They rode off in single file on the faintest of trails through the woods, Cooke leading and Ardmore and Collins following immediately behind him. The great host of summer stars thronged the sky, and the moon sent its soft effulgence across the night. They presently forded a noisy stream, and while they were seeking the trail again on the farther side an owl hooted a thousand yards up the creek, and while the line re-formed Cooke paused and listened. Then the owl’s call was repeated farther off, and so faintly that Cooke alone heard it. He laid his hand on Ardmore’s rein:
“There’s a foot-trail that leads along that creek, and it’s very rough and difficult to follow. Half a mile from here there used to be a still, run by one of the Appleweights. We smashed it once, but no doubt they are operating again by this time. That hoot of the owl is a warning common among the pickets put out by these people. Wireless telegraphy isn’t in it with them. Every Appleweight within twenty miles will know in half an hour how many there are of us and just what direction we are taking. We must not come back here to-night. We must put up on your place somewhere and let them think, if they will, we are guests of yours out for an evening ride.”
“That’s all right. Unless we complete this job in about two days my administration is a fizzle,” said Ardmore, as they resumed their march through the forest. There was a wilder fling to the roll of the land now, but the underbrush was better cleared, and the trail had become a bridle-path that had known man’s care.
“This is some of Paul’s work,” said Ardmore; “and if I am not very much mistaken we are on my land now and headed straight enough for the wagon-road that leads south beyond the red bungalow. These roads in here were planned to give variety, but I never before appreciated how complicated they are.”
The path stretched away through the heavy forest, and they climbed to a ridge that commanded a wide region that lay bathed in silver moonlight, so softly luminous that it seemed of the stuff of shadows made light. Westward, a mile distant, lay Ardsley, only a little below the level of the ridge and touched with a faint purple as of spring twilight.
Ardmore sat his saddle, quietly contemplating the great house that struck him almost for the first time as imposing. He felt, too, a little heartache that he did not quite understand. He was not sure whether it was the effect of the moon, or whether he was tired, or what it was, though he thought perhaps the moon had something to do with it. His own house, of which he was sincerely fond, seemed mistily hung between heaven and earth in the moonlight, a thing not wholly of this world; and in his depression of spirit he reflected for a moment on his own aimless, friendless life; he knew then that he was lonely, and that there was a great void in his mind and heart and soul, and he knew also that Jerry Dangerfield and not the moon was the cause of his melancholy.
“We’d better be moving,” suggested Cooke.
“It’s too bad to leave that picture,” remarked Collins, sighing. “Had I the lyre of Gray I should compose an ‘Ode on a Distant Prospect of Ardsley Castle,’ which would ultimately reach the school readers and bring me fame more enduring than brass.”
“Did you say brass?” ironically scoffed Cooke.
Whereupon the Palladium’s late representative laughed softly and muttered to himself,