"What did you learn? What did he say?"
"Only one thing of real importance," I answered in subdued tone, "and I dragged that out of him by threat. He was not employed by Neale, and the fellow who was sent down here to a.s.sist us was disposed of in some way."
"Killed, you mean?"
"I suspect as much, but Coombs claims he was kicked off the place, and returned North."
For a moment she stood silent, breathing heavily, her eyes on my face.
In the pause I saw again the picture of the old Judge, and remembered.
"Why is he here then? What authority has he?"
"Come outside into the garden, and I will tell you the whole story.
Somehow I feel here as though we were being watched every minute.
Never mind a hat; we will find shade somewhere."
CHAPTER XVII
CIRc.u.mSTANTIAL EVIDENCE
In front of the veranda, and to the right of the brick walk, the latticework of a small summerhouse could be discerned through a maze of shrubbery and weeds. No path led toward it, yet we made the difficult pa.s.sage, by pressing aside the foliage, and discovered a rustic seat within, where we were completely screened from observation. I felt the slight trembling of the woman"s form from suppressed excitement, but the adventure with Coombs had only served to stiffen my nerves. With flushed cheeks, and eyes bright and questioning, she could scarcely wait for me to begin.
"Now tell me; surely we are out of sight and hearing."
"I do not think I shall ever be entirely a.s.sured as to that until I know more of our exact situation," I replied, speaking cautiously. "We may have been seen coming here, and those weeds would easily conceal an eavesdropper. The truth is, I have gained very little information of value, and am as mystified as ever. If that fellow told the truth it is beyond my understanding."
"But you are sure he knows nothing of those men who sent you here?"
"Yes, he had never heard of Vail, and all he knew about Neale was that name was signed to the orders of the new overseer."
"Under what authority is the man acting?"
I hesitated, not venturing to look at her, conscious of a personal feeling which I must conceal.
"Do you not wish to tell me?"
"It is not that," I hastened to explain, but finding the words hard to speak. "I think he lied, and yet cannot be sure. He claims to be working under the orders of Philip Henley."
"What! Impossible!"
"So I felt, and consequently hesitated to tell you, but now that I have been compelled to do so, I will explain in full. He said this under the menace of a revolver, a condition which often inspires men to speak the truth. I can scarcely imagine his making up such a story, for he is a dull-witted fellow, and even before he had threatened to test your claims to be Henley"s wife."
"You told him, then?"
"Everything, except the original cause of our being here. I determined this morning to fight in the open, under my own name. That is the right way, is it not?"
"Yes, I think so," and she lifted her eyes to mine.
"I like you better for that."
"I think I like myself better also," I said with a laugh. "I confess I did n"t care much at first. The whole affair merely represented a lark, an adventure with me. But after what you said the night of our arrival I began to view the thing in a new light, and to despise my part in It. Yet even then I felt bound to carry out my agreement. It was only when you told me your ident.i.ty, that I felt free to decide otherwise."
"Why should that make such a difference? If I had not been the one, then it would have been some other woman defrauded."
"True, but a mere unknown, a shadow. Besides, I had no reason previously to know that a fraud was contemplated--those rascals told a most plausible story, leaving me to believe I served the real heirs.
Now I comprehend their true purpose and--and, well, knowing you it has become personal."
"I do not altogether understand."
"Why, it is simply this," I went on desperately, "I want to serve you, and I want you to respect me. Down in your heart you have n"t really been a.s.sured that I was not one of that gang of conspirators. You came down here to watch me. Now I am going to stand up as Gordon Craig, and fight it out for you."
There was a knot of blue ribbon at her throat, and I reached out and unpinned it before she had time to protest.
"See, there are your colors, and I do battle under them. Whatever the final results you are never going to doubt me any more--are you?"
Her eyes were veiled by long lashes, and I could see the heaving of her b.r.e.a.s.t.s.
"No--no. I scarcely think I ever did doubt you, only it was all very strange. Nothing seemed real; it was more like a stage-play in which I acted a part--our first meeting, our being thrown together on this quest. I have not known what to think, even of myself."
"We are both getting our heads above the mist now," I interrupted gently, "and deep as the mystery appears, when finally solved it will likely prove a very sordid, commonplace affair. The main thing is for us to thoroughly understand and trust each other."
"You need not doubt me."
"I have already learned that. It is more important that you fully trust me."
"I do," and both her hands were impulsively extended. "I have from the very first. I did not come here to watch, but because I believed in you. Truly this was my motive rather than any thought of the property.
Indeed I hardly realized at the start that this was my affair; I merely had a feeling that you needed me. That--that morning on the bench,"
she paused, her voice choking in her throat, her eyes misted, "why, I--I was scarcely rational; my mind could not even grasp clearly what you endeavored to tell. I was so far from being myself that I failed to recognize my own name. Perhaps that was not strange as I always lived under another. So it was not that, not any selfish motive, which impelled me to accompany you. I came because--because I knew you needed me. I had an intuition that you were going into danger, into some trap. I cannot explain, no woman can, how such knowledge lays hold upon her. I merely acted instinctively. It was not until that afternoon that I realized clearly what this all meant to me personally.
I seemed to wake up as from a dream. Then I sat down in the rest room of one of those big department stores, and thought it all out. At first I determined to tell you everything, but I did--did not know you at all. I trusted you, I believed in you; you had impressed me as being a real man. But this was merely a woman"s intuition. There were circ.u.mstances that made me doubt, that compelled caution. I--I had to test you, Gordon Craig."
"My only wonder is that you retained any confidence."
"Oh, but I did," she insisted warmly. "That alone brought me here. I thought of appealing to a lawyer, to the police, and then your face rose up before me, and my decision was made. I came back to you that night because--because I believed you to be a gentleman."
"And now? henceforth?"
Her eyes never wavered, although there was a high color in her cheeks as my hands clasped her own more closely.
"I am convinced I chose aright. You are the man I thought you to be.
I am glad I came."
For an instant the hot blood coursed through my veins; I seemed to see only the beauty of her flesh. Wild words leaped to my lips, only to be choked back unspoken, although I scarcely knew what strength combined to win the swift struggle. Impulse, made with sudden revelation of love, swept me perilously near to outburst, yet reason held sufficiently firm to restrain; the flood of pa.s.sion. I knew I must refrain; I read it in the calm depths of those eyes fronting me in frank friendship. A word, a single, mad, ill-considered word, would sever the bond between us as though cleft by a sword. With any other I might have dared all, but not with her. Reckless as my nature had grown in the hard school of life, I shrank from this test, dreading to see her face change, her att.i.tude harden. And it would; there had already been sufficient revealment of her character to make me aware of how firm a line she drew between right and wrong. It was not in her nature to compromise. She trusted, me--yes! But as a "gentleman."
Should I fail in that test of her faith I could never again hope to regain my place in her esteem. I have wondered since how I ever won that swift, deadly battle; how I ever crushed back the wild pa.s.sion, the mad impulse to clasp her In my arms. Yet, under G.o.d"s mercy I did, my voice emotionless, my face white from restraint, my lips dry as with fever. The one thing I was sure about just then was that we must break away from this personal conversation; flesh and blood could stand the strain no longer.
"Let"s not talk of ourselves then," I said, releasing her hands, "but of what we must face here. We trust each other; that is enough for the present surely. You will not leave, and let me ferret out the mystery alone, so we must work together in its solution. I have told you that Coombs claims to be working under the orders of your husband. Is that possible?"