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"See here, d.i.c.k, I've something serious to say to you," he said.
"Something I've been worrying over for the last day or two. You've always been honest with me--the soul of honesty--so I must be honest with you."
"What have I bin doin'?" asked the trapper uneasily.
"You? Oh, you haven't done anything that you shouldn't, old man. I am thinking of myself. You told me, a little while ago, that you were--ah--very fond of Miss Harley. But you told me in such a way, old man, as to lead me to think that--that you didn't believe yourself to have--much chance--in the quarter."
"That's right, Mr. Rayton," replied the trapper frankly. "I knew there wasn't any chance for me, and I know it still. I said that _you_ was the kind of man she'd ought to marry, some day. I'm a good trapper, and I try to be an honest friend to them as act friendly to me; but I'm just a tough, ignorant bushwhacker. She ain't my kind--nor David Marsh's kind--and neither is Jim. She's more like you and Mr. Banks."
Rayton blushed deeply.
"My dear chap, you must not talk like that," he said. "You live in the bush, of course, but so do I, and so do all of us. But--but what I want to say, d.i.c.k, is this: I am--I am in love with Miss Harley!"
"Good for you!" exclaimed the trapper. He extended his hand. "Lay it there! And good luck to you!"
CHAPTER X
RED CROSSES AGAIN
"I am investigating the mysteries of Samson's Mill Settlement along lines of my own," said Harvey P. Banks. "My system of detection is not perfect yet, but it is good enough to go ahead with. So far I have not nailed anything down, but my little hammer is ready, I can tell you. I am full of highly colored suspicions, and there is one thing I am ready to swear to."
"What is that?" asked Reginald Baynes Rayton.
"Just this, Reginald. I'll eat my boots--and they cost me twelve plunks--if the burning of young Marsh's camp and the attack upon old Timothy Fletcher are not parts of the same game. I don't see any connection, mind you, but I'll swear it is so. I have two pieces of this picture puzzle on the table, and I am waiting for more. I know that these two pieces belong to the same picture."
"And what about the marked card?" inquired Rayton. "Is it part of your puzzle?"
"Certainly. It is the t.i.tle of the picture. But I want more pieces, and just at this stage I need another game of poker. Can you get the same bunch of players together for to-night--and d.i.c.k Goodine?"
"I'll try. If we both set to work we can make the round this afternoon.
Jim Harley is home, I know. Why do you want d.i.c.k? I give you my word, H.
P., that you'll not find him one of the crooked pieces of your puzzle picture."
"Right you are, son! But he has sharp eyes, and as he is our friend it would not be polite to give a party and leave him out. He needn't play.
Somebody must sit out, anyway, or we'll have too many for a good game, but he can talk, and look on, and help burn tobacco."
"Good! Then we must get Goodine, Nash, Wigmore, Marsh, Jim Harley, and Benjamin Samson."
"Never mind Samson. We don't need him. He is harmless and hopeless--and one too many. Also, he has promised Mrs. Samson never to stay out again after ten o'clock at night."
"All serene. We'd better start out with our invites right after grub.
And as the roads are bad we may as well ride. You can have Buller and I'll take Bobs. Who do you want to call on?"
"I'll see Nash and Wigmore, and leave the others to you."
So, after the midday meal, they saddled the two farm horses and set out.
Mr. Banks rode straight to Captain Wigmore's house. The air was still mild and the sky was clouded. About four inches of slushy snow lay upon the half-frozen ruts of the roads. The New Yorker hitched Buller in an open carriage shed, and hammered with the b.u.t.t of his whip upon the front door. He waited patiently for nearly ten minutes, then hammered again. This time the summons brought old Timothy Fletcher, looking even more sullen than usual and with his gray-streaked hair standing up like the crest of some grotesque fowl. His eyes had the appearance of being both sharp and dull at the same time. They showed inner points, glinting like ice, and an outer, blinking film like the shadow of recent sleep.
For several seconds he stood with the door no more than six inches ajar, staring and blinking at the caller, his wind-tanned brow forbidding, but his lower face as expressionless as a panel of the door.
"Who d'ye want, sir?" he inquired at last, in a grudging voice.
"Good!" exclaimed Mr. Banks. "I really thought you were asleep, Timothy. I want to speak to the captain for a few minutes. Is he at home?"
Timothy Fletcher lowered his staring eyes for an instant, then raised them again, blinking owlishly. The glint in their depths brightened, and took on sharper edges.
"What d'ye want to speak to him about?" he asked suspiciously.
"I'll tell that to your master," replied Mr. Banks blandly.
"He ain't at home."
"Not at home? Guess again, my good man."
"I tell ye, he ain't at home!"
"Not so fast," said the sportsman coolly, and with astonishing swiftness he advanced his heavily booted right foot, and thrust it across the threshold. The door nipped it instantly.
"It is not polite to slam doors in the faces of your master's friends,"
he said.
Then he threw all his weight against the door, flinging it wide open and hurling Timothy Fletcher against the wall.
"I don't like your manners," he said. "I intend to keep my eye on you. I give you fair warning, Timothy Fletcher."
The old fellow stood against the wall, breathing heavily, but in no wise abashed. He grinned sardonically.
"Warning?" he gasped. "Ye warn _me_! Chuck it!"
Mr. Banks halted and gazed at him, noting the narrow, heaving chest and gray face.
"I hope I have not hurt you. I opened the door a trifle more violently than I intended," he said.
Fletcher did not answer. Banks glanced up the stairs and beheld Captain Wigmore standing at the top and smiling down at him. He turned sharply to the servant. "There!" he whispered. "Just as I suspected! You were lying."
The old fellow twisted his gray face savagely. That was his only answer.
Timothy retired to the back of the house as Captain Wigmore descended the stairs. The captain was in fine spirits. He clasped his visitor's hand and patted his shoulder.
"Come into my den," he cried. "What'll you have? Tea, whisky, sherry?
Give it a name, my boy."
"A drop of Scotch, if you have it handy," replied the caller. "But I came over just for a moment, captain, to see if you can join us to-night in a little game of poker."
"Delighted! Nothing I'd like better. We've been dull as ditch water lately," answered the captain, as he placed a gla.s.s and decanter before his visitor. "Just a moment," he added. "There is no water--and there is no bell in this room. Timothy has a strong objection to bells."
Wigmore left the room, returning in a minute with a jug of water. He closed the door behind him.