<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXII</h2>
<br/>
<p>At the desk in Alan's living-room sat Rossland, when the door
opened behind him and the master of the range came in. He was not
disturbed when he saw who it was, and rose to meet him. His coat
was off, his sleeves rolled up, and it was evident he was making no
effort to conceal his freedom with Alan's books and papers.</p>
<p>He advanced, holding out a hand. This was not the same Rossland
who had told Alan to attend to his own business on board the
<i>Nome</i>. His attitude was that of one greeting a friend,
smiling and affable even before he spoke. Something inspired Alan
to return the smile. Behind that smile he was admiring the man's
nerve. His hand met Rossland's casually, but there was no
uncertainty in the warmth of the other's grip.</p>
<p>"How d' do, Paris, old boy?" he greeted good-humoredly. "Saw you
going in to Helen a few minutes ago, so I've been waiting for you.
She's a little frightened. And we can't blame her. Menelaus is
mightily upset. But mind me, Holt, I'm not blaming you. I'm too
good a sport. Clever, I call it--damned clever. She's enough to
turn any man's head. I only wish I were in your boots right now.
I'd have turned traitor myself aboard the <i>Nome</i> if she had
shown an inclination."</p>
<p>He proffered a cigar, a big, fat cigar with a gold band. It was
inspiration again that made Alan accept it and light it. His blood
was racing. But Rossland saw nothing of that. He observed only the
nod, the cool smile on Alan's lips, the apparent nonchalance with
which he was meeting the situation. It pleased Graham's agent. He
reseated himself in the desk-chair and motioned Alan to another
chair near him.</p>
<p>"I thought you were badly hurt," said Alan. "Nasty knife wound
you got."</p>
<p>Rossland shrugged his shoulders. "There you have it again,
Holt--the hell of letting a pretty face run away with you. One of
the Thlinkit girls down in the steerage, you know. Lovely little
thing, wasn't she? Tricked her into my cabin all right, but she
wasn't like some other Indian girls I've known. The next night a
brother, or sweetheart, or whoever it was got me through the open
port. It wasn't bad. I was out of the hospital within a week. Lucky
I was put there, too. Otherwise I wouldn't have seen Mrs. Graham
one morning--through the window. What a little our fortunes hang to
at times, eh? If it hadn't been for the girl and the knife and the
hospital, I wouldn't be here now, and Graham wouldn't be bleeding
his heart out with impatience--and you, Holt, wouldn't be facing
the biggest opportunity that will ever come into your life."</p>
<p>"I'm afraid I don't understand," said Alan, hiding his face in
the smoke of his cigar and speaking with an apparent indifference
which had its effect upon Rossland. "Your presence inclines me to
believe that luck has rather turned against me. Where can my
advantage be?"</p>
<p>A grim seriousness settled in Rossland's eyes, and his voice
became cool and hard. "Holt, as two men who are not afraid to meet
unusual situations, we may as well call a spade a spade in this
matter, don't you think so?"</p>
<p>"Decidedly," said Alan.</p>
<p>"You know that Mary Standish is really Mary Standish Graham,
John Graham's wife?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"And you probably know--now--why she jumped into the sea, and
why she ran away from Graham."</p>
<p>"I do."</p>
<p>"That saves a lot of talk. But there is another side to the
story which you probably don't know, and I am here to tell it to
you. John Graham doesn't care for a dollar of the Standish fortune.
It's the girl he wants, and has always wanted. She has grown up
under his eyes. From the day she was fourteen years old he has
lived and planned with the thought of possessing her. You know how
he got her to marry him, and you know what happened afterward. But
it makes no difference to him whether she hates him or not. He
<i>wants</i> her. And this"--he swept his arms out, "is the most
beautiful place in the world in which to have her returned to him.
I've been figuring from your books. Your property isn't worth over
a hundred thousand dollars as it stands on hoof today. I'm here to
offer you five times that for it. In other words, Graham is willing
to forfeit all action he might have personally against you for
stealing his wife, and in place of that will pay you five hundred
thousand dollars for the privilege of having his honeymoon here,
and making of this place a country estate where his wife may reside
indefinitely, subject to her husband's visits when he is so
inclined. There will be a stipulation, of course, requiring that
the personal details of the deal be kept strictly confidential, and
that you leave the country. Do I make myself clear?"</p>
<p>Alan rose to his feet and paced thoughtfully across the room. At
least, Rossland measured his action as one of sudden, intensive
reflection as he watched him, smiling complacently at the effect of
his knock-out proposition upon the other. He had not minced
matters. He had come to the point without an effort at bargaining,
and he possessed sufficient dramatic sense to appreciate what the
offer of half a million dollars meant to an individual who was
struggling for existence at the edge of a raw frontier. Alan stood
with his back toward him, facing a window. His voice was oddly
strained when he answered. But that was quite natural, too,
Rossland thought.</p>
<p>"I am wondering if I understand you," he said. "Do you mean that
if I sell Graham the range, leave it bag and baggage, and agree to
keep my mouth shut thereafter, he will give me half a million
dollars?"</p>
<p>"That is the price. You are to take your people with you. Graham
has his own."</p>
<p>Alan tried to laugh. "I think I see the point--now. He isn't
paying five hundred thousand for Miss Standish--I mean Mrs. Graham.
He's paying it for the <i>isolation</i>."</p>
<p>"Exactly. It was a last-minute hunch with him--to settle the
matter peaceably. We started up here to get his wife. You
understand, to <i>get</i> her, and settle the matter with you in a
different way from the one we're using now. You hit the word when
you said 'isolation.' What a damn fool a man can make of himself
over a pretty face! Think of it--half a million dollars!"</p>
<p>"It sounds unreal," mused Alan, keeping his face to the window.
"Why should he offer so much?"</p>
<p>"You must keep the stipulation in mind, Holt. That is an
important part of the deal. You are to keep your mouth shut. Buying
the range at a normal price wouldn't guarantee it. But when you
accept a sum like that, you're a partner in the other end of the
transaction, and your health depends upon keeping the matter quiet.
Simple enough, isn't it?"</p>
<p>Alan turned back to the table. His face was pale. He tried to
keep smoke in front of his eyes. "Of course, I don't suppose he'd
allow Mrs. Graham to escape back to the States--where she might do
a little upsetting on her own account?"</p>
<p>"He isn't throwing the money away," replied Rossland
significantly.</p>
<p>"She would remain here indefinitely?"</p>
<p>"Indefinitely."</p>
<p>"Probably never would return."</p>
<p>"Strange how squarely you hit the nail on the head! Why should
she return? The world believes she is dead. Papers were full of it.
The little secret of her being alive is all our own. And this will
be a beautiful summering place for Graham. Magnificent climate.
Lovely flowers. Birds. And the girl he has watched grow up, and
wanted, since she was fourteen."</p>
<p>"And who hates him."</p>
<p>"True."</p>
<p>"Who was tricked into marrying him, and who would rather die
than live with him as his wife."</p>
<p>"But it's up to Graham to keep her alive, Holt. That's not our
business. If she dies, I imagine you will have an opportunity to
get your range back pretty cheap."</p>
<p>Rossland held a paper out to Alan.</p>
<p>"Here's partial payment--two hundred and fifty thousand. I have
the papers here, on the desk, ready to sign. As soon as you give
possession, I'll return to Tanana with you and make the remaining
payment."</p>
<p>Alan took the check. "I guess only a fool would refuse an offer
like this, Rossland."</p>
<p>"Yes, only a fool."</p>
<p>"<i>And I am that fool</i>."</p>
<p>So quietly did Alan speak that for an instant the significance
of his words did not fall with full force upon Rossland. The smoke
cleared away from before Alan's face. His cigar dropped to the
floor, and he stepped on it with his foot. The check followed it in
torn scraps. The fury he had held back with almost superhuman
effort blazed in his eyes.</p>
<p>"If I could have Graham where you are now--<i>in that
chair</i>--I'd give ten years of my life, Rossland. I would kill
him. And you--<i>you</i>--"</p>
<p>He stepped back a pace, as if to put himself out of striking
distance of the beast who was staring at him in amazement.</p>
<p>"What you have said about her should condemn you to death. And I
would kill you here, in this room, if it wasn't necessary for you
to take my message back to Graham. Tell him that Mary
Standish--<i>not</i> Mary Graham--is as pure and clean and as sweet
as the day she was born. Tell him that she belongs to <i>me</i>. I
love her. She is mine--do you understand? And all the money in the
world couldn't buy one hair from her head. I'm going to take her
back to the States. She is going to get a square deal, and the
world is going to know her story. She has nothing to conceal.
Absolutely nothing. Tell that to John Graham for me."</p>
<p>He advanced upon Rossland, who had risen from his chair; his
hands were clenched, his face a mask of iron.</p>
<p>"Get out! Go before I flay you within an inch of your rotten
life!"</p>
<p>The energy which every fiber in him yearned to expend upon
Rossland sent the table crashing back in an overturned wreck
against the wall.</p>
<p>"Go--before I kill you!"</p>
<p>He was advancing, even as the words of warning came from his
lips, and the man before him, an awe-stricken mass of flesh that
had forgotten power and courage in the face of a deadly and
unexpected menace, backed quickly to the door and escaped. He made
for the corrals, and Alan watched from his door until he saw him
departing southward, accompanied by two men who bore packs on their
shoulders. Not until then did Rossland gather his nerve
sufficiently to stop and look back. His breathless voice carried
something unintelligible to Alan. But he did not return for his
coat and hat.</p>
<p>The reaction came to Alan when he saw the wreck he had made of
the table. Another moment or two and the devil in him would have
been at work. He hated Rossland. He hated him now only a little
less than he hated John Graham, and that he had let him go seemed a
miracle to him. He felt the strain he had been under. But he was
glad. Some little god of common sense had overruled his passion,
and he had acted wisely. Graham would now get his message, and
there could be no misunderstanding of purpose between them.</p>
<p>He was staring at the disordered papers on his desk when a
movement at the door turned him about. Mary Standish stood before
him.</p>
<p>"You sent him away," she cried softly.</p>
<p>Her eyes were shining, her lips parted, her face lit up with a
beautiful glow. She saw the overturned table, Rossland's hat and
coat on a chair, the evidence of what had happened and the
quickness of his flight; and then she turned her face to Alan
again, and what he saw broke down the last of that grim resolution
which he had measured for himself, so that in a moment he was at
her side, and had her in his arms. She made no effort to free
herself as she had done in the cottonwoods, but turned her mouth up
for him to kiss, and then hid her face against his shoulder--while
he, fighting vainly to find utterance for the thousand words in his
throat, stood stroking her hair, and then buried his face in it,
crying out at last in the warm sweetness of it that he loved her,
and was going to fight for her, and that no power on earth could
take her away from him now. And these things he repeated until she
raised her flushed face from his breast, and let him kiss her lips
once more, and then freed herself gently from his arms.</p>
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