to ride away, Lannis said to Clinch, who stood on the +veranda: + +"It's still blue-jay and squirrel talk between us, Mike, but the +show-down is sure to come. Better go straight while the going's good." + +"I go straight enough to suit me," said Clinch. + +"But it's the Government that is to be suited, Mike. And if it gets you +right you'll be in dutch." + +"Don't let that worry you," said Clinch. + + * * * * * + +About three o'clock the two State Troopers, riding at a walk, came to +the forks of the Ghost Lake road. + +"Now," said Lannis to Stormont, "if you really believe you saw the girl +beat it out of the back door and take to the woods, she's probably +somewhere in there----" he pointed into the western forest. "But," he +added, "what's your idea in following her?" + +"She wore men's clothes; she was in a hurry and trying to keep out of +sight. I wondered whether Clinch might have sent her to warn this +hold-up fellow." + +"That's rather a long shot, isn't it?" + +"Very long. I could go in and look about a bit, if you'll lead my +horse." + +"All right. Take your bearings. This road runs west to Ghost Lake. We +sleep at the Inn there--if you mean to cross the woods on foot." + +Stormont nodded, consulted his map and compass, pocketed both, unbuckled +his spurs. + +When he was ready he gave his bridle to Lannis. + +"I'd just like to see what she's up to," he remarked. + +"All right. If you miss me come to the Inn," said Lannis, starting on +with the led horse. + + * * * * * + +The forest was open amid a big stand of white pine and hemlock, and +Stormont travelled easily and swiftly. He had struck a line by compass +that must cross the direction taken by Eve Strayer when she left +Clinch's. But it was a wild chance that he would ever run across her. + +And probably he never would have if the man that she was looking for had +not fired a shot on the edge of that vast maze of stream, morass and +dead timber called Owl Marsh. + +Far away in the open forest Stormont heard the shot and turned in that +direction. + +But Eve already was very near when the young man who called himself Hal +Smith fired at one of Harrod's deer--a three-prong buck on the edge of +the dead water. + + * * * * * + +Smith had drawn and dressed the buck by the time the girl found him. + +He was cleaning up when she arrived, squatting by the water's edge when +he heard her voice across the swale: + +"Smith! The State Troopers are looking for you!" + +He stood up, dried his hands on his breeches. The girl picked her way +across the bog, jumping from one tussock to the next. + +When she told him what had happened he began to laugh. + +"Did you really stick up this man?" she asked incredulously. + +"I'm afraid I did, Eve," he replied, still laughing. + +The girl's entire expression altered. + +"So that's the sort you are," she said. "I thought you different. But +you're all a rotten lot----" + +"Hold on," he interrupted, "what do you mean by that?" + +"I mean that the only men who ever come to Star Pond are crooks," she +retorted bitterly. "I didn't believe you were. You look decent. But +you're as crooked as the rest of them--and it seems as if I--I couldn't +stand it--any longer----" + +"If you think me so rotten, why did you run all the way from Clinch's to +warn me?" he asked curiously. + +"I didn't do it for _you_; I did it for my father. They'll jail him if +they catch him hiding you. They've got it in for him. If they put him in +prison he'll die. He couldn't stand it. I _know_. And that's why I came +to find you and tell you to clear out----" + +The distant crack of a dry stick checked her. The next instant she +picked up his rifle, seized his arm, and fairly dragged him into a +spruce thicket. + +"Do you want to get my father into trouble!" she said fiercely. + +The rocky flank of Star Peak bordered the marsh here. + +"Come on," she whispered, jerking him along through the thicket and up +the rocks to a cleft--a hole in the sheer rock overhung by shaggy +hemlock. + +"Get in there," she said breathlessly. + +"Whoever comes," he protested, "will see the buck yonder, and will +certainly look in here----" + +"Not if I go down there and take your medicine. Creep into that cave and +lie down." + +"What do you intend to do?" he demanded, interested and amused. + +"If it's one of Harrod's game-keepers," said the girl drily, "it only +means a summons and a fine for me. And if it's a State Trooper, who is +prowling in the woods yonder hunting crooks, he'll find nobody here but +a trespasser. Keep quiet. I'll stand him off." + + +IV + +When State Trooper Stormont came out on the edge of Owl Marsh, the girl +was kneeling by the water, washing deer blood from her slender, +sun-tanned fingers. + +"What are you doing here?" she enquired, looking up over her shoulder +with a slight smile. + +"Just having a look around," he said pleasantly. "That's a nice fat buck +you have there." + +"Yes, he's nice." + +"You shot him?" asked Stormont. + +"Who else do you suppose shot him?" she enquired, smilingly. She rinsed +her fingers again and stood up, swinging her arms to dry her hands,--a +lithe, grey-shirted figure in her boyish garments, straight, supple, and +strong. + +"I saw you hurrying into the woods," said Stormont. + +"Yes, I was in a hurry. We need meat." + +"I didn't notice that you carried a rifle when I saw you leave the +house--by the back door." + +"No; it was in the woods," she said indifferently. + +"You have a hiding place for your rifle?" + +"For other things, also," she said, letting her eyes of gentian-blue +rest on the young man. + +"You seem to be very secretive." + +"Is a girl more so than a man?" she asked smilingly. + +Stormont smiled too, then became grave. + +"Who else was here with you?" he asked quietly. + +She seemed surprised. "Did you see anybody else?" + +He hesitated, flushed, pointed down at the wet sphagnum. Smith's +foot-prints were there in damning contrast to her own. Worse than that, +Smith's pipe lay on an embedded log, and a rubber tobacco pouch beside +it. + +She said with a slight catch in her breath: "It seems that somebody has +been here.... Some hunter, perhaps,--or a game warden...." + +"Or Hal Smith," said Stormont. + +A painful colour swept the girl's face and throat. The man, sorry for +her, looked away. + +After a silence: "I know something about you," he said gently. "And now +that I've seen you--heard you speak--met your eyes--I know enough about +you to form an opinion.... So I don't ask you to turn informer. But the +law won't stand for what Clinch is doing--whatever provocation he has +had. And he must not aid or abet any criminal, or harbour any +malefactor." + +The girl's features were expressionless. The passive, sullen beauty of +her troubled the trooper. + +"Trouble for Clinch means sorrow for you," he said. "I don't want you +to be unhappy. I bear Clinch no ill will. For this reason I ask him, and +I ask you too, to stand clear of this affair. + +"Hal Smith is wanted. I'm here to take him." + +As she said nothing, he looked down at the foot-print in the sphagnum. +Then his eyes moved to the next imprint; to the next. Then he moved +slowly along the water's edge, tracking the course of the man he was +following. + +The girl watched him in silence until the plain trail led him to the +spruce thicket. + +"Don't go in there!" she said sharply, with an odd tremor in her voice. + +He turned and looked at her, then stepped calmly into the thicket. And +the next instant she was among the spruces, too, confronting him with +her rifle. + +"Get out of these woods!" she said. + +He looked into the girl's deathly white face. + +"Eve," he said, "it will go hard with you if you kill me. I don't want +you to live out your life in prison." + +"I can't help it. If you send my father to prison he'll die. I'd rather +die myself. Let us alone, I tell you! The man you're after is nothing to +us. We didn't know he had stuck up anybody!" + +"If he's nothing to you, why do you point that rifle at me?" + +"I tell you he is nothing to us. But my father wouldn't betray a dog. +And I won't. That's all. Now get out of these woods and come back +to-morrow. Nobody'll interfere with you then." + +Stormont smiled: "Eve," he said, "do you really think me as yellow as +that?" + +Her blue eyes flashed a terrible warning, but, in the same instant, he +had caught her rifle, twisting it out of her grasp as it exploded. + +The detonation dazed her; then, as he flung the rifle into the water, +she caught him by neck and belt and flung him bodily into the spruces. + +But she fell with him; he held her twisting and struggling with all her +superb and supple strength; staggered to his feet, still mastering her; +and, as she struggled, sobbing, locked hot and panting in his arms, he +snapped a pair of handcuffs on her wrists and flung her aside. + +She fell on both knees, got up, shoulder deep in spruce, blood running +from her lip over her chin. + +The trooper took her by the arm. She was trembling all over. He took a +thin steel chain and padlock from his pocket, passed the links around +her steel-bound wrists, and fastened her to a young birch tree. + +Then, drawing his pistol from its holster, he went swiftly forward +through the spruces. + +When he saw the cleft in the rocky flank of Star Peak, he walked +straight to the black hole which confronted him. + +"Come out of there," he said distinctly. + +After a few seconds Smith came out. + +"Good God!" said Stormont in a low voice. "What are you doing here, +Darragh?" + +Darragh came close and rested one hand on Stormont's shoulder: + +"Don't crab my game, Stormont. I never dreamed you were in the +Constabulary or I'd have let you know." + +"Are _you_ Hal Smith?" + +"I sure am. Where's that girl?" + +"Handcuffed out yonder." + +"Then for God's sake go back and act as if you hadn't found me. Tell +Mayor Chandler that I'm after bigger game than he is." + +"Clinch?" + +"Stormont, I'm here to _protect_ Mike Clinch. Tell the Mayor not to +touch him. The men I'm after are going to try to rob him. I don't want +them to because--well, I'm going to rob him myself." + +Stormont stared. + +"You must stand by me," said Darragh. "So must the Mayor. He knows me +through and through. Tell him to forget that hold-up. I stopped that man +Sard. I frisked him. Tell the Mayor. I'll keep in touch with him." + +"Of course," said Stormont, "that settles it." + +"Thanks, old chap. Now go back to that girl and let her believe that you +never found me." + +A slight smile touched their eyes. Both instinctively saluted. Then they +shook hands; Darragh, alias Hal Smith, went back into the hemlock-shaded +hole in the rocks; Trooper Stormont walked slowly down through the +spruces. + +When Eve saw him returning empty handed, something flashed in her pallid +face like sunlight across snow. + +Stormont passed her, went to the water's edge, soaked a spicy handful of +sphagnum moss in the icy water, came back and wiped the blood from her +face. + +The girl seemed astounded; her face surged in vivid colour as he +unlocked the handcuffs and pocketed them and the little steel chain. + +Her lip was bleeding again. He washed it with wet moss, took a clean +handkerchief from the breast of his tunic and laid it against her mouth. + +"Hold it there," he said. + +Mechanically she raised her hand to support the compress. Stormont went +back to the shore, recovered her rifle from the shallow water, and +returned with it. + +As she made no motion to take it, he stood it against the tree to which +he had tied her. + +Then he came close to her where she stood holding his handkerchief +against her mouth and looking at him out of steady eyes as deeply blue +as gentian blossoms. + +"Eve," he said, "you win. But you won't forgive me.... I wish we could +be friends, some day.... We never can, now.... Good-bye." + +Neither spoke again. Then, of a sudden, the girl's eyes filled; and +Trooper Stormont caught her free hand and kissed it;--kissed it again +and again,--dropped it and went striding away through the underbrush +which was now all rosy with the rays of sunset. + + * * * * * + +After he had disappeared, the girl, Eve, went to the cleft in the rocks +above. + +"Come out," she said contemptuously. "It's a good thing you hid, because +there was a real man after you; and God help you if he ever finds you!" + +Hal Smith came out. + +"Pack in your meat," said the girl curtly, and flung his rifle across +her shoulder. + +Through the ruddy afterglow she led the way homeward, a man's +handkerchief pressed to her wounded mouth, her eyes preoccupied with +the strangest thoughts that ever had stirred her virgin mind. + +Behind her walked Darragh with his load of venison and his alias,--and +his tongue in his cheek. + +Thus began the preliminaries toward the ultimate undoing of Mike Clinch. +Fate, Chance, and Destiny had undertaken the job in earnest. + + + + +EPISODE TWO + +THE RULING PASSION + + +I + +Nobody understood how Jose Quintana had slipped through the Secret +Service net spread for him at every port. + +The United States authorities did not know why Quintana had come to +America. They realised merely that he arrived for no good purpose; and +they had meant to arrest and hold him for extradition if requested; for +deportation as an undesirable alien anyway. + +Only two men in America knew that Quintana had come to the United States +for the purpose of recovering the famous "Flaming Jewel," stolen by him +from the Grand Duchess Theodorica of Esthonia; and stolen from Quintana, +in turn, by a private soldier in an American Forestry Regiment, on leave +in Paris. This soldier's name, probably, was Michael Clinch. + +One of the men who knew why Quintana might come to America was James +Darragh, recently of the Military Intelligence, but now passing as a +hold-up man under the name of Hal Smith, and actually in the employment +of Clinch at his disreputable "hotel" at Star Pond in the North Woods. + +The other man who knew why Quintana had come to America was Emanuel +Sard, a Levantine diamond broker of New York, Quintana's agent in +America. + + * * * * * + +Now, as the October days passed without any report of Quintana's +detention, Darragh, known as Hal Smith at Clinch's dump, began to +suspect that Quintana had already slid into America through the meshes +of the police. + +If so, this desperate international criminal could be expected at +Clinch's under some guise or other, piloted thither by Emanuel Sard. + +So Hal Smith, whose duty was to wash dishes, do chores, and also to +supply Clinch's with "mountain beef"--or deer taken illegally--made it +convenient to prowl every day in the vicinity of the Ghost Lake road. + +He was perfectly familiar with Emanuel Sard's squat features and parrot +nose, having robbed Mr. Sard of Quintana's cipher and of $4,000 at +pistol point. And one morning, while roving around the guide's quarters +at Ghost Lake Inn, Smith beheld Sard himself on the hotel veranda, in +company with five strangers of foreign aspect. + +During the midday dinner Smith, on pretense of enquiring for a guide's +license, got a look at the Inn ledger. Sard's signature was on it, +followed by the names of Henri Picquet, Nicolas Salzar, Victor +Georgiades, Harry Beck, and Jose Sanchez. And Smith went back through +the wilderness to Star Pond, convinced that one of these gentlemen was +Quintana, and the remainder, Quintana's gang; and that they were here to +do murder if necessary in their remorseless quest of "The Flaming +Jewel." Two million dollars once had been offered for the Flaming Jewel; +and had been refused. + +Clinch probably possessed it. Smith was now convinced of that. But he +was there to rob Clinch of it himself. For he had promised the little +Grand Duchess to help recover her Erosite jewel; and now that he had +finally traced its probable possession to Clinch, he was wondering how +this recovery was to be accomplished. + +To arrest Clinch meant ruin to Eve Strayer. Besides he knew now that +Clinch would die in prison before revealing the hiding place of the +Flaming Jewel. + +Also, how could it be proven that Clinch had the Erosite gem? The cipher +from Quintana was not sufficient evidence. + +No; the only way was to watch Clinch, prevent any robbery by Quintana's +gang, somehow discover where the Flaming Jewel had been concealed, take +it, and restore it to the beggared young girl whose only financial +resource now lay in the possible recovery of this almost priceless gem. + + * * * * * + +Toward evening Hal Smith shot two deer near Owl Marsh. To poach on his +own property appealed to his sense of humour. And Clinch, never dreaming +that Hal Smith was the James Darragh who had inherited Harrod's vast +preserve, damned all millionaires for every buck brought in, and became +friendlier to Smith. + + +II + +Clinch's dump was the disposal plant in which collected the human sewage +of the wilderness. + +It being Saturday, the scum of the North Woods was gathering at the Star +Pond resort. A venison and chicken supper was promised--and a dance if +any women appeared. + +Jake Kloon had run in some Canadian hooch; Darragh, alias Hal Smith, +contributed two fat deer and Clinch cooked them. By ten o'clock that +morning many of the men were growing noisy; some were already drunk by +noon. Shortly after midday dinner the first fight started--extinguished +only after Clinch had beaten several of the backwoods aristocracy +insensible. + +Towering amid the wreck of battle, his light grey eyes a-glitter, Clinch +dominated, swinging his iron fists. + +When the combat ended and the fallen lay starkly where they fell, Clinch +said in his pleasant, level voice: + +"Take them out and stick their heads in the pond. And don't go for to +get me mad, boys, or I'm liable to act up rough." + +They bore forth the sleepers for immersion in Star Pond. Clinch +relighted his cigar and repeated the rulings which had caused the +fracas: + +"You gotta play square cards here or you don't play none in my house. No +living thumb-nail can nick no cards in my place and get away with it. +Three kings and two trays is better than three chickens and two eggs. If +you don't like it, g'wan home." + +He went out in his shirt sleeves to see how the knock-outs were +reviving, and met Hal Smith returning from the pond, who reported +progress toward consciousness. They walked back to the "hotel" together. + +"Say, young fella," said Clinch in his soft, agreeable way, "you want to +keep your eye peeled to-night." + +"Why?" inquired Smith. + +"Well, there'll be a lot o' folks here. There'll be strangers, too.... +Don't forget the State Troopers are looking for you." + +"Do the State Troopers ever play detective?" asked Smith, smiling. + +"Sure. They've been in here rigged out like peddlers and lumber-jacks +and timber lookers." + +"Did they ever get anything on you?" + +"Not a thing." + +"Can you always spot them, Mike?" + +"No. But when a stranger shows up here who don't know nobody, he never +sees nothing and he don't never learn nothing. He gets no hootch outa +me. No, nor no craps and no cards. He gets his supper; that's what he +gets ... and a dance, if there's ladies--and if any girl favours him. +That's all the change any stranger gets out of Mike Clinch." + +They had paused on the rough veranda in the hot October sunshine. + +"Mike," suggested Smith carelessly, "wouldn't it pay you better to go +straight?" + +Clinch's small grey eyes, which had been roaming over the prospect of +lake and forest, focussed on Smith's smiling features. + +"What's that to you?" he asked. + +"I'll be out of a job," remarked Smith, laughing, "if they ever land +you." + +Clinch's level gaze measured him; his mind was busy measuring him, too. + +"Who the hell are you, anyway?" he asked. "_I_ don't know. You stick up +a man on the Ghost Lake Road and hide out here when the State Troopers +come after you. And now you ask me if it pays better to go straight. Why +didn't _you_ go straight if you think it pays?" + +"I haven't got a daughter to worry about," explained Smith. "If they get +me it won't hurt anybody else." + +A dull red tinge came out under Clinch's tan: + +"Who asked _you_ to worry about Eve?" + +"She's a fine girl: that's all." + +Clinch's steely glare measured the young man: + +"You trying to make up to her?" he enquired gently. + +"No. She has no use for me." + +Clinch reflected, his cold tiger-gaze still fastened on Smith. + +"You're right," he said after a moment. "Eve is a good girl. Some day +I'll make a lady of her." + +"She _is_ one, Clinch." + +At that Clinch reddened heavily--the first finer emotion ever betrayed +before Smith. He did not say anything for a few moments, but his grim +mouth worked. Finally: + +"I guess you was a gentleman once before you went crooked, Hal," he +said. "You act up like you once was.... Say; there's only one thing on +God's earth I care about. You've guessed it, too." He was off again upon +his ruling passion. + +"Eve," nodded Smith. + +"Sure. She isn't my flesh and blood. But it seems like she's more, even. +I want she should be a lady. It's _all_ I want. That damned millionaire +Harrod bust me. But he couldn't stop me giving Eve her schooling. And +now all I'm livin' for is to be fixed so's to give her money to go to +the city like a lady. I don't care how I make money; all I want is to +make it. And I'm a-going to." + +Smith nodded again. + +Clinch, now obsessed by his monomania, went on with an oath: + +"I can't make no money on the level after what Harrod done to me. And I +gotta fix up Eve. What the hell do you mean by asking me would it pay me +to travel straight I dunno." + +"I was only thinking of Eve. A lady isn't supposed to have a crook for a +father." + +Clinch's grey eyes blazed for a moment, then their menacing glare +dulled, died out into wintry fixity. + +"I wan't born a crook," he said. "I ain't got no choice. And don't +worry, young fella; they ain't a-going to get me." + +"You can't go on beating the game forever, Clinch." + +"I'm beating it----" he hesitated--"and it won't be so long, neither, +before I turn over enough to let Eve live in the city like any lady, +with her autymobile and her own butler and all her swell friends, in a +big house like she is educated for----" + +He broke off abruptly as a procession approached from the lake, +escorting the battered gentry who now were able to wabble about a +little. + +One of them, a fox-faced trap thief named Earl Leverett, slunk hastily +by as though expecting another kick from Clinch. + +"G'wan inside, Earl, and act up right," said Clinch pleasantly. "You +oughter have more sense than to start a fight in my place--you and Sid +Hone and Harvey Chase. G'wan in and behave." + +He and Smith followed the procession of damaged ones into the house. + +The big unpainted room where a bar had once been was blue with cheap +cigar smoke; the air reeked with the stench of beer and spirits. A score +or more shambling forest louts in their dingy Saturday finery were +gathered there playing cards, shooting craps, lolling around tables and +tilting slopping glasses at one another. + +Heavy pleasantries were exchanged with the victims of Clinch's ponderous +fists as they re-entered the room from which they had been borne so +recently, feet first. + +"Now, boys," said Clinch kindly, "act up like swell gents and behave +friendly. And if any ladies come in for the chicken supper, why, gol +dang it, we'll have a dance!" + + +III + +Toward sundown the first woodland nymph appeared--a half-shy, half-bold, +willowy thing in the rosy light of the clearing. + +Hal Smith, washing glasses and dishes on the back porch for Eve Strayer +to dry, asked who the rustic beauty might be. + +"Harvey Chase's sister," said Eve. "She shouldn't come here, but I can't +keep her away and her brother doesn't care. She's only a child, too." + +"Is there any harm in a chicken supper and a dance?" + +Eve looked gravely at young Smith without replying. + +Other girlish shapes loomed in the evening light. Some were met by +gallants, some arrived at the veranda unescorted. + +"Where do they all come from? Do they live in trees like dryads?" asked +Smith. + +"There are always squatters in the woods," she replied indifferently. + +"Some of these girls come from Ghost Lake, I suppose." + +"Yes; waitresses at the Inn." + +"What music is there?" + +"Jim Hastings plays a fiddle. I play the melodeon if they need me." + +"What do you do when there's a fight?" he asked, with a side glance at +her pure profile. + +"What do you suppose I do? Fight, too?" + +He laughed--mirthlessly--conscious always of his secret pity for this +girl. + +"Well," he said, "when your father makes enough to quit, he'll take you +out of this. It's a vile hole for a young girl----" + +"See here," she said, flushing; "you're rather particular for a young +man who stuck up a tourist and robbed him of four thousand dollars." + +"I'm not complaining on my own account," returned Smith, laughing; +"Clinch's suits me." + +"Well, don't concern yourself on my account, Hal Smith. And you'd better +keep out of the dance, too, if there are any strangers there." + +"You think a State Trooper may happen in?" + +"It's likely. A lot of people come and go. We don't always know them." +She opened a sliding wooden shutter and looked into the bar room. After +a moment she beckoned him to her side. + +"There are strangers there now," she said, "--that thin, dark man who +looks like a Kanuk. And those two men shaking dice. I don't know who +they are. I never before saw them." + +But Smith had seen them at Ghost Lake Inn. One of them was Sard. +Quintana's gang had arrived at Clinch's dump. + +A moment later Clinch came through the pantry and kitchen and out onto +the rear porch where Smith was washing glasses in a tub filled from an +ever-flowing spring. + +"I'm a-going to get supper," he said to Eve. "There'll be twenty-three +plates." And to Smith: "Hal--you help Eve wait on the table. And if +anybody acts up rough you slam him on the jaw--don't argue, don't +wait--just slam him good, and I'll come on the hop." + +"Who are the strangers, dad?" asked Eve. + +"Don't nobody know 'em none, girlie. But they ain't State Troopers. They +talk like they was foreign. One of 'em's English--the big, bony one with +yellow hair and mustache." + +"Did they give any names?" asked Smith. + +"You bet. The stout, dark man calls himself Hongri Picket. French, I +guess. The fat beak is a fella named Sard. Sanchez is the guy with a +face like a Canada priest--Jose Sanchez--or something on that style. And +then the yellow skinned young man is Nicole Salzar; the Britisher, Harry +Beck; and that good lookin' dark gent with a little black Charlie +Chaplin, he's Victor Georgiades." + +"What are those foreigners doing in the North Woods, Clinch?" enquired +Smith. + +"Oh, they all give the same spiel--hire out in a lumber camp. But _they_ +ain't no lumberjacks," added Clinch contemptuously. "I don't know what +they be--hootch runners maybe--or booze bandits--or they done something +crooked som'ers r'other. It's safe to serve 'em drinks." + +Clinch himself had been drinking. He always drank when preparing to +cook. + +He turned and went into the kitchen now, rolling up his shirt sleeves +and relighting his clay pipe. + + +IV + +By nine o'clock the noisy chicken supper had ended; the table had been +cleared; Jim Hastings was tuning his fiddle in the big room; Eve had +seated herself before the battered melodeon. + +"Ladies and gents," said Clinch in his clear, pleasant voice, which +carried through the hubbub, "we're a-going to have a dance--thanks and +beholden to Jim Hastings and my daughter Eve. Eve, she don't drink and +she don't dance, so no use askin' and no hard feelin' toward nobody. + +"So act up pleasant to one and all and have a good time and no rough +stuff in no form, shape or manner, but behave like gents all and swell +dames, like you was to a swarry on Fifth Avenue. Let's go!" + +He went back to the pantry, taking no notice of the cheering. The +fiddler scraped a fox trot, and Eve's melodeon joined in. A vast +scuffling of heavily shod feet filled the momentary silence, accented by +the shrill giggle of young girls. + +"They're off," remarked Clinch to Smith, who stood at the pantry shelf +prepared to serve whiskey or beer upon previous receipt of payment. + +In the event of a sudden raid, the arrangements at Clinch's were quite +simple. Two large drain pipes emerged from the kitchen floor beside +Smith, and ended in Star Pond. In case of alarm the tub of beer was +poured down one pipe; the whiskey down the other. + +Only the trout in Star Pond would ever sample that hootch again. + +Clinch, now slightly intoxicated, leaned heavily on the pantry shelf +beside Smith, adjusting his pistol under his suspenders. + +"Young fella," he said in his agreeable voice, "you're dead right. You +sure said a face-full when you says to me, 'Eve's a lady, by God!' _You_ +oughta know. You was a gentleman yourself once. Even if you take to +stickin' up tourists you know a lady when you see one. And you called +the turn. She _is_ a lady. All I'm livin' for is to get her down to the +city and give her money to live like a lady. I'll do it yet.... Soon!... +I'd do it to-morrow--to-night--if I dared.... If I thought it sure +fire.... If I was dead certain I could get away with it.... I've _got_ +the money. _Now!_ ... Only it ain't in _money_.... Smith?" + +"Yes, Mike." + +"You know me?" + +"Sure." + +"You size me up?" + +"I do." + +"All right. If you ever tell anyone I got money that ain't money I'll +shoot you through the head." + +"Don't worry, Clinch." + +"I ain't. You're a crook; you won't talk. You're a gentleman, too. +_They_ don't sell out a pal. Say, Hal, there's only one fella I don't +want to meet." + +"Who's that, Mike?" + +"Lemme tell you," continued Clinch, resting more heavily on the shelf +while Smith, looking out through the pantry shutter at the dancing, +listened intently. + +"When I was in France in a Forestry Rig'ment," went on Clinch, lowering +his always pleasant voice, "I was to Paris on leave a few days before +they sent us home. + +"I was in the washroom of a caffy--a-cleanin' up for supper, when +dod-bang! into the place comes a-tumblin' a man with two cops pushing +and kickin' him. + +"They didn't see me in there for they locked the door on the man. He was +a swell gent, too, in full dress and silk hat and all like that, and a +opry cloak and white kid gloves, and mustache and French beard. + +"When they locked him up he stood stock still and lit a cigarette, as +cool as ice. Then he begun walkin' around looking for a way to get out; +but there wasn't no way. + +"Then he seen me and over he comes and talks English right away: 'Want +to make a thousand francs, soldier?' sez he in a quick whisper. 'You're +on,' sez I; 'show your dough.' 'Them Flics has went to get the +Commissaire for to frisk me,' sez he. 'If they find this parcel on me I +do twenty years in Noumea. Five years kills anybody out there.' 'What do +you want I should do?' sez I, havin' no love for no cops, French or +other. 'Take this packet and stick it in your overcoat,' sez he. 'Go to +13 roo Quinze Octobre and give it to the concierge for Jose Quintana.' +And he shoves the packet on me and a thousand-franc note. + +"Then he grabs me sudden and pulls open my collar. God, he was strong. + +"'What's the matter with you?' says I. 'Lemme go or I'll mash your mug +flat.' 'Lemme see your identification disc,' he barks. + +"Bein' in Paris for a bat, I had exchanged with my bunkie, Bill Hanson. +'Let him look,' thinks I; and he reads Bill's check. + +"'If you fool me,' says he, 'I'll folly ye and I'll do you in if it +takes the rest of my life. You understand?' 'Sure,' says I, me tongue in +me cheek. 'Bong! Allez vous en!' says he. + +"'How the hell,' sez I, 'do I get out of here?' 'You're a Yankee +soldier. The Flics don't know you were in here. You go and kick on that +door and make a holler.' + +"So I done it good; and a cop opens and swears at me, but when he sees a +Yankee soldier was locked in the wash-room by mistake, he lets me out, +you bet." + +Clinch smiled a thin smile, poured out three fingers of hooch. + +"What else?" asked Smith quietly. + +"Nothing much. I didn't go to no roo Quinze Octobre. But I don't never +want to see that fella Quintana. I've been waiting till it's safe to +sell--what was in that packet." + +"Sell what?" + +"What was in that packet," replied Clinch thickly. + +"What was in it?" + +"Sparklers--since you're so nosey." + +"Diamonds?" + +"And then some. I dunno what they're called. All I know is I'll croak +Quintana if he even turns up askin' for 'em. He frisked somebody. I +frisked him. I'll kill anybody who tries to frisk me." + +"Where do you keep them?" enquired Smith naively. + +Clinch looked at him, very drunk: "None o' your dinged business," he +said very softly. + +The dancing had become boisterous but not unseemly, although all the men +had been drinking too freely. + +Smith closed the pantry bar at midnight, by direction of Eve. Now he +came out into the ballroom and mixed affably with the company, even +dancing with Harvey Chase's sister once--a slender hoyden, all flushed +and dishevelled, with a tireless mania for dancing which seemed to +intoxicate her. + +She danced, danced, danced, accepting any partner offered. But Smith's +skill enraptured her and she refused to let him go when her beau, a late +arrival, one Charlie Berry, slouched up to claim her. + +Smith, always trying to keep Clinch and Quintana's men in view, took no +part in the discussion; but Berry thought he was detaining Lily Chase +and pushed him aside. + +"Hold on, young man!" exclaimed Smith sharply. "Keep your hands to +yourself. If your girl don't want to dance with you she doesn't have +to." + +Some of Quintana's gang came up to listen. Berry glared at Smith. + +"Say," he said, "I seen you before somewhere. Wasn't you in Russia?" + +"What are you talking about?" + +"Yes, you was. You was an officer! What you doing at Clinch's?" + +"What's that?" growled Clinch, shoving his way forward and shouldering +the crowd aside. + +"Who's this man, Mike?" demanded Berry. + +"Well, who do you think he is?" asked Clinch thickly. + +"I think he's gettin' the goods on you, that's what I think," yelled +Berry. + +"G'wan home, Charlie," returned Clinch. "G'wan, all o' you. The dance is +over. Go peaceable, every one. Stop that fiddle!" + +The music ceased. The dance was ended; they all understood that; but +there was grumbling and demands for drinks. + +Clinch, drunk but impassive, herded them through the door out into the +starlight. There was scuffling, horse-play, but no fighting. + +The big Englishman, Harry Beck, asked for accommodations for his party +over night. + +"Naw," said Clinch, "g'wan back to the Inn. I can't bother with you +folks to-night." And as the others, Salzar, Georgiades, Picquet and +Sanchez gathered about to insist, Clinch pushed them all out of doors in +a mass. + +"Get the hell out o' here!" he growled; and slammed the door. + +He stood for a moment with head lowered, drunk, but apparently capable +of reflection. Eve came from the melodeon and laid one slim hand on his +arm. + +"Go to bed, girlie," he said, not looking at her. + +"You also, dad." + +"No.... I got business with Hal Smith." + +Passing Smith, the girl whispered: "You look out for him and undress +him." + +Smith nodded, gravely preoccupied with coming events, and nerving +himself to meet them. + +He had no gun. Clinch's big automatic bulged under his armpit. + +When the girl had ascended the creaking stairs and her door, above, +closed, Clinch walked unsteadily to the door, opened it, fished out his +pistol. + +"Come on out," he said without turning. + +"Where?" enquired Smith. + +Clinched turned, lifted his square head; and the deadly glare in his +eyes left Smith silent. + +"You comin'?" + +"Sure," said Smith quietly. + +But Clinch gave him no chance to close in: it was death even to swerve. +Smith walked slowly out into the starlight, ahead of Clinch--slowly +forward in the luminous darkness. + +"Keep going," came Clinch's quiet voice behind him. And, after they had +entered the woods,--"Bear to the right." + +Smith knew now. The low woods were full of sink-holes. They were headed +for the nearest one. + + * * * * * + +On the edge of the thing they halted. Smith turned and faced Clinch. + +"What's the idea?" he asked without a quaver. + +"Was you in Roosia?" + +"Yes." + +"Was you an officer?" + +"I was." + +"Then you're spyin'. You're a cop." + +"You're mistaken." + +"Ah, don't hand me none like that! You're a State Trooper or a Secret +Service guy, or a plain, dirty cop. And I'm a-going to croak you." + +"I'm not in any service, now." + +"Wasn't you an army officer?" + +"Yes. Can't an officer go wrong?" + +"Soft stuff. Don't feed it to me. I told you too much anyway. I was +babblin' drunk. I'm drunk now, but I got sense. D'you think I'll run +chances of sittin' in State's Prison for the next ten years and leave +Eve out here alone? No. I gotta shoot you, Smith. And I'm a-going to do +it. G'wan and say what you want ... if you think there's some kind o' +god you can square before you croak." + +"If you go to the chair for murder, what good will it do Eve?" asked +Smith. His lips were crackling dry; he moistened them. + +"Sink holes don't talk," said Clinch. "G'wan and square yourself, if +you're the church kind." + +"Clinch," said Smith unsteadily, "if you kill me now you're as good as +dead yourself. Quintana is here." + +"Say, don't hand me that," retorted Clinch. "Do you square yourself or +no?" + +"I tell you Quintana's gang were at the dance to-night--Picquet, Salzar, +Georgiades, Sard, Beck, Jose Sanchez--the one who looks like a French +priest. Maybe he had a beard when you saw him in that cafe +wash-room----" + +"What!" shouted Clinch in sudden fury. "What yeh talkin' about, you poor +dumb dingo! Yeh fixin' to scare me? What do _you_ know about Quintana? +Are you one of Quintana's gang, too? Is that what you're up to, hidin' +out at Star Pond. Come on, now, out with it! I'll have it all out of you +now, Hal Smith, before I plug you----" + +He came lurching forward, swinging his heavy pistol as though he meant +to brain his victim, but he halted after the first step or two and stood +there, a shadowy bulk, growling, enraged, undecided. + +And, as Smith looked at him, two shadows detached themselves from the +trees behind Clinch--silently--silently glided behind--struck in utter +silence. + +Down crashed Clinch, black-jacked, his face in the ooze. His pistol flew +from his hand, struck Smith's leg; and Smith had it at the same instant +and turned it like lightning on the murderous shadows. + +"Hands up! Quick!" he cried, at bay now, and his back to the sink-hole. + +Pistol levelled, he bent one knee, pushed Clinch over on his back, lest +the ooze suffocate him. + +"Now," he said coolly, "what do you bums want of Mike Clinch?" + +"Who are you?" came a sullen voice. "This is none o' your bloody +business. We want Clinch, not you." + +"What do you want of Clinch?" + +"Take your gun off us!" + +"Answer, or I'll let go at you. What do you want of Clinch?" + +"Money. What do you think?" + +"You're here to stick up Clinch?" enquired Smith. + +"Yes. What's that to you?" + +"What has Clinch done to you?" + +"He stuck _us_ up, that's what! Now, are you going to keep out of this?" + +"No." + +"We ain't going to hurt Clinch." + +"You bet you're not. Where's the rest of your gang?" + +"What gang?" + +"Quintana's," said Smith, laughing. A wild exhilaration possessed him. +His flanks and rear were protected by the sink-hole. He had Quintana's +gang--two of them--over his pistol. + +"Turn your backs and sit down," he said. As the shadowy forms hesitated, +he picked up a stick and hurled it at them. They sat down hastily, hands +up, backs toward him. + +"You'll both die where you sit," remarked Smith, "if you yell for help." + +Clinch sighed heavily, stirred, groped on the damp leaves with his +hands. + +"I say," began the voice which Smith identified as Harry Beck's, "if +you'll come in with us on this it will pay you, young man." + +"No," drawled Smith, "I'll go it alone." + +"It can't be done, old dear. You'll see if you try it on." + +"Who'll stop me? Quintana?" + +"Come," urged Beck, "and be a good pal. You can't manage it alone. We've +got all night to make Clinch talk. We know how, too. You'll get your +share----" + +"Oh, stow it," said Smith, watching Clinch, who was reviving. He sat up +presently, and put both hands over his head. Smith touched him silently +on the shoulder and he turned his heavy, square head in a dazed way. +Blood striped his visage. He gazed dully at Smith for a little while, +then, seeming to recollect, the old glare began to light his pale eyes. + +The next instant, however, Beck spoke again, and Clinch turned in +astonishment and saw the two figures sitting there with backs toward +Smith and hands up. + +Clinch stared at the squatting forms, then slowly moved his head and +looked at Smith and his levelled pistol. + +"We know how to make a man squeal," said Harry Beck suddenly. "He'll +talk. We can make Clinch talk, no fear! Leave it to us, old pal. Are you +with us?" He started to look around over his shoulder and Smith hurled +another stick and hit him in the face. + +"Quiet there, Harry," he said. "What's my share if I go in with you?" + +"One sixth, same's we all get." + +"What's it worth?" asked Smith, with a motion of caution toward Clinch. + +"If I say a million you'll tell me I lie. But it's nearer three--or you +can have my share. Is it a go?" + +"You'll not hurt Clinch when he comes to?" + +"We'll make him talk, that's all. It may hurt him some." + +"You won't kill him?" + +"I swear by God----" + +"Wait! Isn't it better to shoot him after he squeals? Here's a lovely +sink-hole handy." + +"Right-o! We'll make him talk first and then shove him in. Are you with +us?" + +"If you turn your head I'll blow the face off you, Harry," said Smith, +cautioning Clinch to silence with a gesture. + +"All right. Only you better make up your mind. That cove is likely to +wake up now at any time," grumbled Beck. + +Clinch looked at Smith. The latter smiled, leaned over, and whispered: + +"Can you walk all right?" + +Clinch nodded. + +"Well, we'd better beat it. Quintana's whole gang is in these woods, +somewhere, hunting for you, and they might stumble on us here, at any +moment." And, to the two men in front: "Lie down flat on your faces. +Don't stir; don't speak; or it's you for the sink-hole.... Lie down, I +tell you! That's it. Don't move till I tell you to." + +Clinch got up from where he was sitting, cast one murderous glance at +the prostrate forms, then followed Smith, noiselessly, over the stretch +of sphagnum moss. + + * * * * * + +When they reached the house they saw Eve standing on the steps in her +night-dress and bare feet, holding a lantern. + +"Daddy," she whimpered, "I was frightened. I didn't know where you had +gone----" + +Clinch put his arm around her, turned his bloody face and looked at +Smith. + +"It's _this_," he said, "that I ain't forgetting, young fella. What you +done for me you done for _her_. + +"I gotta live to make a lady of her. That's why," he added thickly, "I'm +much obliged to you, Hal Smith.... Go to bed, girlie----" + +"You're bleeding, dad?" + +"Aw, a twig scratched me. I been in the woods with Hal. G'wan to bed." + +He went to the sink and washed his face, dried it, kissed the girl, and +gave her a gentle shove toward the stairs. + +"Hal and I is sittin' up talkin' business," he remarked, bolting the +door and all the shutters. + + * * * * * + +When the girl had gone, Clinch went to a closet and brought back two +Winchester rifles, two shot guns, and a box of ammunition. + +"Goin' to see it out with me, Hal?" + +"Sure," smiled Smith. + +"Aw' right. Have a drink?" + +"No." + +"Aw' right. Where'll you set?" + +"Anywhere." + +"Aw' right. Set over there. They may try the back porch. I'll jest set +here a spell, n'then I'll kind er mosey 'round.... Plug the first fella +that tries a shutter, Hal." + +"You bet." + +Clinch came over and held out his hand. + +"You said a face-full that time when you says to me, 'Clinch,' you says, +'Eve _is_ a lady.' ... I gotta fix her up. I gotta be alive to do it.... +That's why I'm greatly obliged to yeh, Hal." + +He took his rifle and walked slowly toward the pantry. + +"You bet," he muttered, "she _is_ a lady, so help me God." + + + + +EPISODE THREE + +ON STAR PEAK + + +I + +Mike Clinch regarded the jewels taken from Jose Quintana as legitimate +loot acquired in war. + +He was prepared to kill anybody who attempted to take the gems from him. + +At the very possibility his ruling passion blazed--his mania to make of +Eve Strayer a grand lady. + +But now, what he had feared for years had happened. Quintana had found +him,--Quintana, after all these years, had discovered the identity and +dwelling place of the obscure American soldier who had robbed him in the +wash-room of a Paris cafe. And Quintana was now in America, here in this +very wilderness, tracking the man who had despoiled him. + + * * * * * + +Clinch, in his shirt-sleeves, carrying a rifle, came out on the log +veranda and sat down to think it over. + +He began to realise that he was likely to have trouble with a man as +cold-blooded and as dogged as himself. + +Nor did he doubt that those with Quintana were desperate men. + +On whom could he count? On nobody unless he paid their hire. None among +the lawless men who haunted his backwoods "hotel" at Star Pond would +lift a finger to help him. Almost any among them would have robbed +him,--murdered him, probably,--if it were known that jewels were hidden +in the house. + +He could not trust Jake Kloon; Leverett was as treacherous as only a +born coward can be; Sid Hone, Harvey Chase, Blommers, Byron +Hastings,--he knew them all too well to trust them,--a sullen, +unscrupulous pack, partly cowardly, always fierce,--as are any creatures +that live furtively, feed only by their wits, and slink through life +just outside the frontiers of law. + +And yet, one of this gang had stood by him--Hal Smith--the man he +himself had been about to slay. + +Clinch got up from the bench where he had been sitting and walked down +to the pond where Hal Smith sat cleaning trout. + +"Hal," he said, "I been figuring some. Quintana don't dare call in the +constables. I can't afford to. Quintana and I've got to settle this on +our own." + +Smith slit open a ten-inch trout, stripped it, flung the entrails out +into the pond, soused the fish in water, and threw it into a milk pan. + +"Whose jewels were they in the beginning?" he enquired carelessly. + +"How do I know?" + +"If you ever found out----" + +"I don't want to. I got them in the war, anyway. And it don't make no +difference how I got 'em; Eve's going to be a lady if I go to the chair +for it. So that's that." + +Smith slit another trout, gutted it, flung away the viscera but laid +back the roe. + +"Shame to take them in October," he remarked, "but people must eat." + +"Same's me," nodded Clinch; "I don't want to kill no one, but Eve she's +gotta be a lady and ride in her own automobile with the proudest." + +"Does Eve know about the jewels?" + +Clinch's pale eyes, which had been roving over the wooded shores of Star +Pond, reverted to Smith. + +"I'd cut my throat before I'd tell her," he said softly. + +"She wouldn't stand for it?" + +"Hal, when you said to me, 'Eve's a lady, by God!' you swallered the +hull pie. That's the answer. A lady don't stand for what you and I don't +bother about." + +"Suppose she learns that you robbed the man who robbed somebody else of +these jewels." + +Clinch's pale eyes were fixed on him: "Only you and me know," he said in +his pleasant voice. + +"Quintana knows. His gang knows." + +Clinch's smile was terrifying. "I guess she ain't never likely to know +nothing, Hal." + +"What do you purpose to do, Mike?" + +"Still hunt." + +"For Quintana?" + +"I might mistake him for a deer. Them accidents is likely, too." + +"If Quintana catches you it will go hard with you, Mike." + +"Sure. I know." + +"He'll torture you to make you talk." + +"You think I'd talk, Hal?" + +Smith looked up into the light-coloured eyes. The pupils were pin +points. Then he went on cleaning fish. + +"Hal?" + +"What?" + +"If they get me,--but no matter; they ain't a-going to get me." + +"Were you going to tell me where those jewels are hidden, Mike?" +enquired the young man, still busy with his fish. He did not look around +when he spoke. Clinch's murderous gaze was fastened on the back of his +head. + +"Don't go to gettin' too damn nosey, Hal," he said in his always +agreeable voice. + +Smith soused all the fish in water again: "You'd better tell somebody if +you go gunning for Quintana." + +"Did I ask your advice?" + +"You did not," said the young man, smiling. + +"All right. Mind your business." + +Smith got up from the water's edge with his pan of trout: + +"That's what I shall do, Mike," he said, laughing. "So go on with your +private war; it's no button off _my_ pants if Quintana gets you." + +He went away toward the ice-house with the trout. Eve Strayer, doing +chamber work, watched the young man from an upper room. + +The girl's instinct was to like Smith,--but that very instinct aroused +her distrust. What was a man of his breeding and education doing at +Clinch's dump? Why was he content to hang around and do chores? A man of +his type who has gone crooked enough to stick up a tourist in an +automobile nourishes higher--though probably perverted--ambitions than a +dollar a day and board. + +She heard Clinch's light step on the uncarpeted stair; went on making +up Smith's bed; and smiled as her step-father came into the room, still +carrying his rifle. + +He had something else in his hand, too,--a flat, thin packet wrapped in +heavy paper and sealed all over with black wax. + +"Girlie," he said, "I want you should do a little errand for me this +morning. If you're spry it won't take long--time to go there and get +back to help with noon dinner." + +"Very well, dad." + +"Go git your pants on, girlie." + +"You want me to go into the woods?" + +"I want you to go to the hole in the rocks under Star Peak and lay this +packet in the hootch cache." + +She nodded, tucked in the sheets, smoothed blanket and pillow with deft +hands, went out to her own room. Clinch seated himself and turned a +blank face to the window. + +It was a sudden decision. He realised now that he couldn't keep the +jewels in his house. War was on with Quintana. The "hotel" would be the +goal for Quintana and his gang. And for Smith, too, if ever temptation +overpowered him. The house was liable to an attempt at robbery any +night, now;--any day, perhaps. It was no place for the packet he had +taken from Jose Quintana. + +Eve came in wearing grey shirt, breeches, and puttees. Clinch gave her +the packet. + +"What's in it, dad?" she asked smilingly. + +"Don't you get nosey, girlie. Come here." + +She went to him. He put his left arm around her. + +"You like me some, don't you, girlie?" + +"You know it, dad." + +"All right. You're all that matters to me ... since your mother went +and died ... after a year.... That was crool, girlie. Only a year. +Well, I ain't cared none for nobody since--only you, girlie." + +He touched the packet with his forefinger: + +"If I step out, that's yours. But I ain't a-going to step out. Put it +with the hootch. You know how to move that keystone?" + +"Yes, dad." + +"And watch out that no game protector and none of that damn +millionaire's wardens see you in the woods. No, nor none o' these here +fancy State Troopers. You gotta watch out _this_ time, Eve. It means +everything to us--to you, girlie--and to me. Go tip-toe. Lay low, coming +and going. Take a rifle." + +Eve ran to her bed-room and returned with her Winchester and belt. + +"You shoot to kill," said Clinch grimly, "if anyone wants to stop you. +But lay low and you won't need to shoot nobody, girlie. G'wan out the +back way; Hal's in the ice house." + + +II + +Slim and straight as a young boy in her grey shirt and breeches, Eve +continued on lightly through the woods, her rifle over her shoulder, her +eyes of gentian-blue always alert. + +The morning turned warm; she pulled off her soft felt hat, shook out her +clipped curls, stripped open the shirt at her snowy throat where sweat +glimmered like melted frost. + +The forest was lovely in the morning sunlight--lovely and still--save +for the blue-jays--for the summer birds had gone and only birds +destined to a long Northern winter remained. + +Now and then, ahead of her, she saw a ruffed grouse wandering in the +trail. These, and a single tiny grey bird with a dreary note +interminably repeated, were the only living things she saw except here +and there a summer-battered butterfly of the Vanessa tribe flitting in +some stray sunbeam. + +The haunting odour of late autumn was in the air--delicately acrid--the +scent of frost-killed brake and ripening wild grasses, of brilliant dead +leaves and black forest loam pungent with mast from beech and oak. + +Eve's tread was light on the moist trail; her quick eyes missed +nothing--not the dainty imprint of deer, fresh made, nor the sprawling +insignia of rambling raccoons--nor the big barred owl huddled on a pine +limb overhead, nor, where the swift gravelly reaches of the brook caught +sunlight, did she miss the swirl and furrowing and milling of painted +trout on the spawning beds. + +Once she took cover, hearing something stirring; but it was only a +yearling buck that came out of the witch-hazel to stare, stamp, then +wheel and trot away, displaying the danger signal. + +In her cartridge-pouch she carried the flat, sealed packet which Clinch +had trusted to her. The sack swayed gently as she strode on, slapping +her left hip at every step; and always her subconscious mind remained on +guard and aware of it; and now and then she dropped her hand to feel of +the pouch and strap. + +The character of the forest was now changing as she advanced. The first +tamaracks appeared, slim, silvery trunks, crowned with the gold of +autumn foliage, outer sentinels of that vast maze of swamp and stream +called Owl Marsh, the stronghold and refuge of forest wild +things--sometimes the sanctuary of hunted men. + +From Star Peak's left flank an icy stream clatters down to the level +floor of the woods, here; and it was here that Eve had meant to quench +her thirst with a mouthful of sweet water. + +But as she approached the tiny ford, warily, she saw a saddled horse +tied to a sapling and a man seated on a mossy log. + +The trappings of horse, the grey-green uniform of the man, left no room +for speculation; a trooper of the State Constabulary was seated there. + +His cap was off; his head rested on his palm. Elbow on knee, he sat +there gazing at the water--watching the slim fish, perhaps, darting up +stream toward their bridal-beds hidden far away at the headwaters. + +A detour was imperative. The girl, from the shelter of a pine, looked +out cautiously at the trooper. The sudden sight of him had merely +checked her; now the recognition of his uniform startled her heart out +of its tranquil rhythm and set the blood burning in her cheeks. + +There was a memory of such a man seared into the girl's very soul;--a +man whose head and shoulders resembled this man's,--who had the same +bright hair, the same slim and powerful body,--and who moved, too, as +this young man moved. + +The trooper stirred, lifted his head to relight his pipe. + +The girl knew him. Her heart stood still; then heart and blood ran riot +and she felt her knees tremble,--felt weak as she rested against the +pine's huge trunk and covered her face with unsteady fingers. + +Until the moment, Eve had never dreamed what the memory of this man +really meant to her,--never dreamed that she had capacity for emotion so +utterly overwhelming. + +Even now confusion, shame, fear were paramount. All she wanted was to +get away,--get away and still her heart's wild beating,--control the +strange tremor that possessed her, recover mind and sense and breath. + +She drew her hand from her eyes and looked upon the man she had +attempted to kill,--upon the young man who had wrestled her off her feet +and handcuffed her,--and who had bathed her bleeding mouth with +sphagnum,--and who had kissed her hands---- + +She was trembling so that she became frightened. The racket of the brook +in his ears safeguarded her in a measure. She bent over nearly double, +her rifle at a trail, and cautiously began the detour. + + * * * * * + +When at length the wide circle through the woods had been safely +accomplished and Eve was moving out through the thickening ranks of +tamarack, her heart, which seemed to suffocate her, quieted; and she +leaned against a shoulder of rock, strangely tired. + +After a while she drew from her pocket _his_ handkerchief, and looked at +it. The square of cambric bore his initials, J. S. Blood from her lip +remained on it. She had not washed out the spots. + +She put it to her lips again, mechanically. A faint odour of tobacco +still clung to it. + +By every law of loyalty, pride, self-respect, she should have held this +man her enemy. Instead, she held his handkerchief against her +lips,--crushed it there suddenly, closing her eyes while the colour +surged and surged through her skin from throat to hair. + +Then, wearily, she lifted her head and looked out into the grey and +empty vista of her life, where the dreary years seemed to stretch like +milestones away, away into an endless waste. + +She put the handkerchief into her pocket, shouldered her rifle, moved on +without looking about her,--a mistake which only the emotion of the +moment could account for in a girl so habituated to caution,--for she +had gone only a few rods before a man's strident voice halted her: + +"_Halte la! Crosse en air!_" + +"Drop that rifle!" came another voice from behind her. "You're covered! +Throw your gun on the ground!" + +She stood as though paralysed. To the right and left she heard people +trampling through the thicket toward her. + +"Down with that gun, damn you!" repeated the voice, breathless from +running. All around her men came floundering and crashing toward her +through the undergrowth. She could see some of them. + +As she stooped to place her rifle on the dead leaves, she drew the flat +packet from her cartridge sack at the same time and slid it deftly under +a rotting log. Then, calm but very pale, she stood upright to face +events. + +The first man wore a red and yellow bandanna handkerchief over the lower +half of his face, pulled tightly across a bony nose. He held a long +pistol nearly parallel to his own body; and when he came up to where she +was standing he poked the muzzle into her stomach. + +She did not flinch; he said nothing; she looked intently into the two +ratty eyes fastened on her over the edge of his bandanna. + +Five other men were surrounding her, but they all wore white masks of +vizard shape, revealing chin and mouth. + +They were different otherwise, also, wearing various sorts and patterns +of sport clothes, brand new, and giving them an odd, foreign appearance. + +What troubled her most was the silence they maintained. The man wearing +the bandanna was the only one who seemed at all a familiar +figure,--merely, perhaps, because he was American in build, clothing, +and movement. + +He took her by the shoulder, turned her around and gave her a shove +forward. She staggered a step or two; he gave her another shove and she +comprehended that she was to keep on going. + +Presently she found herself in a steep, wet deer-trail rising upward +through a gully. She knew that runway. It led up Star Peak. + +Behind her as she climbed she heard the slopping, panting tread of men; +her wind was better than theirs; she climbed lithely upward, setting a +pace which finally resulted in a violent jerk backward,--a savage, +wordless admonition to go more slowly. + +As she climbed she wondered whether she should have fired an alarm shot +on the chance of the State Trooper, Stormont, hearing it. + +But she had thought only of the packet at the moment of surprise. And +now she wondered whether, when freed, she could ever again find that +rotting log. + +Up, up, always up along the wet gully, deep with silt and +frost-splintered rock, she toiled, the heavy gasping of men behind her. +Twice she was jerked to a halt while her escort rested. + +Once, without turning, she said unsteadily: "Who are you? What have I +done to you?" + +There was no reply. + +"What are you going to do to me----" she began again, and was shaken by +the shoulder until silent. + +At last the vast arch of the eastern sky sprang out ahead, where stunted +spruces stood out against the sunshine and the intense heat of midday +fell upon a bare table-land of rock and moss and fern. + +As she came out upon the level, the man behind her took both her arms +and pulled them back and somebody bandaged her eyes. Then a hand closed +on her left arm and, so guided, she stumbled and crept forward across +the rocks for a few moments until her guide halted her and forced her +into a sitting position on a smooth, flat boulder. + +She heard the crunching of heavy feet all around her, whispering made +hoarse by breath exhausted, movement across rock and scrub, retreating +steps. + +For an interminable time she sat there alone in the hot sun, drenched to +the skin in sweat, listening, thinking, striving to find a reason for +this lawless outrage. + +After a long while she heard somebody coming across the rocks, stiffened +as she listened with some vague presentiment of evil. + +Somebody had halted beside her. After a pause she was aware of nimble +fingers busy with the bandage over her eyes. + +At first, when freed, the light blinded her. By degrees she was able to +distinguish the rocky crest of Star Peak, with the tops of tall trees +appearing level with the rocks from depths below. + +Then she turned, slowly, and looked at the man who had seated himself +beside her. + +He wore a white mask over a delicate, smoothly shaven face. + +His soft hat and sporting clothes were dark grey, evidently new. And she +noticed his hands--long, elegantly made, smooth, restless, playing with +a pencil and some sheets of paper on his knees. + +As she met his brilliant eyes behind the mask, his delicate, thin lips +grew tense in what seemed to be a smile--or a soundless sort of laugh. + +"Veree happee," he said, "to make the acquaintance. Pardon my +unceremony, miss, but onlee necissitee compels. Are you, perhaps, a +little rested?" + +"Yes." + +"Ah! Then, if you permit, we proceed with affairs of moment. You will be +sufficiently kind to write down what I say. Yes?" + +He placed paper and pencil in Eve's hand. Without demurring or +hesitation she made ready to write, her mind groping wildly for the +reason of it all. + +"Write," he said, with his silent laugh which was more like the +soundless snarl of a lynx unafraid: + +"To Mike Clinch, my fathaire, from his child, Eve.... I am hostage, +held by Jose Quintana. Pay what you owe him and I go free. + +"For each day delay he sends to you one finger which will be severed +from my right hand----" + +Eve's slender fingers trembled; she looked up at the masked man, stared +steadily into his brilliant eyes. + +"Proceed miss, if you are so amiable," he said softly. + +She wrote on: "--One finger for every day's delay. The whole hand at the +week's end. The other hand then, finger by finger. Then, alas! the right +foot----" + +Eve trembled. + +"Proceed," he said softly. + +She wrote: "If you agree you shall pay what you owe to Jose Quintana in +this manner: you shall place a stick at the edge of the Star Pond where +the Star rivulet flows out. Upon this stick you shall tie a white rag. +At the foot of the stick you shall lay the parcel which contains your +indebt to Jose Quintana. + +"Failing this, by to-night _one finger_ at sunset." + +The man paused: Eve waited, dumb under the surging confusion in her +brain. A sort of incredulous horror benumbed her, through which she +still heard and perceived. + +"Be kind enough to sign it with your name," said the man pleasantly. + +Eve signed. + +Then the masked man took the letter, got up, removed his hat. + +"I am Quintana," he said. "I keep my word. A thousand thanks and +apologies, miss. I trust that your detention may be brief and not too +disagreeable. I place at your feet my humble respects." + +He bowed, put on his hat, and walked quickly away. And she saw him +descend the rocks to the eastward, where the peak slopes. + +When Quintana had disappeared behind the summit scrub and rocks, Eve +slowly stood up and looked about her at the rocky pulpit so familiar. + +There was only one way out. Quintana had gone that way. His men no doubt +guarded it. Otherwise, sheer precipices confronted her. + +She walked to the western edge where a sheet of slippery reindeer moss +clothed the rock. Below the mountain fell away to the valley where she +had been made prisoner. + +She looked out over the vast panorama of wilderness and mountain, range +on range stretching blue to the horizon. She looked down into the depths +of the valley where deep under the flaming foliage of October, +somewhere, a State Trooper was sitting, cheek on hand, beside a +waterfall--or, perhaps, riding slowly through a forest which she might +never gaze upon again. + +There was a noise on the rocks behind her. A masked man came out of the +spruce scrub, laid a blanket on the rocks, placed a loaf of bread, some +cheese, and a tin pail full of water upon it, motioned her, and went +away through the dwarf spruces. + +Eve walked slowly to the blanket. She drank out of the tin pail. Then +she set aside the food, lay down, and buried her quivering face in her +arms. + + * * * * * + +The sun was half way between zenith and horizon when she heard somebody +coming, and rose to a sitting posture. Her visitor was Quintana. + +He came up to her quite close, stood with glittering eyes intent upon +her. + +After a moment he handed her a letter. + +She could scarcely unfold it, she trembled so: + +"Girlie, for God's sake give that packet to Quintana and come on home. +I'm near crazy with it all. What the hell's anything worth beside you +girlie. I don't give a damn for nothing only you, so come on quick. +Dad." + + * * * * * + +After a little while she lifted her eyes to Quintana. + +"So," he said quietly, "you are the little she-fox that has learned +tricks already." + +"What do you mean?" + +"Where is that packet?" + +"I haven't it." + +"Where is it?" + +She shook her head slightly. + +"You had a packet," he insisted fiercely. "Look here! Regard!" and he +spread out a penciled sheet in Clinch's hand: + + "Jose Quintana: + + "You win. She's got that stuff with her. Take your damn junk and + let my girl go. + + "MIKE CLINCH." + +"Well," said Quintana, a thin, strident edge to his tone. + +"My father is mistaken. I haven't any packet." + +The man's visage behind his mask flushed darkly. Without warning or +ceremony he caught Eve by the throat and tore open her shirt. Then, +hissing and cursing and panting with his own violence, he searched her +brutally and without mercy--flung her down and tore off her spiral +puttees and even her shoes and stockings, now apparently beside himself +with fury, puffing, gasping, always with a fierce, nasal sort of whining +undertone like an animal worrying its kill. + +"Cowardly beast!" she panted, fighting him with all her +strength--"filthy, cowardly beast!----" striking at him, wrenching his +grasp away, snatching at the disordered clothing half stripped from her. + +His hunting knife fell clattering and she fought to get it, but he +struck her with his open hand, knocking her down at his feet, and stood +glaring at her with every tooth bared. + +"So," he cried, "I give you ten minutes, make up your mind, tell me what +you do with that packet." + +He wiped the blood from his face where she had struck him. + +"You don't know Jose Quintana. No! You shall make his acquaintance. +Yes!" + +Eve got up on naked feet, quivering from head to foot, striving to +button the grey shirt at her throat. + +"Where?" he demanded, beside himself. + +Her mute lips only tightened. + +"Ver' well, by God!" he cried. "I go make me some fire. You like it, eh? +We shall put one toe in the fire until it burn off. Yes? Eh? How you +like it? Eh?" + +The girl's trembling hands continued busy with her clothing. + +"So!" he said, hoarsely, "you remain dumb! Well, then, in ten minutes +you shall talk!" + +He walked toward her, pushed her savagely aside, and strode on into the +spruce thicket. + +The instant he disappeared Eve caught up the knife he had dropped, knelt +down on the blanket and fell to cutting it into strips. + +The hunting knife was like a razor; the feverish business was +accomplished in a few moments, the pieces knotted, the cord strained in +a desperate test over her knee. + +And now she ran to the precipice where, ten feet below, the top of a +great pine protruded from the gulf. + +On the edge of the abyss was a spruce root. It looked dead, wedged deep +between two rocks; but with all her strength she could not pull it out. + +Sobbing, breathless, she tied her blanket rope to this, threw the other +end over the cliff's edge, and, not giving herself time to think, lay +flat, grasped the knotted line, swung off. + +Knot by knot she went down. Half-way her naked feet brushed the needles. +She looked over her shoulder, behind and down. Then, teeth clenched, she +lowered herself steadily as she had learned to do in the school +gymnasium, down, down, until her legs came astride of a pine limb. + +It bent, swayed, gave with her, letting her sag to a larger limb below. +This she clasped, letting go her rope. + +Already, from the mountain's rocky crest above, she heard excited cries. +Once, on her breakneck descent, she looked up through the foliage of the +pine; and she saw, far up against the sky, a white-masked face looking +over the edge of the precipice. + +But if it were Quintana or another of his people she could not tell. +And, again looking down, she began again the terrible descent. + + * * * * * + +An hour later, Trooper Stormont of the State Constabulary, sat his horse +in amazement to see a ragged, breathless, boyish figure speeding toward +him among the tamaracks, her naked feet splashing through pool and mire +and sphagnum. + +"Good heavens!" he exclaimed as she flung herself against his stirrup, +sobbing, hysterical, and clinging to his knee. + +"Take me back," she stammered, "--take me back to daddy! I can't--go +on--another step----" + +He leaned down, swung her up to his saddle in front, holding her cradled +in his arms. + +"Lie still," he said coolly; "you're all right now." + +For another second he sat looking down at her, at the dishevelled hair, +the gasping mouth,--at the rags clothing her, and at the flat packet +clasped convulsively to her breast. + +Then he spoke in a low voice to his horse, guiding left with one knee. + + + + +EPISODE FOUR + +A PRIVATE WAR + + +I + +When State Trooper Stormont rode up to Clinch's with Eve Strayer lying +in his arms, Mike Clinch strode out of the motley crowd around the +tavern, laid his rifle against a tree, and stretched forth his powerful +hands to receive his stepchild. + +He held her, cradled, looking down at her in silence as the men +clustered around. + +"Eve," he said hoarsely, "be you hurted?" + +The girl opened her sky-blue eyes. + +"I'm all right, dad, ... just tired.... I've got your parcel ... +safe...." + +"To hell with the gol-dinged parcel," he almost sobbed; "--did Quintana +harm you?" + +"No, dad." + +As he carried her to the veranda the packet fell from her cramped +fingers. Clinch kicked it under a chair and continued on into the house +and up the stairs to Eve's bedroom. + +Flat on the bed, the girl opened her drowsy eyes again, unsmiling. + +"Did that dirty louse misuse you?" demanded Clinch unsteadily. "G'wan +tell me, girlie." + +"He knocked me down.... He went away to get fire to make me talk. I cut +up the blanket they gave me and made a rope. Then I went over the cliff +into the big pine below. That was all, dad." + +Clinch filled a tin basin and washed the girl's torn feet. When he had +dried them he kissed them. She felt his unshaven lips trembling, heard +him whimper for the first time in his life. + +"Why the hell didn't you give Quintana the packet?" he demanded. "What +does that count for--what does any damn thing count for against you, +girlie?" + +She looked up at him out of heavy-lidded eyes: "You told me to take good +care of it." + +"It's only a little truck I'd laid by for you," he retorted unsteadily, +"--a few trifles for to make a grand lady of you when the time's ripe. +'Tain't worth a thorn in your little foot to me.... The hull gol-dinged +world full o' money ain't worth that there stone-bruise onto them little +white feet o' yourn, Eve. + +"Look at you now--my God, look at you there, all peaked an' scairt an' +bleedin'--plum tuckered out, 'n' all ragged 'n' dirty----" + +A blaze of fury flared in his small pale eyes: "--And he hit you, too, +did he?--that skunk! Quintana done that to my little girlie, did he?" + +"I don't know if it was Quintana. I don't know who he was, dad," she +murmured drowsily. + +"Masked, wa'n't he?" + +"Yes." + +Clinch's iron visage twitched and quivered. He gnawed his thin lips into +control: + +"Girlie, I gotta go out a spell. But I ain't a-leavin' you alone here. +I'll git somebody to set up with you. You jest lie snug and don't think +about nothin' till I come back." + +"Yes, dad," she sighed, closing her eyes. + +Clinch stood looking at her for a moment, then he went downstairs +heavily, and out to the veranda where State Trooper Stormont still sat +his saddle, talking to Hal Smith. On the porch a sullen crowd of +backwoods riff-raff lounged in silence, awaiting events. + +Clinch called across to Smith: "Hey, Hal, g'wan up and set with Eve a +spell while she's nappin'. Take a gun." + +Smith said to Stormont in a low voice: "Do me a favour, Jack?" + +"You bet." + +"That girl of Clinch's is in real danger if left here alone. But I've +got another job on my hands. Can you keep a watch on her till I return?" + +"Can't you tell me a little more, Jim?" + +"I will, later. Do you mind helping me out now?" + +"All right." + +Trooper Stormont swung out of his saddle and led his horse away toward +the stable. + +Hal Smith went into the bar where Clinch stood, oiling a rifle. + +"G'wan upstairs," he muttered. "I got a private war on. It's me or +Quintana, now." + +"You're going after Quintana?" inquired Smith, carelessly. + +"I be. And I want you should git your gun and set up by Evie. And I want +you should kill any living human son of a slut that comes botherin' +around this here hotel." + +"I'm going after Quintana with you, Mike." + +"B'gosh, you ain't. You're a-goin' to keep watch here." + +"No. Trooper Stormont has promised to stay with Eve. You'll need every +man to-day, Mike. This isn't a deer drive." + +Clinch let his rifle sag across the hollow of his left arm. + +"Did you beef to that trooper?" he demanded in his pleasant, misleading +way. + +"Do you think I'm crazy?" retorted Smith. + +"Well, what the hell----" + +"They all know that some man used your girl roughly. That's all I said +to him--'keep an eye on Eve until we can get back.' And I tell you, +Mike, if we drive Star Peak we won't be back till long after sundown." + +Clinch growled: "I ain't never asked no favours of no State Trooper----" + +"He did you a favour, didn't he? He brought your daughter in." + +"Yes, 'n' he'd jail us all if he got anything on us." + +"Yes; and he'll shoot to kill if any of Quintana's people come here and +try to break in." + +Clinch grunted, peeled off his coat and got into a leather vest +bristling with cartridge loops. + +Trooper Stormont came in the back door, carrying his rifle. + +"Some rough fellow been bothering your little daughter, Clinch?" he +inquired. "The child was nearly all in when she met me out by Owl +Marsh--clothes half torn off her back, bare-foot and bleeding. She's a +plucky youngster. I'll say so, Clinch. If you think the fellow may come +here to annoy her I'll keep an eye on her till you return." + +Clinch went up to Stormont, put his powerful hands on the young fellow's +shoulders. + +After a moment's glaring silence: "You _look_ clean. I guess you be, +too. I wanta tell you I'll cut the guts outa any guy that lays the heft +of a single finger onto Eve." + +"I'd do so, too, if I were you," said Stormont. + +"Would ye? Well, I guess you're a real man, too, even if you're a State +Trooper," growled Clinch. "G'wan up. She's a-nappin'. If she wakes up +you kinda talk pleasant to her. You act kind pleasant and cosy. She +ain't had no ma. You tell her to set snug and ca'm. Then you cook her a +egg if she wants it. There's pie, too. I cal'late to be back by +sundown." + +"Nearer morning," remarked Smith. + +Stormont shrugged. "I'll stay until you show up, Clinch." + +The latter took another rifle from the corner and handed it to Smith +with a loop of ammunition. + +"Come on," he grunted. + +On the veranda he strode up to the group of sullen, armed men who +regarded his advent in expressionless silence. + +Sid Hone was there, and Harvey Chase, and the Hastings boys, and +Cornelius Blommers. + +"You fellas comin'?" inquired Clinch. + +"Where?" drawled Sid Hone. + +"Me an' Hal Smith is cal'kalatin' to drive Star Peak. It ain't a deer, +neither." + +There ensued a grim interval. Clinch's wintry smile began to glimmer. + +"Booze agents or game protectors? Which?" asked Byron Hastings. "They +both look like deer--if a man gits mad enough." + +Clinch's smile became terrifying. "I shell out five hundred dollars for +every _deer_ that's dropped on Star Peak to-day," he said. "And I hope +there won't be no accidents and no mistakin' no _stranger_ for a deer," +he added, wagging his great, square head. + +"Them accidents is liable to happen," remarked Hone, reflectively. + +After another pause: "Where's Jake Kloon?" inquired Smith. + +Nobody seemed to know. + +"He was here when Mike called me into the bar," insisted Smith. "Where'd +he go?" + +Then, of a sudden, Clinch recollected the packet which he had kicked +under a veranda chair. It was no longer there. + +"Any o' you fellas seen a package here on the pyazza?" demanded Clinch +harshly. + +"Jake Kloon, he had somethin'," drawled Chase. "I supposed it was his +lunch. Mebbe 'twas, too." + +In the intense stillness Clinch glared into one face after another. + +"Boys," he said in his softly modulated voice, "I kinda guess there's a +rat amongst us. I wouldn't like for to be that there rat--no, not for a +billion hundred dollars. No, I wouldn't. Becuz that there rat has bit my +little girlie, Eve,--like that there deer bit her up onto Star Peak.... +No, I wouldn't like for to be that there rat. Fer he's a-goin' to die +like a rat, same's that there deer is a-goin' to die like a deer.... +Anyone seen which way Jake Kloon went?" + +"Now you speak of it," said Byron Hastings, "seems like I noticed Jake +and Earl Leverett down by the woods near the pond. I kinda disremembered +when you asked, but I guess I seen them." + +"Sure," said Sid Hone. "Now you mention it, I seen 'em, too. Thinks I to +m'self, they is pickin' them blackberries down to the crick. Yas, I seen +'em." + +Clinch tossed his rifle across his left shoulder. + +"Rats an' deer," he said pleasantly. "Them's the articles we're lookin' +for. Only for God's sake be careful you don't mistake a _man_ for 'em in +the woods." + +One or two men laughed. + + * * * * * + +On the edge of Owl Marsh Clinch halted in the trail, and, as his men +came up, he counted them with a cold eye. + +"Here's the runway and this here hazel bush is my station," he said. +"You fellas do the barkin'. You, Sid Hone, and you, Corny, start drivin' +from the west. Harve, you yelp 'em from the north by Lynx Brook. Jim and +Byron, you get twenty minutes to go 'round to the eastward and drive by +the Slide. And you, Hal Smith,"--he looked around--"where 'n hell be +you, Hal?----" + +Smith came up from the bog's edge. + +"Send 'em out," he said in a low voice. "I've got Jake's tracks in the +bog." + +Clinch motioned his beaters to their duty. "Twenty minutes," he reminded +Hone, Chase, and Blommers, "before you start drivin'." And, to the +Hastings boys: "If you shoot, aim low for their bellies. Don't leave no +blood around. Scrape it up. We bury what we get." + +He and Smith stood looking after the five slouching figures moving away +toward their blind trails. When all had disappeared: + +"Show me Jake's mark," he said calmly. + +Smith led him to the edge of the bog, knelt down, drew aside a branch of +witch-hopple. A man's footprint was plainly visible on the mud. + +"That's Jake," said Clinch slowly. "I know them half-soled boots o' +hisn." He lifted another branch. "There's another man's track!" + +"The other is probably Leverett's." + +"Likely. He's got thin feet." + +"I think I'd better go after them," said Smith, reflectively. + +"They'll plug you, you poor jackass--two o' them like that, and one +a-settin' up to watch out. Hell! Be you tired o' bed an' board?" + +Smith smiled: "Don't you worry, Mike." + +"Why? You think you're that smart? Jest becuz you stuck up a tourist you +think you're cock o' the North Woods--with them two foxes lyin' out for +to snap you up? Hey? Why, you poor dumb thing, Jake runs Canadian hootch +for a livin' and Leverett's a trap thief! What could _you_ do with a +pair o' foxes like that?" + +"Catch 'em," said Smith, coolly. "You mind your business, Mike." + +As he shouldered his rifle and started into the marsh, Clinch dropped a +heavy hand on his shoulder; but the young man shook it off. + +"Shut up," he said sharply. "You've a private war on your hands. So have +I. I'll take care of my own." + +"What's _your_ grievance?" demanded Clinch, surprised. + +"Jake Kloon played a dirty trick on me." + +"When was that?" + +"Not very long ago." + +"I hadn't heard," said Clinch. + +"Well, you hear it now, don't you? All right. All right; I'm going after +him." + +As he started again across the marsh, Clinch called out in a guarded +voice: "Take good care of that packet if you catch them rats. It belongs +to Eve." + +"I'll take such good care of it," replied Smith, "that its proper owner +need not worry." + + +II + +The "proper owner" of the packet was, at that moment, on the Atlantic +Ocean, travelling toward the United States. + +Four other pretended owners of the Grand Duchess Theodorica's jewels, +totally unconscious of anything impending which might impair their +several titles to the gems, were now gathered together in a wilderness +within a few miles of one another. + +Jose Quintana lay somewhere in the forests with his gang, fiercely +planning the recovery of the treasure of which Clinch had once robbed +him. Clinch squatted on his runway, watching the mountain flank with +murderous eyes. It was no longer the Flaming Jewel which mattered. His +master passion ruled him now. Those who had offered violence to Eve must +be reckoned with first of all. The hand that struck Eve Strayer had +offered mortal insult to Mike Clinch. + +As for the third pretender to the Flaming Jewel, Jake Kloon, he was now +travelling in a fox's circle toward Drowned Valley--that shaggy +wilderness of slime and tamarack and depthless bog which touches the +northwest base of Star Peak. He was not hurrying, having no thought of +pursuit. Behind him plodded Leverett, the trap thief, very, very busy +with his own ideas. + +To Leverett's repeated requests that Kloon halt and open the packet to +see what it contained, Kloon gruffly refused. + +"What do we care what's in it?" he said. "We get ten thousand apiece +over our rifles for it from them guys. Ain't it a good enough job for +you?" + +"Maybe we make more if we take what's inside it for ourselves," argued +Leverett. "Let's take a peek, anyway." + +"Naw. I don't want no peek nor nothin'. The ten thousand comes too easy. +More might scare us. Let that guy, Quintana, have what's his'n. All I +ask is my rake-off. You allus was a dirty, thieving mink, Earl. Let's +give him his and take ours and git. I'm going to Albany to live. You bet +I don't stay in no woods where Mike Clinch dens." + +They plodded on, arguing, toward their rendezvous with Quintana's +outpost on the edge of Drowned Valley. + + * * * * * + +The fourth pretender to the pearls, rubies, and great gem called the +Flaming Jewel, stolen from the young Grand Duchess Theodorica of +Esthonia by Jose Quintana, was an unconscious pretender, entirely +innocent of the role assigned her by Clinch. + +For Eve Strayer had never heard where the packet came from or what it +contained. All she knew was that her stepfather had told her that it +belonged to her. And the knowledge left her incurious. + + +III + +Eve slept the sleep of mental and physical exhaustion. Reaction from +fear brings a fatigue more profound than that which follows physical +overstrain. But the healthy mind, like the healthy body, disposes very +thoroughly of toxics which arise from terror and exhaustion. + +The girl slept profoundly, calmly. Her bruised young mind and body left +her undisturbed. There was neither restlessness nor fever. Sleep swept +her with its clean, sweet tide, cleansing the superb youth and health of +her with the most wonderful balm in the Divine pharmacy. + +She awoke late in the afternoon, opened her flower-blue eyes, and saw +State Trooper Stormont sitting by the window, and gazing out. + +Perhaps Eve's confused senses mistook the young man for a vision; for +she lay very still, nor stirred even her little finger. + +After a while Stormont glanced around at her. A warm, delicate colour +stained her skin slowly, evenly, from throat to hair. + +He got up and came over to the bed. + +"How do you feel?" he asked, awkwardly. + +"Where is dad?" she managed to inquire in a steady voice. + +"He won't be back till late. He asked me to stick around--in case you +needed anything----" + +The girl's clear eyes searched his. + +"Trooper Stormont?" + +"Yes, Eve." + +"Dad's gone after Quintana." + +"Is he the fellow who misused you?" + +"I think so." + +"Who is he?" + +"I don't know." + +"Is he your enemy or your stepfather's?" + +But the girl shook her head: "I can't discuss dad's affairs +with--with----" + +"With a State Trooper," smiled Stormont. "That's all right, Eve. You +don't have to." + +There was a pause; Stormont stood beside the bed, looking down at her +with his diffident, boyish smile. And the girl gazed back straight into +his eyes--eyes she had so often looked into in her dreams. + +"I'm to cook you an egg and bring you some pie," he remarked, still +smiling. + +"Did dad say I am to stay in bed?" + +"That was my inference. Do you feel very lame and sore?" + +"My feet burn." + +"You poor kid!... Would you let me look at them? I have a first-aid +packet with me." + +After a moment she nodded and turned her face on the pillow. He drew +aside the cover a little, knelt down beside the bed. + +Then he rose and went downstairs to the kitchen. There was hot water in +the kettle. He fetched it back, bathed her feet, drew out from cut and +scratch the flakes of granite-grit and brier-points that still remained +there. + +From his first-aid packet he took a capsule, dissolved it, sterilized +the torn skin, then bandaged both feet with a deliciously cool salve, +and drew the sheets into place. + +Eve had not stirred nor spoken. He washed and dried his hands and came +back, drawing his chair nearer to the bedside. + +"Sleep, if you feel like it," he said pleasantly. + +As she made no sound or movement he bent over to see if she had already +fallen asleep. And noticed that her flushed cheeks were wet with tears. + +"Are you suffering?" he asked gently. + +"No.... You are so wonderfully kind...." + +"Why shouldn't I be kind?" he said, amused and touched by the girl's +emotion. + +"I tried to shoot you once. That is why you ought to hate me." + +He began to laugh: "Is _that_ what you're thinking about?" + +"I--never can--forget----" + +"Nonsense. We're quits anyway. Do you remember what I did to _you_?" + +He was thinking of the handcuffs. Then, in her vivid blush he read what +she was thinking. And he remembered his lips on her palms. + +He, too, now was blushing brilliantly at memory of that swift, sudden +rush of romantic tenderness which this girl had witnessed that memorable +day on Owl Marsh. + +In the hot, uncomfortable silence, neither spoke. He seated himself +after a while. And, after a while, she turned on her pillow part way +toward him. + +Somehow they both understood that it was friendship which had subtly +filled the interval that separated them since that amazing day. + +"I've often thought of you," he said,--as though they had been +discussing his absence. + +No hour of the waking day that she had not thought of him. But she did +not say so now. After a little while: + +"Is yours a lonely life?" she asked in a low voice. + +"Sometimes. But I love the forest." + +"Sometimes," she said, "the forest seems like a trap that I can't +escape. Sometimes I hate it." + +"Are you lonely, Eve?" + +"As you are. You see I know what the outside world is. I miss it." + +"You were in boarding school and college." + +"Yes." + +"It must be hard for you here at Star Pond." + +The girl sighed, unconsciously: + +"There are days when I--can scarcely--stand it.... The wilderness would +be more endurable if dad and I were all alone.... But even then----" + +"You need young people of your own age,--educated companions----" + +"I need the city, Mr. Stormont. I need all it can give: I'm starving for +it. That's all." + +She turned on her pillow, and he saw that she was smiling faintly. Her +face bore no trace of the tragic truth she had uttered. But the tragedy +was plain enough to him, even without her passionless words of revolt. +The situation of this young, educated girl, aglow with youth, fettered, +body and mind, to the squalor of Clinch's dump, was perfectly plain to +anybody. + +She said, seeing his troubled expression: "I'm sorry I spoke that way." + +"I knew how you must feel, anyway." + +"It seems ungrateful," she murmured. "I love my step-father." + +"You've proven that," he remarked with a dry humour that brought the hot +flush to her face again. + +"I must have been crazy that day," she said. "It scares me to remember +what I tried to do.... What a frightful thing--if I had killed +you----How _can_ you forgive me?" + +"How can you forgive _me_, Eve?" + +She turned her head: "I do." + +"Entirely?" + +"Yes." + +He said,--a slight emotion noticeable in his voice: "Well, I forgave you +before the darned gun exploded in our hands." + +"How _could_ you?" she protested. + +"I was thinking all the while that you were acting as I'd have acted if +anything threatened _my_ father." + +"Were you thinking of _that_?" + +"Yes,--and also how to get hold of you before you shot me." He began to +laugh. + +After a moment she turned her head to look at him, and her smile +glimmered, responsive to his amusement. But she shivered slightly, too. + +"How about that egg?" he inquired. + +"I can get up----" + +"Better keep off your feet. What is there in the pantry? You must be +starved." + +"I could eat a little before supper time," she admitted. "I forgot to +take my lunch with me this morning. It is still there in the pantry on +the bread box, wrapped up in brown paper, just as I left it----" + +She half rose in bed, supported on one arm, her curly brown-gold hair +framing her face: + +"--Two cakes of sugar-milk chocolate in a flat brown packet tied with a +string," she explained, smiling at his amusement. + +So he went down to the pantry and discovered the parcel on the bread box +where she had left it that morning before starting for the cache on Owl +Marsh. + +He brought it to her, placed both pillows upright behind her, stepped +back gaily to admire the effect. Eve, with her parcel in her hands, +laughed shyly at his comedy. + +"Begin on your chocolate," he said. "I'm going back to fix you some +bread and butter and a cup of tea." + +When again he had disappeared, the girl, still smiling, began to untie +her packet, unhurriedly, slowly loosening string and wrapping. + +Her attention was not fixed on what her slender fingers were about. + +She drew from the parcel a flat morocco case with a coat of arms and +crest stamped on it in gold, black, and scarlet. + +For a few moments she stared at the object stupidly. The next moment she +heard Stormont's spurred tread on the stairs; and she thrust the morocco +case and the wrapping under the pillows behind her. + +She looked up at him in a dazed way when he came in with the tea and +bread. He set the tin tray on her bureau and came over to the bedside. + +"Eve," he said, "you look very white and ill. Have you been hurt +somewhere, and haven't you admitted it?" + +She seemed unable to speak, and he took both her hands and looked +anxiously into the lovely, pallid features. + +After a moment she turned her head and buried her face in the pillow, +trembling now in overwhelming realization of what she had endured for +the sake of two cakes of sugar-milk chocolate hidden under a bush in the +forest. + + * * * * * + +For a long while the girl lay there, the feverish flush of tears on her +partly hidden face, her nervous hands tremulous, restless, now seeking +his, convulsively, now striving to escape his clasp--eloquent, uncertain +little hands that seemed to tell so much and yet were telling him +nothing he could understand. + +"Eve, dear," he said, "are you in pain? What is it that has happened to +you? I thought you were all right. You seemed all right----" + +"I am," she said in a smothered voice. "You'll stay here with me, won't +you?" + +"Of course I will. It's just the reaction. It's all over. You're +relaxing. That's all, dear. You're safe. Nothing can harm you now----" + +"Please don't leave me." + +After a moment: "I won't leave you.... I wish I might never leave you." + +In the tense silence that followed her trembling ceased. Then his heart, +heavy, irregular, began beating so that the startled pulses in her body +awoke, wildly responsive. + +Deep emotions, new, unfamiliar, were stirring, awaking, confusing them +both. In a sudden instinct to escape, she turned and partly rose on one +elbow, gazing blindly about her out of tear-marred eyes. + +"I want my room to myself," she murmured in a breathless sort of way, +"--I want you to go out, please----" + +A boyish flush burnt his face. He got up slowly, took his rifle from +the corner, went out, closing the door, and seated himself on the +stairs. + +And there, on guard, sat Trooper Stormont, rigid, unstirring, hour after +hour, facing the first great passion of his life, and stunned by the +impact of its swift and unexpected blow. + + * * * * * + +In her chamber, on the bed's edge, sat Eve Strayer, her deep eyes fixed +on space. Vague emotions, exquisitely recurrent, new born, possessed +her. The whole world, too, all around her seemed to have become misty +and golden and all pulsating with a faint, still rhythm that indefinably +thrilled her pulses to response. + +Passion, full-armed, springs flaming from the heart of man. Woman is +slow to burn. And it was the delicate phantom of passion that Eve gazed +upon, there in her unpainted chamber, her sun-tanned fingers linked +listlessly in her lap, her little feet like bruised white flowers +drooping above the floor. + +Hour after hour she sat there dreaming, staring at the tinted ghost of +Eros, rose-hued, near-smiling, unreal, impalpable as the dusty sunbeam +that slanted from her window, gilding the boarded floor. + + * * * * * + +Three spectres, gliding near, paused to gaze at State Trooper Stormont, +on guard by the stairs. Then they looked at the closed door of Eve's +chamber. + +Then the three spectres, Fate, Chance and Destiny, whispering together, +passed on toward the depths of the sunset forest. + + + + +EPISODE FIVE + +DROWNED VALLEY + + +I + +The soft, bluish forest shadows had lengthened, and the barred sun-rays, +filtering through, were tinged with a rosy hue before Jake Kloon, the +hootch runner, and Earl Leverett, trap thief, came to Drowned Valley. + +They were still a mile distant from the most southern edge of that vast +desolation, but already tamaracks appeared in the beauty of their burnt +gold; little pools glimmered here and there; patches of amber sphagnum +and crimson pitcher-plants became frequent; and once or twice Kloon's +big boots broke through the crust of fallen leaves, soaking him to the +ankles with black silt. + +Leverett, always a coward, had pursued his devious and larcenous way +through the world, always in deadly fear of sink holes. + +His movements and paths were those of a weasel, preferring always solid +ground; but he lacked the courage of that sinuous little beast, though +he possessed all of its ferocity and far more cunning. + +Now trotting lightly and tirelessly in the broad and careless spoor of +Jake Kloon, his narrow, pointed head alert, and every fear-sharpened +instinct tensely observant, the trap-thief continued to meditate murder. + +Like all cowards, he had always been inclined to bold and ruthless +action; but inclination was all that ever had happened. + +Yet, even in his pitiable misdemeanours he slunk through life in terror +of that strength which never hesitates at violence. In his petty +pilfering he died a hundred deaths for every trapped mink or otter he +filched; he heard the game protector's tread as he slunk from the bagged +trout brook or crawled away, belly dragging, and pockets full of snared +grouse. + +Always he had dreamed of the day when, through some sudden bold and +savage stroke, he could deliver himself from a life of fear and live in +a city, grossly, replete with the pleasures of satiation, never again to +see a tree or a lonely lake or the blue peaks which, always, he had +hated because they seemed to spy on him from their sky-blue heights. + +They were spying on him now as he moved lightly, furtively at Jake +Kloon's heels, meditating once more that swift, bold stroke which +forever would free him from all care and fear. + +He looked at the back of Kloon's massive head. One shot would blow that +skull into fragments, he thought, shivering. + +One shot from behind,--and twenty thousand dollars,--or, if it proved a +better deal, the contents of the packet. For, if Quintana's bribery had +dazzled them, what effect might the contents of that secret packet have +if revealed? + +Always in his mean and busy brain he was trying to figure to himself +what that packet must contain. And, to make the bribe worth while, +Leverett had concluded that only a solid packet of thousand-dollar bills +could account for the twenty thousand offered. + +There might easily be half a million in bills pressed together in that +heavy, flat packet. Bills were absolutely safe plunder. But Kloon had +turned a deaf ear to his suggestions,--Kloon, who never entertained +ambitions beyond his hootch rake-off,--whose miserable imagination +stopped at a wretched percentage, satisfied. + +One shot! There was the back of Kloon's bushy head. One shot!--and fear, +which had shadowed him from birth, was at an end forever. Ended, too, +privation,--the bitter rigour of black winters; scorching days; bodily +squalor; ills that such as he endured in a wilderness where, like other +creatures of the wild, men stricken died or recovered by chance alone. + +A single shot would settle all problems for him.... But if he missed? +At the mere idea he trembled as he trotted on, trying to tell himself +that he couldn't miss. No use; always the coward's "if" blocked him; and +the coward's rage,--fiercest of all fury,--ravaged him, almost crazing +him with his own impotence. + + * * * * * + +Tamaracks, sphagnum, crimson pitcher-plants grew thicker; wet woods set +with little black pools stretched away on every side. + +It was still nearly a mile from Drowned Valley when Jake Kloon halted in +his tracks and seated himself on a narrow ridge of hard ground. And +Leverett came lightly up and, after nosing the whole vicinity, sat down +cautiously where Kloon would have to turn partly around to look at him. + +"Where the hell do we meet up with Quintana?" growled Kloon, tearing a +mouthful from a gnawed tobacco plug and shoving the remainder deep into +his trousers pocket. + +"We gotta travel a piece, yet.... Say, Jake, be you a man or be you a +poor dumb critter what ain't got no spunk?" + +Kloon, chewing on his cud, turned and glanced at him. Then he spat, as +answer. + +"If you got the spunk of a chipmunk you and me'll take a peek at that +there packet. I bet you it's thousand-dollar bills--more'n a billion +million dollars, likely." + +Kloon's dogged silence continued. Leverett licked his dry lips. His +rifle lay on his knees. Almost imperceptibly he moved it, moved it +again, froze stiff as Kloon spat, then, by infinitesimal degrees, +continued to edge the muzzle toward Kloon. + +"Jake?" + +"Aw, shut your head," grumbled Kloon disdainfully. "You allus was a +dirty rat--you sneakin' trap robber. Enough's enough. I ain't got no use +for no billion million dollar bills. Ten thousand'll buy me all I +cal'late to need till I'm planted. But you're like a hawg; you ain't +never had enough o' nothin' and you won't never git enough, +neither,--not if you wuz God a'mighty you wouldn't." + +"Ten thousand dollars hain't nothin' to a billion million, Jake." + +Kloon squirted a stream of tobacco at a pitcher plant and filled the +cup. Diverted and gratified by the accuracy of his aim, he took other +shots at intervals. + +Leverett moved the muzzle of his rifle a hair's width to the left, +shivered, moved it again. Under his soggy, sun-tanned skin a +pallor made his visage sickly grey. + +"Jake?" + +No answer. + +"Say, Jake?" + +No notice. + +"Jake, I wanta take a peek at them bills." + +Merely another stream of tobacco soiling the crimson pitcher. + +"I'm--I'm desprit. I gotta take a peek. I gotta--gotta----" + +Something in Leverett's unsteady voice made Kloon turn his head. + +"You gol rammed fool," he said, "what you doin' with your----" + +The loud detonation of the rifle punctuated Kloon's inquiry with a final +period. The big, soft-nosed bullet struck him full in the face, spilling +his brains and part of his skull down his back, and knocking him flat as +though he had been clubbed. + +Leverett, stunned, sat staring, motionless, clutching the rifle from the +muzzle of which a delicate stain of vapour floated and disappeared +through a rosy bar of sunshine. + +In the intense stillness of the place, suddenly the dead man made a +sound; and the trap-robber nearly fainted. + +But it was only air escaping from the slowly collapsing lungs; and +Leverett, ashy pale, shaking, got to his feet and leaned heavily against +an oak tree, his eyes never stirring from the sprawling thing on the +ground. + + * * * * * + +If it were a minute or a year he stood there he could never have +reckoned the space of time. The sun's level rays glimmered ruddy through +the woods. A green fly appeared, buzzing about the dead man. Another +zig-zagged through the sunshine, lacing it with streaks of greenish +fire. Others appeared, whirling, gyrating, filling the silence with +their humming. And still Leverett dared not budge, dared not search the +dead and take from it that for which the dead had died. + +A little breeze came by and stirred the bushy hair on Kloon's head and +fluttered the ferns around him where he lay. + +Two delicate, pure-white butterflies--rare survivors of a native species +driven from civilization into the wilderness by the advent of the +foreign white--fluttered in airy play over the dead man, drifting away +into the woodland at times, yet always returning to wage a fairy combat +above the heap of soiled clothing which once had been a man. + +Then, near in the ferns, the withering fronds twitched, and a red +squirrel sprung his startling alarm, squeaking, squealing, chattering +his opinion of murder; and Leverett, shaking with the shock, wiped icy +sweat from his face, laid aside his rifle, and took his first stiff step +toward the dead man. + +But as he bent over he changed his mind, turned, reeling a little, then +crept slowly out among the pitcher-plants, searching about him as though +sniffing. + +In a few minutes he discovered what he was looking for; took his +bearings; carefully picked his way back over a leafy crust that trembled +under his cautious tread. + +He bent over Kloon and, from the left inside coat pocket, he drew the +packet and placed it inside his own flannel shirt. + +Then, turning his back to the dead, he squatted down and clutched +Kloon's burly ankles, as a man grasps the handles of a wheelbarrow to +draw it after him. + +Dragging, rolling, bumping over roots, Jake Kloon took his last trail +through the wilderness, leaving a redder path than was left by the +setting sun through fern and moss and wastes of pitcher-plants. + +Always, as Leverett crept on, pulling the dead behind him, the floor of +the woods trembled slightly, and a black ooze wet the crust of withered +leaves. + +At the quaking edge of a little pool of water, Leverett halted. The +water was dark but scarcely an inch deep over its black bed of silt. + +Beside this sink hole the trap-thief dropped Kloon. Then he drew his +hunting knife and cut a tall, slim swamp maple. The sapling was about +twenty feet in height. Leverett thrust the butt of it into the pool. +Without any effort he pushed the entire sapling out of sight in the +depthless silt. + +He had to manoeuvre very gingerly to dump Kloon into the pool and keep +out of it himself. Finally he managed it. + +To his alarm, Kloon did not sink far. He cut another sapling and pushed +the body until only the shoes were visible above the silt. + +These, however, were very slowly sinking, now. Bubbles rose, dully +iridescent, floated, broke. Strings of blood hung suspended in the +clouding water. + +Leverett went back to the little ridge and covered with dead leaves the +spot where Kloon had lain. There were broken ferns, but he could not +straighten them. And there lay Kloon's rifle. + +For a while he hesitated, his habits of economy being ingrained; but he +remembered the packet in his shirt, and he carried the rifle to the +little pool and shoved it, muzzle first, driving it downward, out of +sight. + +As he rose from the pool's edge, somebody laid a hand on his shoulder. + +That was the most real death that Leverett ever had died. + + +II + +A coward dies many times before Old Man Death really gets him. + +The swimming minutes passed; his mind ceased to live for a space. Then, +as through the swirling waters of the last dark whirlpool, a dulled roar +of returning consciousness filled his being. + +Somebody was shaking him, shouting at him. Suddenly instinct resumed its +function, and he struggled madly to get away from the edge of the +sink-hole--fought his way, blindly, through tangled undergrowth toward +the hard ridge. No human power could have blocked the frantic creature +thrashing toward solid ground. + +But there Quintana held him in his wiry grip. + +"Fool! Mule! Crazee fellow! What you do, eh? For why you make jumps like +rabbits! Eh? You expec' Quintana? Yes? Alors!" + +Leverett, in a state of collapse, sagged back against an oak tree. +Quintana's nervous grasp fell from his arms and they swung, dangling. + +"What you do by that pond-hole? Eh? I come and touch you, and, my +God!--one would think I have stab you. Such an ass!" + +The sickly greenish hue changed in Leverett's face as the warmer tide +stirred from its stagnation. He lifted his head and tried to look at +Quintana. + +"Where Jake Kloon?" demanded the latter. + +At that the weasel wits of the trap-robber awoke to the instant crisis. +Blood and pulse began to jump. He passed one dirty hand over his mouth +to mask any twitching. + +"Where my packet, eh?" inquired Quintana. + +"Jake's got it." Leverett's voice was growing stronger. His small eyes +switched for an instant toward his rifle, where it stood against a tree +behind Quintana. + +"Where is he, then, this Jake?" repeated Quintana impatiently. + +"He got bogged." + +"Bogged? What is that, then?" + +"He got into a sink-hole." + +"What!" + +"That's all I know," said Leverett, sullenly. "Him and me was travellin' +hell-bent to meet up with you,--Jake, he was for a short cut to Drowned +Valley,--but 'no,' sez I, 'gimme a good hard ridge an' a long deetoor +when there's sink-holes into the woods----'" + +"What is it the talk you talk to me?" asked Quintana, whose perplexed +features began to darken. "Where is it, my packet?" + +"I'm tellin' you, ain't I?" retorted the other, raising a voice now +shrill with the strain of this new crisis rushing so unexpectedly upon +him: "I heard Jake give a holler. 'What the hell's the trouble?' I +yells. Then he lets out a beller, 'Save me!' he screeches, 'I'm into a +sink-hole! The quicksand's got me,' sez he. So I drop my rifle, I +did,--there she stands against that birch sapling!--and I run down into +them there pitcher-plants. + +"'Whar be ye!' I yells. Then I listens, and don't hear nothin' only a +kina wallerin' noise an' a slobber like he was gulpin' mud. + +"Then I foller them there sounds and I come out by that sink-hole. The +water was a-shakin' all over it but Jake he had went down plum out o' +sight. T'want no use. I cut a sapling an' I poked down. I was sick and +scared like, so when you come up over the moss, not makin' no noise, an' +grabbed me--God!--I guess you'd jump, too." + +Quintana's dark, tense face was expressionless when Leverett ventured to +look at him. Like most liars he realised the advisability of looking his +victim straight in the eyes. This he managed to accomplish, sustaining +the cold intensity of Quintana's gaze as long as he deemed it necessary. +Then he started toward his rifle. Quintana blocked his way. + +"Where my packet?" + +"Gol ram it! Ain't I told you? Jake had it in his pocket." + +"My packet?" + +"Yaas, yourn." + +"My packet, it is down in thee sink 'ole?" + +"You think I'm lyin'?" blustered Leverett, trying to move around +Quintana's extended arm. The arm swerved and clutched him by the collar +of his flannel shirt. + +"Wait, my frien'," said Quintana in a soft voice. "You shall explain to +me some things before you go." + +"Explain what!--you gol dinged----" + +Quintana shook him into speechlessness. + +"Listen, my frien'," he continued with a terrifying smile, "I mus' ask +you what it was, that gun-shot, which I hear while I await at Drown' +Vallee. Eh? Who fire a gun?" + +"I ain't heard no gun," replied Leverett in a strangled voice. + +"You did not shoot? No?" + +"No!--damn it all----" + +"And Jake? He did not fire?" + +"No, I tell yeh----" + +"Ah! Someone lies. It is not me, my frien'. No. Let us examine your +rifle----" + +Leverett made a rush for the gun; Quintana slung him back against the +oak tree and thrust an automatic pistol against his chin. + +"Han's up, my frien'," he said gently, "--up! high up!--or someone will +fire another shot you shall never hear.... So!... Now I search the +other pocket.... So!... Still no packet. Bah! Not in the pants, +either? Ah, bah! But wait! Tiens! What is this you hide inside your +shirt----?" + +"I was jokin'," gasped Leverett; "--I was jest a-goin' to give it to +you----" + +"Is that my packet?" + +"Yes. It was all in fun; I wan't a-going to steal it----" + +Quintana unbuttoned the grey wool shirt, thrust in his hand and drew +forth the packet for which Jake Kloon had died within the hour. + +Suddenly Leverett's knees gave way and he dropped to the ground, +grovelling at Quintana's feet in an agony of fright: + +"Don't hurt me," he screamed, "--I didn't meant no harm! Jake, he wanted +me to steal it. I told him I was honest. I fired a shot to scare him, +an' he tuk an' run off! I wan't a-goin' to steal it off you, so help me +God! I was lookin' for you--as God is my witness----" + +He got Quintana by one foot. Quintana kicked him aside and backed away. + +"Swine," he said, calmly inspecting the whimpering creature who had +started to crawl toward him. + +He hesitated, lifted his automatic, then, as though annoyed by +Leverett's deafening shriek, shrugged, hesitated, pocketed both pistol +and packet, and turned on his heel. + +By the birch sapling he paused and picked up Leverett's rifle. Something +left a red smear on his palm as he worked the ejector. It was blood. + +Quintana gazed curiously at his soiled hand. Then he stooped and picked +up the empty cartridge case which had been ejected. And, as he stooped, +he noticed more blood on a fallen leaf. + +With one foot, daintily as a game-cock scratches, he brushed away the +fallen leaves, revealing the mess underneath. + +After he had contemplated the crimson traces of murder for a few +moments, he turned and looked at Leverett with faint curiosity. + +"So," he said in his leisurely, emotionless way, "you have fight with my +frien' Jake for thee packet. Yes? Ver' amusing." He shrugged his +indifference, tossed the rifle to his shoulder and, without another +glance at the cringing creature on the ground, walked away toward +Drowned Valley, unhurriedly. + + +III + +When Quintana disappeared among the tamaracks, Leverett ventured to rise +to his knees. As he crouched there, peering after Quintana, a man came +swiftly out of the forest behind him and nearly stumbled over him. + +Recognition was instant and mutual as the man jerked the trap-robber to +his feet, stifling the muffled yell in his throat. + +"I want that packet you picked up on Clinch's veranda," said Hal Smith. + +"M-my God," stammered Leverett, "Quintana just took it off me. He ain't +been gone a minute----" + +"You lie!" + +"I ain't lyin'. Look at his foot-marks there in the mud!" + +"Quintana!" + +"Yaas, Quintana! He tuk my gun, too----" + +"Which way!" whispered Smith fiercely, shaking Leverett till his jaws +wagged. + +"Drowned Valley.... Lemme loose!--I'm chokin'----" + +Smith pushed him aside. + +"You rat," he said, "if you're lying to me I'll come back and settle +your affair. And Kloon's, too!" + +"Quintana shot Jake and stuck him into a sink-hole!" snivelled Leverett, +breaking down and sobbing; "--oh, Gawd--Gawd--he's down under all that +black mud with his brains spillin' out----" + +But Smith was already gone, running lightly along the string of +footprints which led straight away across slime and sphagnum toward the +head of Drowned Valley. + +In the first clump of hard-wood trees Smith saw Quintana. He had halted +and he was fumbling at the twine which bound a flat, paper-wrapped +packet. + +He did not start when Smith's sharp warning struck his ear: "Don't move! +I've got you over my rifle, Quintana!" + +Quintana's fingers had instantly ceased operations. Then, warily, he +lifted his head and looked into the muzzle of Smith's rifle. + +"Ah, bah!" he said tranquilly. "There were three of you, then." + +"Lay that packet on the ground." + +"My frien'----" + +"Drop it or I'll drop _you_!" + +Quintana carefully placed the packet on a bed of vivid moss. + +"Now your gun!" continued Smith. + +Quintana shrugged and laid Leverett's rifle beside the packet. + +"Kneel down with your hands up and your back toward me!" said Smith. + +"My frien'----" + +"Down with you!" + +Quintana dropped gracefully into the humiliating attitude popularly +indicative of prayerful supplication. Smith walked slowly up behind him, +relieved him of two automatics and a dirk. + +"Stay put," he said sharply, as Quintana started to turn his head. Then +he picked up the packet with its loosened string, slipped it into his +side pocket, gathered together the arsenal which had decorated Quintana, +and so, loaded with weapons, walked away a few paces and seated himself +on a fallen log. + +Here he pocketed both automatics, shoved the sheathed dirk into his +belt, placed the captured rifle handy, after examining the magazine, and +laid his own weapon across his knees. + +"You may turn around now, Quintana," he said amiably. + +Quintana lowered his arms and started to rise. + +"Sit down!" said Smith. + +Quintana seated himself on the moss, facing Smith. + +"Now, my gay and nimble thimble-rigger," said Smith genially, "while I +take ten minutes' rest we'll have a little polite conversation. Or, +rather, a monologue. Because I don't want to hear anything from you." + +He settled himself comfortably on the log: + +"Let me assemble for you, Senor Quintana, the interesting history of the +jewels which so sparklingly repose in the packet in my pocket. + +"In the first place, as you know, Monsieur Quintana, the famous Flaming +Jewel and the other gems contained in this packet of mine, belonged to +Her Highness the Grand Duchess Theodorica of Esthonia. + +"Very interesting. More interesting still--along comes Don Jose Quintana +and his celebrated gang of international thieves, and steals from the +Grand Duchess of Esthonia the Flaming Jewel and all her rubies, emeralds +and diamonds. Yes?" + +"Certainly," said Quintana, with a polite inclination of acknowledgment. + +"Bon! Well, then, still more interesting to relate, a gentleman named +Clinch helps himself to these famous jewels. How very careless of you, +Mr. Quintana." + +"Careless, certainly," assented Quintana politely. + +"Well," said Smith, laughing, "Clinch was more careless still. The +robber baron, Sir Jacobus Kloon, swiped,--as Froissart has it,--the +Esthonian gems, and, under agreement to deliver them to you, I suppose, +thought better of it and attempted to abscond. Do you get me, Herr +Quintana?" + +"Gewiss." + +"Yes, and you got Jake Kloon, I hear," laughed Smith. + +"No." + +"Didn't you kill Kloon?" + +"No." + +"Oh, pardon. The mistake was natural. You merely robbed Kloon and +Leverett. You should have killed them." + +"Yes," said Quintana slowly, "I should have. It was my mistake." + +"Signor Quintana, it is human for the human crook to err. Sooner or +later he always does it. And then the Piper comes around holding out two +itching palms." + +"Mr. Smith," said Quintana pleasantly, "you are an unusually agreeable +gentleman for a thief. I regret that you do not see your way to an +amalgamation of interests with myself." + +"As you say, Quintana mea, I am somewhat unusual. For example, what do +you suppose I am going to do with this packet in my pocket?" + +"Live," replied Quintana tersely. + +"Live, certainly," laughed Smith, "but not on the proceeds of this +coup-de-main. Non pas! I am going to return this packet to its rightful +owner, the Grand Duchess Theodorica of Esthonia. And what do you think +of that, Quintana?" + +Quintana smiled. + +"You do not believe me?" inquired Smith. + +Quintana smiled again. + +"Allons, bon!" exclaimed Smith, rising. "It's the unusual that happens +in life, my dear Quintana. And now we'll take a little inventory of +these marvellous gems before we part.... Sit very, very still, +Quintana,--unless you want to lie stiller still.... I'll let you take a +modest peep at the Flaming Jewel----" busily unwrapping the +packet--"just one little peep, Quintana----" + +He unwrapped the paper. Two cakes of sugar-milk chocolate lay within. + +Quintana turned white, then deeply, heavily red. Then he smiled in +ghastly fashion: + +"Yes," he said hoarsely, "as you have just said, sir, it is usually the +unusual which happens in the world." + + + + +EPISODE SIX + +THE JEWEL AFLAME + + +I + +Mike Clinch and his men "drove" Star Peak, and drew a blanket covert. + +There was a new shanty atop, camp debris, plenty of signs of recent +occupation everywhere,--hot embers in which offal still smouldered, +bottles odorous of claret dregs, and an aluminum culinary outfit, +unwashed, as though Quintana and his men had departed in haste. + +Far in the still valley below, Mike Clinch squatted beside the runway he +had chosen, a cocked rifle across his knees. + +The glare in his small, pale eyes waned and flared as distant sounds +broke the forest silence, grew vague, died out,--the fairy clatter of a +falling leaf, the sudden scurry of a squirrel, a feathery rustle of +swift wings in play or combat, the soft crash of a rotten bough sagging +earthward to enrich the soil that grew it. + +And, as Clinch squatted there, murderously intent, ever the fixed +obsession burned in his fever brain, stirring his thin lips to incessant +muttering,--a sort of soundless invocation, part chronicle, part prayer: + +"O God A'mighty, in your big, swell mansion up there, all has went +contrary with me sence you let that there damn millionaire, Harrod, come +into this here forest.... He went and built unto hisself an +habitation, and he put up a wall of law all around me where I was +earnin' a lawful livin' in Thy nice, clean wilderness.... And now comes +this here Quintana and robs my girlie.... I promised her mother I'd +make a lady of her little Eve.... I loved my wife, O Lord.... Once she +showed me a piece in the Bible,--I ain't never found it sence,--but it +said: 'And the woman she fled into the wilderness where there was a +place prepared for her of God.' ... That's what _you_ wrote into your +own Bible, O God! You can't go back on it. I seen it. + +"And now I wanta to ask, What place did you prepare for my Eve? What +spot have you reference to? You didn't mean my 'Dump,' did you? Why, +Lord, that ain't no place for no lady.... And now Quintana has went and +robbed me of what I'd saved up for Eve.... Does that go with Thee, O +Lord? No, it don't. And it don't go with me, neither. I'm a-goin' to git +Quintana. Then I'm a-goin' to git them two minks that robbed my +girlie,--I am!... Jake Kloon, he done it in cahoots with Earl Leverett; +and Quintana set 'em on. And they gotta die, O Lord of Israel, them +there Egyptians is about to hop the twig.... I ain't aimin' to be mean +to nobody. I buy hootch of them that runs it. I eat mountain mutton in +season and out. I trade with law-breakers, I do. But, Lord, I gotta get +my girlie outa here; and Harrod he walled me in with the chariots and +spears of Egypt, till I nigh went wild.... And now comes Quintana, and +here I be a-lyin' out to get him so's my girlie can become a lady, +same's them fine folks with all their butlers and automobiles and +what-not----" + +A far crash in the forest stilled his twitching lips and stiffened every +iron muscle. + +As he lifted his rifle, Sid Hone came into the glade. + +"Yahoo! Yahoo!" he called. "Where be you, Mike?" + +Clinch slowly rose, grasping his rifle, his small, grey eyes ablaze. + +"Where's Quintana?" he demanded. + +"H'ain't you seen nobody?" + +"No." + +In the intense silence other sounds broke sharply in the sunset forest; +Harvey Chase's halloo rang out from the rocks above; Blommers and the +Hastings boys came slouching through the ferns. + +Byron Hastings greeted Clinch with upflung gun: "Me and Jim heard a shot +away out on Drowned Valley," he announced. "Was you out that way, +Mike?" + +"No." + +One by one the men who had driven Star Peak lounged up in the red sunset +light, gathering around Clinch and wiping the sweat from sun-reddened +faces. + +"Someone's in Drowned Valley," repeated Byron. "Them minks slid off'n +Star in a hurry, I reckon, judgin' how they left their shanty. Phew! It +stunk! They had French hootch, too." + +"Mebby Leverett and Kloon told 'em we was fixin' to visit them," +suggested Blommers. + +"They didn't know," said Clinch. + +"Where's Hal Smith?" inquired Hone. + +Clinch made no reply. Blommers silently gnawed a new quid from the +remains of a sticky plug. + +"Well," inquired Jim Hastings finally, "do we quit, Mike, or do we +still-hunt in Drowned Valley?" + +"Not me, at night," remarked Blommers drily. + +"Not amongst them sink-holes," added Hone. + +Suddenly Clinch turned and stared at him. Then the deadly light from his +little eyes shone on the others one by one. + +"Boys," he said, "I gotta get Quintana. I can't never sleep another wink +till I get that man. Come on. Act up like gents all. Let's go." + +Nobody stirred. + +"Come on," repeated Clinch softly. But his lips shrank back, twitching. + +As they looked at him they saw his teeth. + +"All right, all right," growled Hone, shouldering his rifle with a jerk. + +The Hastings boys, young and rash, shuffled into the trail. Blommers +hesitated, glanced askance at Clinch, and instantly made up his mind to +take a chance with the sink-holes rather than with Clinch. + +"God A'mighty, Mike, what be you aimin' to do?" faltered Harvey. + +"I'm aimin' to stop the inlet and outlet to Drowned Valley, Harve," +replied Clinch in his pleasant voice. "God is a-goin' to deliver +Quintana into my hands." + +"All right. What next?" + +"Then," continued Clinch, "I cal'late to set down and wait." + +"How long?" + +"Ask God, boys. I don't know. All I know is that whatever is livin' in +Drowned Valley at this hour has gotta live and die there. For it can't +never live to come outen that there morass walkin' onto two legs like a +real man." + +He moved slowly along the file of sullen men, his rifle a-trail in one +huge fist. + +"Boys," he said, "I got first. There ain't no sink-hole deep enough to +drowned me while Eve needs me.... And my little girlie needs me bad.... +After she gits what's her'n, then I don't care no more...." He looked up +into the sky, where the last ashes of sunset faded from the zenith.... +"Then I don't care," he murmured. "Like's not I'll creep away like some +shot-up critter, n'kinda find some lone, safe spot, n'kinda fix me f'r +a long nap.... I guess that'll be the way ... when Eve's a lady down to +Noo York 'r'som'ers----" he added vaguely. + +Then, still looking up at the fading heavens, he moved forward, head +lifted, silent, unhurried, with the soundless, stealthy, and certain +tread of those who walk unseeing and asleep. + + +II + +Clinch had not taken a dozen strides before Hal Smith loomed up ahead in +the rosy dusk, driving in Leverett before him. + +An exclamation of fierce exultation burst from Clinch's thin lips as he +flung out one arm, indicating Smith and his clinking prisoner: + +"Who was that gol-dinged catamount that suspicioned Hal? I wa'nt worried +none, neither. Hal's a gent. Mebbe he sticks up folks, too, but he's a +gent. And gents is honest or they ain't gents." + +Smith came up at his easy, tireless gait, hustling Leverett along with +prods from gun-butt or muzzle, as came handiest. + +The prisoner turned a ghastly visage on Clinch, who ignored him. + +"Got my packet, Hal?" he demanded. + +Smith poked Leverett with his rifle: "Tune up," he said; "tell Clinch +your story." + +As a caged rat looks death in the face, his ratty wits working like +lightning and every atom of cunning and ferocity alert for attack or +escape, so the little, mean eyes of Earl Leverett became fixed on Clinch +like two immobile and glassy beads of jet. + +"G'wan," said Clinch softly, "spit it out." + +"Jake done it," muttered Leverett, thickly. + +"Done what?" + +"Stole that there packet o' yourn--whatever there was into it." + +"Who put him up to it?" + +"A fella called Quintana." + +"What was there in it for Jake?" inquired Clinch pleasantly. + +"Ten thousand." + +"How about you?" + +"I told 'em I wouldn't touch it. Then they pulled their guns on me, and +I was scared to squeal." + +"So that was the way?" asked Clinch in his even, reassuring voice. + +Leverett's eyes travelled stealthily around the circle of men, then +reverted to Clinch. + +"I dassn't touch it," he said, "but I dassn't squeal.... I was huntin' +onto Drowned Valley when Jake meets up with me." + +"'I got the packet,' he sez, 'and I'm a-going to double criss-cross +Quintana, I am, and beat it. Don't you wish you was whacks with me?' + +"'No,' sez I, 'honesty is my policy, no matter what they tell about me. +S'help me God, I ain't never robbed no trap and I ain't no skin thief, +whatever lies folks tell. All I ever done was run a little hootch, +same's everybody.'" + +He licked his lips furtively, his cold, bright eyes fastened on Clinch. + +"G'wan, Earl," nodded the latter, "heave her up." + +"That's all. I sez, 'Good-bye, Jake. An' if you heed my warnin', +ill-gotten gains ain't a-going to prosper nobody.' That's what I said to +Jake Kloon, the last solemn words I spoke to that there man now in his +bloody grave----" + +"Hey?" demanded Clinch. + +"That's where Jake is," repeated Leverett. "Why, so help me, I wa'nt +gone ten yards when, bang! goes a gun, and I see this here Quintana come +outen the bush, I do, and walk up to Jake and frisk him, and Jake still +a-kickin' the moss to slivers. Yessir, that's what I seen." + +"G'wan." + +"Yessir.... 'N'then Quintana he shoved Jake into a sink-hole. Thaswot I +seen with my two eyes. Yessir. 'N'then Quintana he run off, 'n'I jest +set down in the trail, I did; 'n'then Hal come up and acted like I had +stole your packet, he did; 'n'then I told him what Quintana done. +'N'Hal, he takes after Quintana, but I don't guess he meets up with him, +for he come back and ketched holt o' me, 'n'he druv me in like I was a +caaf, he did. 'N'here I be." + +The dusk in the forest had deepened so that the men's faces had become +mere blotches of grey. + +Smith said to Clinch: "That's his story, Mike. But I preferred he should +tell it to you himself, so I brought him along.... Did you drive Star +Peak?" + +"There wa'nt nothin' onto it," said Clinch very softly. Then, of a +sudden, his shadowy visage became contorted and he jerked up his rifle +and threw a cartridge into the magazine. + +"You dirty louse!" he roared at Leverett, "you was into this, too, +a-robbin' my little Eve----" + +"Run!" yelled somebody, giving Leverett a violent shove into the woods. + +In the darkness and confusion, Clinch shouldered his way out of the +circle and fired at the crackling noise that marked Leverett's +course,--fired again, lower, and again as a distant crash revealed the +frenzied flight of the trap-robber. After he had fired a fourth shot, +somebody struck up his rifle. + +"Aw," said Jim Hastings, "that ain't no good. You act up like a kid, +Mike. 'Tain't so far to Ghost Lake, n'them Troopers might hear you." + +After a silence, Clinch spoke, his voice heavy with reaction: + +"Into that there packet is my little girl's dower. It's all I got to +give her. It's all she's got to make her a lady. I'll kill any man that +robs her or that helps rob her. 'N'that's that." + +"Are you going on after Quintana?" asked Smith. + +"I am. 'N'these fellas are a-going with me. N' I want you should go back +to my Dump and look after my girlie while I'm gone." + +"How long are you going to be away?" + +"I dunno." + +There was a silence. Then, + +"All right," said Smith, briefly. He added: "Look out for sink-holes, +Mike." + +Clinch tossed his heavy rifle to his shoulder: "Let's go," he said in +his pleasant, misleading way, "--and I'll shoot the guts outa any fella +that don't show up at roll call." + + +III + +For its size there is no fiercer animal than a rat. + +Rat-like rage possessed Leverett. In his headlong flight through the +dusk, fear, instead of quenching, added to his rage; and he ran on and +on, crashing through the undergrowth, made wilder by the pain of vicious +blows from branches which flew back and struck him in the dark. + +Thorns bled him; unseen logs tripped him; he heard Clinch's bullets +whining around him; and he ran on, beginning to sob and curse in a +frenzy of fury, fear, and shame. + +Shots from Clinch's rifle ceased; the fugitive dropped into a heavy, +shuffling walk, slavering, gasping, gesticulating with his weaponless +fists in the darkness. + +"Gol ram ye, I'll fix ye!" he kept stammering in his snarling, jangling +voice, broken by sobs. "I'll learn ye, yeh poor danged thing, gol ram +ye----" + +An unseen limb struck him cruelly across the face, and a moose-bush +tripped him flat. Almost crazed, he got up, yelling in his pain, one +hand wet and sticky from blood welling up from his cheek-bone. + +He stood listening, infuriated, vindictive, but heard nothing save the +panting, animal sounds in his own throat. + +He strove to see in the ghostly obscurity around him, but could make out +little except the trees close by. + +But wood-rats are never completely lost in their native darkness; and +Leverett presently discovered the far stars shining faintly through +rifts in the phantom foliage above. + +These heavenly signals were sufficient to give him his directions. Then +the question suddenly came, _which_ direction? + +To his own shack on Stinking Lake he dared not go. He tried to believe +that it was fear of Clinch that made him shy of the home shanty; but, in +his cowering soul, he knew it was fear of another kind--the deep, +superstitious horror of Jake Kloon's empty bunk--the repugnant sight of +Kloon's spare clothing hanging from its peg--the dead man's shoes---- + +No, he could not go to Stinking Lake and sleep.... And wake with the +faint stench of sulphur in his throat.... And see the worm-like leeches +unfolding in the shallows, and the big, reddish water-lizards, livid as +skinned eels, wriggling convulsively toward their sunless lairs.... + +At the mere thought of his dead bunk-mate he sought relief in vindictive +rage--stirred up the smouldering embers again, cursed Clinch and Hal +Smith, violently searching in his inflamed brain some instant vengeance +upon these men who had driven him out from the only place on earth where +he knew how to exist--the wilderness. + +All at once he thought of Clinch's step-daughter. The thought instantly +scared him. Yet--what a revenge!--to strike Clinch through the only +creature he cared for in all the world!... What a revenge!... Clinch +was headed for Drowned Valley. Eve Strayer was alone at the Dump.... +Another thought flashed like lightning across his turbid mind;--_the +packet_! + +Bribed by Quintana, Jake Kloon, lurking at Clinch's door, had heard him +direct Eve to take a packet to Owl Marsh, and had notified Quintana. + +Wittingly or unwittingly, the girl had taken a packet of sugar-milk +chocolate instead of the priceless parcel expected. + +Again, carried in, exhausted, by a State Trooper, Jake Kloon had been +fooled; and it was the packet of sugar-milk chocolate that Jake had +purloined from the veranda where Clinch kicked it. For two cakes of +chocolate Kloon had died. For two cakes of chocolate he, Earl Leverett, +had become a man-slayer, a homeless fugitive in peril of his life. + +He stood licking his blood-dried lips there in the darkness, striving to +hatch courage out of the dull fury eating at a coward's heart. + +Somewhere in Clinch's Dump was the packet that would make him rich.... +Here was his opportunity. He had only to dare; and pain and poverty and +fear--above all else _fear_--would end forever!... + + * * * * * + +When, at last, he came out to the edge of Clinch's clearing, the dark +October heavens were but a vast wilderness of stars. + +Star Pond, set to its limpid depths with the heavenly gems, glittered +and darkled with its million diamond incrustations. The humped-up lump +of Clinch's Dump crouched like some huge and feeding night-beast on the +bank, ringed by the solemn forest. + +There was a kerosene lamp burning in Eve Strayer's rooms. Another +light--a candle--flickered in the kitchen. + +Leverett, crouching, ran rat-like down to the barn, slid in between the +ice house and corn-crib, crawled out among the wilderness of weeds and +lay flat. + +The light burned steadily from Eve's window. + + +IV + +From his form among frost-blackened rag-weeds, the trap-robber could see +only the plastered ceiling of the bed chamber. + +But the kerosene lamp cast two shadows on that--tall shadows of human +shapes that stirred at times. + +The trap-robber, scared, stiffened to immobility, but his little eyes +remained fastened on the camera obscura above. All the cunning, +patience, and murderous immobility of the rat were his. + +Not a weed stirred under the stars where he lay with tiny, unwinking +eyes intent upon the shadows on the ceiling. + + * * * * * + +The shadows on the ceiling were cast by Eve Strayer and her State +Trooper. + +Eve sat on her bed's edge, swathed in a lilac silk kimona--delicate +relic of school days. Her bandaged feet, crossed, dangled above the +rag-rug on the floor; her slim, tanned fingers were interlaced over the +book on her lap. + +Near the door stood State Trooper Stormont, spurred, booted, trig and +trim, an undecided and flushed young man, fumbling irresolutely with the +purple cord on his campaign-hat. + +The book on Eve's knees--another relic of the past--was _Sigurd the +Volsung_. Stormont had been reading to her--they having found, after the +half shy tentatives of new friends, a point d'appui in literature. And +the girl, admitting a passion for the poets, invited him to inspect the +bookcase of unpainted pine which Clinch had built into her bedroom wall. + +Here it was he discovered mutual friends among the nobler +Victorians--surprised to discover _Sigurd_ there--and, carrying it to +her bedside, looked leisurely through the half forgotten pages. + +"Would you read a little?" she ventured. + +He blushed but did his best. His was an agreeable, boyish voice, +betraying taste and understanding. Time passed quickly--not so much in +the reading but in the conversations intervening. + +And now, made uneasy by chance consultation with his wrist-watch, and +being rather a conscientious young man, he had risen and had informed +Eve that she ought to go to sleep. + +And she had denounced the idea, almost fretfully. + +"Even if you go I shan't sleep till daddy comes," she said. "Of course," +she added, smiling at him out of gentian-blue eyes, "if _you_ are sleepy +I shouldn't dream of asking you to stay." + +"I'm not intending to sleep." + +"What are you going to do?" + +"Take a chair on the landing outside your door." + +"What!" + +"Certainly. What did you expect me to do, Eve?" + +"Go to bed, of course. The beds in the guest rooms are all made up." + +"Your father didn't expect me to do that," he said, smiling. + +"I'm not afraid, as long as you're in the house," she said. + +She looked up at him again, wistfully. Perhaps he was restless, bored, +sitting there beside her half the day, and, already, half the night. Men +of that kind--active, nervous young men accustomed to the open, can't +stand caging. + +"I want you to go out and get some fresh air," she said. "It's a +wonderful night. Go and walk a while. And--if you feel like--coming back +to me----" + +"Will you sleep?" + +"No, I'll wait for you." + +Her words were natural and direct, but in their simplicity there seemed +a delicate sweetness that stirred him. + +"I'll come back to you," he said. + +Then, in his response, the girl in her turn became aware of something +beside the simple words--a vague charm about them that faintly haunted +her after he had gone away down the stairs. + +_That_ was the man she had once tried to kill! At the sudden and +terrible recollection she shivered from curly head to bandaged feet. +Then she trembled a little with the memory of his lips against her +bruised hands--bruised by handcuffs which he had fastened upon her. + +She sat very, very still now, huddled on the bed's edge, scarcely +breathing. + +For the girl was beginning to dare formulate the deepest of any thoughts +that ever had stirred her virgin mind and body. + +If it was love, then it had come suddenly, and strangely. It had come on +that day--at the very moment when he flung her against the tree and +handcuffed her--that terrible instant--if it were love. + +Or--what was it that so delicately overwhelmed her with pleasure in his +presence, in his voice, in the light, firm sound of his spurred tread on +the veranda below? + +Friendship? A lonely passion for young and decent companionship? The +clean youth of him in contrast to the mangy, surly louts who haunted +Clinch's Dump,--was that the appeal? + +Listening there where she sat clasping the book, she heard his steady +tread patrolling the veranda; caught the faint fragrance of his brier +pipe in the still night air. + +"I think--I think it's--love," she said under her breath.... "But he +couldn't ever think of me----" always listening to his spurred tread +below. + +After a while she placed both bandaged feet on the rug. It hurt her, but +she stood up, walked to the open window. She wanted to look at him--just +a moment---- + +By chance he looked up at that instant, and saw her pale face, like a +flower in the starlight. + +"Why, Eve," he said, "you ought not to be on your feet." + +"Once," she said, "you weren't so particular about my bruises." + +Her breathless little voice coming down through the starlight thrilled +him. + +"Do you remember what I did?" he asked. + +"Yes. You bruised my hands and made my mouth bleed." + +"I did penance--for your hands." + +"Yes, you kissed _them_!" + +What possessed her--what irresponsible exhilaration was inciting her to +a daring utterly foreign to her nature? She heard herself laugh, knew +that she was young, pretty, capable of provocation. And in a sudden, +breathless sort of way an overwhelming desire seized her to please, to +charm, to be noticed by such a man--whatever, on afterthought, he might +think of the step-child of Mike Clinch. + +Stormont had come directly under her window and stood looking up. + +"I dared not offer further penance," he said. + +The emotion in his voice stirred her--but she was still laughing down at +him. + +She said: "You _did_ offer further penance--you offered your +handkerchief. So--as that was _all_ you offered as reparation for--my +lips----" + +"Eve! I could have taken you into my arms----" + +"You _did_! And threw me down among the spruces. You really did +everything that a contrite heart could suggest----" + +"Good heavens!" said that rather matter-of-fact young man, "I don't +believe you have forgiven me after all." + +"I have--everything except the handkerchief----" + +"Then I'm coming up to complete my penance----" + +"I'll lock my door!" + +"Would you?" + +"I ought to.... But if you are in great spiritual distress, and if you +really and truly repent, and if you humbly desire to expiate your sin by +doing--penance----" And hesitated: "Do you so desire?" + +"Yes, I do." + +"Humbly? Contritely?" + +"Yes." + +"Very well. Say 'Mea culpa, mea maxima culpa.'" + +"Mea maxima culpa," he said so earnestly, looking up into her face that +she bent lower over the sill to see him. + +"Let me come up, Eve," he said. + +She strove to laugh, gazing down into his shadowy face--but suddenly the +desire had left her,--and all her gaiety left her, too, suddenly, +leaving only a still excitement in her breast. + +"You--you knew I was just laughing," she said unsteadily. "You +understood, didn't you?" + +"I don't know." + +After a silence: "I didn't mean you to take me seriously," she said. She +tried to laugh. It was no use. And, as she leaned there on the sill, her +heart frightened her with its loud beating. + +"Will you let me come up, Eve?" + +No answer. + +"Would you lock your door?" + +"What do you think I'd do?" she asked tremulously. + +"You know; I don't." + +"Are you so sure I know what I'd do? I don't think either of us know our +own minds.... I seem to have lost some of my wits.... Somehow...." + +"If you are not going to sleep, let me come up." + +"I want you to take a walk down by the pond. And while you're walking +there all by yourself, I want you to think very clearly, very calmly, +and make up your mind whether I should remain awake to-night, or +whether, when you return, I ought to be asleep and--and my door bolted." + +After a long pause: "All right," he said in a low voice. + + +V + +She saw him walk away--saw his shadowy, well-built form fade into the +starlit mist. + +An almost uncontrollable impulse set her throat and lips quivering with +desire to call to him through the night, "I do love you! I do love you! +Come back quickly, quickly!----" + +Fog hung over Star Pond, edging the veranda, rising in frail shreds to +her window. The lapping of the water sounded very near. An owl was very +mournful in the hemlocks. + +The girl turned from the window, looked at the door for a moment, then +her face flushed and she walked toward a chair and seated herself, +leaving the door unbolted. + +For a little while she sat upright, alert, as though a little +frightened. After a few moments she folded her hands and sat unstirring, +with lowered head, awaiting Destiny. + + * * * * * + +It came, noiselessly. And so swiftly that the rush of air from her +violently opened door was what first startled her. + +For in the same second Earl Leverett was upon her in his stockinged +feet, one bony hand gripping her mouth, the other flung around her, +pinning both arms to her sides. + +"The packet!" he panted, "--quick, yeh dirty little cat, 'r'I'll break +yeh head off'n yeh damn neck!" + +She bit at the hand that he held crushed against her mouth. He lifted +her bodily, flung her onto the bed, and, twisting sheet and quilt around +her, swathed her to the throat. + +Still controlling her violently distorted lips with his left hand and +holding her so, one knee upon her, he reached back, unsheathed his +hunting knife, and pricked her throat till the blood spurted. + +"Now, gol ram yeh!" he whispered fiercely, "where's Mike's packet? +Yell, and I'll hog-stick yeh fur fair! Where is it, you dum thing!" + +He took his left hand from her mouth. The distorted, scarlet lips +writhed back, displaying her white teeth clenched. + +"Where's Mike's bundle!" he repeated, hoarse with rage and fear. + +"You rat!" she gasped. + +At that he closed her mouth again, and again he pricked her with his +knife, cruelly. The blood welled up onto the sheets. + +"Now, by God!" he said in a ghastly voice, "answer or I'll hog-stick yeh +next time! Where is it? Where! where!" + +She only showed her teeth in answer. Her eyes flamed. + +"Where! Quick! Gol ding yeh, I'll shove this knife in behind your ear if +you don't tell! Go on. Where is it? It's in this Dump som'ers. I know it +is--don't lie! You want that I should stick you good? That what you +want--you dirty little dump-slut? Well, then, gol ram yeh--I'll fix yeh +like Quintana was aimin' at----" + +He slit the sheet downward from her imprisoned knees, seized one wounded +foot and tried to slash the bandages. + +"I'll cut a coupla toes off'n yeh," he snarled, "--I'll hamstring yeh +fur keeps!"--struggling to mutilate her while she flung her helpless and +entangled body from side to side and bit at the hand that was almost +suffocating her. + +Unable to hold her any longer, he seized a pillow, to bury the venomous +little head that writhed, biting, under his clutch. + +As he lifted it he saw a packet lying under it. + +"By God!" he panted. + +As he seized it she screamed for the first time: "Jack! Jack +Stormont!"--and fairly hurled her helpless little body at Leverett, +striking him full in the face with her head. + +Half stunned, still clutching the packet, he tried to stab her in the +stomach; but the armour of bed-clothes turned the knife, although his +violence dashed all breath out of her. + +Sick with the agony of it, speechless, she still made the effort; and, +as he stumbled to his feet and turned to escape, she struggled upright, +choking, blood running from the knife pricks in her neck. + +With the remnant of her strength, and still writhing and gasping for +breath, she tore herself from the sheets and blankets, reeled across the +room to where Stormont's rifle stood, threw in a cartridge, dragged +herself to the window. + +Dimly she saw a running figure in the night mist, flung the rifle across +the window sill and fired. Then she fired again--or thought she did. +There were two shots. + +"Eve!" came Stormont's sharp cry, "what the devil are you trying to do +to me?" + +His cry terrified her; the rifle clattered to the floor. + +The next instant he came running up the stairs, bare headed, heavy +pistol swinging, and halted, horrified at sight of her. + +"Eve! My God!" he whispered, taking her blood-wet body into his arms. + +"Go after Leverett," she gasped. "He's robbed daddy. He's running +away--out there--somewhere----" + +"Where did he hurt you, Eve--my little Eve----" + +"Oh, go! go!" she wailed,--"I'm not hurt. He only pricked me with his +knife. I'm not hurt, I tell you. Go after him! Take your pistol and +follow him and kill him!" + +"Oh," she cried hysterically, twisting and sobbing in his arms, "don't +lose time here with me! Don't stand here while he's running away with +dad's money!" And, "Oh--oh--_oh_!!" she sobbed, collapsing in his arms +and clinging to him convulsively as he carried her to her tumbled bed +and laid her there. + +He said: "I couldn't risk following anybody now, after what has happened +to you. I can't leave you alone here! Don't cry, Eve. I'll get your man +for you, I promise! Don't cry, dear. It was all my fault for leaving +this room even for a minute----" + +"No, no, no! It's my fault. I sent you away. Oh, I wish I hadn't. I wish +I had let you come back when you wanted to.... I was waiting for you.... +I left the door unbolted for you. When it opened I thought it was you. +And it was Leverett!--it was Leverett!----" + +Stormont's face grew very white: "What did he do to you, Eve? Tell me, +darling. What did he do to you?" + +"Dad's money was under my pillow," she wailed. "Leverett tried to make +me tell where it was. I wouldn't, and he hurt me----" + +"How?" + +"He pricked me with his knife. When I screamed for you he tried to choke +me with the pillow. Didn't you hear me scream?" + +"Yes. I came on the jump." + +"It was too late," she sobbed; "--too late! He saw the money packet +under my pillow and he snatched it and ran. Somehow I found your rifle +and fired. I fired twice." + +Her only bullet had torn his campaign hat from his head. But he did not +tell her. + +"Let me see your neck," he said, bending closer. + +She bared her throat, making a soft, vague complaint like a hurt +bird,--lay there whimpering under her breath while he bathed the blood +away with lint, sterilised the two cuts from his emergency packet, and +bound them. + +He was still bending low over her when her blue eyes unclosed on his. + +"That is the second time I've tried to kill you," she whispered. "I +thought it was Leverett.... I'd have died if I had killed you." + +There was a silence. + +"Lie very still," he said huskily. "I'll be back in a moment to +rebandage your feet and make you comfortable for the night." + +"I can't sleep," she repeated desolately. "Dad trusted his money to me +and I've let Leverett rob me. How can I sleep?" + +"I'll bring you something to make you sleep." + +"I can't!" + +"I promise you you will sleep. Lie still." + +He rose, went away downstairs and out to the barn, where his campaign +hat lay in the weed, drilled through by a bullet. + +There was something else lying there in the weeds,--a flat, muddy, +shoeless shape sprawling grotesquely in the foggy starlight. + +One hand clutched a hunting knife; the other a packet. + +Stormont drew the packet from the stiff fingers, then turned the body +over, and, flashing his electric torch, examined the ratty visage--what +remained of it--for his pistol bullet had crashed through from ear to +cheek-bone, almost obliterating the trap-robber's features. + + * * * * * + +Stormont came slowly into Eve's room and laid the packet on the sheet +beside her. + +"Now," he said, "there is no reason for you to lie awake any longer. +I'll fix you up for the night." + +Deftly he unbandaged, bathed, dressed, and rebandaged her slim white +feet--little wounded feet so lovely, so exquisite that his hand trembled +as he touched them. + +"They're doing fine," he said cheerily. "You've half a degree of fever +and I'm going to give you something to drink before you go to sleep----" + +He poured out a glass of water, dissolved two tablets, supported her +shoulders while she drank in a dazed way, looking always at him over the +glass. + +"Now," he said, "go to sleep. I'll be on the job outside your door until +your daddy arrives." + +"How did you get back dad's money?" she asked in an odd, emotionless way +as though too weary for further surprises. + +"I'll tell you in the morning." + +"Did you kill him? I didn't hear your pistol." + +"I'll tell you all about it in the morning. Good night, Eve." + +As he bent over her, she looked up into his eyes and put both arms +around his neck. + +It was her first kiss given to any man, except Mike Clinch. + +After Stormont had gone out and closed the door, she lay very still for +a long while. + +Then, instinctively, she touched her lips with her fingers; and, at the +contact, a blush clothed her from brow to ankle. + +The Flaming Jewel in its morocco casket under her pillow burned with no +purer fire than the enchanted flame glowing in the virgin heart of Eve +Strayer of Clinch's Dump. + +Thus they lay together, two lovely flaming jewels burning softly, +steadily through the misty splendour of the night. + +Under a million stars, Death sprawled in squalor among the trampled +weeds. Under the same high stars dark mountains waited; and there was a +silvery sound of waters stirring somewhere in the mist. + + + + +EPISODE SEVEN + +CLINCH'S DUMP + + +I + +When Mike Clinch bade Hal Smith return to the Dump and take care of Eve, +Smith already had decided to go there. + +Somewhere in Clinch's Dump was hidden the Flaming Jewel. Now was his +time to search for it. + +There were two other reasons why he should go back. One of them was that +Leverett was loose. If anything had called Trooper Stormont away, Eve +would be alone in the house. And nobody on earth could forecast what a +coward like Leverett might attempt. + +But there was another and more serious reason for returning to Clinch's. +Clinch, blood-mad, was headed for Drowned Valley with his men, to stop +both ends of that vast morass before Quintana and his gang could get +out. + +It was evident that neither Clinch nor any of his men--although their +very lives depended upon familiarity with the wilderness--knew that a +third exit from Drowned Valley existed. + +But the nephew of the late Henry Harrod knew. + +When Jake Kloon was a young man and Darragh was a boy, Kloon had shown +him the rocky, submerged game trail into Drowned Valley. Doubtless Kloon +had used it in hootch running since. If ever he had told anybody else +about it, probably he had revealed the trail to Quintana. + +And that was why Darragh, or Hal Smith, finally decided to return to +Star Pond;--because if Quintana had been told or had discovered that +circuitous way out of Drowned Valley, he might go straight to Clinch's +Dump.... And, supposing Stormont was still there, how long could one +State Trooper stand off Quintana's gang? + + * * * * * + +No sooner had Clinch and his motley followers disappeared in the dusk +than Smith unslung his basket-pack, fished out a big electric torch, +flashed it tentatively, and then, reslinging the pack and taking his +rifle in his left hand, he set off at an easy swinging stride. + +His course was not toward Star Pond; it was at right angles with that +trail. For he was taking no chances. Quintana might already have left +Drowned Valley by that third exit unknown to Clinch. + +Smith's course would now cut this unmarked trail, trodden only by game +that left no sign in the shallow mountain rivulet which was the path. + +The trail lay a long way off through the night. But if Quintana had +discovered and taken that trail, it would be longer still for him--twice +as long as the regular trail out. + +For a mile or two the forest was first growth pine, and sufficiently +open so that Smith might economise on his torch. + +He knew every foot of it. As a boy he had carried a jacob-staff in the +Geological Survey. Who better than the forest-roaming nephew of Henry +Harrod should know this blind wilderness? + +The great pines towered on every side, lofty and smooth to the feathery +canopy that crowned them under the high stars. + +There was no game here, no water, nothing to attract anybody except the +devastating lumberman. But this was a five thousand acre patch of State +land. The ugly whine of the steam-saw would never be heard here. + +On he walked at an easy, swinging stride, flashing his torch rarely, +feeling no concern about discovery by Quintana's people. + +It was only when he came into the hardwoods that the combined necessity +for caution and torch perplexed and worried him. + +Somewhere in here began an outcrop of rock running east for miles. Only +stunted cedar and berry bushes found shallow nourishment on this ridge. + +When at last he found it he travelled upon it, more slowly, constantly +obliged to employ the torch. + +After an hour, perhaps, his feet splashed in shallow water. _That_ was +what he was expecting. The water was only an inch or two deep; it was +ice cold and running north. + +Now, he must advance with every caution. For here trickled the thin flow +of that rocky rivulet which was the other entrance and exit penetrating +that immense horror of marsh and bog and depthless sink-hole known as +Drowned Valley. + + * * * * * + +For a long while he did not dare to use his torch; but now he was +obliged to. + +He shined the ground at his feet, elevated the torch with infinite +precaution, throwing a fan-shaped light over the stretch of sink he had +suspected and feared. It flanked the flat, wet path of rock on either +side. Here Death spread its slimy trap at his very feet. + +Then, as he stood taking his bearings with burning torch, far ahead in +the darkness a light flashed, went out, flashed twice more, and was +extinguished. + +Quintana! + +Smith's wits were working like lightning, but instinct guided him before +his brain took command. He levelled his torch and repeated the three +signal flashes. Then, in darkness, he came to swift conclusion. + +There were no other signals from the unknown. The stony bottom of the +rivulet was his only aid. + +In his right hand the torch hung almost touching the water. At times he +ventured sufficient pressure for a feeble glimmer, then again trusted to +his sense of contact. + +For three hundred yards, counting his strides, he continued on. Then, in +total darkness, he pocketed the torch, slid a cartridge into the breech +of his rifle, slung the weapon, pulled out a handkerchief, and tied it +across his face under the eyes. + +Now, he drew the torch from his pocket, levelled it, sent three quick +flashes out into darkness. + +Instantly, close ahead, three blinding flashes broke out. + +For Hal Smith it all had become a question of seconds. + +Death lay depthless on either hand; ahead Death blocked the trail in +silence. + +Out of the dark some unseen rifle might vomit death in his very face at +any moment. + +He continued to move forward. After a little while his ear caught a +slight splash ahead. Suddenly a glare of light enveloped him. + +"Is it you, Harry Beck?" + +Instinct led again while wits worked madly: "Harry Beck is two miles +back on guard. Where is Sard?" + +The silence became terrible. Once the glaring light in front moved, then +become fixed. There was a light splashing. Instantly Smith realised that +the man in front had set his torch in a tree-crotch and was now cowering +somewhere behind a levelled weapon. His voice came presently: + +"He! Drap-a that-a gun damn quick!" + +Smith bent, leisurely, and laid his rifle on a mossy rock. + +"Now! You there! Why you want Sard! Eh?" + +"I'll tell Sard, not you," retorted Smith coolly. "You listen to me, +whoever you are. I'm from Sard's office in New York. I'm Abrams. The +police are on their way here to find Quintana." + +"How I know? Eh? Why shall I believe that? You tell-a me queeck or I +blow-a your damn head off!" + +"Quintana will blow-a _your_ head off unless you take me to Sard," +drawled Smith. + +A movement might have meant death, but he calmly rummaged for a +cigarette, lighted it, blew a cloud insolently toward the white glare +ahead. Then he took another chance: + +"I guess you're Nick Salzar, aren't you?" + +"Si! I am Salzar. Who the dev' are you?" + +"I'm Eddie Abrams, Sard's lawyer. My business is to find my client. If +you stop me you'll go to prison--the whole gang of you--Sard, Quintana, +Picquet, Sanchez, Georgiades and Harry Beck,--and _you_!" + +After a dead silence: "Maybe _you'll_ go to the chair, too!" + +It was the third chance he took. + +There was a dreadful stillness in the woods. Finally came a slight +series of splashes; the crunch of heavy boots on rock. + +"For why you com-a here, eh?" demanded Salzar, in a less aggressive +manner. "What-a da matt', eh?" + +"Well," said Smith, "if you've got to know, there are people from +Esthonia in New York.... If you understand that." + +"Christi! When do they arrive?" + +"A week ago. Sard's place is in the hands of the police. I couldn't stop +them. They've got his safe and all his papers. City, State, and Federal +officers are looking for him. The Constabulary rode into Ghost Lake +yesterday. Now, don't you think you'd better lead me to Sard?" + +"Cristi!" exclaimed Salzar. "Sard he is a mile ahead with the others. +Damn! Damn! Me, how should I know what is to be done? Me, I have my +orders from Quintana. What I do, eh? Cristi! What to do? What you say I +should do, eh, Abrams?" + +A new fear had succeeded the old one--that was evident--and Salzar came +forward into the light of his own fixed torch--a well-knit figure in +slouch hat, grey shirt, and grey breeches, and wearing a red bandanna +over the lower part of his face. He carried a heavy rifle. + +He came on, sturdily, splashing through the water, and walked up to +Smith, his rifle resting on his right shoulder. + +"For me," he said excitedly, "long time I have worry in this-a damn +wood! Si! Where you say those carbinieri? Eh?" + +"At Ghost Lake. _Your_ signature is in the hotel ledger." + +"Cristi! You know where Clinch is?" + +"You know, too. He is on the way to Drowned Valley." + +"Damn! I knew it. Quintana also. You know where is Quintana? And Sard? I +tell-a you. They march ver' fast to the Dump of Clinch. Si! And there +they would discover these-a beeg-a dimon'--these-a Flame-Jewel. Si! +_Now_, you tell-a me what I do?" + +Smith said slowly: "If Quintana is marching on Clinch's he's marching +into a trap!" + +Salzar blanched above his bandanna. + +"The State Troopers are there," said Smith. "They'll get him sure." + +"Cristi," faltered Salzar, "--then they are gobble--Quintana, Sard, +everybody! Si?" + +Smith considered the man: "You can save _your_ skin anyway. You can go +back and tell Harry Beck. Then both of you can beat it for Drowned +Valley." + +He picked up his rifle, stood a moment in troubled reflection: + +"If I could overtake Quintana I'd do it," he said. "I think I'll try. If +I can't, he's done for. You tell Harry Beck that Eddie Abrams advises +him to beat it for Drowned Valley." + +Suddenly Salzar tore the bandanna from his face, flung it down and +stamped on it. + +"What I tell Quintana!" he yelled, his features distorted with rage. "I +don't-a like!--no, not me!--no, I tell-a heem, stay at those Ghost-a +Lake and watch thees-a fellow Clinch. Si! Not for me thees-a wood. No! I +spit upon it! I curse like hell! I tell Quintana I don't-a like. Now, +eet is trouble that comes and we lose-a out! Damn! _Damn!_ Me, I find me +Beck. You shall say to Jose Quintana how he is a damfool. Me, I am +finish--me, Nick Salzar! You hear me, Abrams! I am through! I go!" + +He glared at Smith, started to move, came back and took his torch, made +a violent gesture with it which drenched the woods with goblin light. + +"You stop-a Quintana, maybe. You tell-a heem he is the bigg-a fool! You +tell-a heem Nick Salzar is no damn fool. No! Adios, my frien' Abrams. I +beat it. I save my skin!" + +Once more Salzar turned and headed for Drowned Valley.... Where Clinch +would not fail to kill him.... The man was going to his death.... And +it was Smith who sent him. + +Suddenly it came to Smith that he could not do this thing; that this man +had no chance; that he was slaying a human being with perfect safety to +himself and without giving him a chance. + +"Salzar!" he called sharply. + +The man halted and looked around. + +"Come back!" + +Salzar hesitated, turned finally, slouched toward him. + +Smith laid aside his pack and rifle, and, as Salzar came up, he quietly +took his weapon from him and laid it beside his own. + +"What-a da matt'?" demanded Salzar, astonished. "Why you taka my gun?" + +Smith measured him. They were well matched. + +"Set your torch in that crotch," he said. + +Salzar, puzzled and impatient, demanded to know why. Smith took both +torches, set them opposite each other and drew Salzar into the white +glare. + +"Now," he said, "you dirty desperado, I am going to try to kill you +clean. Look out for yourself!" + +For a second Salzar stood rooted in blank astonishment. + +"I'm one of Clinch's men," said Smith, "but I can't stick a knife in +your back, at that! Now, take care of yourself if you can----" + +His voice died in his throat; Salzar was on him, clawing, biting, +kicking, striving to strangle him, to wrestle him off his feet. Smith +reeled, staggering under the sheer rush of the man, almost blinded by +blows, clutched, bewildered in Salzar's panther grip. + +For a moment he writhed there, searching blindly for his enemy's wrist, +striving to avoid the teeth that snapped at his throat, stifled by the +hot stench of the man's breath in his face. + +"I keel you! I keel you! Damn! Damn!" panted Salzar, in convulsive fury +as Smith freed his left arm and struck him in the face. + +Now, on the narrow, wet and slippery strip of rock they swayed to and +fro, murderously interlocked, their heavy boots splashing, battling with +limb and body. + +Twice Salzar forced Smith outward over the sink, trying to end it, but +could not free himself. + +Once, too, he managed to get at a hidden knife, drag it out and stab at +head and throat; but Smith caught the fist that wielded it, forced back +the arm, held it while Salzar screamed at him, lunging at his face with +bared teeth. + +Suddenly the end came: Salzar's body heaved upward, sprawled for an +instant in the dazzling glare, hurtled over Smith's head and fell into +the sink with a crashing splash. + +Frantically he thrashed there, spattering and floundering in darkness. +He made no outcry. Probably he had landed head first. + +In a moment only a vague heaving came from the unseen ooze. + +Smith, exhausted, drenched with sweat, leaned against a tamarack, +sickened. + +After all sound had ceased he straightened up with an effort. Presently +he bent and recovered Salzar's red bandanna and his hat, lifted his own +rifle and pack and struggled into the harness. Then, kicking Salzar's +rifle overboard, he unfastened both torches, pocketed one, and started +on in a flood of ghostly light. + +He was shaking all over and the torch quivered in his hand. He had seen +men die in the Great War. He had been near death himself. But never +before had he been near death in so horrible a form. The sodden noises +in the mud, the deadened flopping of the sinking body--mud-plastered +hands beating frantically on mud, spattering, agonising in darkness--"My +God," he breathed, "anything but that--anything but that!----" + + +II + +Before midnight he struck the hard forest. Here there was no trail at +all, only spreading outcrop of rock under dying leaves. + +He could see a few stars. Cautiously he ventured to shine his compass +close to the ground. He was still headed right. The ghastly sink country +lay behind him. + +Ahead of him, somewhere in darkness--but how far he did not +know--Quintana and his people were moving swiftly on Clinch's Dump. + +It may have been an hour later--two hours, perhaps--when from far ahead +in the forest came a sound--the faint clink of a shod heel on rock. + +Now, Smith unslung his pack, placed it between two rocks where laurel +grew. + +Salzar's red bandanna was still wet, but he tied it across his face, +leaving his eyes exposed. The dead man's hat fitted him. His own hat and +the extra torch he dropped into his basket-pack. + +Ready, now, he moved swiftly forward, trailing his rifle. And very soon +it became plain to him that the people ahead were moving without much +caution, evidently fearing no unfriendly ear or eye in that section of +the wilderness. + +Smith could hear their tread on rock and root and rotten branch, or +swishing through frosted fern and brake, or louder on newly fallen +leaves. + +At times he could even see the round white glare of a torch on the +ground--see it shift ahead, lighting up tree trunks, spread out, +fanlike, into a wide, misty glory, then vanish as darkness rushed in +from the vast ocean of the night. + +Once they halted at a brook. Their torches flashed it; he heard them +sounding its depths with their gun-butts. + +Smith knew that brook. It was the east branch of Star Brook, the inlet +to Star Pond. + +Far ahead above the trees the sky seemed luminous. It was star lustre +over the pond, turning the mist to a silvery splendour. + +Now the people ahead of him moved with more caution, crossing the brook +without splashing, and their boots made less noise in the woods. + +To keep in touch with them Smith hastened his pace until he drew near +enough to hear the low murmur of their voices. + +They were travelling in single file; he had a glimpse of them against +the ghostly radiance ahead. Indeed, so near had he approached that he +could hear the heavy, laboured breathing of the last man in the +file--some laggard who dragged his feet, plodding on doggedly, panting, +muttering. Probably the man was Sard. + +Already the forest in front was invaded by the misty radiance from the +clearing. Through the trees starlight glimmered on water. The perfume of +the open land grew in the night air,--the scent of dew-wet grass, the +smell of still water and of sedgy shores. + +Lying flat behind a rotting log, Smith could see them all now,--spectral +shapes against the light. There were five of them at the forest's edge. + +They seemed to know what was to be done and how to do it. Two went down +among the ferns and stunted willows toward the west shore of the pond; +two sheered off to the southwest, shoulder deep in blackberry and sumac. +The fifth man waited for a while, then ran down across the open pasture. + +Scarcely had he started when Smith glided to the wood's edge, crouched, +and looked down. + +Below stood Clinch's Dump, plain in the starlight, every window dark. To +the west the barn loomed, huge with its ramshackle outbuildings +straggling toward the lake. + +Straight down the slope toward the barn ran the fifth man of Quintana's +gang, and disappeared among the out-buildings. + +Smith crept after him through the sumacs; and, at the foot of the slope, +squatted low in a clump of rag-weed. + +So close to the house was he now that he could hear the dew rattling on +the veranda roof. He saw shadowy figures appear, one after another, and +take stations at the four corners of the house. The fifth man was +somewhere near the out-buildings, very silent about whatever he had on +hand. + +The stillness was absolute save for the drumming dew and a faint ripple +from the water's edge. + +Smith crouched, listened, searched the starlight with intent eyes, and +waited. + +Until something happened he could not solve the problem before him. He +could be of no use to Eve Strayer and to Stormont until he found out +what Quintana was going to do. + +He could be of little use anyway unless he got into the house, where two +rifles might hold out against five. + +There was no use in trying to get to Ghost Lake for assistance. He felt +that whatever was about to happen would come with a rush. It would be +all over before he had gone five minutes. No; the only thing to do was +to stay where he was. + +As for his pledge to the little Grand Duchess, that was always in his +mind. Sooner or later, somehow, he was going to make good his pledge. + +He knew that Quintana and his gang were here to find the Flaming Jewel. + +Had he not encountered Quintana, his own errand had been the same. For +Smith had started for Clinch's prepared to reveal himself to Stormont, +and then, masked to the eyes--and to save Eve from a broken heart, and +Clinch from States Prison--he had meant to rob the girl at +pistol-point. + +It was the only way to save Clinch; the only way to save the pride of +this blindly loyal girl. For the arrest of Clinch meant ruin to both, +and Smith realised it thoroughly. + + * * * * * + +A slight sound from one of the out-houses--a sort of +wagon-shed--attracted his attention. Through the frost-blighted +rag-weeds he peered intently, listening. + +After a few moments a faint glow appeared in the shed. There was a +crackling noise. The glow grew pinker. + + +III + +Inside Clinch's house Eve awoke with a start. Her ears were filled with +a strange, rushing, crackling noise. A rosy glare danced and shook +outside her windows. + +As she sprang to the floor on bandaged feet, a shrill scream burst out +in the ruddy darkness--unearthly, horrible; and there came a thunderous +battering from the barn. + +The girl tore open her bedroom door. "Jack!" she cried in a terrified +voice. "The barn's on fire!" + +"Good God!" he said, "--my horse!" + +He had already sprung from his chair outside her door. Now he ran +downstairs, and she heard bolt and chain clash at the kitchen door and +his spurred boots land on the porch. + +"Oh," she whimpered, snatching a blanket wrapper from a peg and +struggling into it. "Oh, the poor horse! Jack! Jack! I'm coming to help! +Don't risk your life! I'm coming--I'm coming----" + +Terror clutched her as she stumbled downstairs on bandaged feet. + +As she reached the door a great flare of light almost blinded her. + +"Jack!" + +And at the same instant she saw him struggling with three masked men in +the glare of the wagon-shed afire. + +His rifle stood in the corridor outside her door. With one bound she was +on the stairs again. There came the crash and splinter of wood and glass +from the kitchen, and a man with a handkerchief over his face caught her +on the landing. + +Twice she wrenched herself loose and her fingers almost touched +Stormont's rifle; she fought like a cornered lynx, tore the handkerchief +from her assailant's face, recognised Quintana, hurled her very body at +him, eyes flaming, small teeth bared. + +Two other men laid hold. In another moment she had tripped Quintana, and +all four fell, rolling over and over down the short flight of stairs, +landing in the kitchen, still fighting. + +Here, in darkness, she wriggled out, somehow, leaving her blanket +wrapped in their clutches. In another instant she was up the stairs +again, only to discover that the rifle was gone. + +The red glare from the wagon-house lighted her bedroom; she sprang +inside and bolted the door. + +Her chamois jacket with its loops full of cartridges hung on a peg. She +got into it, seized her rifle and ran to the window just as two masked +men, pushing Stormont before them, entered the house by the kitchen way. + +Her own door was resounding with kicks and blows, shaking, shivering +under the furious impact of boot and rifle-butt. + +She ran to the bed, thrust her hand under the pillow, pulled out the +case containing the Flaming Jewel, and placed it in the breast pocket of +her shooting jacket. + +Again she crept to the window. Only the wagon-house was burning. +Somebody, however, had led Stormont's horse from the barn, and had tied +it to a tree at a safe distance. It stood there, trembling, its +beautiful, nervous head turned toward the burning building. + +The blows upon her bedroom door had ceased; there came a loud trampling, +the sound of excited voices; Quintana's sarcastic tones, clear, +dominant: + +"Dios! The police! Why you bring me this gendarme? What am I to do with +a gentleman of the Constabulary, eh? Do you think I am fool enough to +cut his throat? Well, Senor Gendarme, what are you doing here in the +Dump of Clinch?" + +Then Stormont's voice, clear and quiet: "What are _you_ doing here? If +you've a quarrel with Clinch, he's not here. There's only a young girl +in this house." + +"So?" said Quintana. "Well, that is what I expec', my frien'. It is +thees lady upon whom I do myse'f the honour to call!" + +Eve, listening, heard Stormont's rejoinder, still, calm, and very grave: + +"The man who lays a finger on that young girl had better be dead. He's +as good as dead the moment he touches her. There won't be a chance for +him.... Nor for any of you, if you harm her." + +"Calm youse'f, my frien'," said Quintana. "I demand of thees young lady +only that she return to me the property of which I have been rob by +Monsieur Clinch." + +"I knew nothing of any theft. Nor does she----" + +"Pardon; Senor Clinch knows; and I know." His tone changed, offensively: +"Senor Gendarme, am I permit to understan' that you are a frien' of +thees young lady?--a heart-frien', per'aps----" + +"I am her friend," said Stormont bluntly. + +"Ah," said Quintana, "then you shall persuade her to return to me thees +packet of which Monsieur Clinch has rob me." + +There was a short silence, then Quintana's voice again: + +"I know thees packet is concel in thees house. Peaceably, if possible, I +would recover my property.... If she refuse----" + +Another pause. + +"Well?" inquired Stormont, coolly. + +"Ah! It is ver' painful to say. Alas, Senor Gendarme, I mus' have my +property.... If she refuse, then I mus' sever one of her pretty +fingers.... An' if she still refuse--I sever her pretty fingers, one by +one, until----" + +"You know what would happen to _you_?" interrupted Stormont, in a voice +that quivered in spite of himself. + +"I take my chance. Senor Gendarme, she is within that room. If you are +her frien', you shall advise her to return to me my property." + +After another silence: + +"Eve!" he called sharply. + +She placed her lips to the door: "Yes, Jack." + +He said: "There are five masked men out here who say that Clinch robbed +them and they are here to recover their property.... Do you know +anything about this?" + +"I know they lie. My father is not a thief.... I have my rifle and +plenty of ammunition. I shall kill every man who enters this room." + +For a moment nobody stirred or spoke. Then Quintana strode to the bolted +door and struck it with the butt of his rifle. + +"You, in there," he said in a menacing voice, "--you listen once to +_me_! You open your door and come out. I give you one minute!" He struck +the door again: "_One_ minute, senorita!--or I cut from your frien', +here, the hand from his right arm!" + +There was a deathly silence. Then the sound of bolts. The door opened. +Slowly the girl limped forward, still wearing the hunting jacket over +her night-dress. + +Quintana made her an elaborate and ironical bow, slouch hat in hand; +another masked man took her rifle. + +"Senorita," said Quintana with another sweep of his hat, "I ask pardon +that I trouble you for my packet of which your father has rob me for +ver' long time." + +Slowly the girl lifted her blue eyes to Stormont. He was standing +between two masked men. Their pistols were pressed slightly against his +stomach. + +Stormont reddened painfully: + +"It was not for myself that I let you open your door," he said. "They +would not have ventured to lay hands on _me_." + +"Ah," said Quintana with a terrifying smile, "you would not have been +the first gendarme who had--_accorded me his hand_!" + +Two of the masked men laughed loudly. + + * * * * * + +Outside in the rag-weed patch, Smith rose, stole across the grass to the +kitchen door and slipped inside. + +"Now, senorita," said Quintana gaily, "my packet, if you please,--and we +leave you to the caresses of your faithful gendarme,--who should thank +God that he still possesses two good hands to fondle you! Alons! Come +then! My packet!" + +One of the masked men said: "Take her downstairs and lock her up +somewhere or she'll shoot us from her window." + +"Lead out that gendarme, too!" added Quintana, grasping Eve by the arm. + +Down the stairs tramped the men, forcing their prisoners with them. + +In the big kitchen the glare from the burning out-house fell dimly; the +place was full of shadows. + +"Now," said Quintana, "I take my property and my leave. Where is the +packet hidden?" + +She stood for a moment with drooping head, amid the sombre shadows, +then, slowly, she drew the emblazoned morocco case from her breast +pocket. + +What followed occurred in the twinkling of an eye: for, as Quintana +extended his arm to grasp the case, a hand snatched it, a masked figure +sprang through the doorway, and ran toward the barn. + +Somebody recognised the hat and red bandanna: + +"Salzar!" he yelled. "Nick Salzar!" + +"A traitor, by God!" shouted Quintana. Even before he had reached the +door, his pistol flashed twice, deafening all in the semi-darkness, +choking them with stifling fumes. + +A masked man turned on Stormont, forcing him back into the pantry at +pistol-point. Another man pushed Eve after him, slammed the pantry door +and bolted it. + +Through the iron bars of the pantry window, Stormont saw a man, wearing +a red bandanna tied under his eyes, run up and untie his horse and fling +himself astride under a shower of bullets. + +As he wheeled the horse and swung him into the clearing toward the foot +of Star Pond, his seat and horsemanship were not to be mistaken. + +He was gone, now, the gallop stretching into a dead run; and Quintana's +men still following, shooting, hallooing in the starlight like a pack of +leaping shapes from hell. + +But Quintana had not followed far. When he had emptied his automatic he +halted. + +Something about the transaction suddenly checked his fury, stilled it, +summoned his brain into action. + +For a full minute he stood unstirring, every atom of intelligence in +terrible concentration. + +Presently he put his left hand into his pocket, fitted another clip to +his pistol, turned on his heel and walked straight back to the house. + +Between the two locked in the pantry not a word had passed. Stormont +still peered out between the iron bars, striving to catch a glimpse of +what was going on. Eve crouched at the pantry doors, her face in her +hands, listening. + +Suddenly she heard Quintana's step in the kitchen. Cautiously she turned +the pantry key from inside. + +Stormont heard her, and instantly came to her. At the same moment +Quintana unbolted the door from the outside and tried to open it. + +"Come out," he said coldly, "or it will not go well with you when my men +return." + +"You've got what you say is your property," replied. Stormont. "What do +you want now?" + +"I tell you what I want ver' damn quick. Who was he, thees man who rides +with my property on your horse away? Eh? Because it was not Nick Salzar! +No! Salzar can not ride thees way. No! Alors?" + +"I can't tell you who he was," replied Stormont. "That's your affair, +not ours." + +"No? Ah! Ver' well, then. I shall tell you, Senor Flic! He was one of +_yours_. I understan'. It is a trap, a cheat--what you call a _plant_! +Thees man who rode your horse he is disguise! Yes! He also is a +gendarme! Yes! You think I let a gendarme rob me? I got you where I want +you now. You shall write your gendarme frien' that he return to me my +property, _one day's time_, or I send him by parcel post two nice, +fresh-out right-hands--your sweetheart's and your own!" + +Stormont drew Eve's head close to his: + +"This man is blood mad or out of his mind! I'd better go out and take a +chance at him before the others come back." + +But the girl shook her head violently, caught him by the arm and drew +him toward the mouth of the tile down which Clinch always emptied his +hootch when the Dump was raided. + +But now, it appeared that the tile which protruded from the cement floor +was removable. + +In silence she began to unscrew it, and he, seeing what she was trying +to do, helped her. + +Together they lifted the heavy tile and laid it on the floor. + +"You open thees door!" shouted Quintana in a paroxysm of fury. "I give +you one minute! Then, by God, I kill you both!" + +Eve lifted a screen of wood through which the tile had been set. Under +it a black hole yawned. It was a tunnel made of three-foot aqueduct +tiles; and it led straight into Star Pond, two hundred feet away. + +Now, as she straightened up and looked silently at Stormont, they heard +the trample of boots in the kitchen, voices, the bang of gun-stocks. + +"Does that drain lead into the lake?" whispered Stormont. + +She nodded. + +"Will you follow me, Eve?" + +She pushed him aside, indicating that he was to follow her. + +As she stripped the hunting jacket from her, a hot colour swept her +face. But she dropped on both knees, crept straight into the tile and +slipped out of sight. + +As she disappeared, Quintana shouted something in Portuguese, and fired +at the lock. + +With the smash of splintering wood in his ears, Stormont slid into the +smooth tunnel. + +In an instant he was shooting down a polished toboggan slide, and in +another moment was under the icy water of Star Pond. + +Shocked, blinded, fighting his way to the surface, he felt his spurred +boots dragging at him like a ton of iron. Then to him came her helping +hand. + +"I can make it," he gasped. + +But his clothing and his boots and the icy water began to tell on him in +mid-lake. + +Swimming without effort beside him, watching his every stroke, presently +she sank a little and glided under him and a little ahead, so that his +hands fell upon her shoulders. + +He let them rest, so, aware now that it was no burden to such a +swimmer. Supple and silent as a swimming otter, the girl slipped lithely +through the chilled water, which washed his body to the nostrils and +numbed his legs till he could scarcely move them. + +And now, of a sudden, his feet touched gravel. He stumbled forward in +the shadow of overhanging trees and saw her wading shoreward, a +dripping, silvery shape on the shoal. + +Then, as he staggered up to her, breathless, where she was standing on +the pebbled shore, he saw her join both hands, cup-shape, and lift them +to her lips. + +And out of her mouth poured diamond, sapphire, and emerald in a dazzling +stream,--and, among them, one great, flashing gem blazing in the +starlight,--the Flaming Jewel! + +Like a naiad of the lake she stood, white, slim, silent, the heaped gems +glittering in her snowy hands, her face framed by the curling masses of +her wet hair. + +Then, slowly she turned her head to Stormont. + +"These are what Quintana came for," she said. "Could you put them into +your pocket?" + + + + +EPISODE EIGHT + +CUP AND LIP + + +I + +Two miles beyond Clinch's Dump, Hal Smith pulled Stormont's horse to a +walk. He was tremendously excited. + +With naive sincerity he believed that what he had done on the spur of +the moment had been the only thing to do. + +By snatching the Flaming Jewel from Quintana's very fingers he had +diverted that vindictive bandit's fury from Eve, from Clinch, from +Stormont, and had centred it upon himself. + +More than that, he had sown the seeds of suspicion among Quintana's own +people. They never could discover Salzar's body. Always they must +believe that it was Nicolas Salzar and no other who so treacherously +robbed them, and who rode away in a rain of bullets, shaking the +emblazoned morocco case above his masked head in triumph, derision and +defiance. + +At the recollection of what had happened, Hal Smith drew bridle, and, +sitting his saddle there in the false dawn, threw back his handsome head +and laughed until the fading stars overhead swam in his eyes through +tears of sheerest mirth. + +For he was still young enough to have had the time of his life. Nothing +in the Great War had so thrilled him. For, in what had just happened, +there was humour. There had been none in the Great Grim Drama. + +Still, Smith began to realise that he had taken the long, long chance of +the opportunist who rolls the bones with Death. He had kept his pledge +to the little Grand Duchess. It was a clean job. It was even good +drama---- + +The picturesque angle of the affair shook Hal Smith with renewed +laughter. As a moving picture hero he thought himself the funniest thing +on earth. + +From the time he had poked a pistol against Sard's fat paunch, to this +bullet-pelted ride for life, life had become one ridiculously exciting +episode after another. + +He had come through like the hero in a best-seller.... Lacking only a +heroine.... If there had been any heroine it was Eve Strayer. Drama had +gone wrong in that detail.... So perhaps, after all, it was real life +he had been living and not drama. Drama, for the masses, must have a +definite beginning and ending. Real life lacks the latter. In life +nothing is finished. It is always a premature curtain which is yanked by +that doddering old stage-hand, Johnny Death. + + * * * * * + +Smith sat his saddle, thinking, beginning to be sobered now by the +inevitable reaction which follows excitement and mirth as relentlessly +as care dogs the horseman. + +He had had a fine time,--save for the horror of the Rocktrail.... He +shuddered.... Anyway, at worst he had not shirked a clean deal in that +ghastly game.... It was God's mercy that he was not lying where Salzar +lay, ten feet--twenty--a hundred deep, perhaps--in immemorial slime---- + +He shook himself in his saddle as though to be rid of the creeping +horror, and wiped his clammy face. + +Now, in the false dawn, a blue-jay awoke somewhere among the oaks and +filled the misty silence with harsh grace-notes. + +Then reaction, setting in like a tide, stirred more sombre depths in the +heart of this young man. + +He thought of Riga; and of the Red Terror; of murder at noon-day, and +outrage by night. He remembered his only encounter with a lovely +child--once Grand Duchess of Esthonia--then a destitute refugee in +silken rags. + +What a day that had been.... Only one day and one evening.... And +never had he been so near in love in all his life.... + +That one day and evening had been enough for her to confide to an +American officer her entire life's history.... Enough for him to pledge +himself to her service while life endured.... And if emotion had swept +every atom of reason out of his youthful head, there in the turmoil and +alarm--there in the terrified, riotous city jammed with refugees, +reeking with disease, half frantic from famine and the filthy, rising +flood of war--if really it all had been merely romantic impulse, ardour +born of overwrought sentimentalism, nevertheless, what he had pledged +that day to a little Grand Duchess in rags, he had fulfilled to the +letter within the hour. + +As the false dawn began to fade, he loosened hunting coat and cartridge +sling, drew from his shirt-bosom the morocco case. + +It bore the arms and crest of the Grand Duchess Theodorica of Esthonia. + +His fingers trembled slightly as he pressed the jewelled spring. It +opened on an empty casket. + +In the sudden shock of horror and astonishment, his convulsive clutch on +the spring started a tiny bell ringing. Then, under his very nose, the +empty tray slid aside revealing another tray underneath, set solidly +with brilliants. A rainbow glitter streamed from the unset gems in the +silken tray. Like an incredulous child he touched them. They were +magnificently real. + +In the centre lay blazing the great Erosite gem,--the Flaming Jewel +itself. Priceless diamonds, sapphires, emeralds ringed it. In his hands +he held nearly four millions of dollars. + +Gingerly he balanced the emblazoned case, fascinated. Then he replaced +the empty tray, closed the box, thrust it into the bosom of his flannel +shirt and buttoned it in. + +Now there was little more for this excited young man to do. He was +through with Clinch. Hal Smith, hold-up man and dish-washer at Clinch's +Dump, had ended his career. The time had now arrived for him to vanish +and make room for James Darragh. + +Because there still remained a very agreeable role for Darragh to play. +And he meant to eat it up--as Broadway has it. + +For by this time the Grand Duchess of Esthonia--Ricca, as she was called +by her companion, Valentine, the pretty Countess Orloff-Strelwitz--must +have arrived in New York. + +At the big hunting lodge of the late Henry Harrod--now inherited by +Darragh--there might be a letter--perhaps a telegram--the cue for Hal +Smith to vanish and for James Darragh to enter, play his brief but +glittering part, and---- + +Darragh's sequence of pleasing meditations halted abruptly.... To walk +out of the life of the little Grand Duchess did not seem to suit his +ideas--indefinite and hazy as they were, so far. + +He lifted the bridle from the horse's neck, divided curb and snaffle +thoughtfully, touched the splendid animal with heel and knee. + +As he cantered on into the wide forest road that led to his late uncle's +abode, curiosity led him to wheel into a narrower trail running east +along Star Pond, and from whence he could take a farewell view of +Clinch's Dump. + +He smiled to think of Eve and Stormont there together, and now in safety +behind bolted doors and shutters. + +He grinned to think of Quintana and his precious crew, blood-crazy, +baffled, probably already distrusting one another, yet running wild +through the night like starving wolves galloping at hazard across a +famine-stricken waste. + +"Only wait till Stormont makes his report," he thought, grinning more +broadly still. "Every State Trooper north of Albany will be after Senor +Quintana. Some hunting! And, if he could understand, Mike Clinch might +thank his stars that what I've done this night has saved him his skin +and Eve a broken heart!" + +He drew his horse to a walk, now, for the path began to run closer to +Star Pond, skirting the pebbled shallows in the open just ahead. + +Alders still concealed the house across the lake, but the trail was +already coming out into the starlight. + +Suddenly his horse stopped short, trembling, its ears pricked forward. + +Darragh sat listening intently for a moment. Then with infinite +caution, he leaned over the cantle and gently parted the alders. + +On the pebbled beach, full in the starlight, stood two figures, one +white and slim, the other dark. + +The arm of the dark figure clasped the waist of the white and slender +one. + +Evidently they had heard his horse, for they stood motionless, looking +directly at the alders behind which his horse had halted. + +To turn might mean a shot in the back as far as Darragh knew. He was +still masked with Salzar's red bandanna. He raised his rifle, slid a +cartridge into the breech, pressed his horse forward with a slight touch +of heel and knee, and rode slowly out into the star-dusk. + +What Stormont saw was a masked man, riding his own horse, with menacing +rifle half lifted for a shot! What Eve Strayer thought she saw was too +terrible for words. And before Stormont could prevent her she sprang in +front of him, covering his body with her own. + +At that the horseman tore off his red mask: + +"Eve! Jack Stormont! What the devil are you doing over _here_?" + +Stormont walked slowly up to his own horse, laid one unsteady hand on +its silky nose, kept it there while dusty, velvet lips mumbled and +caressed his fingers. + +"I knew it was a cavalryman," he said quietly. "I suspected you, Jim. It +was the sort of crazy thing you were likely to do.... I don't ask you +what you're up to, where you've been, what your plans may be. If you +needed me you'd have told me. + +"But I've got to have my horse for Eve. Her feet are wounded. She's in +her night-dress and wringing wet. I've got to set her on my horse and +try to take her through to Ghost Lake." + +Darragh stared at Stormont, at the ghostly figure of the girl who had +sunk down on the sand at the lake's edge. Then he scrambled out of the +saddle and handed over the bridle. + +"Quintana came back," said Stormont. "I hope to reckon with him some +day.... I believe he came back to harm Eve.... We got out of the +house.... We swam the lake.... I'd have gone under except for her----" + +In his distress and overwhelming mortification, Darragh stood miserable, +mute, irresolute. + +Stormont seemed to understand: "What you did, Jim, was well meant," he +said. "I understand. Eve will understand when I tell her. But that +fellow Quintana is a devil. You can't draw a herring across any trail he +follows. I tell you, Jim, this fellow Quintana is either blood-mad or +just plain crazy. Somebody will have to put him out of the way. I'll do +it if I ever find him." + +"Yes.... Your people ought to do that.... Or, if you like, I'll +volunteer.... I've a little business to transact in New York, first.... +Jack, your tunic and breeches are soaked; I'll be glad to chip in +something for Eve.... Wait a moment----" + +He stepped into cover, drew the morocco box from his grey shirt, shoved +it into his hip pocket. + +Then he threw off his cartridge belt and hunting coat, pulled the grey +shirt over his head and came out in his undershirt and breeches, with +the other garments hanging over his arm. + +"Give her these," he said. "She can button the coat around her waist +for a skirt. She'd better go somewhere and get out of that soaking-wet +night-dress----" + +Eve, crouched on the sand, trying to wring out and twist up her drenched +hair, looked up at Stormont as he came toward her holding out Darragh's +dry clothing. + +"You'd better do what you can with these," he said, trying to speak +carelessly.... "_He_ says you'd better chuck--what you're wearing----" + +She nodded in flushed comprehension. Stormont walked back to his horse, +his boots slopping water at every stride. + +"I don't know any place nearer than Ghost Lake Inn," he said ... "except +Harrod's." + +"That's where we're going, Jack," said Darragh cheerfully. + +"That's _your_ place, isn't it?" + +"It is. But I don't want Eve to know it.... I think it better she +should not know me except as Hal Smith--for the present, anyway. You'll +see to that, won't you?" + +"As you wish, Jim.... Only, if we go to your own house----" + +"We're not going to the main house. She wouldn't, anyway. Clinch has +taught that girl to hate the very name of Harrod--hate every foot of +forest that the Harrod game keepers patrol. She wouldn't cross my +threshold to save her life." + +"I don't understand, but--it's all right--whatever _you_ say, Jim." + +"I'll tell you the whole business some day. But where I'm going to take +you now is into a brand new camp which I ordered built last spring. It's +within a mile of the State Forest border. Eve won't know that it's +Harrod property. I've a hatchery there and the State lets me have a man +in exchange for free fry. When I get there I'll post my man.... It will +be a roof for to-night, anyway, and breakfast in the morning, whenever +you're ready." + +"How far is it?" + +"Only about three miles east of here." + +"That's the thing to do, then," said Stormont bluntly. + +He dropped one sopping-wet sleeve over his horse's neck, taking care not +to touch the saddle. He was thinking of the handful of gems in his +pocket; and he wondered why Darragh had said nothing about the empty +case for which he had so recklessly risked his life. + +What this whole business was about Stormont had no notion. But he knew +Darragh. That was sufficient to leave him tranquil, and perfectly +certain that whatever Darragh was doing must be the right thing to do. + +Yet--Eve had swum Star Pond with her mouth filled with jewels. + +When she had handed the morocco box to Quintana, Stormont now realised +that she must have played her last card on the utterly desperate chance +that Quintana might go away without examining the case. + +Evidently she had emptied the case before she left her room. He +recollected that, during all that followed, Eve had not uttered a single +word. He knew why, now. How could she speak with her mouth full of +diamonds? + +A slight sound from the shore caused him to turn. Eve was coming toward +him in the dusk, moving painfully on her wounded feet. Darragh's flannel +shirt and his hunting coat buttoned around her slender waist clothed +her. + +The next instant he was beside her, lifting her in both arms. + +As he placed her in the saddle and adjusted one stirrup to her bandaged +foot, she turned and quietly thanked Darragh for the clothing. + +"And that was a brave thing you did," she added, "--to risk your life +for my father's property. Because the morocco case which you saved +proved to be empty does not make what you did any the less loyal and +gallant." + +Darragh gazed at her, astounded; took the hand she stretched out to him; +held it with a silly expression on his features. + +"Hal Smith," she said with perceptible emotion, "I take back what I once +said to you on Owl Marsh. No man is a real crook by nature who did what +you have done. That is 'faithfulness unto death'--the supreme +offer--loyalty----" + +Her voice broke; she pressed Darragh's hand convulsively and her lip +quivered. + +Darragh, with the morocco case full of jewels buttoned into his hip +pocket, stood motionless, mutely swallowing his amazement. + +What in the world did this girl mean, talking about an _empty_ case? + +But this was no time to unravel that sort of puzzle. He turned to +Stormont who, as perplexed as he, had been listening in silence. + +"Lead your horse forward," he said. "I know the trail. All you need do +is to follow me." And, shouldering his rifle, he walked leisurely into +the woods, the cartridge belt sagging _en bandouliere_ across his +woollen undershirt. + + +II + +When Stormont gently halted his horse it was dawn, and Eve, sagging +against him with one arm around his neck, sat huddled up on her saddle +fast asleep. + +In a birch woods, on the eastern slope of the divide, stood the log +camp, dimly visible in the silvery light of early morning. + +Darragh, cautioning Stormont with a slight gesture, went forward, +mounted the rustic veranda, and knocked at a lighted window. + +A man, already dressed, came and peered out at him, then hurried to open +the door. + +"I didn't know you, Captain Darragh----" he began, but fell silent under +the warning gesture that checked him. + +"I've a guest outside. She's Clinch's step-daughter, Eve Strayer. She +knows me by the name of Hal Smith. Do you understand?" + +"Yes, sir----" + +"Cut _that_ out, too. I'm Hal Smith to you, also. State Trooper Stormont +is out there with Eve Strayer. He was a comrade of mine in Russia. I'm +Hal Smith to him, by mutual agreement. _Now_ do you get me, Ralph?" + +"Sure, Hal. Go on; spit it out!" + +They both grinned. + +"You're a hootch runner," said Darragh. "This is your shack. The +hatchery is only a blind. That's all you have to know, Ralph. So put +that girl into my room and let her sleep till she wakes of her own +accord. + +"Stormont and I will take two of the guest-bunks in the _L._ And for +heaven's sake make us some coffee when you make your own. But first come +out and take the horse." + +They went out together. Stormont lifted Eve out of the saddle. She did +not wake. Darragh led the way into the log house and along a corridor to +his own room. + +"Turn down the sheets," whispered Stormont. And, when the bed was ready: +"Can you get a bath towel, Jim?" + +Darragh fetched one from the connecting bath-room. + +"Wrap it around her wet hair," whispered Stormont. "Good heavens, I wish +there were a woman here." + +"I wish so too," said Darragh; "she's chilled to the bone. You'll have +to wake her. She can't sleep in what she's wearing; it's almost as damp +as her hair----" + +He went to the closet and returned with a man's morning robe, as soft as +fleece. + +"Somehow or other she's got to get into that," he said. + +There was a silence. + +"Very well," said Stormont, reddening.... "If you'll step out +I'll--manage...." He looked Darragh straight in the eyes: "I have asked +her to marry me," he said. + + * * * * * + +When Stormont came out a great fire of birch-logs was blazing in the +living-room, and Darragh stood there, his elbow on the rough stone +mantel-shelf. + +Stormont came straight to the fire and set one spurred boot on the +fender. + +"She's warm and dry and sound asleep," he said. "I'll wake her again if +you think she ought to swallow something hot." + +At that moment the fish-culturist came in with a pot of steaming coffee. + +"This is my friend, Ralph Wier," said Darragh. "I think you'd better +give Eve a cup of coffee." And, to Wier, "Fill a couple of hot water +bags, old chap. We don't want any pneumonia in this house." + +When breakfast was ready Eve once more lay asleep with a slight dew of +perspiration on her brow. + +Darragh was half starved: Stormont ate little. Neither spoke at all +until, satisfied, they rose, ready for sleep. + +At the door of his room Stormont took Darragh's offered hand, +understanding what it implied: + +"Thanks, Jim.... Hers is the loveliest character I have ever known.... +If I weren't as poor as a homeless dog I'd marry her to-morrow.... I'll +do it anyway, I think.... I _can't_ let her go back to Clinch's Dump!" + +"After all," said Darragh, smiling, "if it's only money that worries +you, why not talk about a job to _me_!" + +Stormont flushed heavily: "That's rather wonderful of you, Jim----" + +"Why? You're the best officer I had. Why the devil did you go into the +Constabulary without talking to me?" + +Stormont's upper lip seemed inclined to twitch but he controlled it and +scowled at space. + +"Go to bed, you darned fool," said Darragh, carelessly. "You'll find dry +things ready. Ralph will take care of your uniform and boots." + +Then he went into his own quarters to read two letters which, conforming +to arrangements made with Mrs. Ray the day he had robbed Emanuel Sard, +were to be sent to Trout Lodge to await his arrival. + +Both, written from the Ritz, bore the date of the day before: the first +he opened was from the Countess Orloff-Strelwitz: + + "Dear Captain Darragh, + + "--You are so wonderful! Your messenger, with the _ten_ thousand + dollars which you say you already have recovered from those + miscreants who robbed Ricca, came aboard our ship before we + landed. It was a godsend; we were nearly penniless,--and oh, + _so_ shabby! + + "Instantly, my friend, we shopped, Ricca and I. Fifth Avenue + enchanted us. All misery was forgotten in the magic of that + paradise for women. + + "Yet, spendthrifts that we naturally are, we were not silly + enough to be extravagant. Ricca was wild for American + sport-clothes. I, also. Yet--only _two_ gowns apiece, excepting + our sport clothes. And other necessaries. Don't you think we + were economical?" + + "Furthermore, dear Captain Darragh, we are hastening to follow + your instructions. We are leaving to-day for your chateau in the + wonderful forest, of which you told us that + never-to-be-forgotten day in Riga. + + "Your agent is politeness, consideration and kindness itself. We + have our accommodations. We leave New York at midnight. + + "Ricca is so excited that it is difficult for her to restrain + her happiness. God knows the child has seen enough unhappiness + to quench the gaiety of anybody! + + "Well, all things end. Even tears. Even the Red Terror shall + pass from our beloved Russia. For, after all, Monsieur, God + still lives. + + "VALENTINE." + + "P. S. Ricca has written to you. I have read the letter. I have + let it go uncensored." + +Darragh went to the door of his room: + +"Ralph! Ralph!" he called. And, when Wier hurriedly appeared: + +"What time does the midnight train from New York get into Five Lakes?" + +"A little before nine----" + +"You can make it in the flivver, can't you?" + +"Yes, if I start _now_." + +"All right. Two ladies. You're to bring them to the _house_, not +_here_. Mrs. Ray knows about them. And--get back here as soon as you +can." + +He closed his door again, sat down on the bed and opened the other +letter. His hand shook as he unfolded it. He was so scared and excited +that he could scarcely decipher the angular, girlish penmanship: + + "To dear Captain Darragh, our champion and friend-- + + "It is difficult for me, Monsieur, to express my happiness and + my deep gratitude in the so cold formality of the written page. + + "Alas, sir, it will be still more difficult to find words for it + when again I have the happiness of greeting you in proper + person. + + "Valentine has told you everything, she warns me, and I am, + therefore, somewhat at a loss to know what I should write to + you. + + "Yet, I know very well what I would write if I dare. It is this: + that I wish you to know--although it may not pass the + censor--that I am most impatient to see you, Monsieur. _Not_ + because of kindness past, nor with an unworthy expectation of + benefits to come. But because of friendship,--_the deepest, + sincerest of my_ WHOLE LIFE. + + "Is it not modest of a young girl to say this? Yes, surely all + the world which was once _en regle_, formal, artificial, has + been burnt out of our hearts by this so frightful calamity which + has overwhelmed the world with fire and blood. + + "If ever on earth there was a time when we might venture to + express with candour what is hidden within our minds and hearts, + it would seem, Monsieur, that the time is now. + + "True, I have known you only for one day and one evening. Yet, + what happened to the world in that brief space of time--and to + us, Monsieur--brought _us_ together as though our meeting were + but a blessed reunion after the happy intimacy of many years.... + I speak, Monsieur, for myself. May I hope that I speak, also, + for you? + + "With a heart too full to thank you, and with expectations + indescribable--but with courage, always, for any event,--I take + my leave of you at the foot of this page. Like death--I + trust--my adieu is not the end, but the beginning. It is not + farewell; it is a greeting to him whom I most honour in all the + world.... And would willingly obey if he shall command. And + otherwise--_all_ else that in his mind--and heart--he might + desire. + + "THEODORICA." + +It was the most beautiful love-letter any man ever received in all the +history of love. + +And it had passed the censor. + + +III + +It was afternoon when Darragh awoke in his bunk, stiff, sore, confused +in mind and battered in body. + +However, when he recollected where he was he got out of bed in a hurry +and jerked aside the window curtains. + +The day was magnificent; a sky of royal azure overhead, and everywhere +the silver pillars of the birches supporting their splendid canopy of +ochre, orange, and burnt-gold. + +Wier, hearing him astir, came in. + +"How long have you been back! Did you meet the ladies with your +flivver?" demanded Darragh, impatiently. + +"I got to Five Lakes station just as the train came in. The young ladies +were the only passengers who got out. I waited to get their two steamer +trunks and then I drove them to Harrod Place----" + +"How did they seem, Ralph--worn-out--worried--ill?" + +Wier laughed: "No, sir, they looked very pretty and lively to me. They +seemed delighted to get here. They talked to each other in some foreign +tongue--Russian, I should say--at least, it sounded like what we heard +over in Siberia, Captain----" + +"It _was_ Russian.... You go on and tell me while I take another hot +bath!----" + +Wier followed him into the bath-room and vaulted to a seat on the deep +set window-sill: + +"--When they weren't talking Russian and laughing they talked to me and +admired the woods and mountains. I had to tell them everything--they +wanted to see buffalo and Indians. And when I told them there weren't +any, enquired for bears and panthers. + +"We saw two deer on the Scaur, and a woodchuck near the house; I thought +they'd jump out of the flivver----" + +He began to laugh at the recollection: "No, sir, they didn't act tired +and sad; they said they were crazy to get into their knickerbockers and +go to look for you----" + +"Where did you say I was?" asked Darragh, drying himself vigorously. + +"Out in the woods, somewhere. The last I saw of them, Mrs. Ray had their +hand-bags and Jerry and Tom were shouldering their trunks." + +"I'm going up there right away," interrupted Darragh excitedly. "--Good +heavens, Ralph, I haven't any clothes here, have I?" + +"No, sir. But those you wore last night are dry----" + +"Confound it! I meant to send some decent clothes here---- All right; +get me those duds I wore yesterday--and a bite to eat! I'm in a hurry, +Ralph----" + +He ate while dressing, disgustedly arraying himself in the grey shirt, +breeches, and laced boots which weather, water, rock, and brier had not +improved. + +In a pathetic attempt to spruce up, he knotted the red bandanna around +his neck and pinched Salzar's slouch hat into a peak. + +"I look like a hootch-running Wop," he said. "Maybe I can get into the +house before I meet the ladies----" + +"You look like one of Clinch's bums," remarked Wier with native honesty. + +Darragh, chagrined, went to his bunk, pulled the morocco case from under +the pillow, and shoved it into the bosom of his flannel shirt. + +"That's the main thing anyway," he thought. Then, turning to Wier, he +asked whether Eve and Stormont had awakened. + +It appeared that Trooper Stormont had saddled up and cantered away +shortly after sunrise, leaving word that he must hunt up his comrade, +Trooper Lannis, at Ghost Lake. + +"They're coming back this evening," added Wier. "He asked you to look +out for Clinch's step-daughter." + +"She's all right here. Can't you keep an eye on her, Ralph?" + +"I'm stripping trout, sir. I'll be around here to cook dinner for her +when she wakes up." + +Darragh glanced across the brook at the hatchery. It was only a few +yards away. He nodded and started for the veranda: + +"That'll be all right," he said. "Nobody is coming here to bother +her.... And don't let her leave, Ralph, till I get back----" + +"Very well, sir. But suppose she takes it into her head to leave----" + +Darragh called back, gaily: "She can't: she hasn't any clothes!" And +away he strode in the gorgeous sunshine of a magnificent autumn day, all +the clean and vigorous youth of him afire in anticipation of a reunion +which the letter from his lady-love had transfigured into a tryst. + +For, in that amazing courtship of a single day, he never dreamed that he +had won the heart of that sad, white-faced, hungry child in rags--silken +tatters still stained with the blood of massacre,--the very soles of her +shoes still charred by the embers of her own home. + +Yet, that is what must have happened in a single day and evening. Life +passes swiftly during such periods. Minutes lengthen into days; hours +into years. The soul finds itself. + +Then mind and heart become twin prophets,--clairvoyant concerning what +hides behind the veil; comprehending with divine clair-audience what the +Three Sisters whisper there--hearing even the whirr of the spindle--the +very snipping of the Eternal Shears! + + * * * * * + +The soul finds itself; the mind knows itself; the heart perfectly +understands. + +He had not spoken to this young girl of love. The blood of friends and +servants was still rusty on her skirt's ragged hem. + +Yet, that night, when at last in safety she had said good-bye to the man +who had secured it for her, he knew that he was in love with her. And, +at such crises, the veil that hides hearts becomes transparent. + +At that instant he had seen and known. Afterward he had dared not +believe that he had known. + +But hers had been a purer courage. + + * * * * * + +As he strode on, the comprehension of her candour, her honesty, the +sweet bravery that had conceived, created, and sent that letter, +thrilled this young man until his heavy boots sprouted wings, and the +trail he followed was but a path of rosy clouds over which he floated +heavenward. + + * * * * * + +About half an hour later he came to his senses with a distinct shock. + +Straight ahead of him on the trail, and coming directly toward him, +moved a figure in knickers and belted tweed. + +Flecked sunlight slanted on the stranger's cheek and burnished hair, +dappling face and figure with moving, golden spots. + +Instantly Darragh knew and trembled. + +But Theodorica of Esthonia had known him only in his uniform. + +As she came toward him, lovely in her lithe and rounded grace, only +friendly curiosity gazed at him from her blue eyes. + +Suddenly she knew him, went scarlet to her yellow hair, then white: and +tried to speak--but had no control of the short, rosy upper lip which +only quivered as he took her hands. + +The forest was dead still around them save for the whisper of painted +leaves sifting down from a sunlit vault above. + +Finally she said in a ghost of a voice: "My--friend...." + +"If you accept his friendship...." + +"Friendship is to be shared.... Ours mingled--on that day.... Your +share is--as much as pleases you." + +"All you have to give me, then." + +"Take it ... all I have...." Her blue eyes met his with a little +effort. All courage is an effort. + +Then that young man dropped on both knees at her feet and laid his lips +to her soft hands. + +In trembling silence she stood for a moment, then slowly sank on both +knees to face him across their clasped hands. + +So, in the gilded cathedral of the woods, pillared with silver, and +azure-domed, the betrothal of these two was sealed with clasp and lip. + +Awed, a little fearful, she looked into her lover's eyes with a gaze so +chaste, so oblivious to all things earthly, that the still purity of her +face seemed a sacrament, and he scarcely dared touch the childish lips +she offered. + +But when the sacrament of the kiss had been accomplished, she rested one +hand on his shoulder and rose, and drew him with her. + +Then _his_ moment came: he drew the emblazoned case from his breast, +opened it, and, in silence, laid it in her hands. The blaze of the +jewels in the sunshine almost blinded them. + +That was _his_ moment. + +The next moment was Quintana's. + + * * * * * + +Darragh hadn't a chance. Out of the bushes two pistols were thrust hard +against his stomach. Quintana's face was behind them. He wore no mask, +but the three men with him watched him over the edges of +handkerchiefs,--over the sights of levelled rifles, too. + +The youthful Grand Duchess had turned deadly white. One of Quintana's +men took the morocco case from her hands and shoved her aside without +ceremony. + +Quintana leered at Darragh over his levelled weapons: + +"My frien' Smith!" he exclaimed softly. "So it is you, then, who have +twice try to rob me of my property! + +"Ah! You recollec'? Yes? How you have rob me of a pacquet which contain +only some chocolate?" + +Darragh's face was burning with helpless rage. + +"My frien', Smith," repeated Quintana, "do you recollec' what it was you +say to me? Yes?... How often it is the onexpected which so usually +happen? You are quite correc', l'ami Smith. It has happen." + +He glanced at the open jewel box which one of the masked men held, then, +like lightning, his sinister eyes focussed on Darragh. + +"So," he said, "it was also you who rob me las' night of my property.... +What you do to Nick Salzar, eh?" + +"Killed him," said Darragh, dry lipped, nerved for death. "I ought to +have killed you, too, when I had the chance. But--_I'm_ white, you see." + +At the insult flung into his face over the muzzles of his own pistols, +Quintana burst into laughter. + +"Ah! You _should_ have shot me! You are quite right, my frien'. I mus' +say you have behave ver' foolish." + +He laughed again so hard that Darragh felt his pistols shaking against +his body. + +"So you have kill Nick Salzar, eh?" continued Quintana with perfect good +humour. "My frien', I am oblige to you for what you do. You are +surprise? Eh? It is ver' simple, my frien' Smith. What I want of a man +who can be kill? Eh? Of what use is he to me? Voila!" + +He laughed, patted Darragh on the shoulder with one of his pistols. + +"You, now--_you_ could be of use. Why? Because you are a better man than +was Nick Salzar. He who kills is better than the dead." + +Then, swiftly his dark features altered: + +"My frien' Smith," he said, "I have come here for my property, not to +kill. I have recover my property. Why shall I kill you? To say that I am +a better man? Yes, perhaps. But also I should be oblige to say that also +I am a fool. Yaas! A poor damfool." + +Without shifting his eyes he made a motion with one pistol to his men. +As they turned and entered the thicket, Quintana's intent gaze became +murderous. + +"If I mus' kill you I shall do so. Otherwise I have sufficient trouble +to keep me from ennui. My frien', I am going home to enjoy my property. +If you live or die it signifies nothing to me. No! Why, for the pleasure +of killing you, should I bring your dirty gendarmes on my heels?" + +He backed away to the edge of the thicket, venturing one swift and evil +glance at the girl who stood as though dazed. + +"Listen attentively," he said to Darragh. "One of my men remains hidden +very near. He is a dead shot. His aim is at your--sweetheart's--body. +You understan'?" + +"Yes." + +"Ver' well. You shall not go away for one hour time. After that----" he +took off his slouch hat with a sweeping bow--"you may go to hell!" + +Behind him the bushes parted, closed. + +Jose Quintana had made his adieux. + + + + +EPISODE NINE + +THE FOREST AND MR. SARD + + +I + +When at last Jose Quintana had secured what he had been after for years, +his troubles really began. + +In his pocket he had two million dollars worth of gems, including the +Flaming Jewel. + +But he was in the middle of a wilderness ringed in by hostile men, and +obliged to rely for aid on a handful of the most desperate criminals in +Europe. + +Those openly hostile to him had a wide net spread around him--wide of +mesh too, perhaps; and it was through a mesh he meant to wriggle, but +the net was intact from Canada to New York. + +Canadian police and secret agents held it on the north: this he had +learned from Jake Kloon long since. + +East, west and south he knew he had the troopers of the New York State +Constabulary to deal with, and in addition every game warden and fire +warden in the State Forests, a swarm of plain clothes men from the +Metropolis, and the rural constabulary of every town along the edges of +the vast reservation. + +Just who was responsible for this enormous conspiracy to rob him of what +he considered his own legitimate loot Quintana did not know. + +Sard's attorney, Eddie Abrams, believed that the French police +instigated it through agents of the United States Secret Service. + +Of one thing Quintana was satisfied, Mike Clinch had nothing to do with +stirring up the authorities. Law-breakers of his sort don't shout for +the police or invoke State or Government aid. + +As for the status of Darragh--or Hal Smith, as he supposed him to +be--Quintana took him for what he seemed to be, a well-born young man +gone wrong. Europe was full of that kind. To Quintana there was nothing +suspicious about Hal Smith. On the contrary, his clever recklessness +confirmed that polished bandit's opinion that Smith was a gentleman +degenerated into a crook. It takes an educated imagination for a man to +do what Smith had done to him. If the common crook has any imagination +at all it never is educated. + +Another matter worried Jose Quintana: he was not only short on +provisions, but what remained was cached in Drowned Valley; and Mike +Clinch and his men were guarding every outlet to that sinister region, +excepting only the rocky and submerged trail by which he had made his +exit. + +That was annoying; it cut off provisions and liquor from Canada, for +which he had arranged with Jake Kloon. For Kloon's hootch-runners now +would be stopped by Clinch; and not one among them knew about the rocky +trail in. + +All these matters were disquieting enough: but what really and most +deeply troubled Quintana was his knowledge of his own men. + +He did not trust one among them. Of international crookdom they were +the cream. Not one of them but would have murdered his fellow if the +loot were worth it and the chances of escape sufficient. + +There was no loyalty to him, none to one another, no "honour among +thieves"--and it was Jose Quintana who knew that only in romance such a +thing existed. + +No, he could not trust a single man. Only hope of plunder attached these +marauders to him, and merely because he had education and imagination +enough to provide what they wanted. + +Anyone among them would murder and rob him if opportunity presented. + +Now, how to keep his loot; how to get back to Europe with it, was the +problem that confronted Quintana after robbing Darragh. And he +determined to settle part of that question at once. + +About five miles from Harrod Place, within a hundred rods of which he +had held up Hal Smith, Quintana halted, seated himself on a rotting log, +and waited until his men came up and gathered around him. + +For a little while, in utter silence, his keen eyes travelled from one +visage to the next, from Henri Picquet to Victor Georgiades, to Sanchez, +to Sard. His intent scrutiny focussed on Sard; lingered. + +If there were anybody he might trust, a little way, it would be Sard. + +Then a polite, untroubled smile smoothed the pale, dark features of Jose +Quintana: + +"Bien, messieurs, the coup has been success. Yes? Ver' well; in turn, +then, en accord with our custom, I shall dispose myse'f to listen to +your good advice." + +He looked at Henri Picquet, smiled and nodded invitation to speak. + +Picquet shrugged: "For me, mon capitaine, eet ees ver' simple. We are +five. Therefore, divide into five ze gems. After zat, each one for +himself to make his way out----" + +"Nick Salzar and Harry Beck are in the Drowned Valley," interrupted +Quintana. + +Picquet shrugged again; Sanchez laughed, saying: "If they are there it +is their misfortune. Also, we others are in a hurry." + +Picquet added: "Also five shares are sufficient division." + +"It is propose, then, that we abandon our comrades Beck and Salzar to +the rifle of Mike Clinch?" + +"Why not?" demanded Georgiades sullenly;--"we shall have worse to face +before we see the Place de l'Opera." + +"There remains, also, Eddie Abrams," remarked Quintana. + +Crooks never betray their attorney. Everybody expressed a willingness to +have the five shares of plunder properly assessed to satisfy the fee due +to Mr. Abrams. + +"Ver' well," nodded Quintana, "are you satisfy, messieurs, to divide an' +disperse?" + +Sard said, heavily, that they ought to stick together until they arrived +in New York. + +Sanchez sneered, accusing Sard of wanting a bodyguard to escort him to +his own home. "In this accursed forest," he insisted, "five of us would +attract attention where one alone, with sufficient stealth, can slip +through into the open country." + +"Two by two is better," said Picquet. "You, Sanchez, shall travel alone +if you desire----" + +"Divide the gems first," growled Georgiades, "and then let each do what +pleases him." + +"That," nodded Quintana, "is also my opinion. It is so settle. +Attention!" Two pistols were in his hands as by magic. With a slight +smile he laid them on the moss beside him. + +He then spread a large white handkerchief flat on the ground; and, from +his pockets, he poured out the glittering cascade. Yet, like a feeding +panther, every sense remained alert to the slightest sound or movement +elsewhere; and when Georgiades grunted from excess emotion, Quintana's +right hand held a pistol before the grunt had ceased. + +It was a serious business, this division of loot; every reckless visage +reflected the strain of the situation. + +Quintana, both pistols in his hands, looked down at the scintillating +heap of jewels. + +"I estimate two and one quartaire million of dollaires," he said simply. +"It has been agree that I accep' for me the erosite gem known as The +Flaming Jewel. In addition, messieurs, it has been agree that I accep' +for myse'f one part in five of the remainder." + +A fierce silence reigned. Every wolfish eye was on the leader. He +smiled, rested his pair of pistols on either knee. + +"Is there," he asked softly, "any gentleman who shall objec'?" + +"Who," demanded Georgiades hoarsely, "is to divide for us?" + +"It is for such purpose," explained Quintana suavely, "that my frien', +Emanuel Sard, has arrive. Monsieur Sard is a brokaire of diamon's, as +all know ver' well. Therefore, it shall be our frien' Sard who will +divide for us what we have gain to-day by our--industry." + +The savage tension broke with a laugh at the word chosen by Quintana to +express their efforts of the morning. + +Sard had been standing with one fat hand flat against the trunk of a +tree. Now, at a nod from Quintana, he squatted down, and, with the same +hand that had been resting against the tree, he spread out the pile of +jewels into a flat layer. + +As he began to divide this into five parts, still using the flat of his +pudgy hand, something poked him lightly in the ribs. It was the muzzle +of one of Quintana's pistols. + +Sard, ghastly pale, looked up. His palm, sticky with balsam gum, +quivered in Quintana's grasp. + +"I was going to scrape it off," he gasped. "The tree was sticky----" + +Quintana, with the muzzle of his pistol, detached half a dozen diamonds +and rubies that clung to the gum on Mr. Sard's palm. + +"Wash!" he said drily. + +Sard, sweating with fear, washed his right hand with whiskey from his +pocket-flask, and dried it for general inspection. + +"My God," he protested tremulously, "it was accidental, gentlemen. Do +you think I'd try to get away with anything like that----" + +Quintana coolly shoved him aside and with the barrel of his pistol he +pushed the flat pile of gems into five separate heaps. Only he and +Georgiades knew that a magnificent diamond had been lodged in the muzzle +of his pistol. The eyes of the Greek flamed with rage at the trick, but +he awaited the division before he should come to any conclusion. + +Quintana coolly picked out The Flaming Jewel and pocketed it. Then, to +each man he indicated the heap which was to be his portion. + +A snarling wrangle instantly began, Sanchez objecting to rubies and +demanding more emeralds, and Picquet complaining violently concerning +the smallness of the diamonds allotted him. + +Sard's trained eyes appraised every allotment. Without weighing, and, +lacking time and paraphernalia for expert examination, he was inclined +to think the division fair enough. + +Quintana got to his feet lithely. + +"For me," he said, "it is finish. With my frien' Sard I shall now +depart. Messieurs, I embrace and salute you. A bientot in Paris--if it +be God's will! Donc--au revoir, les amis, et a la bonheur! Allons! Each +for himself and gar' aux flics!" + +Sard, seized with a sort of still terror, regarded Quintana with +enormous eyes. Torn between dismay of being left alone in the +wilderness, and a very natural fear of any single companion, he did not +know what to say or do. + +En masse, the gang were too distrustful of one another to unite on +robbing any individual. But any individual might easily rob a companion +when alone with him. + +"Why--why can't we all go together," he stammered. "It is safer, +surer----" + +"I go with Quintana and you," interrupted Georgiades, smilingly; his +mind on the diamond in the muzzle of Quintana's pistol. + +"I do not invite you," said Quintana. "But come if it pleases you." + +"I also prefer to come with you others," growled Sanchez. "To roam alone +in this filthy forest does not suit me." + +Picquet shrugged his shoulders, turned on his heel in silence. They +watched him moving away all alone, eastward. When he had disappeared +among the trees, Quintana looked inquiringly at the others. + +"Eh, bien, non alors!" snarled Georgiades suddenly. "There are too many +in your trupeau, mon capitaine. Bonne chance!" + +He turned and started noisily in the direction taken by Picquet. + +They watched him out of sight; listened to his careless trample after he +was lost to view. When at length the last distant sound of his retreat +had died away in the stillness, Quintana touched Sard with the point of +his pistol. + +"Go first," he said suavely. + +"For God's sake, be a little careful of your gun----" + +"I am, my dear frien'. It is of _you_ I may become careless. You will +mos' kin'ly face south, and you will be kin' sufficient to start +immediate. Tha's what I mean.... I thank you.... Now, my frien', +Sanchez! Tha's correc'! You shall follow my frien' Sard ver' close. Me, +I march in the rear. So we shall pass to the eas' of thees Star Pon', +then between the cross-road an' Ghos' Lake; an' then we shall repose; +an' one of us, en vidette, shall discover if the Constabulary have +patrol beyon'.... Allons! March!" + + +II + +Guided by Quintana's directions, the three had made a wide detour to the +east, steering by compass for the cross-roads beyond Star Pond. + +In a dense growth of cedars, on a little ridge traversing wet land, +Quintana halted to listen. + +Sard and Sanchez, supposing him to be at their heels, continued on, +pushing their way blindly through the cedars, clinging to the hard ridge +in terror of sink-holes. But their progress was very slow; and they were +still in sight, fighting a painful path amid the evergreens, when +Quintana suddenly squatted close to the moist earth behind a juniper +bush. + +At first, except for the threshing of Sard and Sanchez through the +massed obstructions ahead, there was not a sound in the woods. + +After a little while there _was_ a sound--very, very slight. No dry +stick cracked; no dry leaves rustled; no swish of foliage; no whipping +sound of branches disturbed the intense silence. + +But, presently, came a soft, swift rhythm like the pace of a forest +creature in haste--a discreetly hurrying tread which was more a series +of light earth-shocks than sound. + +Quintana, kneeling on one knee, lifted his pistol. He already felt the +slight vibration of the ground on the hard ridge. The cedars were moving +just beyond him now. He waited until, through the parted foliage, a face +appeared. + +The loud report of his pistol struck Sard with the horror of paralysis. +Sanchez faced about with one spring, snarling, a weapon in either hand. + +In the terrible silence they could hear something heavy floundering in +the bushes, choking, moaning, thudding on the ground. + +Sanchez began to creep back; Sard, more dead than alive, crawled at his +heels. Presently they saw Quintana, waist deep in juniper, looking down +at something. + +And when they drew closer they saw Georgiades lying on his back under a +cedar, the whole front of his shirt from chest to belly a sopping mess +of blood. + +There seemed no need of explanation. The dead Greek lay there where he +had not been expected, and his two pistols lay beside him where they had +fallen. + +Sanchez looked stealthily at Quintana, who said softly: + +"Bien sure.... In his left side pocket, I believe." + +Sanchez laid a cool hand on the dead man's heart; then, satisfied, +rummaged until he found Georgiades' share of the loot. + +Sard, hurriedly displaying a pair of clean but shaky hands, made the +division. + +When the three men had silently pocketed what was allotted to each, +Quintana pushed curiously at the dead man with the toe of his shoe. + +"Peste!" he remarked. "I had place, for security, a ver' large +diamon' in my pistol barrel. Now it is within the interior of this +gentleman...." He turned to Sanchez: "I sell him to you. One sapphire. +Yes?" + +Sanchez shook his head with a slight sneer: "We wait--if you want your +diamond, mon capitaine." + +Quintana hesitated, then made a grimace and shook his head. + +"No," he said, "he has swallow. Let him digest. Allons! March!" + +But after they had gone on--two hundred yards, perhaps--Sanchez stopped. + +"Well?" inquired Quintana. Then, with a sneer: "I now recollec' that +once you have been a butcher in Madrid.... Suit your tas'e, l'ami +Sanchez." + +Sard gazed at Sanchez out of sickened eyes. + +"You keep away from me until you've washed yourself," he burst out, +revolted. "Don't you come near me till you're clean!" + +Quintana laughed and seated himself. Sanchez, with a hang-dog glance at +him, turned and sneaked back on the trail they had traversed. Before he +was out of sight Sard saw him fish out a Spanish knife from his hip +pocket and unclasp it. + +Almost nauseated, he turned on Quintana in a sort of frightened fury: + +"Come on!" he said hoarsely. "I don't want to travel with that man! I +won't associate with a ghoul! My God, I'm a respectable business +man----" + +"Yaas," drawled Quintana, "tha's what I saw always myse'f; my frien' +Sard he is ver' respec'able, an' I trus' him like I trus' myse'f." + +However, after a moment, Quintana got up from the fallen tree where he +had been seated. + +As he passed Sard he looked curiously into the man's frightened eyes. +There was not the slightest doubt that Sard was a coward. + +"You shall walk behin' me," remarked Quintana carelessly. "If Sanchez +fin' us, it is well; if he shall not, that also is ver' well.... We go, +now." + + * * * * * + +Sanchez made no effort to find them. They had been gone half an hour +before he had finished the business that had turned him back. + +After that he wandered about hunting for water--a rivulet, a puddle, +anything. But the wet ground proved wet only on the surface moss. +Sanchez needed more than damp moss for his toilet. Casting about him, +hither and thither, for some depression that might indicate a stream, he +came to a heavily wooded slope, and descended it. + +There was a bog at the foot. With his fouled hands he dug out a basin +which filled up full of reddish water, discoloured by alders. + +But the water was redder still when his toilet ended. + +As he stood there, examining his clothing, and washing what he could of +the ominous stains from sleeve and shoe, very far away to the north he +heard a curious noise--a far, faint sound such as he never before had +heard. + +If it were a voice of any sort there was nothing human about it.... +Probably some sort of unknown bird.... Perhaps a bird of prey.... That +was natural, considering the attraction that Georgiades would have for +such creatures.... If it were a bird it must be a large one, he +thought.... Because there was a certain volume to the cry.... Perhaps +it was a beast, after all.... Some unknown beast of the forest.... + +Sanchez was suddenly afraid. Scarcely knowing what he was doing he began +to run along the edge of the bog. + +First growth timber skirted it; running was unobstructed by underbrush. + +With his startled ears full of the alarming and unknown sound, he ran +through the woods under gigantic pines which spread a soft green +twilight around him. + +He was tired, or thought he was, but the alarming sounds were filling +his ears now; the entire forest seemed full of them, echoing in all +directions, coming in upon him from everywhere, so that he knew not in +which direction to run. + +But he could not stop. Demoralised, he darted this way and that; terror +winged his feet; the air vibrated above and around him with the +dreadful, unearthly sounds. + +The next instant he fell headlong over a ledge, struck water, felt +himself whirled around in the icy, rushing current, rolled over, tumbled +through rapids, blinded, deafened, choked, swept helplessly in a vast +green wall of water toward something that thundered in his brain an +instant, then dashed it into roaring chaos. + + * * * * * + +Half a mile down the turbulent outlet of Star Pond,--where a great sheet +of green water pours thirty feet into the tossing foam below,--and +spinning, dipping, diving, bobbing up like a lost log after the drive, +the body of Senor Sanchez danced all alone in the wilderness, spilling +from soggy pockets diamonds, sapphires, rubies, emeralds, into crystal +caves where only the shadows of slim trout stirred. + + * * * * * + +Very far away to the eastward Quintana stood listening, clutching Sard +by one sleeve to silence him. + +Presently he said: "My frien', somebody is hunting with houn's in this +fores'. + +"Maybe they are not hunting _us_.... _Maybe._... But, for me, I shall +seek running water. Go you your own way! Houp! Vamose!" + +He turned westward; but he had taken scarcely a dozen strides when Sard +came panting after him: + +"Don't leave me!" gasped the terrified diamond broker. "I don't know +where to go----" + +Quintana faced him abruptly--with a terrifying smile and glimmer of +white teeth--and shoved a pistol into the fold of fat beneath Sard's +double chin. + +"You hear those dogs? Yes? Ver' well; I also. Run, now. I say to you run +ver' damn quick. He! Houp! Allez vous en! Beat eet!" + +He struck Sard a stinging blow on his fleshy ear with the pistol barrel, +and Sard gave a muffled shriek which was more like the squeak of a +frightened animal. + +"My God, Quintana----" he sobbed. Then Quintana's eyes blazed murder: +and Sard turned and ran lumbering through the thicket like a stampeded +ox, crashing on amid withered brake, white birch scrub and brier, not +knowing whither he was headed, crazed with terror. + +Quintana watched his flight for a moment, then, pistol swinging, he ran +in the opposite direction, eastward, speeding lithely as a cat down a +long, wooded slope which promised running water at the foot. + + * * * * * + +Sard could not run very far. He could scarcely stand when he pulled up +and clung to the trunk of a tree. + +More dead than alive he embraced the tree, gulping horribly for air, +every fat-incrusted organ labouring, his senses swimming. + +As he sagged there, gripping his support on shaking knees, by degrees +his senses began to return. + +He could hear the dogs, now, vaguely as in a nightmare. But after a +little while he began to believe that their hysterical yelping was +really growing more distant. + +Then this man whose every breath was an outrage on God, prayed. + +He prayed that the hounds would follow Quintana, come up with him, drag +him down, worry him, tear him to shreds of flesh and clothing. + +He listened and prayed alternately. After a while he no longer prayed +but concentrated on his ears. + +Surely, surely, the diabolical sound was growing less distinct.... It +was changing direction too. But whether in Quintana's direction or not +Sard could not tell. He was no woodsman. He was completely turned +around. + +He looked upward through a dense yellow foliage, but all was grey in the +sky--very grey and still;--and there seemed to be no traces of the sun +that had been shining. + +He looked fearfully around: trees, trees, and more trees. No break, no +glimmer, nothing to guide him, teach him. He could see, perhaps, fifty +feet; no further. + +In panic he started to move on. That is what fright invariably does to +those ignorant of the forest. Terror starts them moving. + + * * * * * + +Sobbing, frightened almost witless, he had been floundering forward for +over an hour, and had made circle after circle without knowing, when, by +chance, he set foot in a perfectly plain trail. + +Emotion overpowered him. He was too overcome to stir for a while. At +length, however, he tottered off down the trail, oblivious as to what +direction he was taking, animated only by a sort of madness--horror of +trees--an insane necessity to see open ground, get into it, and lie down +on it. + +And now, directly ahead, he saw clear grey sky low through the trees. +The wood's edge! + +He began to run. + +As he emerged from the edge of the woods, waist-deep in brush and weeds, +wide before his blood-shot eyes spread Star Pond. + +Even in his half-stupefied brain there was memory enough left for +recognition. + +He remembered the lake. His gaze travelled to the westward; and he saw +Clinch's Dump standing below, stark, silent, the doors swinging open in +the wind. + +When terror had subsided in a measure and some of his trembling strength +returned, he got up out of the clump of rag-weeds where he had lain +down, and earnestly nosed the unpainted house, listening with all his +ears. + +There was not a sound save the soughing of autumn winds and the delicate +rattle of falling leaves in the woods behind him. + +He needed food and rest. He gazed earnestly at the house. Nothing +stirred there save the open doors swinging idly in every vagrant wind. + +He ventured down a little way--near enough to see the black cinders of +the burned barn, and close enough to hear the lake waters slapping the +sandy shore. + +If he dared---- + +And after a long while he ventured to waddle nearer, slinking through +brush and frosted weed, creeping behind boulders, edging always closer +and closer to that silent house where nothing moved except the +wind-blown door. + +And now, at last, he set a furtive foot upon the threshold, stood +listening, tip-toed in, peered here and there, sidled to the +dining-room, peered in. + + * * * * * + +When, at length, Emanuel Sard discovered that Clinch's Dump was +tenantless, he made straight for the pantry. Here was cheese, crackers, +an apple pie, half a dozen bottles of home-brewed beer. + +He loaded his arms with all they could carry, stole through the +dance-hall out to the veranda, which overlooked the lake. + +Here, hidden in the doorway, he could watch the road from Ghost Lake and +survey the hillside down which an intruder must come from the forest. + +And here Sard slaked his raging thirst and satiated the gnawing appetite +of the obese, than which there is no crueller torment to an inert liver +and distended paunch. + +Munching, guzzling, watching, Sard squatted just within the veranda +doorway, anxiously considering his chances. + +He knew where he was. At the foot of the lake, and eastward, he had been +robbed by a highwayman on the forest road branching from the main +highway. Southwest lay Ghost Lake and the Inn. + +Somewhere between these two points he must try to cross the State +Road.... After that, comparative safety. For the miles that still +would lie between him and distant civilisation seemed as nothing to +the horror of that hell of trees. + +He looked up now at the shaggy fringing woods, shuddered, opened another +bottle of beer. + +In all that panorama of forest, swale, and water the only thing that had +alarmed him at all by moving was something in the water. When first he +noticed it he almost swooned, for he took it to be a swimming dog. + +In his agitation he had risen to his feet; and then the swimming +creature almost frightened Sard out of his senses, for it tilted +suddenly and went down with a report like the crack of a pistol. + +However, when Sard regained control of his wits he realised that a +swimming dog doesn't dive and doesn't whack the water with its tail. + +He dimly remembered hearing that beavers behaved that way. + +Watching the water he saw the thing out there in the lake again, +swimming in erratic circles, its big, dog-like head well out of the +water. + +It certainly was no dog. A beaver, maybe. Whatever it was, Sard didn't +care any longer. + +Idly he watched it. Sometimes, when it swam very near, he made a sudden +motion with his fat arm; and crack!--with a pistol-shot report down it +dived. But always it reappeared. + +What had a creature like that to do with him? Sard watched it with +failing interest, thinking of other things--of Quintana and the chances +that the dogs had caught him,--of Sanchez, the Ghoul, hoping that dire +misfortune might overtake him, too;--of the dead man sprawling under the +cedar-tree, all sopping crimson---- Faugh! + +Shivering, Sard filled his mouth with apple-pie and cheese and pulled +the cork from another bottle of home-brewed beer. + + +III + +About that time, a mile and a half to the southward, James Darragh came +out on the rocky and rushing outlet to Star Pond. + +Over his shoulder was a rifle, and all around him ran dogs,--big, +powerful dogs, built like foxhounds but with the rough, wiry coats of +Airedales, even rougher of ear and features. + +The dogs,--half a dozen or so in number,--seemed very tired. All ran +down eagerly to the water and drank and slobbered and panted, lolling +their tongues, and slaking their thirst again and again along the +swirling edge of a deep trout pool. + +Darragh's rifle lay in the hollow of his left arm; his khaki waistcoat +was set with loops full of cartridges. From his left wrist hung a +raw-hide whip. + +Now he laid aside his rifle and whip, took from the pocket of his +shooting coat three or four leather dog-leashes, went down among the +dogs and coupled them up. + +They followed him back to the bank above. Here he sat down on a rock and +inspected his watch. + +He had been seated there for ten minutes, possibly, with his tired dogs +lying around him, when just above him he saw a State Trooper emerge from +the woods on foot, carrying a rifle over one shoulder. + +"Jack!" he called in a guarded voice. + +Trooper Stormont turned, caught sight of Darragh, made a signal of +recognition, and came toward him. + +Darragh said: "Your mate, Trooper Lannis, is down stream. I've two of my +own game wardens at the cross-roads, two more on the Ghost Lake Road, +and two foresters and an inspector out toward Owl Marsh." + +Stormont nodded, looked down at the dogs. + +"This isn't the State Forest," said Darragh, smiling. Then his face grew +grave: "How is Eve?" he asked. + +"She's feeling better," replied Stormont. "I telephoned to Ghost Lake +Inn for the hotel physician.... I was afraid of pneumonia, Jim. Eve had +chills last night.... But Dr. Claybourn thinks she's all right.... So +I left her in care of your housekeeper." + +"Mrs. Ray will look out for her.... You haven't told Eve who I am, have +you?" + +"No." + +"I'll tell her myself to-night. I don't know how she'll take it when she +learns I'm the heir to the mortal enemy of Mike Clinch." + +"I don't know either," said Stormont. + +There was a silence; the State Trooper looked down at the dogs: + +"What are they, Jim?" + +"Otter-hounds," said Darragh, "--a breed of my own.... But that's _all_ +they are capable of hunting, I guess," he added grimly. + +Stormont's gaze questioned him. + +Darragh said: "After I telephoned you this morning that a guest of mine +at Harrod Place, and I, had been stuck up and robbed by Quintana's +outfit, what did you do, Jack?" + +"I called up Bill Lannis first," said Stormont, "--then the doctor. +After he came, Mrs. Ray arrived with a maid. Then I went in and spoke to +Eve. Then I did what you suggested--I crossed the forest diagonally +toward The Scaur, zig-zagged north, turned by the rock hog-back south of +Drowned Valley, came southeast, circled west, and came out here as you +asked me to." + +"Almost on the minute," nodded Darragh.... "You saw no signs of +Quintana's gang?" + +"None." + +"Well," said Darragh, "I left my two guests at Harrod Place to amuse +each other, got out three couple of my otter-hounds and started +them,--as I hoped and supposed,--on Quintana's trail." + +"What happened?" inquired Stormont curiously. + +"Well--I don't know. I think they were following some of Quintana's +gang--for a while, anyway. After that, God knows,--deer, hare, +cotton-tail,--_I_ don't know. They yelled their bally heads off--I on +the run--they're slow dogs, you know--and whatever they were after +either fooled them or there were too many trails.... I made a mistake, +that's all. These poor beasts don't know anything except an otter. I +just _hoped_ they might take Quintana's trail if I put them on it." + +"Well," said Stormont, "it can't be helped now.... I told Bill Lannis +that we'd rendezvous at Clinch's Dump." + +"All right," nodded Darragh. "Let's keep to the open; my dogs are +leashed couples." + +They had been walking for twenty minutes, possibly, exchanging scarcely +a word, and they were now nearing the hilly basin where Star Pond lay, +when Darragh said abruptly: + +"I'm going to tell you about things, Jack. You've taken my word so far +that it's all right----" + +"Naturally," said Stormont simply. + +The two men, who had been brother officers in the Great War, glanced at +each other, slightly smiling. + +"Here it is then," said Darragh. "When I was on duty in Riga for the +Intelligence Department, I met two ladies in dire distress, whose +mansion had been burned and looted, supposedly by the Bolsheviki. + +"They were actually hungry and penniless; the only clothing they +possessed they were wearing. These ladies were the Countess +Orloff-Strelwitz, and a young girl, Theodorica, Grand Duchess of +Esthonia.... I did what I could for them. After a while, in the course +of other duty, I found out that the Bolsheviki had had nothing to do +with the arson and robbery, but that the crime had been perpetrated by +Jose Quintana's gang of international crooks masquerading as +Bolsheviki." + +Stormont nodded: "I also came across similar cases," he remarked. + +"Well, this was a flagrant example. Quintana had burnt the chateau and +had made off with over two million dollars worth of the little Grand +Duchess's jewels--among them the famous Erosite gem known as The Flaming +Jewel." + +"I've heard of it." + +"There are only two others known.... Well, I did what I could with the +Esthonian police, who didn't believe me. + +"But a short time ago the Countess Orloff sent me word that Quintana +really was the guilty one, and that he had started for America. + +"I've been after him ever since.... But, Jack, until this morning +Quintana did not possess these stolen jewels. _Clinch did!_" + +"What!" + +"Clinch served over-seas in a Forestry Regiment. In Paris he robbed +Quintana of these jewels. That's why I've been hanging around Clinch." + +Stormont's face was flushed and incredulous. Then it lost colour as he +thought of the jewels that Eve had concealed--the gems for which she had +risked her life. + +He said: "But you tell me Quintana robbed you this morning." + +"He did. The little Grand Duchess and the Countess Orloff-Strelwitz are +my guests at Harrod Place. + +"Last night I snatched the case containing these gems from Quintana's +fingers. This morning, as I offered them to the Grand Duchess, Quintana +coolly stepped between us----" + +His voice became bitter and his features reddened with rage poorly +controlled: + +"By God, Jack, I should have shot Quintana when the opportunity offered. +Twice I've had the chance. The next time I shall kill him any way I +can.... Legitimately." + +"Of course," said Stormont gravely. But his mind was full of the jewels +which Eve had. What and whose were they,--if Quintana again had the +Esthonian gems in his possession? + +"Had you recovered all the jewels for the Grand Duchess?" he asked +Darragh. + +"Every one, Jack.... Quintana has done me a terrible injury. I shan't +let it go. I mean to hunt that man to the end." + +Stormont, terribly perplexed, nodded. + +A few minutes later, as they came out among the willows and alders on +the northeast side of Star Pond, Stormont touched his comrade's arm. + +"Look at that enormous dog-otter out there in the lake!" + +"Grab those dogs! They'll strangle each other," cried Darragh quickly. +"That's it--unleash them, Jack, and let them go!"--he was struggling +with the other two couples while speaking. + +And now the hounds, unleashed, lifted frantic voices. The very sky +seemed full of the discordant tumult; wood and shore reverberated with +the volume of convulsive and dissonant baying. + +"Damn it," said Darragh, disgusted, "--that's what they've been trailing +all the while across-woods,--that devilish dog-otter yonder.... And I +had hoped they were on Quintana's trail----" + +A mass rush and scurry of crazed dogs nearly swept him off his feet, and +both men caught a glimpse of a large bitch-otter taking to the lake from +a ledge of rock just beyond. + +Now the sky vibrated with the deafening outcry of the dogs, some taking +to water, others racing madly along shore. + +Crack! The echo of the dog-otter's blow on the water came across to them +as the beast dived. + +"Well, I'm in for it now," muttered Darragh, starting along the bank +toward Clinch's Dump, to keep an eye on his dogs. + +Stormont followed more leisurely. + + +IV + +A few minutes before Darragh and Stormont had come out on the farther +edge of Star Pond, Sard, who had heard from Quintana about the big drain +pipe which led from Clinch's pantry into the lake, decided to go in and +take a look at it. + +He had been told all about its uses,--how Clinch,--in the event of a +raid by State Troopers or Government enforcement agents,--could empty +his contraband hootch into the lake if necessary,--and even could slide +a barrel of ale or a keg of rum, intact, into the great tile tunnel and +recover the liquor at his leisure. + +Also, and grimly, Quintana had admitted that through this drain Eve +Strayer and the State Trooper, Stormont, had escaped from Clinch's Dump. + +So now Sard, full of curiosity, went back into the pantry to look at it +for himself. + +Almost instantly the idea occurred to him to make use of the drain for +his own safety and comfort. + +Why shouldn't he sleep in the pantry, lock the door, and, in case of +intrusion,--other exits being unavailable,--why shouldn't he feel +entirely safe with such an avenue of escape open? + +For swimming was Sard's single accomplishment. He wasn't afraid of the +water; he simply couldn't sink. Swimming was the only sport he ever had +indulged in. He adored it. + +Also, the mere idea of sleeping alone amid that hell of trees terrified +Sard. Never had he known such horror as when Quintana abandoned him in +the woods. Never again could he gaze upon a tree without malignant +hatred. Never again did he desire to lay eyes upon even a bush. The very +sight, now, of the dusky forest filled him with loathing. Why should he +not risk one night in this deserted house,--sleep well and warmly, feed +well, drink his bellyfull of Clinch's beer, before attempting the +dead-line southward, where he was only too sure that patrols were riding +and hiding on the lookout for the fancy gentlemen of Jose Quintana's +selected company of malefactors? + +Well, here in the snug pantry were pies, crullers, bread, cheeses, +various dried meats, tinned vegetables, ham, bacon, fuel and range to +prepare what he desired. + +Here was beer, too; and doubtless ardent spirits if he could nose out +the hidden demijohns and bottles. + +He peered out of the pantry window at the forest, shuddered, cursed +it and every separate tree in it; cursed Quintana, too, wishing him +black mischance. No; it was settled. He'd take his chance here in the +pantry.... And there must be a mattress somewhere upstairs. + +He climbed the staircase, cautiously, discovered Clinch's bedroom, took +the mattress and blankets from the bed, dragged them to the pantry. + +Could any honest man be more tight and snug in this perilous world of +the desperate and undeserving? Sard thought not. But one matter troubled +him: the lock of the pantry door had been shattered. To remedy this he +moused around until he discovered some long nails and a claw-hammer. +When he was ready to go to sleep he'd nail himself in. And in the +morning he'd pry the door loose. That was simple. Sard chuckled for the +first time since he had set eyes upon the accursed region. + +And now the sun came out from behind a low bank of solid grey cloud, and +fell upon the countenance of Emanuel Sard. It warmed his parrot-nose +agreeably; it cheered and enlivened him. + +Not for him a night of terrors in that horrible forest which he could +see through the pantry window. + +A sense of security and of well-being pervaded Sard to his muddy shoes. +He even curled his fat toes in them with animal contentment. + +A little snack before cooking a heavily satisfactory dinner? Certainly. + +So he tucked a couple of bottles of beer under one arm, a loaf of bread +and a chunk of cheese under the other, and waddled out to the veranda +door. + +And at that instant the very heavens echoed with that awful tumult which +had first paralysed, then crazed him in the woods. + +Bottles, bread, cheese fell from his grasp and his knees nearly +collapsed under him. In the bushes on the lake shore he saw animals +leaping and racing, but, in his terror, he did not recognise them for +dogs. + +Then, suddenly, he saw a man, close to the house, running: and another +man not far behind. _That_ he understood, and it electrified him into +action. + +It was too late to escape from the house now. He understood that +instantly. + +He ran back through the dance-hall and dining-room to the pantry; but he +dared not let these intruders hear the noise of hammering. + +In an agony of indecision he stood trembling, listening to the infernal +racket of the dogs, and waiting for the first footstep within the house. + +No step came. But, chancing to look over his shoulder, he saw a man +peering through the pantry window at him. + +Ungovernable terror seized Sard. Scarcely aware what he was about, he +seized the edges of the big drain-pipe and crowded his obese body into +it head first. He was so fat and heavy that he filled the tile. To start +himself down he pulled with both hands and kicked himself forward, +tortoise-like, down the slanting tunnel, sticking now and then, dragging +himself on and downward. + +Now he began to gain momentum; he felt himself sliding, not fast but +steadily. + +There came a hitch somewhere; his heavy body stuck on the steep incline. + +Then, as he lifted his bewildered head and strove to peer into the +blackness in front, he saw four balls of green fire close to him in +darkness. + +He began to slide at the same instant, and flung out both hands to check +himself. But his palms slid in the slime and his body slid after. + +He shrieked once as his face struck a furry obstruction where four balls +of green fire flamed horribly and a fury of murderous teeth tore his +face and throat to bloody tatters as he slid lower, lower, settling +through crimson-dyed waters into the icy depths of Star Pond. + + * * * * * + +Stormont, down by the lake, called to Darragh, who appeared on the +veranda: + +"Oh, Jim! Both otters crawled into the drain! I think your dogs must +have killed one of them under water. There's a big patch of blood +spreading off shore." + +"Yes," said Darragh, "something has just been killed, somewhere ... +Jack!" + +"Yes?" + +"Pull both your guns and come up here, quick!" + + + + +EPISODE TEN + +THE TWILIGHT OF MIKE + + +I + +When Quintana turned like an enraged snake on Sard and drove him to his +destruction, he would have killed and robbed the frightened diamond +broker had he dared risk the shot. He had intended to do this anyway, +sooner or later. But with the noise of the hunting dogs filling the +forest, Quintana was afraid to fire. Yet, even then he followed Sard +stealthily for a few minutes, afraid yet murderously desirous of the +gems, confused by the tumult of the hounds, timid and ferocious at the +same time, and loath to leave his fat, perspiring, and demoralised +victim. + +But the racket of the dogs proved too much for Quintana. He sheered away +toward the South, leaving Sard floundering on ahead, unconscious of the +treachery that had followed furtively in his panic-stricken tracks. + +About an hour later Quintana was seen, challenged, chased and shot at by +State Trooper Lannis. + +Quintana ran. And what with the dense growth of seedling beech and oak +and the heavily falling birch and poplar leaves, Lannis first lost +Quintana and then his trail. + +The State Trooper had left his horse at the cross-roads near the scene +of Darragh's masked exploit, where he had stopped and robbed Sard--and +now Lannis hastened back to find and mount his horse, and gallop +straight into the first growth timber. + +Through dim aisles of giant pine he spurred to a dead run on the chance +of cutting Quintana from the eastward edge of the forest and forcing him +back toward the north or west, where patrols were more than likely to +hold him. + +The State Trooper rode with all the reckless indifference and grace of +the Western cavalryman, and he seemed to be part of the superb animal he +rode--part of its bone and muscle, its litheness, its supple power--part +of its vertebrae and ribs and limbs, so perfect was their bodily +co-ordination. + +Rifle and eyes intently alert, the rider scarce noticed his rushing +mount; and if he guided with wrist and knee it was instinctive and as +though the horse were guiding them both. + +And now, far ahead through this primeval stand of pine, sunshine +glimmered, warning of a clearing. And here Trooper Lannis pulled in his +horse at the edge of what seemed to be a broad, flat meadow, vividly +green. + +But it was the intense, arsenical green of hair-fine grass that covers +with its false velvet those quaking bogs where only a thin, crust-like +skin of root-fibre and vegetation cover infinite depths of silt. + +The silt had no more substance than a drop of ink colouring the water in +a tumbler. + +Sitting his fast-breathing mount, Lannis searched this wide, flat +expanse of brilliant green. Nothing moved on it save a great heron +picking its deliberate way on stilt-like legs. It was well for Quintana +that he had not attempted it. + +Very cautiously Lannis walked his horse along the hard ground which +edged this marsh on the west. Nowhere was there any sign that Quintana +had come down to the edge among the shrubs and swale grasses. + +Beyond the marsh another trooper patrolled; and when at length he and +Lannis perceived each other and exchanged signals, the latter wheeled +his horse and retraced his route at an easy canter, satisfied that +Quintana had not yet broken cover. + +Back through the first growth he cantered, his rifle at a ready, +carefully scanning the more open woodlands, and so came again to the +cross-roads. + +And here stood a State Game Inspector, with a report that some sort of +beagle-pack was hunting in the forest to the northwest; and very curious +to investigate. + +So it was arranged that the Inspector should turn road-patrol and the +Trooper become the rover. + +There was no sound of dogs when Lannis rode in on the narrow, spotted +trail whence he had flushed Quintana into the dense growth of saplings +that bordered it. + +His horse made little noise on the moist layer of leaves and forest +mould; he listened hard for the sound of hounds as he rode; heard +nothing save the chirr of red squirrels, the shriek of a watching jay, +or the startling noise of falling acorns rapping and knocking on great +limbs in their descent to the forest floor. + +Once, very, very far away westward in the direction of Star Pond he +fancied he heard a faint vibration in the air that might have been +hounds baying. + +He was right. And at that very moment Sard was dying, horribly, among +two trapped otters as big and fierce as the dogs that had driven them +into the drain. + +But Lannis knew nothing of that as he moved on, mounted, along the +spotted trail, now all a yellow glory of birch and poplar which made the +woodland brilliant as though lighted by yellow lanterns. + +Somewhere among the birches, between him and Star Pond, was Harrod +Place. And the idea occurred to him that Quintana might have ventured to +ask food and shelter there. Yet, that was not likely because Trooper +Stormont had called him that morning on the telephone from the Hatchery +Lodge. + +No; the only logical retreat for Quintana was northward to the +mountains, where patrols were plenty and fire-wardens on duty in every +watch-tower. Or, the fugitive could make for Drowned Valley by a blind +trail which, Stormont informed him, existed but which Lannis never had +heard of. + +However, to reassure himself, Lannis rode as far as Harrod Place, and +found game wardens on duty along the line. + +Then he turned west and trotted his mount down to the hatchery, where he +saw Ralph Wier, the Superintendent, standing outside the lodge talking +to his assistant, George Fry. + +When Lannis rode up on the opposite side of the brook, he called across +to Wier: + +"You haven't seen anything of any crooked outfit around here, have you, +Ralph? I'm looking for that kind." + +"See here," said the Superintendent, "I don't know but George Fry may +have seen one of your guys. Come over and he'll tell you what happened +an hour ago." + +Trooper Lannis pivotted his horse and put him to the brook with scarcely +any take-off; and the splendid animal cleared the water like a deer and +came cantering up to the door of the lodge. + +Fry's boyish face seemed agitated; he looked up at the State Trooper +with the flush of tears in his gaze and pointed at the rifle Lannis +carried: + +"If I'd had _that_," he said excitedly, "I'd have brought in a crook, +you bet!" + +"Where did you see him?" inquired Lannis. + +"Jest west of the Scaur, about an hour and a half ago. Wier and me was +stockin' the head of Scaur Brook with fingerlings. There's more good +water--two miles of it--to the east, and all it needed was a fish-ladder +around Scaur Falls. + +"So I toted in cement and sand and grub last week, and I built me a +shanty on the Scaur, and I been laying up a fish-way around the falls. +So that's how I come there----" He clicked his teeth and darted a +furious glance at the woods. "By God," he said, "I was such a fool I +didn't take no rifle. All I had was an axe and a few traps.... I wasn't +going to let the mink get our trout whatever you fellows say," he added +defiantly, "--and law or no law----" + +"Get along with your story, young man," interrupted Lannis; "--you can +spill the rest out to the Commissioner." + +"All right, then. This is the way it happened down to the Scaur. I was +eating lunch by the fish-stairs, looking up at 'em and kind of planning +how to save cement, and not thinking about anybody being near me, when +_something_ made me turn my head.... You know how it is in the woods.... +I kinda _felt_ somebody near. And, by cracky!--there stood a man with a +big, black automatic pistol, and he had a bead on my belly. + +"'Well,' said I, 'what's troubling _you_ and your gun, my friend?'--I +was that astonished. + +"He was a slim-built, powerful guy with a foreign face and voice and +way. He wanted to know if he had the honour--as he put it--to introduce +himself to a detective or game constable, or a friend of Mike Clinch. + +"I told him I wasn't any of these, and that I worked in a private +hatchery; and he called me a liar." + +Young Fry's face flushed and his voice began to quiver: + +"That's the way he misused me: and he backed me into the shanty and I +had to sit down with both hands up. Then he filled my pack-basket with +grub, and took my axe, and strapped my kit onto his back.... And +talking all the time in his mean, sneery, foreign way--and I guess he +thought he was funny, for he laughed at his own jokes. + +"He told me his name was Quintana, and that he ought to shoot me for a +rat, but wouldn't because of the stink. Then he said he was going to do +a quick job that the police were too cowardly to do;--that he was +a-going to find Mike Clinch down to Drowned Valley and kill him; and if +he could catch Mike's daughter, too, he'd spoil her face for life----" + +The boy was breathing so hard and his rage made him so incoherent that +Lannis took him by the shoulder and shook him: + +"What next?" demanded the Trooper impatiently. "Tell your story and quit +thinking how you were misused!" + +"He told me to stay in the shanty for an hour or he'd do for me good," +cried Fry.... "Once I got up and went to the door; and there he stood +by the brook, wolfing my lunch with both hands. I tell you he cursed and +drove me, like a dog, inside with his big pistol--my God--like a dog.... + +"Then, the next time I took a chance he was gone.... And I beat it here +to get me a rifle----" The boy broke down and sobbed: "He drove me +around--like a dog--he did----" + +"You leave that to me," interrupted Lannis sharply. And, to Wier: "You +and George had better get a gun apiece. That fellow _might_ come back +here or go to Harrod Place if we starve him out." + +Wier said to Fry: "Go up to Harrod Place and tell Jansen your story and +bring back two 45-70's.... And quit snivelling.... You may get a shot +at him yet." + +Lannis had already ridden down to the brook. Now he jumped his horse +across, pulled up, called back to Wier: + +"I think our man is making for Drowned Valley, all right. My mate, +Stormont, telephoned me that some of his gang are there, and that Mike +Clinch and his gang have them stopped on the other side! Keep your eye +on Harrod Place!" + +And away he cantered into the North. + + * * * * * + +Behind the curtains of her open window Eve Strayer, lying on her bed, +had heard every word. + +Crouched there beside her pillow she peered out and saw Trooper Lannis +ride away; saw the Fry boy start toward Harrod Place on a run; saw Ralph +Wier watch them out of sight and then turn and re-enter the lodge. + +Wrapped in Darragh's big blanket robe she got off the bed and opened her +chamber door as Wier was passing through the living-room. + +"Please--I'd like to speak to you a moment," she called. + +Wier turned instantly and came to the partly open door. + +"I want to know," she said, "where I am." + +"Ma'am?" + +"What is this place?" + +"It's a hatchery----" + +"Whose?" + +"Ma'am?" + +"Whose lodge is this? Does it belong to Harrod Place?" + +"We're h-hootch runners, Miss----" stammered Wier, mindful of +instructions, but making a poor business of deception; "--I and Hal +Smith, we run a 'Easy One,' and we strip trout for a blind and sell to +Harrod Place--Hal and I----" + +"_Who_ is Hal Smith?" she asked. + +"Ma'am?" + +The girl's flower-blue eyes turned icy: "Who is the man who calls +himself Hal Smith?" she repeated. + +Wier looked at her, red and dumb. + +"Is he a Trooper in plain clothes?" she demanded in a bitter voice. "Is +he one of the Commissioner's spies? Are _you_ one, too?" + +Wier gazed miserably at her, unable to formulate a convincing lie. + +She flushed swiftly as a terrible suspicion seized her: + +"Is this Harrod property? Is Hal Smith old Harrod's heir? _Is_ he?" + +"My God, Miss----" + +"He _is_!" + +"Listen, Miss----" + +She flung open the door and came out into the living-room. + +"Hal Smith is that nephew of old Harrod," she said calmly. "His name is +Darragh. And you are one of his wardens.... And I can't stay here. Do +you understand?" + +Wier wiped his hot face and waited. The cat was out; there was a hole in +the bag; and he knew there was no use in such lies as he could tell. + +He said: "All I know, Miss, is that I was to look after you and get you +whatever you want----" + +"I want my clothes!" + +"Ma'am?" + +"My _clothes_!" she repeated impatiently. "I've _got_ to have them!" + +"Where are they, ma'am?" asked the bewildered man. + +At the same moment the girl's eyes fell on a pile of men's sporting +clothing--garments sent down from Harrod Place to the Lodge--lying on a +leather lounge near a gun-rack. + +Without a glance at Wier, Eve went to the heap of clothing, tossed it +about, selected cords, two pairs of woollen socks, grey shirt, puttees, +shoes, flung the garments through the door into her own room, followed +them, and locked herself in. + + * * * * * + +When she was dressed--the two heavy pairs of socks helping to fit her +feet to the shoes--she emptied her handful of diamonds, sapphires and +emeralds, including the Flaming Jewel, into the pockets of her breeches. + +Now she was ready. She unlocked her door and went out, scarcely limping +at all, now. + +Wier gazed at her helplessly as she coolly chose a rifle and +cartridge-belt at the gun-rack. + +Then she turned on him as still and dangerous as a young puma: + +"Tell Darragh he'd better keep clear of Clinch's," she said. "Tell him I +always thought he was a rat. Now I know he's one." + +She plunged one slim hand into her pocket and drew out a diamond. + +"Here," she said insolently. "This will pay your _gentleman_ for his gun +and clothing." + +She tossed the gem onto a table, where it rolled, glittering. + +"For heaven's sake, Miss----" burst out Wier, horrified, but she cut him +short: + +"--He may keep the change," she said. "We're no swindlers at Clinch's +Dump!" + +Wier started forward as though to intercept her. Eve's eyes flamed. And +he stood still. She wrenched open the door and walked out among the +silver birches. + +At the edge of the brook she stood a moment, coolly loading the magazine +of her rifle. Then, with one swift glance of hatred, flung at the place +that Harrod's money had built, she sprang across the brook, tossed her +rifle to her shoulder, and passed lithely into the golden wilderness of +poplar and silver birch. + + +II + +Quintana, on a fox-trot along the rock-trail into Drowned Valley, now +thoroughly understood that it was the only sanctuary left him for the +moment. Egress to the southward was closed; to the eastward, also; and +he was too wary to venture westward toward Ghost Lake. + +No, the only temporary safety lay in the swamps of Drowned Valley. + +And there, he decided as he jogged along, if worse came to worst and +starvation drove him out, he'd settle matters with Mike Clinch and break +through to the north. + +He meant to settle matters with Mike Clinch anyway. He was not afraid of +Clinch; not really afraid of anybody. It had been the dogs that +demoralised Quintana. He'd had no experience with hunting hounds,--did +not know what to expect,--how to manoeuvre. If only he could have +_seen_ these beasts that filled the forest with their hob-goblin +outcries--if he could have had a good look at the creatures who gave +forth that weird, crazed, melancholy volume of sound!---- + +"Bon!" he said coolly to himself. "It was a crisis of nerves which I +experience. Yes.... I should have shot him, that fat Sard. Yes.... +Only those damn dog---- And now he shall die an' rot--that fat Sard--all +by himse'f, parbleu!--like one big dead thing all alone in the wood.... +A puddle of guts full of diamonds! Ah!--mon dieu!--a million francs in +gems that shine like festering stars in this damn wood till the world +end. Ah, bah--nome de dieu de----" + +"Halte la!" came a sharp voice from the cedar fringe in front. A pause, +then recognition; and Henri Picquet walked out on the hard ridge beyond +and stood leaning on his rifle and looking sullenly at his leader. + +Quintana came forward, carelessly, a disagreeable expression in his +eyes and on his narrow lips, and continued on past Picquet. + +The latter slouched after his leader, who had walked over to the lean-to +before which a pile of charred logs lay in cold ashes. + +As Picquet came up, Quintana turned on him, with a gesture toward the +extinguished fire: "It is cold like hell," he said. "Why do you not have +some fire?" + +"Not for me, non," growled Picquet, and jerked a dirty thumb in the +direction of the lean-to. + +And there Quintana saw a pair of muddy boots protruding from a blanket. + +"It is Harry Beck, yes?" he inquired. Then _something_ about the boots +and the blanket silenced him. He kept his eyes on them for a full +minute, then walked into the lean-to. The blanket also covered Harry +Beck's features and there was a stain on it where it outlined the +prostrate man's features, making a ridge over the bony nose. + +After a moment Quintana looked around at Picquet: + +"So. He is dead. Yes?" + +Picquet shrugged: "Since noon, mon capitaine." + +"Comment?" + +"How shall I know? It was the fire, perhaps,--green wood or wet--it is +no matter now.... I said to him, 'Pay attention, Henri; your wood makes +too much smoke.' To me he reply I shall go to hell.... Well, there was +too much smoke for me. I arise to search for wood more dry, when, +crack!--they begin to shoot out there----" He waved a dirty hand toward +the forest. + +"'Bon,' said I, 'Clinch, he have seen your damn smoke!' + +"'What shall I care?' he make reply, Henri Beck, to me. 'Clinch he +shall shoot and be damn to him. I cook me my dejeuner all the same.' + +"I make representations to that Johnbull; he say to me that I am a frog, +and other injuries, while he lay yet more wood on his sacre fire. + +"Then crack! crack! crack! and zing-gg!--whee-ee! come the big bullets +of Clinch and his voyous yonder. + +"'Bon,' I say, 'me, I make my excuse to retire.' + +"Then Henri Beck he laugh and say, 'Hop it, frog!' And that is all he +has find time to say, when crack! spat! Bien droit he has it--tenez, mon +capitaine--here, over the left eye!... Like a beef surprise he go over, +crash! thump! And like a beef that dies, the air bellows out from his +big lungs----" + +Picquet looked down at the dead comrade in a sort of weary compassion +for such stupidity. + +"--So he pass, this ros-biff goddam Johnbull.... Me, I roll him in +there.... Je ne sais pas pourquoi.... Then I put out the fire and +leave." + +Quintana let his sneering glance rest on the dead a moment, and his thin +lip curled immemorial contempt for the Anglo-Saxon. + +Then he divested himself of the basket-pack which he had stolen from the +Fry boy. + +"Alors," he said calmly, "it has been Mike Clinch who shoot my frien' +Beck. Bien." + +He threw a cartridge into the breech of his rifle, adjusted his +ammunition belt _en bandouliere_, carelessly. + +Then, in a quiet voice: "My frien' Picquet, the time has now arrive when +it become ver' necessary that we go from here away. Donc--I shall now +go kill me my frien' Mike Clinch." + +Picquet, unastonished, gave him a heavy, bovine look of inquiry. + +Quintana said softly: "Me, I have enough already of this damn woods. Why +shall we starve here when there lies our path?" He pointed north; his +arm remained outstretched for a while. + +"Clinch, he is there," growled Picquet. + +"Also our path, l'ami Henri.... And, behind us, they hunt us now with +_dogs_." + +Picquet bared his big white teeth in fierce surprise. "Dogs?" he +repeated with a sort of snarl. + +"That is how they now hunt us, my frien'--like they hunt the hare in the +Cote d'Or.... Me, I shall now reconnoitre--_that_ way!" And he looked +where he was pointing, into the north--with smouldering eyes. Then he +turned calmly to Picquet: "An' you, l'ami?" + +"At orders, mon capitaine." + +"C'est bien. Venez." + +They walked leisurely forward with rifles shouldered, following the hard +ridge out across a vast and flooded land where the bark of trees +glimmered with wet mosses. + +After a quarter of a mile the ridge broadened and split into two, one +hog-back branching northeast! They, however, continued north. + +About twenty minutes later Picquet, creeping along on Quintana's left, +and some sixty yards distant, discovered something moving in the woods +beyond, and fired at it. Instantly two unseen rifles spoke from the +woods ahead. Picquet was jerked clear around, lost his balance and +nearly fell. Blood was spurting from his right arm, between elbow and +shoulder. + +He tried to lift and level his rifle; his arm collapsed and dangled +broken and powerless; his rifle clattered to the forest floor. + +For a moment he stood there in plain view, dumb, deathly white; then he +began screaming with fury while the big, soft-nosed bullets came +streaming in all around him. His broken arm was hit again. His screaming +ceased; he dragged out his big clasp-knife with his left hand and +started running toward the shooting. + +As he ran, his mangled arm flopping like a broken wing, Byron Hastings +stepped out from behind a tree and coolly shot him down at close +quarters. + +Then Quintana's rifle exploded twice very quickly, and the Hastings boy +stumbled sideways and fell sprawling. He managed to rise to his knees +again; he even was trying to stand up when Quintana, taking his time, +deliberately began to empty his magazine into the boy, riddling him limb +and body and head. + +Down once more, he still moved his arms. Sid Hone reached out from +behind a fallen log to grasp the dying lad's ankle and draw him into +shelter, but Quintana reloaded swiftly and smashed Hone's left hand with +the first shot. + +Then Jim Hastings, kneeling behind a bunch of juniper, fired a +high-velocity bullet into the tree behind which Quintana stood; but +before he could fire again Quintana's shot in reply came ripping through +the juniper and tore a ghastly hole in the calf of his left leg, +striking a blow that knocked young Hastings flat and paralysed as a dead +flounder. + +A mile to the north, blocking the other exit from Drowned Valley, Mike +Clinch, Harvey Chase, Cornelius Blommers, and Dick Berry stood listening +to the shooting. + +"B'gosh," blurted out Chase, "it sounds like they was goin' through, +Mike. B'gosh, it does!" + +Clinch's little pale eyes blazed, but he said in his soft, agreeable +voice: + +"Stay right here, boys. Like as not some of 'em will come this way." + +The shooting below ceased. Clinch's nostrils expanded and flattened with +every breath, as he stood glaring into the woods. + +"Harve," he said presently, "you an' Corny go down there an' kinda look +around. And you signal if I'm wanted. G'wan, both o' you. Git!" + +They started, running heavily, but their feet made little noise on the +moss. + +Berry came over and stood near Clinch. For ten minutes neither man +moved. Clinch stared at the woods in front of him. The younger man's +nervous glance flickered like a snake's tongue in every direction, and +he kept moistening his lips with his tongue. + +Presently two shots came from the south. A pause; a rattle of shots from +hastily emptied magazines. + +"G'wan down there, Dick!" said Clinch. + +"You'll be alone, Mike----" + +"Au' right. You do like I say; git along quick!" + +Berry walked southward a little way. He had turned very white under his +tan. + +"Gol ding ye!" shouted Clinch, "take it on a lope or I'll kick the pants +off'n ye!" + +Berry began to run, carrying his rifle at a trail. + +For half an hour there was not a sound in the forests of Drowned Valley +except in the dead timber where unseen woodpeckers hammered fitfully at +the ghosts of ancient trees. + +Always Clinch's little pale eyes searched the forest twilight in front +of him; not a falling leaf escaped him; not a chipmunk. + +And all the while Clinch talked to himself; his lips moved a little now +and then, but uttered no sound: + +"All I want God should do," he repeated again and again, "is to just let +Quintana come _my_ way. 'Tain't for because he robbed my girlie. 'Tain't +for the stuff he carries onto him.... No, God, 'tain't them things. But +it's what that there skunk done to my Evie.... O God, be you listenin'? +He _hurt_ her, Quintana did. That's it. He misused her.... God, if you +had seen my girlie's little bleeding feet!---- _That's_ the reason.... +'Tain't the stuff. I can work. I can save for to make my Evie a lady +same's them high-steppers on Fifth Avenoo. I can moil and toil and slave +an' run hootch--hootch---- They wuz wine 'n' fixin's into the Bible. It +ain't you, God, it's them fanatics.... Nobody in my Dump wanted I +should sell 'em more'n a bottle o' beer before this here prohybishun set +us all crazy. 'Tain't right.... O God, don't hold a little hootch agin +me when all I want of you is to let Quintana----" + +The slightest noise behind him. He waited, turned slowly. Eve stood +there. + +Hell died in his pale eyes as she came to him, rested silently in his +gentle embrace, returned his kiss, laid her flushed, sweet cheek against +his unshaven face. + +"Dad, darling?" + +"Yes, my baby----" + +"You're watching to kill Quintana. But there's no use watching any +longer." + +"Have the boys below got him?" he demanded. + +"They got one of his gang. Byron Hastings is dead. Jim is badly hurt; +Sid Hone, too,--not so badly----" + +"Where's Quintana?" + +"Dad, he's gone.... But it don't matter. See here!----" She dug her +slender hand into her breeches' pocket and pulled out a little +fistful of gems. + +Clinch, his powerful arm closing her shoulders, looked dully at the +jewels. + +"You see, dad, there's no use killing Quintana. These are the things he +robbed you of." + +"'Tain't them that matter.... I'm glad you got 'em. I allus wanted you +should be a great lady, girlie. Them's the tickets of admission. You put +'em in your pants. I gotta stay here a spell----" + +"Dad! Take them!" + +He took them, smiled, shoved them into his pocket. + +"What is it, girlie?" he asked absently, his pale eyes searching the +woods ahead. + +"I've just told you," she said, "that the boys went in as far as +Quintana's shanty. There was a dead man there, too; but Quintana has +gone." + +Clinch said,--not removing his eyes from the forest: "If any o' them +boys has let Quintana crawl through I'll kill _him_, too.... G'wan +home, girlie. I gotta mosey--I gotta kinda loaf around f'r a spell----" + +"Dad, I want you to come back with me----" + +"You go home; you hear me, Eve? Tell Corny and Dick Berry to hook it for +Owl Marsh and stop the Star Peak trails--both on 'em.... Can Sid and +Jimmy walk?" + +"Jim can't----" + +"Well, let Harve take him on his back. You go too. You help fix Jimmy up +at the house. He's a little fella, Jimmy Hastings is. Harve can tote +him. And you go along----" + +"Dad, Quintana says he means to kill you! What is the use of hurting +him? You have what he took----" + +"I gotta have more'n he took. But even that ain't enough. He couldn't +pay for all he ever done to me, girlie.... I'm aimin' to draw on him on +sight----" + +Clinch's set visage relaxed into an alarming smile which flickered, +faded, died in the wintry ferocity of his eyes. + +"Dad----" + +"G'wan home!" he interrupted harshly. "You want that Hastings boy to +bleed to death?" + +She came up to him, not uttering a word, yet asking him with all the +tenderness and eloquence of her eyes to leave this blood-trail where it +lay and hunt no more. + +He kissed her mouth, infinitely tender, smiled; then, again prim and +scowling: + +"G'wan home, you little scut, an' do what I told ye, or, by God, I'll +cut a switch that'll learn ye good! Never a word, now! On yer way! +G'wan!" + + * * * * * + +Twice she turned to look back. The second time, Clinch was slowly +walking into the woods straight ahead of him. She waited; saw him go in; +waited. After a while she continued on her way. + +When she sighted the men below she called to Blommers and Dick Berry: + +"Dad says you're to stop Star Peak trail by Owl Marsh." + +Jimmy Hastings sat on a log, crying and looking down at his dead +brother, over whose head somebody had spread a coat. + +Blommers had made a tourniquet for Jimmy out of a bandanna and a peeled +stick. + +The girl examined it, loosened it for a moment, twisted it again, and +bade Harvey Chase take him on his back and start for Clinch's. + +The boy began to sob that he didn't want his brother to be left out +there all alone; but Chase promised to come back and bring him in before +night. + +Sid Hone came up, haggard from pain and loss of blood, resting his +mangled hand in the sling of his cartridge-belt. + +Berry and Blommers were already starting across toward Owl Marsh; and +the latter, passing by, asked Eve where Mike was. + +"He went into Drowned Valley by the upper outlet," she said. + +"He'll never find no one in them logans an' sinks," muttered Chase, +squatting to hoist Jimmy Hastings to his broad back. + +"I guess he'll be over Star Peak side by sundown," nodded Blommers. + +Eve watched him slouching off into the woods, followed sullenly by +Berry. Then she looked down at the dead man in silence. + +"Be you ready, Eve?" grunted Chase. + +She turned with a heavy heart to the home trail; but her mind was +passionately with Clinch in the spectral forests of Drowned Valley. + + +III + +And Clinch's mind was on her. All else--his watchfulness, his stealthy +advance--all the alertness of eye and ear, all the subtlety, the +cunning, the infinite caution--were purely instinctive mechanics. + +Somewhere in this flooded twilight of gigantic trees was Jose Quintana. +Knowing that, he dismissed that fact from his mind and turned his +thoughts to Eve. + +Sometimes his lips moved. They usually did when he was arguing with God +or calling his Creator's attention to the justice of his case. His _two_ +cases--each, to him, a cause celebre; the matter of Harrod; the affair +of Quintana. + +Many a time he had pleaded these two causes before the Most High. + +But now his thoughts were chiefly concerned with Eve--with the problem +of her future--his master passion--this daughter of the dead wife he had +loved. + +He sighed unconsciously; halted. + +"Well, Lord," he concluded, in his wordless way, "my girlie has gotta +have a chance if I gotta go to hell for it. That's sure as shootin'.... +Amen." + +At that instant he saw Quintana. + +Recognition was instant and mutual. Neither man stirred. Quintana was +standing beside a giant hemlock. His pack lay at his feet. + +Clinch had halted--always the mechanics!--close to a great ironwood +tree. + +Probably both men knew that they could cover themselves before the other +moved a muscle. Clinch's small, light eyes were blazing; Quintana's +black eyes had become two slits. + +Finally: "You--dirty--skunk," drawled Clinch in his agreeably misleading +voice, "by Jesus Christ I got you now." + +"Ah--h," said Quintana, "thees has happen ver' nice like I expec'.... +Always I say myse'f, yet a little patience, Jose, an' one day you shall +meet thees fellow Clinch, who has rob you.... I am ver' thankful to the +good God----" + +He had made the slightest of movements: instantly both men were behind +their trees. Clinch, in the ferocious pride of woodcraft, laughed +exultingly--filled the dim and spectral forest with his roar of +laughter. + +"Quintana," he called out, "you're a-going to cash in. Savvy? You're +a-going to hop off. An' first you gotta hear why. 'Tain't for the stuff. +Naw! I hooked it off'n you; you hooked it off'n me; now I got it again. +_That's_ all square.... No, 'tain't _that_ grudge, you green-livered +whelp of a cross-bred, still-born slut! No! It's becuz you laid the heft +o' your dirty little finger onto my girlie. 'N' now you gotta hop!" + +Quintana's sinister laughter was his retort. Then: "You damfool Clinch," +he said, "I got in my pocket what you rob of me. Now I kill you, and +then I feel ver' well. I go home, live like some kings; yes. But you," +he sneered, "you shall not go home never no more. No. You shall remain +in thees damn wood like ver' dead old rat that is all wormy.... He! I +got a million dollaire--five million franc in my pocket. You shall learn +what it cost to rob Jose Quintana! Unnerstan'?" + +"You liar," said Clinch contemptuously, "I got them jools in my pants +pocket----" + +Quintana's derisive laugh cut him short: "I give you thee Flaming Jewel +if you show me you got my gems in you pants pocket!" + +"I'll show you. Lay down your rifle so's I see the stock." + +"First you, my frien' Mike," said Quintana cautiously. + +Clinch took his rifle by the muzzle and shoved the stock into view so +that Quintana could see it without moving. + +To his surprise, Quintana did the same, then coolly stepped a pace +outside the shelter of his hemlock stump. + +"You show me now!" he called across the swamp. + +Clinch stepped into view, dug into his pocket, and, cupping both hands, +displayed a glittering heap of gems. + +"I wanted you should know who's gottem," he said, "before you hop. It'll +give you something to think over in hell." + +Quintana's eyes had become slits again. Neither man stirred. Then: + +"So you are buzzard, eh, Clinch? You feed on dead man's pockets, eh? You +find Sard somewhere an' you feed." He held up the morocco case, +emblazoned with the arms of the Grand Duchess of Esthonia, and shook it +at Clinch. + +"In there is my share.... Not all. Ver' quick, now, I take yours, +too----" + +Clinch vanished and so did his rifle; and Quintana's first bullet struck +the moss where the stock had rested. + +"You black crow!" jeered Clinch, laughing, "--I need that empty case of +yours. And I'm going after it.... But it's because your filthy claw +touched my girlie that you gotta hop!" + + * * * * * + +Twilight lay over the phantom wood, touching with pallid tints the +flooded forest. + +So far only that one shot had been fired. Both men were still +manoeuvring, always creeping in circles and always lining some great +tree for shelter. + +Now, the gathering dusk was making them bolder and swifter; and twice, +already, Clinch caught the shadow of a fading edge of something that +vanished against the shadows too swiftly for a shot. + +Now Quintana, keeping a tree in line, brushed with his lithe back a +leafless moose-bush that stood swaying as he avoided it. + +Instantly a stealthy hope seized him: he slipped out of his coat, spread +it on the bush, set the naked branches swaying, and darted to his tree. + +Waiting, he saw that the grey blot his coat made in the dusk was still +moving a little--just vibrating a little bit in the twilight. He touched +the bush with his rifle barrel, then crouched almost flat. + +Suddenly the red crash of a rifle lit up Clinch's visage for a fraction +of a second. And Quintana's bullet smashed Clinch between the eyes. + + * * * * * + +After a long while Quintana ventured to rise and creep forward. + +Night, too, came creeping like an assassin amid the ghostly trees. + +So twilight died in the stillness of Drowned Valley and the pall of +night lay over all things,--living and dead alike. + + + + +EPISODE ELEVEN + +THE PLACE OF PINES + + +I + +The last sound that Mike Clinch heard on earth was the detonation of his +own rifle. Probably it was an agreeable sound to him. He lay there with +a pleasant expression on his massive features. His watch had fallen out +of his pocket. + +Quintana shined him with an electric torch; picked up the watch. Then, +holding the torch in one hand, he went through the dead man's pockets +very thoroughly. + +When Quintana had finished, both trays of the flat morocco case were +full of jewels. And Quintana was full of wonder and suspicion. + +Unquietly he looked upon the dead--upon the glittering contents of the +jewel-box,--but always his gaze reverted to the dead. The faintest +shadow of a smile edged Clinch's lips. Quintana's lips grew graver. He +said slowly, like one who does his thinking aloud: + +"What is it you have done to me, l'ami Clinch?... Are there truly then +two sets of precious stones?--_two_ Flaming Jewels?--two gems of Erosite +like there never has been in all thees worl' excep' only two more?... +Or is one set false?... Have I here one set of paste facsimiles?... My +frien' Clinch, why do you lie there an' smile at me so ver' funny ... +like you are amuse?... I am wondering what you may have done to me, my +frien' Clinch...." + +For a while he remained kneeling beside the dead. Then: "Ah, bah," he +said, pocketing the morocco case and getting to his feet. + +He moved a little way toward the open trail, stopped, came back, stood +his rifle against a tree. + +For a while he was busy with his sharp Spanish clasp knife, whittling +and fitting together two peeled twigs. A cross was the ultimate result. +Then he placed Clinch's hands palm to palm upon his chest, laid the +cross on his breast, and shined the result with complacency. + +Then Quintana took off his hat. + +"L'ami Mike," he said, "you were a _man_!... Adios!" + + * * * * * + +Quintana put on his hat. The path was free. The world lay open before +Jose Quintana once more;--the world, his hunting ground. + +"But," he thought uneasily, "what is it that I bring home this time? How +much is paste? My God, how droll that smile of Clinch.... Which is the +false--his jewels or mine? Dieu que j'etais bete!---- Me who have not +suspec' that there are _two_ trays within my jewel-box!... I +unnerstan'. It is ver' simple. In the top tray the false gems. Ah! Paste +on top to deceive a thief!... Alors.... Then what I have recover of +Clinch is the _real_!... Nom de Dieu!... How should I know? His smile +is so ver' funny.... I think thees dead man make mock of me--all inside +himse'f----" + +So, in darkness, prowling south by west, shining the trail furtively, +and loaded rifle ready, Quintana moved with stealthy, unhurried tread +out of the wilderness that had trapped him and toward the tangled +border of that outer world which led to safe, obscure, uncharted +labyrinths--old-world mazes, immemorial hunting grounds--haunted by +men who prey. + + * * * * * + +The night had turned frosty. Quintana, wet to the knees and very tired, +moved slowly, not daring to leave the trail because of sink-holes. + +However, the trail led to Clinch's Dump, and sooner or later he must +leave it. + +What he had to have was a fire; he realised that. Somewhere off the +trail, in big timber if possible, he must build a fire and master this +deadly chill that was slowly paralysing all power of movement. + +He knew that a fire in the forest, particularly in big timber, could be +seen only a little way. He must take his chances with sink-holes and +find some spot in the forest to build that fire. + +Who could discover him except by accident? + +Who would prowl the midnight wilderness? At thirty yards the fire +would not be visible. And, as for the odour--well, he'd be gone +before dawn.... Meanwhile, he must have that fire. He could wait no +longer. + +He cut a pole first. Then he left the trail where a little spring flowed +west, and turned to the right, shining the forest floor as he moved and +sounding with his pole every wet stretch of moss, every strip of mud, +every tiniest glimmer of water. + +At last he came to a place of pines, first growth giants towering into +night, and, looking up, saw stars, infinitely distant, ... where +perhaps those things called souls drifted like wisps of vapour. + +When the fire took, Quintana's thin dark hands had become nearly useless +from cold. He could not have crooked finger to trigger. + +For a long time he sat close to the blaze, slowly massaging his torpid +limbs, but did not dare strip off his foot-gear. + +Steam rose from puttee and heavy shoe and from the sodden woollen +breeches. Warmth slowly penetrated. There was little smoke; the big dry +branches were dead and bleached and he let the fire eat into them +without using his axe. + +Once or twice he sighed, "Oh, my God," in a weary demi-voice, as though +the content of well-being were permeating him. + +Later he ate and drank languidly, looking up at the stars, speculating +as to the possible presence of Mike Clinch up there. + +"Ah, the dirty thief," he murmured; "--nevertheless a man. Quel homme! +Mais bete a faire pleurer! Je l'ai bien triche, moi! Ha!" + +Quintana smiled palely as he thought of the coat and the gently-swaying +bush--of the red glare of Clinch's shot, of the death-echo of his own +shot. + +Then, uneasy, he drew out the morocco case and gazed at the two trays +full of gems. + +The jewels blazed in the firelight. He touched them, moved them about, +picked up several and examined them, testing the unset edges against his +under lip as an expert tests jade. + +But he couldn't tell; there was no knowing. He replaced them, closed +the case, pocketed it. When he had a chance he could try boiling water +for one sort of trick. He could scratch one or two.... Sard would know. +He wondered whether Sard had got away, not concerned except selfishly. +However, there were others in Paris whom he could trust--at a price.... + +Quintana rested both elbows on his knees and framed his dark face +between both bony hands. + +What a chase Clinch had led him after the Flaming Jewel. And now Clinch +lay dead in the forest--faintly smiling. At _what_? + +In a very low, passionless voice, Quintana cursed monotonously as he +gazed into the fire. In Spanish, French, Portuguese, Italian, he cursed +Clinch. After a little while he remembered Clinch's daughter, and he +cursed her, elaborately, thoroughly, wishing her black mischance awake +and asleep, living or dead. + +Darragh, too, he remembered in his curses, and did not slight him. And +the trooper, Stormont--ah, he should have killed all of them when he had +the chance.... And those two Baltic Russians, also, the girl duchess +and her friend. Why on earth hadn't he made a clean job of it? +Over-caution. A wary disinclination to stir up civilization by needless +murder. But after all, old maxims, old beliefs, old truths are the best, +God knows. The dead don't talk! And that's the wisest wisdom of all. + +"If," murmured Quintana fervently, "God gives me further opportunity to +acquire a little property to comfort me in my old age, I shall leave no +gossiping fool to do me harm with his tongue. No! I kill. + +"And though they raise a hue and cry, dead tongues can not wag and I +save myse'f much annoyance in the end." + +He leaned his back against the trunk of a massive pine. + +Presently Quintana slept after his own fashion--that is to say, looking +closely at him one could discover a glimmer under his lowered eyelids. +And he listened always in that kind of sleep. As though a shadowy part +of him were detached from his body, and mounted guard over it. + +The inaudible movement of a wood-mouse venturing into the firelit circle +awoke Quintana. Again a dropping leaf amid distant birches awoke him. +Such things. And so he slept with wet feet to the fire and his rifle +across his knees; and dreamed of Eve and of murder, and that the Flaming +Jewel was but a mass of glass. + + * * * * * + +At that moment the girl of whose white throat Quintana was dreaming, and +whining faintly in his dreams, stood alone outside Clinch's Dump, rifle +in hand, listening, fighting the creeping dread that touched her slender +body at times--seemed to touch her very heart with frost. + +Clinch's men had gone on to Ghost Lake with their wounded and dead, +where there was fitter shelter for both. All had gone on; nobody +remained to await Clinch's home-coming except Eve Strayer. + +Black Care, that tireless squire of dames, had followed her from the +time she had left Clinch, facing the spectral forests of Drowned Valley. + +An odd, unusual dread weighted her heart--something in emotions that she +never before had experienced in time of danger. In it there was the +deathly unease of premonition. But of what it was born she did not +understand,--perhaps of the strain of dangers passed--of the shock of +discovery concerning Smith's identity with Darragh--Darragh!--the hated +kinsman of Harrod the abhorred. + +Fiercely she wondered how much her lover knew about this miserable +masquerade. Was Stormont involved in this deception--Stormont, the +object of her first girl's passion--Stormont, for whom she would have +died? + +Wretched, perplexed, fiercely enraged at Darragh, deadly anxious +concerning Clinch, she had gone about cooking supper. + +The supper, kept warm on the range, still awaited the man who had no +more need of meat and drink. + + * * * * * + +Of the tragedy of Sard Eve knew nothing. There were no traces save in +the disorder in the pantry and the bottles and chair on the veranda. + +Who had visited the place excepting those from whom she and Stormont had +fled, did not appear. She had no idea why her step-father's mattress and +bed-quilt lay in the pantry. + +Her heart heavy with ceaseless anxiety, Eve carried mattress and +bed-clothes to Clinch's chamber, re-made his bed, wandered through the +house setting it in order; then, in the kitchen, seated herself and +waited until the strange dread that possessed her drove her out into the +starlight to stand and listen and stare at the dark forest where all her +dread seemed concentrated. + + * * * * * + +It was not yet dawn, but the girl could endure the strain no longer. + +With electric torch and rifle she started for the forest, almost running +at first; then, among the first trees, moving with caution and in +silence along the trail over which Clinch should long since have +journeyed homeward. + +In soft places, when she ventured to flash her torch, foot-prints cast +curious shadows, and it was hard to make out tracks so oddly distorted +by the light. Prints mingled and partly obliterated other prints. She +identified her own tracks leading south, and guessed at the others, +pointing north and south, where they had carried in the wounded and had +gone back to bring in the dead. + +But nowhere could she discover any impression resembling her +step-father's,--that great, firm stride and solid imprint which so often +she had tracked through moss and swale and which she knew so well. + +Once when she got up from her knees after close examination of the muddy +trail, she became aware of the slightest taint in the night air--stood +with delicate nostrils quivering--advanced, still conscious of the +taint, listening, wary, every stealthy instinct alert. + +She had not been mistaken: somewhere in the forest there was smoke. +Somewhere a fire was burning. It might not be very far away; it might be +distant. _Whose fire?_ Her father's? Would a hunter of men build a fire? + +The girl stood shivering in the darkness. There was not a sound. + +Now, keeping her cautious feet in the trail by sense of touch alone, she +moved on. Gradually, as she advanced, the odour of smoke became more +distinct. She heard nothing, saw nothing; but there was a near reek of +smoke in her nostrils and she stopped short. + +After a little while in the intense silence of the forest she ventured +to touch the switch of her torch, very cautiously. + +In the faint, pale lustre she saw a tiny rivulet flowing westward from a +spring, and, beside it, in the mud, imprints of a man's feet. + +The tracks were small, narrow, slimmer than imprints made by any man she +could think of. Under the glimmer of her torch they seemed quite fresh; +contours were still sharp, some ready to crumble, and water stood in the +heels. + +A little way she traced them, saw where their maker had cut a pole, +peeled it; saw, farther on, where this unknown man had probed in moss +and mud--peppered some particularly suspicious swale with a series of +holes as though a giant woodcock had been "boring" there. + +Who was this man wandering all alone at night off the Drowned Valley +trail and probing the darkness with a pole? + +She knew it was not her father. She knew that no native--none of her +father's men--would behave in such a manner. Nor could any of these have +left such narrow, almost delicate tracks. + +As she stole along, dimly shining the tracks, lifting her head +incessantly to listen and peer into the darkness, her quick eye caught +something ahead--something very slightly different from the wall of +black obscurity--a vague hint of colour--the very vaguest tint scarcely +perceptible at all. + +But she knew it was firelight touching the trunk of an unseen tree. + +Now, soundlessly over damp pine needles she crept. The scent of smoke +grew strong in nostril and throat; the pale tint became palely reddish. +All about her the blackness seemed palpable--seemed to touch her body +with its weight; but, ahead, a ruddy glow stained two huge pines. And +presently she saw the fire, burning low, but redly alive. And, after a +long, long while, she saw a man. + +He had left the fire circle. His pack and belted mackinaw still lay +there at the foot of a great tree. But when, finally, she discovered +him, he was scarcely visible where he crouched in the shadow of a +tree-trunk, with his rifle half lowered at a ready. + +Had he heard her? It did not seem possible. Had he been crouching there +since he made his fire? Why had he made it then--for its warmth could +not reach him there. And why was he so stealthily watching--silent, +unstirring, crouched in the shadows? + +She strained her eyes; but distance and obscurity made recognition +impossible. And yet, somehow, every quivering instinct within her was +telling her that the crouched and shadowy watcher beyond the fire was +Quintana. + +And every concentrated instinct was telling her that he'd kill her if he +caught sight of her; her heart clamoured it; her pulses thumped it in +her ears. + +Had the girl been capable of it she could have killed him where he +crouched. She thought of it, but knew it was not in her to do it. And +yet Quintana had boasted that he meant to kill her father. That was what +terribly concerned her. And there must be a way to stop that +danger--some way to stop it short of murder,--a way to render this man +harmless to her and hers. + +No, she could not kill him this way. Except in extremes she could not +bring herself to fire upon any human creature. And yet this man must be +rendered harmless--somehow--somehow--ah!---- + +As the problem presented itself its solution flashed into her mind. Men +of the wilderness knew how to take dangerous creatures alive. To take a +dangerous and reasoning human was even less difficult, because reason +makes more mistakes than does instinct. + +Stealthily, without a sound, the girl crept back through the shadows +over the damp pine needles, until, peering fearfully over her shoulder, +she saw the last ghost-tint of Quintana's fire die out in the terrific +dark behind. + +Slowly, still, she moved until her sensitive feet felt the trodden path +from Drowned Valley. + +Now, with torch flaring, she ran, carrying her rifle at a trail. Before +her, here and there, little night creatures fled--a humped-up raccoon, +dazzled by the glare, a barred owl still struggling with its wood-rat +kill. + +She ran easily,--an agile, tireless young thing, part of the swiftness +and silence of the woods--part of the darkness, the sinuous celerity, +the ominous hush of wide, still places--part of its very blood and pulse +and hot, sweet breath. + +Even when she came out among the birches by Clinch's Dump she was +breathing evenly and without distress. She ran to the kitchen door but +did not enter. On pegs under the porch a score or more of rusty traps +hung. She unhooked the largest, wound the chain around it, tucked it +under her left arm and started back. + + * * * * * + +When at last she arrived at the place of pines again, and saw the far, +spectral glimmer of Quintana's fire, the girl was almost breathless. But +dawn was not very far away and there remained little time for the +taking alive of a dangerous man. + +Where two enormous pines grew close together near a sapling, she knelt +down, and, with both hands, scooped out a big hollow in the immemorial +layers of pine needles. Here she placed her trap. It took all her +strength and skill to set it; to fasten the chain around the base of the +sapling pine. + +And now, working with only the faintest glimmer of her torch, she +covered everything with pine needles. + +It was not possible to restore the forest floor; the place remained +visible--a darker, rougher patch on the bronzed carpet of needles beaten +smooth by decades of rain and snow. No animal would have trodden that +suspicious space. But it was with man she had to deal--a dangerous but +reasoning man with few and atrophied instincts--and with no experience +in traps; and, therefore, in no dread of them. + + * * * * * + +Before she started she had thrown a cartridge into the breech of her +rifle. + +Now she pocketed her torch and seated herself between the two big pines +and about three feet behind the hidden trap. + +Dawn was not far away. She looked upward through high pine-tops where +stars shone; and saw no sign of dawn. But the watcher by the fire beyond +was astir, now, in the imminence of dawn, and evidently meant to warm +himself before leaving. + +Eve could hear him piling dry wood on the fire; the light on the tree +trunks grew redder; a pungent reek of smoke was drawn through the +forest aisles. She sniffed it, listened, and watched, her rifle across +her knees. + +Eve never had been afraid of anything. She was not afraid of this man. +If it came to combat she would have to kill. It never entered her mind +to fear Quintana's rifle. Even Clinch was not as swift with a rifle as +she.... Only Stormont had been swifter--thank God!---- + +She thought of Stormont--sat there in the terrific darkness loving him, +her heart of a child tremulous with adoration. + +Then the memory of Darragh pushed in and hot hatred possessed her. +Always, in her heart, she had distrusted the man. + +Instinct had warned her. A spy! What evil had he worked already? +Where was her father? Evidently Quintana had escaped him at Drowned +Valley.... Quintana was yonder by his fire, preparing to flee the +wilderness where men hunted him.... But where was Clinch? Had this +sneak, Darragh, betrayed him? Was Clinch already in the clutch of +the State Troopers? Was he in _jail_? + +At the thought the girl felt slightly faint, then a rush of angry blood +stung her face in the darkness. Except for game and excise violations +the stories they told about Clinch were lies. + +He had nothing to fear, nothing to be ashamed of. Harrod had driven him +to lawlessness; the Government took away what was left him to make a +living. He had to live. What if he did break laws made by millionaire +and fanatic! What of it? He had her love and her respect--and her deep, +deep pity. And these were enough for any girl to fight for. + +Dawn spread a silvery light above the pines, but Quintana's fire still +reddened the tree trunks; and she could hear him feeding it at +intervals. + +Finally she saw him. He came out on the edge of the ruddy ring of light +and stood peering around at the woods where already a vague greyness was +revealing nearer trees. + +When, finally, he turned his back and looked at his fire, Eve rose and +stood between the two big pines. Behind one of them she placed her +rifle. + +It was growing lighter in the woods. She could see Quintana in the fire +ring and outside,--saw him go to the spring rivulet, lie flat, drink, +then, on his knees, wash face and hands in the icy water. + +It became plain to her that he was nearly ready to depart. She watched +him preparing. And now she could see him plainly, and knew him to be +Quintana and no other. + +He had a light basket pack. He put some articles into it, stretched +himself and yawned, pulled on his hat, hoisted the pack and fastened it +to his back, stood staring at the fire for a long time; then, with a +sudden upward look at the zenith where a slight flush stained a cloud, +he picked up his rifle. + +At that moment Eve called to him in a clear and steady voice. + +The effect on Quintana was instant; he was behind a tree before her +voice ceased. + +"Hallo! Hi! You over there!" she called again. "This is Eve Strayer. I'm +looking for Clinch! He hasn't been home all night. Have you seen him?" + +After a moment she saw Quintana's head watching her,--not at the +shoulder-height of a man but close to the ground and just above the tree +roots. + +"Hey!" she cried. "What's the matter with you over there? I'm asking you +who you are and if you've seen my father?" + +After a while she saw Quintana coming toward her, circling, creeping +swiftly from tree to tree. + +As he flitted through the shadows the trees between which she was +standing hid her from him a moment. Instantly she placed her rifle on +the ground and kicked the pine needles over it. + +As Quintana continued his encircling manoeuvres Eve, apparently +perplexed, walked out into the clear space, putting the concealed trap +between her and Quintana, who now came stealthily toward her from the +rear. + +It was evident that he had reconnoitred sufficiently to satisfy himself +that the girl was alone and that no trick, no ambuscade, threatened him. + +And now, from behind a pine, and startlingly near her, came Quintana, +moving with confident grace yet holding his rifle ready for any +emergency. + +Eve's horrified stare was natural; she had not realised that any man +could wear so evil a smile. + +Quintana stopped short a dozen paces away. The dramatic in him demanded +of the moment its full value. He swept off his hat with a flourish, +bowed deeply where he stood. + +"Ah!" he cried gaily, "the happy encounter, Senorita. God is too good to +us. And it was but a moment since my thoughts were of you! I swear +it!----" + +It was not fear; it was a sort of slow horror of this man that began to +creep over the girl. She stared at his brilliant eyes, at his thick +mouth, too red--shuddered slightly. But the toe of her right foot +touched the stock of her rifle under the pine needles. + +She held herself under control. + +"So it's you," she said unsteadily. "I thought our people had caught +you." + +Quintana laughed: "Charming child," he said, "it is _I_ who have caught +your people. And now, my God!--I catch _you_!... It is ver' funny. Is +it not?" + +She looked straight into Quintana's black eyes, but the look he returned +sent the shamed blood surging into her face. + +"By God," he said between his white, even teeth,--"by God!" + +Staring at her he slowly disengaged his pack, let it fall behind him on +the pine needles; rested his rifle on it; slipped out of his mackinaw +and laid that across his rifle--always keeping his brilliant eyes on +her. + +His lips tightened, the muscles in his dark face grew tense; his eyes +became a blazing insult. + +For an instant he stood there, unencumbered, a wiry, graceful shape in +his woollen breeches, leggings, and grey shirt open at the throat. Then +he took a step toward her. And the girl watched him, fascinated. + +One pace, two, a third, a fourth--the girl's involuntary cry echoed the +stumbling crash of the man thrashing, clawing, scrambling in the +clenched jaws of the bear-trap amid a whirl of flying pine needles. + +He screamed once, tried to rise, turned blindly to seize the jaws that +clutched him; and suddenly crouched, loose-jointed, cringing like a +trapped wolf--the true fatalist among our lesser brothers. + +Eve picked up her rifle. She was trembling violently. Then, mastering +her emotion, she walked over to the pack, placed Quintana's rifle and +mackinaw in it, coolly hoisted it to her shoulders and buckled it there. + +Over her shoulder she kept an eye on Quintana who crouched where he had +fallen, unstirring, his deadly eyes watching her. + +She placed the muzzle of her rifle against his stomach, rested it so, +holding it with one hand, and her finger at the trigger. + +At her brief order he turned out both breeches pockets. She herself +stooped and drew the Spanish clasp-knife from its sheath at his belt, +took a pistol from the holster, another out of his hip pocket. Reaching +up and behind her, she dropped these into the pack. + +"Maybe," she said slowly, "your ankle is broken. I'll send somebody from +Ghost Lake to find you. But whether you've a broken bone or not you'll +not go very far, Quintana.... After I'm gone you'll be able to free +yourself. But you can't get away. You'll be followed and caught.... So +if you can walk at all you'd better go in to Ghost Lake and give +yourself up.... It's that or starvation.... You've got a watch.... +Don't stir or touch that trap for half an hour.... And that's all." + +As she moved away toward the Drowned Valley trail she looked back at +him. His face was bloodless but his black eyes blazed. + +"If ever you come into this forest again," she said, "my father will +surely kill you." + +To her horror Quintana slowly grinned at her. Then, still grinning, he +placed the forefinger of his left hand between his teeth and bit it. + +Whatever he meant by the gesture it seemed unclean, horrible; and the +girl hurried on, seized with an overwhelming loathing through which a +sort of terror pulsated like evil premonition in a heavy and tortured +heart. + +Straight into the fire of dawn she sped. A pale primrose light glimmered +through the woods; trees, bushes, undergrowth turned a dusky purple. +Already the few small clouds overhead were edged with fiery rose. + +Then, of a sudden, a shaft of flame played over the forest. The sun had +risen. + +Hastening, she searched the soft path for any imprint of her father's +foot. And even in the vain search she hoped to find him at home--hurried +on burdened with two rifles and a pack, still all nervous and aquiver +from her encounter with Quintana. + +Surely, surely, she thought, if he had missed Quintana in Drowned Valley +he would not linger in that ghastly place; he'd come home, call in his +men, take counsel perhaps---- + + * * * * * + +Mist over Star Pond was dissolving to a golden powder in the blinding +glory of the sun. The eastern window-panes in Clinch's Dump glittered as +though the rooms inside were all on fire. + +Down through withered weeds and scrub she hurried, ran across the grass +to the kitchen door which swung ajar under its porch. + +"Dad!" she called, "Dad!" + +Only her own frightened voice echoed in the empty house. She climbed +the stairs to his room. The bed lay undisturbed as she had made it. He +was not in any of the rooms; there were no signs of him. + +Slowly she descended to the kitchen. He was not there. The food she had +prepared for him had become cold on a chilled range. + +For a long while she stood staring through the window at the sunlight +outside. Probably, since Quintana had eluded him, he'd come home for +something to eat.... Surely, now that Quintana had escaped, Clinch +would come back for some breakfast. + +Eve slipped the pack from her back and laid it on the kitchen table. +There was kindling in the wood-box. She shook down the cinders, laid a +fire, soaked it with kerosene, lighted it, filled the kettle with fresh +water. + +In the pantry she cut some ham, and found eggs, condensed milk, butter, +bread, and an apple pie. After she had ground the coffee she placed all +these on a tray and carried them into the kitchen. + +Now there was nothing more to do until her father came, and she sat down +by the kitchen table to wait. + +Outside the sunlight was becoming warm and vivid. There had been no +frost after all--or, at most, merely a white trace in the shadow--on a +fallen plank here and there--but not enough to freeze the ground. And, +in the sunshine, it all quickly turned to dew, and glittered and +sparkled in a million hues and tints like gems--like that handful of +jewels she had poured into her father's joined palms--yesterday--there +at the ghostly edge of Drowned Valley. + +At the memory, and quite mechanically, she turned in her chair and drew +Quintana's basket pack toward her. + +First she lifted out his rifle, examined it, set it against the window +sill. Then, one by one, she drew out two pistols, loaded; the murderous +Spanish clasp-knife; an axe; a fry-pan and a tin pail, and the rolled-up +mackinaw. + +Under these the pack seemed to contain nothing except food and +ammunition; staples in sacks and a few cans--lard, salt, tea--such +things. + +The cartridge boxes she piled up on the table; the food she tossed into +a tin swill bucket. + +About the effects of this man it seemed to her as though something +unclean lingered. She could scarcely bear to handle them,--threw them +from her with disgust. + +The garment, also--the heavy brown and green mackinaw--she disliked to +touch. To throw it out doors was her intention; but, as she lifted the +coat, it unrolled and some things fell from the pockets to the kitchen +table,--money, keys, a watch, a flat leather case---- + +She looked stupidly at the case. It had a coat of arms emblazoned on it. + +Still, stupidly and as though dazed, she laid one hand on it, drew it to +her, opened it. + +The Flaming Jewel blazed in her face amid a heap of glittering gems. + +Still she seemed slow to comprehend--as though understanding were +paralysed. + +It was when her eyes fell upon the watch that her heart seemed to stop. +Suddenly her stunned senses were lighted as by an infernal flare.... +Under the awful blow she swayed upright to her feet, sick with fright, +her eyes fixed on her father's watch. + +It was still ticking. + +She did not know whether she cried out in anguish or was dumb under it. +The house seemed to reel around her; under foot too. + +When she came to her senses she found herself outside the house, running +with her rifle, already entering the woods. But, inside the barrier of +trees, something blocked her way, stopped her,--a man--_her_ man! + +"Eve! In God's name!----" he said as she struggled in his arms; but she +fought him and strove to tear her body from his embrace: + +"They've killed Dad!" she panted,--"Quintana killed him. I didn't +know--oh, I didn't know!--and I let Quintana go! Oh, Jack, Jack, he's at +the Place of Pines! I'm going there to shoot him! Let me go!--he's +killed Dad, I tell you! He had Dad's watch--and the case of jewels--they +were in his pack on the kitchen table----" + +"Eve!" + +"Let me go!----" + +"_Eve!_" He held her rigid a moment in his powerful grip, compelled her +dazed, half-crazed eyes to meet his own: + +"You must come to your senses," he said. "Listen to what I say: they are +_bringing in your father_." + +Her dilated blue eyes never moved from his. + +"We found him in Drowned Valley at sunrise," said Stormont quietly. "The +men are only a few rods behind me. They are carrying him out." + +Her lips made a word without sound. + +"Yes," said Stormont in a low voice. + +There was a sound in the woods behind them. Stormont turned. Far away +down the trail the men came into sight. + +Then the State Trooper turned the girl very gently and placed one arm +around her shoulders. + +Very slowly they descended the hill together. His equipment was shining +in the morning sun: and the sun fell on Eve's drooping head, turning her +chestnut hair to fiery gold. + + * * * * * + +An hour later Trooper Stormont was at the Place of Pines. + +There was nothing there except an empty trap and the ashes of the dying +fire beyond. + + + + +EPISODE TWELVE + +HER HIGHNESS INTERVENES + + +I + +Toward noon the wind changed, and about one o'clock it began to snow. + +Eve, exhausted, lay on the sofa in her bedroom. Her step-father lay on a +table in the dance hall below, covered by a sheet from his own bed. And +beside him sat Trooper Stormont, waiting. + +It was snowing heavily when Mr. Lyken, the little undertaker from Ghost +Lake, arrived with several assistants, a casket, and what he called +"swell trimmings." + +Long ago Mike Clinch had selected his own mortuary site and had driven a +section of iron pipe into the ground on a ferny knoll overlooking Star +Pond. In explanation he grimly remarked to Eve that after death he +preferred to be planted where he could see that Old Harrod's ghost +didn't trespass. + +Here two of Mr. Lyken's able assistants dug a grave while the digging +was still good; for if Mike Clinch was to lie underground that season +there might be need of haste--no weather prophet ever having +successfully forecast Adirondack weather. + +Eve, exhausted by shock and a sleepless night, was spared the more +harrowing details of the coroner's visit and the subsequent jaunty +activities of Mr. Lyken and his efficient assistants. + +She had managed to dress herself in a black wool gown, intending to +watch by Mike, but Stormont's blunt authority prevailed and she lay down +for an hour's rest. + +The hour lengthened into many hours; the girl slept heavily on her sofa +under blankets laid over her by Stormont. + +All that dark, snowy day she slept, mercifully unconscious of the +proceedings below. + +In its own mysterious way the news penetrated the wilderness; and out of +the desolation of forest and swamp and mountain drifted the people who +somehow existed there--a few shy, half wild young girls, a dozen silent, +lank men, two or three of Clinch's own people, who stood silently about +in the falling snow and lent a hand whenever requested. + +One long shanked youth cut hemlock to line the grave; others erected a +little fence of silver birch around it, making of the enclosure a +"plot." + +A gaunt old woman from God knows where aided Mr. Lyken at intervals: a +pretty, sulky-eyed girl with her slovenly, red-headed sister cooked for +anybody who desired nourishment. + +When Mike was ready to hold the inevitable reception everybody filed +into the dance hall. Mr. Lyken was master of ceremonies; Trooper +Stormont stood very tall and straight by the head of the casket. + +Clinch wore a vague, indefinable smile and his best clothes,--that same +smile which had so troubled Jose Quintana. + +Light was fading fast in the room when the last visitor took silent +leave of Clinch and rejoined the groups in the kitchen, where were the +funeral baked meats. + +Eve still slept. Descending again from his reconnaissance, Trooper +Stormont encountered Trooper Lannis below. + +"Has anybody picked up Quintana's tracks?" inquired the former. + +"Not so far. An Inspector and two State Game Protectors are out beyond +Owl Marsh. The Troopers from Five Lakes are on the job, and we have +enforcement men along Drowned Valley from The Scaur to Harrod Place." + +"Does Darragh know?" + +"Yes. He's in there with Mike. He brought a lot of flowers from Harrod +Place." + +The two troopers went into the dance hall where Darragh was arranging +the flowers from his greenhouses. + +Stormont said quietly: "All right, Jim, but Eve must not know that they +came from Harrod's." + +Darragh nodded: "How is she, Jack?" + +"All in." + +"Do you know the story?" + +"Yes. Mike went into Drowned Valley early last evening after Quintana. +He didn't come back. Before dawn this morning Eve located Quintana, set +a bear-trap for him, and caught him with the goods----" + +"What goods?" demanded Darragh sharply. + +"Well, she got his pack and found Mike's watch and jewelry in it----" + +"What jewelry?" + +"The jewels Quintana was after. But that was after she'd arrived at the +Dump, here, leaving Quintana to get free of the trap and beat it. + +"That's how I met her--half crazed, going to find Quintana again. We'd +found Mike in Drowned Valley and were bringing him out when I ran into +Eve.... I brought her back here and called Ghost Lake.... They haven't +picked up Quintana's tracks so far." + +After a silence: "Too bad this snow came so late," remarked Trooper +Lannis. "But we ought to get Quintana anyway." + +Darragh went over and looked silently at Mike Clinch. + +"I liked you," he said under his breath. "It wasn't your fault. And it +wasn't mine, Mike.... I'll try to square things. Don't worry." + +He came back slowly to where Stormont was standing near the door: + +"Jack," he said, "you can't marry Eve on a Trooper's pay. Why not quit +and take over the Harrod estate?... You and I can go into business +together later if you like." + +After a pause: "That's rather wonderful of you, Jim," said Stormont, +"but you don't know what sort of business man I'd make----" + +"I know what sort of officer you made.... I'm taking no chance.... And +I'll make my peace with Eve--or somebody will do it for me.... Is it +settled then?" + +"Thanks," said Trooper Stormont, reddening. They clasped hands. Then +Stormont went about and lighted the candles in the room. Clinch's face, +again revealed, was still faintly amused at something or other. The dead +have much to be amused at. + +As Darragh was about to go, Stormont said: "We're burying Clinch at +eleven to-morrow morning. The Ghost Lake Pilot officiates." + +"I'll come if it won't upset Eve," said Darragh. + +"She won't notice anybody, I fancy," remarked Stormont. + +He stood by the veranda and watched Darragh take the Lake Trail through +the snow. Finally the glimmer of his swinging lantern was lost in the +woods and Stormont mounted the stairs once more, stood silently by Eve's +open door, realised she was still heavily asleep, and seated himself on +a chair outside her door to watch and wait. + + * * * * * + +All night long it snowed hard over the Star Pond country, and the late +grey light of morning revealed a blinding storm pelting a white robed +world. + +Toward ten o'clock, Stormont, on guard, noticed that Eve was growing +restless. + +Downstairs the flotsam of the forest had gathered again: Mr. Lyken was +there in black gloves; the Reverend Laomi Smatter had arrived in a +sleigh from Ghost Lake. Both were breakfasting heavily. + +The pretty, sulky-faced girl fetched a tray and placed Eve's breakfast +on it; and Trooper Stormont carried it to her room. + +She was awake when he entered. He set the tray on the table. She put +both arms around his neck. + +"Jack," she murmured, her eyes tremulous with tears. + +"Everything has been done," he said. "Will you be ready by eleven? I'll +come for you." + +She clung to him in silence for a while. + + * * * * * + +At eleven he knocked on her door. She opened it. She wore her black wool +gown and a black fur turban. Some of her pallor remained,--traces of +tears and bluish smears under both eyes. But her voice was steady. + +"Could I see Dad a moment alone?" + +"Of course." + +She took his arm: they descended the stairs. There seemed to be many +people about but she did not lift her eyes until her lover led her into +the dance hall where Clinch lay smiling his mysterious smile. + +Then Stormont left her alone there and closed the door. + + * * * * * + +In a terrific snow-storm they buried Mike Clinch on the spot he had +selected, in order that he might keep a watchful eye upon the +trespassing ghost of old man Harrod. + +It blew and stormed and stormed, and the thin, nasal voice of "Rev. +Smatter" was utterly lost in the wind. The slanting lances of snow drove +down on the casket, building a white mound over the flowers, blotting +the hemlock boughs from sight. + +There was no time to be lost now; the ground was freezing under a +veering and bitter wind out of the west. Mr. Lyken's talented assistants +had some difficulty in shaping the mound which snow began to make into a +white and flawless monument. + +The last slap of the spade rang with a metallic jar across the lake, +where snow already blotted the newly forming film of ice; the human +denizens of the wilderness filtered back into it one by one; "Rev. +Smatter" got into his sleigh, plainly concerned about the road; Mr. +Lyken betrayed unprofessional haste in loading his wagon with his +talented assistants and starting for Ghost Lake. + +A Game Protector or two put on snow-shoes when they departed. Trooper +Lannis led out his horse and Stormont's, and got into the saddle. + +"I'd better get these beasts into Ghost Lake while I can," he said. +"You'll follow on snow-shoes, won't you, Jack?" + +"I don't know. I may need a sleigh for Eve. She can't remain here all +alone. I'll telephone the Inn." + +Darragh, in blanket outfit, a pair of snow-shoes on his back, a rifle in +his mittened hand, came trudging up from the lake. He and Stormont +watched Lannis riding away with the two horses. + +"He'll make it all right, but it's time he started," said the latter. + +Darragh nodded: "Some storm. Where is Eve?" + +"In her room." + +"What is she going to do, Jack?" + +"Marry me as soon as possible. She wants to stay here for a few days but +I can't leave her here alone. I think I'll telephone to Ghost Lake for a +sleigh." + +"Let me talk to her," said Darragh in a low voice. + +"Do you think you'd better--at such a time?" + +"I think it's a good time. It will divert her mind, anyway. I want her +to come to Harrod Place." + +"She won't," said Stormont grimly. + +"She might. Let me talk to her." + +"Do you realise how she feels toward you, Jim?" + +"I do, indeed. And I don't blame her. But let me tell you; Eve Strayer +is the most honest and fair-minded girl I ever knew.... Except one.... +I'll take a chance that she'll listen to me.... Sooner or later she +will be obliged to hear what I have to tell her.... But it will be +easier for her--for everybody--if I speak to her now. Let me try, +Jack." + +Stormont hesitated, looked at him, nodded. Darragh stood his rifle +against the bench on the kitchen porch. They entered the house slowly. +And met Eve descending the stairs. + +The girl looked at Darragh, astonished, then her pale face flushed with +anger. + +"What are you doing in this house?" she demanded unsteadily. "Have you +no decency, no shame?" + +"Yes," he said, "I am ashamed of what my kinsman has done to you and +yours. That is partly why I am here." + +"You came here as a spy," she said with hot contempt. "You lied about +your name; you lied about your purpose. You came here to betray Dad! If +he'd known it he would have killed you!" + +"Yes, he would have. But--do you know why I came here, Eve?" + +"I've told you!" + +"And you are wrong. I didn't come here to betray Mike Clinch: I came to +save him." + +"Do you suppose I believe a man who has lied to Dad?" she cried. + +"I don't ask you to, Eve. I shall let somebody else prove what I say. I +don't blame you for your attitude. God knows I don't blame Mike Clinch. +He stood up like a man to Henry Harrod.... All I ask is to undo some of +the rotten things that my uncle did to you and yours. And that is partly +why I came here." + +The girl said passionately: "Neither Dad nor I want anything from Harrod +Place or from you! Do you suppose you can come here after Dad is dead +and pretend you want to make amends for what your uncle did to us?" + +"Eve," said Darragh gravely, "I've made some amends already. You don't +know it, but I have.... You may not believe it, but I liked your +father. He was a real man. Had anybody done to me what Henry Harrod did +to your father I'd have behaved as your father behaved; I'd never have +budged from this spot; I'd have hunted where I chose; I'd have borne an +implacable hatred against Henry Harrod and Harrod Place, and every soul +in it!" + +The girl, silenced, looked at him without belief. + +He said: "I am not surprised that you distrust what I say. But the man +you are going to marry was a junior officer in my command. I have no +closer friend than Jack Stormont. Ask him whether I am to be believed." + +Astounded, the girl turned a flushed, incredulous face to Stormont. + +He said: "You may trust Darragh as you trust me. I don't know what he +has to say to you, dear. But whatever he says will be the truth." + +Darragh said, gravely: "Through a misunderstanding your father came into +possession of stolen property, Eve. He did not know it had been stolen. +I did. But Mike Clinch would not have believed me if I had told him that +the case of jewels in his possession had been stolen from a woman.... +Quintana stole them. By accident they came into your father's +possession. I learned of this. I had promised this woman to recover her +jewels. + +"I came here for that purpose, Eve. And for two reasons: first, because +I learned that Quintana also was coming here to rob your father of these +gems; second, because, when I knew your father, and knew _you_, I +concluded that it would be an outrage to call on the police. It would +mean prison for Clinch, misery and ruin for you, Eve. So--I tried to +steal the jewels ... to save you both." + +He looked at Stormont, who seemed astonished. + +"To whom do these jewels belong, Jim?" demanded the trooper. + +"To the young Grand Duchess of Esthonia.... Do you remember that I +befriended her over there?" + +"Yes." + +"Do you remember that the Reds were accused of burning her chateau and +looting it?" + +"Yes, I remember." + +"Well, it was Quintana and his gang of international criminals who did +that," said Darragh drily. + +And, to Eve: "By accident this case of jewels, emblazoned with the coat +of arms of the Grand Duchess of Esthonia, came into your father's +possession. That is the story, Eve." + +There was a silence. The girl looked at Stormont, flushed painfully, +looked at Darragh. + +Then, without a word, she turned, ascended the stairs, and reappeared +immediately carrying the leather case. + +"Thank you, Mr. Darragh," she said simply; and laid the case in his +hand. + +"But," said Darragh, "I want you to do a little more, Eve. The owner of +these gems is my guest at Harrod Place. I want you to give them to her +yourself." + +"I--I can't go to Harrod Place," stammered the girl. + +"Please don't visit the sins of Henry Harrod on me, Eve." + +"I--don't. But--but that place----" + +After a silence: "If Eve feels that way," began Stormont awkwardly, "I +couldn't become associated with you in business, Jim----" + +"I'd rather sell Harrod Place than lose you!" retorted Darragh almost +sharply. "I want to go into business with you, Jack--if Eve will permit +me----" + +She stood looking at Stormont, the heightened colour playing in her +cheeks as she began to comprehend the comradeship between these two men. + +Slowly she turned to Darragh, offered her hand: + +"I'll go to Harrod Place," she said in a low voice. + +Darragh's quick smile brightened the sombre gravity of his face. + +"Eve," he said, "when I came over here this morning from Harrod Place I +was afraid you would refuse to listen to me; I was afraid you would not +even see me. And so I brought with me--somebody--to whom I felt certain +you would listen.... I brought with me a young girl--a poor refugee +from Russia, once wealthy, to-day almost penniless.... Her name is +Theodorica.... Once she was Grand Duchess of Esthonia.... But this +morning a clergyman from Five Lakes changed her name.... To such +friends as you and Jack she is Ricca Darragh now ... and she's having a +wonderful time on her new snow-shoes----" + +He took Eve by one hand and Stormont by the other, and drew them to the +kitchen door and kicked it open. + +Through the swirling snow, over on the lake-slope at the timber edge, a +graceful, boyish figure in scarlet and white wool moved swiftly over the +drifts with all the naive delight of a child with a brand new toy. + +As Darragh strode out into the open the distant figure flung up one arm +in salutation and came racing over the drifts, her brilliant scarf +flying. + +All aglow and a trifle breathless, she met Darragh just beyond the +veranda, rested one mittened hand on his shoulder while he knelt and +unbuckled her snow-shoes, stepped lightly from them and came forward to +Eve with out-stretched hand and a sudden winning gravity in her lovely +face. + +"We shall be friends, surely," she said in her quick, winning +voice;--"because my husband has told me--and I am so grieved for +you--and I need a girl friend----" + +Holding both Eve's hands, her mittens dangling from her wrist, she +looked into her eyes very steadily. + +Slowly Eve's eyes filled; more slowly still Ricca kissed her on both +cheeks, framed her face in both hands, kissed her lightly on the lips. + +Then, still holding Eve's hands, she turned and looked at Stormont. + +"I remember you now," she said. "You were with my husband in Riga." + +She freed her right hand and held it out to Stormont. He had the grace +to kiss it and did it very well for a Yankee. + +Together they entered the kitchen door and turned into the dining room +on the left, where were chairs around the plain pine table. + +Darragh said: "The new mistress of Harrod Place has selected your +quarters, Eve. They adjoin the quarters of her friend, the Countess +Orloff-Strelwitz." + +"Valentine begged me," said Ricca, smiling. "She is going to be lonely +without me. All hours of day and night we were trotting into one +another's rooms----" She looked gravely at Eve: "You will like +Valentine; and she will like you very much.... As for me--I already +love you." + +She put one arm around Eve's shoulders: "How could you even think of +remaining here all alone? Why, I should never close my eyes for thinking +of you, dear." + +Eve's head drooped; she said in a stifled voice: "I'll go with you.... +I want to.... I'm very--tired." + +"We had better go now," said Darragh. "Your things can be brought over +later. If you'll dress for snow-shoeing, Jack can pack what clothes you +need.... Are there snow-shoes for him, too?" + +Eve turned tragically to her lover: "In Dad's closet----" she said, +choking; then turned and went up the stairs, still clinging to Ricca's +hand and drawing her with her. + +Stormont followed, entered Clinch's quarters, and presently came +downstairs again, carrying Clinch's snow-shoes and a basket pack. + +He seated himself near Darragh. After a silence: "Your wife is +beautiful, Jim.... Her character seems to be even more beautiful.... +She's like God's own messenger to Eve.... And--you're rather wonderful +yourself----" + +"Nonsense," said Darragh, "I've given my wife her first American friend +and I've done a shrewd stroke of business in nabbing the best business +associate I ever heard of----" + +"You're crazy but kind.... I hope I'll be some good.... One thing; +I'll never get over what you've done for Eve in this crisis----" + +"There'll be no crisis, Jack. Marry, and hook up with me in business. +That solves everything.... Lord!--what a life Eve has had! But you'll +make it all up to her ... all this loneliness and shame and misery of +Clinch's Dump----" + +Stormont touched his arm in caution: Eve and Ricca came down the +stairs--the former now in the grey wool snow-shoe dress, and carrying +her snow-shoes, black gown, and toilet articles. + +Stormont began to stow away her effects in the basket pack; Darragh went +over to her and took her hand. + +"I'm so glad we are to be friends," he said. "It hurt a lot to know you +held me in contempt. But I had to go about it that way." + +Eve nodded. Then, suddenly recollecting: "Oh," she exclaimed, reddening, +"I forgot the jewel case! It's under my pillow----" + +She turned and sped upstairs and reappeared almost instantly, carrying +the jewel-case. + +Breathless, flushed, thankful and happy in the excitement of +restitution, she placed the leather case in Ricca's hands. + +"My jewels!" cried the girl, astounded. Then, with a little cry of +delight, she placed the case upon the table, stripped open the +emblazoned cover, and emptied the two trays. All over the table rolled +the jewels, flashing, scintillating, ablaze with blinding light. + +And at the same instant the outer door crashed open and Quintana covered +them with Darragh's rifle. + +"Now, by Christ!" he shouted, "who stirs a finger shall go to God in one +jump! You, my gendarme frien'--_you_, my frien' Smith--turn your damn +backs--han's up high!--tha's the way!--now, ladies!--back away +there--get back or I kill!--sure, by Jesus, I kill you like I would some +white little mice!----" + +With incredible quickness he stepped forward and swept the jewels into +one hand--filled the pocket of his trousers, caught up every stray stone +and pocketed them. + +"You gendarme," he cried in a menacing voice, "you think you shall +follow in my track. Yes? I blow your damn head off if you stir before +the hour.... After that--well, follow and be damn!" + +Even as he spoke he stepped outside and slammed the door; and Darragh +and Stormont leaped for it. Then the loud detonation of Quintana's rifle +was echoed by the splintering rip of bullets tearing through the closed +door; and both men halted in the face of the leaden hail. + +Eve ran to the pantry window and saw Quintana in somebody's stolen +lumber-sledge, lash a big pair of horses to a gallop and go floundering +past into the Ghost Lake road. + +As he sped by in a whirl of snow he fired five times at the house, then, +rising and swinging his whip, he flogged the frantic horses into the +woods. + +In the dining room, Stormont, red with rage and shame, and having found +his rifle in the corridor outside Eve's bedroom, was trying to open the +shutters for a shot; and Darragh, empty-handed, searched the house +frantically for a weapon. + +Eve, terribly excited, came from the pantry: + +"He's gone!" she cried furiously. "He's in somebody's lumber-sledge with +a pair of horses and he's driving west like the devil!" + +Stormont ran to the tap-room telephone, cranked it, and warned the +constabulary at Five Lakes. + +"Good God!" he exclaimed, turning to Darragh, scarlet with +mortification, "what a ghastly business! I never dreamed he was within +miles of Clinch's! It's the most shameful thing that ever happened to +me----" + +"What could anybody do under that rifle?" said Eve hotly. "That beast +would have murdered the first person who stirred!" + +Darragh, exasperated and dreadfully humiliated, looked miserably at his +brand-new wife. + +Eve and Stormont also looked at her. She had come forward from the rear +of the stairway where Quintana had brutally driven her. Now she stood +with one hand on the empty leather jewel case, looking at everybody out +of pretty, bewildered eyes. + +To Darragh, in a perplexed, unsteady voice: "Is it the same bandit who +robbed us before?" + +"Yes; Quintana," he said wretchedly. Rage began to redden his features. +"Ricca," he said, "I promised I'd find your jewels.... I promise you +again that I'll never drop this business until your gems--and the +Flaming Jewel--are in your possession----" + +"But, Jim----" + +"I swear it!" he exclaimed violently. "I'm not such a stupid fool as I +seem----" + +"Dear!" she protested excitedly, "you _have_ done what you promised. My +gems _are_ in my possession--I believe----" + +She caught up the emblazoned case, stripped out the first tray, then the +second, and flung them aside. Then, searching with the delicate tip of +her forefinger in the empty case, she suddenly pressed the bottom +hard,--thumb, middle finger and little finger forming the three apexes +of an equilateral triangle. + +There came a clear, tiny sound like the ringing of the alarm in a +repeating watch. Very gently the false bottom of the case detached +itself and came away in the palm of her hand. + +And there, each embedded in its own shaped compartment of chamois, lay +the Esthonian jewels--the true ones--deep hidden, always doubly guarded +by two sets of perfect imitations lining the two visible trays above. + +And, in the centre, blazed the Erosite gem--the magnificent Flaming +Jewel, a glory of living, blinding fire. + +Nobody stirred or spoke. Darragh blinked at the crystalline blaze as +though stunned. + +Then the young girl who had once been Her Serene Highness Theodorica, +Grand Duchess of Esthonia, looked up at her brand-new husband and +laughed. + +"Did you really suppose it was these that brought me across the ocean? +Did you suppose it was a passion for these that filled my heart? Did you +think it was for these that I followed you?" + +She laughed again, turned to Eve: + +"_You_ understand. Tell him that if he had been in rags I would have +followed him like a gypsy.... They say there is gypsy blood in us.... +God knows.... I think perhaps there is a little of it in all real +women----" Still laughing she placed her hand lightly upon her +heart--"In all women--perhaps--a Flaming Jewel imbedded here----" + +Her eyes, tender, and mocking, met his; she lifted the jewel-case, +closed it, and placed it in his hands. + +"Now," she said, "you have everything in your possession; and we are +safe--we are quite safe, now, my jewels and I." + +Then she went to Eve and rested both hands on her shoulders. + +"Shall we put on our snow-shoes and go--home?" + +Stormont flung open the bullet-splintered door. Outside in the snow he +dropped on both knees to buckle on Eve's snow-shoes. + +Darragh was performing a like office for his wife, and the State +Trooper, being unobserved, took Eve's slim hands and kissed them, +looking up at her where he was kneeling. + +Her pale face blushed as it had that day in the woods on Owl Marsh, so +long, so long ago, when this man's lips first touched her hands. + +As their eyes met both remembered. Then she smiled at her lover with the +shy girl's soul of her gazing out at him through eyes as blue as the +wild blind-gentians that grow among the ferns and mosses of Star Pond. + + * * * * * + +Far away in the northwestern forests Quintana still lashed his horses +through the primeval pines. + +Triumphant, reckless, resourceful, dangerous, he felt that now nothing +could stop him, nothing bar his way to freedom. + +Out of the wilderness lay his road and his destiny; out of it he must +win his way, by strategy, by cunning, by violence--creep out, lie his +way out, shoot his way out--it scarcely mattered. He was going out! He +was going back to life once more. Who could forbid him? Who stop him? +Who deny him, now, when, in his pockets, he held all that was worth +living for--the keys to power, to pleasure,--the key to everything on +earth! + +In fierce exultation he slapped the glass jewels in his pocket and +laughed aloud. + +"The keys to the world!" he cried. "Let him stop me and take them who is +a better man than I!" Then his long whip whistled and he cursed his +horses. + +Then, of a sudden, close by in the snowy road ahead, he saw a State +Trooper on snow-shoes,--saw the upflung arm warning him--screamed curses +at his horses, flogged them forward to crush this thing to death that +dared menace him--this object that suddenly rose up out of nowhere to +snatch from him the keys of the world---- + + * * * * * + +For a moment the State Trooper looked after the runaway horses. There +was no use following; they'd have to run till they dropped. + +Then he lowered the levelled rifle from his shoulder, looked grimly at +the limp thing which had tumbled from the sledge into the snowy road and +which sprawled there crimsoning the spotless flakes that fell upon it. + +THE END + + + + +_Novels by_ ROBERT W. CHAMBERS + + + THE FLAMING JEWEL THE TREE OF HEAVEN + THE LITTLE RED FOOT THE MOONLIT WAY + THE SLAYER OF SOULS IN SECRET + THE CRIMSON TIDE CARDIGAN + THE LAUGHING GIRL THE RECKONING + THE RESTLESS SEX THE MAID-AT-ARMS + BARBARIANS AILSA PAIGE + THE DARK STAR SPECIAL MESSENGER + THE GIRL PHILIPPA THE HAUNTS OF MEN + WHO GOES THERE! LORRAINE + ATHALIE MAIDS OF PARADISE + THE BUSINESS OF LIFE ASHES OF EMPIRE + THE GAY REBELLION THE RED REPUBLIC + THE STREETS OF ASCALON BLUE-BIRD WEATHER + THE COMMON LAW A YOUNG MAN IN A HURRY + THE FIGHTING CHANCE THE GREEN MOUSE + THE YOUNGER SET IOLE + THE DANGER MARK THE MYSTERY OF CHOICE + THE FIRING LINE THE CAMBRIC MASK + JAPONETTE THE MAKER OF MOONS + QUICK ACTION THE KING IN YELLOW + THE ADVENTURES OF A MODEST MAN IN SEARCH OF THE UNKNOWN + ANNE'S BRIDGE THE TRACER OF LOST PERSONS + BETWEEN FRIENDS THE CONSPIRATORS + THE BETTER MAN A KING AND A FEW DUKES + POLICE!!! THE HIDDEN CHILDREN + SOME LADIES IN HASTE IN THE QUARTER + OUTSIDERS + + + + + +------------------------------------------------------------------+ + |Transcriber's Note: | + | | + |[=a] is a macron | + | | + |Page 14 "Stormond nodded" changed to "Stormont nodded" | + | 40 Double close quotation mark added after "have a dance!" | + | 95 "seated hmiself" changed to "seated himself" | + | 96 "pallour" changed to "pallor" | + | 103 Open bracket removed from "Ah, bah! (But wait!" | + | 112 Double close quotation mark added after "that way, Mike."| + | 118 Double close quotation mark added after "at roll call." | + | 197 "swiming" changed to "swimming" | + | 226 "her breeches pocket" changed to "her breeches' pocket | + | 258 Double open quotation mark added to "But we ought to" | + | | + |All other inconsistencies in spelling, hyphenation and dialect | + |have been retained as they appear in the original book. | + +------------------------------------------------------------------+ + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Flaming Jewel, by Robert W. 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