<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_TWENTY_FIVE" id= "CHAPTER_TWENTY_FIVE"></SPAN>CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE</h2>
<h3>ON THE HIGH IRON BRIDGE</h3>
<p>As the weeks had passed Marshall Langham had felt his fears lift
somewhat, but the days and nights still remained endless cycles of
torment. Wherever he turned and with whomsoever he talked the North
case was certain sooner or later to be mentioned. There were
hideous rumors afloat, too, concerning General Herbert's activity
in behalf of the condemned man, and in spite of his knowledge of
the law, he was profoundly affected by this wild gossip, this
ignorant conjecture, which reason and experience alike told him
misstated every fact that bore on the situation. He was learning
just how dependent he had been on Gilmore; no strange imaginings,
no foolish vagaries had ever beset the gambler, his brutal vigor
had yielded nothing to terror or remorse.</p>
<p>He knew the Herberts had gone to Columbus to make a final appeal
to the governor. Father and daughter had been driven across the
Square by Thompson, the Idle Hour foreman, and they had passed
below the windows of Langham's office on their way to the station.
It had seemed to him an iniquitous thing that the old statesman's
position and influence should be brought into the case to defeat
his hopes, to rob him of his vengeance, to imperil his very safety.
Racked and tortured, he had no existence outside his fear and hate.
All that day Langham haunted the railway station. If any word did
come over the wires, he wished to know it at once, and if General
Herbert returned he wished to see him, since his appearance must
indicate success or failure. If it were failure the knowledge would
come none too quickly; if success, in any degree, he contemplated
instant flight, for he was obsessed by the belief that then he
would somehow stand in imminent peril.</p>
<p>He was pacing the long platform when the afternoon train
arrived, but his bloodshot eyes searched the crowd in vain for a
sight of General Herbert's stalwart figure.</p>
<p>"He has just one more chance to get back in time!" he told
himself. "If he doesn't come to-night it means I am safe!"</p>
<p>His bloodless lips sucked in the warm air. Safe! It was the
first time in months he had dared to tell himself this; yet a
moment later and his fears were crowding back crushing him to
earth. The general might do much in the six hours that remained to
him.</p>
<p>He was back at his post when the night train drew in, and his
heart gave a great leap in his breast as he saw the general descend
from the platform of the sleeper and then turn to assist Elizabeth.
She was closely veiled, but one glance at the pair sufficed.</p>
<p>Langham passed down the long platform. The flickering gas-jets
that burned at intervals under the wide eaves of the low station
were luminous suns, his brain whirled and his step was unsteady. He
passed out into the night, and when the friendly darkness had
closed about him, slipped a feverish palm across his eyes and
thanked God that his season of despair was at an end. He had
suffered and endured but now he was safe!</p>
<p>Before him the train, with its trailing echoes, had dwindled
away into the silence of the spring night. Scarcely conscious of
the direction he was taking he walked down the track toward the
iron bridge. It was as if some miracle of healing had come to him;
his heavy step grew light, his shaking hands became steady, his
brain clear; in those first moments of security he was the
ease-seeking, pleasure-loving Marshall Langham of seven months
before.</p>
<p>As he strode forward he became aware that some one was ahead of
him on the track, then presently at the bridge a match was struck,
and his eyes, piercing the intervening darkness, saw that a man had
paused there to light a pipe. He was quite near the bridge himself
when another match flared, and he was able to distinguish the
figure of this man who was crouching back of one of the iron
girders. A puff of wind extinguished the second match almost
immediately, and after a moment or two in which the lawyer
continued to advance, a third match was struck; at the same instant
the man must have heard the sound of Langham's approach, for as he
brought the blazing match to the bowl of a short black pipe, he
turned, standing erect, and Langham caught sight of his face. It
was Joe Montgomery. Another playful gust found Mr. Montgomery's
match and the two men stood facing each other in the darkness.</p>
<p>Langham had been about to speak but the words died on his lips;
a wave of horror passed over him. He had known not quite ten
minutes of security and now it was at an end; his terror all
revived; this hulking brute who faced him there in the darkness
menaced his safety, a few drinks might give him courage to go to
Moxlow or to the general with his confession. How was he to deal
with the situation?</p>
<p>"There ain't much Irish about me!" said Montgomery, with a
casual oath.</p>
<p>There was a moment of silence. The handy-man was searching his
pockets for a fresh match.</p>
<p>"Why have you come back, Joe?" asked Langham finally, when he
could command himself.</p>
<p>Montgomery started violently and his pipe fell from his
mouth.</p>
<p>"Is that you, Boss Langham?" he faltered.</p>
<p>He stared about him seeking to pierce the darkness, fearful that
Langham was not alone, that Gilmore might be somewhere near.</p>
<p>"Are you by yourself, boss?" he asked, and a tremor stole into
his hoarse throaty voice. He still carried the scars of that
fearful beating Gilmore had administered.</p>
<p>"Yes," said Langham. "I'm alone."</p>
<p>"I didn't know but Andy Gilmore might be with you, boss," said
Montgomery, clearing his throat.</p>
<p>"No, he's not here," replied Langham quietly. "He's left
town."</p>
<p>"Yes, but he'll be comin' back!" said the handy-man with a short
laugh.</p>
<p>"No, he's gone for good."</p>
<p>"Well, I ain't sorry. I hope to God I never see him
again—he beat me up awful! I was as good a friend as he'll
ever have; I was a perfect yellow dog to him; he whistled and I
jumped, but I'll be damned if I ever jump again! Say, I got about
eighteen inches of old gas-pipe slid down my pants leg now for Mr.
Andy; one good slug with that, and he won't have no remarks to make
about my goin' home to my old woman!"</p>
<p>"You won't have to use it."</p>
<p>"I'm almost sorry," said Montgomery.</p>
<p>"I suppose that thirst of yours is unimpaired?" inquired
Langham.</p>
<p>His burning eyes never for an instant forsook the dark outline
of the handy-man's slouching figure.</p>
<p>"I dunno, boss, I ain't been drinkin' much lately. Liquor's a
bully thing to keep the holes in your pants, and your toes out
where you can look at 'em if you want to. I dunno as I'll ever take
up whisky-drinkin' again," concluded Mr. Montgomery, with a
self-denying shake of the head.</p>
<p>"Are you glad to be back, Joe?" asked Langham.</p>
<p>It was anything to gain time, he was thinking desperately but to
no purpose.</p>
<p>"Glad! Stick all the cuss words you know in front of that and it
will be mild!" cried Montgomery feelingly. "It's pitiful the way I
been used, just knocked from pillar to post; I've seen dogs right
here in Mount Hope that had a lot happier time than I've been
havin'—and me a married man! I've always tried to be a good
husband, I hope there won't be no call for me to make a rough-house
of it to-night!" he added playfully, as he looked off across the
bridge.</p>
<p>"I guess not, Joe," said Langham.</p>
<p>His fears assembled themselves before him like a phantom host.
How was he to deal with the handy-man; how would Gilmore have dealt
with him? Had the time gone by to bully and bribe, or was that
still the method by which he could best safeguard his life?</p>
<p>"Say, boss, what they done with young John North?" Montgomery
suddenly demanded.</p>
<p>"Nothing yet," answered Langham after an instant's pause.</p>
<p>"Ain't he had his trial?" Montgomery asked.</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"Well, ain't they done anything with him? If he ain't been sent
up, he's been turned loose."</p>
<p>"Neither, Joe," rejoined Langham slowly. "The jury didn't agree.
His friends are trying to get the judge to dismiss the case."</p>
<p>"That would suit me bully, boss, if they done that!" cried the
handy-man.</p>
<p>Langham caught the tone of relief.</p>
<p>"I don't want to see him hang; I don't want to see no one hang,
I'm all in favor of livin', myself. Say, I had a sweet time out
West! I'd a died yonder; I couldn't stand it, I had to come
back—just had to!"</p>
<p>He was shaking and wretched, and he exaggerated no part of the
misery he had known.</p>
<p>"When did you get in?" asked Langham.</p>
<p>"I beat my way in on the ten-thirty; I rode most of the way from
Columbus on top of the baggage car—I'm half dead, boss!"</p>
<p>"Have you seen any one?"</p>
<p>"No one but you. I got off at the crossin' where they slow up
and come along here; I wasn't thinkin' of a damn thing but gettin'
home to my old woman. I guess I'll hit the ties right now!" he
concluded with sudden resolution, and once more his small blue eyes
were turned toward the bridge.</p>
<p>"I'll walk across to the other side with you," said Langham
hastily.</p>
<p>"The crick's up quite a bit!" said the handy-man as they set
foot on the bridge.</p>
<p>Langham glanced out into the gloom, where swollen by the recent
rains the stream splashed and whirled between its steep banks.</p>
<p>"Yes, way up!" he answered.</p>
<p>As he spoke he stepped close to Montgomery's side and raised his
voice.</p>
<p>"Stop a bit," said Joe halting. "I shan't need this now," and he
drew the piece of gas-pipe from his trousers pocket. "I'd have
hammered the life out of Andy Gilmore!" he said, as he tossed the
ugly bludgeon from him.</p>
<p>"You haven't told me where you have been," said Langham, and
once more he pressed close to Montgomery, so close their elbows
touched.</p>
<p>The handy-man moved a little to one side.</p>
<p>"Where <i>ain't</i> I been, you better ask, boss," he said. "I
seen more rotten cities and more rotten towns and more rotten
country than you can shake a stick at; God A'mighty knows what's
the good of it—I dunno! Everybody I seen was strangers to me,
never a face I knowed anywhere; Chicago, Kansas City, St. Louis,
Denver—to hell with 'em all, boss; old Mount Hope's good
enough for me!" And the handy-man shrugged his huge slanting
shoulders.</p>
<p>"Don't go so fast, Joe!" Langham cautioned, and his eyes
searched the darkness ahead of them.</p>
<p>"It's a risky business for you, boss," said the handy-man. "You
ain't used to this bridge like me."</p>
<p>"Do you always come this way?" asked Langham.</p>
<p>"Always, in all seasons and all shapes, drunk or sober, winter
or summer," said the handy-man.</p>
<p>"One wouldn't have much chance if he slipped off here to-night,"
said Langham with a shudder.</p>
<p>"Mighty little," agreed Montgomery. "Say, step over,
boss—we want to keep in the middle! There—that's
better, I was clean outside the rail."</p>
<p>"Can you swim?" asked Langham.</p>
<p>"Never swum a stroke. The dirt's good enough for me; I got a
notion that these here people who are always dippin' themselves are
just naturally filthy. Look at me, a handy-man doing all kinds of
odd jobs, who's got a better right to get dirty—but I leave
it alone and it wears off. I'm blame certain you won't find many
people that fool away less money on soap than just me!" said Joe
with evident satisfaction. "The old woman's up!" he cried, as he
caught the glimmer of a light on the shore beyond.</p>
<p>Perhaps unconsciously he quickened his pace.</p>
<p>"Not so fast, Joe!" gasped Langham.</p>
<p>"Oh, all right, boss!" responded Montgomery.</p>
<p>Langham turned to him quickly, but as he did so his foot struck
the cinder ballast of the road-bed.</p>
<p>"Good night, boss!" said Joe, his eyes fixed on the distant
light.</p>
<p>"Wait!" said Langham imperiously.</p>
<p>"What for?" demanded Montgomery.</p>
<p>"The water made such a noise I couldn't talk to you out on the
bridge," began Langham.</p>
<p>"Well, I can't stop now, boss," said the handy-man, turning
impatiently from him.</p>
<p>"Yes, damn you—you can—and will!" and Langham raised
his voice to give weight to his words.</p>
<p>Montgomery rounded up his shoulders.</p>
<p>"Don't you try that, boss! Andy Gilmore could shout me down and
cuss me out, but you can't; and I'll peel the face off you if you
lay hands on me!" He thrust out a grimy fist and menaced Langham
with it. There was a brief silence and the handy-man swung about on
his heel.</p>
<p>"Good night, boss!" he said over his shoulder, as he moved
off.</p>
<p>Langham made no answer, but long after Joe's shuffling steps had
died away in the distance he was still standing there irresolute
and undecided, staring fixedly off into the darkness that had
swallowed up the handy-man's hulking figure.</p>
<p>Mr. Montgomery, muttering somewhat and wagging his head,
continued along the track for a matter of a hundred yards, when his
feet found a narrow path which led off in the direction of the
light he had so confidently declared was his old woman's. Then
presently as he shuffled forward, the other seven houses of the row
of which his was the eighth, cloaked in utter darkness, took
shadowy form against the sky. The handy-man stumbled into his
unkempt front yard, its metes and bounds but indifferently defined
by the remnants of what had been a picket fence; he made his way to
the side door, which he threw open without ceremony. As he had
surmised, his old woman was up. She was seated by the table in the
corner, engaged in mending the ragged trousers belonging to Joseph
Montgomery, junior.</p>
<p>At sight of Joe, senior, she screamed and flung them aside; then
white and shaking she came weakly to her feet. The handy-man
grinned genially. He was not of demonstrative temperament.</p>
<p>"Joe!" cried Nellie, as she sprang toward him. "Dear Joe!" and
she threw her arms about him.</p>
<p>"Oh, hell!" said the handy-man.</p>
<p>Nellie was hanging limply about his neck and he was aware that
she had kissed him; he could not remember when before she had taken
such a liberty. Mr. Montgomery believed in a reasonable display of
affection, but kissing seemed to him a singularly frivolous
practice.</p>
<p>"Oh, my man!" sobbed Nellie.</p>
<p>"Oh, cheese it, and let me loose—I don't like this to-do!
Can't a married man come home without all this fuss?"</p>
<p>"Dear Joe, you've come back to me and your babies!" And the
tears streamed down her cheeks.</p>
<p>"I don't need you to tell me that—I got plenty sense
enough to know when I'm home!" said Montgomery, not without
bitterness.</p>
<p>"I mourned you like you was passed away, until your letter
come!" said Nellie, and the memory of her sufferings set her
sobbing afresh.</p>
<p>"Oh, great hell!" exclaimed Joe dejectedly. "Why can't you act
cheerful? What's the good of takin' on, anyhow—I don't like
tombstone talk."</p>
<p>"It was just the shock of seein' you standin' there in the door
like I seen you so often!" said Nellie weakly.</p>
<p>"If that ain't a woman for you, miserable because she's happy.
Say, stop chokin' me; I won't stand for much more of this nonsense,
you might know I don't like these to-dos!"</p>
<p>"You don't know what I've suffered, Joe!"</p>
<p>"That's a woman for you every time—always thinkin' of
herself! To hear you talk any one would think I'd been to a church
picnic; I look like I'd been to a picnic, don't I? Yes, I
do—like hell!"</p>
<p>"They said you would never come back to me," moaned Nellie.</p>
<p>"Who said that?" asked Mr. Montgomery aggressively.</p>
<p>"Everybody—the neighbors—Shrimplin—they all
said it!"</p>
<p>"Ain't I told you never to listen to gossip, and ain't I always
done what's right?" interrogated the handy-man severely.</p>
<p>"Yes, always, Joe," said Nellie.</p>
<p>"Then you might know'd I'd come back when I got plenty good and
ready. I fooled 'em all, and I'm here to stay—that is if you
keep your hands off me!"</p>
<p>"You mean it, Joe?" asked Nellie.</p>
<p>"What? About your keepin' your hands off me? Yes, you bet I
do!"</p>
<p>And Montgomery by a not ungentle effort released himself from
his wife's embrace. This act so restored his self-respect that he
grinned pleasantly at her.</p>
<p>"I don't know when I been so happy, Joe—it's awful nice to
have you back!" said Nellie, wiping her eyes on the corner of her
apron.</p>
<p>"There's some sense in your sayin' that," said the handy-man,
shaking his head. "You ought to feel happy."</p>
<p>"You don't ask after your children, Joe.—"</p>
<p>"Don't I? Well, maybe you don't give me no time to!" said Mr.
Montgomery, but without any special enthusiasm, since the truth was
that his interest in his numerous offspring was most casual.</p>
<p>"They're all well, and the littlest, Tom—the one you never
seen—has got his first tooth!" said Nellie.</p>
<p>Joe grunted at this information.</p>
<p>"He'll have more by and by, won't he?" he said.</p>
<p>"How you talk, of course he will!"</p>
<p>"He'd have a devil of a time chewin' his food if he didn't,"
observed, the handy-man with a throaty chuckle.</p>
<p>"And, Joe, I got the twenty dollars you sent!"</p>
<p>"Is any of it left?" inquired Mr. Montgomery, with sudden
interest.</p>
<p>"The rent and things took it all. That was the noblest act you
ever done, Joe; it made me certain you was thinkin' of us, and from
the moment I got that money I was sure you would come back no
matter what people said!"</p>
<p>"Humph!" said Joe. "Is there anything in the house fit to eat?
Because if there is, I'll feed my face right now!"</p>
<p>"Do set down, Joe; I'll have something for you in a
minute—why didn't you tell me you was hungry?"</p>
<p>She was already rattling plates and knives at the cupboard, and
Joe took the chair she had quitted when he entered the house,
stretching his legs under his own table with a sense of deep
satisfaction. He had not considered it worth his while to visit the
kitchen sink, although his mode of life, as well as his mode of
travel for days past, had covered him with dust and grime; nor did
he take off his ragged cap. It had always been his custom to wear
it in the privacy of his own home, it was one of the last things he
removed before going to bed at night; at all other times it reposed
on the top of his curly red head as the only safe place for a cap
to be.</p>
<p>"I was real worried about Arthur along in March," said Mrs.
Montgomery, as such odds and ends as had survived the appetites of
all the little Montgomerys began to assemble themselves on the
table.</p>
<p>"What's he been a-doin'?" inquired Arthur's father.</p>
<p>"It was his chest," explained Nellie.</p>
<p>Joe grunted. By this time his two elbows were planted on the
edge of the table and his mouth was brought to within six scant
inches of his plate. The handy-man's table manners were not his
strong point.</p>
<p>"Oh, I guess his chest is all right!" he paused to say.</p>
<p>"I thought it was best to be on the safe side, so I took him
up-town and had his health examined by a doctor. He had to take off
his shirt so he could hear Arthur's lungs."</p>
<p>"Well, I'm damned,—what did he do that for?" cried Joe,
profoundly astonished.</p>
<p>"It was a mercy I'd washed him first," added Nellie, not
comprehending the reason of her husband's sudden show of interest
though gratified by it.</p>
<p>"Lord, I thought you meant the doctor had took off his shirt!"
said Joe. "He's all right now, ain't he?"</p>
<p>"Yes, but he did have such an alarmin' cough; it hung on and
hung on, it seemed to me like it was on his chest, but the doctor
said no, and I was that relieved! I used some of the twenty dollars
to pay him and to get medicine from the drug store."</p>
<p>Joe was cramming his mouth full of cold meat and bread, and for
the moment could not speak; when at length he could and did, it was
to say:</p>
<p>"I hear Andy Gilmore's left town?"</p>
<p>"Yes, all of a sudden, and no one knows where he's gone!"</p>
<p>"I guess he's had enough of Mount Hope, and I guess Mount Hope's
had enough of him!" remarked Joe.</p>
<p>"They say the police was goin' to stop the gamblin' in his rooms
if he hadn't gone when he did."</p>
<p>"Well, I hope he'll catch hell wherever he is!" said Joe, with a
sullen drop to his voice.</p>
<p>"For a while after you left, Joe, they didn't give me no peace
at all—the police and detectives, I mean—they was here
every day! And Shrimplin told me they was puttin' advertisements in
the papers all over the country."</p>
<p>"What for?" inquired Montgomery uneasily.</p>
<p>"They wanted to find out where you'd gone; it seemed like they
was determined to get you back as a witness for the trial,"
explained Nellie.</p>
<p>Montgomery's uneasiness increased. He began to wonder fearfully
if he was in any danger, vague forebodings assailed him. Suppose he
was pinched and sent up. His face blanched and his small blue eyes
slid around in their sockets. Nellie was evidently unaware of the
feeling of terror her words had inspired, for she continued:</p>
<p>"But it didn't make no difference in the end that you wasn't
here, for everybody says it was you that hanged John North; you get
all the credit for that!"</p>
<p>Montgomery's hands fell at his side.</p>
<p>"Me hanged John North! <i>Me hanged John North!</i>" he
repeated. "But he ain't hanged—God A'mighty, he ain't hanged
yet!"</p>
<p>His voice shot up into a wail of horrified protest. Nellie
regarded him with a look of astonishment. She had been rather sorry
for young John North, but she had also felt a certain wifely pride
in Joe's connection with the case.</p>
<p>"No, he ain't hanged yet but he will be in the morning!" she
said.</p>
<p>The handy-man sprang to his feet, knocking over the chair in
which he had been seated.</p>
<p>"What's that?" he roared.</p>
<p>"Why, haven't you heard? He's to be hung in the morning."</p>
<p>Joe glared at her with starting eyes.</p>
<p>"What will they do that for—hang him—hang John
North!" He tore off his ragged cap and dashed it to the floor at
his feet. "To hell with Andy Gilmore and to hell with Marsh
Langham—that's why they drove me out of town—to hell
with 'em both!" he shouted, and his great chest seemed bursting
with pent-up fury.</p>
<p>"Why, whatever do you mean, Joe?" cried Nellie.</p>
<p>"He never done it—you hear me—and they <i>know</i>
it! You sure you got the straight of this—they are goin' to
hang young John North?" He seized her roughly by the shoulders.</p>
<p>"Yes—how you take on, Joe—"</p>
<p>"Take on!" he shouted. "You'd take on too if you stood in my
place. You're sure you know what you're talkin' about?"</p>
<p>"I seen the fence around the jail yard where they're goin' to
hang him; I went over on purpose yesterday with one of the
neighbors and took Arthur; I thought it would be improvin', but
he'd seen it before. There ain't much he don't see—for all I
can do he just runs the streets."</p>
<p>Joe's resolution had been formed while she was speaking, and now
he snatched his ragged cap from the floor.</p>
<p>"You stay right here till I get back!" he said gruffly.</p>
<p>It was not his habit to discuss affairs of any moment with Mrs.
Montgomery, since in a general way he doubted the clearness of the
feminine judgment, and in the present instance he had no intention
of taking her into his confidence. The great problem by which he
was confronted he would settle in his own fashion.</p>
<p>"You ain't in any trouble, Joe?" and Nellie's eyes widened with
the birth of sudden fear.</p>
<p>The handy-man was standing by the door, and she went to his
side.</p>
<p>"Me? No, I guess not; but I got an everlastin' dose of it for
the other fellow!" and he reached for the knob.</p>
<p>"Was it what I said about the police wantin' you?" his wife
asked timidly.</p>
<p>She knew that his dealings with the police had never been of an
especially fortunate nature. He shook off the hand she had placed
on his arm.</p>
<p>"You keep your mouth shut till I get back!" he said, and pushing
open the door, passed out.</p>
<p>The night had cleared since he crossed the bridge, and from the
great blue arch of heaven the new moon gave her radiance to a
sleeping world. But Montgomery was aware only of his purpose as he
slouched along the path toward the railroad track. The horror of
North's fate had fixed his determination, nothing of terror or fear
that he had ever known was comparable to the emotion he was
experiencing now. He did not even speculate on the consequences to
himself of the act he had decided on. They said that he had hanged
John North—he got the credit for that—well, John North
wasn't hanged yet! He tossed his arms aloft. "My God, I didn't mean
to do that!" he muttered.</p>
<p>He had gained the railroad tracks and was running toward the
bridge, the very seconds seemed of infinite value to him, for
suppose he should have difficulty in finding Moxlow? And if he
found the prosecuting attorney, would he believe his story? A
shudder passed through him. He was quite near the bridge when
suddenly he paused and a whispered curse slipped from between his
parted lips. A man was standing at the entrance to the bridge and
though it was impossible to distinguish more than the shadowy
outline of his figure, Montgomery was certain that it was Marshall
Langham. His first impulse was to turn back and go into town by the
wagon road and the wooden bridge, but as he hesitated the figure
came toward him, and Langham spoke.</p>
<p>"Is that you, Joe?" he asked.</p>
<p>"Damn him, he knows I won't stand for hangin' North!" the
handy-man told himself under his breath. He added aloud as he
shuffled forward, "Yes, it's me, boss!"</p>
<p>"Couldn't you make it right with Nellie?" asked Langham.</p>
<p>"Oh, it isn't that—the old woman's all right—but the
baby's sick and I'm out huntin' a doctor."</p>
<p>He did not expect Langham to believe him, but on the spur of the
moment he could think of nothing better.</p>
<p>"I am sorry to hear that!" said Langham.</p>
<p>An evil wolfish light stole into his eyes and the lines of his
weak debauched face hardened.</p>
<p>"What's the matter with you, boss; couldn't you get across?"
asked Joe.</p>
<p>"No, the bridge is too much for me. Like a fool I stopped here
to smoke a cigar after you left me; I hoped it would clear off a
bit so I could see the ties, but it's worse now that I can. I had
about made up my mind to come and get you to help me back into
town."</p>
<p>"Come along, boss, I'm in a terrible hurry!" said Joe
eagerly.</p>
<p>But Langham was a pace or two in advance of him when they
stepped out on the bridge. Never once did he glance in the
handy-man's direction. Had he done so, Montgomery must have been
aware that his face showed bloodless in the moonlight, while his
sunken eyes blazed with an unaccustomed fire.</p>
<p>"I can't walk these ties, Joe—give me your hand—" he
managed to say.</p>
<p>Joe did as he desired, and as the lawyer's slim fingers closed
about his great fist he was conscious that a cold moisture covered
them. He could only think of a dead man's hand.</p>
<p>"What's wrong with the baby, Joe?" Langham asked.</p>
<p>"Seems like it's got a croup," said Joe promptly.</p>
<p>"That's too bad—"</p>
<p>"Yes, it's a hell of a pity," agreed Montgomery.</p>
<p>He was furtively watching Langham out of the corners of his
beady blue eyes; his inner sense of things told him it was well to
do this. They took half a dozen steps and Langham released Joe's
hand.</p>
<p>"I wonder if I can manage this alone!" he said. But apparently
the attempt was a failure, for he quickly rested his hand on his
companion's massive shoulder.</p>
<p>They had reached the second of the bridge's three spans. Below
them in the darkness the yellow flood poured in noisy volume. As
Langham knew, here the stream was at its deepest and its current
the swiftest. He knew also that his chance had come; but he dared
not make use of it. The breath whistled from his lips and the
moisture came from every pore. He sought frantically to nerve
himself for the supreme moment; but suppose he slipped, or suppose
Joe became aware of his purpose one second too soon!</p>
<p>"Keep over a bit, boss!" said the handy-man suddenly. "You are
crowding me off the bridge!"</p>
<p>"Oh, all right; is that better?"</p>
<p>And Langham moved a step aside.</p>
<p>"A whole lot," responded Joe gruffly. But his little blue eyes,
alert with cunning, were never withdrawn from the lawyer for an
instant.</p>
<p>They walked forward in silence for a moment or two, and were
approaching the end of the center span, when the lawyer glanced
about him wildly; he realized that he was letting slip his one
great opportunity. Again Joe spoke:</p>
<p>"Keep over, boss!" And then all in the same breath, "What the
hell are you up to, anyway?"</p>
<p>It must be now or it would be never; and Langham, turning
swiftly, hurled himself on his companion, and his slim fingers with
their death-like chill gripped Joe's hairy throat. In the
suddenness of the attack he was forced toward the edge of the
bridge. The rush of the noisy waters sounded with fearful
distinctness in his ears.</p>
<p>"Here, damn you, let go!" panted Montgomery.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><br/> <SPAN href="images/368.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/368.jpg" width-obs="45%" alt= "" title="" /></SPAN><br/> <b>"Here, let go!" panted Montgomery.</b>
<br/></div>
<p>He felt Langham's hot breath on his cheek, he read murder by the
wolfish light in his eyes. He wrenched himself free of the other's
desperate clutch, but as he did so his foot caught against one of
the rails and he slipped and fell to his knees. In the intervals of
his own labored breathing, he heard the flow of the river, a dull
ceaseless roar, and saw the flashing silver of the moon's rays as
they touched the water's turgid surface. Langham no longer sought
to force him from the bridge, but bent every effort to thrust him
down between the ties to a swift and certain death.</p>
<p>"You want to kill me, too!" panted Montgomery, as by a mighty
effort that brought the veins on neck and forehead to the point of
bursting, he regained his footing on the ties.</p>
<p>But his antagonist was grimly silent, and Joe, roused to action
by fear, and by a sullen rage at what he deemed the lawyer's
perfidy, turned and grappled with him. Once he smashed his great
fist full into Langham's face, and though the blow sent the lawyer
staggering across the bridge, he recovered himself quickly and
rushed back to renew the fight. Montgomery greeted him with an
oath, and they grappled again.</p>
<p>Langham had known in his calmer moments when he planned Joe's
death, that his only hope of success lay in the suddenness of his
attack. Now as they swayed on the very edge of the bridge the
handy-man put forth all his strength and lifted the lawyer clear of
the ties, then with a mighty heave of his great shoulders he tossed
him out into space.</p>
<p>There was a scarcely audible splash and Joe, looking fearfully
down, saw the muddy drops turn limpid in the soft white light. A
moment later some dark object came to the surface and a white face
seemed to look up into his, but only for a second, and then the
restless flood bore it swiftly away.</p>
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