Good Men and True; and, Hit the Line Hard/Good Men and True/Chapter 8

EFF pulled the paper over and began to scribble madly; pausing from time to time to glance around for inspiration: at the Judge, at Mac, at the papers, the books, the typewriter. "I'll slip in a note for the kids," said Jeff. His lips moved, his eyes kindled in his eager absorption; his face took on a softer and tenderer look. The Judge, watching him, beamed with almost paternal indulgence.

On the whole Jeff wrote with amazing swiftness for a man who professed to be unaccustomed to lying. For this communication, apparently so spontaneous, dashed off by a man hardly yet clear of the shadow of death, was learned by rote, no syllable unpremeditated, the very blots of it designed.

This is what he handed the Judge at last:


 * , Chihuahua, March 24.


 * My dear Wife:


 * Since I last wrote you I have been on a long trip into the Yaqui country as guide, interpreter and friend to a timid tenderfoot—and all-round sharp from the Smithsonian. His main lay is Cliff-Dweller-ology, but he does other stunts—rocks and bugs and Indian languages, and early Spanish relics.


 * I get big pay. I enclose you $100

"A hundred dollars! Why, this is blackmail!" remonstrated the Judge, grinning nevertheless.

"But," said Jeff, "I've got to send it. She knows I wouldn't stay away except for good big pay, and she knows I'll send the big pay to her. I didn't think you were a piker. Why, I had thirty dollars in my pocket. You won't be out but seventy. And if you don't send it she'll know the letter is a fake. Besides, she needs the money."

"I surrender! I'll send it," said the Judge, and resumed his reading:


 * and will send you more when I get back from next trip. Going way down in the Sierra Madre this time. Don't know when we will hit civilization again, so you needn't write till you hear from me.


 * The Cliff-Dweller-ologist had the El Paso papers sent on here to him and I am reading them all through while he writes letters and reports and things. I am reading some of his books, too.


 * Mary, I always hated it because I didn't have a better education. I used to wonder if you wasn't sometimes ashamed of me when we was first married. But I've learned a heap from you and I've picked up considerable, reading, these last few years—and I begin to see that there are compensations in all things. I see a good deal in things I read now that I would have missed if I'd just skimmed over the surface when I was younger. For instance, I've just made the acquaintance of Julius Cæsar—introduced by my chief.


 * Say, that's a great book! And I just know I'm getting more out of it than if I'd been familiar with it ever since I was a boy, with stone-bruises on my hoofs. I've read it over two or three times now, and find things every time that I didn't quite get before.


 * It ought to be called Yond Caius Cassius, though. Shakspere makes Julius out to be a superstitious old wretch. But Julius had some pretty good hunches at that.


 * Of course Mark Antony's wonderful speech at the funeral was fine business. Gee! how he skinned the "Honorable men!" Some of the things he said after that will stand reading, too.


 * But Yond Cassius, he was the man for my money. He was a regular go-getter. If Brutus had only hearkened to Cassius once in a while they'd have made a different play of it. I didn't like Brutus near so well. He was a four-flusher. Said he wouldn't kill himself and sure enough he did. He was set up and heady and touchy. I shouldn't wonder if he was better than Cassius, just morally. I guess maybe that's why Cassius  knuckled down to him and humored him so. But intellectually, and as a man of action, he wasn't ace-high to Cassius.


 * Still there's no denying that Brutus had a fine line of talk. There was his farewell to Cassius—you remember that—and his parting with his other friends.


 * I've been reading Carlyle's "French Revolution" too. It's a little too deep for me, so I take it in small doses. It looks to me like a great writer could take a page of it and build a book on it.


 * Well, that's all I know. Oh, yes! I tried to learn typewriting when I was in El Paso—I musn't forget that. I made up a sentence with all the letters in it—he kept vexing me by frantic journeys hidden with quiet zeal—I got so I could rattle that off pretty well, but when I tried new stuff I got balled up.


 * Will write you when I can. George will know what to do with the work. Have the boys help him.

.


 * Dear Kids:


 * I wish you could see some of the places I saw in the mountains. We took the train to Casas Grandes and went with a pack outfit to Durasno and Tarachi, just over the line into Sonora. That's one fine country. Had a good time going and coming, but when we got there and my chief was snooping around in those musty old underground cave houses I was bored a-plenty. One day I remember I lay in camp with nothing to do and read every line of an old El Paso paper, ads and all.


 * Leo, you're getting to be a big boy now. I want you to get into something better than punching cows. When you get time you ought to go down to your Uncle Sim's and make a start on learning to use a typewriter. I've been trying it myself, but it's hard for an old dog to learn new tricks.


 * You and Wesley must both help your mother, and help George. Do what George tells you—he knows more about things than you do. Be good kids. I'll be home just as soon as I can.

.

"There," said Jeff, "if there's anything you want to blue-pencil I'll write it over. Anything you want to say suits me so long as it goes."

"Why, this seems all right," said the Judge, after reading it. "I have an envelope in my billbook. Address it, but don't seal it. You might attempt to put in some inclosure by sleight-of-hand. If you try any such trick I shall consider myself absolved from any promise. If you don t, I'll mail it. I always prefer not to lie when I have nothing to gain by lying. Bless my soul, how you have blotted it!"

"Yes. I'm getting nervous," said Jeff.

The envelope bore the address:

"Of course you will do as you like," remonstrated Patterson, later. "But I shouldn't send that letter, and I should, without any further delay, erase Mr. Bransford's name from the list of living men."

"Tush!" said the Judge. "The letter is harmless. The man is a splendid fighter, and has some practical notion of psychology, but the poor fellow has no imagination. In his  eagerness, he made his letter up on the spur of the moment. There is scarcely a line in it but was suggested by his surroundings. His haste and affection made him transparent; I followed the workings of his mind and, except for personalities, anticipated practically all of it.

"As for killing him, I shall do nothing of the kind. I made a bargain with him in the very article of death and I shall keep to it. He cannot escape; it is not possible. Besides, I like the man. Hang it, Patterson, he is what I would wish my son to be, if I had one. I'll not kill him and I'll send his letter."

He did send it. It reached Billy Beebe some days later, to his no small mystification—Jeff Bransford was unmarried. Yet the address was indubitably in Jeff's handwriting. Taking Leo Ballinger into consultation, he carried it unopened to John Wesley Pringle; taking also a letter for that person, bearing an El Paso postmark many days earlier than the one for the mysterious Mrs. Bransford. Both had lain long in the Escondido office before any one passed going to Rainbow, so the two letters reached there together.

Pringle's letter was brief:

Texas, March 20.

Rainbow, N. M.


 * Dear Sir:


 * Your friend, Mr. Jeff Bransford, came here some time since on some business with Mr. Simon Hibler—whose clerk I am. Mr. Hibler was on a trip to San Simon, Arizona, and I did not know exactly when he would return. Mr. Bransford decided to wait for him. We became great friends and he rather made his headquarters with me. He told me a great deal about you.


 * On the night of March i6th, Mr. Bransford was with me until almost midnight, when he started for his rooms. So far as I can learn he has not been seen or heard of since; his effects are still at his lodgings. He did not take the street car home. I inquired carefully of all the men.


 * It is now the fourth day since his disappearance and I am much distressed. I have lodged information with the police—but, between you and me, I don't feel any enthusiasm about the police.


 * If you have any knowledge of his whereabouts I wish you would be so kind as to drop me a line. If you know nothing, I hope that you and the other friends he spoke of so often would come down, and I will put myself at your orders. I am uneasy. As you doubtless know, this is one awful tough town.


 * Trusting to hear good news at an early date, I remain,

.
 * 112 Temple Street.

On reading this John Wesley took it upon himself to open the letter for the non-existent Mrs. Bransford. From that cryptic document they gathered three things only. First, Jeff was under duress; his letter was written to pass inspection by hostile eyes. Second, Leo Ballinger was to visit Uncle Sim and to learn typewriting. Third, George would tell them what to do. There was no George at Rainbow; Leo's only uncle, Simon Hibler, lived in El Paso, his clerk's name was George. The inference was plain.

The next day the three friends presented themselves at 112 Temple Street.