The zane grey megapack, p.653

The Zane Grey Megapack, page 653

 

The Zane Grey Megapack
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  Lane sat there under the moonlit maples and talked until he was hoarse. He could not rouse a sense of shame in Bessy, because that had been atrophied, but as he closely watched her, he realized that his victory would come through the emotion he was able to arouse in her, and the ultimate appeal to the clear logic of her mind.

  When the time came for him to go she stood before him in the clear moonlight.

  “I’ve never been so excited, so scared and sick, so miserable and thoughtful in all my life before,” she said. “Daren, I know now what a soldier is. What you’ve seen—what you’ve done. Oh! it was grand!… And you’re going to be my—my friend.… Daren, I thought it was great to be bad. I thought men liked a girl to be bad. The girls nicknamed me Angel Bell, but not because I was an angel, I’ll tell the world.… Now I’m going to try to be the girl you want me to be.”

  CHAPTER XIV

  The time came when Daren had to make a painful choice. His sister Lorna grew weary of his importunities and distrustful of his espionage. One night she became violent and flatly told him she would not stay in the house another day with him in it. Then she ran out, slamming the door behind her. Lane remained awake all night, in the hope that she would return. But she did not. And then he knew he must make a choice.

  He made it. Lorna must not be driven from her home. Lane divided his money with his mother and packed his few effects. Mrs. Lane was distracted over the situation. She tried to convince Lane there was some kind of a law to keep a young girl home. She pleaded and begged him to remain. She dwelt on his ill health. But Lane was obdurate; and not the least of his hurts was the last one—a divination that in spite of his mother’s distress there was a feeling of relief of which she was unconscious. He assured her that he would come to see her often during the afternoons and would care as best he could for his health. Then he left, saying he would send an expressman for the things he had packed.

  Broodingly Lane plodded down the street. He had feared that sooner or later he would be forced to leave home, and he had shrunk from the ordeal. But now, that it was over, he felt a kind of relief, and told himself that it was of no consequence what happened to him. All that mattered was for him to achieve the few tasks he had set himself.

  Then he thought of Mel Iden. She had been driven from home and would know what it meant to him. The longing to see her increased. Every disappointment left him more in need of sympathy. And now, it seemed, he would be ashamed to go to Mel Iden or Blair Maynard. Such news could not long be kept from them. Middleville was a beehive of gossips. Lane had a moment of blank despair, a feeling of utter, sick, dazed wonder at life and human nature. Then he lifted his head and went on.

  Lane’s first impulse was to ask Colonel Pepper if he could share his lodgings, but upon reflection he decided otherwise. He engaged a small room in a boarding house; his meals, which did not seem of much importance, he could get anywhere.

  This change of residence brought Lane downtown, and naturally increased his activities. He did not husband his strength as before, nor have the leisure for bad spells. Home had been a place of rest. He could not rest in a drab little bare room he now occupied.

  He became a watcher, except during the stolen hours with Bessy Bell. Then he tried to be a teacher. But he learned more than he thought. He no longer concentrated his vigilance on his sister. Having failed to force that issue, he bided his time, sensing with melancholy portent the certainty that he would soon be confronted with the stark and hateful actuality. Thus he wore somewhat away from his grim resolve to kill Swann. That adventure on the country road, when he had discovered Swann with Helen instead of Lorna, had somehow been a boon. Nevertheless he spied upon Lorna in the summer evenings when it was possible to follow her, and he dogged Swann’s winding and devious path as far as possible. Apparently Swann had checked his irregularities as far as Lorna was concerned. Still Lane trusted nothing. He became an almost impassive destiny with the iron consequences in his hands.

  Days passed. Every other afternoon and night he spent hours with Bessy Bell, and found a mounting happiness in the change in her, a deep and ever deeper insight into the causes that had developed her. The balance of his waking hours, which were many, he passed on the streets, in the ice cream parlors and confectionery dens, at the motion-picture theatres. He went many and odd times to Colonel Pepper’s apartment, and took a peep into the club-rooms. Some of these visits were fruitful, but he did not see whom he expected to see there. At night he haunted the parks, watching and listening. Often he hired a cheap car and drove it down the river highway, where he would note the cars he passed or met. Sometimes he would stop to get out and make one of his scouting detours, or he would follow a car to some distant roadhouse, or go to the outlying summer pavilions where popular dances were given. More than once, late at night, he was an unseen and unbidden guest at one of the gay bathing parties. Strange and startling incidents seemed to gravitate toward Lane. He might have been predestined for this accumulation of facts. How vain it seethed for wild young men and women to think they hid their tracks! Some trails could not be hidden.

  Toward the end of that protracted period of surveillance, Lane knew that he had become infamous in the eyes of most of that younger set. He had been seen too often, alone, watching, with no apparent excuse for his presence. And from here and there, through Bessy and Colonel Pepper, and Blair, who faithfully hunted him up, Lane learned of the unfavorable light in which he was held. Society, in the persons of the younger matrons, took exception to Lane’s queer conduct and hinted of mental unbalance. The young rakes and libertines avoided him, and there was not a slacker among them who could meet his eye across cafe or billiard room.

  Yet despite the peculiar species of ignominy and disgrace that Middleville gossips heaped upon Lane’s head and the slow, steady decline of his speaking acquaintance with the elite, there were some who always greeted him and spoke if he gave them a chance. Helen Wrapp never failed of a green flashing glance of mockery and enticement. She smiled, she beckoned, she once called him to her car and asked him to ride with her, to come to see her. Margaret Maynard rose above dread of her mother and greeted Lane graciously when occasion offered. Dorothy Dalrymple and Elinor always evinced such unhesitating intention of friendship that Lane grew to avoid meeting them. And twice, when he had come face to face with Mel Iden, her look, her smile had been such that he had plunged away somewhere, throbbing and thrilling, to grow blind and sick and numb. It was the failure of his hopes, and the suffering he endured, and the vain longings she inspired that heightened his love. She wrote him after the last time they had passed on the street—a note that stormed Lane’s heart. He did not answer. He divined that his increasing loneliness, and the sure slow decline of his health, and the heartless intolerance of the same class that had ostracized her were added burdens to Mel Iden’s faithful heart. He had seen it in her face, read it in her note. And the time would come, sooner or later, when he could go to her and make her marry him.

  CHAPTER XV

  To be a mystery is overpoweringly sweet to any girl and Bessy Bell was being that. Her sudden desire for solitude had worried her mother, and her distant superiority had incited the vexation of her friends. When they exerted themselves to win Bessy back to her old self she looked dreamily beyond them and became more aloof. Doctor Bronson, in reply to Mrs. Bell’s appeal to him, looked the young woman over, asked her a few questions, marveled at the imperious artifice with which she evaded him, and throwing up his hands said Bessy was beyond him. The dark fever, rising from the school yards and the playgrounds and the streets, subtly poisoning the blood of Bessy Bell, slowly lost its heat and power for the time being. Bessy lived in the full secret expression of her girlish adoration. She was worshipping a hero; she was glorifying in her sacrifice; she was faithful to a man; she was being a woman. At first she grew pale, tense, quiet, and seemed to be going into a decline. Then that stage passed; and the roseleaf flush returned to her cheeks, the purple fire deepened in her eyes, the quivering life in all her supple young body. Night after night loneliness had no fears for her. If she heard a whistle on the avenue, the honk of a car—the familiar old signals of the boys and girls, she smiled her disdain, and curling comfortably in her great chair, bent her lovely head over her books.

  In the beginning her dreams were all of Daren Lane, of the strangeness and glory of this soldier who spent so many secret hours with her. And when the time came that she did not see him so often her dreams were just as full. But gradually, as the days went by, other figures than Lane’s were limned upon her fancy—vague figures of heroes, knights, soldiers. He still dominated her romances, though less personally. She built around him. Every day brought her new strange desires.

  One evening in August when Bessy sat alone the telephone bell rang sharply. She ran to take down the receiver.

  “Hello, hello, that you, Bessy?” came the hurried call in a girl’s voice.

  “Rose! Oh, how are you?”

  “Fine. But say, Angel, I can’t take time to talk. Something doing. Are you alone?”

  “Yes, all alone, old girl.”

  “Listen, then, and get this.… I’m here, you know, telephone girl at the Exchange. Just heard your father on the wire. Some one has betrayed the secret of the club. There’s a warrant out for the arrest of the boys. For gambling. You know there’s a political vice drive on. Some time tonight they’ll be raided.… But early. Bess, are you getting this?”

  “Sure. Hurry—hurry,” replied Bessy, in excitement.

  “I tried to get Dick on the wire, but couldn’t. Same with two more of the boys. But I did get wise to this. Gail and Lorna have a date at the club tonight.… Never mind how I found out. Dick has thrown me down for Gail. I’m sore as a pup. But I don’t want your father to pinch those girls.… Now, Bess, I’m tied here. But you get a move on. Don’t waste time. You can save them. You must. Do something. If you can’t find somebody, go straight to the club. You know where the key for the outside entrance is kept. Hurry and it’ll be safe. Good-bye.”

  Bessy stood statue-like for a moment, her big eyes glowing, changing, darkening with rapid thought, then she flew upstairs to her room, snatched a veil and a soft hat, and putting these on as she went, she flew out of the house without putting out the lights or locking the door.

  It was a dark windy night, slightly cool for August, and a fine misty rain was blowing. Bessy’s footsteps pattered softly as she ran block after block, and she did not slacken her pace till she reached the house where Daren Lane had his room. In answer to her ring a woman appeared, who told her Mr. Lane was out.

  This was a severe disappointment to Bessy, and left her an alternative that required more than courage, but she did not vacillate. She sped swiftly on in the dark, for the electric lights were few and far between, until the black of the gloomy building, where the boys had their club, loomed up. On the corner Bessy saw a man standing with his back to a telegraph pole. This occasioned her much concern; perhaps he might be watching the building. But he had not seen her, of that she was certain. The possibility that he might be a spy made her task all the harder.

  Bessy returned the way she come, crossed at the next corner, hurried round the block and up to the outside stairway that was her objective point.

  By feeling along the brick wall she brought up, with a sudden bump, at the back of the stairway. Then she deliberated. If she went around to the front so as to get access to the steps, she might pass in range of the loiterer whom she mistrusted. That risk she would not incur. Examining the wall that enclosed the box-like stairway as best she could in the dark, she found it rickety, full of holes and cracks, and she decided she would climb it. A sheer perpendicular board wall, some twelve or fifteen feet high, shrouded in pitchy darkness and apparently within earshot of a police spy, did not daunt Bessy Bell. Slipping her strong fingers in crevices and her slim toes in cracks, she climbed up and up, till she got hold of the railing post on the first platform. Here she had great difficulty to keep from falling, but lifting and squirming her supple body, by a desperate effort she got her knees on the platform, and then pulled herself to safety. Once on the stairs she ran up the remaining few steps to the landing, where she rested panting and triumphant.

  As she was about to go on she heard footsteps, which froze her. A man was crossing the street. He came from the direction of the corner where she had seen the supposed spy. Presently she saw him stop under one of the trees to scratch a match, and in the round glow of light she saw him puff at a cigar. Then he passed on with uncertain steps, as of one slightly under the influence of drink.

  Bessy’s heart warmed to life and began to beat again. Then she sought for the key. She had been told where it was, but did not remember. Slipping her hand under the railing, close to the wall, she felt a string, and, pulling at it suddenly, found the key in her hand. She glided into the dim hall, feeling along the wall for a door, until she found it. With trembling fingers she inserted the key in the lock, and the door swung inward silently. Bessy went in, leaving the key on the outside.

  Dark as it had been without, it was light compared to the ebon blackness within. Bessy felt ice form in the marrow of her bones. The darkness was tangible; it seemed to envelop her in heavy folds. The sudden natural impulse to fly out of the thick creeping gloom, down the stairway to the light, strung her muscles for instant action, but checked by the swiftly following thought of her purpose, they relaxed, and she took not a backward step.

  “Rose did her part and I’ll do mine,” she cogitated. “I’ve got to save them. But what to do—I may have to wait. I know—in the big room—the closet behind the curtain! I can find that even in this dark, and once in there I won’t be afraid.”

  Bessy, fired by this inspiration, groped along the wall through the room to the large chamber, stumbled over chairs and a couch and at last got her hands on the drapery. She readily found the knob, turned it, opened the door and stepped in.

  “I hope they won’t be long,” she thought. “I hope the girls come first. I don’t want to burst into a room full of boys. Won’t Daren be surprised when I tell him—maybe angry! But it’s bound to come out all right, and father will never know.”

  CHAPTER XVI

  Early one August evening Lane went out to find a cool misty rain blowing down from the hills. At the inn he encountered Colonel Pepper, who wore a most woebegone and ludicrous expression. He pounced at once upon Lane.

  “Daren, what do you think?” he wailed, miserably.

  “I don’t think. I know. You’ve gone and done it—pulled that stunt of yours again,” returned Lane.

  “Yes—but oh, so much worse this time.”

  “Worse! How could it be worse, unless you mean someone punched your head.”

  “No. That would have been nothing.… Daren, this—this time I—it was a lady!” gasped Pepper.

  “Oh, say now, Pepper—not really?” queried Lane, incredulously.

  “It was. And a lady I—I admire very much.”

  “Who?”

  “Miss Amanda Hill.”

  “The schoolteacher? Nice little woman like that! Pepper, why couldn’t you pick on one of these Middleville gossips or society dames?”

  “Lord—I didn’t know who she was—until after—and I couldn’t have helped it anyway,” he replied, mopping his red face. “When—I saw her—and she recognized me—I nearly died.… It was at White’s Confectionery Den. And I’m afraid some people saw me.”

  “Well. You old duffer! And you say you admire this lady very much?”

  “Indeed I do. I call on her.”

  “Colonel, your name is Dennis,” replied Lane, with merciless humor. “It serves you right.”

  The little man evidently found relief in his confession and in Lane’s censure.

  “I’m cured forever,” he declared vehemently. “And say, Lane, I’ve been looking for you. Have you been at my rooms lately—you know—to take a peep?”

  “I have not,” replied Lane, turning sharply. A slight chill went over him. “I thought that club stuff was off.”

  “Off—nothing,” whispered Colonel Pepper, drawing Lane aside. “Swann and his strong-arm gang just got foxy. They quit for a while. Now they’re rushing the girls in there—say from four to five—and in the evenings a little while, not too late. Oh, they’re the slick bunch, picking out the ice cream soda hour when everybody’s downtown.… You run up to my rooms right now. And I’ll gamble——”

  “I’ll go,” interrupted Lane, grimly.

  Not fifteen minutes before he had seen his sister Lorna and a chum, Gail Williams, go into White’s place. Lane’s pulse quickened. As he started to go he ran into Blair Maynard who grasped at him: “What’s hurry, old scout?”

  “Blair, I’m never in a hurry if you want me. But the fact is I’ve got rather urgent business. How about tomorrow?”

  “Sure. Meet you here. I just wanted to unload on you, Dare. Looks as if my mother has hatched it up between Margie and our esteemed countryman, Richard Swann.”

  It was not often that Lane cursed, but he did so now.

  “But Blair, didn’t you tell your mother what this fellow is?” remonstrated Lane.

  “Well, I’ll say I did,” replied Blair, sardonically. “Cut no ice whatever. She didn’t believe. She didn’t care for any proofs. All rich young men had their irregularities!… Good God! Doesn’t it make you sick?”

  “But how about Holt Dalrymple?”

  “Holt’s turned over a new leaf. He’s working hard, and I think he has taken a tumble to himself. Listen to this. He met Margie with Dick Swann out at one of the lake dances—Watkins’ Lake. And he cut her dead. I’m sorry for Margie. She sure is rank poison these days.… Well, speak of the devil!”

  Holt Dalrymple collided with them at the entrance of the inn. The haggard, sullen, heated look that had characterized him was gone. He was sunburned, and his dark eyes were bright. He greeted his friends warmly. They chatted for a moment. Then Lane grew thoughtful, all the while gazing at Holt.

 

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