PATIENCE
There is one patience greater than
the endurance of the cat at the hole of the mouse
or the wolf which waits for the moose to drop, and
that is the patience of the thinking man; the measure
of the Hindoo’s moveless contemplation of Nirvana
is not in hours but in weeks or even in months.
Randall Byrne sat at his sentinel post with his hands
folded and his grave eyes steadily fixed before him,
and for hour after hour he did not move. Though
the wind rose, now and again, and whistled through
the upper chambers or mourned down the empty halls,
Randall Byrne did not stir so much as an eyelash in
observance. Two things held him fascinated.
One was the girl who had passed up yonder stairs so
wearily without a single backward glance at him; the
other was the silent battle which went on in the adjoining
room. Now and then his imagination wandered away
to secondary pictures. He would see Barry meeting
Buck Daniels, at last, and striking him down as remorselessly
as the hound strikes the hare; or he would see him
riding back towards Elkhead and catch a bright, sad
vision of Kate Cumberland waving a careless adieu to
him, and then hear her singing carelessly as she turned
away. Such pictures as these, however, came up
but rarely in the mind of Byrne. Mostly he thought
of the stranger leaning over the body of old Joe Cumberland,
reviving him, storing him with electric energy, paying
back, as it were, some ancient debt. And he thought
of the girl as she had turned at the landing place
of the stairs, her head fallen; and he thought of
her lying in her bed, with her arm under the mass of
bright hair, trying to sleep, very tired, but remorsely
held awake by that same power which was bringing Joe
Cumberland back from the verge of death.
It was all impossible. This thing
could not be. It was really as bad as the yarn
of the Frankenstein monster. He considered how
it would seem in print, backed by his most solemn
asseverations, and then he saw the faces of the men
who associated with him, pale thoughtful faces striving
to conceal their smiles and their contempt. But
always he came back, like the desperate hare doubling
on his course, upon the picture of Kate Cumberland
there at the turning of the stairs, and that bent,
bright head which confessed defeat. The man had
forgotten her. It made Byrne open his eyes in
incredulity even to imagine such a thing. The
man had forgotten her! She was no more to him
than some withered hag he might ride past on the road.
His ear, subconsciously attentive
to everything around him, caught a faint sound from
the next room. It was a regular noise. It
had the rhythm of a quick footfall, but in its nature
it was more like the sound of a heavily beating pulse.
Randall Byrne sat up in his chair. A faint creaking
attested that it was, indeed, a footfall traversing
the room to and fro, steadily.
The stranger, then, no longer leaned
over the couch of the old cattleman. He was walking
up and down the floor with that characteristic, softly
padding step. Of what did he think as he walked?
It carried Byrne automatically out into the darkest
night, with a wind in his face, and the rhythm of
a long striding horse carrying him on to a destination
unknown.
Here he heard a soft scratching, repeated,
at the door. When it came again he rose and opened
the door—at once the tall, shaggy dog slipped
through the opening and glided past him. It startled
Byrne oddly to see the animal stealing away, as if
Barry himself had been leaving. He called to
the beast, but he was met by a silent baring of white
fangs that stopped him in his tracks. The great
dog was gone without a sound, and Byrne closed the
door again without casting a look inside. He was
stupidly, foolishly afraid to look within.
After that the silence had a more
vital meaning. No pictures crowded his brain.
He was simply keyed to a high point of expectancy,
and therefore, when the door was opened silently,
he sprang up as if in acknowledgment of an alarm and
faced Barry. The latter closed the door behind
him and glided after the big dog. He had almost
crossed the big room when Byrne was able to speak.
“Mr. Barry!” he called.
The man hesitated.
“Mr. Barry,” he repeated.
And Dan Barry turned. It was
something like the act of the wolf the moment before;
a swift movement—a flash of the eyes in
something like defiance.
“Mr. Barry, are you leaving us?”
“I’m going outside.”
“Are you coming back?”
“I dunno.”
A great joy swelled in the throat
of Doctor Byrne. He felt like shouting in triumph;
yet he remembered once more how the girl had gone up
the stairs, wearily, with fallen head. He decided
that he would do what he could to keep the stranger
with them, and though Randall Byrne lived to be a
hundred he would never do a finer thing than what he
attempted then. He stepped across the room and
stood before Barry, blocking the way.
“Sir,” he said gravely,
“if you go now, you will work a great sorrow
in this house.”
A glint of anger rose in the eyes of Barry.
“Joe Cumberland is sleepin’
soun’,” he answered. “He’ll
be a pile rested when he wakes up. He don’t
need me no more.”
“He’s not the only one
who needs you,” said Byrne. “His daughter
has been waiting impatiently for your coming, sir.”
The sharp glance of Barry wavered away.
“I’d kind of like to stay,” he murmured,
“but I got to go.”
A dull voice called from the next room.
“It’s Joe Cumberland,” said Byrne.
“You see, he is not sleeping!”
The brow of Barry clouded, and he turned gloomily
back.
“Maybe I better stay,” he agreed.
Yet before he made a step Byrne heard
a far-away honking of the wild geese, that musical
discord carrying for uncounted miles through the windy
air. The sound worked like magic on Barry.
He whirled back.
“I got to go,” he repeated.
And yet Byrne blocked the way.
It required more courage to do that than to do anything
he had ever attempted in his life. The sweat poured
out from under his armpits as the stranger stepped
near; the blood rushed from his face as he stared
into the eyes of Barry—eyes which now held
an uncanny glimmer of yellow light.
“Sir,” said Byrne huskily,
“you must not go! Listen! Old Cumberland
is calling to you again! Does that mean nothing?
If you have some errand out in the night, let me go
for you.”
“Partner,” said the soft
voice of Barry, “stand aside. I got no time,
I’m wanted!”
Every muscle of Randall Byrne’s
body was set to repulse the stranger in any effort
to pass through that door, and yet, mysteriously, against
his will, he found himself standing to one side, and
saw the other slip through the open door.
“Dan! Are ye there?”
called a louder voice from the room beyond.
There was no help for it. He,
himself, must go back and face Joe Cumberland.
With a lie, no doubt. He would say that Dan had
stepped out for a moment and would be back again.
That might put Cumberland safely to sleep. In
the morning, to be sure, he would find out the deception—but
let every day bury its dead. Here was enough trouble
for one night. He went slowly, but steadily enough,
towards the door of what had now become a fatal room
to the doctor. In that room he had seen his dearest
doctrines cremated. Out of that room he had come
bearing the ashes of his hopes in his hands.
Now he must go back once more to try to fill, with
science, a gap of which science could never take cognizance.
He lingered another instant with his
hand on the door; then he cast it wide bravely enough
and stepped in. Joe Cumberland was sitting up
on the edge of his couch. There was colour in
the old man’s face. It almost seemed, to
the incredulous eyes of Byrne, that the face was filled
out a trifle. Certainly the fire of the old cattleman’s
glance was less unearthly.
“Where’s Dan?” he called. “Where’d
he go?”
It was no longer the deep, controlled
voice of the stoic; it was the almost whining complaint
of vital weakness.
“Is there anything I can do
for you?” parried Byrne. “Anything
you need or wish?”
“Him!” answered the old
man explosively. “Damn it, I need Dan!
Where is he? He was here. I felt
him here while I was sleepin’. where is he?”
“He has stepped out for an instant,”
answered Byrne smoothly. “He will be back
shortly.”
“He—has—stepped—out?”
echoed the old man slowly. Then he rose to the
full of his gaunt height. His white hair, his
triangle of beard and pointed moustache gave him a
detached, a mediaeval significance; a portrait by
Van Dyck had stepped from its frame.
“Doc, you’re lyin’ to me! Where
has he gone?”
A sudden, almost hysterical burst of emotion swept
Doctor Byrne.
“Gone to heaven or hell!”
he cried with startling violence. “Gone
to follow the wind and the wild geese—God
knows where!”
Like a period to his sentence, a gun
barked outside, there was a howl of demoniac pain
and rage, and then a scream that would tingle in the
ear of Doctor Randall Byrne till his dying day.