The Highgrader. William MacLeod Raine

The Highgrader - William MacLeod Raine


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you have believed him guilty?"

      "No. He couldn't have done it."

      "On the same evidence you would acquit him and condemn me. Is that fair?"

      "I have known him for years—his standards, his ways of thinking. All his life he has schooled himself to run a straight course."

      "Whereas I——" He waited, the sardonic frosty smile on his lean strong face.

      Moya knew that the flutter of her pulses was telling tales in the pink of her cheeks. "I don't know you."

      "I'm only a workingman, and an American at that—so it follows that I must be a criminal," he answered with a touch of bitterness.

      "No—no! But you're—different. There's something untamed about you. I don't quite know how to put it—as if you had been brought up without restraints, as if you didn't care much for law."

      "Why should I? Law is a weapon to bolster up the rich and keep down the poor," he flung back with an acid smile. "But there's law and law. Even in our class we have our standards, such as they are."

      "Now it's you that isn't fair," she told him quietly. "You know I meant nothing like that. The point is that I don't know what your standards are. Law doesn't mean so much to people here. Your blood runs freer, less evenly than ours. You don't let the conventions hamper you."

      "The convention of honesty, for instance. Thanks, Miss Dwight."

      "I didn't want to believe it, but——"

      The penitence in her vivid face pleaded for her. He could not refuse the outstretched hand of this slender lance-straight girl whose sweet vitality was at once so delicate and so gallant. Reluctantly his palm met hers.

      "You're quite sure now that I didn't do it?"

      "Quite sure."

      "Even though I've been brought up badly?"

      "Oh, I didn't say badly—really. You know I didn't."

      "And though I'm wild and lawless?"

      "Aren't you?" she flashed back with a smile that took from the words any sting they might otherwise have had.

      Mirth overflowed in his eyes, from which now many little creases radiated. "You're a good one, neighbor. But, since you will have it, I am. I reckon my standards even of honesty wouldn't square with yours. I live in a rough mining camp where questions have two sides. It's up to me to play the game the way the other fellow plays it. But we'll not go into that now."

      Strong, clear-eyed and masterful, she knew him a man among ten thousand. He might be capable of great sin, but what he did would be done with his eyes wide open and not from innate weakness. Her heart sang jubilantly. How could she ever have dreamed this crime of him? Her trust was now a thing above any evidence.

      "And you'll sit down with me now if I ask you, neighbor," he laughed.

      She did not wait to be asked, but sat down, tailor fashion, and looked expectantly up with a humorous little twist of the eyebrows. Flakes of dappled sunlight played on her through the moving leaves and accented the youthful bloom of her.

      With a sigh of content he stretched himself on the sun-warmed loam. His glance swept up the gulch, a sword cleft in the hills, passed over the grove of young pines through which he had recently descended, and came back to the slim Irish girl sitting erectly on the turf.

      "It's sometimes a mighty good world, neighbor," he said.

      "I'm thinking that myself," she admitted, laughter welling softly out of her.

      The sun lit the tips of the pines, so that they looked like burnished lances in battle array, poured its beams over the scarred hillside, and bathed the little valley in effulgent glory.

      "You can always find it somewhere," he said with deep content, leaning on an elbow indolently.

      She asked for no antecedent to his pronoun. What he meant was not ambiguous to her.

      "If one knows where to look for it," she added softly.

      "That's the trouble. We get so busy with our little everyday troubles that we forget to look. But the joy of life is always there if we'll forget our grouch and see it."

      "Yes—if having eyes we see."

      "I'm comforted a heap to know that you believe in me—even if I'm not Captain Kilmeny," he assured her with his slow rippling laugh.

      Had he been looking at her he would have seen the telltale color tide her cheeks. "If that is a comfort you are welcome to it. I might have known the idea of connecting you with such a thing was folly."

      He glanced whimsically at her. "Don't be too sure of me, neighbor. I'm likely to disappoint you. What one person thinks is right another knows is wrong. You'd have to make a heap of allowances for me if I were your friend."

      "Isn't that what friendship is for—to make allowances?"

      "You've found that out already, have you?"

      The long-lashed lids fell to her cheeks in self-defense. Not for worlds would she have had him guess the swift message ready to leap out toward him. He seemed to be drawing her soul to his unconsciously. Tingling in every nerve, athrob with an emotion new and inexplicable, she drew a long slow breath and turned her head away. A hot shame ran like quicksilver through her veins. She whipped herself with her own scorn. Was she the kind of girl that gave her love to a man who did not want it?

      His next words brought to her the shock she needed, the effect of a plunge into icy water on a warm day.

      "What about your friends—what about Miss Seldon—did she believe me guilty too?" He could not quite keep the self-consciousness out of his voice.

      "Hadn't you better ask her that?" she suggested.

      In spite of his interest in their talk, Kilmeny's alert eyes had swept again and again the trail leading up the gulch. He did not intend to be caught napping by the officers. Now he rose and offered her a hand up.

      "Your friends are coming."

      Swiftly Moya came to earth from her emotions. In another moment she was standing beside the fugitive, her gaze on the advancing group. Captain Kilmeny was in the lead and was the first to recognize her companion. If he was surprised, his voice failed to show it.

      "No, no, Verinder. I had him hooked all right," he was saying. "Dashed poor generalship lost him. He went into the rushes like a shot. I persuaded him out—had him in the open water. Looked to me like a two to one shot, hang it. Mr. Trout develops a bad break to the off and heads under a big log. Instead of moving down the bank I'm ass enough to reel from where I hooked him. Leader snaps, and Mr. Trout has the laugh on me."

      To the sound of that high cheerful voice Moya roused at once. The rapt expression died from her face.

      "How many?" called India, holding up her string.

      "I haven't been fishing," Moya answered; then gave herself away. "It surely isn't time for luncheon already."

      She took a step toward her friends, so that for the first time Jack Kilmeny stood plainly revealed. India's pretty piquant face set to a red-lipped soundless whistle. Joyce stared in frank amusement. Verinder, rutted in caste and respectability as only a social climber dubious of his position can be, ejaculated a "God bless my soul!" and collapsed beyond further articulation. Captain Kilmeny nodded to the Westerner without embarrassment.

      "Mornin', Mr. Crumbs."

      "Good-morning. But you have the name wrong, sir."

      "Beg pardon." The captain's eyebrows lifted in inquiry.

      "Kilmeny," the American corrected.

      Nonchalantly the captain came to time. "Same name as ours. Wonder if by any chance we're of the same family. Happen to be any relation of Archibald Kilmeny, who died in Colorado fifteen years ago?"

      Jack


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