"Never better," he a.s.sured her. "You can see what this wonderful sunlight does, even to me."
"Yes, I see. And you left Starlight yesterday?"
"Yesterday afternoon. I had trouble running back. Otherwise we"d have been here in the evening."
She glanced at him quickly. "We? Glen didn"t come along? He isn"t here?"
"Oh, no, no, certainly not," he hastened to say. "I brought in a man who--who is interested in the purchase we have made."
That served to arouse her sense of wonderment at what he had really been doing with her money. He was attempting to deceive her concerning Glen, and perhaps his entire story was a fabrication.
"Oh," she said. "Then you have purchased the mine--you and Glen?"
"Well--a few minor details remain to be concluded," he said off-handedly. "We are not yet in actual possession of the property.
There will be no further hitches, however--and the claim is certainly rich."
For the life of her she could not tell what lay at the bottom of the business. The strange conflicts and discrepancies between Glen"s very own letters made the riddle utterly obscure. She felt that Searle was fashioning falsehoods in every direction. That he had not visited Glen at all was her fixed conviction. A sudden distrust, almost a loathing for this heavy-browed man, was settling down upon her, inescapably.
Someway, somehow she must know about Glen for herself. Her own attempted trip to Starlight had discouraged all thought of further adventure, and no reliance whatsoever could be placed on Searle"s reports. Perhaps the reputed mining property was likewise a myth--or if such a property existed, Glen might never have heard of it at all.
But Glen"s letter--she was always forgetting that letter--the one he had written to Searle.
She said: "Where is this mine that Glen has found?"
He colored slightly. "We have all agreed not to talk too much about it yet. It"s not very far from here--I can tell you that. Precautions are necessary where a hundred men follow every prospector about, night and day, if he happens to have found a bit of valuable ore. A thousand men would be after this property if they knew the way to secure it."
Perhaps, after all, Glen, had purposely concealed this matter from herself. Bostwick sounded plausible. Her mind reverted to her brother"s illness, for Glen to her was of far more importance than all the mines in Nevada.
"I am glad to hear that Glen is _well_," she said, determined on another tack. "He hasn"t answered my letter."
Once more Bostwick colored, beneath his tan and the gun-metal tint of his jaw.
"I suppose he"s been too busy," he answered. "Have you written again?"
"Not yet," she answered honestly. "I wasn"t sure of his whereabouts.
You are sure he"s in Starlight now?"
"Yes--but you needn"t write," he hastened to say. "He said he might come, perhaps to-morrow." He rose from his chair. "I"ve got to hurry off, little girl. These negotiations cannot wait. I"ll run in when I can--this afternoon at the latest. I"m glad to see you looking so well." He approached her with lover-like intent. "My heart has been empty and forlorn, away from you, Beth. Surely you have a little--a little something for me, pet? You know how starved----"
"Oh--Mrs. d.i.c.k is coming!" she interrupted desperately. "You must have a great deal to do."
Mrs. d.i.c.k was making a large and lively noise in the kitchen.
Bostwick listened for a second, his deep-set eyes keenly fixed on the girl, like very orbs of suspicion and jealousy. He lowered his voice.
"Has that ruffian, Van Buren, been here recently?"
She raised her brows in well-feigned astonishment,
"I haven"t heard of any ruffian being in town."
Bostwick studied her face for a moment in silence.
"I"ll be around this afternoon," he repeated. "Good-by."
He departed hurriedly, glancing at his watch as he went.
Not a block from the house he met old Billy St.i.tts, who, though quite unknown to the New York man, knew Bostwick in a way of his own.
"Morning, Uncle.--Howdy?" he said, blocking Bostwick"s path. "Back, I see. Welcome home. I guess you don"t know me as well as I know you.
My name is St.i.tts--Billy St.i.tts--and I"m gittin" on fine with your niece. I"m the one which runs her errands and gits the inside track."
Bostwick, staring at Billy ominously, and about to sweep him aside as a bit of old rubbish, too familiar and impudent for tolerance, paused abruptly in his impulse, at a hint which Billy had supplied.
"Oh," he said. "How are you? So you are the friend who runs Miss Kent"s errands? You must be the one she asked me to befriend."
"Did she?" said old Billy, inordinately pleased. "What did I tell you about the inside track?"
"I"m glad if you have been of use," Bostwick told him insidiously.
"You didn"t say what your services have been. Just a few little errands, I suppose?"
"Never you mind," said Billy, with a profoundly impressive wink.
"That"s between her and me. That ain"t even fer you, Uncle Bostwick,"
and he winked again.
"Of course, of course," agreed Bostwick, half consumed with rage at the old fellow"s abominable manners and familiarity. "I"ll keep you in mind and add some reward of my own on the next occasion."
He bowed and hastened on his way, boiling with curiosity to know what it was that Beth had been doing to require this old tattler"s services.
He meant to ascertain. His suspicions went at once to Van, at thought of whom he closed down his jaw like a vise.
Filled with a turmoil of thoughts that seethed in his brain, like a brew in a witch"s cauldron--some of them dark and some golden bright, and some of them red with l.u.s.t for many things--he proceeded down street to McCoppet"s place, to find himself locked out of the private den, where the gambler was closeted with Lawrence.
CHAPTER x.x.x
BETH"S ONE EXPEDIENT
Bostwick had told Beth partial truths. His journey had been hard. His car had been twice disabled on the desert; Lawrence had been difficult to find; delays had confronted him at every turn, and not until midnight of the day before this had he come with his quarry to Goldite--barely in time to save the situation, with the reservation opening less than forty-eight hours away.
He had not seen Glen, nor approached the town of Starlight closer than fifteen miles. He had not yet expended Beth"s money, which only that morning had been practically placed at McCoppet"s disposal. But having finally landed the Government surveyor in camp, he had achieved the first desirable end in the game they were playing, and matters were moving at last with a speed to suit the most exacting.
During the interim between Searle"s departure and return affairs had been a trifle complicated in another direction--affairs that lay between the gambler and his friend, the lumberman, big Trimmer.
Trimmer had been paid one thousand dollars only of the sum agreed upon when he gave the name of Culver to the half-breed Indian, Cayuse. He had since spent his money, demanded the balance due, and threatened McCoppet with exposure, only to be met with a counter threat of prison for life as the half-breed"s accomplice in the crime. McCoppet meant to pay a portion of the creature"s price, but intended to get it from Bostwick. Indeed, to-day he had the money, but was far too much engrossed with Lawrence to give the lumberman a thought.
Trimmer, waxing greedy through the ease with which he had blackmailed McCoppet, had developed a cunning of his own. Convinced that the gambler was accustomed to incubating plans in his private office, the lumberman made shift to excavate a hole beneath the floor of that particular den of privacy, and, after having spent half a night in vain, in this place of concealment, was at last being duly rewarded as he listened to McCoppet and Lawrence.
With his ear to a knot-hole he gathered in everything essential to a knowledge of the plot. He became aware that Lawrence "fell" for twenty thousand dollars; he overheard the details of the "survey" about to be made; but to save his very life he could not have fathomed the means that were about to be employed to "jump" the mining property belonging to Van Buren and his partners.