Surely we can find some one in the place who knows them. Wouldn't it be jolly good fun if Jack Howland, Esquire, who has never been interested in theaters and girls, should come up into these God-forsaken regions and develop a case of love at first sight? By the Great North Trail, I tell you it may not be as uninteresting for you as it has been for Thorne and me! If I had only seen her sooner—”
“Shut up!” growled Howland, betraying irritability for the first time. “Let's go in to supper.”
“Good. And I move that we investigate these people while we are smoking our after-supper cigars. It will pass our time away, at least.”
“Your taste is good, Gregson,” said Howland, recovering his good-humor as they seated themselves at one of the rough board tables in the dining-room. Inwardly he was convinced it would be best to keep to himself the incidents of the past two days and nights. “It was a beautiful face.”
“And the eyes!” added Gregson, his own gleaming with enthusiasm. “She looked at me squarely this afternoon when she and that dark fellow passed, and I swear they're the most beautiful eyes I ever saw. And her hair—”
“Do you think that she knew you?” asked Howland quietly.
Gregson hunched his shoulders.
“How the deuce could she know me?”
“Then why did she look at you so 'squarely?' Trying to flirt, do you suppose?”
Surprise shot into Gregson's face.
“By thunder, no, she wasn't flirting!” he exclaimed. “I'd stake my life on that. A man never got a clearer, more sinless look than she gave me, and yet—Why, deuce take it, shestared at me! I didn't see her again after that, but the dark fellow was in here half of the afternoon, and now that I come to think of it he did show some interest in me. Why do you ask?”
“Just curiosity,” replied Howland, “I don't like flirts.”
“Neither do I,” said Gregson musingly. Their supper came on and they conversed but little until its end. Howland had watched his companion closely and was satisfied that he knew nothing of Croisset or the girl. The fact puzzled him more than ever. How Gregson and Thorne, two of the best engineers in the country, could voluntarily surrender a task like the building of the Hudson Bay Railroad simply because they were “tired of the country” was more than he could understand.
It was not until they were about to leave the table that Howland's eyes accidentally fell on Gregson's left hand. He gave an exclamation of astonishment when he saw that the little finger was missing. Gregson jerked the hand to his side.
“A little accident,” he explained. “You'll meet 'em up here, Howland.”
Before he could move, the young engineer had caught his arm and was looking closely at the hand.
“A curious wound,” he remarked, without looking up. “Funny I didn't notice it before. Your finger was cut off lengthwise, and here's the scar running half way to your wrist. How did you do it?”
He dropped the hand in time to see a nervous flush in the other's face.
“Why—er—fact is, Howland, it was shot off several months ago—in an accident, of course.” He hurried through the door, continuing to speak over his shoulder as he went, “Now for those after-supper cigars and our investigation.”
As they passed from the dining-room into that part of the inn which was half bar and half lounging-room, already filled with smoke and a dozen or so picturesque citizens of Le Pas, the rough-jowled proprietor of the place motioned to Howland and held out a letter.
“This came while you was at supper, Mr.
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