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know much of it. I only guessed. I put nothing beyond Decherd.”

“Did you know anything about the levee-cutting?”

“Nothing whatever. They didn’t tell me anything of that. I presume it didn’t suit Henry Decherd to tell me everything he was doing.”

“I can imagine that,” said Eddring. “There was a time for Decherd to lighten ship, and, as you say, he had only women to fear.”

“I knew myself when the time came for me to leave him,” said the woman, now apathetically. “I went over to St. Louis soon after Miss Lady first left the Big House, and after Decherd followed her. I knew that he was smitten with Miss Lady, and that there would be trouble, and that neither Delphine nor myself would be safe. I hid as best I could, and lived as best I could. Lately I have been frightened. I thought I would come to see you. I hoped you might help me. I don’t know what I did think.”

“You don’t know where Decherd is at present?”

“No, I do not.”

“Do you have any hope that he will ever care for you in any way?”

“Yes,” said the woman, slowly and dully, “he cares for me. He’ll care for me. He’ll find me some day, now that you’ve taken Miss Lady from him.”

“And you will go back to him?”

“Never! God forbid. Love him? No!”

“Yet you think he will look you up again. Why? To get help in this lawsuit?”

“You do not know him. He knows that all his hope in this lawsuit was gone long ago. He’s not a fool. But he is going to hunt me up some day. He’s going to find me; and then—he’s going to kill me. He’s killed Delphine, and he’s going to kill me.”

The two white hands, trembling now as though with a palsy, fell on the table in front of her. Her eyes, not seeing Eddring, gazed staring straight in front of her. The horror of her soul was written upon her face. Remorse, repentance, fear for the atonement—these had their way with her who was lately known as Alice Ellison, woman of fortune, and now served ill by fortune’s hand.

All at once she broke from her half-stupor, her overstrung nerves giving way. A cry of terror burst from her lips. “You!” she cried, “you will not love me, you will not save me! Oh, Lady, girl—oh, is there no one, is there no one in all the world?”

John Eddring took her firmly by the shoulders, and after a time half-quieted her.

“Wine,” she sobbed; “brandy—give me something.”

Eddring threw open the door. “Jack,” he cried; “Jack, come here. Run across the street for me. When you come back order a carriage. This lady is ill.”

She sat for a time, trembling. Eddring, himself agitated, completed his hurried writing. She signed. He called a notary, and she made oath with a hand that shook as she uplifted it.

John Eddring, possessed at length of the last thread of his mystery, helped down the stairs the trembling and terror-stricken woman who had been the final agent of a justice long deferred. “Madam,” he said, as he assisted her into the carriage, “I thank you for Miss Lady. If you ever have any need, address me; and meantime, keep careful watch. Take care of yourself, and be sure this knowledge will never be used against you. We shall not see you want.”

She seemed not to hear him. Her eyes still stared straight in front of her. “He’s coming,” she whispered. “It will be the end!”

CHAPTER XX THE LID OF THE GRAVE

In a little room of a poor hotel situated on a back street of the city of New Orleans, a man bent over an old trunk which had that day been unearthed from a long-time hiding-place. It had for years been left unopened. It was like opening a grave now to raise its cover. The man almost shuddered as he bent over and looked in, curious as though these things had never before met his gaze. There was a dull odor of dead flowers long boxed up. A faint rustling as of intangible things became half audible, as though spirits passed out at this contact with the outer air.

“Twelve years ago—and this is the sort of luggage I carried then,” he mused. “What taste! What a foolish boy! Dear me. Well—what?” His bravado failed him. He started, fearing something. Yet presently he peered in.

It was like a grave, yet one where some beneficent or some cruel process of nature had resisted the way of death and change. “Foolish boy!” he muttered, as he peered in and saw Life as it had been for him when he had shut down the lid. “God! it’s strange. There ought to be a picture or so near the top.” He touched the tray, and the dead flowers and dry papers rustled again until he started back. His face, tired, dissipated, deeply lined, went all the paler, but presently he delved in again.

“Pictures of myself, eh? the first thing. I was always first thing to myself. Nice, clean boy, wasn’t I? Wouldn’t have known it was myself. Might have been a parson, almost. Here’s another. Militia uniform, all that. Might have been a major, almost. Uh-hum! High school diploma here—very important. Eighteen—great God, was it so long ago as that? University diploma—Latin. Can’t read it now. Might have been a professor, mightn’t I? Diploma of law school; also Latin. Certificate of admission to the bar of—. Might have been a lawyer. Might have been a judge, mightn’t I? Might have a home now; white, green blinds, brick walk up to the door, paling fence—that kind of thing. Might have had a home—wife and babies—eh! Baby? Children? What? Well, I couldn’t call this much of a home, could I, now?”

He unfolded some old newspapers and periodicals of a departed period, bearing proof of certain of his own handicraft. “Might have been a writer—poet—that sort of thing!” He smiled quizzically. “Not so bad. Not so bad. I couldn’t do as well to-day, I’m afraid. Seem to have lost it—let go somewhere. I never could depend on myself—never could depend—ah, what’s this? Yes, here are the ladies, God bless them—la-ladies—God bless ‘em!”

The lower tray was filled with pictures of girls or women of all types, some of them beautiful, some of them coarse, most of them attractive from a certain point of view. “God! what a lot!” he murmured. “How did I do it? By asking, I reckon. Six—six—six of one—six of another. Women and men alike, eh? Well, I don’t know. Ask ‘em, you win. Or, don’t ask ‘em, you win.”

His hand fell upon the frame of a little mirror laid away in the old trunk. He picked it up and gazed steadily at what it revealed. “Changed,” he said, “changed a lot. Must have gone a pace, eh? Lawyer. Judge. Writer-man. Poet. I thought these beat all of that,”— and he looked down again at the smiling faces. He picked them up one at a time and laid them on the bed beside him. “Alice, Nora, Clara, Kate, Margaret—I’ll guess at the names, and guess at some of the faces now. It’s the same, all alike, the hunting of love: the hunting—the hunt—ing—of—love! Great thing. But of course we never do find it, do we? Ladies, good night.” This he said in half-mocking solemnity.

He bowed ironically; yet his face was more uneasy now than wholly mocking. He looked once more at the trunk-tray, and found what he apparently half-feared to see. “Madam!” he whispered. “Madam! Alice!” He gazed at a face strong and full, with deep curved lips, and wide jaw, and large dark eyes, deeply browed and striking, the face of a woman to beckon to a man, to make him forget, for a time—and that was Alice Ellison as he had known her years ago, before—before—He turned away and would not look at this. He tried to laugh, to mock. “Bless you, ladies,” he said, “I’ve often said I would like to see you all together in the same room. Eh—but the finding of it—oh, we never do find it, do we? Not love. I never could depend on myself.

“What! What’s this!” he exclaimed, as his hand now touched something else, a hard object in the bottom of the trunk, beneath the tray. “Why, here’s my old pistol. Twelve years old. I thought I’d lost it. Loaded! My faith, loaded for twelve years. Wonder if it would go off.”

He sat on the edge of the bed, looking into the trunk, the revolver in his hand. Slowly, slowly, as though against his will, his face turned, and he found himself looking down at the pictured smiling faces that stared up at him. The last picture seemed to frighten him with its smile. All the pictures smiled. “Alice!” he whispered.

“My God!” cried Henry Decherd, suddenly. “They’re alive! They’re coming to life!”

They stood about him now in the little room, smiling, beckoning; Alice, Nora, Kate, Jane, Margaret, all the rest, as he addressed them. They smiled and beckoned; but he could not reply, whether to those honest or not honest, to those deceived or undeceived.

The face of Alice Ellison, strong-jawed, dark-browed, large-eyed, stared at him steadily from behind a certain chair. He could see that her hair was wet. It hung down on her neck, on her shoulders. It clung to her temples. Her eyes gazed at him stonily now. He saw it all again—the struggle! He heard his own accusations, and hers. He heard her pleading, her cry for mercy; and then her cry of terror. He saw her face, staring up at him from the water. As he gazed, the other faces faded away into the darkness. He stood, staring, Henry Decherd, murderer of the woman whom he once had loved.

The porter of the hotel said on the next day that he remembered hearing late in the night a sort of crash, which sounded like the dropping of a trunk lid. He did not know what it was. The lid of the grave had fallen again for Henry Decherd!

[Illustration: “MY GOD! THEY’RE ALIVE. THEY’RE COMING TO LIFE!”]

CHAPTER XXI THE RED RIOT OF YOUTH

The rim of the ancient forest still made the boundary of the little world of Miss Lady. Still she looked out beyond it in query, yearningly, longingly, though now she found herself more content than ever in her life before.

It was the daily habit of Miss Lady to ride for a time the big chestnut saddler which Colonel Blount had devoted to her special use. Mounted thus on Cherry, she cantered each day over the fields, where a renewed industry had now set on again. The simple field hands looked upon her as a higher being, and as their special messenger. If a baby was sick at a distant cabin, Miss Lady knew of it, and had the proper aid despatched. If the daughter of this or the other laborer needed shoes and could not wait until Christmas accounting time, it was Miss Lady who interceded with the master of the Big House.

“I couldn’t get along here without you now,” said that stern soul to her gruffly. “But I reckon you’d better run away again, for I’m afraid of people that I can’t get along without. Besides, you’re spoiling all my dogs, a-honeying of ‘em up the way you do.”

Miss Lady only laughed at that; though each day she looked out at the edge of her world.

Sometimes so wistfully did Miss Lady look out beyond the rim of the forest that she felt interest in the railway trains which carried her now and then to the cities north or south of her. Sometimes, even,

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