<h2>CHAPTER XII</h2>
<h3>MYSTERIOUS FINDINGS</h3></div>
<p>Monday morning Elder Craigmile walked to the bank
with the stubborn straightening of the knees at each step
that always betokened irritation with him. Neither of
the young men had appeared at breakfast, a matter peculiarly
annoying to him. Peter Junior he had not expected
to see, as, owing to his long period of recovery, he had
naturally been excused from rigorous rules, but his nephew
surely might have done that much out of courtesy, where
he had always been treated as a son, to promote the orderliness
of the household. It was unpardonable in the young
man to lie abed in the morning thus when a guest in that
home. It was a mistake of his wife to allow Peter Junior
a night key. It induced late hours. He would take it
from him. And as for Richard––there was no telling what
habits he had fallen into during these years of wandering.
What if he had come home to them with a clear skin and
laughing eye! Was not the “heart of man deceitful above
all things and desperately wicked”? And was not Satan
abroad in the world laying snares for the feet of wandering
youths?</p>
<p>It was still early enough for many of the workmen to be
on their way to their day of labor with their tin dinner pails,
and among them Mr. Walters passed him, swinging his pail
with the rest, although he was master of his own foundry
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_140' name='page_140'></SPAN>140</span>
and employed fifty men. He had always gone early to
work, and carried his tin pail when he was one of the workmen,
and he still did it from choice. He, too, was a Scotchman
of a slightly different class from the Elder, it is true,
but he was a trustee of the church, and a man well respected
in the community.</p>
<p>He touched his hat to the Elder, and the Elder nodded
in return, but neither spoke a word. Mr. Walters smiled
after he was well past. “The man has a touch of the indigestion,”
he said.</p>
<p>When the Elder entered his front door at noon, his first
glance was at the rack in the corner of the hall, where, on
the left-hand hook, Peter Junior’s coat and hat had hung
when he was at home, ever since he was a boy. They were
not there. The Elder lifted his bushy brows one higher
than the other, then drew them down to their usual straight
line, and walked on into the dining room. His wife was
not there, but in a moment she entered, looking white and
perturbed.</p>
<p>“Peter!” she said, going up to her husband instead of
taking her place opposite him, “Peter!” She laid a trembling
hand on his arm. “I haven’t seen the boys this morning.
Their beds have not been slept in.”</p>
<p>“Quiet yourself, lass, quiet yourself. Sit and eat in
peace. ‘Evil communications corrupt good manners,’
but when doom strikes him, he’ll maybe experience a change
of heart.” The Elder spoke in a tone not unkindly. He
seated himself heavily.</p>
<p>Then his wife silently took her place at the table and he
bowed his head and repeated the grace to which she had
listened three times a day for nearly thirty years, only that
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_141' name='page_141'></SPAN>141</span>
this time he added the request that the Lord would, in his
“merciful kindness, strike terror to the hearts of all evildoers
and turn them from their way.”</p>
<p>When the silent meal was ended, Hester followed her
husband to the door and laid a detaining hand on his arm.
He stood and looked down on that slender white hand as if
it were something that too sudden a movement would
joggle off, and she did not know that it was as if she had
laid her hand on his very heart. “Peter, tell me what
happened yesterday afternoon. You should tell me,
Peter.”</p>
<p>Then the Elder did an unwonted thing. He placed his
hand over hers and pressed it harder on his arm, and after
an instant’s pause he stooped and kissed her on the forehead.</p>
<p>“I spoke the lad fair, Hester, and made him an offer, but
he would none of it. He thinks he is his own master, but I
have put him in the Lord’s hands.”</p>
<p>“Has he gone, Peter?”</p>
<p>“Maybe, but the offer I made him was a good one.
Comfort your heart, lass. If he’s gone, he will return.
When the Devil holds the whip, he makes a hard bargain,
and drives fast. When the boy is hard pressed, he will be
glad to return to his father’s house.”</p>
<p>“Richard’s valise is gone. The maid says he came late
yesterday after I was gone, and took it away with him.”</p>
<p>“They are likely gone together.”</p>
<p>“But Peter’s things are all here. No, they would never
go like that and not bid me good-by.”</p>
<p>The Elder threw out his hands with his characteristic
downward gesture of impatience. “I have no way of
knowing, more than you. It is no doubt that Richard has
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_142' name='page_142'></SPAN>142</span>
become a ne’er-do-weel. He felt shame to tell us he was
going a journey on the Sabbath day.”</p>
<p>“Oh, Peter, I think not. Peter, be just. You know your
son was never one to let the Devil drive; he is like yourself,
Peter. And as for Richard, Peter Junior would never think
so much of him if he were a ne’er-do-weel.”</p>
<p>“Women are foolish and fond. It is their nature, and
perhaps that is how we love them most, but the men should
rule, for their own good. A man should be master in his
own house. When the lad returns, the door is open to him.
That is enough.”</p>
<p>With a sorrowful heart he left her, and truth to tell, the
sorrow was more for his wife’s hurt than for his own. The
one great tenderness of his life was his feeling for her, and
this she felt rather than knew; but he believed himself
absolutely right and that the hurt was inevitable, and for
her was intensified by her weakness and fondness.</p>
<p>As for Hester, she turned away from the door and went
quietly about her well-ordered house, directing the maidservant
and looking carefully over her husband’s wardrobe.
Then she did the same for Peter Junior’s, and at last, taking
her basket of mending, she sat in the large, lace-curtained
window looking out toward the west––the direction from
which Peter Junior would be likely to come. For how
long she would sit there during the days to come––waiting––she
little knew.</p>
<p>She was comforted by the thought of the talk she had had
with him the day before. She knew he was upright, and
she felt that this quarrel––if it had been a quarrel––with
his father would surely be healed; and then, there was
Betty to call him back. The love of a girl was a good thing
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_143' name='page_143'></SPAN>143</span>
for a man. It would be stronger to draw him and hold
him than love of home or of mother; it was the divine way
for humanity, and it was a good way, and she must be patient
and wait.</p>
<p>She was glad she had gone without delay to Mary Ballard.
The two women were fond of each other, and the visit had
been most satisfactory. Betty she had not seen, for the
maiden was still sleeping the long, heavy sleep which saves
a normal healthy body from wreck after severe emotion.
Betty was so young––it might be best that matters should
wait awhile as they were.</p>
<p>If Peter Junior went to Paris now, he would have to earn
his own way, of course, and possibly he had gone west with
Richard where he could earn faster than at home. Maybe
that had been the grounds of the quarrel. Surely she would
hear from him soon. Perhaps he had taken their talk on
Sunday afternoon as a good-by to her; or he might yet
come to her and tell her his plans. So she comforted herself
in the most wholesome and natural way.</p>
<p>Richard’s action in taking his valise away during her
absence and leaving no word of farewell for her was more of
a surprise to her. But then––he might have resented the
Elder’s attitude and sided with his cousin. Or, he might
have feared he would say things he would afterwards regret,
if he appeared, and so have taken himself quietly away.
Still, these reasons did not wholly appeal to her, and she
was filled with misgivings for him even more than for her
son.</p>
<p>Peter Junior she trusted absolutely and Richard she loved
as a son; but there was much of his father in him, and the
Irish nature was erratic and wild, as the Elder said. Where
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_144' name='page_144'></SPAN>144</span>
was that father now? No one knew. It was one of the
causes for anxiety she had for the boy that his father had
been lost to them all ever since Richard’s birth and his
wife’s death. He had gone out of their lives as completely
as a candle in a gale of wind. She had mothered the boy,
and the Elder had always been kind to him for his own dead
sister’s sake, but of the father they never spoke.</p>
<p>It was while Hester Craigmile sat in her western window,
thinking her thoughts, that two lads came hurrying down
the bluff from the old camp ground, breathless and awed.
One carried a straw hat, and the other a stout stick––a
stick with an irregular knob at the end. It was Larry
Kildene’s old blackthorn that Peter Junior had been carrying.
The Ballards’ home was on the way between the bluff
and the village, and Mary Ballard was standing at their
gate watching for the children from school. She wished
Jamie to go on an errand for her.</p>
<p>Mary noticed the agitation of the boys. They were
John Walters and Charlie Dean––two chums who were
always first to be around when there was anything unusual
going on, or to be found. It was they who discovered the
fire in the foundry in time to have it put out. It was they
who knew where the tramps were hiding who had been
stealing from the village stores, and now Mary wondered
what they had discovered. She left the gate swinging open
and walked down to meet them.</p>
<p>“What is it, boys?”</p>
<p>“We––we––found these––and––there’s something
happened,” panted the boys, both speaking at once.</p>
<p>She took the hat of white straw from John’s hand.
“Why! This is Peter Junior’s hat! Where did you find
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_145' name='page_145'></SPAN>145</span>
it?” She turned it about and saw dark red stains, as if
it had been grasped by a bloody hand––finger marks of
blood plainly imprinted on the rim.</p>
<p>“And this, Mrs. Ballard,” said Charlie, putting Peter
Junior’s stick in her hand, and pointing to the same red
stains sunken into the knob. “We think there’s been a
fight and some one’s been hit with this.”</p>
<p>She took it and looked at it in a dazed way. “Yes. He
was carrying this in the place of his crutch,” she said, as if
to herself.</p>
<p>“We think somebody’s been pushed over the bluff into
the river, Mrs. Ballard, for they’s a hunk been tore out as
big as a man, from the edge, and it’s gone clean over, and
down into the river. We can see where it is gone. And
it’s an awful swift place.”</p>
<p>She handed the articles back to the boys.</p>
<p>“Sit down in the shade here, and I’ll bring you some sweet
apples, and if any one comes by, don’t say anything about it
until I have time to consult with Mr. Ballard.”</p>
<p>She hurried back and passed quickly around the house,
and on to her husband, who was repairing the garden
fence.</p>
<p>“Bertrand, come with me quickly. Something serious
has happened. I don’t want Betty to hear of it until we
know what it is.”</p>
<p>They hastened to the waiting boys, and together they
slowly climbed the long path leading to the old camping
place. Bertrand carried the stick and the hat carefully,
for they were matters of great moment.</p>
<p>“This looks grave,” he said, when the boys had told him
their story.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_146' name='page_146'></SPAN>146</span></div>
<p>“Perhaps we ought to have brought some one with us––if
anything––” said Mary.</p>
<p>“No, no; better wait and see, before making a stir.”</p>
<p>It was a good half hour’s walk up the hill, and every
moment of the time seemed heavily freighted with foreboding.
They said no more until they reached the spot
where the boys had found the edge of the bluff torn away.
There, for a space of about two feet only, back from the
brink, the sparse grass was trampled, and the earth showed
marks of heels and in places the sod was freshly torn up.</p>
<p>“There’s been something happened here, you see,” said
Charlie Dean.</p>
<p>“Here is where a foot has been braced to keep from being
pushed over; see, Mary? And here again.”</p>
<p>“I see indeed.” Mary looked, and stooping, picked something
from the ground that glinted through the loosened
earth. She held it on her open palm toward Bertrand, and
the two boys looked intently at it. Her husband did not
touch it, but glanced quickly into her eyes and then at the
boys. Then her fingers closed over it, and taking her handkerchief
she tied it in one corner securely.</p>
<p>“Did you ever see anything like it, boys?” she asked.</p>
<p>“No, ma’am. It’s a watch charm, isn’t it? Or what?”</p>
<p>“I suppose it must be.”</p>
<p>“I guess the fellah that was being pushed over must ’a’
grabbed for the other fellah’s watch. Maybe he was trying
to rob him.”</p>
<p>“Let’s see whether we can find anything else,” said John
Walters, peering over the bluff.</p>
<p>“Don’t, John, don’t. You may fall over. It might have
been a fall, and one of them might have been trying to save
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_147' name='page_147'></SPAN>147</span>
the other, you know. He might have caught at him and
pulled this off. There’s no reason why we should surmise
the worst.”</p>
<p>“They might ha’ been playing––you know––wrestling––and
it might ’a’ happened so,” said Charlie.</p>
<p>“Naw! They’d been big fools to wrestle so near the
edge of the bluff as this,” said the practical John. “I see
something white way down there, Mrs. Ballard. I can get
it, I guess.”</p>
<p>“But take care, John. Go further round by the path.”</p>
<p>Both boys ran along the bluff until they came to a path
that led down to the river. “Do be careful, boys!” called
Mary.</p>
<p>“Now, let me see that again, my dear,” and Mary untied
the handkerchief. “Yes, it is what I thought. That belonged
to Larry Kildene. He got it in India, although he
said it was Chinese. He was a year in the British service in
India. I’ve often examined it. I should have known it
anywhere. He must have left it with Hester for the boy.”</p>
<p>“Poor Larry! And it has come to this. I remember
it on Richard’s chain when he came out there to meet us in
the grove. Bertrand, what shall we do? They must have
been here––and have quarreled––and what has happened!
I’m going back to ask Betty.”</p>
<p>“Ask Betty! My dear! What can Betty know about
it?”</p>
<p>“Something upset her terribly yesterday morning. She
was ill and with no cause that I could see, and I believe she
had had a nervous shock.”</p>
<p>“But she seemed all right this morning,––a little pale,
but otherwise quite herself.” Bertrand turned the little
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_148' name='page_148'></SPAN>148</span>
charm over in his hand. “He thought it was Chinese
because it is jade, but this carving is Egyptian. I don’t
think it is jade, and I don’t think it is Chinese.”</p>
<p>“But whatever it is, it was on Richard’s chain Saturday,”
said Mary, sadly. “And now, what can we do? On
second thought I’ll say nothing to Betty. If a tragedy has
come upon the Craigmiles, it will also fall on her now, and
we must spare her all of it we can, until we know.”</p>
<p>A call came to them from below, and Bertrand hastily
handed the charm back to his wife, and she tied it again in
her handkerchief.</p>
<p>“Oh, Bertrand, don’t go near that terrible brink.
It might give way. I’m sure this has been an accident.”</p>
<p>“But the stick, Mary, and the marks of blood on Peter
Junior’s hat. I’m afraid––afraid.”</p>
<p>“But they were always fond of each other. They have
been like brothers.”</p>
<p>“And quarrels between brothers are often the bitterest.”</p>
<p>“But we have never heard of their quarreling, and they
were so glad to see each other Saturday. And you know
Peter Junior was always possessed to do whatever Richard
planned. They were that way about enlisting, you remember,
and everything else. What cause could Richard
have against Peter Junior?”</p>
<p>“We can’t say it was Richard against Peter. You see
the stick was bloody, and it was Peter’s. We must offer
no opinion, no matter what we think, for the world may turn
against the wrong one, and only time will tell.”</p>
<p>They both were silent as the boys came panting up the
bank. “Here’s a handkerchief. It was what I saw. It
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_149' name='page_149'></SPAN>149</span>
was caught on a thorn bush, and here––here’s Peter
Junior’s little notebook, with his name––”</p>
<p>“This is Peter’s handkerchief. P. C. J. Hester Craigmile
embroidered those letters.” Mary’s eyes filled with tears.
“Bertrand, we must go to her. She may hear in some
terrible way.”</p>
<p>“And the book, where was that, John?”</p>
<p>“It was lying on that flat rock. John had to crawl along
the ledge on his belly to get it; and here, I found this lead
pencil,” cried Charlie, excited and important.</p>
<p>“‘Faber No. 2.’ Yes, this was also Peter’s.” Bertrand
shut it in the notebook. “Mary, this looks sinister. We’d
better go down. There’s nothing more to learn here.”</p>
<p>“Maybe we’ll find the young men both safely at home.”</p>
<p>“Richard was to leave early this morning.”</p>
<p>“I remember.”</p>
<p>Sadly they returned, and the two boys walked with them,
gravely and earnestly propounding one explanation after
another.</p>
<p>“You’d better go back to the house, Mary, and I’ll go
on to the village with the boys. We’ll consult with your
father, John; he’s a thoughtful man, and––”</p>
<p>“And he’s a coroner, too––” said John.</p>
<p>“Yes, but if there’s nobody found, who’s he goin’ to sit
on?”</p>
<p>“They don’t sit on the body, they sit on the jury,” said
John, with contempt.</p>
<p>“Don’t I know that? But they’ve got to find the body,
haven’t they, before they can sit on anything? Guess I
know that much.”</p>
<p>“Now, boys,” said Bertrand, “this may turn out to be a
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_150' name='page_150'></SPAN>150</span>
very grave matter, and you must keep silent about it. It
won’t do to get the town all stirred up about it and all manner
of rumors afloat. It must be looked into quietly first,
by responsible people, and you must keep all your opinions
and surmises to yourselves until the truth can be learned.”</p>
<p>“Don’t walk, Bertrand; take the carryall, and these can
be put under the seat. Boys, if you’ll go back there in the
garden, you’ll find some more apples, and I’ll fetch you
out some cookies to go with them.” The boys briskly
departed. “I don’t want Betty to see them, and we’ll be
silent until we know what to tell her,” Mary added, as they
walked slowly up the front path.</p>
<p>Bertrand turned off to the stable, carrying the sad trophies
with him, and Mary entered the house. She looked first for
Betty, but no Betty was to be found, and the children were
at home clamoring for something to eat. They always
came home from school ravenously hungry. Mary hastily
packed them a basket of fruit and cookies and sent them to
play picnic down by the brook. Still no Betty appeared.</p>
<p>“Where is she?” asked Bertrand, as he entered the
kitchen after bringing up the carryall.</p>
<p>“I don’t know. She may have gone over to Clara Dean’s.
She spoke of going there to-day. I’m glad––rather.”</p>
<p>“Yes, yes.”</p>
<p>A little later in the day, almost closing time at the bank,
James Walters and Bertrand Ballard entered and asked to
see the Elder. They were shown into the director’s room,
and found him seated alone at the great table in the center.
He pushed his papers one side and rose, greeting them with
his grave courtesy, as usual.</p>
<p>Mr. Walters, a shy man of few words, looked silently at
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_151' name='page_151'></SPAN>151</span>
Mr. Ballard to speak, while the Elder urged them to be
seated. “A warm day for the season, and very pleasant
to have it so. We’ll hope the winter may come late this
year.”</p>
<p>“Yes, yes. We wish to inquire after your son, Elder
Craigmile. Is he at home to-day?”</p>
<p>“Ah, yes. He was not at home––not when I left this
noon.” The Elder cleared his throat and looked keenly
at his friend. “Is it––ahem––a matter of business, Mr.
Ballard?”</p>
<p>“Unfortunately, no. We have come to inquire if he––when
he was last at home––or if his cousin––has been
with you?”</p>
<p>“Not Richard, no. He came unexpectedly and has gone
with as little ceremony, but my son was here on the Sabbath––ahem––He
dined that day with you, Mr. Ballard?”</p>
<p>“He did––but––Elder, will you come with us? A
matter with regard to him and his cousin should be looked
into.”</p>
<p>“It is not necessary for me to interfere in matters regarding
my son any longer. He has taken the ordering of
his life in his own hands hereafter. As for Richard, he has
long been his own master.”</p>
<p>“Elder, I beg you to come with us. We fear foul play
of some sort. It is not a question now of family differences
of opinion.”</p>
<p>The Elder’s face remained immovable, and Bertrand reluctantly
added, “We fear either your son or his cousin,
possibly both of them, have met with disaster––maybe
murder.”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_152' name='page_152'></SPAN>152</span></div>
<p>A pallor crept over the Elder’s face, and without a word
further he took his hat from a hook in the corner of the
room, paused, and then carefully arranged the papers he had
pushed aside at their entrance and placing them in his desk,
turned the key, still without a word. At the door he
waited a moment with his hand on the knob, and with the
characteristic lift of his brows, asked: “Has anything been
said to my wife?”</p>
<p>“No, no. We thought best to do nothing until under
your direction.”</p>
<p>“Thank you. That’s well. Whatever comes, I would
spare her all I can.”</p>
<p>The three then drove slowly back to the top of the bluff,
and on the way Bertrand explained to the Elder all that had
transpired. “It seemed best to Mary and me that you
should look the ground over yourself, before any action be
taken. We hoped appearances might be deceptive, and that
you would have information that would set our fears at
rest before news of a mystery should reach the town.”</p>
<p>“Where are the boys who found these things?”</p>
<p>Mr. Walters spoke, “My son was one of them, and he is
now at home. They are forbidden to speak to any one until
we know more about it.”</p>
<p>Arrived at the top of the bluff the three men went carefully
over the ground, even descending the steep path to the
margin of the river.</p>
<p>“There,” said Bertrand, “the notebook was picked up on
that flat rock which juts out from that narrow ledge. John
Walters crawled along the ledge to get it. The handkerchief
was caught on that thorn shrub, halfway up, see? And the
pencil was picked up down here, somewhere.”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_153' name='page_153'></SPAN>153</span></div>
<p>The Elder looked up to the top of the bluff and down at
the rushing river beneath, and as he looked he seemed visibly
to shrink and become in the instant an old man––older by
twenty years. As they climbed back again, his shoulders
drooped and his breath came hard. As they neared the top,
Bertrand turned and gave him his aid to gain a firm footing
above.</p>
<p>“Don’t forget that we can’t always trust to appearances,”
he urged.</p>
<p>“Some heavy body––heavier than a clod of earth, has
gone down there,” said the Elder, and his voice sounded
weak and thin.</p>
<p>“Yes, yes. But even so, a stone may have been dislodged.
You can’t be sure.”</p>
<p>“Ay, the lads might have been wrestling in play––or the
like––and sent a rock over; it’s like lads, that,” hazarded
Mr. Walters.</p>
<p>“Wrestling on the Sabbath evening! They are men, not
lads.”</p>
<p>Mr. Walters looked down in embarrassment, and the old
man continued. “Would a stone leave a handkerchief
clinging to a thorn? Would it leave a notebook thrown
down on yonder rock?” The Elder lifted his head and
looked to the sky: holding one hand above his head he shook
it toward heaven. “Would a stone leave a hat marked with
a bloody hand––my son’s hat? There has been foul play
here. May the curse of God fall on him who has robbed me
of my son, be he stranger or my own kin.”</p>
<p>His voice broke and he reeled backward and would have
fallen over the brink but for Bertrand’s quickness. Then,
trembling and bowed, his two friends led him back to the
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_154' name='page_154'></SPAN>154</span>
carryall and no further word was spoken until they reached
the village, when the Elder said:––</p>
<p>“Will you kindly drive me to the bank, Mr. Ballard?”</p>
<p>They did so. No one was there, and the Elder quietly
unlocked the door and carried the articles found on the bluff
into the room beyond and locked them away. Bertrand
followed him, loath to leave him thus, and anxious to make
a suggestion. The Elder opened the door of a cupboard
recessed into the wall and laid the hat on a high shelf. Then
he took the stick and looked at it with a sudden awakening
in his eyes as if he saw it for the first time.</p>
<p>“This stick––this blackthorn stick––accursed! How
came it here? I thought it had been burned. It was left
years ago in my front hall by––Richard’s father. I condemned
it to be burned.”</p>
<p>“Peter Junior was using that in place of his crutch,
no doubt because of its strength. He had it at my house,
and I recognize it now as one Larry brought over with
him––”</p>
<p>“Peter was using it! My God! My God! The blow
was struck with this. It is my son who is the murderer,
and I have called down the curse of God on him? It falls––it
falls on me!” He sank in his chair––the same in
which he had sat when he talked with Peter Junior––and
bowed his head in his arms. “It is enough, Mr. Ballard.
Will you leave me?”</p>
<p>“I can’t leave you, sir: there is more to be said. We
must not be hasty in forming conclusions. If any one was
thrown over the bluff, it must have been your son, for he
was lame and could not have saved himself. If he struck
any one, he could not have killed him; for evidently he
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got away, unless he also went over the brink. If he got
away, he must be found. There is something for you to
do, Elder Craigmile.”</p>
<p>The old man lifted his head and looked in Bertrand’s
face, pitifully seeking there for help. “You are a good man,
Mr. Ballard. I need your counsel and help.”</p>
<p>“First, we will go below the rapids and search; the sooner
the better, for in the strong current there is no telling how
far––”</p>
<p>“Yes, we will search.” The Elder lifted himself to his
full height, inspired by the thought of action. “We’ll go
now.” He looked down on his shorter friend, and Bertrand
looked up to him, his genial face saddened with sympathy,
yet glowing with kindliness.</p>
<p>“Wait a little, Elder; let us consider further. Mr. Walters––sit
down, Elder Craigmile, for a moment––Mr. Walters
is capable, and he can organize the search; for if you keep
this from your wife, you must be discreet. Here is something
I haven’t shown you before. It is the charm from
Richard’s watch. It was almost covered with earth where
they had been struggling, and Mary found it. You see there
is a mystery––and let us hope whatever happened was an
accident. The evidences are so––so––mingled, that no
one may know whom to blame.”</p>
<p>The Elder looked down on the charm without touching
it, as it lay on Bertrand’s palm. “That belonged––” his
lips twitched––“that belonged to the man who took from
me my twin sister. The shadow––forever the shadow of
Larry Kildene hangs over me.” He was silent for some
moments, then he said: “Mr. Ballard, if, after the search,
my son is found to be murdered, I will put a detective on
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the trail of the man who did the deed, and be he whom he
may, he shall hang.”</p>
<p>“Hush, Elder Craigmile; in Wisconsin men are not
hanged.”</p>
<p>“I tell you––be he whom he may––he shall suffer what
is worse than to be hanged, he shall enter the living grave of
a life imprisonment.”</p>
<hr class='toprule' />
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<SPAN name='CHAPTER_XIII_CONFESSION' id='CHAPTER_XIII_CONFESSION'></SPAN>
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