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Mrs. Terriberry made no offer to take the package which Mrs. Jackson extended.
"Just a little taste of buffalo berry jelly for Essie," said Miss Starr, with her most radiant smile. "Her uncle might enjoy it."
"I ain't forgot," said Mrs. Tutts, "how fond Ess is of brown bread, so I says to myself I'll just take some of my baked beans along, too. Tutts says I beat the world on baked beans. Where's Ess? I'd like to see her."
"Yes; tell her we're here," chorused the others.
Mrs. Terriberry's moment had come. She drew herself up in a pose of hauteur which a stout person can only achieve with practice.
"Miss Tisdale," she replied with glib gusto, "is engaged at present and begs to be excused. But," she added in words which were obviously her own, "you can put your junk in the closet over there with the rest that's come."
Dr. Harpe understood perfectly now the meaning of the Dago Duke's confident smile and the stranger's cold, searching look of enmity. He was no weakling, this new-found relative of Essie Tisdale's, and the Dago Duke's threats were no longer empty boastings.
If only she could sleep! Sleep? Was it days or weeks since she had slept? Forebodings, suspicions of those whom she had been forced to trust, Nell Beecroft, Lamb, and others, were spectres that frightened sleep from her strained eyes. A tight band seemed stretched across her forehead. She rubbed it hard, as though to lessen the tension. There was a dull ache at the base of her brain and she shook her head to free herself from it, but the jar hurt her.
Some one whistled in the corridor. She listened.
"Farewell, my own dear Napoli, Farewell to Thee, Farewell to Thee----"
How she hated that song! The Dago Duke was coming for his answer.
He stood before her with his hat in his hand, the other hand resting on his hip smiling, confident, the one long, black lock of hair hanging nearly in his eyes. He made no comment, but she saw that he was noting the ravages which the intervening hours had left in her face. Beneath his smile there was something hard and pitiless--a look that the executioner of a de Medici might have worn--and for a moment it put her at a loss for words. Then with an attempt at her old-time camaraderie, she shoved a gla.s.s toward him--
His white teeth flashed in a fleeting smile--
"If you will join me--in my last drink?"
For answer she filled his gla.s.s and hers.
He raised it and looked at her.
"I give you--the sweetest thing in the world."
Her lip curled.
"Love?"
His black eyes glittered between their narrowed lids.
"The power to avenge the wrongs of the helpless."
He set down his empty gla.s.s and fumbled in his pocket for a paper which he handed her to read.
"It's always well to know what you're signing," he said, and he watched her face as her eyes followed the lines, with the intent yet impersonal scrutiny of a specialist studying his case.
She looked, as she read, like a corpse that has been propped to a sitting position, with nostrils sunken and lips of Parian marble. Her hand shook with a violence which recalled her to herself, and when she raised her eyes they looked as though the iris itself had faded. The Dago Duke seemed absorbed in the curious effect.
He could hear the dryness of her mouth when she asked at last--
"You expect me--to put my name--to this?"
He inclined his head.
"It is--_impossible_!"
He replied evenly:
"It is necessary."
"You are asking me to sign my own death warrant."
He lifted his shoulders.
"It is your reputation or Essie Tisdale's."
The name seemed to p.r.i.c.k her like a goad. Her hands and body twitched nervously and then he saw swift decision arrive in her face.
"I'll not do it!"
As moved by a common impulse they arose.
"It's the lesser of two evils."
"I don't care!" She reiterated in a kind of hopeless desperation, "I don't care--I'll fight!"
He eyed her again with a recurrence of his impersonal professional scrutiny.
"You can't go through it, Doc; you haven't the stamina, any more. You don't know what you're up against, for I haven't half showed my hand. I have no personal grievance, as you know, but the wrongs of my countrymen are my wrongs, and for your brutality to them you shall answer to me. Fight if you will, but when you're done you'll not disgrace your profession again in this or any other State."
While this scene was occurring in Doctor Harpe's office, Andy P. Symes in his office was toying impatiently with an unopened letter from Mudge as Mr. Percy Parrott, hat in hand, stood before him.
"It's not that I'm worried at all, Mr. Symes"--every line of Parrott's face was deep-lined with anxiety as he spoke--"but, of course, I've made you these loans largely upon my own responsibility, I've exceeded my authority, in fact, and any failure on your part----" Mr. Parrott finding himself floundering under Symes's cold gaze blurted out desperately, "Well, 'twould break us!"
"Certainly, certainly, I know all that, but, really, these frequent duns--this Homeseekers' Excursion has put me behind with my work, but as soon as things are straightened out again----"
"Oh, of course. That's all right. I understand, but as soon as you conveniently can----"
Mr. Parrott's lengthened jaw rested between the "white wings" of his collar as he turned away. It might have reached his shirt-stud had he known the number of creditors that had preceded him.
Even Symes's confident a.s.surances that the complete failure of the Homeseekers' Excursion was relatively a small matter, could not entirely eradicate from the minds of Crowheart's merchants the picture presented by the procession of excursionists returning with their satchels to the station, glowering at Crowheart's citizens as they pa.s.sed and making loud charges of misrepresentation and fraud.
When the door closed behind him Symes dropped the catch that he might read Mudge's bulky letter undisturbed. Mudge's diction was ever open to criticism, but he had a faculty for conveying his meaning which genius well might envy.
The letter read:
MY DEAR SYMES: