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    A Lost Lady

    Page 8
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    looked like an old tree walking.

      Once up the steps and into the parlour, he sank into his big chair

      and panted heavily. The first whiff of a fresh cigar seemed to

      restore him. "Can I trouble you to mail some letters for me, Niel,

      as you go by the post-office?" He produced them from the breast

      pocket of his summer coat. "Let me see whether Mrs. Forrester has

      anything to go." Rising, the Captain went into the little hall.

      There, by the front door, on a table under the hat rack, was a

      scantily draped figure, an Arab or Egyptian slave girl, holding in

      her hands a large flat shell from the California coast. Niel

      remembered noticing that figure the first time he was ever in the

      house, when Dr. Dennison carried him out through this hallway with

      his arm in splints. In the days when the Forresters had servants

      and were sending over to the town several times a day, the letters

      for the post were always left in this shell. The Captain found one

      now, and handed it to Niel. It was addressed to Mr. Francis

      Bosworth Ellinger, Glenwood Springs, Colorado.

      For some reason Niel felt embarrassed and tried to slip the letter

      quickly into his pocket. The Captain, his two canes in one hand,

      prevented him. He took the pale blue envelope again, and held it

      out at arm's length, regarding it.

      "Mrs. Forrester is a fine penman; have you ever noticed? Always

      was. If she made me a list of articles to get at the store, I

      never had to hide it. It was like copper plate. That's

      exceptional in a woman, Niel."

      Niel remembered her hand well enough, he had never seen another in

      the least like it; long, thin, angular letters, curiously delicate

      and curiously bold, looped and laced with strokes fine as a hair

      and perfectly distinct. Her script looked as if it had been done

      at a high pitch of speed, the pen driven by a perfectly confident

      dexterity.

      "Oh, yes, Captain! I'm never able to take any letters for Mrs.

      Forrester without looking at them. No one could forget her

      writing."

      "Yes. It's very exceptional." The Captain gave him the envelope,

      and with his canes went slowly toward his big chair.

      Niel had often wondered just how much the Captain knew. Now, as he

      went down the hill, he felt sure that he knew everything; more than

      anyone else; all there was to know about Marian Forrester.

      THREE

      Niel had planned to do a great deal of reading in the Forresters'

      grove that summer, but he did not go over so often as he had

      intended. The frequent appearance of Ivy Peters about the place

      irritated him. Ivy visited his new wheat fields on the bottom land

      very often; and he always took the old path, that led from what was

      once the marsh, up the steep bank and through the grove. He was

      likely to appear at any hour, his trousers stuffed into his top-

      boots, tramping along between the rows of trees with an air of

      proprietorship. He shut the gate behind the house with a slam and

      went whistling through the yard. Often he stopped at the kitchen

      door to call out some pleasantry to Mrs. Forrester. This annoyed

      Niel, for at that hour of the morning, when she was doing her

      housework, Mrs. Forrester was not dressed to receive her inferiors.

      It was one thing to greet the president of the Colorado & Utah en

      deshabille, but it was another to chatter with a coarse-grained

      fellow like Ivy Peters in her wrapper and slippers, her sleeves

      rolled up and her throat bare to his cool, impudent eyes.

      Sometimes Ivy strode through the rose plot where Captain Forrester

      was sitting in the sun,--went by without looking at him, as if

      there were no one there. If he spoke to the Captain at all, he did

      so as if he were addressing someone incapable of understanding

      anything. "Hullo, Captain, ain't afraid this sun will spoil your

      complexion?" or "Well, Captain, you'll have to get the prayer-

      meetings to take up this rain question. The drought's damned bad

      for my wheat."

      One morning, as Niel was coming up through the grove, he heard

      laughter by the gate, and there he saw Ivy, with his gun, talking

      to Mrs. Forrester. She was bareheaded, her skirts blowing in the

      wind, her arm through the handle of a big tin bucket that rested on

      the fence beside her. Ivy stood with his hat on his head, but

      there was in his attitude that unmistakable something which shows

      that a man is trying to make himself agreeable to a woman. He was

      telling her a funny story, probably an improper one, for it brought

      out her naughtiest laugh, with something nervous and excited in it,

      as if he were going too far. At the end of his story Ivy himself

      broke into his farm-hand guffaw. Mrs. Forrester shook her ringer

      at him and, catching up her pail, ran back into the house. She

      bent a little with its weight, but Ivy made no offer to carry it

      for her. He let her trip away with it as if she were a kitchen

      maid, and that were her business.

      Niel emerged from the grove, and stopped where the Captain sat in

      the garden. "Good-morning, Captain Forrester. Was that Ivy Peters

      who just went through here? That fellow hasn't the manners of a

      pig!" he blurted out.

      The Captain pointed to Mrs. Forrester's empty chair. "Sit down,

      Niel, sit down." He drew his handkerchief from his pocket and

      began polishing his glasses. "No," he said quietly, "he ain't

      overly polite."

      More than if he had complained bitterly, that guarded admission

      made one feel how much he had been hurt and offended by Ivy's

      rudeness. There was something very sad in his voice, and helpless.

      From his equals, respect had always come to him as his due; from

      fellows like Ivy he had been able to command it,--to order them off

      his place, or dismiss them from his employ.

      Niel sat down and smoked a cigar with him. They had a long talk

      about the building of the Black Hills branch of the Burlington. In

      Boston last winter Niel had met an old mine-owner, who was living

      in Deadwood when the railroad first came in. When Niel asked him

      if he had known Daniel Forrester, the old gentleman said,

      "Forrester? Was he the one with the beautiful wife?"

      "You must tell her," said the Captain, stroking the warm surface of

      his sun-dial. "Yes, indeed. You must tell Mrs. Forrester."

      One night in the first week of July, a night of glorious moonlight,

      Niel found himself unable to read, or to stay indoors at all. He

      walked aimlessly down the wide, empty street, and crossed the first

      creek by the footbridge. The wide ripe fields, the whole country,

      seemed like a sleeping garden. One trod the dusty roads softly,

      not to disturb the deep slumber of the world.

      In the Forrester lane the scent of sweet clover hung heavy. It had

      always grown tall and green here ever since Niel could remember;

      the Captain would never let it be cut until the weeds were mowed in

      the fall. The black, plume-like shadows of the poplars fell across

      the lane and over Ivy Peters' wheat fields. As he walked on, Niel

    &n
    bsp; saw a white figure standing on the bridge over the second creek,

      motionless in the clear moonlight. He hurried forward. Mrs.

      Forrester was looking down at the water where it flowed bright over

      the pebbles. He came up beside her. "The Captain is asleep?"

      "Oh, yes, long ago! He sleeps well, thank heaven! After I tuck

      him in, I have nothing more to worry about."

      While they were standing there, talking in low voices, they heard a

      heavy door slam on the hill. Mrs. Forrester started and looked

      back over her shoulder. A man emerged from the shadow of the house

      and came striding down the drive-way. Ivy Peters stepped upon the

      bridge.

      "Good evening," he said to Mrs. Forrester, neither calling her by

      name nor removing his hat. "I see you have company. I've just

      been up looking at the old barn, to see if the stalls are fit to

      put horses in there tomorrow. I'm going to start cutting wheat in

      the morning, and we'll have to put the horses in your stable at

      noon. We'd lose time taking them back to town."

      "Why, certainly. The horses can go in our barn. I'm sure Mr.

      Forrester would have no objection." She spoke as if he had asked

      her permission.

      "Oh!" Ivy shrugged. "The men will begin down here at six o'clock.

      I won't get over till about ten, and I have to meet a client at my

      office at three. Maybe you could give me some lunch, to save

      time."

      His impudence made her smile. "Very well, then; I invite you to

      lunch. We lunch at one."

      "Thanks. It will help me out." As if he had forgotten himself, he

      lifted his hat, and went down the lane swinging it in his hand.

      Niel stood looking after him. "Why do you allow him to speak to

      you like that, Mrs. Forrester? If you'll let me, I'll give him a

      beating and teach him how to speak to you."

      "No, no, Niel! Remember, we have to get along with Ivy Peters, we

      simply have to!" There was a note of anxiety in her voice, and she

      caught his arm.

      "You don't have to take anything from him, or to stand his bad

      manners. Anybody else would pay you as much for the land as he

      does."

      "But he has a lease for five years, and he could make it very

      disagreeable for us, don't you see? Besides," she spoke hurriedly,

      "there's more than that. He's invested a little money for me in

      Wyoming, in land. He gets splendid land from the Indians some way,

      for next to nothing. Don't tell your uncle; I've no doubt it's

      crooked. But the Judge is like Mr. Forrester; his methods don't

      work nowadays. He will never get us out of debt, dear man! He

      can't get himself out. Ivy Peters is terribly smart, you know.

      He owns half the town already."

      "Not quite," said Niel grimly. "He's got hold of a good deal of

      property. He'll take advantage of anybody's necessity. You know

      he's utterly unscrupulous, don't you? Why didn't you let Mr.

      Dalzell, or some of your other old friends, invest your money for

      you?"

      "Oh, it was too little! Only a few hundred dollars I'd saved on

      the housekeeping. They would put it into something safe, at six

      per cent. I know you don't like Ivy,--and he knows it! He's

      always at his worst before you. He's not so bad as--as his face,

      for instance!" She laughed nervously. "He honestly wants to help

      us out of the hole we're in. Coming and going all the time, as he

      does, he sees everything, and I really think he hates to have me

      work so hard."

      "Next time you have anything to invest, you let me take it to Mr.

      Dalzell and explain. I'll promise to do as well by you as Ivy

      Peters can."

      Mrs. Forrester took his arm and drew him into the lane. "But, my

      dear boy, you know nothing about these business schemes. You're

      not clever that way,--it's one of the things I love you for. I

      don't admire people who cheat Indians. Indeed I don't!" She shook

      her head vehemently.

      "Mrs. Forrester, rascality isn't the only thing that succeeds in

      business."

      "It succeeds faster than anything else, though," she murmured

      absently. They walked as far as the end of the lane and turned

      back again. Mrs. Forrester's hand tightened on his arm. She began

      speaking abruptly. "You see, two years, three years, more of this,

      and I could still go back to California--and live again. But after

      that . . . Perhaps people think I've settled down to grow old

      gracefully, but I've not. I feel such a power to live in me,

      Niel." Her slender fingers gripped his wrist. "It's grown by

      being held back. Last winter I was with the Dalzells at Glenwood

      Springs for three weeks (I owe THAT to Ivy Peters; he looked after

      things here, and his sister kept house for Mr. Forrester), and I

      was surprised at myself. I could dance all night and not feel

      tired. I could ride horseback all day and be ready for a dinner

      party in the evening. I had no clothes, of course; old evening

      dresses with yards and yards of satin and velvet in them, that Mrs.

      Dalzell's sewing woman made over. But I looked well enough! Yes,

      I did. I always know how I'm looking, and I looked well enough.

      The men thought so. I looked happier than any woman there. They

      were nearly all younger, much. But they seemed dull, bored to

      death. After a glass or two of champagne they went to sleep and

      had nothing to say! I always look better after the first glass,--

      it gives me a little colour, it's the only thing that does. I

      accepted the Dalzell's invitation with a purpose; I wanted to see

      whether I had anything left worth saving. And I have, I tell you!

      You would hardly believe it, I could hardly believe it, but I still

      have!"

      By this time they had reached the bridge, a bare white floor in the

      moonlight. Mrs. Forrester had been quickening her pace all the

      while. "So that's what I'm struggling for, to get out of this

      hole,"--she looked about as if she had fallen into a deep well,--

      "out of it! When I'm alone here for months together, I plan and

      plot. If it weren't for that--"

      As Niel walked back to his room behind the law offices, he felt

      frightened for her. When women began to talk about still feeling

      young, didn't it mean that something had broken? Two or three

      years, she said. He shivered. Only yesterday old Dr. Dennison had

      proudly told him that Captain Forrester might live a dozen. "We

      are keeping his general health up remarkably, and he was originally

      a man of iron."

      What hope was there for her? He could still feel her hand upon his

      arm, as she urged him faster and faster up the lane.

      FOUR

      The weather was dry and intensely hot for several weeks, and then,

      at the end of July, thunder-storms and torrential rains broke upon

      the Sweet Water valley. The river burst out of its banks, all the

      creeks were up, and the stubble of Ivy Peters' wheat fields lay

      under water. A wide lake and two rushing creeks now separated the

      Forresters from the town. Ben Keezer rode over to them every day

     
    ; to do the chores and to take them their mail. One evening Ben,

      with his slicker and leather mailbag, had just come out of the

      post-office and was preparing to mount his horse, when Niel Herbert

      stopped him to ask in a low voice whether he had got the Denver

      paper.

      "Oh, yes. I always wait for the papers. She likes to have them to

      read of an evening. Guess it's pretty lonesome over there." He

      swung into his saddle and splashed off. Niel walked slowly around

      to the hotel for dinner. He had found something very disconcerting

      in the Denver paper: Frank Ellinger's picture on the society page,

      along with Constance Ogden's. They had been married yesterday at

      Colorado Springs, and were stopping at the Antlers.

      After supper Niel put on his rubber coat and started for the

      Forresters'. When he reached the first creek, he found that the

      footbridge had been washed out from the far bank and lay obliquely

      in the stream, battered at by the yellow current which might at any

      moment carry it away. One could not cross the ford without a

      horse. He looked irresolutely across the submerged bottom lands.

      The house was dark, no lights in the parlour windows. The rain was

      beginning to fall again. Perhaps she had rather be alone tonight.

      He would go over tomorrow.

      He went back to the law office and tried to make himself

      comfortable, though the place was in distracting disorder. The

      continued rain had set one of the chimneys leaking, had brought

      down streams of soot and black water and flooded the stove and the

      Judge's once handsome Brussels carpet. The tinner had been there

      all afternoon, trying to find what was the matter with the flue,

      cutting a new sheet-iron drawer to fit under the stove-pipe. But

      at six o'clock he had gone away, leaving tools and sheets of metal

      lying about. The rooms were damp and cold. Niel put on a heavy

      sweater, since he could not have a fire, lit the big coal-oil lamp,

      and sat down with a book. When at last he looked at his watch, it

      was nearly midnight, and he had been reading three hours. He would

      have another pipe, and go to bed. He had scarcely lit it, when he

      heard quick, hurrying footsteps in the echoing corridor outside.

      He got to the door in an instant, was there to open it before Mrs.

      Forrester had time to knock. He caught her by the arm and pulled

      her in.

      Everything but her wet, white face was hidden by a black rubber hat

      and a coat that was much too big for her. Streams of water

      trickled from the coat, and when she opened it he saw that she was

      drenched to the waist,--her black dress clung in a muddy pulp about

      her.

      "Mrs. Forrester," he cried, "you can't have crossed the creek!

      It's up to a horse's belly in the ford."

      "I came over the bridge, what's left of it. It shook under me, but

      I'm not heavy." She threw off her hat and wiped the water from her

      face with her hands.

      "Why didn't you ask Ben to bring you over on his horse? Here,

      please swallow this."

      She pushed his hand aside. "Wait. Afterwards. Ben? I didn't

      think until after he was gone. It's the telephone I want, long

      distance. Get me Colorado Springs, the Antlers, quick!"

      Then Niel noticed that she smelled strong of spirits; it steamed

      above the smell of rubber and creek mud and wet cloth. She

      snatched up the desk telephone, but he gently took it from her.

      "I'll get them for you, but you're in no condition to talk now;

      you're out of breath. Do you really want to talk tonight? You

      know Mrs. Beasley will hear every word you say." Mrs. Beasley was

      the Sweet Water central, and an indefatigable reporter of

      everything that went over the wires.

      Mrs. Forrester, sitting in his uncle's desk chair, tapped the

      carpet with the toe of her rubber boot. "Do hurry, please," she

      said in that polite, warning tone of which even Ivy Peters was

     


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