Black Jack by Max Brand (interesting novels to read TXT) đź“–
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This repulse made Kate thoughtful. She was not used to such bluff talk
from men, however smooth or rough the exterior might be. And under the
quiet of Vance she sensed an opposition like a stone wall.
“I guess you ain’t a friend of Terry’s?”
“I’d hardly like to put it strongly one way or the other. I know the boy,
if that’s what you mean.”
“It ain’t.” She considered him again. And again she was secretly pleased
to see him stir under the cool probe of her eyes. “How long did you live
with Terry?”
“He was with us twenty-four years.” He turned and explained casually to
Waters. “He was taken in as a foundling, you know. Quite against my
advice. And then, at the end of the twenty-four years, the bad blood of
his father came out, and he showed himself in his true colors. Fearful
waste of time to us all—of course, we had to turn him out.”
“Of course,” nodded Waters sympathetically, and he looked wistfully down
at his blueprint.
“Twenty-four years you lived with Terry,” said the girl softly, “and you
don’t like him, I see.”
Instantly and forever he was damned in her eyes. Anyone who could live
twenty-four years with Terry Hollis and not discover his fineness was
beneath contempt.
“I’ll tell you,” she said. “I’ve got to see Miss Elizabeth Cornish.”
“H’m!” said Vance. “I’m afraid not. But—just what have you to tell her?”
The girl smiled.
“If I could tell you that, I wouldn’t have to see her.”
He rubbed his chin with his knuckles, staring at the floor of the
veranda, and now and then raising quick glances at her. Plainly he was
suspicious. Plainly, also, he was tempted in some manner.
“Something he’s done, eh? Some yarn about Terry?”
It was quite plain that this man actually wanted her to have something
unpleasant to say about Terry. Instantly she suited herself to his mood;
for he was the door through which she must pass to see Elizabeth Cornish.
“Bad?” she said, hardening her expression as much as possible. “Well, bad
enough. A killing to begin with.”
There was a gleam in his eyes—a gleam of positive joy, she was sure,
though he banished it at once and shook his head in deprecation.
“Well, well! As bad as that? I suppose you may see my sister. For a
moment. Just a moment. She is not well. I wish I could understand your
purpose!”
The last was more to himself than to her. But she was already off her
horse. The man with the blueprint glared at her, and she passed across
the veranda and into the house, where Vance showed her up the big stairs.
At the door of his sister’s room he paused again and scrutinized.
“A killing—by Jove!” he murmured to himself, and then knocked.
A dull voice called from within, and he opened. Kate found herself in a
big, solemn room, in one corner of which sat an old woman wrapped to the
chin in a shawl. The face was thin and bleak, and the eyes that looked at
Kate were dull.
“This girl—” said Vance. “By Jove, I haven’t asked your name, I’m
afraid.”
“Kate Pollard.”
“Miss Pollard has some news of Terry. I thought it might—interest you,
Elizabeth.”
Kate saw the brief struggle on the face of the old woman. When it passed,
her eyes were as dull as ever, but her voice had become husky.
“I’m surprised, Vance. I thought you understood—his name is not to be
spoken, if you please.”
“Of course not. Yet I thought—never mind. If you’ll step downstairs with
me, Miss Pollard, and tell me what—”
“Not a step,” answered the girl firmly, and she had not moved her eyes
from the face of the elder woman. “Not a step with you. What I have to
say has got to be told to someone who loves Terry Hollis. I’ve found that
someone. I stick here till I’ve done talking.”
Vance Cornish gasped. But Elizabeth opened her eyes, and they
brightened—but coldly, it seemed to Kate.
“I think I understand,” said Elizabeth Cornish gravely. “He has entangled
the interest of this poor girl—and sent her to plead for him. Is that
so? If it’s money he wants, let her have what she asks for, Vance. But I
can’t talk to her of the boy.”
“Very well,” said Vance, without enthusiasm. He stepped before her. “Will
you step this way, Miss Pollard?”
“Not a step,” she repeated, and deliberately sat down in a chair. “You’d
better leave,” she told Vance.
He considered her in open anger. “If you’ve come to make a scene, I’ll
have to let you know that on account of my sister I cannot endure it.
Really—” “I’m going to stay here,” she echoed, “until I’ve done talking.
I’ve found the right person. I know that. Tell you what I want? Why, you
hate Terry Hollis!”
“Hate—him?” murmured Elizabeth.
“Nonsense!” cried Vance.
“Look at his face, Miss Cornish,” said the girl.
“Vance, by everything that’s sacred, your eyes were positively shrinking.
Do you hate—him?”
“My dear Elizabeth, if this unknown—”
“You’d better leave,” interrupted the girl. “Miss Cornish is going to
hear me talk.”
Before he could answer, his sister said calmly: “I think I shall, Vance.
I begin to be intrigued.”
“In the first place,” he blurted angrily, “it’s something you shouldn’t
hear—some talk about a murder—”
Elizabeth sank back in her chair and closed her eyes.
“Ah, coward!” cried Kate Pollard, now on her feet.
“Vance, will you leave me for a moment?”
For a moment he was white with malice, staring at the girl, then suddenly
submitting to the inevitable, turned on his heel and left the room.
“Now,” said Elizabeth, sitting erect again, “what is it? Why do you
insist on talking to me of—him? And—what has he done?”
In spite of her calm, a quiver of emotion was behind the last words, and
nothing of it escaped Kate Pollard.
“I knew,” she said gently, “that two people couldn’t live with Terry
for twenty-four years and both hate him, as your brother does. I can tell
you very quickly why I’m here, Miss Cornish.”
“But first—what has he done?”
Kate hesitated. Under the iron self-control of the older woman she saw
the hungry heart, and it stirred her. Yet she was by no means sure of a
triumph. She recognized the most formidable of all foes—pride. After
all, she wanted to humble that pride. She felt that all the danger in
which Terry Hollis now stood, both moral and physical, was indirectly the
result of this woman’s attitude. And she struck her, deliberately
cruelly.
“He’s taken up with a gang of hard ones, Miss Cornish. That’s one thing.”
The face of Elizabeth was like stone.
“Professional—thieves, robbers!”
And still Elizabeth refused to wince. She forced a cold, polite smile of
attention.
“He went into a town and killed the best fighter they had.”
And even this blow did not tell.
“And then he defied the sheriff, went back to the town, and broke into a
bank and stole fifty thousand dollars.”
The smile wavered and went out, but still the dull eyes of Elizabeth were
steady enough. Though perhaps that dullness was from pain. And Kate,
waiting eagerly, was chagrined to see that she had not broken through to
any softness of emotion. One sign of grief and trembling was all she
wanted before she made her appeal; but there was no weakness in Elizabeth
Cornish, it seemed.
“You see I am listening,” she said gravely and almost gently. “Although I
am really not well. And I hardly see the point of this long recital of
crimes. It was because I foresaw what he would become that I sent him
away.”
“Miss Cornish, why’d you take him in in the first place?”
“It’s a long story,” said Elizabeth.
“I’m a pretty good listener,” said Kate.
Elizabeth Cornish looked away, as though she hesitated to touch on the
subject, or as though it were too unimportant to be referred to at
length.
“In brief, I saw from a hotel window Black Jack, his father, shot down in
the street; heard about the infant son he left, and adopted the child—on
a bet with my brother. To see if blood would tell or if I could make him
a fine man.”
She paused.
“My brother won the bet!”
And her smile was a wonderful thing, so perfectly did it mask her pain.
“And, of course, I sent Terry away. I have forgotten him, really. Just a
bad experiment.”
Kate Pollard flushed.
“You’ll never forget him,” she said firmly. “You think of him every day!”
The elder woman started and looked sharply at her visitor. Then she
dismissed the idea with a shrug.
“That’s absurd. Why should I think of him?”
There is a spirit of prophecy in most women, old or young; and especially
they have a way of looking through the flesh of their kind and seeing the
heart. Kate Pollard came a little closer to her hostess.
“You saw Black Jack die in the street,” she queried, “fighting for his
life?”
Elizabeth dreamed into the vague distance.
“Riding down the street with his hair blowing—long black hair, you
know,” she reminisced. “And holding the crowd back as one would hold back
a crowd of curs. Then—he was shot from the side by a man in concealment.
That was how he fell!”
“I knew,” murmured the girl, nodding. “Miss Cornish, I know now why you
took in Terry.”
“Ah?”
“Not because of a bet—but because you—you loved Black Jack Hollis!”
It brought an indrawn gasp from Elizabeth. Rather of horror than
surprise. But the girl went on steadily:
“I know. You saw him with his hair blowing, fighting his way—he rode
into your heart. I know, I tell you! Maybe you’ve never guessed it all
these years. But has a single day gone when you haven’t thought of the
picture?”
The scornful, indignant denial died on the lips of Elizabeth Cornish. She
stared at Kate as though she were seeing a ghost.
“Not one day!” cried Kate. “And so you took in Terry, and you raised him
and loved him—not for a bet, but because he was Black Jack’s son!”
Elizabeth Cornish had grown paler than before. “I mustn’t listen to such
talk,” she said.
“Ah,” cried the girl, “don’t you see that I have a right to talk? Because
I love him also, and I know that you love him, too.”
Elizabeth Cornish came to her feet, and there was a faint flush in her
cheeks.
“You love Terry? Ah, I see. And he has sent you!”
“He’d die sooner than send me to you.”
“And yet—you came?”
“Don’t you see?” pleaded Kate. “He’s in a corner. He’s about to go—bad!”
“Miss Pollard, how do you know these things?”
“Because I’m the daughter of the leader of the gang!”
She said it without shame, proudly.
“I’ve tried to keep him from the life he intends leading,” said Kate. “I
can’t turn him. He laughs at me. I’m nothing to him, you see? And he
loves the new life. He loves the freedom. Besides, he thinks that there’s
no hope. That he has to be what his father was before him. Do you
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