“What d’you mean?” asked the mayor of Reuton, coming militantly to Professor Bolton’s side.
Magee did not reply. Miss Norton and her mother came down the stair, the former wrapped in a great coat. She stood on the bottom step, her cheeks flushed, her eyes ablaze. Mr. Magee, going to her side, reflected that she looked charming and wonderful, and wished he had time to admire. But he hadn’t. He took from one pocket the pistol he had removed from the hand of Hayden; from the other the celebrated package of money.
“I warn you all,” he said, “I will shoot any one who makes a move for this bundle. Miss Norton is going to take it away with her — she is to catch the ten-thirty train for Reuton. The train arrives at its destination at twelve. Much as it pains me to say it, no one will leave this room before twelve-fifteen.”
“You — crook!” roared Cargan.
Mr. Magee smiled as he put the package in the girl’s hand.
“Possibly,” he said. “But, Mr. Cargan, the blackness of the kettle always has annoyed the pot. Do not be afraid,” he added to the girl. “Every gentleman in this room is to spend the evening with me. You will not be annoyed in any way.” He looked around the menacing circle. “Go,” he said, “and may the gods of the mountain take care of you.”
The little professor of Comparative Literature stepped forward and stood pompously before Magee.
“One moment,” he remarked. “Before you steal this money in front of our very eyes, I want to inform you who I am, and who I represent here.”
“This is no time,” replied Magee, “for light talk on the subject of blondes.”
“This is the time,” said the professor warmly, “for me to tell you that Mr. Kendrick here and myself represent at Baldpate Inn the prosecuting attorney of Reuton county. We—”
Cargan, big, red, volcanic, interrupted.
“Drayton,” he bellowed. “Drayton sent you here? The rat! The pup! Why, I made that kid. I put him where he is. He won’t dare touch me.”
“Won’t he?” returned Professor Bolton. “My dear sir, you are mistaken. Drayton fully intends to prosecute you on the ground that you arranged to pass Ordinance Number 45, granting the Suburban Railway the privilege of merging with the Civic, in exchange for this bribe of two hundred thousand dollars.”
“He won’t dare,” cried Cargan. “I made him.”
“Before election,” said the professor, “I believe he often insisted to you that he would do his duty as he saw it.”
“Of course he did,” replied Cargan. “But that’s what they all say.”
“He intends to keep his word.”
The mayor of Reuton slid into the shadows.
“To think he’d do this thing to me,” he whined. “After all I’ve done for him.”
“As I was saying, Mr. Magee,” continued the professor, “Mr. Kendrick and I came up here to secure this package of money as evidence against Cargan and — the man above. I speak with the voice of the law when I say you must turn this money over to me.”
For answer Magee smiled at the girl.
“You’d better go now,” he said. “It’s a long walk down the mountain.”
“You refuse?” cried the professor.
“Absolutely — don’t we, Miss Norton?” said Magee.
“Absolutely,” she repeated bravely.
“Then, sir,” announced the old man crushingly, “you are little better than a thief, and this girl is your accomplice.”
“So it must look, on the face of it,” assented Magee. The girl moved to the big front door, and Magee, with his eyes still on the room, backed away until he stood beside her. He handed her his key.
“I give you,” he said, “to the gods of the mountain. But it’s only a loan — I shall surely want you back. I can’t follow ten feet behind, as I threatened — it will be ten hours instead. Good night, and good luck.”
She turned the key in the lock.
“Billy Magee,” she whispered, “yours is a faith beyond understanding. I shall tell the gods of the mountain that I am to be — returned. Good night, you — dear.”
She went out quickly, and Magee, locking the door after her, thrust the key into his pocket. For a moment no one stirred. Then Mr. Max leaped up and ran through the flickering light to the nearest window.
There was a flash, a report, and Max came back into the firelight examining a torn trousers leg.
“I don’t mean to kill anybody,” explained Mr. Magee. “Just to wing them. But I’m not an expert — I might shoot higher than I intend. So I suggest that no one else try a break for it.”
“Mr. Magee,” said Miss Thornhill, “I don’t believe you have the slightest idea who that girl is, nor what she wants with the money.”
“That,” he replied, “makes it all the more exciting, don’t you think?”
“Do you mean—” the professor, exploded, “you don’t know her? Well, you young fool.”
“It’s rather fine of you,” remarked Miss Thornhill.
“It’s asinine, if it’s true,” the professor voiced the other side of it.
“You have said yourself — or at least you claim to have said—” Mr. Magee reminded him, “one girl like that is worth a million suffragettes.”
“And can make just as much trouble,” complained Professor Bolton. “I shall certainly see to it that the hermit’s book has an honored place in our college library.”
Out of the big chair into which he had sunk came the wail of the uncomprehending Cargan:
“He’s done this thing to me — after all I’ve done for him.”
“I hope every one is quite comfortable,” remarked Mr. Magee, selecting a seat facing the crowd. “It’s to be a long wait, you know.”
There was no answer. The wind roared lustily at the windows. The firelight flickered redly on the faces of Mr. Magee’s prisoners.
Chapter XVII
The Professor Sums Up
In Upper Asquewan Falls the clock on the old town hall struck nine. Mr. Magee, on guard in Baldpate’s dreary office, counted the strokes. She must be half-way down the mountain now — perhaps at this very moment she heard Quimby’s ancient gate creaking in the wind. He could almost see her as she tramped along through the snow, the lovely heroine of the most romantic walk of all romantic walks on Baldpate to date. Half-way to the waiting-room where she had wept so bitterly; half-way to the curious station agent with the mop of ginger hair. To-night there would be no need of a troubadour to implore “Weep no more, my lady”. William Hallowell Magee had removed the cause for tears.
It was a long vigil he had begun, but there was no boredom in it for Billy Magee. He was too great a lover of contrast for that. As he looked around on the ill-assorted group he guarded, he compared them with the happier people of the inn’s summer nights, about whom the girl had told him. Instead of these surly or sad folk sitting glumly under the pistol of romantic youth he saw maids garbed in the magic of muslin flit through the shadows. Lights glowed softly; a waltz came up from the casino on the breath of the summer breeze. Under the red and white awnings youth and joy and love had their day — or their night. The hermit was on hand with his postal-carded romance. The trees gossiped in whispers on the mountain.
And, too, the rocking-chair fleet gossiped in whispers on the veranda, pausing only when the admiral sailed by in his glory. Eagerly it ran down its game. This girl — this Myra Thornhill — he remembered, had herself been a victim. After Kendrick disappeared she had come there no more, for there were ugly rumors of the man who had fled. Mr. Magee saw the girl and her long-absent lover whispering together in the firelight; he wondered if they, too, imagined themselves at Baldpate in the summer; if they heard the waltz in the casino, and the laughter of men in the grill-room.