uncomprehended at his ear. It said:
"I'd knocked on all the doors, and was just going. I wanted to see you at
once--"
Gordon felt over the door in search of the place for the key.
"I say I wanted to see you," the voice persisted; "it's Edgar Crandall.
You'll take pleasure from what I've got to tell."
The key slipped into its place and the bolt shot back.... Well, he was
home. No other thought, no other consciousness, lingered in his mind; even
the pain, the unsupportable white core of suffering in his brain, was
dulled. He placed his foot upon the threshold, but the hand upon his
shoulder arrested him:
"Greenstream's going to have a bank," the voice triumphantly declared;
"it's settled--part outside capital, part guaranteed right here. Paper
shaving, robbery, finished ... lawful rate ... chance--"
It was no more to Gordon Makimmon than the crackling of the forest
branches, no more than an inexplicable hindrance to a desired
consummation.
"If it hadn't been for you, what you did for me ... others ... new
courage, example of bigness--Why! what's the matter with you, Makimmon?
That's blood."
Gordon made a tremendous effort of will, of grim concentration. He freed
himself from the detaining hand. "Moment," he pronounced. The single word
was expelled as dryly, as lifelessly, as a projectile, from a throat
insensate as the barrel of a gun. He vanished into the bitterly cold
house.
The bare floors echoed to his plodding footsteps as he entered the bedroom
beyond the dismantled chamber of the safe. A flickering desire to see led
him to where, on the bureau, a lamp had been left. The chimney fell with a
crash of splintering glass upon the floor, a match flared in his stiff
fingers, and the unprotected wick burned with a choking, spectral blue
light.
He saw, gazing at him from the black depths of the mirror above the
bureau, a haggard face drained of all life, of all blood, with deep inky
pools upon the eyes. A sudden emotion stirred in the chill immobility
creeping upward through him.
"Lettice!" he cried in a voice as flat as a spent echo; "Lettice!"
He stumbled back, sinking.
Edgar Crandall found him kneeling at the bed, his arms outflung across the
counterpane, his head bowed between, with a blackening stain beneath his
clay-cold lips, beneath his face scarred with immeasurable suffering,
fixed in a last surprise.
THE END
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Mountain Blood, by Joseph
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