Vance went gloomily to the room of
Terry and called him out. The boy was pale, but
perfectly calm, and he looked older, much older.
“There was a great deal of talk,”
said Vance—he must make doubly sure of
Terence now. “And they even started a little
lynching party. But we stopped all that.
Gainor made a very nice little speech about you.
And now Elizabeth is waiting for you in the library.”
Terry bit his lip.
“And she?” he asked anxiously.
“There’s nothing to worry about,”
Vance assured him.
“She’ll probably read
you a curtain lecture. But at heart she’s
proud of you because of the way Gainor talked.
You can’t do anything wrong in my sister’s
eyes.”
Terry breathed a great sigh of relief.
“But I’m not ashamed of
what I’ve done. I’m really not, Uncle
Vance. I’m afraid that I’d do it
over again, under the same circumstances.”
“Of course you would. Of
course you would, my boy. But you don’t
have to blurt that out to Elizabeth, do you?
Let her think it was the overwhelming passion of the
moment; something like that. A woman likes to
be appealed to, not defied. Particularly Elizabeth.
Take my advice. She’ll open her arms to
you after she’s been stern as the devil for a
moment.”
The boy caught his hand and wrung it.
“By the Lord, Uncle Vance,” he said, “I
certainly appreciate this!”
“Tush, Terry, tush!” said
Vance. “You’ll find that I’m
with you and behind you in more ways than you’d
ever guess.”
He received a grateful glance as they
went down the broad stairs together. At the door
to the library Vance turned away, but Elizabeth called
to him and asked him in. He entered behind Terence
Hollis, and found Elizabeth sitting in her father’s
big chair under the window, looking extremely fragile
and very erect and proud. Across her lap was a
legal-looking document.
Vance knew instantly that it was the
will she had made up in favor of Terence. He
had been preparing himself for the worst, but at this
his heart sank. He lowered himself into a chair.
Terence had gone straight to Elizabeth.
“I know I’ve done a thing
that will cut you deeply, Aunt Elizabeth,” he
said. “I’m not going to ask you to
see any justice on my side. I only want to ask
you to forgive me, because—”
Elizabeth was staring straight at
and through her protege.
“Are you done, Terence?”
This time Vance was shocked into wide-eyed
attention. The voice of Elizabeth was hard as
iron. It brought a corresponding stiffening of
Terence.
“I’m done,” he said,
with a certain ring to his voice that Vance was glad
to hear.
It brought a flush into the pale cheeks of Elizabeth.
“It is easy to see that you’re proud of
what you have done, Terence.”
“Yes,” he answered with
sudden defiance, “I am proud. It’s
the best thing I’ve ever done. I regret
only one part of it.”
“And that?”
“That my bullet didn’t kill him!”
Elizabeth looked down and tapped the
folded paper against her fingertips. Whether
it was mere thoughtfulness or a desire to veil a profound
emotion from Terence, her brother could not tell.
But he knew that something of importance was in the
air. He scented it as clearly as the smoke of
a forest fire.
“I thought,” she said
in her new and icy manner, “that that would be
your one regret.”
She looked suddenly up at Terence.
“Twenty-four years,” she
said, “have passed since I took you into my
life. At that time I was told that I was doing
a rash thing, a dangerous thing—that before
your twenty-fifth birthday the bad blood would out;
that you would, in short, have shot a man. And
the prophecy has come true. By an irony of chance
it has happened on the very last day. And by
another irony you picked your victim from among the
guests under my roof!”
“Victim?” cried Terry hoarsely. “Victim,
Aunt Elizabeth?”
“If you please,” she said
quietly, “not that name again, Terence.
I wish you to know exactly what I have done.
Up to this time I have given you a place in my affections.
I have tried to the best of my skill to bring you
up with a fitting education. I have given you
what little wisdom and advice I have to give.
Today I had determined to do much more. I had
a will made out—this is it in my hands—and
by the terms of this will I made you my heir—the
heir to the complete Cornish estate aside from a comfortable
annuity to Vance.”
She looked him in the eye, ripped
the will from end to end, and tossed the fragments
into the fire. There was a sharp cry from Vance,
who sprang to his feet. It was the thrill of
an unexpected triumph, but his sister took it for
protest.
“Vance, I haven’t used
you well, but from now on I’m going to change.
As for you, Terence, I don’t want you near me
any longer than may be necessary. Understand
that I expect to provide for you. I haven’t
raised you merely to cast you down suddenly.
I’m going to establish you in business, see
that you are comfortable, supply you with an income
that’s respectable, and then let you drift where
you will.
“My own mind is made up about
your end before you take a step across the threshold
of my house. But I’m still going to give
you every chance. I don’t want to throw
you out suddenly, however. Take your time.
Make up your mind what you want to do and where you
are going. Take all the time you wish for such
a conclusion. It’s important, and it needs
time for such a decision. When that decision
is made, go your way. I never wish to hear from
you again. I want no letters, and I shall certainly
refuse to see you.”
Every word she spoke seemed to be
a heavier blow than the last, and Terence bowed under
the accumulated weight. Vance could see the boy
struggle, waver between fierce pride and desperate
humiliation and sorrow. To Vance it was clear
that the stiff pride of Elizabeth as she sat in the
chair was a brittle strength, and one vital appeal
would break her to tears. But the boy did not
see. Presently he straightened, bowed to her
in the best Colby fashion, and turned on his heel.
He went out of the room and left Vance and his sister
facing one another, but not meeting each other’s
glances.
“Elizabeth,” he said at
last, faintly—he dared not persuade too
much lest she take him at his word. “Elizabeth,
you don’t mean it. It was twenty-four years
ago that you passed your word to do this if things
turned out as they have. Forget your promise.
My dear, you’re still wrapped up in Terry, no
matter what you have said. Let me go and call
him back. Why should you torture yourself for
the sake of your pride?”
He even rose, not too swiftly, and
still with his eyes upon her. When she lifted
her hand, he willingly sank back into his chair.
“You’re a very kind soul,
Vance. I never knew it before. I’m
appreciating it now almost too late. But what
I have done shall stand!”
“But, my dear, the pain—is it worth—”
“It means that my life is a
wreck and a ruin, Vance. But I’ll stand
by what I’ve done. I won’t give way
to the extent of a single scruple.”
And the long, bitter silence which
was to last so many days at the Cornish ranch began.
And still they did not look into one another’s
eyes. As for Vance, he did not wish to.
He was seeing a bright future. Not long to wait;
after this blow she would go swiftly to her grave.
He had barely reached that conclusion
when the door opened again. Terry stood before
them in the old, loose, disreputable clothes of a cow-puncher.
The big sombrero swung in his hand. The heavy
Colt dragged down in its holster over his right hip.
His tanned face was drawn and stern.
“I won’t keep you more
than a moment,” he said. “I’m
leaving. And I’m leaving with nothing of
yours. I’ve already taken too much.
If I live to be a hundred, I’ll never forgive
myself for taking your charity these twenty-four years.
For what you’ve spent maybe I can pay you back
one of these days, in money. But for all the
time and—patience—you’ve
spent on me I can never repay you. I know that.
At least, here’s where I stop piling up a debt.
These clothes and this gun come out of the money I
made punching cows last year. Outside I’ve
got El Sangre saddled with a saddle I bought out of
the same money. They’re my start in life,
the clothes I’ve got on and the gun and the
horse and the saddle. So I’m starting clean—Miss
Cornish!”
Vance saw his sister wince under that
name from the lips of Terry. But she did not
speak.
“There’ll be no return,”
said Terence sadly. “My trail is an out
trail. Good-by again.” And so he was
gone.