Caswell, 4) Frank Swain.
TEXT 24. WAGER WITH DESTINY
E.E. Gatti
Anderson was alone in camp when the native boy brought him
Barton's book.
"The boss has dropped it on the trail," the boy said. Anderson
knew the book well, a cheap, shabby little notebook. He had heard
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Barton say a dozen times that he'd bought it with the first dime he'd
earned, and every financial transaction he'd made since was entered in
that book.
The camp was inside a mountain jungle in the Kuvi region of the
Congo. And the heavy clouds overhead made Anderson feel gloomy. He
was not well, and he was nervous. And he was unreasonably disturbed
about the cage.
He had come on this hunting safari as Barton's guest. Barton, now,
was one of the richest men in America; a hard man, who was proud of
his power. It was surprising, therefore, to Anderson, that after fifteen
years of silence, Barton had looked him up, renewed their boyhood
friendship and made him this invitation. Anderson was grateful for it; for
he, himself, was penniless and a failure.
Barton had made a bet at his club that he could capture alive a full-
grown gorilla and bring it back to America. Hence the safari. And hence
the portable steel cage with its automatic door.
Anderson couldn't bear to think of a great gorilla, unable to use his
magnificent strength, shut up in the cage. But Anderson, of course, was
sensitive about steel bars.
He did not mean to look in Barton's book. It had fallen into the
mud, and Anderson only wanted to clean it.
But as he turned the pages shaking out the dried mud, his eyes
fell upon a date—April 20, 1923. That was the date that had been seared
into Anderson's mind with a red-hot iron, and mechanically he read the
entry. Then he opened his mouth and the air swam around him.
"April 20, 1923, received $50,000" the book stated. Nothing more
than that. And on April 20, 1923, he, Anderson, an innocent man, a
young accountant in the same firm where Barton was just beginning his
career, had been sentenced to fifteen years in prison for embezzlement
1
of $50,000.
Anderson was as shaken as if the very ground had opened under
his feet. Memories rushed back to him. The books
2
had been tampered
3
with, all right. But they had never been able to locate the money.
And all the time it was Barton who had stolen the money; had used
it as the cornerstone
4
of his vast success; had noted it down, laconically,
in his little book!
"But why did he bring me here?" Anderson asked himself. His
body was burning with heat, and his head was heavy; he felt the first
sign of malaria. And his heart was filled with the terrible, bitter rage of
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one betrayed. "Does he think I suspect him? Does he plan to kill me
now?"
And then the reason came, cold and clear. There was a power of
justice in life, and that power had made Barton bring him, so that he,
Anderson, could take the law in his own hands, and the guilty would be
punished instead of the innocent.
At once his mind was made up, and he had never known his
thinking to be so clear and direct. He would kill Barton while he slept—
they shared the same tent. And he would go to bed now and pretend
sleeping, so that he would not have to speak to Barton.
It was already late in the afternoon. Anderson uneasily walked into
the tent. But he did not have to play a role, for as soon as he touched the
bed he fell into the heavy sleep of increasing malaria.
It was bright moonlight outside the tent when he awoke. He could
hear Barton's regular, rhythmic breathing in the darkness near him. He
dressed quickly and noiselessly, turned the safety catch of his revolver
and bent above Barton. But a sudden shock of revulsion came over him.
He put the revolver down carefully on the table near his bed. Then
he was outside the tent and trying to run, to get away from that accusing
voice that cried within him, again and again, "Murderer!"
He did not know where he was until his hand touched something
cold and hard—a steel bar of the cage. God, it knew steel bars, that
hand. He closed his eyes against the thought, and took a few steps
forward. Then a noise behind him made him turn around. The steel door
of the cage had dropped! He had walked into the cage, closing the
automatic door!
“Where you should be," cried the accusing voice, "where
murderers ought to be, in a cage!”
Anderson sobbed hysterically. Then he fell and the flames of his
fever licked him.
Anderson opened his eyes with great effort, and saw above him the
face of the friendly planter who lived some miles from the camp.
"You'll be all right now," the man said, "the fever's over. But how
did you get into the cage?"
Anderson tried to explain, but he didn't have strength enough to
speak. He knew where he was, in a bed in the planter's house. And
gradually he became aware that there was another white man in the
room, one he had never seen before.
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"He was lucky," the planter was saying to this strange man. "If he
hadn't been safe in that cage, the gorillas would have got him as they did
Barton and those pygmies."
"Do you feel able to talk now?" the stranger asked. "I expect you're
wondering who I am. I am Barton's lawyer, I flew down from New York
to take charge of Barton's affairs as soon as I got the news. You've been
delirious three weeks, you know."
The lawyer sat down beside Anderson's bed. "As you know, my
late client was a superstitious man, and a great gambler
5
," he said. "You
two, as young men, started your careers together. And on the very day
that he received the capital that gave him his chance, you were sentenced
to prison on a charge of embezzling the identical
6
sum—fifty thousand
dollars. Barton took the coincidence as an act of fate
7
."
"He made a kind of bet with fate," the lawyer went on. "If he were
allowed to succeed, he promised to do something good for you. And he
kept the bet, he remembered you in his will
8
.I thought you'd like to
know why."
"I know why all right," said Anderson. A little word called
"conscience
9
", he thought.
"I happened to know all about it," the lawyer added, "Because I
was the executor of the will of Barton's aunt. She hadn't liked him, and
he'd expected nothing from her. So that fifty thousand was like money
falling from the skies."
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