<SPAN name="24"></SPAN><h2>24</h2>
<br/>
<p>That was the signal for the rush that swept across the floor and left a
flood of marveling men around the fallen Landis. On the outskirts of
this tide, Donnegan stepped up to two men, Joe Rix and the Pedlar. They
greeted him with expectant glances.</p>
<p>"Gentlemen," said Donnegan, "will you step aside?"</p>
<p>They followed him to a distance from the clamoring group.</p>
<p>"I have to thank you," said Donnegan.</p>
<p>"For what?"</p>
<p>"For changing your minds," said Donnegan, and left them.</p>
<p>And afterward the Pedlar murmured with an oddly twisted face: "Cat-eye,
Joe. He can see in the dark! But I told you he was worth savin'."</p>
<p>"Speakin' in general," said Joe, "which you ain't hardly ever wrong when
you get stirred up about a thing."</p>
<p>"He's something new," the Pedlar said wisely.</p>
<p>"Ay, he's rare."</p>
<p>"But talkin' aside, suppose he was to meet up with Lord Nick?"</p>
<p>The smile of Joe Rix was marvelously evil.</p>
<p>"You got a great mind for great things," he declared. "You ought to of
been in politics."</p>
<p>In the meantime the doctor had been found. The wound had been cleansed.
It was a cruel one, for the bullet had torn its way through flesh and
sinew, and for many a week the fighting arm of Jack Landis would be
useless. It had, moreover, carried a quantity of cloth into the wound,
and it was almost impossible to cleanse the hole satisfactorily. As for
the bullet itself, it had whipped cleanly through, at that short
distance making nothing of its target.</p>
<p>A door was knocked off its hinges. But before the wounded man was placed
upon it, Lebrun appeared at the door into Milligan's. He was never a
very cheery fellow in appearance, and now he looked like a demoniac. He
went straight to Joe Rix and the skeleton form of the Pedlar. He raised
one finger as he looked at them.</p>
<p>"I've heard," said Lebrun. "Lord Nick likewise shall hear."</p>
<p>Joe Rix changed color. He bustled about, together with the Pedlar, and
lent a hand in carrying the wounded man to the house of Lebrun, for
Nelly Lebrun was to be the nurse of Landis.</p>
<p>In the meantime, Donnegan went up the hill with big George behind him.
Already he was a sinisterly marked man. Working through the crowd near
Lebrun's gambling hall, a drunkard in the midst of a song stumbled
against him. But the sight of the man with whom he had collided, sobered
him as swiftly as the lash of a whip across his face. It was impossible
for him, in that condition, to grow pale. But he turned a vivid purple.</p>
<p>"Sorry, Mr. Donnegan."</p>
<p>Donnegan, with a shrug of his shoulders, passed on. The crowd split
before him, for they had heard his name. There were brave men, he knew,
among them. Men who would fight to the last drop of blood rather than be
shamed, but they shrank from Donnegan without shame, as they would have
shrunk from the coming of a rattler had their feet been bare. So he went
easily through the crowd with big George in his wake, walking proudly.</p>
<p>For George had stood to one side and watched Donnegan indomitably beat
down the will of Jack Landis, and the sight would live in his mind
forever. Indeed, if Donnegan had bidden the sun to stand in the heavens,
the big man would have looked for obedience. That the forbearance of
Donnegan should have been based on a desire to serve a girl certainly
upset the mind of George, but it taught him an amazing thing—that
Donnegan was capable of affection.</p>
<p>The terrible Donnegan went on. In his wake the crowd closed slowly, for
many had paused to look after the little man. Until they came to the
outskirts of the town and climbed the hill toward the two shacks. The
one was, of course, dark. But the shack in which Lou Macon lived burst
with light. Donnegan paused to consider this miracle. He listened, and
he heard voices—the voice of a man, laughing loudly. Thinking something
was wrong, he hurried forward and called loudly.</p>
<p>What he saw when he was admitted made him speechless. Colonel Macon,
ensconced in his invalid chair, faced the door, and near him was Lou
Macon. Lou rose, half-frightened by the unexpected interruption, but the
liquid laughter of the colonel set all to rights at once.</p>
<p>"Come in, Donnegan. Come in, lad," said the colonel.</p>
<p>"I heard a man's voice," Donnegan said half apologetically. The sick
color began to leave his face, and relief swept over it slowly. "I
thought something might be wrong. I didn't think of you." And looking
down, as all men will in moments of relaxation from a strain, he did not
see the eyes of Lou Macon grow softly luminous as they dwelt upon him.</p>
<p>"Come in, George," went on the colonel, "and make yourself comfortable
in the kitchen. Close the door. Sit down, Donnegan. When your letter
came I saw that I was needed here. Lou, have you looked into our
friend's cabin? No? Nothing like a woman's touch to give a man the
feeling of homeliness, Lou. Step over to Donnegan's cabin and put it to
rights. Yes, I know that George takes care of it, but George is one
thing, and your care will be another. Besides, I must be alone with him
for a moment. Man talk confuses a girl, Lou. You shouldn't listen to
it."</p>
<p>She withdrew with that faint, dreamy smile with which she so often heard
the instructions of her father; as though she were only listening with
half of her mind. When she was gone, though the door to the kitchen
stood wide open, and big George was in it, the colonel lowered his bass
voice so successfully that it was as safe as being alone with Donnegan.</p>
<p>"And now for facts," he began.</p>
<p>"But," said Donnegan, "how—that chair—how in the world have you come
here?"</p>
<p>The colonel shook his head.</p>
<p>"My dear boy, you grieve and disappoint me. The manner in which a thing
is done is not important. Mysteries are usually simply explained. As for
my small mystery—a neighbor on the way to The Corner with a wagon
stopped in, and I asked him to take me along. So here I am. But now for
your work here, lad?"</p>
<p>"Bad," said Donnegan.</p>
<p>"I gathered you had been unfortunate. And now you have been fighting?"</p>
<p>"You have heard?"</p>
<p>"I see it in your eye, Donnegan. When a man has been looking fear in the
face for a time, an image of it remains in his eyes. They are wider,
glazed with the other thing."</p>
<p>"It was forced on me," said Donnegan. "I have shot Landis."</p>
<p>He was amazed to see the colonel was vitally affected. His lips remained
parted over his next word, and one eyelid twitched violently. But the
spasm passed over quickly. When he raised his perfect hands and pressed
them together just under his chin. He smiled in a most winning manner
that made the blood of Donnegan run cold.</p>
<p>"Donnegan," he said softly, "I see that I have misjudged you. I
underestimated you. I thought, indeed, that your rare qualities were
qualified by painful weaknesses. But now I see that you are a man, and
from this moment we shall act together with open minds. So you have done
it? Tush, then I need not have taken my trip. The work is done; the
mines come to me as the heir of Jack. And yet, poor boy, I pity him! He
misjudged me; he should not have ventured to this deal with Lord Nick
and his compatriots!"</p>
<p>"Wait," exclaimed Donnegan. "You're wrong; Landis is not dead."</p>
<p>Once more the colonel was checked, but this time the alteration in his
face was no more than a comma's pause in a long balanced sentence. It
was impossible to obtain more than one show of emotion from him in a
single conversation.</p>
<p>"Not dead? Well, Donnegan, that is unfortunate. And after you had
punctured him you had no chance to send home the finishing shot?"</p>
<p>Donnegan merely watched the colonel and tapped his bony finger against
the point of his chin.</p>
<p>"Ah," murmured the colonel, "I see another possibility. It is almost as
good—it may even be better than his death. You have disabled him, and
having done this you at once take him to a place where he shall be under
your surveillance—this, in fact, is a very comfortable outlook—for me
and my interests. But for you, Donnegan, how the devil do you benefit by
having Jack flat on his back, sick, helpless, and in a perfect position
to excite all the sympathies of Lou?"</p>
<p>Now, Donnegan had known cold-blooded men in his day, but that there
existed such a man as the colonel had never come into his mind. He
looked upon the colonel, therefore, with neither disgust nor anger, but
with a distant and almost admiring wonder. For perfect evil always wins
something akin to admiration from more common people.</p>
<p>"Well," continued the colonel, a little uneasy under this silent
scrutiny—silence was almost the only thing in the world that could
trouble him—"well, Donnegan, my lad, this is your plan, is it not?"</p>
<p>"To shoot down Landis, then take possession of him and while I nurse him
back to health hold a gun—metaphorically speaking—to his head and make
him do as I please: sign some lease, say, of the mines to you?"</p>
<p>The colonel shifted himself to a more comfortable position in his chair,
brought the tips of his fingers together under his vast chin, and smiled
benevolently upon Donnegan.</p>
<p>"It is as I thought," he murmured. "Donnegan, you are rare; you are
exquisite!"</p>
<p>"And you," said Donnegan, "are a scoundrel."</p>
<p>"Exactly. I am very base." The colonel laughed. "You and I alone can
speak with intimate knowledge of me." His chuckle shook all his body,
and set the folds of his face quivering. His mirth died away when he saw
Donnegan come to his feet.</p>
<p>"Eh?" he called.</p>
<p>"Good-by," said Donnegan.</p>
<p>"But where—Landis—Donnegan, what devil is in your eye?"</p>
<p>"A foolish devil, Colonel Macon. I surrender the benefits of all my
work for you and go to make sure that you do not lay your hands upon
Jack Landis."</p>
<p>The colonel opened and closed his lips foolishly like a fish gasping
silently out of water. It was rare indeed for the colonel to appear
foolish.</p>
<p>"In heaven's name, Donnegan!"</p>
<p>The little man smiled. He had a marvelously wicked smile, which came
from the fact that his lips could curve while his eyes remained bright
and straight, and malevolently unwrinkled. He laid his hand on the knob
of the door.</p>
<p>"Donnegan," cried the colonel, gray of face, "give me one minute."</p>
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