The City of Fire - Page 92/221

As the shades of evening had drawn down two figures that had been

lurking all day in the fastnesses of Lone Valley over beyond the state

Highway, stole forth and crept stealthily under cover to Stark

Mountain.

A long time they lingered in the edge of the woods till the dark was

velvet black around them, before the moon arose. Then slowly,

cautiously they drew near the haunted house, observing it long and

silently from every possible angle, till satisfied that no enemy was

about. Yet taking no chances even then, the taller one crept forth from

shelter while the other watched. So stealthily he went that even his

companion heard no stir.

It was some ten minutes that Shorty waited there in the bushes scarcely

daring to breathe, while Link painfully quiet, inch by inch encircled

the house, and listened, trying the front door first and finding it

fast; softly testing the cellar windows one by one, beginning from the

eastern end, going toward the front first, and so missing the window by

which Billy had entered. A hundred times his operation was halted by

the sound of a rat scuttling across the floor, or racketing in the

wall, but the hollow echoes assured him over and over again that the

house was not occupied, at least not by anyone awake and in his senses.

Link had been in the business so long that he "felt" when there was an

enemy near.

That was what vexed him now. He had "felt" that morning

that someone was near, but he had laid it to nerves and the reported

ghost, and had not heeded his trained faculties. He was back now doubly

alert to discover the cause and make good his failure in the morning.

He had undertaken to look after this guy and see this job through and

there was big money in it. He was heavily armed and prepared for any

reasonable surprise. He meant to get this matter straight before

morning. So, feeling his way along in the blackness, listening, halting

at every moment with bated breath, he came at last to the back door,

and drawing himself up to the steps, took the knob in his hand and

turned it. To his surprise it yielded to his touch, and the door came

open. And yet it was some seconds of tense listening before he let

himself down to the ground again, and with his hand in the grass let

out a tiny winking flashlight, no more than a firefly would flicker,

and out again.

This was answered by a wink from the bushes, as if the same firefly or

its mate might be glowing, and after an instant another wink from the

ground near the house. Slowly Shorty arrived without noise, his big

bulk muffling in fat the muscles of velvet. It was incredible how light

his step could be--professionally. It was as if he had been

wafted there like down. Silently still and without communication the

two drifted into the open door, sent a searching glowworm ahead into

the crannies of the dusty, musty kitchen, surprising a mouse that had

stolen forth domestically. The door being shut and fastened cautiously,

the key in Link's pocket, they drifted through the swing door, as air

might have circulated, identifying the mouse's scuttle, the rattle of a

rat among the loose coal in the cellar bin, the throaty chirp of a

cricket outside in the grass, and drifting on.