The Colossus

Chapter 34

"Sometimes," Witherspoon agreed; and after a short silence he added: "I was just thinking of how that fellow imposed on me, but I can"t quite get at the cause of my worry over him, and I don"t understand why I should have been afraid that he could ruin me. I want to ask you something, and I want you to tell me the exact truth without fear of giving offense: Have you ever thought that at times my mind was unbalanced? Have you?"

"You haven"t been well, and a sick man"s mind is never sound, you know."

"That"s all true enough; but do I remind you very much of your uncle Andrew?"

"Yes, when you worry."

"I thought so. I"ve got to stop worrying; and I believe that we have more control over ourselves than we exercise. Come back at noon and we"ll go out together."

"I"ll be here," Henry replied.

Just before he reached the office Henry met John Richmond, and together they stepped into a cigar-store.

"I"ve been over to your office," said Richmond. "I have important business with you."

"All right, John. Business with you is a pleasure."

"I think this will be. This is the last day of September, and relying on my recollection, I know that black ba.s.s are about ready to begin their fall campaign. So I thought we"d better get on a train early to-morrow morning and go out into Lake County. Now don"t say you are too busy, for _I"m_ running away from a stack of work as high as my head."

"I"ll go."

"Good. We"ll have a glorious day in the woods. We"ll forget Brother Brooks and the fanatic who saved his life; we"ll float on the lake; well pick up nuts; we"ll listen to the controversy of the blue jays, and the flicker, flicker of the yellowhammers; we"ll study Mr.

Woodp.e.c.k.e.r, whose judgment tells him to go south, but who is held back by the promising sunshine. The train leaves at eight. I"ll be on hand, and don"t you fail."

"I won"t. I"m only too anxious to get out of town."

Shortly after Henry arrived at the office Miss Drury came into his room. "Your sister was here just now," she said.

"Was she?"

"Yes, she came to wait for the verdict."

"That reminds me. I intended to telephone, but forgot it."

"She said she knew you wouldn"t think of it."

"Did you quarrel?" Henry asked.

"Did we quarrel? Well, now, I like that question. No, we didn"t quarrel. I got along with her quite as well as I do with her brother.

She said that she had often wondered who got up my department, but that no one had ever told her."

"She may have wondered, but she never asked. So, you see, I intend to rid myself of blame even at the expense of my sister."

"Oh, I suppose she said it merely to put me in good humor with myself."

"But wouldn"t it have been more in harmony with a woman"s character if she"d given you a sly cut, a tiny stab, to put you in ill humor with the world?"

"I hope you don"t mean that, Mr. Witherspoon."

"Why? Would it make you think less of women?"

"What egotism! No, less of you."

"Oh, if that"s the case I"ll withdraw it--will say that I didn"t mean it."

"That"s so kind of you that I"m almost glad you said it."

She went back to her work, but a few moments later she returned, and now she appeared to be embarra.s.sed. "You must pardon me," she said.

"Pardon you? What for?"

"For speaking so rudely just now. You constantly make me forget that I am working for you."

"That"s a high compliment. But I didn"t notice that you spoke rudely."

"Yes, I said "what egotism," and I"m sorry."

"You must not be sorry, for if you meant what you said, I deserved it."

"Oh, then you really did mean what you said about women."

Henry laughed. "Miss Drury, don"t worry over anything I say; and remember that I"m pleased whenever you forget that you are working for me. You didn"t know that I was instrumental in the arrest of Brooks, did you?"

"Why, no, I never thought of such a thing."

"You must keep it to yourself, but I was, and why? I hated him. Once he suggested to me that he would like to have you take lunch with him.

I told him that you didn"t go out with any one, and with coldbloodedness he replied, "Ah, she hasn"t been here long." I hated him from that moment. Don"t you see what a narrow-minded fellow I am?"

"Narrow-minded!"

"Yes, to move the law against a man merely because he had spoken lightly of--of my friend."

She was leaning against the door-case and was looking down. She dropped a paper. Henry glanced at the window, which he called his loop-hole of freedom, for through it no Colossus could be seen. He turned slowly and looked toward the door. The girl was gone.

CHAPTER XXIX.

A DAY OF REST.

Early the next morning Henry and Richmond were on a train, speeding away from the roar, the clang, the turmoil, the smoke, the atmospheric streams of stench, the trouble of the city. They saw a funeral procession, and Richmond remarked: "They have killed a drone and are dragging him out of the hive, and as they have set out so early they must be going to pay him the compliment of a long haul." They pa.s.sed stations where men who had spent a quiet night at home paced up and down impatiently waiting for a train to whirl them back to their daily strife. "They play cards going in and coming out," said Richmond, "but at noon they are eager to cut one another"s throats."

They ran through a forest, dense and wild-looking, but in the wildness there was a touch of man"s deceiving art. They crossed a small river and caught sight of a barefooted boy trying to steal a boat. They sped over the prairie and flew past an old Dutch windmill. It was an odd sight, an un-American glimpse--a wink at a strange land. They commented on everything that whirled within sight--a bend in the road, a crooked Line, a tumble-down fence. They were boys. They talked about names that they held a prejudice against, and occasionally one of them would say, "No, I don"t like a man of that name."

"There," Richmond spoke up, "I never knew a man of that name that wasn"t a wolf. But sometimes one good fellow offsets a whole generation of bad names. I never liked the name Witherspoon until I met you."

"How do you like DeGolyer?" Henry asked.

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