The house would have been more in
place on the main street of a town than here in the
mountain desert; but when the first John Merchant had
made his stake and could build his home as it pleased
him to build, his imagination harked back to a mid-Victorian
model, built of wood, with high, pointed roofs, many
carved balconies and windows, and several towers.
Here the second John Merchant lived with his son Charles,
whose taste had quite outgrown the house.
But to the uneducated eye of Andrew
Lanning it was a great and dignified building.
He reined the pinto under the trees to look up at that
tall, black mass. It was doubly dark against
the sky, for now the first streaks of gray light were
pale along the eastern horizon, and the house seemed
to tower up into the center of the heavens. Andy
sighed at the thought of stealing through the great
halls within. Even if he could find an open window,
or if the door were unlatched, how could he find the
girl?
Another thing troubled him. He
kept canting his ear with eternal expectation of hearing
the chorus of many hoofs swinging toward him out of
the darkness. After all, it was not a simple thing
to put Bill Dozier off the trail. When a horse
neighed in one of the corrals, Andy started violently
and laid his fingertips on his revolver butt.
That false alarm determined him to
make his attempt without further waste of time.
He swung from the stirrups and went lightly up the
front steps. His footfall was a feathery thing
that carried him like a shadow to the door. It
yielded at once under his hand, and, stepping through,
he found himself lost in utter blackness.
He closed the door, taking care that
the spring did not make the lock click, and then stood
perfectly motionless, listening, probing the dark.
After a time the shadows gave way
before his eyes, and he could make out that he was
in a hall with lofty ceiling. Something wound
down from above at a little distance, and he made
out that this was the stairway. Obviously the
bedrooms would be in the second story.
Andy began the ascent.
He had occasion to bless the thick
carpet before he was at the head of the stairs; he
could have run up if he had wished, and never have
made a sound. At the edge of the second hall
he paused again. The sense of people surrounded
him. Then directly behind him a man cleared his
throat. As though a great hand had seized his
shoulder and wrenched him down, Andy whirled and dropped
to his knees, the revolver in his hand pointing uneasily
here and there like the head of a snake laboring to
find its enemy.
But there was nothing in the hall.
The voice became a murmur, and then Andy knew that
it had been some man speaking in his sleep.
At least that room was not the room
of the girl. Or was she, perhaps, married?
Weak and sick, Andy rested his hand against the wall
and waited for his brain to clear. “She
won’t be married,” he whispered to himself
in the darkness.
But of all those doors up and down
the hall, which would be hers? There was no reasoning
which could help him in the midst of that puzzle.
He walked to what he judged to be the middle of the
hall, turned to his right, and opened the first door.
A hinge creaked, but it was no louder than the rustle
of silk against silk.
There were two windows in that room,
and each was gray with the dawn, but in the room itself
the blackness was unrelieved. There was the one
dim stretch of white, which was the covering of the
bed; the furniture, the chairs, and the table were
half merged with the shadows around them. Andy
slipped across the floor, evaded a chair by instinct
rather than by sight, and leaned over the bed.
It was a man, as he could tell by the heavy breathing;
yet he leaned closer in a vain effort to make surer
by the use of his eyes.
Then something changed in the face
of the man in the bed. It was an indescribable
change, but Andrew knew that the man had opened his
eyes. Before he could straighten or stir, hands
were thrown up. One struck at his face, and the
fingers were stiff; one arm was cast over his shoulders,
and Andy heard the intake of breath which precedes
a shriek. Not a long interval—no more,
say, than the space required for the lash of a snapping
blacksnake to flick back on itself—but in
that interim the hands of Andy were buried in the
throat of his victim.
His fingers, accustomed to the sway
and quiver of eight-pound hammers and fourteen-pound
sledges, sank through the flesh and found the windpipe.
And the hands of the other grappled at his wrists,
smashed into his face. Andy could have laughed
at the effort. He jammed the shin of his right
leg just above the knees of the other, and at once
the writhing body was quiet. With all of his
blood turned to ice, Andy found, what he had discovered
when he faced the crowd in Martindale, that his nerves
did not jump and that his heart, instead of trembling,
merely beat with greater pulses. Fear cleared
his brain; it sent a tremendous nervous power thrilling
in his wrists and elbows. All the while he was
watching mercilessly for the cessation of the struggles.
And when the wrenching at his forearms ceased he instantly
relaxed his grip.
For a time there was a harsh sound
filling the room, the rough intake of the man’s
breath; he was for the time being paralyzed and incapable
of any effort except the effort to fill his lungs.
By the glint of the metal work about the bits Andy
made out two bridles hanging on the wall near the
bed. Taking them down, he worked swiftly.
As soon as the fellow on the bed would have his breath
he would scream. Yet the time sufficed Andy;
he had his knife out, flicked the blade open, and cut
off the long reins of the bridles. Then he went
back to the bed and shoved the cold muzzle of his
revolver into the throat of the other.
There was a tremor through the whole
body of the man, and Andy knew that at that moment
the senses of his victim had cleared.
He leaned close to the ear of the
man and whispered: “Don’t make no
loud talk, partner. Keep cool and steady.
I don’t aim to hurt you unless you play the
fool.”
Instantly the man answered in a similar
whisper, though it was broken with panting: “Get
that coat of mine out the closet. There—the
door is open. You’ll find my wallet in
the inside pocket and about all you can want will
be in it.”
“That’s the way,”
reassured Andy. “Keep your head and use
sense. But it isn’t the coin I want.
You’ve got a red-headed girl in this house.
Where’s her room?”
His hand which held the revolver was
resting on the breast of the man, and he felt the
heart of the other leap. Then there was a current
of curses, a swift hissing of invective. And
suddenly it came over Andy that since he had killed
one man, as he thought, the penalty would be no greater
if he killed ten. All at once the life of this
prostrate fellow on the bed was nothing to him.
When he cut into that profanity he
meant what he said. “Partner, I’ve
got a pull on this trigger. There’s a slug
in this gun just trembling to get at you. And
I tell you honest, friend, I’d as soon drill
you as turn around. Now tell me where that girl’s
room is?”
“Anne Withero?” Only his
breathing was heard for a moment. Then: “Two
doors down, on this side of the hall. If you lay
a hand on her I’ll live to—”
“Partner, so help me heaven,
I wouldn’t touch a lock of her hair. Now
lie easy while I make sure of you.”
And he promptly trussed the other
in the bridle reins. Out of a pillowcase folded
hard he made a gag and tied it into the mouth of the
man. Then he ran his hands over the straps; they
were drawn taut.
“If you make any noise,”
he warned the other, “I’ll come back to
find out why. S’long.”