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this very spot long before; and with that glimpse of a woman’s garb in the darkness at the time of the night attack on the Big House.

There was no time to ponder upon these things. The dogs passed over the trampled ground in front of the building, sniffed at the door, circled the building, sniffed at the windows, passed slowly into the empty room when the door was opened for them. Then they drew apart again, and, wailing once more solemnly, headed back along a path which presently brought all into the plain road to the railway station. The procession moved more rapidly now, and presently it had crossed the railway track and turned into the lane which led up to the Big House, the dogs threading without hesitation the maze of footprints which covered all the ground thereabout. They came on with heads down and tails slowly moving, now and again giving utterance to their long and mournful note, until presently they and those who followed them were met at the yard gate by Colonel Blount, who came down to greet the sheriff of the county, whom he knew very well.

“Jim,” said he, “I know you and your dogs, and I know what you’re doing. It’s all right, but I want to warn you to be mighty careful about my own dogs. They won’t run with any other pack, and they’ll kill a strange dog just as sure as they can get to him.”

The sheriff looked at him and shook his head, as if to say that justice must have its course. Blount made no further objection, and the three trailing dogs, entering the gate, now crossed the lawn and passed around the corner of the house toward the quarters of the servants, beyond which lay the kennels of the fighting Big House pack. The baying of these dogs, penned up, had been incessant. They could tolerate no thought of intelligence other than their own at this work. They were born and trained to fight, and knew no kinship with their species. It had been better for Jim Peters, sheriff of Tullahoma, had he taken the advice of the master of the Big House; for as he turned into the yard at the rear of the house, the prediction of the latter came true, and so swiftly that none saw how it chanced.

Who loosed the gate no one ever knew; but certainly it was opened, and the fighting bear-pack came boiling out, eager for any foe. There was ineffectual shouting over a mass of writhing, snarling creatures of many colors. In a moment the solemn-faced emissaries of justice lay dead and mangled on an unfinished trail. Blount caught the sheriff’s hand as it moved toward his revolver.

“It’s no use shooting the dogs, Jim,” said he. “You’ve run the trail fair to here, and you know I’ll help you run it to the end. I don’t know what to say. Hell’s broke loose in the Delta.”

CHAPTER XVI THE TRAVELING-BAG

The sheriff turned upon Blount his grave face, and for a time made no answer. “You’re right, Cal,” said he, at length. “Things are bad down here. It’s no nigger planned this thing. But if it wasn’t, then who did?”

“I don’t know,” said Blount. “Some day, my friend, we’ll find out, and then we’ll see whether or not there’s any law left in the Delta for people who do things like that.” He pointed toward the spot where a long line of men were now busily engaged in removing from the rails the fragments of what had been train Number 4.

“Come into the house, men,” said Blount, presently. “Let’s get something to eat.” There had been more than a hundred persons taken in as guests at the Big House that day, but even yet the hospitality of the old planter’s home was not quite exhausted. The two ladies of the house had abundance to do in caring for the injured, but the servant, Delphine, had become the presiding spirit of the household in these hours of stress. In some way Delphine brought partial order out of the chaos, and the great table still was served.

By this time there had begun the pitiful procession which was to empty the Big House of its company. The tracks were nearly cleared by the wrecking crew, and long rows of fires were consuming the broken evidences of the ruin that had been wrought. The injured had been cared for as best might be by the physicians of the relief train, and this train, with its burden of the living and the dead, now started on its journey northward. The day of Number 4 was done. The iron way would soon again have its own. Another Number 4, screaming, exultant, defiant, would again pursue its course across the wilderness.

Naturally, in hours so crowded with perplexities, the master of the Big House had had small time to specialize his hospitality. The demands of the living, the needs of the suffering, the eagerness of all in the search for the author of this disaster, kept him, as well as others, so occupied that he scarce knew what was going forward. He had not known that Henry Decherd was about the place until he saw him seated at his own table. He made no inquiries, supposing that Decherd might have been a passenger on the train; yet he greeted this uninvited guest none too warmly, even in that sanctuary. Deeherd thought best later to explain his presence. He had been on the wrecked train, he said to Colonel Blount, but had by some miracle escaped. He was on his way to New Orleans, and wished to take the first train down as soon as traffic was resumed. He hoped that he was not intruding too much if he once more dropped in on his old friend. To this Colonel Blount listened grimly and said no word, only sweeping his hand toward the table. “Eat,” said he, and so turned away. He would have done as much for a strange hound in his yard, and Decherd knew it.

It was well on in the afternoon when John Eddring, still busy with his confused mass of papers, was in turn approached at the table where he sat by this same Henry Decherd. The latter carried in his hand a traveling-bag which he extended toward the claim agent. “Mr. Eddring.” said he, “I found this bag in my room, but it isn’t mine. They tell me you’ve got track of a lot of things. Did you see anything of an alligator bag about like this?”

“Why do you ask?” said Eddring, quietly.

“Well, I know you’re claim agent on the road,” said Decherd. “You seem to be getting ready for a lot of trouble later on. I didn’t know but you might have seen my bag among others. Nothing in it much—a few collars and brushes, you know; things I could use now if I had them.”

“Would you let me see this bag?” said Eddring. Decherd, somewhat uneasily, as it seemed to Eddring, opened the valise and displayed its contents. “This seemed to belong to some fellow by the name of Thompson,” said he, as he rummaged among the articles. “Maybe he has gone back to the city—maybe he’s got my bag. See, here’s a letter addressed to him, ‘James Thompson, Davenport’—” Eddring glanced at the handwriting. It bore no resemblance to that of another letter which at that moment rested in his own pocket. His face half-flushed. He begged the dead man’s pardon. This, he felt assured, was from James Thompson’s wife. The other letter, he felt with swift conviction, was from a woman different. Yes, and to a different man. Yet he held his own counsel as to this.

“I shouldn’t wonder if it were your bag that I’ve got in my own room, Mr. Decherd,” said he. He rose and led the way, and Decherd, perforce, must follow. “Is this yours?” He held up to Decherd’s view the valise which had once contained the book and papers earlier mentioned. Eddring looked narrowly into Decherd’s face. He saw it suddenly change color, going from pale to sallow.

Decherd made a distinct effort at recovering himself. “Y-yes, that’s it—it looks like it, anyhow,” said he.

Eddring handed him the valise. Decherd pressed the spring of the lock and looked into the interior.

“Why, it’s empty!” cried he. “What in—”

“Yes,” said Eddring, simply, “it’s empty.” Decherd cast at him one swift, veiled look, under which Eddring saw all the covert venom of a dangerous serpent that is aroused. “It’s not my bag, anyhow,” said Decherd, regaining his composure. “I thought it was, but mine had my name on the plate.”

“Yes?” said Eddring. “I am sorry I can’t help you. Well, if the bag isn’t yours, I’ll just keep it. I don’t doubt the owner will be found in time.” The eyes of the two met fairly now; and from that instant there was issue joined between them.

CHAPTER XVII MISS LADY AND HENRY DECHERD

Why Henry Decherd should have remained so long at the Big House at this particular time might have found plausible answer in any of a dozen ways. There were reasons indeed why Decherd should be covertly pleased at matters as he now found them. Colonel Blount touched his pride keenly enough by practically ignoring his presence, yet he made amends by continuing moody and aloof, spending little time about the house. John Eddring had long since taken his departure for the city. Mrs. Ellison was rarely visible about the house. There was an atmosphere of uneasiness, an unsettled discontent over all things. Yet, for the oblique purposes of Henry Decherd, matters could not have been better arranged. So much being established, he played his chosen part at least with boldness. In spite of all this recent stress and strain, in spite of this continuing trace of sadness and anxiety which lay over all, Henry Decherd none the less knew very well that there was now at hand the best and perhaps the last opportunity which, he might expect for the carrying out of a certain intention which, above all other purposes, worthy or unworthy, had long possessed his soul. At times he was absent from the Big House, none knew where; for in the careless bigness of that place there were no locks upon the doors and no hours for the spreading of the table. Each came and went as he pleased. In no other situation could Decherd have found things shaped better to his plan.

That plan, the sole motive which could have kept him at that time in that certain locality, was to speak alone with Miss Lady. Even thus favored by circumstances, he found this purpose difficult to accomplish. Now it was Colonel Blount who passed moodily across the yard; or it was Mrs. Ellison who accosted him just as he started to follow the young girl down the hall or out on the gallery. Once or twice the girl Delphine stopped him in some such errand and held him on one pretext or another in some corner of the place. Yet Decherd, involved as was the game he played, persisted and at length had his more immediate wish.

He came upon Miss Lady at last in the twilight on the big gallery, when the birds were chirping all about and the insects were attuning their nightly orchestra. He walked directly up to her.

“Miss Lady,” he said suddenly, without parley or preface, “ah, Miss Lady, how glad I am to find you at last!”

The girl drew back from him, at once divining the import of his air and tone; but he went on.

“I’ve waited so long,” said he. “There’s always been some one about. Couldn’t you see—don’t you see what it is that

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