The Miracle
No great intelligence was needed to
understand the meaning of it. Fernand, having
trapped his game, was now about to kill it. He
could suffocate the two with smoke, blown into the
tunnel, and make them rush blindly out. The moment
they appeared, dazed and uncertain, the revolvers
of half a dozen gunmen would be emptied into them.
“It’s like taking a trap
full of rats,” said Ronicky bitterly, “and
shaking them into a pail of water. Let’s
go back and see what we can.”
They had only to turn the corner of
the tunnel to be sure. Fernand had had the door
of the tunnel slid noiselessly open, then, into the
tunnel itself, smoking, slowly burning, pungent pieces
of pine wood had been thrown, having been first soaked
in oil, perhaps. The tunnel was rapidly filling
with smoke, and through the white drifts of it they
looked into the lighted cellar beyond. They would
run out at last, gasping for breath and blinded by
the smoke, to be shot down in a perfect light.
So much was clear.
“Now back to the wall and try
to find that door,” said Ronicky.
Jerry had already turned. In
a moment they were back and tearing with their fingers
at the sham wall, kicking loose fragments with their
feet.
All the time, while they cleared a
larger and larger space, they searched feverishly
with the electric torch for some sign of a knob which
would indicate a door, or some button or spring which
might be used to open it. But there was nothing,
and in the meantime the smoke was drifting back, in
more and more unendurable clouds.
“I can’t stand much more,” declared
Jerry at length.
“Keep low. The best air is there,”
answered Ronicky.
A voice called from the mouth of the
tunnel, and they could recognize the smooth tongue
of Frederic Fernand. “Doone, I think I have
you now. But trust yourselves to me, and all
may still be well with you. Throw out your weapons,
and then walk out yourselves, with your arms above
your heads, and you may have a second chance.
I don’t promise—I simply offer you
a hope in the place of no hope at all. Is that
a good bargain?”
“I’ll see you hung first,”
answered Ronicky and turned again to his work at the
wall.
But it seemed a quite hopeless task.
The surface of the steel was still covered, after
they had cleared it as much as they could, with a thin,
clinging coat of plaster which might well conceal the
button or device for opening the door. Every
moment the task became infinitely harder.
Finally Jerry, his lungs nearly empty
of oxygen, cast himself down on the floor and gasped.
A horrible gagging sound betrayed his efforts for
breath.
Ronicky knelt beside him. His
own lungs were burning, and his head was thick and
dizzy. “One more try, then we’ll turn
and rush them and die fighting, Jerry.”
The other nodded and started to his
feet. Together they made that last effort, fumbling
with their hands across the rough surface, and suddenly—had
they touched the spring, indeed?—a section
of the surface before them swayed slowly in.
Ronicky caught the half-senseless body of Jerry Smith
and thrust him inside. He himself staggered after,
and before him stood Ruth Tolliver!
While he lay panting on the floor,
she closed the door through which they had come and
then stood and silently watched them. Presently
Smith sat up, and Ronicky Doone staggered to his feet,
his head clearing rapidly.
He found himself in a small room,
not more than eight feet square, with a ceiling so
low that he could barely stand erect. As for the
furnishings and the arrangement, it was more like the
inside of a safe than anything else. There were,
to be sure, three little stools, but nothing else
that one would expect to find in an apartment.
For the rest there was nothing but a series of steel
drawers and strong chests, lining the walls of the
room and leaving in the center very little room in
which one might move about.
He had only a moment to see all of
this. Ruth Tolliver, hooded in an evening cloak,
but with the light gleaming in her coppery hair, was
shaking him by the arm and leaning a white face close
to him.
“Hurry!” she was saying.
“There isn’t a minute to lose. You
must start now, at once. They will find out—they
will guess—and then—”
“John Mark?” he asked.
“Yes,” she exclaimed,
realizing that she had said too much, and she pressed
her hand over her mouth, looking at Ronicky Doone in
a sort of horror.
Jerry Smith had come to his feet at
last, but he remained in the background, staring with
a befuddled mind at the lovely vision of the girl.
Fear and excitement and pleasure had transformed her
face, but she seemed trembling in an agony of desire
to be gone. She seemed invincibly drawn to remain
there longer still. Ronicky Doone stared at her,
with a strange blending of pity and admiration.
He knew that the danger was not over by any means,
but he began to forget that.
“This way!” called the
girl and led toward an opposite door, very low in
the wall.
“Lady,” said Ronicky gently,
“will you hold on one minute? They won’t
start to go through the smoke for a while. They’ll
think they’ve choked us, when we don’t
come out on the rush, shooting. But they’ll
wait quite a time to make sure. They don’t
like my style so well that they’ll hurry me.”
He smiled sourly at the thought. “And we
got time to learn a lot of things that we’ll
never find out, unless we know right now, pronto!”
He stepped before the girl, as he
spoke. “How come you knew we were in there?
How come you to get down here? How come you to
risk everything you got to let us out through the
treasure room of Mark’s gang?”
He had guessed as shrewdly as he could,
and he saw, by her immediate wincing, that the shot
had told.
“You strange, mad, wild Westerner!”
she exclaimed. “Do you mean to tell me
you want to stay here and talk? Even if you have
a moment to spare you must use it. If you knew
the men with whom you are dealing you would never
dream of—”
In her pause he said, smiling:
“Lady, it’s tolerable clear that you don’t
know me. But the way I figure it is this:
a gent may die any time, but, when he finds a minute
for good living, he’d better make the most of
it.”
He knew by her eyes that she half
guessed his meaning, but she wished to be certain.
“What do you intend by that?” she asked.
“It’s tolerable simple,”
said Ronicky. “I’ve seen square things
done in my life, but I’ve never yet seen a girl
throw up all she had to do a good turn for a gent
she’s seen only once. You follow me, lady?
I pretty near guess the trouble you’re running
into.”
“You guess what?” she asked.
“I guess that you’re one
of John Mark’s best cards. You’re
his chief gambler, lady, and he uses you on the big
game.”
She had drawn back, one hand pressed
against her breast, her mouth tight with the pain.
“You have guessed all that about me?” she
asked faintly. “That means you despise
me!”
“What folks do don’t matter
so much,” said Ronicky. “It’s
the reasons they have for doing a thing that matters,
I figure, and the way they do it. I dunno how
John Mark hypnotized you and made a tool out of you,
but I do know that you ain’t changed by what
you’ve done.”
Ronicky Doone stepped to her quickly
and took both her hands. He was not, ordinarily,
particularly forward with girls. Now he acted
as gracefully as if he had been the father of Ruth
Tolliver. “Lady,” he said, “you’ve
saved two lives tonight. That’s a tolerable
lot to have piled up to anybody’s credit.
Besides, inside you’re snow-white. We’ve
got to go, but I’m coming back. Will you
let me come back?”
“Never, never!” declared
Ruth Tolliver. “You must never see me—you
must never see Caroline Smith again. Any step
you take in that direction is under peril of your
life. Leave New York, Ronicky Doone. Leave
it as quickly as you may, and never come back.
Only pray that his arm isn’t long enough to
follow you.”
“Leave Caroline?” he asked.
“I’ll tell you what you’re going
to do, Ruth. When you get back home you’re
going to tell Caroline that Jerry, here, has seen
the light about Mark, and that he has money enough
to pay back what he owes.”
“But I haven’t,” broke in Jerry.
“I have it,” said Ronicky, “and
that’s the same thing.”
“I’ll take no charity,” declared
Jerry Smith.
“You’ll do what I tell
you,” said Ronicky Doone. “You been
bothering enough, son. Go tell Caroline what
I’ve said,” he went on to the girl.
“Let her know that they’s no chain on anybody,
and, if she wants to find Bill Gregg, all she’s
got to do is go across the street. You understand?”
“But, even if I were to tell
her, how could she go, Ronicky Doone, when she’s
watched?”
“If she can’t make a start
and get to a man that loves her and is waiting for
her, right across the street, she ain’t worth
worrying about,” said Ronicky sternly.
“Do we go this way?”
She hurried before them. “You’ve
waited too long—you’ve waited too
long!” she kept whispering in her terror, as
she led them through the door, paused to turn out
the light behind her, and then conducted them down
a passage like that on the other side of the treasure
chamber.
It was all deadly black and deadly
silent, but the rustling of the girl’s dress,
as she hurried before them, was their guide. And
always her whisper came back: “Hurry!
Hurry! I fear it is too late!”
Suddenly they were climbing up a narrow
flight of steps. They stood under the starlight
in a back yard, with houses about them on all sides.
“Go down that alley, and you
will be on the street,” said the girl.
“Down that alley, and then hurry—run—find
the first taxi. Will you do that?”
“We’ll sure go, and we’ll
wait for Caroline Smith—and you, too!”
“Don’t talk madness!
Why will you stay? You risk everything for yourselves
and for me!”
Jerry Smith was already tugging at
Ronicky’s arm to draw him away, but the Westerner
was stubbornly pressing back to the girl. He had
her hand and would not leave it.
“If you don’t show up,
lady,” he said, “I’ll come to find
you. You hear?”
“No, no!”
“I swear!”
“Bless you, but never venture
near again. But, oh, Ronicky Doone, I wish ten
other men in the whole world could be half so generous
and wild as you!” Suddenly her hand was slipped
from his, and she was gone into the shadows.
Down the alley went Jerry Smith, but
he returned in an agony of dread to find that Ronicky
Doone was still running here and there, in a blind
confusion, probing the shadowy corners of the yard
in search of the girl.
“Come off, you wild man,”
said Jerry. “They’ll be on our heels
any minute—they may be waiting for us now,
down the alley—come off, idiot, quick!”
“If I thought they was a chance
of finding her I’d stay,” declared Ronicky,
shaking his head bitterly. “Whether you
and me live, don’t count beside a girl like
that. Getting soot on one tip of her finger might
mean more’n whether you or me die.”
“Maybe, maybe,” said the
other, “but answer that tomorrow; right now,
let’s start to make sure of ourselves, and we
can come back to find her later.”
Ronicky Doone, submitting partly to
the force and partly to the persuasion of his friend,
turned reluctantly and followed him down the alley.