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Some one rushed quickly through the hall; others followed, knocking against the walls in the darkness. Then the awful, heart-clutching clang of a bell rang out-near, insistent, metallic. It was the meeting-house bell. There was no other in the town. The girls sprang to the floor. The thought had found swift lodgment in the mind of each that the hotel was on fire, and in that moment Louise thought of the poisoned meat that had once been served to some arch-enemies of the gang whose chief was now on trial for his liberty. So quickly does the brain work under stress of great crises, that, even before she had her shoes and stockings on, she found herself wondering who was the marked victim this time. Not Williston,-he was dead. Not Gordon,-he slept in his own room back of the office. Not Langford,-he was bunking with his friend in that same room.
Jim Munson? Or was the Judge the proscribed one? He was not a corrupt judge. He could not be bought. It might be he. Mary had gone to the window.
"Louise!" she gasped. "The court-house!"
True. The cloudy sky was reddened above the poor little temple of justice where for days and weeks the tide of human interest of a big part of a big State-ay, a big part of all the northwest country, maybe-had been steadily setting in and had reached its culmination only yesterday, when a gray eyed, drooping-shouldered, firm-jawed young man had at last faced quietly in the bar of his court the defier of the cow country. To-night, it would dance its little measure, recite its few lines on its little stage of popularity before an audience frenzied with appreciation and interest; to-morrow, it would be a heap of ashes, its scene played out.
"My note books!" cried Louise, in a flash of comprehension. She dressed hastily. Shirt-waist was too intricate, so she threw on a gay j.a.panese kimono; her jacket and walking skirt concealed the limitations of her attire.
"What are you going to do?" asked Mary, also putting on clothes which were easy of adjustment. She had never gone to fires in the old days before she had come to South Dakota; but if Louise went-gentle, high-bred Louise-why, she would go too, that was all there was about it.
She had const.i.tuted herself Louise's guardian in this rough life that must be so alien to the Eastern girl. Louise had been very good to her.
Louise's startled cry about her note books carried little understanding to her. She was not used to court and its ways.
They hastened out into the hallway and down the stairs. They saw no one whom they knew, though men were still dodging out from unexpected places and hurrying down the street. It seemed impossible that the inconveniently built, diminutive prairie hotel could accommodate so many people. Louise found herself wondering where they had been packed away.
The men, carelessly dressed as they were, their hair s.h.a.ggy and unkempt, always with pistols in belt or hip-pocket or hand, made her shiver with dread. They looked so wild and weird and fierce in the dimly lighted hall. She clutched Mary's arm nervously, but no thought of returning entered her mind. Probably the Judge was already on the court-house grounds. He would want to save some valuable books he had been reading in his official quarters. So they went out into the bleak and windy night. They were immediately enveloped in a wild gust that nearly swept them off their feet as it came tearing down the street. They clung together for a moment.
"It'll burn like h.e.l.l in this wind!" some one cried, as a bunch of men hurried past them. The words were literally whipped out of his mouth.
"Won't save a thing."
Flames were bursting out of the front windows upstairs. The sky was all alight. Sparks were tossed madly southward by the wind. There was grave danger for buildings other than the one already doomed. The roar of the wind and the flames was well-nigh deafening. The back windows and stairs seemed clear.
"Hurry, Mary, hurry!" cried Louise, above the roar, and pressed forward, stumbling and gasping for the breath that the wild wind coveted. It was not far they had to go. There was a jam of men in the yard. More were coming up. But there was nothing to do. Men shook their heads and shrugged their shoulders and watched the progress of the inevitable with the placidity engendered of the potent "It can't be helped." But some things might have been saved that were not saved had the first on the grounds not rested so securely on that quieting inevitability. As the girls came within the crowded circle of light, they overheard something of a gallant attempt on the part of somebody to save the county records-they did not hear whether or no the attempt had been successful.
They made their way to the rear. It was still dark.
"Louise! What are you going to do?" cried Mary, in consternation. There were few people on this side. Louise put her hand deliberately to the door-k.n.o.b. It gave to her pressure-the door swung open. Some one stumbled out blindly and leaned against the wall for a moment, his hands over his eyes.
"I can't do it," he said, aloud, "I can't reach the vaults."
Louise slipped past him and was within the doorway, closely followed by the frantic Mary.
The man cried out sharply, and stretched out a detaining hand. "Are you crazy? Come back!"
"Mr. Gordon!" cried Louise, with a little sob of relief, "is it really you? Let me go-quick-my note books!"
A thick cloud of smoke at that moment came rolling down the back stairs.
It enveloped them. It went down their throats and made them cough. The man, throwing an arm over the shoulders of the slender girl who had started up after the first shock of the smoke had pa.s.sed away, pushed her gently but firmly outside.
"Don't let her come, Mary," he called back, clearly. "I'll get the note books-if I can." Then he was gone-up the smoke-wreathed stairway.
Outside, the girls waited. It seemed hours. The wind, howling around the corners, whipped their skirts. There was a colder edge to it. Fire at last broke out of the back windows simultaneously with the sound of breaking gla.s.s, and huge billows of released black smoke surged out from the new outlet. Louise started forward. She never knew afterward just what she meant to do, but she sprang away from Mary's encircling arm and ran up the little flight of steps leading to the door from which she had been so unceremoniously thrust. Afterward, when they told her, she realized what her impulsive action meant, but now she did not think. She was only conscious of some wild, vague impulse to fly to the help of the man who would even now be safe in blessed outdoors had it not been for her and her foolish woman's whim. She had sent him to his death. What were those wretched note books-what was anything at all in comparison to his life! So she stumbled blindly up the steps. The wind had slammed the door shut. It was a cruel obstacle to keep her back. She wrenched it open. The clouds of smoke that met her, rolling out of their imprisonment like pent up steam, choked her, blinded her, beat her back.
She strove impotently against it. She tried to fight it off with her hands-those little intensely feminine hands whose fortune Gordon longed to take upon himself forever and forever. They were so small and weak to fend for themselves. But small as they were, it was a good thing they did that night. Now Mary had firm hold of her and would not let her go.
She struggled desperately and tried to push her off, but vainly, for Mary had twice her strength.
"Mary, I shall never forgive you-"
She did not finish her sentence, for at that moment Gordon staggered out into the air. He sat down on the bottom step as if he were drunk, but little darts of flame colored the surging smoke here and there in weird splotches and, suddenly calm now that there was something to do, Mary and Louise led him away from the doomed building where the keen wind soon blew the choking smoke from his eyes and throat.
"I've swallowed a ton," he said, recovering himself quickly. "I couldn't get them, Louise." He did not know he called her so.
"Oh, what does it matter?" cried Louise, earnestly. "Only forgive me for sending you."
"As I remember it, I sent myself," said Gordon, with a humorous smile, "and, I am afraid, tumbled one little girl rather unceremoniously down the stairs. Did I hurt you?" There was a caressing cadence in the question that he could not for the life of him keep out of his voice.
"I did not even know I tumbled. How did you get back?" said Louise, tremulously.
"Who opened the door?" counter-questioned Gordon, remembering. "The wind must have blown it shut. I was blinded-I couldn't find it-I couldn't breathe. I didn't have sense enough to know it was shut, but I couldn't have helped myself anyway. I groped for it as long as I could without breathing. Then I guess I must have gone off a little, for I was sprawling on the floor of the lower hall when I felt a breath of air playing over me. Somebody must have opened the door-because I am pretty sure I had fainted or done some foolish thing."
Louise was silent. She was thankful-thankful! G.o.d had been very good to her. It had been given to her to do this thing. She had not meant to do it-she had not known what she did; enough that it was done.
"It was Louise," spoke up Mary, "and I-tried to hold her back!" So she accused herself.
"But I didn't do it on purpose," said Louise, with shining eyes. "I-I-"
"Yes, you-" prompted Gordon, looking at her with tender intentness.
"I guess I was trying to come after you," she confessed. "It was very-foolish."
The rear grounds were rapidly filling up. Like children following a band-wagon, the crowd surged toward the new excitement of the discovered extension of the fire. Gordon drew a long breath.
"I thank G.o.d for your-foolishness," he said, simply, smiling the smile his friends loved him for.
CHAPTER XIX
AN UNCONVENTIONAL TEA PARTY
As the flames broke through the roof, Langford came rushing up where the group stood a little apart from the press.
"d.i.c.k! I have been looking for you everywhere," he cried, hoa.r.s.ely.
"What's the trouble, old man?" asked Gordon, quietly.
"I have something to tell you," said Langford, in a low voice. "Come quick-let's go back to your rooms. Why, girls-"
"We will go, too," said Mary, with quiet decision. She had caught a glimpse of Red Sanderson's face through the crowd, and she thought he had leered at her. She had been haunted by the vague feeling that she must have known the man who had attempted to carry her off-that dreadful night; but she had never been able to concentrate the abstract, fleeting impressions into comprehensive substance-never until she had seen that scar and glancing away in terror saw that Langford, too, had seen; but she was not brave enough to lose herself and Louise in the crowd where that man was. She could not. He had leered at Louise, too, last night at supper. They could not ask the protection of Gordon and Langford back to the hotel then, when Langford's handsome, tanned face was white with the weight of what he had to tell.
"It will be best," he agreed, unexpectedly. "Come-we must hurry!"
It was Williston's "little girl" whom he took under his personal protection, diving up the street in the teeth of the gale which blew colder every moment, with a force and strength that kept Mary half the time off her feet. A gentler knight was Gordon-though as manly. All was dark around the premises. There was no one lurking near. Everybody was dancing attendance on the court-house holocaust. Gordon felt for his keys.
"How good it is to get out of the wind," whispered Louise. This proceeding smacked so much of the mysterious that whispering followed as a natural sequence.
They stepped within. It was inky black.
"Lock the door," said Langford, in a low voice.
Gordon complied, surprised, but asking no question. He knew his friend, and had faith in his judgment. Then he lighted a lamp that stood on his desk.