Simon West.

Jack Flatray here, and about to be murdered! The thing was incredible. And

yet--and yet---- Was it so impossible, after all? Some one had broken into

the Cache and released the prisoners. Who more likely than Jack to have

done this? And later they had captured him and condemned him for what he

had done.

Melissy reconstructed the scene in a flash. The Indian squaw was West. He

had been rigged up in that paraphernalia to deceive any chance mountaineer

who might drop into the valley by accident.

No doubt, when he first saw Melissy, the railroad magnate had been passing

his time in making notes about his plans for the system he controlled. But

when he had caught sight of her, he had written the note, under the very

eyes of the guard, had torn the envelope as if it were of no importance,

and tossed the pieces away. He had taken the thousandth chance that his

note might fall into the hands of the person to whom it was directed.

All this she understood without giving it conscious thought. For her whole

mind was filled with the horror of what she had learned. Jack Flatray, the

man she loved, was to be killed. He was to be shot down in an hour.

With the thought, she was at her door--only to find that it had been

quietly locked while she lay on the bed. No doubt they had meant to keep

her a close prisoner until the thing they were about to do was finished.

She beat upon it, called to Rosario to let her out, wrung her hands in her

desperation. Then she remembered the window. It was a cheap and flimsy

case, and had been jammed so that her strength was not sufficient to raise

it.

Her eye searched the room for a weapon, and found an Indian tom-tom club.

With this she smashed the panes and beat down the wooden cross bars of the

sash. Agile as a forest fawn, she slipped through the opening she had made

and ran toward the far cabin.

A group of men surrounded the door; and, as she drew near, it opened to

show three central figures. MacQueen was one, Rosario Chaves a second; but

the most conspicuous was a bareheaded young man, with his hands tied

behind him. He was going to his death, but a glance was enough to show

that he went unconquered and unconquerable. His step did not drag. There

was a faint, grave smile on his lips; and in his eye was the dynamic spark

that proclaimed him still master of his fate. The woolen shirt had been

unbuttoned and pulled back to make way for the rope that lay loosely about

his neck, so that she could not miss the well-muscled slope of his fine

shoulders, or the gallant set of the small head upon the brown throat.




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