The Traitor (Dixon, 1907)/Book 2/Chapter 3
THE next morning Steve Hoyle left town and Stella began at once to put into execution her plan to entrap John Graham in the meshes of her beauty and deliver him to justice. She felt instinctively that if this man with his intense and romantic nature ever yielded to the spell of her love, there could be no limit to which he would not go at her bidding. With equal certainty she realised that the task would be a delicate one—a task which might put to the test every power she possessed. Her whole being rose to the work with a thrill of keen, cruel interest—the interest of the primitive huntress on track of the rarest, wildest and most daring game.
The first difficulty which apparently opened an impassable gulf between them was the suit which John Graham had begun to regain possession of the estate. The language in which his complaint had been drawn was the limit of bitter accusation permitted in a legal document—parts of it, indeed, the Court had ordered stricken from the record as scandalous and irrelevant.
Stella's eyes danced with excitement as she read in the morning's paper the announcement of his withdrawal of this suit. The news was accompanied by a brief statement which might have been written as a personal apology to her for the language he had used.
Without a moment's hesitation she seized her pen and wrote him an invitation to call. Her words revealed the deeply laid scheme on which her mind had seized in a flash of inspiration. She read and reread it carefully:
John Graham could not believe his senses when he first read this letter. The boy had turned and gone without waiting for an answer and he sat stupefied by a whirl of conflicting emotions.He read it again, bent and kissed her name. He had never before seen her handwriting. He studied it with curious interest. Its deep lines revealed with startling distinctness traits of a remarkable character. It was full of long strokes of the pen with equal emphasis across, up and down. The letters were unevenly formed, showing the self-willed, imperious spirit that had refused to copy the lines set by another hand, and yet the effect was pleasing and held the eye in a continuous surprise at its sensational curves and dashes. Through every line he felt the throb of an intense nature, which seemed to sink into inaudible whispers of emotion in the queer little twists of the pen with which each sentence ended.
He placed the note in an inner pocket. Had he received this invitation yesterday, he would have locked his doors, shouted and danced for joy at the opportunity to press her hand again and look into those deep brown eyes that haunted him waking or dreaming. Now it was a serious question. Within twenty-four hours he had received confirmation of two suspicions which had oppressed him since the night of Butler's death—that his father might have committed the deed and that Billy was in the party of masqueraders.
In either case, the stain of the Judge's blood was on the house of Graham and the Angel of Death stood with drawn sword barring the way of his happiness. He would not seek the hand of Stella with the blood of her father on his own. He would accept the moral responsibility of his father's act or that of his younger brother. He had reproached himself bitterly that he had neglected to know and teach his high-strung younger brother as he might. The mother dead, his father a hopeless mental invalid, Billy had grown up with no hand to guide his wayward fancy. It was not to be wondered at that he soon recognised no authority save that of his own will.
Stella's request had brought John face to face with the problems of his father and Billy. He must know the truth before he could answer that letter. Better to strangle the love that was fast swelling in his heart than wait until the hour when the call of love might drown the voice of honour.
He left his office and went at once to his father's room. The Major was dressed with his habitual care, his linen spotless, his boots carefully polished, his thin white hair brushed straight back from his high forehead. He was seated in his armchair, gently stroking with his chalk-white bony hand his delicate ghostly beard, while delivering to Alfred one of his interminable talks of the old life in the South. At times he forgot the war and the horrors which followed and reënacted the scenes of the past until his former slave, too full to bear more, would stop him tenderly, and get him to change the subject.
"Leave us awhile, Alfred," John said, on entering.
"Yassah," the old butler answered, bowing himself out with stately dignity.
John closed the door and drew his chair close to the Major's.
"Father, I want to ask you something very particular," be began.
The old man smiled indulgently.
"Well, out with it, you young rascal! You've been flying round her long enough. I knew it would come at last. So, she's got you, has she! Well, well, Jennie's a fine girl, my boy; I danced at her father's and mother's wedding. I wish I had more to give you. You'll have to be content with the lower plantation, and a dozen slaves to start with."
"Listen, father," John urged, stopping him with a gentle pressure on his arm. "And try to remember. Have you encountered Butler lately?"
"Change our butler!—what better butler do you want than Alfred? He's an aristocrat to his finger tips. I wouldn't think of reducing him from his present rank; what has he done to offend any one?"
"I mean the Judge who took the house—I mean Judge Butler."
"Ah! A man of low origin and no principle, my son—a renegade who betrayed his people for thirty pieces of silver—silver stained with blood—a dirty, contemptible office-seeker. I wouldn't lower myself by speaking to such a man."
"Yes, I know father," John broke in, "but I'm trying to recall to your memory the visits you have made at night lately to the old home."
"Of course, I love the old home. I was born here. I brought my bride here. I'll never leave it except for a better world."
John felt a lump rise in his throat and rose to go. It was useless. Besides, the thing was unthinkable. How could this feeble-old man spring on one of Butler's physique and stab him to death. He couldn't, except in a moment of superhuman frenzy which sometimes comes to the insane. There was the thought which returned again and again to torment him! Aunt Julie Ann declared the ghost was seen to pass through the hall and go upstairs but a few moments before the tragedy. Yes, it was possible.
John peered into his father's restless eyes with a mad desire to lift the mysterious veil that obscured the world from his vision. The horror of the sickening tragedy strangled him and he turned, abruptly leaving the room.
He sought Billy with a growing sense of helpless and bitter despair. Since the day of their brief quarrel which followed the demonstration before old Larkin, Billy had avoided John. Since Butler's death they had scarcely spoken. The effect of this tragedy on his headstrong younger brother first led John to suspect his membership in the newly organised Klan under Steve's leadership.
John found him in his room reading.
"Billy, I must have a serious talk with you," the older brother began.
"All right, sit down," the boy answered, laying aside his book.
"A youngster of eighteen who keeps to his room for days at a time and reads is either sick or has something on his mind."
"Which do you think?" Billy asked, looking vaguely out the window.
"I'll answer you by asking a question, and I want you to answer on the honour of a Graham. Are you a member of Steve Hoyle's Klan?"
"You have no right to ask that question," was the hot reply.
"Yes, I have," John slowly said, "for two reasons. As the organiser of the original Ku Klux Klan in this state I hold myself in a measure responsible for its existence even in its lowest forms. But that's not wall, my boy, you're my brother, and I love you."
Billy's eyes blinked and he looked at the ceiling. He had never heard such an expression from John's lips before.
"I wish I'd slipped my arm around you and told you that long ago. I've always been proud of your high-strung, sensitive spirit, proud in my own heart that we were of the same blood, and I want to ask you to forgive me for seeing so little of you and being of so little help to you."
A sob caught the boy's breath.
"You'll let me help you now?" John asked tenderly, extending his hand.
Billy rose trembling, his eyes running over with tears, took a step toward the door, turned and threw himself into John's arms, sobbing bitterly.
The older brother held him close for a moment in silence, and slowly said at last:
"Now tell me."
"I was at Judge Butler's that night!"
John sank to a chair with a groan.
"My God! I knew it!"
"But, of course, you know that I had nothing to do with any attack on a man in whose house I was a guest," he went on rapidly. "The whole thing is a horrible mystery to us all. Every man in our crowd was in the ballroom dancing."
"How did you know that?" John interrupted sharply.
"Because I counted them as they entered."
"You counted them?"
"Yes."
"Then you were in command of the crowd?"
Billy hesitated a moment, and said:
"Yes!"
John drew a deep breath and turned his head away in anguish.
"I could not resist the temptation to lead them. I wanted to see inside the old house again—you understand. I never dreamed of anything happening."
"None of the boys were drinking?"
"No, and there wasn't a fool among them—they were all my chums and friends in town."
"Then go at once and tell them that I say to put a thousand miles between them and this town in the next forty-eight hours—to Texas if possible."
"Why?" asked Billy with a touch of wounded pride.
"There are a hundred reasons—one is enough. There's a price on the head of the man who committed that crime."
"My men didn't do it!"
"Granted. But one of these fine days a white-livered traitor may crawl from your Klan and claim his reward of gold or office. You will be convicted in ten minutes."
Billy turned pale, and straightened his boyish figure.
"Well, I'll tell my men to go. I'll not run."
"You can serve your men best by going. The bravest general always knows when to retreat."
"I'll stand my ground."
"You must go. I can fight for you better with a thousand miles between us. I'll play a trick on my Yankee friends this time. I'm going to send you North into the enemy's country—to college."
Billy was trembling now with a new excitement. His heart was set on a college career and he hadn't as yet hoped to find the way.
"How will you do it?" he asked eagerly.
"Old Nickaroshinski will take my note. I'll borrow the money."
The boy smiled for the first time in a month.
"Oh! John, you've taken a load off my soul."
John's hand crushed the letter from Stella, which he was unconsciously grasping in his pocket.
"And you've piled one on my soul under which I'll stagger to the grave," he cried within, outwardly answering with a smile and warm grip of the hand as he said:
"Quick now, boy. Don't lose a minute. There will be some heart-broken mothers in town to-morrow night. There's but one choice: the plains of the West, or a prison pen."
"I'll go at once," Billy cried, seizing his hat and hastily leaving.
Pale and haggard, John slowly returned to his office. He looked at his watch. It was five minutes to three. Stella was waiting to receive him. He could hear the low sweet tones of her voice greeting him, and see her great brown eyes smiling their welcome.
But his mind was made up. Safety lay in flight. He wrote a brief reply to her letter.
Stella received the note with mingled surprise and rage, and immediately wired the Attorney General in the cipher code he had given her asking for the assistance for two months of the best detective the Secret Service could command. General Champion replied within two hours. "Mr. Ackerman leaves here to-night. He will report to you in Independence to-morrow."