<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</SPAN></span>
<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER V<br/> <small>THE SEARCH BEGINS</small></h2></div>
<p class="drop-cap2">AN UNWONTED activity prevailed in the
miser’s cottage. The presence of Saxe
Temple and his companions brought into the
isolated dwelling a varied and bustling atmosphere,
which, at times, came near confusion.
The one member of the party who permitted
naught to disturb his tranquillity was Billy
Walker, and that because of a chronic aversion
to every form of physical exertion. He contented
himself with holding a sort of informal
court on the porch, sitting at ease with his
massive frame sprawled in a commodious
wicker chair. Mrs. West remained with him
much of the time, while Margaret by turns
joined them, or moved about here and there
as an interested observer of the other three
men, who were already busily searching the
house.</p>
<p>On occasion, Margaret and May Thurston
wandered away together in long strolls by the
lake shore, or over the hills through the forest.
By the circumstances of such companionship,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</SPAN></span>
a considerable degree of intimacy was soon
established between the two girls, which was
inexpressibly comforting to the secretary. She
would have delighted to tell this new friend of
the engagement that existed between herself
and the engineer, but she had passed her word
not to do so, and it never occurred to her as
possible that she should break it. At times,
Masters joined the girls in their rambles, but
that avaricious gentleman, though eager to
press his suit with Margaret could not often
bear to absent himself from the scene of operations
that had to do with the treasure. So,
for the most part, he either joined the group
on the porch, or gave himself over to loitering
hidden in the woods, at a point a few hundred
yards to the south, where a thick screen
of undergrowth effectually offered a barrier
against observation from the cottage. By such
espionage, he was sure to be instantly advised
concerning any discovery of a clue, as it would
create excitement among those on the piazza.
He would have preferred to remain constantly
among the searchers, but this was patently
impossible. Masters was by no means lacking
in shrewdness, however great his shortcomings<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</SPAN></span>
in the way of respect for <i>meum et tuum</i>, and he
was both sensitive and sensible enough to know
that his company was not especially agreeable
to Temple and his friends in their exploration
of the house.</p>
<p>It was, in truth, rather curious to note the
various opinions held in reference to the engineer
by the four men engaged in seeking Abernethey’s
treasure. Masters had been introduced
to them by May on the morning after
their arrival at the cottage, and had shown
himself as friendly as possible. But, in accordance
with the usual effect he had on men,
the impression created by him on each of the
four was distinctly unpleasant. Saxe Temple
felt an intuitive dislike, which he was at no
pains to explain. Billy Walker regarded the
engineer with a mingling of amusement and
disdain, ill concealed, and he did not scruple
afterward to describe the visitor as a peculiarly
obnoxious romantic pirate, with a flamboyant
veneer of the <i>Quartier Latin</i>. But he refused
to take the fellow with much seriousness. In
this respect, he differed from Roy Morton, who
made it a rule to be uniformly suspicious of all
things and all persons, and lived up to this rule<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</SPAN></span>
with finical fidelity. He immediately characterized
the engineer as a completely base and
designing person, one of whom all decent and
honest men might well beware. He proved
his contentions quite to his own satisfaction by
physiognomy, by phrenology, by chiromancy,
by the sixth sense and by the fourth dimension.
David Thwing, who was ordinarily a
kindly soul, made some small effort to combat
the severity of Roy’s strictures, but the philanthropic
attempt failed dismally of appreciation—which
result troubled David not at all,
since his heart was not in the task.</p>
<p>Ensued a week of feverish activity on the
part of Saxe and his friends, in which Billy
Walker was as busy as any, although his toil
was exclusively mental, while his body
remained in its customary lethargic condition.
By day and by night, he devoted himself to
examination of the problem that confronted
his friend, and by day and by night the other
three carried out his every suggestion. Unfortunately,
however, for Saxe’s hopes of inheritance,
their first hurried search of the cottage
resulted in naught save weariness and dismay.
Of anything in the nature of a clue, they found<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</SPAN></span>
no least trace.</p>
<p>Billy Walker delivered the final decree in
a council held by the four, after dinner on
the seventh day. It had so chanced that the
friends were alone together in the chief room
of the cottage, which was the music-room.</p>
<p>“I’ve addled my wits in vain,” Billy
Walker confessed, dolefully. “Until there
shall have been an accumulation of new intellectual
energy on my part, I shall be able to
offer you no theory as to the actual hiding-place
so ingeniously selected by the late
lamented Mr. Abernethey—to whose ashes,
peace! While I am thus recuperating, however,
you, my children, shall not be idle—oh,
by no manner of means. On the contrary,
you shall be very busy, indeed, after
the method prescribed by inexorable logic.”</p>
<p>“I’m beginning to think that a little luck
just now would help more than a lot of
logic,” Saxe declared, gloomily.</p>
<p>“Listen to the oracle, anyhow,” David
Thwing urged, in his always kindly voice.
“You see,” he went on whimsically, “Billy is
a specialist in thinking: he doesn’t do anything
except think. So, we must respect his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</SPAN></span>
thinking. Otherwise, we could not respect
our friend at all.” David’s big, protruding
eyes, magnified by the heavy lenses of his
eyeglasses, beamed benignantly on his three
companions.</p>
<p>The one thus dubiously lauded grunted
disdainfully.</p>
<p>“Panegyrics apart,” he resumed, in his
roughly rumbling tones, “there appears at
this time but one course of procedure. To
wit: Tomorrow morning, you must start on
an exhaustive search of the whole house.
Hitherto, you have made only a superficial
examination. This has failed miserably.
Now, the scrutiny must be made microscopic.”</p>
<p>There could be no gainsaying the utterance.
As the speaker had declared, it was
the command of the inevitable logic presented
by the situation. The hearers gave
grumbling assent to the wisdom of the suggestion—with
the exception of Roy Morton,
who, curled lazily in the depths of the morris
chair, was staring vacantly at the elaborate
carving of the wainscoting, and smoking an
especially fat Egyptian cigarette. Now, he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</SPAN></span>
suddenly sat upright, and his gaze was
turned on his companions, who had looked
up at his abrupt movement. Roy’s eyes were
hard; his chin was thrust forward, in the
fashion characteristic of him when the spirit
of combat flared high, which, to tell the
truth, was rather often. He spoke with
apparent seriousness, but Thwing, who had
been through some adventures of a violent
sort in his company, noted that a significant
excess of amiability in his tones, which was
always to be heard on critical occasions, was
now wanting.</p>
<p>“There’s only one simple and sure way to
success,” Roy declared authoritatively. “We
must burgle.”</p>
<p>There were ejaculations of astonishment
from his curious hearers.</p>
<p>“It’s this way,” he explained blandly, fixing
his steel-blue eyes grimly on the wondering
Billy Walker. “We must rifle the
lawyer’s safe. Of course, the lawyer whom
Abernethey employed has exact instructions
as to how to come on the treasure. All we
have to do, then, is to break into his office,
carrying an oxy-acetylene blow-pipe, cut<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</SPAN></span>
open the safe, find the secret instructions,
copy them off, and afterward duly retrieve
the gold at our leisure; besides,” he concluded,
with great complacency, “I know a
first-class safe-blower, to help us on the job.
I did him a favor once. He’ll be glad to do
me a kindness, in turn.”</p>
<p>A chorus of protests came from Saxe and
Billy, to which, at last, with much apparent
reluctance, Roy yielded, and definitely,
though sulkily, withdrew his ingenious predatory
plan. But David, the while, chuckled
contentedly, for he was apt at a jest—and,
too, he had known Roy more closely than
had the other two.</p>
<p>Since the working schedule had been thus
happily determined on the side of law and
order, the friends gave themselves over to
an interval of social relaxation for the
remainder of the evening, during which
period, at the suggestion of David, the subject
of the treasure was taboo. Roy, who
was fond of music, and had himself once
possessed no mean measure of skill on the
violoncello, now besought Saxe to try the
piano, for hitherto their whole attention had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</SPAN></span>
been given to the business in hand, to the
exclusion of all else. David, also, who doted
on music, though without any technical
training, added his entreaties. Billy Walker,
who esteemed music about as highly as a
cat does water, was complacent enough not
to protest, which was the utmost that might
be expected of him under the circumstances.
Saxe went to the piano very willingly, for he
was in a mood of nervous tension that
craved the emotional relaxation of harmony.</p>
<p>Saxe played with a good degree of excellence
in his technique, although he was far
from being such a master of the instrument
as had been the dead owner. But the essential
charm of the younger man’s interpretation
lay in the delicate truth of his sympathy.
His intelligent sensitiveness seemed,
indeed, catholic in its scope. Whether he
toyed daintily with a graceful <i>appoggiatura</i>
from Chopin, or crashed an astonishing dissonance
from Strauss, he equally felt and
revealed the emotion that had been in the
composer’s soul. Hardly had he begun,
when Mrs. West entered from the porch,
and after her came Margaret. Presently,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</SPAN></span>
May made her appearance, with Masters at
her side. Only Jake and his wife, in the
kitchen, remained unattracted. They had
already heard from their late master sufficient
music to last them a lifetime. The
audience was sympathetic enough to encourage
the player, and Saxe remained at the
piano for a long time, to the satisfaction of
all his hearers—even that of Billy Walker,
who was shamelessly dozing.</p>
<p>Finally, the musician’s attention, during a
pause, was attracted to a stack of music,
which was lying on top of a cabinet, at the
right of the piano. He rose, and, going to
it, began glancing over the sheets. His eyes
lighted with admiration as he noted the
various compositions in the collection. In
this examination of the music, he realized,
as he had not done hitherto, the virtuosity
of that dead miser who had made him the
possible heir to wealth. For here was naught
save the most worthy in the world of musical
art. There was not a single number of the
many assembled that was not a masterpiece
of its kind. In its entirety, the series presented
the very highest forms of musical<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</SPAN></span>
expression, the supreme achievement, both
intellectual and emotional, in the art. For
the first time, Saxe felt a gust of tenderness
toward the lonely old man, for the sake of
their brotherhood in a great love. And,
then, at the very bottom of the heap, Saxe
came on a single sheet, which drew his particular
attention.</p>
<p>The page showed a few measures written
in manuscript. This fact alone was sufficient
to make the sheet distinctive in the
collection, inasmuch as it was solitary of its
sort. Every other composition was from
editions by the best publishers. With his
newly-aroused interest in Abernethey, it
befell that Saxe was pleased thus to come
on a composition which, he made sure, must
have been from the pen of Abernethey himself.
Yet, as he scanned the few bars, the
young man experienced a feeling of vivid
disappointment, for the work was by no possibility
of a kind to compel particular admiration;
so, at least, it seemed to him just then.
With a sense of disillusionment concerning
the quality of the dead miser’s genius, Saxe
carried the sheet of music to the piano,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</SPAN></span>
where he placed it on the rack, then began
to play. As the first chord sounded, May
Thurston, seated in a chair near the door,
made a movement of surprise. Afterward,
as she rested quietly in her place, there lay
on her face a look of melancholy that was
very near dejection.</p>
<p>The music that Saxe played was this:</p>
<div class="figcenter"><ANTIMG src="images/i_004.jpg" alt="" /></div>
<p class="center">[<SPAN href="music/lake_mystery_music.midi">Listen</SPAN>]</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</SPAN></span>Thus, Saxe Temple played the few simple
phrases, over which the old miser had lingered
so long one desolate night. But, now,
a vast difference appeared in the manner
with which the music was sped. Abernethey
had rendered the composition with astonishing
intensity of emotion. He had interpreted
the harsh measures with exquisite,
though melancholy, tenderness; he had
clanged them forth with the spirit of frantic
appeal, with hot passion in the uncouth
numbers, with crass, savage abandonment—again,
with the superimposing of mighty
harmonies, vast, massive, dignified. Now,
the genius was gone from the reading. Saxe
Temple felt no least degree of sympathy for
this crude, unpleasant fragment. On the
contrary, the piece affected him only disagreeably.
To his musical sense, this creation
by the miser was peculiarly offensive.
Yet, through some subliminal channel, the
stark sequence of the rhythm laid thrall on
him, so that he ran over the score not once,
but many times. Nevertheless, he always
set the music forth nakedly, unadorned by
any graces of variety in the interpretation,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</SPAN></span>
undraped by ingenious Harmonies. He
played merely the written notes, played
them with precision—reluctantly; and, when
finally, he had made an end, he still sat on
at the piano, staring toward the written
page, as one vaguely troubled by a mystery.</p>
<p>It was May Thurston who broke the little
interval of silence that followed after the
music ended:</p>
<p>“I’ve heard that before, Mr. Temple,” she
said; “many, many times.”</p>
<p>Saxe whirled on the piano stool to face
the girl.</p>
<p>“Yes,” he said, and there was a note of
bewilderment in his voice; “I should imagine
so. As it is in manuscript, it was probably
composed by Mr. Abernethey himself. But
I must say that I’m greatly disappointed in
it. I can’t discover any particular merit in
it. You know, he left me all his manuscripts.
I’ve had no time to look at them,
however, as they only arrived the day we
left New York. So, I was especially interested
in this, to learn something of him, and
this teaches me nothing at all concerning
him, or, if it does—” He broke off, unwilling<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</SPAN></span>
to voice his candid judgment of the manuscript’s
merits. He turned to Roy, who
lounged in a window seat, smoking the
inevitable cigarette. “What did you think
of it?” he demanded.</p>
<p>“Perfectly ghastly!” came the sententious
answer. “I was wondering what on earth
you were up to—and hoping for the best.
Yes, ghastly!”</p>
<p>May Thurston laughed, but there was
little merriment in her notes.</p>
<p>“That’s exactly what it is—ghastly!”
She shuddered slightly, and glanced across
the room toward Margaret, as if in quest
of sympathy. “It is ghastly. It got on my
nerves frightfully. Mr. Abernethey was
forever playing it, along at the last—and I
used to enjoy his playing so, too! I love
music, and he was simply wonderful. I’ve
heard most of the great players, and it seems
to me that he was as good as any of them.
His technique was magnificent. He told me
once that, since many years, he had had an
absolute mastery of the instrument physically.
He had only to think and to feel the
spirit of the music. He said that the sympathetic<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</SPAN></span>
response of his body was wholly automatic.”</p>
<p>“That is the ideal, of course,” Saxe agreed,
with a sigh. “I only wish that I had attained
to it myself! Perhaps, he weakened a bit at
the last—when he did this, you know?” He
looked at May inquiringly, as he made the
suggestion.</p>
<p>But the girl shook her head, resolutely.</p>
<p>“No!” she said, with an air of finality.
“Up to the very day of his death, there was
no breaking down of Mr. Abernethey’s mind.
Yet, he was always playing that piece at the
last. Only, he played it in a thousand ways—never
twice alike—and always ghastly!”
Again the girl shuddered slightly.</p>
<p>“That’s curious,” Saxe said. He swung
about on the piano-stool, and sat staring
somberly at the written page.</p>
<p>Billy Walker innocently cleared the
atmosphere. He sat erect, rubbing his eyes
brazenly.</p>
<p>“Now, I liked that piece,” he declared,
genially. “It’s got some swing to it, some
go—yes, rather! Best thing you’ve played,
if anybody asks me.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</SPAN></span>“Nobody did,” Roy retorted, sourly.</p>
<p>As a matter of fact, Billy Walker, though
totally tone-deaf, had been granted a considerable
capacity for the enjoyment of
rhythm. The composition that distressed
May Thurston by its ghastliness had cheered
him with the steady drumming of its chords;
the law of compensation works in curious
ways.</p>
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