Carmen's Messenger eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 354 pages of information about Carmen's Messenger.

Carmen's Messenger eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 354 pages of information about Carmen's Messenger.

“Your letter was from Hulton, wasn’t it?  What does he want?”

“He doesn’t state, but asks us to call at the factory to-morrow evening.  That’s all, but I heard in town that the doctor and nurse had left; Cameron told me Hulton fired them both because they objected to his getting up.”

“It’s possible,” Featherstone agreed.  “Hulton’s not the man to bother about his health or etiquette when he wants to do a thing.  Anyhow, as he has been a pretty good friend of ours, we will have to go, but I wouldn’t have imagined he’d have been ready to talk about the tragedy just yet.”

“You think that is what he wants to talk about?”

Featherstone nodded.  “We knew Fred Hulton better than anybody at the Crossing, and at the inquiry I tried to indicate that his death was due to an accident.  I imagined that Hulton was grateful.  It’s true that I don’t see how the accident could have happened, but I don’t believe Fred shot himself.  Though it was an open verdict, you and I and Hulton are perhaps the only people who take this view.”

“We’ll let it drop until to-morrow.  What did you learn at Toronto?”

“Perhaps the most important thing was that I’ll have to give up my trip to the Old Country.”

“Ah,” said Foster, who waited, trying to hide his disappointment and alarm, for he saw that his suspicions about his partner’s health had been correct.

“The doctor didn’t think it wise; said something about England’s being too damp, and objected to a winter voyage,” Featherstone resumed.  “It looks as if you were better at calculating the profit on a lumber deal than diagnosing illness, because while you doctored me for influenza, it was pneumonia I had.  However, I admit that you did your best and you needn’t feel anxious.  It seems I’m not much the worse, though I’ll have to be careful for the next few months, which I’m to spend on the Pacific slope, California for choice.  It’s a bit of a knock, but can’t be helped.”

Foster declared his sympathy, but Featherstone stopped him.  “There’s another matter; that fellow Daly’s here again.  I expect you guessed what he came for the last time?”

“I did.  The bank-book showed you drew a rather large sum.”

“No doubt you thought it significant that the check was payable to myself?”

Foster was silent for a moment or two.  He trusted his comrade, but suspected that there was something in his past history that he meant to hide.  For one thing, Featherstone never spoke about his life in the Old Country, and Foster was surprised when he stated his intention of spending a few months there.  It looked as if Daly knew his secret and had used his knowledge to blackmail him.

“I’ll go to California with you,” he said.  “One place is as good as another for a holiday, and I’m really not keen on going home.  I’ve no near relations and have lost touch with my friends.”

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Project Gutenberg
Carmen's Messenger from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.