Part 42 (2/2)

”Do you mean to tell me that you doubted it?” Harding returned. ”You haven't the reputation of being a fool. Would you have lent money on a note you suspected was forged?”

Davies saw the game was up. Brand was Mowbray's friend, and Harding was an obviously hostile witness. Unless he were very careful he might lay himself open to a charge of conspiracy; and he was powerless to attack Mowbray so long as Harding acknowledged his signature.

”Well,” resumed Harding, taking out his wallet, ”I guess I'll keep this paper and give you a check.”

Brand saw his last hope vanis.h.i.+ng.

”Stop a minute!” he interposed. ”You're taking too much for granted in concluding that Gerald cannot pay. The debt is his in the first place, and with the help of a friend he is able to find the money.”

Mowbray looked up with a curious expression in which there was relief and shame. Though he would have forced his daughter into a marriage she shrank from, the necessity for doing so had preyed upon his mind and he seized the chance of freeing himself of his debt to Brand. He did not stop to reason, but acted on the vague feeling that Harding, whom he had distrusted, would prove an easier creditor.

”Gerald cannot pay this note,” he said firmly.

Brand turned to him in surprise; but he saw that Mowbray was not to be moved, and he understood what had prompted the Colonel's sudden change.

Brand had not played a straight game, and he had lost. At the last moment the prairie man had beaten him. All that he could do now was to bear his defeat with dignity.

”Very well, sir,” he answered, getting up. ”Since I cannot be of service, I will leave you to arrange matters with these gentlemen.”

Mowbray went to the door with him, and closing it behind them laid his hand on Brand's arm.

”You pressed me hard, but you were willing to help when I needed it badly. I shall remember that with grat.i.tude.”

”I wish you could forget the rest, but it's too much to hope,” Brand replied; and when Mowbray went back into the room he walked moodily down the pa.s.sage.

Reaching the hall, he found Beatrice waiting there. She had seen Davies come in and had heard of Harding's arrival, and she now wondered with tense anxiety what was going on. She could form no conclusion and could not ask Gerald, because he had carefully kept out of her way. Looking up at Brand's step, she felt her heart beat with returning hope, for his lips were set and his brows knit. He had rather the air of a man who had received a heavy blow than that of a rejoicing lover. Something unexpected had happened to humble him and set her free.

”Well,” he said with an effort, ”I have lost you. Still, I want you to believe that I loved you.”

Beatrice was trembling from the shock of relief, but she knew that it would be cruel to show what she felt.

”I never doubted that,” she answered quietly; ”but you took the wrong way.”

”There was no other available. Now that I have lost, perhaps you will forgive me. I'm going to England in a week or two; I haven't the courage to stay here.”

”I'm sorry,” she said. ”But to go away may be best.”

Brand left her, and she leaned against the big newel-post and tried to keep calm. The thing she dreaded most was not to happen. In some miraculous way she was free! She wondered with keen anxiety what her father and Harding were talking about. Davies, she knew, had left the house a few moments after Brand.

As a matter of fact, the moneylender was promptly dismissed, with a check for the full amount of the note; and when Mowbray returned after closing the door behind him, Harding laid the note on the table.

”This is yours, sir,” he said with a smile. ”You may destroy it.”

”Mine!” Mowbray showed his surprise. ”You mean--you----” He stumbled over the words. ”You admit your responsibility?” he finally ended.

”Of course!”

Harding picked up the note, tore it across twice, and threw the pieces into the open fire.

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