Although the three young people had
left the veranda together, when they reached the old
garden Clarence and Susy found themselves considerably
in advance of Mary Rogers, who had become suddenly
and deeply interested in the beauty of a passion vine
near the gate. At the first discovery of their
isolation their voluble exchange of information about
themselves and their occupations since their last
meeting stopped simultaneously. Clarence, who
had forgotten his momentary irritation, and had recovered
his old happiness in her presence, was nevertheless
conscious of some other change in her than that suggested
by the lengthened skirt and the later and more delicate
accentuation of her prettiness. It was not her
affectation of superiority and older social experience,
for that was only the outcome of what he had found
charming in her as a child, and which he still good-humoredly
accepted; nor was it her characteristic exaggeration
of speech, which he still pleasantly recognized.
It was something else, vague and indefinite, something
that had been unnoticed while Mary was with them,
but had now come between them like some unknown presence
which had taken the confidante’s place.
He remained silent, looking at her half-brightening
cheek and conscious profile. Then he spoke with
awkward directness.
“You are changed, Susy, more than in looks.”
“Hush,” said the girl
in a tragic whisper, with a warning gesture towards
the blandly unconscious Mary.
“But,” returned Clarence
wonderingly, “she’s your our
friend, you know.”
“I don’t know,”
said Susy, in a still deeper tone, “that is oh,
don’t ask me! But when you’re always
surrounded by spies, when you can’t say your
soul is your own, you doubt everybody!” There
was such a pretty distress in her violet eyes and
curving eyebrows, that Clarence, albeit vague as to
its origin and particulars, nevertheless possessed
himself of the little hand that was gesticulating
dangerously near his own, and pressed it sympathetically.
Perhaps preoccupied with her emotions, she did not
immediately withdraw it, as she went on rapidly:
“And if you were cooped up here, day after day,
behind these bars,” pointing to the grille,
“you’d know what I suffer.”
“But” began Clarence.
“Hush!” said Susy, with a stamp of her
little foot.
Clarence, who had only wished to point
out that the whole lower end of the garden wall was
in ruins and the grille really was no prevention,
“hushed.”
“And listen! Don’t
pay me much attention to-day, but talk to her,”
indicating the still discreet and distant Mary, “before
father and mother. Not a word to her of this
confidence, Clarence. To-morrow ride out alone
on your beautiful horse, and come back by way of the
woods, beyond our turning, at four o’clock.
There’s a trail to the right of the big madroño
tree. Take that. Be careful and keep a good
lookout, for she mustn’t see you.”
“Who mustn’t see me?” said the puzzled
Clarence.
“Why, Mary, of course, you silly
boy!” returned the girl impatiently. “She’ll
be looking for me. Go now, Clarence!
Stop! Look at that lovely big maiden’s-blush
up there,” pointing to a pink-suffused specimen
of rose grandiflora hanging on the wall. “Get
it, Clarence, that one, I’ll
show you where, there!” They had already
plunged into the leafy bramble, and, standing on tiptoe,
with her hand on his shoulder and head upturned, Susy’s
cheek had innocently approached Clarence’s own.
At this moment Clarence, possibly through some confusion
of color, fragrance, or softness of contact, seemed
to have availed himself of the opportunity, in a way
which caused Susy to instantly rejoin Mary Rogers
with affected dignity, leaving him to follow a few
moments later with the captured flower.
Without trying to understand the reason
of to-morrow’s rendezvous, and perhaps not altogether
convinced of the reality of Susy’s troubles,
he, however, did not find that difficulty in carrying
out her other commands which he had expected.
Mrs. Peyton was still gracious, and, with feminine
tact, induced him to talk of himself, until she was
presently in possession of his whole history, barring
the episode of his meeting with Susy, since he had
parted with them. He felt a strange satisfaction
in familiarly pouring out his confidences to this superior
woman, whom he had always held in awe. There
was a new delight in her womanly interest in his trials
and adventures, and a subtle pleasure even in her
half-motherly criticism and admonition of some passages.
I am afraid he forgot Susy, who listened with the
complacency of an exhibitor; Mary, whose black eyes
dilated alternately with sympathy for the performer
and deprecation of Mrs. Peyton’s critical glances;
and Peyton, who, however, seemed lost in thought,
and preoccupied. Clarence was happy. The
softly shaded lights in the broad, spacious, comfortably
furnished drawing-room shone on the group before him.
It was a picture of refined domesticity which the
homeless Clarence had never known except as a vague,
half-painful, boyish remembrance; it was a realization
of welcome that far exceeded his wildest boyish vision
of the preceding night. With that recollection
came another, a more uneasy one. He
remembered how that vision had been interrupted by
the strange voices in the road, and their vague but
ominous import to his host. A feeling of self-reproach
came over him. The threats had impressed him
as only mere braggadocio, he knew the characteristic
exaggeration of the race, but perhaps he
ought to privately tell Peyton of the incident at
once.
The opportunity came later, when the
ladies had retired, and Peyton, wrapped in a poncho
in a rocking-chair, on the now chilly veranda, looked
up from his reverie and a cigar. Clarence casually
introduced the incident, as if only for the sake of
describing the supernatural effect of the hidden voices,
but he was concerned to see that Peyton was considerably
disturbed by their more material import. After
questioning him as to the appearance of the two men,
his host said: “I don’t mind telling
you, Clarence, that as far as that fellow’s intentions
go he is quite sincere, although his threats are only
borrowed thunder. He is a man whom I have just
dismissed for carelessness and insolence, two
things that run in double harness in this country, but
I should be more afraid to find him at my back on
a dark night, alone on the plains; than to confront
him in daylight, in the witness box, against me.
He was only repeating a silly rumor that the title
to this rancho and the nine square leagues beyond
would be attacked by some speculators.”
“But I thought your title was
confirmed two years ago,” said Clarence.
“The grant was confirmed,”
returned Peyton, “which means that the conveyance
of the Mexican government of these lands to the ancestor
of Victor Robles was held to be legally proven by
the United States Land Commission, and a patent issued
to all those who held under it. I and my neighbors
hold under it by purchase from Victor Robles, subject
to the confirmation of the Land Commission. But
that confirmation was only of Victor’s great-grandfather’s
title, and it is now alleged that as Victor’s
father died without making a will, Victor has claimed
and disposed of property which he ought to have divided
with his sisters. At least, some speculating
rascals in San Francisco have set up what they call
‘the Sisters’ title,’ and are selling
it to actual settlers on the unoccupied lands beyond.
As, by the law, it would hold possession against the
mere ordinary squatters, whose only right is based,
as you know, on the presumption that there is no
title claimed, it gives the possessor immunity
to enjoy the use of the property until the case is
decided, and even should the original title hold good
against his, the successful litigant would probably
be willing to pay for improvements and possession
to save the expensive and tedious process of ejectment.”
“But this does not affect you,
who have already possession?” said Clarence
quickly.
“No, not as far as this
house and the lands I actually occupy and
cultivate are concerned; and they know that I
am safe to fight to the last, and carry the case to
the Supreme Court in that case, until the swindle
is exposed, or they drop it; but I may have to pay
them something to keep the squatters off my unoccupied
land.”
“But you surely wouldn’t
recognize those rascals in any way?” said the
astonished Clarence.
“As against other rascals?
Why not?” returned Peyton grimly. “I
only pay for the possession which their sham title
gives me to my own land. If by accident that
title obtains, I am still on the safe side.”
After a pause he said, more gravely, “What you
overheard, Clarence, shows me that the plan is more
forward than I had imagined, and that I may have to
fight traitors here.”
“I hope, sir,” said Clarence,
with a quick glow in his earnest face, “that
you’ll let me help you. You thought I did
once, you remember, with the Indians.”
There was so much of the old Clarence
in his boyish appeal and eager, questioning face that
Peyton, who had been talking to him as a younger but
equal man of affairs, was startled into a smile, “You
did, Clarence, though the Indians butchered your friends,
after all. I don’t know, though, but that
your experiences with those Spaniards you
must have known a lot of them when you were with Don
Juan Robinson and at the college might
be of service in getting at evidence, or smashing their
witnesses if it comes to a fight. But just now,
money is everything. They must be bought
off the land if I have to mortgage it
for the purpose. That strikes you as a rather
heroic remedy, Clarence, eh?” he continued,
in his old, half-bantering attitude towards Clarence’s
inexperienced youth, “don’t it?”
But Clarence was not thinking of that.
Another more audacious but equally youthful and enthusiastic
idea had taken possession of his mind, and he lay
awake half that night revolving it. It was true
that it was somewhat impractically mixed with his
visions of Mrs. Peyton and Susy, and even included
his previous scheme of relief for the improvident and
incorrigible Hooker. But it gave a wonderful sincerity
and happiness to his slumbers that night, which the
wiser and elder Peyton might have envied, and I wot
not was in the long run as correct and sagacious as
Peyton’s sleepless cogitations. And
in the early morning Mr. Clarence Brant, the young
capitalist, sat down to his traveling-desk and wrote
two clear-headed, logical, and practical business letters, one
to his banker, and the other to his former guardian,
Don Juan Robinson, as his first step in a resolve
that was, nevertheless, perhaps as wildly quixotic
and enthusiastic as any dream his boyish and unselfish
heart had ever indulged.
At breakfast, in the charmed freedom
of the domestic circle, Clarence forgot Susy’s
capricious commands of yesterday, and began to address
himself to her in his old earnest fashion, until he
was warned by a significant knitting of the young
lady’s brows and monosyllabic responses.
But in his youthful loyalty to Mrs. Peyton, he was
more pained to notice Susy’s occasional unconscious
indifference to her adopted mother’s affectionate
expression, and a more conscious disregard of her
wishes. So uneasy did he become, in his sensitive
concern for Mrs. Peyton’s half-concealed mortification,
that he gladly accepted Peyton’s offer to go
with him to visit the farm and corral. As the
afternoon approached, with another twinge of self-reproach,
he was obliged to invent some excuse to decline certain
hospitable plans of Mrs. Peyton’s for his entertainment,
and at half past three stole somewhat guiltily, with
his horse, from the stables. But he had to pass
before the outer wall of the garden and grille, through
which he had seen Mary the day before. Raising
his eyes mechanically, he was startled to see Mrs.
Peyton standing behind the grating, with her abstracted
gaze fixed upon the wind-tossed, level grain beyond
her. She smiled as she saw him, but there were
traces of tears in her proud, handsome eyes.
“You are going to ride?” she said pleasantly.
“Y-e-es,” stammered the shamefaced
Clarence.
She glanced at him wistfully.
“You are right. The girls
have gone away by themselves. Mr. Peyton has
ridden over to Santa Inez on this dreadful land business,
and I suppose you’d have found him a dull riding
companion. It is rather stupid here. I quite
envy you, Mr. Brant, your horse and your freedom.”
“But, Mrs. Peyton,” broke
in Clarence, impulsively, “you have a horse I
saw it, a lovely lady’s horse eating
its head off in the stable. Won’t you let
me run back and order it; and won’t you, please,
come out with me for a good, long gallop?”
He meant what he said. He had
spoken quickly, impulsively, but with the perfect
understanding in his own mind that his proposition
meant the complete abandonment of his rendezvous with
Susy. Mrs. Peyton was astounded and slightly
stirred with his earnestness, albeit unaware of all
it implied.
“It’s a great temptation,
Mr. Brant,” she said, with a playful smile,
which dazzled Clarence with its first faint suggestion
of a refined woman’s coquetry; “but I’m
afraid that Mr. Peyton would think me going mad in
my old age. No. Go on and enjoy your gallop,
and if you should see those giddy girls anywhere,
send them home early for chocolate, before the cold
wind gets up.”
She turned, waved her slim white hand
playfully in acknowledgment of Clarence’s bared
head, and moved away.
For the first few moments the young
man tried to find relief in furious riding, and in
bullying his spirited horse. Then he pulled quickly
up. What was he doing? What was he going
to do? What foolish, vapid deceit was this that
he was going to practice upon that noble, queenly,
confiding, generous woman? (He had already forgotten
that she had always distrusted him.) What a fool he
was not to tell her half-jokingly that he expected
to meet Susy! But would he have dared to talk
half-jokingly to such a woman on such a topic?
And would it have been honorable without disclosing
the whole truth, that they had met
secretly before? And was it fair to Susy? dear,
innocent, childish Susy! Yet something must be
done! It was such trivial, purposeless deceit,
after all; for this noble woman, Mrs. Peyton, so kind,
so gentle, would never object to his loving Susy and
marrying her. And they would all live happily
together; and Mrs. Peyton would never be separated
from them, but always beaming tenderly upon them as
she did just now in the garden. Yes, he would
have a serious understanding with Susy, and that would
excuse the clandestine meeting to-day.
His rapid pace, meantime, had brought
him to the imperceptible incline of the terrace, and
he was astonished, in turning in the saddle, to find
that the casa, corral, and outbuildings had completely
vanished, and that behind him rolled only the long
sea of grain, which seemed to have swallowed them
in its yellowing depths. Before him lay the wooded
ravine through which the stagecoach passed, which
was also the entrance to the rancho, and there, too,
probably, was the turning of which Susy had spoken.
But it was still early for the rendezvous; indeed,
he was in no hurry to meet her in his present discontented
state, and he made a listless circuit of the field,
in the hope of discovering the phenomena that had
caused the rancho’s mysterious disappearance.
When he had found that it was the effect of the different
levels, his attention was arrested by a multitude
of moving objects in a still more distant field, which
proved to be a band of wild horses. In and out
among them, circling aimlessly, as it seemed to him,
appeared two horsemen apparently performing some mystic
evolution. To add to their singular performance,
from time to time one of the flying herd, driven by
the horsemen far beyond the circle of its companions,
dropped suddenly and unaccountably in full career.
The field closed over it as if it had been swallowed
up. In a few moments it appeared again, trotting
peacefully behind its former pursuer. It was
some time before Clarence grasped the meaning of this
strange spectacle. Although the clear, dry atmosphere
sharply accented the silhouette-like outlines of the
men and horses, so great was the distance that the
slender forty-foot lasso, which in the skillful hands
of the horsemen had effected these captures, was completely
invisible! The horsemen were Peyton’s
vacqueros, making a selection from the young horses
for the market. He remembered now that Peyton
had told him that he might be obliged to raise money
by sacrificing some of his stock, and the thought
brought back Clarence’s uneasiness as he turned
again to the trail. Indeed, he was hardly in
the vein for a gentle tryst, as he entered the wooded
ravine to seek the madroño tree which was to
serve as a guide to his lady’s bower.
A few rods further, under the cool
vault filled with woodland spicing, he came upon it.
In its summer harlequin dress of scarlet and green,
with hanging bells of poly-tinted berries, like some
personified sylvan Folly, it seemed a fitting symbol
of Susy’s childish masquerade of passion.
Its bizarre beauty, so opposed to the sober gravity
of the sedate pines and hemlocks, made it an unmistakable
landmark. Here he dismounted and picketed his
horse. And here, beside it, to the right, ran
the little trail crawling over mossy boulders; a narrow
yellow track through the carpet of pine needles between
the closest file of trees; an almost imperceptible
streak across pools of chickweed at their roots, and
a brown and ragged swath through the ferns. As
he went on, the anxiety and uneasiness that had possessed
him gave way to a languid intoxication of the senses;
the mysterious seclusion of these woodland depths
recovered the old influence they had exerted over his
boyhood. He was not returning to Susy, as much
as to the older love of his youth, of which she was,
perhaps, only an incident. It was therefore with
an odd boyish thrill again that, coming suddenly upon
a little hollow, like a deserted nest, where the lost
trail made him hesitate, he heard the crackle of a
starched skirt behind him, was conscious of the subtle
odor of freshly ironed and scented muslin, and felt
the gentle pressure of delicate fingers upon his eyes.
“Susy!”
“You silly boy! Where were
you blundering to? Why didn’t you look around
you?”
“I thought I would hear your voices.”
“Whose voices, idiot?”
“Yours and Mary’s,”
returned Clarence innocently, looking round for the
confidante.
“Oh, indeed! Then you wanted
to see Mary? Well, she’s looking for
me somewhere. Perhaps you’ll go and find
her, or shall I?”
She was offering to pass him when
he laid his hand on hers to detain her. She instantly
evaded it, and drew herself up to her full height,
incontestably displaying the dignity of the added inches
to her skirt. All this was charmingly like the
old Susy, but it did not bid fair to help him to a
serious interview. And, looking at the pretty,
pink, mocking face before him, with the witchery of
the woodland still upon him, he began to think that
he had better put it off.
“Never mind about Mary,”
he said laughingly. “But you said you wanted
to see me, Susy; and here I am.”
“Said I wanted to see you?”
repeated Susy, with her blue eyes lifted in celestial
scorn and wonderment. “Said I wanted to
see you? Are you not mistaken, Mr. Brant?
Really, I imagined that you came here to see me.”
With her fair head upturned, and the
leaf of her scarlet lip temptingly curled over, Clarence
began to think this latest phase of her extravagance
the most fascinating. He drew nearer to her as
he said gently, “You know what I mean, Susy.
You said yesterday you were troubled. I thought
you might have something to tell me.”
“I should think it was you
who might have something to tell me after all these
years,” she said poutingly, yet self-possessed.
“But I suppose you came here only to see Mary
and mother. I’m sure you let them know that
plainly enough last evening.”
“But you said” began the stupefied
Clarence.
“Never mind what I said.
It’s always what I say, never what you say;
and you don’t say anything.”
The woodland influence must have been
still very strong upon Clarence that he did not discover
in all this that, while Susy’s general capriciousness
was unchanged, there was a new and singular insincerity
in her manifest acting. She was either concealing
the existence of some other real emotion, or assuming
one that was absent. But he did not notice it,
and only replied tenderly:
“But I want to say a great deal
to you, Susy. I want to say that if you still
feel as I do, and as I have always felt, and you think
you could be happy as I would be if if we
could be always together, we need not conceal it from
your mother and father any longer. I am old enough
to speak for myself, and I am my own master.
Your mother has been very kind to me, so
kind that it doesn’t seem quite right to deceive
her, and when I tell her that I love you,
and that I want you to be my wife, I believe she will
give us her blessing.”
Susy uttered a strange little laugh,
and with an assumption of coyness, that was, however,
still affected, stooped to pick a few berries from
a manzanita bush.
“I’ll tell you what she’ll
say, Clarence. She’ll say you’re frightfully
young, and so you are!”
The young fellow tried to echo the
laugh, but felt as if he had received a blow.
For the first time he was conscious of the truth:
this girl, whom he had fondly regarded as a child,
had already passed him in the race; she had become
a woman before he was yet a man, and now stood before
him, maturer in her knowledge, and older in her understanding,
of herself and of him. This was the change that
had perplexed him; this was the presence that had
come between them, a Susy he had never known
before.
She laughed at his changed expression,
and then swung herself easily to a sitting posture
on the low projecting branch of a hemlock. The
act was still girlish, but, nevertheless, she looked
down upon him in a superior, patronizing way.
“Now, Clarence,” she said, with a half-abstracted
manner, “don’t you be a big fool!
If you talk that way to mother, she’ll only
tell you to wait two or three years until you know
your own mind, and she’ll pack me off to that
horrid school again, besides watching me like a cat
every moment you are here. If you want to stay
here, and see me sometimes like this, you’ll
just behave as you have done, and say nothing.
Do you see? Perhaps you don’t care to come,
or are satisfied with Mary and mother. Say so,
then. Goodness knows, I don’t want to force
you to come here.”
Modest and reserved as Clarence was
generally, I fear that bashfulness of approach to
the other sex was not one of these indications.
He walked up to Susy with appalling directness, and
passed his arm around her waist. She did not
move, but remained looking at him and his intruding
arm with a certain critical curiosity, as if awaiting
some novel sensation. At which he kissed her.
She then slowly disengaged his arm, and said:
“Really, upon my word, Clarence,”
in perfectly level tones, and slipped quietly to the
ground.
He again caught her in his arms, encircling
her disarranged hair and part of the beribboned hat
hanging over her shoulder, and remained for an instant
holding her thus silently and tenderly. Then she
freed herself with an abstracted air, a half smile,
and an unchanged color except where her soft cheek
had been abraded by his coat collar.
“You’re a bold, rude boy,
Clarence,” she said, putting back her hair quietly,
and straightening the brim of her hat. “Heaven
knows where you learned manners!” and then,
from a safer distance, with the same critical look
in her violet eyes, “I suppose you think mother
would allow that if she knew it?”
But Clarence, now completely subjugated,
with the memory of the kiss upon him and a heightened
color, protested that he only wanted to make their
intercourse less constrained, and to have their relations,
even their engagement, recognized by her parents;
still he would take her advice. Only there was
always the danger that if they were discovered she
would be sent back to the convent all the same, and
his banishment, instead of being the probation of
a few years, would be a perpetual separation.
“We could always run away, Clarence,”
responded the young girl calmly. “There’s
nothing the matter with that.”
Clarence was startled. The idea
of desolating the sad, proud, handsome Mrs. Peyton,
whom he worshiped, and her kind husband, whom he was
just about to serve, was so grotesque and confusing,
that he said hopelessly, “Yes.”
“Of course,” she continued,
with the same odd affectation of coyness, which was,
however, distinctly uncalled for, as she eyed him from
under her broad hat, “you needn’t come
with me unless you like. I can run away by myself, if
I want to! I’ve thought of it before.
One can’t stand everything!”
“But, Susy,” said Clarence,
with a swift remorseful recollection of her confidence
yesterday, “is there really anything troubles
you? Tell me, dear. What is it?”
“Oh, nothing everything!
It’s no use, you can’t
understand! You like it, I know you do.
I can see it; it’s your style. But it’s
stupid, it’s awful, Clarence! With mamma
snooping over you and around you all day, with her
‘dear child,’ ‘mamma’s pet,’
and ‘What is it, dear?’ and ’Tell
it all to your own mamma,’ as if I would!
And ‘my own mamma,’ indeed! As if
I didn’t know, Clarence, that she isn’t.
And papa, caring for nothing but this hideous, dreary
rancho, and the huge, empty plains. It’s
worse than school, for there, at least, when you went
out, you could see something besides cattle and horses
and yellow-faced half-breeds! But here Lord!
it’s only a wonder I haven’t run away before!”
Startled and shocked as Clarence was
at this revelation, accompanied as it was by a hardness
of manner that was new to him, the influence of the
young girl was still so strong upon him that he tried
to evade it as only an extravagance, and said with
a faint smile, “But where would you run to?”
She looked at him cunningly, with
her head on one side, and then said:
“I have friends, and”
She hesitated, pursing up her pretty lips.
“And what?”
“Relations.”
“Relations?”
“Yes, an aunt by
marriage. She lives in Sacramento. She’d
be overjoyed to have me come to her. Her second
husband has a theatre there.”
“But, Susy, what does Mrs. Peyton know of this?”
“Nothing. Do you think
I’d tell her, and have her buy them up as she
has my other relations? Do you suppose I don’t
know that I’ve been bought up like a nigger?”
She looked indignant, compressing
her delicate little nostrils, and yet, somehow, Clarence
had the same singular impression that she was only
acting.
The calling of a far-off voice came
faintly through the wood.
“That’s Mary, looking
for me,” said Susy composedly. “You
must go, now, Clarence. Quick! Remember
what I said, and don’t breathe a word
of this. Good-by.”
But Clarence was standing still, breathless,
hopelessly disturbed, and irresolute. Then he
turned away mechanically towards the trail.
“Well, Clarence?”
She was looking at him half reproachfully,
half coquettishly, with smiling, parted lips.
He hastened to forget himself and his troubles upon
them twice and thrice. Then she quickly disengaged
herself, whispered, “Go, now,” and, as
Mary’s call was repeated, Clarence heard her
voice, high and clear, answering, “Here, dear,”
as he was plunging into the thicket.
He had scarcely reached the madroño
tree again and remounted his horse, before he heard
the sound of hoofs approaching from the road.
In his present uneasiness he did not care to be discovered
so near the rendezvous, and drew back into the shadow
until the horseman should pass. It was Peyton,
with a somewhat disturbed face, riding rapidly.
Still less was he inclined to join or immediately follow
him, but he was relieved when his host, instead of
taking the direct road to the rancho, through the
wild oats, turned off in the direction of the corral.
A moment later Clarence wheeled into
the direct road, and presently found himself in the
long afternoon shadows through the thickest of the
grain. He was riding slowly, immersed in thought,
when he was suddenly startled by a hissing noise at
his ear, and what seemed to be the uncoiling stroke
of a leaping serpent at his side. Instinctively
he threw himself forward on his horse’s neck,
and as the animal shied into the grain, felt the crawling
scrape and jerk of a horsehair lariat across his back
and down his horse’s flanks. He reined in
indignantly and stood up in his stirrups. Nothing
was to be seen above the level of the grain.
Beneath him the trailing riata had as noiselessly vanished
as if it had been indeed a gliding snake. Had
he been the victim of a practical joke, or of the
blunder of some stupid vacquero? For he made
no doubt that it was the lasso of one of the performers
he had watched that afternoon. But his preoccupied
mind did not dwell long upon it, and by the time he
had reached the wall of the old garden, the incident
was forgotten.