"You"re right, Van," said Ralph, grasping both hands of his eccentric chum, heartily enough this time. "I am so strung up, though, with things happening, and so much suspicion and mystery in the air, that I"m jumping to all kinds of conclusions helter-skelter. I hate mystery, you know."
"Sit down," said Van, moving around to the door of the dismantled summerhouse, and dropping to its worm-eaten seat. "I want to tell you something. I wasn"t looking in that window expecting to see your mother."
"No?"
"Not at all."
"Then it must have been Mrs. Davis, the woman who lives there."
"Is that her name?" inquired Van, with a shrewd smile.
"She says it is."
"You know her, then? Well, I don"t, Ralph. Never saw her before. Yet, I"ve traveled a long distance to get a look at her. See here--can you make it out?"
Van took from his pocket the card Ralph had seen him consult at the window. Ralph held it up to the moonlight.
It was an old-fashioned card photograph. Judging from its yellow, faded appearance, it seemed taken in another generation. It presented the face of a woman of about thirty years of age.
Ralph scanned this with a certain token of recognition.
"This picture resembles Mrs. Davis," he said.
"Think so?" asked Van. "I know it does. It"s meant for the lady in that room yonder--when she was younger, though."
"How do you come by it?" inquired Ralph.
"It"s a secret for the present, but I don"t mind telling you. A friend--a long distance away--asked me to locate the original of that picture. Somehow he got a clew to the fact that she was living in this district."
"Yes, she came to Stanley Junction recently."
"Anyhow, I followed out directions," narrated Van. "I"ve done what I came for. The woman lives in that house yonder. I must go back and inform my friend."
"Not right away. Mother will want to see you, Van."
Van shook his head resolutely.
"I"ll be back again soon, Ralph," he promised. "I wish I could tell you more, but it"s not my business."
"That"s all right, Van. I don"t want to pry into your secrets."
Van restored the picture to his pocket. He sighed with a glance at the house, as if it would indeed be a pleasure to have a chat with his adopted mother, Mrs. Fairbanks.
"Oh, Ralph!" he said suddenly, checking himself as he was about to move away--"have you ever heard anything more about those twenty thousand dollars railroad bonds?"
"Have I?" spoke Ralph animately; "I seem to be hearing about them every step I take, lately!"
"Is that so?"
"Yes, but always in a vague, unsatisfactory way. What made you ask that question, Van?" inquired Ralph, with a keen glance at his companion.
"Oh, nothing," declared Van carelessly. "I was just thinking, that"s all. You see, Mr. Gibson is a rare, good fellow."
"He did me some rare, good service--I know that," said Ralph warmly.
"Well, he"s pegging away at that railroad of his, wasting valuable time.
He don"t dare to leave it, because he might vi--vi--bother the word--oh, yes! vitiate his legal rights. He told me, though, that if he could get someone to put up a few thousand dollars so he could hire help, he would go to some big city and interest capital and rush the road through."
"I will bear that in mind," said Ralph thoughtfully. "I believe he has the nucleus of a big speculation. There are rich men in Stanley Junction who might be induced to help him."
"Suppose you got those twenty thousand dollars bonds, Ralph," said Van suddenly. "Would you be inclined to invest?"
"I would feel it a duty, Van," responded Ralph promptly. "I believe my mother would, too. You will remember that if it was not for Mr. Gibson, we would probably be without a home to-day."
"You"re a good fellow, Ralph Fairbanks!" cried Van, slapping his chum heartily on the shoulder. "I knew you"d say that. And say--I guess you"re going to hear something about those bonds, soon."
"The air seems full of those bonds!" half smiled Ralph. "I wish something besides shadows would materialize, though."
Ralph felt that Van was keeping something back--certainly about the person so interested in the mysterious Mrs. Davis, possibly in reference to the railroad bonds, as well.
Before he could express himself further, Van grabbed his sleeve and pulled him into the shelter of the summerhouse with a quick warning:
"S-sh!"
"What is it, Van?" inquired Ralph in surprise.
"Speak low, look sharp!" whispered Van, pointing through the interstices of the trellis in the direction of the house. "You hate mystery, you say. Then how does that strike you?"
"Why," exclaimed Ralph, after a steadfast glance in the direction indicated--"it is Gasper Farrington!"
CHAPTER XV--A HERO DESPITE HIMSELF
Ralph did not have to look twice to be sure that it was the village magnate who stood just where he had discovered Van Sherwin a few minutes previous.
Gasper Farrington was stooping stealthily under the open window. He did not seem to care so much to see who was inside. Perhaps he had already seen. His whole att.i.tude showed that he was listening intently.
Ralph disliked Farrington. He had reason for the sentiment. He could not recall one gracious action on the part of the miserly old man in all the years he had known him.
His present occupation, that of an eavesdropper, was so expected and characteristic of Farrington, that Ralph"s indignation was less than his contempt.
"What is he after here?" reflected Ralph; "no good, of course. Mrs.
Davis knows him and fears him, it seems. He is going."
Before Ralph could make up his mind to any definite course of action, Farrington, after a meditative pause, slunk from under the window. Then he disappeared briskly around the corner of the house.