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He followed the banker into the banking room, carefully closing the door behind him, so that the light from the rear room could not penetrate.
"That's all right," he rea.s.sured the banker as the latter noticed the action; "this isn't a public matter."
He stuffed his pockets with the money the banker gave him, and when the other tried to close the door of the safe he interposed a restraining hand, laughing:
"Leave it open, Croft. It's empty now, and a cracksman trying to get into it would ruin a perfectly good safe, for nothing."
"That's right."
They went into the rear room again, Corrigan last, closing the door behind him. Braman went again to the gla.s.s, Corrigan standing silently behind him.
Standing before the gla.s.s, the banker was seized with a repet.i.tion of the sickening fear that had oppressed him at Corrigan's words upon his entrance. It seemed to him that there was a sinister significance behind Corrigan's present silence. A tension came between them, portentous of evil. Braman s.h.i.+vered, but the silence held. The banker tried to think of something to say--his thoughts were rioting in chaos, a dumb, paralyzing terror had seized him, his lips stuck together, the facial muscles refusing their office. He dropped his hands to his sides and stared into the gla.s.s, noting the ghastly pallor that had come over his face--the dull, whitish yellow of muddy marble. He could not turn, his legs were quivering. He knew it was conscience--only that. And yet Corrigan's ominous silence continued. And now he caught his breath with a shuddering gasp, for he saw Corrigan's face reflected in the gla.s.s, looking over his shoulder--a mirthless smirk on it, the eyes cold, and dancing with a merciless and cunning purpose. While he watched, he saw Corrigan's lips open:
"Where's the board telephone, Braman?"
The banker wheeled, then. He tried to scream--the sound died in a gasping gurgle as Corrigan leaped and throttled him. Later, he fought to loosen the grip of the iron fingers at his throat, twisting, squirming, thres.h.i.+ng about the room in his agony. The grip held, tightened. When the banker was quite still Corrigan put out the light, went into the banking room, where he scattered the papers and books in the safe all around the room. Then he twisted the lock off the door, using an iron bar that he had noticed in a corner when he had come in, and stepped out into the shadow of the building.
CHAPTER XXIII
FIRST PRINCIPLES
Judge Lindman s.h.i.+vered, though a merciless, blighting sun beat down on the great stone ledge that spread in front of the opening, smothering him with heat waves that eddied in and out, and though the interior of the low-ceilinged chamber pulsed with the fetid heat sucked in from the plains generations before. The adobe walls, gray-black in the subdued light, were dry as powder and crumbling in spots, the stone floor was exposed in many places; there was a strange, sickening odor, as though the naked, perspiring bodies of inhabitants in ages past had soaked the walls and floor with the man-scent, and intervening years of disuse had mingled their musty breath with it. But for the presence of the serene-faced, steady-eyed young man who leaned carelessly against the wall outside, whose shoulder and profile he could see, the Judge might have yielded completely to the overpowering conviction that he was dreaming, and that his adventures of the past twelve hours were horrors of his imagination.
But he knew from the young man's presence at the door that his experience had been real enough, and the knowledge kept his brain out of the threatening chaos.
Some time during the night he had awakened on his cot in the rear room of the courthouse to hear a cold, threatening voice warning him to silence.
He had recognized the voice, as he had recognized it once before, under similar conditions. He had been gagged, his hands tied behind him. Then he had been lifted, carried outside, placed on the back of a horse, in front of his captor, and borne away in the darkness. They had ridden many miles before the horse came to a halt and he was lifted down. Then he had been forced to ascend a sharp slope; he could hear the horse clattering up behind them. But he had not been able to see anything in the darkness, though he felt he was walking along the edge of a cliff. The walk had ended abruptly, when his captor had forced him into his present quarters with a gruff admonition to sleep. Sleep had come hard, and he had done little of it, napping merely, sitting on the stone floor, his back against the wall, most of the time watching his captor. He had talked some, asking questions which his captor ignored. Then a period of oblivion had come, and he had awakened to the suns.h.i.+ne. For an hour he had sat where he was, looking out at his captor and blinking at the brilliant suns.h.i.+ne. But he had asked no questions since awakening, for he had become convinced of the meaning of all this. But he was intensely curious, now.
"Where have you brought me?" he demanded of his jailor.
"You're awake, eh?" Trevison grinned as he wheeled and looked in at his prisoner. "This," he waved a hand toward the ledge and its surroundings, "is an Indian pueblo, long deserted. It makes an admirable prison, Judge.
It is also a sort of a fort. There is only one vulnerable point--the slope we came up last night. I'll take you on a tour of examination, if you like. And then you must return here, to stay until you disclose the whereabouts of the original land record."
The Judge paled, partly from anger, partly from a fear that gripped him.
"This is an outrage, Trevison! This is America!"
"Is it?" The young man smiled imperturbably. "There have been times during the past few weeks when I doubted it, very much. It _is_ America, though, but it is a part of America that the average American sees little of--that he knows little of. As little, let us say, as he knows of the weird application of its laws--as applied by _some_ judges." He smiled as Lindman winced. "I have given up hoping to secure justice in the regular way, and so we are in the midst of a reversion to first principles--which may lead us to our goal."
"What do you mean?"
"That I _must_ have the original record, Judge, I mean to have it."
"I deny--"
"Yes--of course. Deny, if you like. We shan't argue. Do you want to explore the place? There will be plenty of time for talk."
He stepped aside as the Judge came out, and grinned broadly as he caught the Judge's shrinking look at a rifle he took up as he turned. It had been propped against the wall at his side. He swung it to the hollow of his left elbow. "Your knowledge of firearms convinces you that you can't run as fast as a rifle bullet, doesn't it, Judge?"
The Judge's face indicated that he understood.
"Ever make the acquaintance of an Indian pueblo, Judge?"
"No. I came West only a year ago, and I have kept pretty close to my work."
"Well, you'll feel pretty intimate with this one by the time you leave it--if you're obstinate," laughed Trevison. He stood still and watched the Judge. The latter was staring hard at his surroundings, perhaps with something of the awed reverence that overtakes the tourist when for the first time he views an ancient ruin.
The pueblo seemed to be nothing more than a jumble of adobe boxes piled in an indiscriminate heap on a gigantic stone level surmounting the crest of a hill. A sheer rock wall, perhaps a hundred feet in height, descended to the surrounding slopes; the latter sweeping down to join the plains. A dust, light, dry, and feathery lay thickly on the adobe boxes on the surrounding ledge on the slopes, like a gray ash sprinkled from a giant sifter. Cactus and yucca dotted the slopes, th.o.r.n.y, lancelike, repellent; lava, dull, hinting of volcanic fire, filled crevices and depressions, and huge blocks of stone, detached in the progress of disintegration, were scattered about.
"It has taken ages for this to happen!" the Judge heard himself murmuring.
Trevison laughed lowly. "So it has, Judge. Makes you think of your school days, doesn't it? You hardly remember it, though. You have a hazy sort of recollection of a print of a pueblo in a geography, or in a geological textbook, but at the time you were more interested in Greek roots, the Alps, Louis Quinze, the heroes of mythology, or something equally foreign, and you forgot that your own country might hold something of interest for you. But the history of these pueblo towns must be pretty interesting, if one could get at it. All that I have heard of it are some pretty weird legends. There can be no doubt, I suppose, that the people who inhabited these communal houses had laws to govern them--and judges to apply the laws. And I presume that then, as now, the judges were swayed by powerful influences in--"
The Judge glared at his tormentor. The latter laughed.
"It is reasonable to presume, too," he went on, "that in some cases the judges rendered some pretty raw decisions. And carrying the supposition further, we may believe that then, as now, the poor downtrodden proletariat got rather hot under the collar. There are always some hot-tempered fools among all cla.s.ses and races that do, you know. They simply can't stand the feel of the iron heel of the oppressor. Can you picture a hot-tempered fool of that tribe abducting a judge of the court of his people and carrying him away to some uninhabited place, there to let him starve until he decided to do the right thing?"
"Starve!" gasped the Judge.
"The chambers and tunnels connecting these communal houses--they look like mud boxes, don't they, Judge? And there isn't a soul in any of them--nor a bite to eat! As I was about to remark, the chambers and tunnels and the pa.s.sages connecting these places are pretty bare and cheerless--if we except scorpions, horned toads, centipedes, tarantulas--and other equally undesirable occupants. Not a pleasant place to sojourn in until--How long can a man live without eating, Judge? You know, of course, that the Indians selected an elevated and isolated site, such as this, because of its strategical advantages? This makes an ideal fort. n.o.body can get into it except by negotiating the slope we came up last night. And a rifle in the hands of a man with a yearning to use it would make _that_ approach pretty unsafe, wouldn't it?"
"My G.o.d!" moaned the Judge; "you talk like a man bereft of his senses!"
"Or like a man who is determined not to be robbed of his rights," added Trevison. "Well, come along. We won't dwell on such things if they depress you."
He took the Judge's arm and escorted him. They circled the broad stone ledge. It ran in wide, irregular sweeps in the general outline of a huge circle, surrounded by the dust-covered slopes melting into the plains, so vast that the eye ached in an effort to comprehend them. Miles away they could see smoke befouling the blue of the sky. The Judge knew the smoke came from Manti, and he wondered if Corrigan were wondering over his disappearance. He mentioned that to Trevison, and the latter grinned faintly at him.
"I forgot to mention that to you. It was all arranged last night. Clay Levins went to Dry Bottom on a night train. He took with him a letter, which he was to mail at Dry Bottom, explaining your absence to Corrigan.
Needless to say, your signature was forged. But I did so good a job that Corrigan will not suspect. Corrigan will get the letter by tonight. It says that you are going to take a long rest."
The Judge gasped and looked quickly at Trevison. The young man's face was wreathed in a significant grin.
"In the first a.n.a.lysis, this looks like a rather strange proceeding," said Trevison. "But if you get deeper into it you see its logic. You know where the original record is. I want it. I mean to have it. One life--a dozen lives--won't stop me. Oh, well, we won't talk about it if you're going to shudder that way."
He led the Judge up a flimsy, rotted ladder to a flat roof, forcing him to look into a chamber where vermin fled at their appearance. Then through numerous pa.s.sages, low, narrow, reeking with a musty odor that nauseated the Judge; on narrow ledges where they had to hug the walls to keep from falling, and then into an open court with a stone floor, stained dark, in the center a huge oblong block of stone, surmounting a pyramid, appalling in its somber suggestiveness.
"The sacrificial altar," said Trevison, grimly. "These stains here, are--"
He stopped, for the Judge had turned his back.
Trevison led him away. He had to help him down the ladder each time they descended, and when they reached the chamber from which they had started the Judge was white and shaking.
Trevison pushed him inside and silently took a position at the door. The Judge sank to the floor of the chamber, groaning.
The hours dragged slowly. Trevison changed his position twice. Once he went away, but returned in a few minutes with a canteen, from which he drank, deeply. The Judge had been without food or water since the night before, and thirst tortured him. The gurgle of the water as it came out of the canteen, maddened him.
"I'd like a drink, Trevison."