“Now,” he cried to himself.
The other still struggled desperately. But his struggle was without success. For deftly Billy Magee drew from his pocket the precious package about which there had been so much debate on Baldpate Mountain. He clasped it close, rose and ran. In another second he was inside number seven, and had lighted a candle at the blazing logs.
Once more he examined that closely packed little bundle; once more he found it rich in greenbacks. Assuredly it was the greatly desired thing he had fought for the night before. He had it again. And this time, he told himself, he would not lose sight of it until he had placed it in the hands of the girl of the station.
The dark shadow of the man he had just robbed was hovering at his windows. Magee turned hastily to the door. As he did so it opened, and Hayden entered. He carried a pistol in his hand; his face was hard, cruel, determined; his usually expressionless eyes lighted with pleasure as they fell on the package in Mr. Magee’s possession.
“It seems I’m just in time,” he said, “to prevent highway robbery.”
“You think so?” asked Magee.
“See here, young man,” remarked Hayden, glancing nervously over his shoulder, “I can’t waste any time in talk. Does that money belong to you? No. Well, it does belong to me. I’m going to have it. Don’t think I’m afraid to shoot to get it. The law permits a man to fire on the thief who tries to fleece him.”
“The law, did you say?” laughed Billy Magee. “I wouldn’t drag the law into this if I were you, Mr. Hayden. I’m sure it has no connection with events on Baldpate Mountain. You would be the last to want its attention to be directed here. I’ve got this money, and I’m going to keep it.”
Hayden considered a brief moment, and then swore under his breath.
“You’re right,” he said. “I’m not going to shoot. But there are other ways, you whipper-snapper—” He dropped the revolver into his pocket and sprang forward. For the second time within ten minutes Mr. Magee steadied himself for conflict.
But Hayden stopped. Some one had entered the room through the window behind Magee. In the dim light of the single candle Magee saw Hayden’s face go white, his lip twitch, his eyes glaze with horrible surprise. His arms fell limply to his sides.
“Good God! Kendrick!” he cried.
The voice of the man with whom Billy Magee had but a moment before struggled on the balcony answered:
“Yes, Hayden. I’m back.”
Hayden wet his lips with his tongue.
“What — what brought you?” he asked, his voice trailing off weakly on the last word.
“What brought me?” Suddenly, as from a volcano that had long been cold, fire blazed up in Kendrick’s eyes. “If a man knew the road from hell back home, what would it need to bring him back?”
Hayden stood with his mouth partly open; almost a grotesque picture of terror he looked in that dim light. Then he spoke, in an odd strained tone, more to himself than to any one else.
“I thought you were dead,” he said. “I told myself you’d never come back. Over and over — in the night — I told myself that. But all the time — I knew — I knew you’d come.”
A cry — a woman’s cry — sounded from just outside the door of number seven. Into the room came Myra Thornhill; quickly she crossed and took Kendrick’s hands in hers.
“David,” she sobbed. “Oh, David — is it a dream — a wonderful dream?”
Kendrick looked into her eyes, sheepishly at first, then gladly as he saw what was in them. For the light there, under the tears, was such as no man could mistake. Magee saw it. Hayden saw it too, and his voice was even more lifeless when he spoke.
“Forgive me, David,” he said. “I didn’t mean—”
And then, as he saw that Kendrick did not listen, he turned and walked quietly into the bedroom of number seven, taking no notice of Cargan and Bland, who, with the other winter guests of Baldpate, now crowded the doorway leading to the hall. Hayden closed the bedroom door. Mr. Magee and the others stood silent, wondering. Their answer came quickly — the sharp cry of a revolver behind that closed door.
It was Mr. Magee who went into the bedroom. The moonlight streamed in through the low windows, and fell brightly on the bed. Across this Hayden lay. Mr. Magee made sure. It was not a pleasant thing to make sure of. Then he took the revolver from the hand that still clasped it, covered the quiet figure on the bed, and stepped back into the outer room.
“He— he has killed himself,” he said in a low voice, closing the bedroom door behind him.
There was a moment’s frightened hush; then the voice of Kendrick rang out:
“Killed himself? I don’t understand. Why should he do that? Surely not because — no—” He looked questioningly into the white face of the girl at his side; she only shook her head. “Killed himself,” he repeated, like a man wakened from sleep. “I don’t understand.”
On tiptoe the amateur hermits of Baldpate descended to the hotel office. Mr. Magee saw the eyes of the girl of the station upon him, wide with doubt and alarm. While the others gathered in little groups and talked, he took her to one side.
“When does the next train leave for Reuton?” he asked her.
“In two hours — at ten-thirty,” she replied.
“You must be on it,” he told her. “With you will go the two-hundred-thousand-dollar package. I have it in my pocket now.”
She took the news stolidly, and made no reply.
“Are you afraid?” asked Magee gently. “You mustn’t be. No harm can touch you. I shall stay here and see that no one follows.”
“I’m not afraid,” she replied. “Just startled, that’s all. Did he — did he do it because you took this money — because he was afraid of what would happen?”
“You mean Hayden?” Magee said. “No. This money was not concerned in — his death. That is an affair between Kendrick and him.”
“I see,” answered the girl slowly. “I’m so glad it wasn’t — the money. I couldn’t bear it if it were.”
“May I call your attention,” remarked Magee, “to the fact that the long reign of ‘I’m going to’ is ended, and the rule of ‘I’ve done it’ has begun? I’ve actually got the money. Somehow, it doesn’t seem to thrill you the way I thought it would.”
“But it does — oh, it does!” cried the girl. “I was upset — for a moment. It’s glorious news And with you on guard here, I’m not afraid to carry it away — down the mountain — and to Reuton. I’ll be with you in a moment, ready for the journey.”
She called Mrs. Norton and the two went rather timidly up-stairs together. Mr. Magee turned to his companions in the room, and mentally called their roll. They were all there, the professor, the mayor, Max, Bland, Peters, Miss Thornhill, and the newcomer Kendrick, a man prematurely old, grayed at the temples, and with a face yellowed by fever. He and the professor were talking earnestly together, and now the old man came and stood before Magee.
“Mr. Magee,” he said seriously, “I learn from Kendrick that you have in your possession a certain package of money that has been much buffeted about here at Baldpate Inn. Now I suggest — no, I demand—”
“Pardon me, Professor,” Mr. Magee interrupted. “I have something to suggest — even to demand. It is that you, and every one else present, select a chair and sit down. I suggest, though I do not demand, that you pick comfortable chairs. For the vigil that you are about to begin will prove a long one.”