Fiction

The Flaming Jewel

Robert Chambers

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II

Two State Troopers drew bridles in the yellowing October forest.  Their
smart drab uniforms touched with purple blended harmoniously with the
autumn woods.  They were as inconspicuous as two deer in the dappled
shadow.  There was a sunny clearing just ahead.  The wood road they had
been travelling entered it.  Beyond lay Star Pond.

Trooper Lannis said to Trooper Stormont: "That's Mike Clinch's clearing.
Our man may be there.  Now we'll see if anybody tips him off this time."

Forest and clearing were very still in the sunshine.  Nothing stirred
save gold leaves drifting down, and a hawk high in the deep blue sky
turning in narrow circles.

Lannis was instructing Stormont, who had been transferred from the Long
Island Troop, and who was unacquainted with local matters.

Lannis said: "Clinch's dump stands on the other edge of the clearing.
Clinch owns five hundred acres in here.  He's a rat."

"Bad?"

"Well, he's mean.  I don't know how bad he is.  But he runs a rotten
dump.  The forest has its slums as well as the city.  This is the Hell's
Kitchen of the North Woods."

Stormont nodded.

"All the scum of the wilderness gathers here," went on Lannis.  "Here's
where half the trouble in the North Woods hatches.  We'll eat dinner at
Clinch's.  His stepdaughter is a peach."

The sturdy, sun-browned trooper glanced at his wrist watch, stretched
his legs in his stirrups.

"Jack," he said, "I want you to get Clinch right, and I'm going to tell
you about his outfit while we watch this road.  It's like a movie.
Clinch plays the lead.  I'll dope out the scenario for you----"

He turned sideways in his saddle, freeing both spurred heels and lolled
so, constructing a cigarette while he talked:

"Way back around 1900 Mike Clinch was a guide -- a decent young fellow
they say.  He guided fishing parties in summer, hunters in fall and
winter.  He made money and built the house.  The people he guided were
wealthy.  He made a lot of money and bought land.  I understand he was
square and that everybody liked him.

"About that time there came to Clinch's `hotel' a Mr. and Mrs. Strayer.
They were `lungers.'  Strayer seemed to be a gentleman; his wife was
good looking and rather common.  Both were very young.  He had the
consump bad -- the galloping variety.  He didn't last long.  A month
after he died his young wife had a baby.  Clinch married her.  She also
died the same year.  The baby's name was Eve.  Clinch became quite crazy
about her and started to make a lady of her.  That was his mania."

Lannis leaned from his saddle and carefully dropped his cigarette end
into a puddle of rain water.  Then he swung one leg over and sat side
saddle.

"Clinch had plenty of money in those days," he went on.  "He could
afford to educate the child.  The kid had a governess.  Then he sent her
to a fancy boarding school.  She had everything a young girl could want.

"She developed into a pretty young thing at fifteen. ... She's eighteen
now -- and I don't know what to call her.  She pulled a gun on me in
July."

"What!"

"Sure.  There was a row at Clinch's dump.  A rum-runner called Jake
Kloon got shot up.  I came up to get Clinch.  He was sick-drunk in his
bunk.  When I broke in the door Eve Strayer pulled a gun on me."

"What happened?" inquired Stormont.

"Nothing.  I took Clinch. ... But he got off as usual."

"Acquitted?"

Lannis nodded, rolling another cigarette:

"Now, I'll tell you how Clinch happened to go wrong," he said.  "You see
he'd always made his living  by guiding.  Well, some years ago Henry
Harrod, of Boston, came here and bought thousands and thousands of acres
of forest all around Clinch's----"  Lannis half rose on one stirrup and,
with a comprehensive sweep of his muscular arm, ending in a flourish:
"-- He bought everything for miles and miles.  And that started Clinch
down hill.  Harrod tried to force Clinch to sell.  The millionaire
tactics you know.  He was determined to oust him.  Clinch got mad and
wouldn't sell at any price.  Harrod kept on buying all around Clinch and
posted trespass notices.  That meant ruin to Clinch.  He was walled in.
No hunters care to be restricted.  Clinch's little property was no good.
Business stopped.  His step-daughter's education became expensive.  He
as in a bad way.  Harrod offered him a high price.  But Clinch turned
ugly and wouldn't budge.  And that's how Clinch began to go wrong."

"Poor devil," said Stormont.

"Devil, all right.  Poor, too.  But he needed money.  He was crazy to
make a lady of Eve Strayer.  And there are ways of finding money, you
know."

Stormont nodded.

"Well, Clinch found money in those ways.  The Conservation Commissioner
in Albany began to hear about game law violations.  The Revenue people
heard of rum-running.  Clinch lost his guide's license.  But nobody
could get the goods on him.

"There was a rough backwoods bunch always drifting around Clinch's place
in those days.  There were fights.  And not so many miles from Clinch's
there was highway robbery and a murder or two.

"Then the war came.  The draft caught Clinch.  Malone exempted him, he
being the sole support of his stepchild.

"But the girl volunteered.  She got to France, somehow -- scrubbed in a
hospital, I believe -- anyway, Clinch wanted to be on the same side of
the world she was on, and he went with a Forestry Regiment and cut trees
for railroad ties in southern France until the war ended and they sent
him home.

"Eve Strayer came back too.  She's there now.  You'll see her at dinner
time.  She sticks to Clinch.  He's a rat.  He's up against the dry laws
and the game laws.  Government enforcement agents, game protectors,
State Constabulary, all keep an eye on Clinch.  Harrod's trespass signs
fence him in.  He's like a rat in a trap.  Yet Clinch makes money at law
breaking and nobody can catch him red-handed.

"He kills Harrod's deer.  That's certain.  I mean Harrod's nephew's
deer.  Harrod's dead.  Darragh's the young nephew's name.  He's never
been here -- he was in the army -- in Russia -- I don't know what became
of him -- but he keeps up the Harrod preserve -- game-wardens, patrols,
watchers, trespass signs and all."

Lannis finished his second cigarette, got back into his stirrups and,
gathering bridle, began leisurely to divide curb and snaffle.

"That's the layout, Jack," he said.  "Yonder lies the Red Light district
of the North Woods.  Mike Clinch is the brains of all the dirty work
that goes on.  A floating population of crooks and bums -- game
violators, boot-leggers, market hunters, pelt `collectors,' rum-runners,
hootch makers, do his dirty work -- and I guess there are some who'll
stick you up by starlight for a quarter and others who'll knock your
block off for a dollar. ... And there's the girl, Eve Strayer.  I don't
get her at all, except that she's loyal to Clinch. ... And now you know
what you ought to know about this movie called `Hell in the woods.'  And
it's up to us to keep a calm, impartial eye on the picture and try to
follow the plot they're acting out -- if there is any."

Stormont said: "Thanks, Bill; I'm posted. ... And I'm getting hungry,
too."

"I believe, said Lannis, "that you want to see that girl."

"I do," returned the other, laughing.

"Well, you'll see her.  She's good to look at.  But I don't get her at
all."

"Why?"

"Because she _looks_ right.  And yet she lives at Clinch's with him and
his bunch of bums.  Would you think a straight girl could stand it?"

"No man can tell what a straight girl can stand."

"Straight or crooked she stands for Mike Clinch," said Lannis, "and he's
a ratty customer."

"Maybe the girl is fond of him.  It's natural."

"I guess it's that.  But I don't see how any young girl can stomach the
life at Clinch's."

"It's a wonder what a decent woman will stand," observed Stormont.
"Ninety-nine per cent, of all wives ought to receive the D.S.O."

"Do you think we're so rotten?" inquired Lannis, smiling.

"Not so rotten.  No.  But any man knows what men are.  And it's a wonder
women stick to us when they learn."

They laughed.  Lannis glanced at his watch again.

"Well," he said, "I don't believe anybody has tipped off our man.  It's
noon.  Come on to dinner, Jack."

They cantered forward into the sunlit clearing.  Star Pond lay ahead.
On its edge stood Clinch's.

* * * * *
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