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"I didn't give it out."
"It is all done in your particularly picturesque style," declared Emerson, angrily. "Alton swears he knows nothing about it, so you must have done it. It is too nearly correct to have come from a stranger."
"Well?" inquired Fraser, quietly.
"The harm is done, but I want to know who is to blame." When the other made no answer except to stare at him curiously, he flamed up, "Why don't you confess?"
For the first time during their acquaintance, "Fingerless" Fraser seemed at a loss for words; but whether for shame or some other motive, his companion was unable to tell. His nature was so warped that his emotions expressed themselves in ways not always easy to follow, and now he merely remarked, with apparent sullenness:
"I'm certainly a hot favorite with you." He clambered stiffly back into bed and turned his defiant face to the wall, nor would he meet his accuser's eyes or open his lips, even when Boyd flung out of the room, convinced that he was the culprit.
All that day Emerson waited fearfully for some word from Hilliard, but night came without it; and when several days in succession had pa.s.sed without a sign from the banker, he breathed more easily. He had already begun to a.s.sure himself that, after all, the exposure would have no effect, when one evening the call he dreaded came. A telephone message summoned him to the bank at eleven o'clock the following morning.
"That means trouble," he grimly told George.
"Maybe not," the big fisherman replied. "If Hilliard took any stock in the story, it seems like he'd have jumped you the next day."
"Our machinery is ordered. You realize what it will mean if he backs water now?"
"Sure! We'll have to go to some other bank."
"Humph! I'll wring Fraser's neck," muttered Emerson. "We have troubles enough without any new ones."
It was with no little anxiety that he asked for the banker at the appointed hour, and was shown into an anteroom, with the announcement:
"Mr. Hilliard is busy; he wishes you to wait."
Inside the gla.s.s part.i.tion Boyd heard a woman's voice and Hilliard's laughter. He took some comfort in the thought that the banker was in a good-humor, at least; but, being too nervous to sit still, he stood at the window, gazing with vacant eyes at the busy street crowds. Facing him, across the way, was a bulletin-board in front of a newspaper office; and, after a time, he noted idly among its various items of information the announcement that the mail steamer _Queen_ had arrived at midnight from Skagway. He wondered why Cherry had not written. Surely she must be anxious to know his progress. He should have advised her of his whereabouts.
The door to Hilliard's office opened, and he heard the rustle of a woman's dress; then his own name spoken--"Come in, Mr. Emerson."
His attention centred on the approaching interview, he did not glance toward the departing visitor until she stopped suddenly at the outer door, and came straight toward him with outstretched hands.
"Boyd!"
He checked himself, and turned to face Cherry Malotte.
"Why, Cherry," he e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed, "what in the world--" He took her two hands in his, and she laughed up into his face. "In the name of Heaven, where did you come from?"
"I arrived last night on the _Queen_," she said. "Oh, I'm glad to see you!"
"But what brings you to the States? I thought you were in Kal--"
"Sh-h!" She laid a finger on her lips, with a glance over her shoulder at the door to the inner office. "I'll tell you about it later."
"Mr. Hilliard will see you now, sir," the attendant announced to Emerson.
"I must talk to you right away!" Boyd exclaimed, hurriedly. "I won't be long. Can you wait?"
"Certainly; I'll wait right here. Only hurry, hurry!"
The pleasure of seeing her was so genuine that he squeezed her hands heartily, and entered Hilliard's sanctum with a smile on his lips. It was gone, however, when he reappeared a half-hour later, and in its place an expression which caused her to inquire, quickly, "What is the matter? Is something wrong?"
He nodded, but it was not until they had reached the outer office that he said: "Yes, something is decidedly wrong." Then, in answer to her further question: "Wait a while; I'm too angry to talk. I'll have to tell you all about it before you'll understand." He began to mutter harshly under his breath: "Come along. We'll have lunch, and I'll explain. First, however, tell me why you came out at this season."
"I have a big mining deal on with Mr. Hilliard. He sent for me, and I came. Oh, I hardly know where to begin! But you remember when you were in Kalvik I told you that I had several men out prospecting?"
"Yes."
"Well, last summer, long before you came through, one of them located a ledge of copper."
"You never told me."
"There wasn't anything to tell at that time--I hadn't received any a.s.say reports, and I didn't know whether the thing was worth telling; but shortly after you left the returns came in, and they showed remarkable values. Now here is the wonderful part of the story. Unknown to me, my man had sent out other samples and a letter to a friend of his here in Seattle. That man had a.s.says made on his own account, and came to Mr.
Hilliard with the result. The very next boat brought him and Hilliard's expert to Katmai. They came over with the mail-carrier. We had opened up the ore body somewhat in the mean time, and it didn't take those men long to see what we had. They were back at my place in no time with a proposition. When I refused to tie up the ground, they made me come out with them--foxy Mr. Halliard had foreseen what would happen, and instructed them to bring me to him if they had to kidnap me. Well, I was a willing victim, and here I am, prepared to deal with Mr. Banker, provided we can reach an agreement. What do you think of me as a business woman?"
Boyd smiled at her enthusiasm. "I think you are fine in every way, and I hope you take all of his money away from him. I can't get any."
"It will take a lot of capital and time to develop the mine, and I am fighting now for control--he is a tight-fisted old fellow."
"I should say he is," remarked Emerson. "He has just thrown a bomb into our camp that makes my teeth rattle. He promised to back me for one hundred thousand dollars, and this morning went back on his word and lay down, absolutely."
"Begin at the beginning, and tell me everything," commanded the girl. "I'm dying to know what you have been doing. Now, right from the start, mind you."
They had reached Emerson's hotel, and, escorting her to the luncheon-room, he proceeded to trace his progress from the day he had bade her farewell in the snows of Kalvik. They had finished their meal before his narrative came to a close.
"To-day Hilliard called me in and coolly informed me that his bank could not make the loan he had promised me, notwithstanding the fact that I had relied on his a.s.surances and ordered my supplies, which are now being s.h.i.+pped."
"Did he offer any reason for his withdrawal?"
"Oh, I dare say he gave a reason, but he beclouded it with so many words that it was merely a fog by the time he got through. All I could distinguish in the general obscurity was that he would not produce. He said something about the bank being overloaded and the board refusing its consent. It's remarkable what a barricade a banker can build out of one board."
"And yet, as I understand it, you have sold your output in advance, at a fixed price."
"Correct."
"It is very strange! The bank would be perfectly safe."
"He merely bulkheaded himself in with a lot of smooth language, and when I tried to argue myself over I just slid off. The moment I stepped into his office I felt the temperature drop. Something new has come up; what it is, I don't know. Anyhow, he froze me out."
"We must raise that money somewhere or we are ruined," Cherry observed, with decision.
"Well, rather!" Boyd agreed, with a desperate grimace.
The girl laughed. "Mr. Hilliard and I merely tried each other's mettle this morning. I am to return at four."
"Let's meet later and dress each other's wounds," he suggested. Cherry's presence had heartened him wonderfully, and the sight of her brightly animated face across the table inspired him with a kind of joyous courage, the like of which he had scarcely felt since their former meeting. In her company his worries had almost disappeared, laughter had become a living thing, and youth a blessing.