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Hereafter oil men would speak of the Snake Creek field as copper men spoke of Anaconda or gold men of the Yukon.
And that night word went by wire to the opportunity hound who had just gone east, that the "fur" side was to the "nigh" side as gold is to silver.
"What do you make of it?" demanded Harrison, when Spurrier, secure in his seeming of undaunted a.s.surance, arrived at his office and the response came smilingly: "I think it means a bluff."
"Read that," snapped the financier as he flung a letter across his desk.
Spurrier took the sheet of paper and read in a hand, evidently disguised!
You find yourself in a cul-de-sac. I hold the key to a way out. My terms are definite and determined in advance. I shall be at your office at noon, Tuesday. We will do business at that time, or not at all.
"I repeat," said Spurrier, "that this seems to me a bra.s.s-bound bluff.
I make only the request that I be permitted to talk with this brigand alone; to sound him out with no interference and to shape my policy by the circ.u.mstances. I'm not at all frightened."
Harrison answered snappily:
"I agree to that--but if you fail you fail finally."
So on Tuesday forenoon Spurrier sat cross-legged in Harrison's office and their discussion had come to its end. Now, he had only to await the unknown person who was to arrive at noon bearing alleged terms, a person who claimed to be armed for battle if battle were needed.
At Harrison's left and right sat his favored lieutenants, but Spurrier himself occupied a chair a little bit apart, relegated to a zone of probation.
Then a rap sounded on the door, and Spurrier smiled with a ghost of triumph as he noted that he alone of the small group did not start at the signal. For all their great caliber and standing, these men were keyed to expectancy and exasperated nervousness.
The clerk who appeared made his announcement with the calculated evenness of routine: "A lady is waiting. She says her name doesn't matter. She has an appointment for twelve."
"A lady!" exclaimed Harrison in amazement. "My G.o.d, do we have to fight this thing out with a woman?"
The tableau of astonishment held, until Spurrier broke it:
"What matter personalities to us?" he blandly inquired. "We are interested in facts."
The chief lifted his hand and gave curt direction. "Show her in."
Then through the door came a woman whose beauty would have arrested attention in any gathering. Just now what these men, rising grudgingly from their chairs, noted first, was the self-possession, the poise, and the convincing evidence of good breeding and competency which characterized her.
She was elegantly but plainly dressed, and her manner conveyed a self-a.s.surance in nowise fl.u.s.tered by the prospect of impending storm.
No one there, save Spurrier, recognized her, for to Martin Harrison carrying the one disapproving impression of a mountain girl in patched gingham, the transformation was complete.
And as for Spurrier himself, after coming to his feet, he stood as a man might be expected to stand if a specter of death had suddenly materialized before him.
For the one time in his life all the a.s.sumption of boldness, worn for other eyes, broke and fell away from him, leaving him nakedly and starkly dumbfounded. He presented the pale and distressed aspect of a whipped prize fighter, reeling groggily against the ropes, and defenseless against attack.
It was a swift transformation from audacious boldness to something which seemed abject, or that at least was the aspect which presented itself to Martin Harrison and his aides, but back of it all lay reasons into which they could not see.
It was no crumbling and softening of battle metal that had wrought this astonis.h.i.+ng metamorphosis but a thing much nearer to the man's heart. At that moment there departed from his mind the whole urgent call of the duel between business enemies--and he saw only the woman for whom he had sought and whom he had not found.
In the c.u.mulative force and impact of their heart-breaking sequence there rushed back on him all the memories that had been haunting him, intensified to unspeakable degree at the sight of her face--and if he thought of the business awaiting them at all, it was only with a stabbing pain of realization that he had met Glory again only in the guise of an enemy.
Harrison gave him one contemptuous glance and remarked brutally:
"Madam, this gentleman was to talk with you, but he seems scarcely able to conduct any affair of moment."
Glory was looking at the broken man, too, and into her splendid eyes stole a pity that had tenderness back of it.
Old memories came in potent waves, and she closed her lids for a moment as though against a painful glare, but with quick recovery she spoke.
"It is imperative, gentlemen, that I have a few words first--and alone--with Mr. Spurrier."
"If you insist, but----" Harrison's shoulders stiffened. "But we do not guarantee that we shall abide by his declarations."
"I do insist--and I think you will find that it is I who am in the position to dictate terms."
Harrison gave a sharply imperative gesture toward the door through which the others filed out, followed by the chief himself, leaving the two alone.
Then John Spurrier rose, and supported himself by hands pressed upon the table top. He stood unsteadily at first and failed in his effort to speak. Then, with difficulty, he straightened and swept his two hands out in a gesture of surrender.
"I'm through," he said. "I thought there was still one fight left in me--but I can't fight you."
She did not answer and, after a little, with a slight regaining of his self-command, he went on again:
"Glory! What a name and what a fulfillment! You have always been Glory to me."
Out of his eyes slowly went the apathy of despair and another look of even stronger feeling preempted its place: a look of wors.h.i.+p and adoration.
"I didn't know," admitted Glory softly, "that I was to meet you here.
I didn't know that the fight was to be between us."
"You have ruined me," he answered. "I'm a sinking s.h.i.+p now, and those rats out there will leave me--but it's worth ruin to see you again. I want you to take this message with you and remember it. All my life I've gambled hard and fought hard. Now I fail hard. I lost you and deserved to lose you, but I've always loved you and always shall."
Her eyes grew stern, repressing the tenderness and pity that sought to hold them soft.
"You abandoned me," she said. "You sought to plunder my people. I took up their fight, and I shall win it."
Spurrier came a step toward her and spread his hands in a gesture of surrender, but he had recovered from the shock that had so unnerved him a few minutes ago and there was now a certain dignity in his acceptance of defeat.
"I break my sword across my knee," he declared, "and since I must do it, I'm glad you are the victor. I won't ask for mercy even from you--but when you say I abandoned you, you are grievously wrong.
"When you say I sought to plunder your people, you speak the truth about me--as I was before I came to love you. From that time on I sought to serve your people."
"Sought to serve them?" she repeated in perplexity, "The record shows nothing of that."
"And since the record doesn't," he answered steadily, "any a.s.sertions and protestations would be without proof. I've told you, because my heart compelled me. I won't try to convince you. At all events, since I failed, my motives don't matter."
"Your motives are everything. I took up the fight," she said, "because I thought a Spurrier had wronged them. I wanted a Spurrier to make rest.i.tution."