"I"d advise you not to start anything you can"t finish, Jack. I"ll give you one more piece of advice, too. Come clean with what you know.
I"m goin" to find out, anyhow. Make up your mind to that. I"m goin"
through with this job till it"s done."
"You"ll pull off your Sherlock-Holmes stuff in jail, then, for I"m going to ask James to get off your bond," Jack retorted vindictively.
"As you please about that," Lane said quietly.
"He"ll choose between you or me. I"ll be d.a.m.ned if I"ll stand for his keeping a man out of jail to try and fasten on me a murder I didn"t do."
"I haven"t said you did it. What I say is that you and Miss Harriman know somethin" an" are concealin" it. What is it? I"m not a fool. I don"t think you killed Uncle any more than I did. But you an" Miss Harriman have a secret. Why don"t you go to James an" make a clean breast of it? He"ll tell you what to do."
"The devil he will! I tell you we haven"t any secret. We weren"t in Uncle"s rooms that night."
"Can you prove an alibi for the whole evening--both of you?" the range rider asked curtly.
"None of your business. We"re not in the prisoner"s dock. It"s you that is likely to be there," Jack tossed out petulantly.
Phyllis Harriman had flung herself down to sob with her head in the pillows. But Kirby noticed that one small pink ear was in the open to take in the swift sentences pa.s.sing between the men.
"I"m intendin" to make it my business," Lane said, his voice ominously quiet.
"You"re laying up trouble for yourself," Jack warned blackly. "If you want me for an enemy you"re going at this the right way."
"I"m not lookin" for enemies. What I want is the truth. You"re concealin" it. We"ll see if you can make it stick."
"We"re not concealing a thing."
"Last call for you to show down your cards, Jack. Are you with me or against me?" asked Kirby.
"Against you, you meddling fool!" Cunningham burst out in a gust of fury. "Don"t you meddle with my affairs, unless you want trouble right off the bat. I"m not going to have a Paul Pry nosing around and hinting slanders about me and Miss Harriman. What do you think I am?
I"ll protect my good name and this lady"s if I have to do it with a gun. Don"t forget that, Mr. Lane."
Kirby"s steady gaze appraised him coolly. "You"re excited an" talkin"
foolishness. I"m not attackin" anybody"s good name. I"m lookin" for the man who killed Uncle James. I"m expectin" to find him. If anybody stands in the way, I"m liable to run against him."
The man from Twin b.u.t.tes bowed toward the black hair and pink ear of his hostess. He turned on his heel and walked from the room.
CHAPTER XXIII
COUSINS DISAGREE
It was essential to Kirby"s plans that he should be at liberty. If he should be locked up in prison even for a few days the threads that he had begun to untangle from the snarl known as the Cunningham mystery would again be ensnared. He was not sure what action James would take at his brother"s demand that he withdraw from the bond. But Lane had no desire to embarra.s.s him by forcing the issue. He set about securing a new bond.
He was, ten minutes later, in the law offices of Irwin, Foster & Warren, attorneys who represented the cattle interests in Wyoming with which Kirby was identified. Foster, a stout, middle-aged man with only a few locks of gray hair left, heard what the rough rider had to say.
"I"ll wire to Caldwell and to Norman as you suggest, Mr. Lane," he said. "If they give me instructions to stand back of you, I"ll arrange a new bond as soon as possible."
"Will it take long? I can"t afford to be tied up behind the bars right now."
"Not if I can get it accepted. I"ll let you know at once."
Kirby rose. He had finished his business.
"Just a moment, Mr. Lane." Foster leaned back in his swivel-chair and looked out of the window. His eyes did not focus on any detail of the office building opposite. They had the far-away look which denotes a preoccupied mind. "Ever been to Golden?" he asked at last abruptly, swinging back in his seat and looking at his client.
"No. Why?"
"Golden is the Gretna Green of Denver, you know. When young people elope they go to Golden. When a couple gets married and doesn"t want it known they choose Golden. Very convenient spot."
"I"m not figuring on gettin" married right now," the cattleman said, smiling.
"Still you might find a visit to the place interesting and useful. I was there on business a couple of weeks ago."
The eyes of the men fastened. Lane knew he was being given a hint that Foster did not want to put more directly.
"What are the interestin" points of the town?" asked the Twin b.u.t.tes man.
"Well, sir, there are several. Of course, there"s the School of Mines, and the mountains right back of the town. Gold was discovered there somewhere about fifty-seven, I think. Used to be the capital of the territory before Denver found her feet."
"I"m rather busy."
"Wouldn"t take you long to run over on the interurban." The lawyer began to gather toward him the papers upon which he had been working when the client was shown in. He added casually: "I found it quite amusing to look over the marriage licenses of the last month or two.
Found the names there of some of our prominent citizens. Well, I"ll call you up as soon as I know about the bond."
Lane was not entirely satisfied with what he had been told, but he knew that Foster had said all he meant to say. One thing stuck in his mind as the gist of the hint. The attorney was advising him to go to the court-house and check up the marriage licenses.
He walked across to the Equitable Building and dropped in on his cousin James. Cunningham rose to meet him a bit stiffly. The cattleman knew that Jack had already been in to see him or had got him on the wire.
Kirby brushed through any embarra.s.sment there might be and told frankly why he had come.
"I"ve had a sort of row with Jack. Under the circ.u.mstances I don"t feel that I ought to let you stay on my bond. It might create ill-feelin" between you an" him. So I"m arrangin" to have some Wyoming friends put up whatever"s required. You"ll understand I haven"t any bad feeling against you, or against him for that matter. You"ve been bully all through this thing, an" I"m certainly in your debt."
"What"s the trouble between you about?" asked James.
"I"ve found out that he an" Miss Harriman were in Uncle James"s rooms the night he was killed. I want them to come through an" tell what they know."
"How did you find that out?"
The eyes of the oil broker were hard as jade. They looked straight into those of his cousin.
"I can"t tell you that exactly. Put two an" two together."
"You mean you _guess_ they were there. You don"t _know_ it."
A warm, friendly smile lit the brown face of the rough rider. He wanted to remain on good terms with James if he could. "I don"t know it in a legal sense. Morally, I"m convinced of it."