PAGE 6
The Only Girl At Overlook
by
CHAPTER II.
The full moon looked for Mary Warriner’s little house that night as soon as a clearance of the sky permitted, and then beamed down on her abode effulgently. But it was eleven o’clock before the gusty wind blew the thick clouds aside and let the orb illumine Overlook. Back of the shed in which the telegrapher worked by day was a structure in which she slept at night. It was built of slabs, with big growing trees to form its irregular corners, and their lowest limbs contributed the rafters, while stripped bark and evergreen boughs made the roof. The foliage swayed above in the fitful wind, and covered the cabin and the grass around it with commingling, separating, capering shadows of leaves, as though a multitude of little black demons were trying to get to the slumberer within. Their antics looked spiteful and angry at first: but as the wind lessened to a breeze, and as the moon seemed to mollify them, they became frolicsome without malice; and at length, when the merest zephyrs impelled their motions, they gambolled lazily, good-humoredly above and around the couch of Mary Mite.
It was midnight when a man shot into the open space around the cabin like a missile. He ran first to the front of the structure, where a tarpaulin curtained the shed for the night, and gazed for a moment blankly at this indication that the hour was not one of business. Tremendous haste was denoted in his every step and gesture. He plucked twice at the canvas, as though to pull it down. Then he skurried around to the single window of Mary’s apartment, whose only door opened into the shed, and pounded with his knuckles on the ill-fitted sash, making it clatter loudly. Silence within followed this noise without. “Hello! Wake up!” he cried. “Don’t fool for a minute. Wake up!”
There was no response, and he skipped to and fro in his impatience. He was an ordinary shoveler and pounder, with nothing to distinguish him from the mass of manual laborers at Overlook, but, unlike the usual man with an errand at the telegraphic station, flourished a scrap of paper.
“I want to telegraph,” he shouted, and struck the window again. “Get up quick! It’s life and death!”
Mary Warriner was convinced that her services were urgently and properly required. She peeped warily out to inspect the man, estimated him to be merely a messenger, and then opened wide the sash, which swung laterally on hinges. Her delicate face bore the same sort of calm that characterized it in business hours, but the moon shone on it now, the hair had got loose from the bondage of knot and pin, and for an outer garment she was carelessly enwrapped in a white, fleecy blanket. The man did not give her time to inquire what was wanted.
“You’re the telegraph girl, ain’t you?” he exclaimed. “Well, here’s something to telegraph. It’s in a hurry, hurry, hurry. Don’t lose a minute.”
“I couldn’t send it to-night,” Mary said.
“You must.”
“It isn’t possible. There is nobody at the other end of the line to receive it. The wire is private–belongs to the railroad company–isn’t operated except in the daytime. You’ll have to wait until to-morrow.”
“To-morrow I’ll be a hundred years old, or else dead,” the man almost wailed in despair.
“What?”
“I was only ten years old yesterday. To-night I’m sixty. To-morrow’ll be too late. Here–here–send it to-night, Miss. Please send it to-night.”
The mystified girl mechanically took the piece of paper which he thrust into her hands, but her eyes did not drop before they discovered the insanity in his face, and when they did rest on the paper they saw a scrawl of hieroglyphics. It was plain that this midnight visitor was a maniac. She screamed for help.
A watchman responded almost instantly to her call. Upon seeing the cause of the girl’s fright, he treated the incident as a matter of course. The lunatic wobbled like a drunken man about to collapse, as he mumbled his request over and over again.