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"Ba'teese watch one, two, t'ree night. Nothin' happen. Ba'teese think about his lost trap. He think mebbe there is one place where he have not look'. He say to Golemar he will go for jus' one, two hour.
n.o.body see, he think. So he go. And he come back. Blooey! Eet is done! Ba'teese have fail!"
"But what, Ba'tiste? It wasn't your fault. Don't feel that way about it? Has anything happened to Agnes?"
"No. The mill."
"They've--?"
"Look!"
They had reached the top of the rise. Below them lay something which caused Barry Houston to leap to his feet unmindful of the jolting wagon, to stand weaving with white-gripped hands, to stare with suddenly deadened eyes--
Upon a blackened, smoldering ma.s.s of charred timbers and twisted machinery. The remainder of all that once had been his mill!
CHAPTER X
Words would not come for a moment. Houston could only stare and realize that his burden had become greater than ever. In the wagons behind him were twenty men, guaranteed at least a month of labor, and now there was nothing to provide it. The mill was gone; the blade was still hanging in its sockets, a useless, distempered thing; the boiler was bent and blackened, the belting burned; the carriages and muley saws and edgers and trimmers were only so much junk. He turned at last to Ba'tiste, to ask tritely what he knew could not be answered:
"But how did it happen, Ba'tiste? Didn't any one see?"
The Canadian shrugged his shoulders.
"Ba'teese come back. Eet is done."
"Let's see Agnes. Maybe she can tell us something."
But the woman, her arms about Houston's neck, could only announce hysterically that she had seen the mill burning, that she had sought help and had failed to find it.
"Then you noticed no one around the place?"
"Only Ba'tiste."
"But that was an hour or so before."
The big French-Canadian had moved away, to stand in doleful contemplation of the charred ma.s.s. The voice of Agnes Jierdon sank low:
"I don't know, Barry. I don't want to accuse--"
"You don't mean--"
"All I know is that I saw him leave the place and go over the hill.
Fifteen minutes later, I saw the mill burning and ran down there. All about the place rags were burning and I could smell kerosene. That's all I saw. But in the absence of any one else, what should a person think?"
Houston's lips pressed tight. He turned angrily, the old grip of suspicion upon him,--suspicion that would point in time of stress to every one about him, suspicion engendered by black days of hopelessness, of despair. But in an instant, it all was gone; the picture of Ba'tiste Renaud, standing there by the embers, the honesty of his expression of sorrow, the slump of his shoulders, while the dog, unnoticed, nuzzled its cold nose in a limp hand, was enough to wipe it all out forever. Houston's eyes went straight to those of Agnes Jierdon and centered there.
"Agnes," came slowly, "I want to ask a favor. No matter what may happen, no matter what you may think personally, there is one man who trusts me as much as you have trusted me, and whom I shall trust in return. That man is Ba'tiste Renaud, my friend. I hope you can find a friend in him too; but if you can't, please, for me, never mention it."
"Why, of course not, Barry." She laughed in an embarra.s.sed manner and drew away from him. "I just thought I'd tell you what I knew. I didn't have any idea you were such warm comrades. We'll forget the whole incident."
"Thank you." Then to Ba'tiste he went, to bang him on the shoulder, and with an effort to whirl him about. "Well!" he demanded, in an echo of Ba'tiste's own thundering manner, "shall we stand here and weep?
Or--"
"Eet was my fault!" The French-Canadian still stared at the ruins.
"Eet is all Ba'teese' fault--"
"I thought you were my friend, Ba'tiste."
"_Sacre_! I am."
"Then show it! We'll not be able to make a case against the firebugs--even though you and I may be fairly sure who did it. Anyway, it isn't going to break us. I've got about fifteen thousand in the bank. There's enough lumber around here to build a new saw-shed of a sort, and money to buy a few saws, even if we can't have as good a place as we had before. We can manage. And I need help--I won't be able to move without you. But--"
"_Oui_?"
"But," and Barry smiled at him, "if you ever mention any responsibility for this thing again--you're fired. Do we understand each other?"
Very slowly the big trapper turned and looked down into the frank, friendly eyes of the younger man. He blinked slightly, and then one tremendous arm encircled Houston's shoulder for just a moment. At last a smile came, to grow stronger. The grip about the shoulders tightened, suddenly to give way to a whanging blow, as Batiste, jovial now, drew away, pulled back his shoulders and squared himself as though for some physical encounter.
"Ah, _oui_!" He bellowed. "_Oui, oui, oui_! _Bon_--good! Ba'teese, he un'stan'. Now what you want me to do?"
"Take this bunch of men and turn to at clearing away this wreckage.
Then," and he smiled his confidence at Renaud, "make your plans for the building of a saw-shed. That is--if you really want to go through with it?"
"Ah, _oui--oui_!" The Canadian waved his arms excitedly and summoned his men. For a moment, Barry stood watching, then returning to Agnes, escorted her toward her cottage.
"Don't you think," he asked, as they walked along, "that you'd better be going back? This isn't just the place for a woman, Agnes."
"Why not?"
"Because--well for one thing, this is a man's life out here, not a woman's. There's no place for you--nothing to interest you or hold you. I can't guarantee you any company except that of a cook--or some one like that."
"But Mr. Thayer--" and Houston detected a strange tone in the voice--"spoke of a very dear friend of yours, in whom I might be greatly interested."
"A friend of mine?"
"Yes--a Miss Robinette. Fred said that she was quite interested in you."
Houston laughed.
"She is--by the inverse ratio. So much, in fact, that she doesn't care to be anywhere near me. She knows--" and he sobered, "that there's something--back there."
"Indeed?" They had reached the cottage and the subject was discontinued. Agnes lingered a moment on the veranda. "I suppose I'm never to see anything of you?"
"That's just it, Agnes. It makes me feel like a cad to have you out here--and then not to be able to provide any entertainment for you.
And, really, there's no need to worry about me. I'm all right--with the exception of this broken arm. And it'll be all right in a couple of weeks. Besides, there's no telling what may happen. You can see from the burning of this mill that there isn't any love lost between Thayer and myself."
"Why, Barry! You don't think he had anything to do with it?"