<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXII" id="CHAPTER_XXII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXII</h2>
<h3>REFLECTION AND REACTION</h3>
<p class="n"><span style="float:left;font-size:40px;line-height:25px;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:1px;">C</span>onrad stood still and stared at the Mexican’s lessening figure,
galloping down the road. Presently he walked across to his mare, stroked
her nose, and said softly, “By God! Betty B.!” For some minutes he gazed
at her abstractedly, swearing under his breath, and now and then
muttering, “Aleck! Aleck Bancroft!” Coherent thought was not yet
possible. He felt that José had told him the truth, and yet he could not
believe it; between the opposing convictions his mind lay dazed and
inactive. He mounted and turned Brown Betty’s nose toward home, riding
at a foot-pace with his head down and his attention all indrawn. For a
mile or two the mare plodded on quietly. At last, resenting the lack of
the companionable attentions her master was accustomed to bestow upon
her when they rode alone, she snorted several times and switched her
tail vigorously, flicking his legs. There was no <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[Pg 361]</SPAN></span>response. She whinnied
softly, waited a little, and tried it again. Still her rider was silent.
So she stopped, lifted her head, and neighed loudly. Conrad aroused
himself. “What is it, Betty?” he said, looking searchingly around the
plain. Nothing was in sight save its usual silent habitants. He
dismounted, and examined her anxiously. She nipped him playfully,
nickered gently, and poked her nose into his coat pocket.</p>
<p>“Betty B., you’re a rogue!” he exclaimed, pulling her ear. “You’re just
lonesome and want me to talk to you! My, but you’re spoiled!” He stroked
her neck affectionately, then suddenly leaned against her, buried his
face in her mane, and a single deep breath that was half a sob shook his
body. “Betty!” he muttered, “to find that your best friend is the
damnedest villain that ever went unhung!”</p>
<p>The little episode with the mare broke up the paralysis that staggering
surprise had set upon both thought and feeling. As he mounted again his
heart was hot and his mind working rapidly. “The damned villain!” he
exclaimed savagely, “to be pretending such friendship with me when he
knew what he had done!”</p>
<p>He spurred Brown Betty to a gallop. The <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[Pg 362]</SPAN></span>tyrannous habit of mind
engendered by long-wonted thought and desire urged him on to face at
once the man who had despoiled his father and deprived him of his
birthright. The old anger and hate surged over him, and his pulses beat
swift and hard. For a while he forgot the personality of the enemy he
had run to earth at last. Through his set teeth came whispered curses of
hatred and contempt, and his tongue clung to the shameful epithets he
longed to throw in the fellow’s face. Not fast enough could he ride to
keep pace with his desire. Revenge, so long fed with hope and promise,
was calling to be sated. “Faster, Betty, faster!” he called to the mare,
spurring her on.</p>
<p>But the very violence of his mood presently induced the beginning of
reaction. He remembered who it was that he was riding so fast to expose
and strike down. “Aleck! Aleck Bancroft!” he murmured, and slowed the
mare’s racing feet. The tenderness and loyalty of friendship raised
still, small voices in his heart. Once again the thing staggered him. It
seemed incredible. In the depths of his heart was conviction that José
Gonzalez had told him the truth. But could he go to his best friend with
such a charge, to taunt, <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[Pg 363]</SPAN></span>insult, and challenge to death, on the word of
a Mexican assassin? The idea repelled him. And he was glad of the
misgiving, unwilling to believe that the quest he had followed with such
eager determination was leading him to the door of Alexander Bancroft.
“I ought—I ought to have confirmation, I suppose,” he said to himself,
uncertainly. And so, still undecided, feeling that it was truth and yet
unwilling to believe, he came to the gate of his own corral. After he
had unsaddled and stabled Brown Betty, he went through the kitchen for a
drink of water from the big <i>olla</i>, wrapped in a wet coffee sack, that
stood always in the drying wind and the shade of a tree beside the door.</p>
<p>Mrs. Peters came in from the store-room with a panful of potatoes. “Hank
had to go to White Rock this morning,” she said, “and he brought some
mail for you. It’s on your desk.”</p>
<p>Conrad passed through the series of rooms, opening one out of another,
to the front. On his desk lay some papers and a single letter.
“Littleton!” he exclaimed as he hastily tore it open. He read:</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>“<span class="smcap">My dear Curt</span>:—I have at last got for you the information we’ve
been searching for so long.”</p>
</div>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[Pg 364]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>His eyes eagerly rushed over the next few lines.</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>“I have satisfied myself that the man we’ve been trailing all these
years is Alexander Bancroft, a banker and prominent man in New
Mexico, who lives at Golden,—is that place anywhere near you?—and
for a number of years has been considered one of the most solid,
upright, and influential citizens of your Territory.”</p>
</div>
<p>The letter dropped from Curtis’s fingers and his heart gave a great
thump that sent the blood in a crimson wave over his face. “My God,
then, it’s true!” he said aloud, and sat for a moment gazing at the
letter in the same stupefied way he had looked after Gonzalez’s
retreating figure. A grim smile twisted the corners of his mouth as he
read on.</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>“You may know him. Delafield’s history as we’ve got it now makes
his case one of those curious romances of detective work whose
equal could hardly be found in fiction. We missed long ago the clew
that would have led us to success, in those gaps in his trail we
never tried to fill, because we came upon his tracks again so
easily a little later. While working on another case recently I had
occasion to look through an omnibus bill passed years ago by an
Arizona legislature. <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[Pg 365]</SPAN></span>It contained an astonishing ruck of things,
and among them was a section authorizing William J. Brown to change
his name to Alexander Bancroft. I knew that William J. Brown was
one of the names under which Delafield had once traded in mines
down there, and that, when we next found him after he had dropped
that name, it was as John Smith, when he went down into old Mexico
with John Mason Hardy. This name of Bancroft, sandwiched in there,
and with such pains to legalize it, when we had found no track of
it elsewhere, made me prick up my ears. I looked deeper into the
matter and found that he had used this name of Bancroft only when
he went to visit his wife and daughter, who lived most of the time
in San Francisco or Denver, and were known by that name. When last
we had track of the man, before I ran across Rutherford Jenkins, it
was, you will remember, as Henry C. Williams, and then we lost all
trace of him. That was because he went then on a visit to his wife
and daughter in Denver and stayed there for some months. He had
made a good clean-up about that time and increased it by some lucky
trading on the Denver stock exchange. Then he went to New Mexico,
kept the name of Bancroft, engaged in other business as well as
mining, and settled down to be a permanent citizen.</p>
<p>“I congratulate you upon the successful termination of our long
chase. I understand Bancroft <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[Pg 366]</SPAN></span>is a man of considerable property and
I hope you will be able to make him disgorge some of the goods he
stole so long ago. I have written this much hurriedly, just to give
you an outline of my discoveries at once. But I have all the
necessary proofs, and whenever you want to bring the case to trial
they are at your service.”</p>
</div>
<p>Conrad folded the letter carefully, and put it in his pocket. He sat
quite still, whispering “Aleck! Aleck Bancroft!” Presently his face went
red again and starting up he hurried into the corral and threw the
saddle again upon Brown Betty. Outside the gate, scarcely looking which
way he went, he headed the mare toward Golden and galloped away, across
the hills, and into the distance. He never knew just where or how far he
rode that day. Afterward he remembered that sometimes he had galloped
along a road and sometimes across the trackless plain, that sometimes he
had found himself urging Betty to her utmost speed and again had
traversed miles at a walk or had stood for a long time stock-still.</p>
<p>When he left the house the old idea that had enthralled him so long was
clamoring in his heart. That may have been why, unconsciously, he rode
at first down the road <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[Pg 367]</SPAN></span>toward Golden. “It was not enough for him to
take all my father had, life as well as money, and to make me drudge
through my youth, but now he must set a hired killer upon me to stick me
in the back!” So galloped his angry thought as Brown Betty’s hoofs sped
over the ground toward Bancroft’s home. “Why didn’t he come out in the
open like a man and tell me who he was, and let us fight it out on the
square? To send a man to live under my roof, and hire him to rope me, or
stick me, or shoot me from ambush! And to pretend to be my good friend
all the time! Coward! Thief! Murderer!”</p>
<p>Then, somehow, through his seething mind, for the first time came the
remembrance of Lucy, and quickly followed the idea that perhaps Bancroft
had gone about it in this secret way to save her from all knowledge of
his disgraceful past. He checked Brown Betty’s gallop to a walk. “He
knew I was after him, hot-foot,” now ran Curtis’s thought, “and he sure
had the right to head me off if he could. But he ought to have done it
on the square!” He remembered the warnings Bancroft had given him about
Gonzalez and about the danger of pursuing Delafield, and chuckled
unmirthfully. “I reckon he was squaring <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[Pg 368]</SPAN></span>himself to his own conscience,”
he said aloud.</p>
<p>Conrad looked about him and saw that he was on the road to Golden. Then
came the flashing idea that he was on his way to kill Lucy’s father.
Instantly his feeling revolted. Whirling the mare’s head he struck off
across the plain to the eastward and after some miles struck the road to
Randall. By that time he was pondering painfully the matter of Lucy and
Homer. That evening, without doubt, Homer would come home, proud and
happy, and tell him that he and Lucy were engaged. And this would be his
wedding present to the girl he loved and the brother he had cared for
almost since babyhood—the dead body of her father!</p>
<p>Then came pelting back the memory of his own wrongs, and Brown Betty was
sent scudding down the road as remembrance and habit again lashed his
heart. He turned about and raced back along the road toward Golden, hot
with the old memories and sore with the newly discovered duplicity of
his friend. “Even if I don’t kill him,” he thought, “I’ll tell him what
he is! I’ll throw his villainy and his cowardice in his face! I’ll tell
him he’s a sneak and a coward, and to draw if <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[Pg 369]</SPAN></span>he dares!” His
imagination rushed on through the scene and showed him, at the end,
Bancroft’s bleeding body at his feet.</p>
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