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"That was in a fit of anger. Lorey swore to Madge that he thought better of his impulse to do murder, stamped upon the burning fuse, and believed that he had put it out, and I believe him."
He saw, now, that his aunt was badly frightened, and cautioned the other men. "Not another word about him, now, at any rate, or Aunt 'Lethe won't once close her eyes to-night."
"Well," said the Colonel, quite agreeing with him and hastening to change the subject, "here's something much more interesting, anyway. A letter from the Company. Looks official and important."
Frank took the letter, opened it and gazed at it in some dismay. "I should think so," he exclaimed. "An a.s.sessment of $15,000 on my stock."
"Fifteen thousand devils!"
"No; fifteen thousand dollars."
The Colonel took the letter from his hand and looked at it with worried eyes. "And you've got to meet it, Frank, or lose what you've put in."
Miss Alathea went to her nephew anxiously. "You'll sell Queen Bess, now, won't you?" she implored. "You could pay it then. Best sell her."
The young man stood there, deep in worried thought. "If I were quite convinced of the Company's good faith in everything, I'd risk it all, even the loss of Woodlawn, my old home," he answered.
Neb now appeared from around a corner of the stable, evidently having decided that the girl had had enough time for her toilet, or afraid to wait another minute. His appearance created a diversion.
"Here, Neb," said Frank, "we've had enough nonsense. Let's see Queen Bess, now."
Neb looked anxiously for signs that Madge was ready to see visitors, he listened at the door. He saw no sign, he heard no signal. He was scared, but he was faithful to his promise to the girl. He planted his old back against the door. "Now de trouble am commencin'!" he a.s.sured himself.
Holton looked at him with a sour smile. "I hope," he said to Frank, "that you'll have better luck nor me. Neb wouldn't open that door for me."
"Dem was yo' ohduhs, suh," said Neb, appealing to his master.
"An' he was powerful sa.s.sy in the bargain," Holton went on, full of malice, hoping to make Neb suffer for defying him.
Layson, however, much as he was now annoyed by the old darky's hesitation about opening the stable door for him, himself, did not propose to chide him for having kept his trust and held it closed to others. "You mustn't mind Neb," he said to Holton. "He's a privileged character around here. I had told him to admit no one, and, as usual, he obeyed my orders blindly."
"Yes, suh," Neb declared, delighted, "went it blind, suh."
"His obedience," his master went on boastingly, "is really phenomenal.
He wouldn't open that door for anybody. He'd guard the key with his own life." He turned to Neb. "Wouldn't you, now, Neb?"
Neb was disconcerted. It was true enough that from most people he certainly would have guarded that key with his life. But at that moment there was one within the stable from whom he had _not_ guarded it.
"Yes--yessah!" he said hesitantly. And as he said it he would have given anything he had if he could have laid his hands upon that self-same key.
Frank smiled at him. "But I suppose you'll let _me_ have a look at her."
"Yes--yessuh--in a--in a minute, suh."
Layson was annoyed. "Why not at once?" He was beginning to be frightened. Could something Neb was trying to hide have happened to the mare?
"Bekase--bekase--" Ned stammered, "well, to tell de trufe, suh, bekase I is afeared she ain't quite dressed."
"Not dressed! The mare not dressed! Have you lost your senses? Open that door--quick!"
"Ma.r.s.e Frank, I cain't. I nachully jus' cain't."
Holton was enjoying this. "You see," he said, "he won't open it for n.o.body. Not even for th' man as owns it an' th' mare behind it."
"Give me the key!" said Frank.
"De key--de key--" Neb stammered.
"I said the key!"
The old negro advanced pitifully. "Fo' de lawd, Ma.r.s.e Frank, I hasn't got it!"
"He'd guard it with his life!" said Holton, with deep sarcasm.
"Where is it?" Frank demanded.
"In dar," said Neb, and pointed to the stable.
Layson, astonished and annoyed beyond the power of words by the old negro's strange performance, fearful of the safety of his mare, entirely puzzled, sprang toward the stable window and was about to pull himself up by the ledge so that he might look in.
Neb seized him and pulled him from the aperture with a desperate agility which strained his aged limbs. "Fo' de Lawd's sake, now, Ma.r.s.e Frank,"
he cried, "don't yo' dare look t'rough dat stable winder!"
Frank, now, was badly frightened. "Is there some one in there with Queen Bess?" he asked.
"A young pusson to see you, suh," Neb admitted.
"And you let that person have the key?"
"No, suh; it were taken from me."
Layson was in panic. "Heaven knows," he exclaimed, "what can have happened here!" He rushed to the stable door and pounded on it with his fists. "Open at once, or I'll break in the door," he cried.
Neb, now, had gone up to the window and looked through it with desperate glance. What he saw was rea.s.suring. He turned back toward his master smiling. "Hol' on, Ma.r.s.e Frank, de young pusson am a-comin' out," he said.
"Well," said Layson, threateningly, "I'm ready for him." He braced himself to spring upon some malefactor.
The door opened and Madge appeared before their astonished eyes, garbed in a gown which she had fas.h.i.+oned after that which Barbara had worn up in the hills.
"Madge!" cried Frank, amazed.
The Colonel, laughing, approached the girl with outstretched hand; Neb, relieved, dived through the stable door; Miss Alathea, who had been under a great strain while the dramatic little scene had been in progress, dropped limply on Neb's bench.
Madge, with a retentive memory of the way Miss "Barbarous" had greeted her back in the mountains, stepped toward that much-astonished maiden, opened her red parasol straight in her face, and courtesied to the rest.
"Howdy, folks; howdy!" she said, happily.