Bob Hampton of Placer - Page 28/205

"Brant of the Seventh?" He faced her fairly now, his face again

haggard and gray, all the slight gleam of fun gone out of it. "Was

that the lad's name?"

"Sure, and didn't ye know him?"

"No; I noticed the '7' on his hat, of course, but never asked any

questions, for his face was strange. I didn't know. The name, when

you just spoke it, struck me rather queer. I--I used to know a Brant

in the Seventh, but he was much older; it was not this man."

She answered something, lingering for a moment at the door, but he made

no response, and she passed out silently, leaving him staring moodily

through the open window, his eyes appearing glazed and sightless.

Glencaid, like most mining towns of its class, was dull and dead enough

during the hours of daylight. It was not until after darkness fell

that it awoke from its somnolence, when the scattered miners came

swarming down from out the surrounding hills and turned into a noisy,

restless playground the single narrow, irregular street. Then it

suddenly became a mad commixture of Babel and hell. At this hour

nothing living moved within range of the watcher's vision except a

vagrant dog; the heat haze hung along the near-by slopes, while a

little spiral of dust rose lazily from the deserted road. But Hampton

had no eyes for this dreary prospect; with contracted brows he was

viewing again that which he had confidently believed to have been

buried long ago. Finally, he stepped quickly across the little room,

and, standing quietly within the open doorway, looked long at the young

girl upon the bed. She lay in sound, motionless sleep, one hand

beneath her cheek, her heavy hair, scarcely revealing its auburn hue in

the gloom of the interior, flowing in wild disorder across the crushed

pillow. He stepped to the single window and drew down the green shade,

gazed at her again, a new look of tenderness softening his stern face,

then went softly out and closed the door.

An hour later he was still sitting on the hard chair by the window, a

cigar between his teeth, thinking. The lowering sun was pouring a

perfect flood of gold across the rag carpet, but he remained utterly

unconscious as to aught save the gloomy trend of his own awakened

memories. Some one rapped upon the outer door.

"Come in," he exclaimed, carelessly, and barely glancing up. "Well,

what is it this time, Mrs. Guffy?"

The landlady had never before seen this usually happy guest in his

present mood, and she watched him curiously.