A Cross-Examination
He was conscious then only of green-blue
eyes, very wide, very bright, and lips that parted
on a word and froze there in silence. The heart
of Ronicky Doone leaped with joy; he had passed the
crisis in safety. She had not cried out.
“You’re not—” he had
said in the first moment.
“I am not who?” asked
the girl with amazing steadiness. But he saw her
hand go back to the dressing table and open, with incredible
deftness and speed, the little top drawer behind her.
“Don’t do that!”
said Ronicky softly, but sharply. “Keep
your hand off that table, lady, if you don’t
mind.”
She hesitated a fraction of a second.
In that moment she seemed to see that he was in earnest,
and that it would be foolish to tamper with him.
“Stand away from that table; sit down yonder.”
Again she obeyed without a word.
Her eyes, to be sure, flickered here and there about
the room, as though they sought some means of sending
a warning to her friends, or finding some escape for
herself. Then her glance returned to Ronicky
Doone.
“Well,” she said, as she settled in the
chair. “Well?”
A world of meaning in those two small
words—a world of dread controlled.
He merely stared at her thoughtfully.
“I hit the wrong trail, lady,”
he said quietly. “I was looking for somebody
else.”
She started. “You were after—”
She stopped.
“That’s right, I guess,” he admitted.
“How many of you are there?”
she asked curiously, so curiously that she seemed
to be forgetting the danger. “Poor Carry
Smith with a mob—” She stopped suddenly
again. “What did you do to Harry Morgan?”
“I left him safe and quiet,” said Ronicky
Doone.
The girl’s face hardened strangely.
“What you are, and what your game is I don’t
know,” she said. “But I’ll tell
you this: I’m letting you play as if you
had all the cards in the deck. But you haven’t.
I’ve got one ace that’ll take all your
trumps. Suppose I call once what’ll happen
to you, pal?”
“You don’t dare call,” he said.
“Don’t dare me,”
said the girl angrily. “I hate a dare worse
than anything in the world, almost.” For
a moment her green-blue eyes were pools of light flashing
angrily at him.
Into the hand of Ronicky Doone, with
that magic speed and grace for which his fame was
growing so great in the mountain desert, came the
long, glimmering body of the revolver, and, holding
it at the hip, he threatened her.
She shrank back at that, gasping.
For there was an utter surety about this man’s
handling of the weapon. The heavy gun balanced
and steadied in his slim fingers, as if it were no
more than a feather’s weight.
“I’m talking straight,
lady,” said Ronicky Doone. “Sit down—pronto!”
In the very act of obedience she straightened
again. “It’s bluff,” she said.
“I’m going through that door!” Straight
for the door she went, and Ronicky Doone set his teeth.
“Go back!” he commanded.
He glided to the door and blocked her way, but the
gun hung futile in his hand.
“It’s easy to pull a gun,
eh?” said the girl, with something of a sneer.
“But it takes nerve to use it. Let me through
this door!”
“Not in a thousand years,” said Ronicky.
She laid her hand on the door and
drew it back—it struck his shoulder—and
Ronicky gave way with a groan and stood with his head
bowed. Inwardly he cursed himself. Doubtless
she was used to men who bullied her, as if she were
another man of an inferior sort. Doubtless she
despised him for his weakness. But, though he
gritted his teeth, he could not make himself firm.
Those old lessons which sink into a man’s soul
in the West came back to him and held him. In
the helpless rage which possessed him he wanted battle
above all things in the world. If half a dozen
men had poured through the doorway he would have rejoiced.
But this one girl was enough to make him helpless.
He looked up in amazement. She
had not gone; in fact, she had closed the door slowly
and stood with her back against it, staring at him
in a speechless bewilderment.
“What sort of a man are you?” asked the
girl at last.
“A fool,” said Ronicky
slowly. “Go out and round up your friends;
I can’t stop you.”
“No,” said the girl thoughtfully,
“but that was a poor bluff at stopping me.”
He nodded. And she hesitated
still, watching his face closely.
“Listen to me,” she said
suddenly. “I have two minutes to talk to
you, and I’ll give you those two minutes.
You can use them in getting out of the house—I’ll
show you a way—or you can use them to tell
me just why you’ve come.”
In spite of himself Ronicky smiled.
“Lady,” he said, “if a rat was in
a trap d’you think he’d stop very long
between a chance of getting clear and a chance to
tell how he come to get into the place?”
“I have a perfectly good reason
for asking,” she answered. “Even if
you now get out of the house safely you’ll try
to come back later on.”
“Lady,” said Ronicky,
“do I look as plumb foolish as that?”
“You’re from the West,” she said
in answer to his slang.
“Yes.”
She considered the straight-looking
honesty of his eyes. “Out West,”
she said, “I know you men are different.
Not one of the men I know here would take another
chance as risky as this, once they were out of it.
But out there in the mountains you follow long trails,
trails that haven’t anything but a hope to lead
you along them? Isn’t that so?”
“Maybe,” admitted Ronicky.
“It’s the fever out of the gold days, lady.
You start out chipping rocks to find the right color;
maybe you never find the right color; maybe you never
find a streak of pay stuff, but you keep on trying.
You’re always just sort of around the corner
from making a big strike.”
She nodded, smiling again, and the
smiles changed her pleasantly, it seemed to Ronicky
Doone. At first she had impressed him almost as
a man, with her cold, steady eyes, but now she was
all woman, indeed.
“That’s why I say that
you’ll come back. You won’t give up
with one failure. Am I right?”
He shrugged his shoulders. “I
dunno. If the trail fever hits me again—maybe
I would come back.”
“You started to tell me.
It’s because of Caroline Smith?”
“Yes.”
“You don’t have to talk
to me,” said the girl. “As a matter
of fact I shouldn’t be here listening to you.
But, I don’t know why, I want to help you.
You—you are in love with Caroline?”
“No,” said Ronicky.
Her expression grew grave and cold
again. “Then why are you here hunting for
her? What do you want with her?”
“Lady,” said Ronicky,
“I’m going to show you the whole layout
of the cards. Maybe you’ll take what I
say right to headquarters—the man that
smiles—and block my game.”
“You know him?” she asked sharply.
Apparently that phrase, “the
man who smiles,” was enough to identify him.
“I’ve seen him. I
dunno what he is, I dunno what you are, lady, but I
figure that you and Caroline Smith and everybody else
in this house is under the thumb of the gent that
smiles.”
Her eyes darkened with a shadow of
alarm. “Go on,” she said curtly.
“I’m not going on to guess
about what you all are. All I know is what I’m
here trying to do. I’m not working for myself.
I’m working for a partner.”
She started. “That’s
the second man, the one who stopped her on the street
today?”
“You’re pretty well posted,”
replied Ronicky. “Yes, that’s the
one. He started after Caroline Smith, not even
knowing her name—with just a picture of
her. We found out that she lived in sight of the
East River, and pretty soon we located her here.”
“And what are you hoping to do?”
“To find her and talk to her
straight from the shoulder and tell her what a pile
Bill has done to get to her—and a lot of
other things.”
“Can’t he find her and
tell her those things for himself?”
“He can’t talk,”
said Ronicky. “Not that I’m a pile
better, but I could talk better for a friend than
he could talk for himself, I figure. If things
don’t go right then I’ll know that the
trouble is with the gent with the smile.”
“And then?” asked the girl, very excited
and grave.
“I’ll find him,” said Ronicky Doone.
“And—”
“Lady,” he replied obliquely,
“because I couldn’t use a gun on a girl
ain’t no sign that I can’t use it on a
gent!”
“I’ve one thing to tell
you,” she said, breaking in swiftly on him.
“Do what you want—take all the chances
you care to—but, if you value your life
and the life of your friend, keep away from the man
who smiles.”
“I’ll have a fighting
chance, I guess,” said Ronicky quietly.”
“You’ll have no chance
at all. The moment he knows your hand is against
him, I don’t care how brave or how clever you
are, you’re doomed!”
She spoke with such a passion of conviction
that she flushed, and a moment later she was shivering.
It might have been the draft from the window which
made her gather the hazy-green mantle closer about
her and glance over her shoulder; but a grim feeling
came to Ronicky Doone that the reason why the girl
trembled and her eyes grew wide, was that the mention
of “the man who smiles” had brought the
thought of him into the room like a breath of cold
wind.
“Don’t you see,”
she went on gently, “that I like you? It’s
the first and the last time that I’m going to
see you, so I can talk. I know you’re honest,
and I know you’re brave. Why, I can see
your whole character in the way you’ve stayed
by your friend; and, if there’s a possible way
of helping you, I’ll do it. But you must
promise me first that you’ll never cross the
man with the sneer, as you call him.”
“There’s a sort of a fate
in it,” said Ronicky slowly. “I don’t
think I could promise. There’s a chill
in my bones that tells me I’m going to meet
up with him one of these days.”
She gasped at that, and, stepping
back from him, she appeared to be searching her mind
to discover something which would finally and completely
convince him. At length she found it.
“Do I look to you like a coward?”
she said. “Do I seem to be weak-kneed?”
He shook his head.
“And what will a woman fight hardest for?”
“For the youngsters she’s
got,” said Ronicky after a moment’s thought.
“And, outside of that, I suppose a girl will
fight the hardest to marry the gent she loves.”
“And to keep from marrying a
man she doesn’t love, as she’d try to
keep from death?”
“Sure,” said Ronicky.
“But these days a girl don’t have to marry
that way.”
“I am going to marry the man
with the sneer,” she said simply enough, and
with dull, patient eyes she watched the face of Ronicky
wrinkle and grow pale, as if a heavy fist had struck
him.
“You?” he asked. “You marry
him?”
“Yes,” she whispered.
“And you hate the thought of him!”
“I—I don’t know. He’s
kind—”
“You hate him,” insisted
Ronicky. “And he’s to have you, that
cold-eyed snake, that devil of a man?” He moved
a little, and she turned toward him, smiling faintly
and allowing the light to come more clearly and fully
on her face. “You’re meant for a king
o’ men, lady; you got the queen in you—it’s
in the lift of your head. When you find the gent
you can love, why, lady, he’ll be pretty near
the richest man in the world!”
The ghost of a flush bloomed in her
cheeks, but her faint smile did not alter, and she
seemed to be hearing him from far away. “The
man with the sneer,” she said at length, “will
never talk to me like that, and still—I
shall marry him.”
“Tell me your name,” said Ronicky Doone
bluntly.
“My name is Ruth Tolliver.”
“Listen to me, Ruth Tolliver:
If you was to live a thousand years, and the gent
with the smile was to keep going for two thousand,
it’d never come about that he could ever marry
you.”
She shook her head, still watching him as from a distance.
“If I’ve crossed the country
and followed a hard trail and come here tonight and
stuck my head in a trap, as you might say, for the
sake of a gent like Bill Gregg—fine fellow
though he is—what d’you think I would
do to keep a girl like you from life-long misery?”
And he dwelt on the last word until the girl shivered.
“It’s what it means,”
said Ronicky Doone, “life-long misery for you.
And it won’t happen—it can’t
happen.”
“Are you mad—are
you quite mad?” asked the girl. “What
on earth have I and my affairs got to do with you?
Who are you?”
“I dunno,” said Ronicky
Doone. “I suppose you might say I’m
a champion of lost causes, lady. Why have I got
something to do with you? I’ll tell you
why: Because, when a girl gets past being just
pretty and starts in being plumb beautiful, she lays
off being the business of any one gent—her
father or her brother—she starts being the
business of the whole world. You see? They
come like that about one in ten million, and I figure
you’re that one, lady.”
The far away smile went out.
She was looking at him now with a sort of sad wonder.
“Do you know what I am?” she said gravely.
“I dunno,” said Ronicky,
“and I don’t care. What you do don’t
count. It’s the inside that matters, and
the inside of you is all right. Lady, so long
as I can sling a gun, and so long as my name is Ronicky
Doone, you ain’t going to marry the gent with
the smile.”
If he expected an outbreak of protest
from her he was mistaken. For what she said was:
“Ronicky Doone! Is that the name? Ronicky
Doone!” Then she smiled up at him. “I’m
within one ace of being foolish and saying—But
I won’t.”
She made a gesture of brushing a mist
away from her and then stepped back a little.
“I’m going down to see the man with the
smile, and I’m going to tell him that Harry
Morgan is not in his room, that he didn’t answer
my knock, and then that I looked around through the
house and didn’t find him. After that I’m
coming back here, Ronicky Doone, and I’m going
to try to get an opportunity for you to talk to Caroline
Smith.”
“I knew you’d change your mind,”
said Ronicky Doone.
“I’ll even tell you why,”
she said. “It isn’t for your friend
who’s asleep, but it’s to give you a chance
to finish this business and come to the end of this
trail and go back to your own country. Because,
if you stay around here long, there’ll be trouble,
a lot of trouble, Ronicky Doone. Now stay here
and wait for me. If anyone taps at the door,
you’d better slip into that closet in the corner.
Will you wait?”
“Yes.”
“And you’ll trust me?”
“To the end of the trail, lady.”
She smiled at him again and was gone.
Now the house was perfectly hushed.
He went to the window and looked down to the quiet
street with all its atmosphere of some old New England
village and eternal peace. It seemed impossible
that in the house behind him there were—
He caught his breath. Somewhere
in the house the muffled sound of a struggle rose.
He ran to the door, thinking of Ruth Tolliver at once,
and then he shrank back again, for a door was slammed
open, and a voice shouted—the voice of
a man: “Help! Harrison! Lefty!
Jerry!”
Other voices answered far away; footfalls
began to sound. Ronicky Doone knew that Harry
Morgan, his victim, had at last recovered and managed
to work the cords off his feet or hands, or both.
Ronicky stepped back close to the
door of the closet and waited. It would mean
a search, probably, this discovery that Morgan had
been struck down in his own room by an unknown intruder.
And a search certainly would be started at once.
First there was confusion, and then a clear, musical
man’s voice began to give orders: “Harrison,
take the cellar. Lefty, go up to the roof.
The rest of you take the rooms one by one.”
The search was on.
“Don’t ask questions,”
was the last instruction. “When you see
someone you don’t know, shoot on sight, and
shoot to kill. I’ll do the explaining to
the police—you know that. Now scatter,
and the man who brings him down I’ll remember.
Quick!”
There was a new scurry of footfalls.
Ronicky Doone heard them approach the door of the
girl’s room, and he slipped into the closet.
At once a cloud of soft, cool silks brushed about
him, and he worked back until his shoulders had touched
the wall at the back of the closet. Luckily the
enclosure was deep, and the clothes were hanging thickly
from the racks. It was sufficient to conceal
him from any careless searcher, but it would do no
good if any one probed; and certainly these men were
not the ones to search carelessly.
In the meantime it was a position
which made Ronicky grind his teeth. To be found
skulking among woman’s clothes in a closet—to
be dragged out and stuck in the back, no doubt, like
a rat, and thrown into the river, that was an end
for Ronicky Doone indeed!
He was on the verge of slipping out
and making a mad break for the door of the house and
trying to escape by taking the men by surprise, when
he heard the door of the girl’s room open.
“Some ex-pugilist,” he
heard a man’s voice saying, and he recognized
it at once as belonging to him who had given the orders.
He recognized, also, that it must be the man with
the sneer.
“You think he was an amateur
robber and an expert prize fighter?” asked Ruth
Tolliver.
It seemed to Ronicky Doone that her
voice was perfectly controlled and calm. Perhaps
it was her face that betrayed emotion, for after a
moment of silence, the man answered.
“What’s the matter?
You’re as nervous as a child tonight, Ruth?”
“Isn’t there reason enough
to make me nervous?” she demanded. “A
robber—Heaven knows what—running
at large in the house?”
“H’m!” murmured
the man. “Devilish queer that you should
get so excited all at once. No, it’s something
else. I’ve trained you too well for you
to go to pieces like this over nothing. What is
it, Ruth?”
There was no answer. Then the
voice began again, silken-smooth and gentle, so gentle
and kindly that Ronicky Doone started. “In
the old days you used to keep nothing from me; we
were companions, Ruth. That was when you were
a child. Now that you are a woman, when you feel
more, think more, see more, when our companionship
should be like a running stream, continually bringing
new things into my life, I find barriers between us.
Why is it, my dear?”
Still there was no answer. The
pulse of Ronicky Doone began to quicken, as though
the question had been asked him, as though he himself
were fumbling for the answer.
“Let us talk more freely,”
went on the man. “Try to open your mind
to me. There are things which you dislike in
me; I know it. Just what those things are I cannot
tell, but we must break down these foolish little
barriers which are appearing more and more every day.
Not that I mean to intrude myself on you every moment
of your life. You understand that, of course?”
“Of course,” said the girl faintly.
“And I understand perfectly
that you have passed out of childhood into young womanhood,
and that is a dreamy time for a girl. Her body
is formed at last, but her mind is only half formed.
There is a pleasant mist over it. Very well,
I don’t wish to brush the mist away. If
I did that I would take half that charm away from
you—that elusive incompleteness which Fragonard
and Watteau tried to imitate, Heaven knows with how
little success. No, I shall always let you live
your own life. All that I ask for, my dear, are
certain meeting places. Let us establish them
before it is too late, or you will find one day that
you have married an old man, and we shall have silent
dinners. There is nothing more wretched than
that. If it should come about, then you will
begin to look on me as a jailer. And—”
“Don’t!”
“Ah,” said he very tenderly,
“I knew that I was feeling toward the truth.
You are shrinking from me, Ruth, because you feel that
I am too old.”
“No, no!”
Here a hand pounded heavily on the door.
“The idiots have found something,”
said the man of the sneer. “And now they
have come to talk about their cleverness, like a rooster
crowing over a grain of corn.” He raised
his voice. “Come in!”
And Ronicky Doone heard a panting
voice a moment later exclaim: “We’ve
got him!”