Wyoming (怀俄明) 【淘宝店铺:驳壳工作室】
Wyoming (怀俄明) 【淘宝店铺:驳壳工作室】
WYOMING
A STORY OF THE OUTDOOR WEST
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WYOMING:A STORY OF THE OUTDOOR WEST
CHAPTER 1. A DESERT
MEETING
An automobile shot out from a gash in the hills and slipped swiftly
down to the butte. Here it came to a halt on the white, dusty road, while its
occupant gazed with eager, unsated eyes on the great panorama that
stretched before her. The earth rolled in waves like a mighty sea to the
distant horizon line. From a wonderful blue sky poured down upon the
land a bath of sunbeat. The air was like wine, pure and strong, and above
the desert swam the rare, untempered light of Wyoming. Surely here was a
peace primeval, a silence unbroken since the birth of creation.
It was all new to her, and wonderfully exhilarating. The infinite roll of
plain, the distant shining mountains, the multitudinous voices of the desert
drowned in a sunlit sea of space--they were all details of the situation that
ministered to a large serenity.
And while she breathed deeply the satisfaction of it, an exploding rifle
echo shattered the stillness. With excited sputtering came the prompt
answer of a fusillade. She was new to the West; but some instinct stronger
than reason told the girl that here was no playful puncher shooting up the
scenery to ventilate his exuberance. Her imagination conceived something
more deadly; a sinister picture of men pumping lead in a grim, close-
lipped silence; a lusty plainsman, with murder in his heart, crumpling into
a lifeless heap, while the thin smoke-spiral curled from his hot rifle.
So the girl imagined the scene as she ran swiftly forward through the
pines to the edge of the butte bluff whence she might look down upon the
coulee that nestled against it. Nor had she greatly erred, for her first
sweeping glance showed her the thing she had dreaded.
In a semicircle, well back from the foot of the butte, half a dozen men
crouched in the cover of the sage-brush and a scattered group of
cottonwoods. They were perhaps fifty yards apart, and the attention of all
of them was focused on a spot directly beneath her. Even as she looked, in
that first swift moment of apprehension, a spurt of smoke came from one
of the rifles and was flung back from the forked pine at the bottom of the
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mesa. She saw him then, kneeling behind his insufficient shelter, a trapped
man making his last stand.
>From where she stood the girl distinguished him very clearly, and
under the field-glasses that she turned on him the details leaped to life.
Tall, strong, slender, with the lean, clean build of a greyhound, he seemed
as wary and alert as a panther. The broad, soft hat, the scarlet handkerchief
loosely knotted about his throat, the gray shirt, spurs and overalls,
proclaimed him a stockman, just as his dead horse at the entrance to the
coulee told of an accidental meeting in the desert and a hurried run for
cover.
That he had no chance was quite plain, but no plainer than the cool
vigilance with which he proposed to make them pay. Even in the matter of
defense he was worse off than they were, but he knew how to make the
most of what he had; knew how to avail himself of every inch of
sagebrush that helped to render him indistinct to their eyes.
One of the attackers, eager for a clearer shot, exposed himself a trifle
too far in taking aim. Without any loss of time in sighting, swift as a
lightning-flash, the rifle behind the forked pine spoke. That the bullet
reached its mark she saw with a gasp of dismay. For the man suddenly
huddled down and rolled over on his side.
His comrades appeared to take warning by this example. The men at
both ends of the crescent fell back, and for a minute the girl's heart leaped
with the hope that they were about to abandon the siege. Apparently the
man in the scarlet kerchief had no such expectation. He deserted his
position behind the pine and ran back, crouching low in the brush, to
another little clump of trees closer to the bluff. The reason for this was at
first not apparent to her, but she understood presently when the men who
had fallen back behind the rolling hillocks appeared again well in to the
edge of the bluff. Only by his timely retreat had the man saved himself
from being outflanked.
It was very plain that the attackers meant to take their time to finish
him in perfect safety. He was surrounded on every side by a cordon of
rifles, except where the bare face of the butte hung down behind him. To
attempt to scale it would have been to expose himself as a mark for every
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bullets.
By this time she was recovering control of the motor, and she dared
not let her attention wander, but out of the corner of her eye she
appreciated the situation. Temporarily, out of sheer amaze at this
apparition from the blue, the guns ceased their sniping. She became aware
that a light curly head, crouched low in the sage-brush, was moving
rapidly to meet her at right angles, and in doing so was approaching
directly the line of fire. She could see him dodging to and fro as he moved
forward, for the rifles were again barking.
She was within two hundred yards of him, still going rapidly, but not
with the same headlong rush as before, when the curly head disappeared in
the sage-brush. It was up again presently, but she could see that the man
came limping, and so uncertainly that twice he pitched forward to the
ground. Incautionsly one of his assailants ran forward with a shout the
second time his head went down. Crack! The unerring rifle rang out, and
the impetuous one dropped in his tracks.
As she approached, the young woman slowed without stopping, and as
the car swept past Curly Head flung himself in headlong. He picked
himself up from her feet, crept past her to the seat beyond, and almost
instantly whipped his rifle to his shoulder in prompt defiance of the fire
that was now converged on them.
Yet in a few moments the sound died away, for a voice midway in the
crescent had shouted an amazed discovery:
"By God, it's a woman!"
The car skimmed forward over the uneven ground toward the end of
the semicircle, and passed within fifty yards of the second man from the
end, the one she had picked out as the leader of the party. He was a black,
swarthy fellow in plain leather chaps and blue shirt. As they passed he
took a long, steady aim.
"Duck!" shouted the man beside her, and dragged her down on the seat
so that his body covered hers.
A puff of wind fanned the girl's cheek.
"Near thing," her companion said coolly. He looked back at the
swarthy man and laughed softly. "Some day you'll mebbe wish you had
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"Which means, I suppose, that you are not going to tell me."
"I got so much else to tell y'u that's a heap more important," he
laughed. "Y'u see, I'm enjoyin' my first automobile ride. It was certainly
thoughful of y'u to ask me to go riding with y'u, Miss Messiter."
"So you know my name. May I ask how?" was her astonished
question.
He gave the low laugh that always seemed to suggest a private source
of amusement of his own. "I suspicioned that might be your name when I
say y'u come a-sailin' down from heaven to gather me up like Enoch."
"Why?"
"Well, ma'am, I happened to drift in to Gimlet Butte two or three days
ago, and while I was up at the depot looking for some freight a train
sashaid in and side tracked a flat car. There was an automobile on that car
addressed to Miss Helen Messiter. Now, automobiles are awful seldom in
this country. I don't seem to remember having seen one before."
"I see. You're quite a Sherlock Holmes. Do you know anything more
about me?"
"I know y'u have just fallen heir to the Lazy D. They say y'u are a
schoolmarm, but I don't believe it."
"Well, I am." Then, "Why don't you believe it?" she added.
He surveyed her with his smile audacious, let his amused eyes wander
down from the mobile face with the wild-rose bloom to the slim young
figure so long and supple, then serenely met her frown.
" Y'u don't look it."
" No? Are you the owner of a composite photograph of the teachers of
the country?"
He enjoyed again his private mirth. "I should like right well to have
the pictures of some of them."
She glanced at him sharply, but he was gazing so innocently at the
purple Shoshones in the distance that she could not give him the snub she
thought he needed.
"You are right. My name is Helen Messiter," she said, by way of
stimulating a counter fund of information. For, though she was a young
woman not much given to curiosity, she was aware of an interest in this
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"Can you tell me where the nearest ranch house is?" she asked,
ignoring his diversion.
"The Lazy D is the nearest, I reckon."
"Which direction?"
"North by east, ma'am."
"Then I'll take the most direct road to it.
"In that case I'll thank y'u for my ride and get out here."
"But--why?"
He waved a jaunty hand toward the recent battlefield. "The Lazy D
lies right back of that hill. I expect, mebbe, those wolves might howl again
if we went back."
"Where, then, shall I take you?"
"I hate to trouble y'u to go out of your way.
"I dare say, but I'm going just the same," she told him, dryly.
"If you're right determined " He interrupted himself to point to the
south. "Do y'u see that camel-back peak over there?"
"The one with the sunshine on its lower edge?"
"That's it, Miss Messiter. They call those two humps the Antelope
Peaks. If y'u can drop me somewhere near there I think I'll manage all
right."
"I'm not going to leave you till we reach a house," she informed him
promptly. "You're not fit to walk fifty yards."
"That's right kind of y'u, but I could not think of asking so much. My
friends will find me if y'u leave me where I can work a heliograph."
"Or your enemies," she cut in.
"I hope not. I'd not likely have the luck to get another invitation right
then to go riding with a friendly young lady."
She gave him direct, cool, black-blue eyes that met and searched his.
"I'm not at all sure she is friendly. I shall want to find out the cause of the
trouble you have just had before I make up my mind as to that."
"I judge people by their actions. Y'u didn't wait to find out before
bringing the ambulance into action," he laughed.
"I see you do not mean to tell me."
"You're quite a lawyer, ma'am," he evaded.
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Butte," she said, as she swept in. For this young woman was possessed of
Western adaptation. It gave her no conscientious qualms to exchange
conversation fraternal with these genial savages.
The Elk House did not rejoice in a private dining room, and
competition strenuous ensued as to who should have the pleasure of sitting
beside the guest of honor. To avoid ill feeling, the matter was determined
by a game of freeze-out, in which Texas and a mature gentleman named,
from his complexion, "Beet" Collins, were the lucky victors. Texas
immediately repaired to the general store, where he purchased a new
scarlet bandanna for the occasion; also a cake of soap with which to rout
the alkali dust that had filtered into every pore of his hands and face from
a long ride across the desert.
Came supper and Texas simultaneously, the cow-puncher's face
scrubbed to an apple shine. At the last moment Collins defaulted, his nerve
completely gone. Since, however, he was a thrifty soul, he sold his place
to Soapy for ten dollars, and proceeded to invest the proceeds in an
immediate drunk.
During the first ten minutes of supper Miss Messiter did not appear,
and the two guardians who flanked her chair solicitously were the object
of much badinage.
"She got one glimpse of that red haid of Tex and the pore lady's took to
the sage," explained Yorky.
"And him scrubbed so shiny fust time since Christmas before the big
blizzard," sighed Doc Rogers.
"Shucks! She ain't scared of no sawed-off, hammered-down runt like
Texas, No, siree! Miss Messiter's on the absent list 'cause she's afraid she
cayn't resist the blandishments of Soapy. Did yo' ever hear about Soapy
and that Caspar hash slinger?"
"Forget it, Slim," advised Soapy, promptly. He had been engaged in
lofty and oblivious conversation with Texas, but he did not intend to allow
reminiscences to get under way just now.
At this opportune juncture arrived the mistress of the "gasoline bronc,"
neatly clad in a simple white lawn with blue trimmings. She looked like a
gleam of sunshine in her fresh, sweet youth; and not even in her own
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school room had she ever found herself the focus of a cleaner, more
unstinted admiration. For the outdoors West takes off its hat reverently to
women worthy of respect, especially when they are young and friendly.
Helen Messiter had come to Wyoming because the call of adventure,
the desire for experience outside of rutted convention, were stirring her
warm-blooded youth. She had seen enough of life lived in a parlor, and
when there came knocking at her door a chance to know the big, untamed
outdoors at first hand she had at once embraced it like a lover. She was
eager for her new life, and she set out skillfully to make these men tell her
what she wanted to know. To them, of course, it was an old story, and
whatever of romance it held was unconscious. But since she wanted to talk
of the West they were more than ready to please her.
So she listened, and drew them out with adroit questions when it was
necessary. She made them talk of life on the open range, of rustlers and
those who lived outside the law in the upper Shoshone country, of the
deadly war waging between the cattle and sheep industries.
"Are there any sheep near the Lazy D ranch?" she asked, intensely
interested in Soapy's tale of how cattle and sheep could no more be got to
mix than oil and water.
For an instant nobody answered her question; then Soapy replied, with
what seemed elaborate carelessness:
"Ned Bannister runs a bunch of about twelve thousand not more'n
fifteen or twenty miles from your place."
"And you say they are spoiling the range?"
"They're ce'tainly spoiling it for cows."
"But can't something be done? If my cows were there first I don't see
what right he has to bring his sheep there," the girl frowned.
The assembled company attended strictly to supper. The girl, surprised
at the stillness, looked round. "Well?"
"Now you're shouting, ma'am! That's what we say," enthused Texas,
spurring to the rescue.
"It doesn't much matter what you say. What do you do?" asked Helen,
impatiently. "Do you lie down and let Mr. Bannister and his kind drive
their sheep over you?"
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"Do we, Soapy?" grinned Texas. Yet it seemed to her his smile was not
quite carefree.
"I'm not a cowman myself," explained Soapy to the girl. "Nor do I run
sheep. I--"
"Tell Miss Messiter what yore business is, Soapy," advised Yorky from
the end of the table, with a mouthful of biscuit swelling his cheeks.
Soapy crushed the irrepressible Yorky with a look, but that young man
hit back smilingly.
"Soapy, he sells soap, ma'am. He's a sorter city salesman, I reckon."
"I should never have guessed it. Mr. Sothern does not LOOK like a
salesman," said the girl, with a glance at his shrewd, hard, expressionless
face.
"Yes, ma'am, he's a first-class seller of soap, is Mr. Sothern," chuckled
the cow-puncher, kicking his friends gayly under the table.
"You can see I never sold HIM any, Miss Messiter," came back Soapy,
sorrowfully.
All this was Greek to the young lady from Kalamazoo. How was she
to know that Mr. Sothern had vended his soap in small cubes on street
corners, and that he wrapped bank notes of various denominations in the
bars, which same were retailed to eager customers for the small sum of
fifty cents, after a guarantee that the soap was good? His customers rarely
patronized him twice; and frequently they used bad language because the
soap wrapping was not as valuable as they had expected. This was
manifestly unfair, for Mr. Sothern, who made no claims to philanthropy,
often warned them that the soap should be bought on its merits, and not
with an eye single to the premium that might or might not accompany the
package.
"I started to tell you, ma'am, when that infant interrupted, that the
cowmen don't aim to quit business yet a while. They've drawn a dead-line,
Miss Messiter,"
"A dead-line?"
"Yes, ma'am, beyond which no sheep herder is to run his bunch."
"And if he does?" the girl asked, open eyed.
" He don't do it twict, ma'am. Why don't you pass the fritters to Miss
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Messiter, Slim?"
"And about this Bannister Who is he?"
Her innocent question seemed to ring a bell for silence; seemed to
carry with it some hidden portent that stopped idle conversation as a
striking clock that marks the hour of an execution.
The smile that had been gay grew grim, and men forgot the subject of
their light, casual talk. It was Sothern that answered her, and she observed
that his voice was grave, his face studiously without expression.
"Mr. Bannister, ma'am, is a sheepman."
"So I understood, but " Her eyes traveled swiftly round the table, and
appraised the sudden sense of responsibility that had fallen on these
reckless, careless frontiersmen. "I am wondering what else he is. Really,
he seems to be the bogey man of Gimlet Butte."
There was another instant silence, and again it was Soapy that lifted it.
"I expaict you'll like Wyoming, Miss Messiter; leastways I hope you will.
There's a right smart of country here." His gaze went out of the open door
to the vast sea of space that swam in the fine sunset light. "Yes, most folks
that ain't plumb spoilt with city ways likes it."
"Sure she'll like it. Y'u want to get a good, easy-riding hawss, Miss
Messiter," advised Slim.
"And a rifle," added Texas, promptly.
It occurred to her that they were all working together to drift the
conversation back to a safe topic. She followed the lead given her, but she
made up her mind to know what it was about her neighbor, Mr. Bannister,
the sheep herder, that needed to be handled with such wariness and
circumspection of speech.
Her chance came half an hour later, when she stood talking to the
landlady on the hotel porch in the mellow twilight that seemed to rest on
the land like a moonlit aura. For the moment they were alone.
"What is it about this man Bannister that makes men afraid to speak of
him?" she demanded, with swift impulse.
Her landlady's startled eyes went alertly round to see that they were
alone. "Hush, child! You mustn't speak of him like that," warned the older
woman.
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this--and after it was done I peeped through the blind of my room and saw
them ride away. He rode in front of them and sang like an angel--did it out
of daredeviltry to mock the people of the town that hadn't nerve enough to
shoot him. You see, he knew that nobody would dare hurt him 'count of
the revenge of his men."
"What was he like?" the mistress of the Lazy D asked, strangely awed
at this recital of transcendent villainy."
"'Course he was masked, and I didn't see his face. But I'd know him
anywhere. He's a long, slim fellow, built like a mountain lion. You couldn't
look at him and ever forget him. He's one of these graceful, easy men that
go so fur with fool women; one of the kind that half shuts his dark, devil
eyes and masters them without seeming to try."
"So he's a woman killer, too, is he? Any more outstanding
inconsistencies in this versatile Jesse James?"
"He's plumb crazy about music, they say. Has a piano and plays Grigg
and Chopping, and all that classical kind of music. He went clear down to
Denver last year to hear Mrs. Shoeman sing."
Helen smiled, guessing at Schumann-Heink as the singer in question,
and Grieg and Chopin as the composers named. Her interest was
incredibly aroused. She had expected the West and its products to
exhilarate her, but she had not looked to find so finished a Mephisto
among its vaunted "bad men." He was probably overrated; considered a
wonder because his accomplishments outstepped those of the range. But
Helen Messiter had quite determined on one thing. She was going to meet
this redoubtable villain and make up her mind for herself. Already, before
she had been in Wyoming six hours, this emancipated young woman had
decided on that.
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CHAPTER 3. AN INVITATION
GIVEN AND ACCEPTED
And already she had met him. Not only met him, but saved him from
the just vengeance about to fall upon him. She had not yet seen her own
ranch, had not spoken to a single one of her employees, for it had been a
part of her plan to drop in unexpected and examine the situation before her
foreman had a chance to put his best foot forward. So she had started
alone from Gimlet Butte that morning in her machine, and had come
almost in sight of the Lazy D ranch houses when the battle in the coulee
invited her to take a hand.
She had acted on generous impulse, and the unforeseen result had been
to save this desperado from justice. But the worst of it was that she could
not find it in her heart to regret it. Granted that he was a villain, double-
dyed and beyond hope, yet he was the home of such courage, such virility,
that her unconsenting admiration went out in spite of herself. He was, at
any rate, a MAN, square-jawed, resolute, implacable. In the sinuous trail
of his life might lie arson, robbery, murder, but he still held to that
dynamic spark of self-respect that is akin to the divine. Nor was it possible
to believe that those unblinking gray eyes, with the capability of a latent
sadness of despair in them, expressed a soul entirely without nobility. He
had a certain gallant ease, a certain attractive candor, that did not consist
with villainy unadulterated.
It was characteristic even of her impulsiveness that Helen Messiter
curbed the swift condemnation that leaped to her lips when she knew that
the man sitting beside her was the notorious bandit of the Shoshone
fastnesses. She was not in the least afraid. A sure instinct told her he was
not the kind of a man of whom a woman need have fear so long as her
own anchor held fast. In good time she meant to let him have her
unvarnished opinion of him, but she did not mean it to be an unconsidered
one. Wherefore she drove the machine forward toward the camelbacked
peak he had indicated, her eyes straight before her, a frown corrugating
her forehead.
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wounded look that leaped to his fine eyes in that flash of time before he
hardened them to steel?
"You did it--didn't you?" she demanded.
"That's what they say." His gaze met her defiantly.
"And it is true, isn't it?"
"Oh, anything is true of a man that herds sheep," he returned, bitterly.
"If that is true it would not be possible for you to understand how
much I despise you."
"Thank you," he retorted, ironically.
"I don't understand at all. I don't see how you can be the man they say
you are. Before I met you it was easy to understand. But somehow--I don't
know--you don't LOOK like a villain." She found herself strangely
voicing the deep hope of her heart. It was surely impossible to look at him
and believe him guilty of the things of which, he was accused. And yet he
offered no denial, suggested no defense.
Her troubled eyes went over his thin, sunbaked face with its touch, of
bitterness, and she did not find it possible to dismiss the subject without
giving him a chance to set himself right.
"You can't be as bad as they say. You are not, are you?" she asked,
naively.
"What do y'u think?" he responded, coolly.
She flushed angrily at what she accepted as his insolence. "A man of
any decency would have jumped at the chance to explain."
"But if there is nothing to explain?"
"You are then guilty."
Their eyes met, and neither of them quailed.
"If I pleaded not guilty would y'u believe me?"
She hesitated. "I don't know. How could I when it is known by
everybody? And yet--"
He smiled. "Why should I trouble y'u, then, with explanations? I
reckon we'll let it go at guilty."
"Is that all you can say for yourself?"
He seemed to hang in doubt an instant, then shook his head and
refused the opening.
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"I expect if we changed the subject I could say a good deal for y'u," he
drawled. "I never saw anything pluckier than the way y'u flew down from
the mesa and conducted the cutting-out expedition. Y'u sure drilled
through your punchers like a streak of lightning."
"I didn't know who you were," she explained, proudly.
"Would it have made any difference if y'u had?"
Again the angry flush touched her cheeks. "Not a bit. I would have
saved you in order to have you properly hanged later," she cut back
promptly.
He shook his head gayly. "I'm ce'tainly going to disappoint y'u some.
Your enterprising punchers may collect me yet, but not alive, I reckon."
"I'll give them strict orders to bring you in alive."
"Did you ever want the moon when y'u was a little kid?" he asked.
"We'll see, Mr. Outlaw Bannister."
He laughed softly, in the quiet, indolent fashion that would have been
pleasant if it had not been at her. "It's right kind of you to take so much
interest in me. I'd most be willing to oblige by letting your boys rope me
to renew this acquaintance, ma'am." Then, "I get out here Miss Messiter,
he added.
She stopped on the instant. Plainly she could not get rid of him too
soon. "Haven't you forgot one thing?" she asked, ironically.
"Yes, ma'am. To thank you proper for what y'u did for me." He limped
gingerly down from the car and stood with his hand on one of the tires. "I
have been trying to think how to say it right; but I guess I'll have to give it
up. All is that if I ever get a chance to even the score--"
She waved his thanks aside impatiently "I didn't mean that. You have
forgotten to take my purse.
His gravity was broken on the instant, and his laughter was certainly
delightfully fresh. "I clean forgot, but I expect I'll drop over to the ranch
for it some day."
"We'll try to make to make you welcome, Mr. Bannister."
"Don't put yourself out at all. I'll take pot-luck when I come."
"How many of you may we expect?" she asked, defiantly.
"Oh, I allow to come alone."
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It took one glance at the diabolical machine, and went up on its hind legs,
preliminary to giving an elaborate exhibition of pitching. The rider
indulged in vivid profanity and plied his quirt vigorously. But the bronco,
with the fear of this unknown evil on its soul, varied its bucking so
effectively that the puncher astride its hurricane deck was forced, in the
language of his kind, to "take the dust."
His red head sailed through the air and landed in the white sand at the
girl's feet. For a moment he sat in the road and gazed with chagrin after
the vanishing heels of his mount. Then his wrathful eyes came round to
the owner of the machine that had caused the eruption. His mouth had
opened to give adequate expression to his feelings, when he discovered
anew the forgotten fact that he was dealing with a woman. His jaw hung
open for an instant in amaze; and when he remembered the unedited
vocabulary he had turned loose on the world a flood of purple swept his
tanned face.
She wanted to laugh, but wisely refrained. "I'm very sorry," was what
she said.
He stared in silence as he slowly picked himself from the ground. His
red hair rose like the quills of a porcupine above a face that had the
appearance of being unfinished. Neither nose nor mouth nor chin seemed
to be quite definite enough.
She choked down her gayety and offered renewed apologies.
"I was going for a doc," he explained, by way of opening his share of
the conversation.
"Then perhaps you had better jump in with me and ride back to the
Lazy D. I suppose that's where you came from?"
He scratched his vivid head helplessly. "Yes, ma'am."
"Then jump in."
"I was going to Bear Creek, ma'am," he added dubiously.
"How far is it?"
"'Bout twenty-five miles, and then some."
"You don't expect to walk, do you?"
"No; I allowed--"
"I'll take you back to the ranch, where you can get another horse."
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"Not now. I want to see the men that were hurt. Perhaps I can help
them. Once I took a few weeks in nursing."
"Bully for you, ma'am," whooped Mac. "I've a notion those boys are
sufferin' for a woman to put the diamond-hitch on them bandages."
"Bring that suit-case in," she commanded Denver, in the gentlest voice
he had ever heard, after she had made a hasty inspection of the first
wounded man.
From the suit-case she took a little leather medicine-case, the kind that
can be bought already prepared for use. It held among other things a roll
of medicated cotton, some antiseptic tablets, and a little steel instrument
for probing.
"Some warm water, please; and have some boiling on the range," were
her next commands.
Mac flew to execute them.
It was a pleasure to see her work, so deftly the skillful hands
accomplished what her brain told them. In admiring awe the punchers
stood awkwardly around while she washed and dressed the hurts. Two of
the bullets had gone through the fleshy part of the arm and left clean
wounds. In the case of the third man she had to probe for the lead, but
fortunately found it with little difficulty. Meanwhile she soothed the victim
with gentle womanly sympathy.
"I know it hurts a good deal. Just a minute and I'll be through."
His hands clutched tightly the edges of his bunk. "That's all right, doc.
You attend to roping that pill and I'll endure the grief."
A long sigh of relief went up from the assembled cowboys when she
drew the bullet out.
The sinewy hands fastened on the wooden bunk relaxed suddenly.
"'Frisco's daid," gasped the cook, who bore the title of Wun Hop for no
reason except that he was an Irishman in a place formerly held by a
Chinese.
"He has only fainted," she said quietly, and continued with the
antiseptic dressing.
When it was all over, the big, tanned men gathered at the entrance to
the calf corral and expanded in admiration of their new boss.
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"She's a pure for fair. She grades up any old way yuh take her to the
best corn-fed article on the market," pronounced Denver, with enthusiasm.
"I got to ride the boundary," sighed Missou. "I kinder hate to go right
now."
"Here, too," acquiesced another. "I got a round-up on Wind Creek to
cut out them two-year-olds. If 'twas my say-so, I'd order Mac on that job."
"Right kind of y'u. Seems to me"--Mac's sarcastic eye trailed around to
include all those who had been singing her praises--"the new queen of this
hacienda won't have no trouble at all picking a prince consort when she
gets round to it. Here's Wun Hop, not what y'u might call anxious, but
ce'tainly willing. Then Denver's some in the turtle-dove business,
according to that hash-slinger in Cheyenne. Missou might be induced to
accept if it was offered him proper; and I allow Jim ain't turned the color
of Redtop's hair jest for instance. I don't want to leave out 'Frisco and the
other boys carrying Bannister's pills--"
"Nor McWilliams. I'd admire to include him," murmured Denver.
That sunburned, nonchalant youth laughed musically. "Sure thing. I'd
hate to be left out. The only difference is--"
"Well?"
His roving eye circled blandly round. "I stand about one show in a
million. Y'u roughnecks are dead ones already."
With which cold comfort he sauntered away to join Miss Messiter and
the foreman, who now appeared together at the door of the ranchhouse,
prepared to make a tour of the buildings and the immediate corrals.
"Isn't there a woman on the place?" she was asking Morgan.
"No'm, there ain't. Henderson's daughter would come and stay with y'u
a while I reckon."
"Please send for her at once, then, and ask her to come to-day."
"All right. I'll send one of the boys right away."
"How did y'u leave 'Frisco, ma'am?" asked Mac, by way of including
himself easily.
"He's resting quietly. Unless blood-poisoning sets in they ought all to
do well."
"It's right lucky for them y'u happened along. This is the hawss corral,
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ma'am," explained the young man just as Morgan opened his thin lips to
tell her.
Judd contrived to get rid of him promptly. "Slap on a saddle, Mac, and
run up the remuda so Miss Messiter can see the hawsses for herself," he
ordered.
"Mebbe she'd rather ride down and look at the bunch," suggested the
capable McWilliams.
As it chanced, she did prefer to ride down the pasture and look over
the place from on horseback. She was in love with her ranch already. Its
spacious distances, the thousands of cattle and the horses, these
picturesque retainers who served her even to the shedding of an enemy's
blood; they all struck an answering echo in her gallant young heart that
nothing in Kalamazoo had been able to stir. She bubbled over with
enthusiasm, the while Morgan covertly sneered and McWilliams warmed
to the untamed youth in her.
"What about this man Bannister?" she flung out suddenly, after they
had cantered back to the house when the remuda had been inspected.
Her abrupt question brought again the short, tense silence she had
become used to expect.
"He runs sheep about twenty or thirty miles southwest of here,"
explained McWilliams, in a carefully casual tone.
"So everybody tells me, but it seems to me he spills a good deal of
lead on my men," she answered impatiently. "What's the trouble?"
"Last week he crossed the dead-line with a bunch of five thousand
sheep."
"Who draws this dead-line?"
"The cattlemen got together and drew it. Your uncle was one of those
that marked it off, ma'am."
"And Bannister crossed it?"
"Yes, ma'am. Yesterday 'Frisco come on him and one of his herders
with a big bunch of them less than fifteen miles from here. He didn't know
it was Bannister, and took a pot-shot at him. 'Course Bannister came back
at him, and he got Frisco in the laig."
"Didn't know it was Bannister? What difference WOULD that make?"
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got him, too, if it hadn't been for Miss Messiter. 'Twas a chance we ain't
likely to get again for a year."
"It wasn't your fault you didn't kill him, Mr. Morgan," she said,
looking hard at him. "You may be interested to know that your last shot
missed him only about six inches, and me about four."
"I didn't know who you were," he sullenly defended.
"I see. You only shoot at women when you don't know who they are."
She turned her back on him pointedly and addressed herself to
McWilliams. "You can tell the men working on this ranch that I won't have
any more such attacks on this man Bannister. I don't care what or who he
is. I don't propose to have him murdered by my employees. Let the law
take him and hang him. Do you hear?"
"I ce'tainly do, and the boys will get the word straight," he replied.
"I take it since yuh are giving your orders through Mac, yuh don't need
me any longer for your foreman," bullied Morgan.
"You take it right, sir," came her crisp reply. "McWilliams will be my
foreman from to-day."
The man's face, malignant and wolfish, suddenly lost its mask. That
she would so promptly call his bluff was the last thing he had expected.
"That's all right. I reckon yuh think yuh know your own business, but I'll
put it to yuh straight. Long as yuh live you'll be sorry for this."
And with that he wheeled away.
She turned to her new foreman and found him less radiant than she
could have desired. "I'm right sorry y'u did that. I'm afraid y'u'll make
trouble for yourself," he said quietly.
"Why?"
"I don't know myself just why." He hesitated before adding: "They say
him and Bannister is thicker than they'd ought to be. It's a cinch that he's in
cahoots somehow with that Shoshone bunch of bad men."
"But--why, that's ridiculous. Only this morning he was trying to kill
Bannister himself."
"That's what I don't just savvy. There's a whole lot about that business
I don't get next to. I guess Bannister is at the head of them. Everybody
seems agreed about that. But the whole thing is a tangle of contradiction to
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A dozen rough young fellows were clustered near the front door,
apparently afraid to venture farther lest their escape be cut off. Through
these McWilliams pushed a way for his charges, the cowboys falling back
respectfully at once when they discovered the presence of Miss Messiter.
In the bedroom where she left her wraps the mistress of the Lazy D
found a dozen or more infants and several of their mothers. In the kitchen
were still other women and babies, some of the former very old and of the
latter very young. A few of the babies were asleep, but most of them were
still very much alive to this scene of unwonted hilarity in their young
lives.
As soon as she emerged into the general publicity of the dancing room
her foreman pounced upon Helen and led her to a place in the head set that
was making up. The floor was rough, the music jerky and uncertain, the
quadrilling an exhibition of joyous and awkward abandon; but its
picturesque lack of convention appealed to the girl from Michigan. It
rather startled her to be swung so vigorously, but a glance about the room
showed that these humorous-eyed Westerners were merely living up to the
duty of the hour as they understood it.
At the close of the quadrille Helen found herself being introduced to
"Mr. Robins," alias Slim, who drew one of his feet back in an embarrassed
bow.
"I enjoy to meet y'u, ma'am," he assured her, and supplemented this
with a request for the next dance, after which he fell into silence that was
painful in its intensity.
Nearly all the dances were squares, as few of those present understood
the intricacies of the waltz and two-step. Hence it happened that the
proficient McWilliams secured three round dances with his mistress.
It was during the lunch of sandwiches, cake and coffee that Helen
perceived an addition to the company. The affair had been advertised a
costume ball, but most of those present had construed this very liberally.
She herself, to be sure, had come as Mary Queen of Scots, Mac was
arrayed in the scarlet tunic and tight-fitting breeches of the Northwest
Mounted Police, and perhaps eight or ten others had made some attempt at
representing some one other than they were. She now saw another,
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on that occasion when she had saved his life. Then a debonair recklessness
had been the outstanding note, but now there was something ribald and
wicked in him.
"Since y'u put it as a question, common politeness demands an answer.
Ned Bannister is my name."
"You are the terror of this country?"
"I shan't be a terror to y'u, ma'am, if I can help it," he smiled.
"But you are the man they call the king?"
"I have that honor."
"HONOR?"
At the sharp scorn of her accent he laughed.
"Do you mean that you are proud of your villainy?" she demanded.
"Y'u've ce'tainly got the teacher habit of asking questions," he replied
with a laugh that was a sneer.
A shadow fell across them and a voice said quietly, "She didn't wait to
ask any when she saved your life down in the coulee back of the Lazy D."
The shadow was Jim McWilliams's, and its owner looked down at the
man beside the girl with steady, hostile eyes.
"Is this your put in, sir?" the other flashed back.
"Yes, seh, it is. The boys don't quite like seeing your hardware so
prominent at a social gathering. In this community guns don't come into
the house at a ranch dance. I'm a committee to mention the subject and to
collect your thirty-eights if y'u agree with us."
"And if I don't agree with you?"
"There's all outdoors ready to receive y'u, seh. It would be a pity to
stay in the one spot where your welcome's wore thin."
"Still I may choose to stay."
"Ce'tainly, but if y'u decide that way y'u better step out on the porch
and talk it over with us where there ain't ladies present."
"Isn't this a costume dance? What's the matter with my guns? I'm an
outlaw, ain't I?"
"I don't know whether y'u are or not, seh. If y'u say y'u are we're ready
to take your word. The guns have to be shucked if y'u stay here. They
might go off accidental and scare the ladies. "
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The man rose blackly. "I'll remember this. If y'u knew who y'u were
getting so gay with--"
"I can guess, Mr. Holloway, the kind of an outfit y'u freight with, and I
expect I could put a handle to another name for you."
"By God, if y'u dare to say--"
"I don't dare. especially among so many ladies," came McWilliams's
jaunty answer.
The eyes of the two men gripped, after which Holloway swung on his
heel and swaggered defiantly out of the house.
Presently there came the sound of a pony's feet galloping down the
road. It had not yet died away when Texas announced that the supper
intermission was over.
"Pardners for a quadrille. Ladies' choice."
The dance was on again full swing. The fiddlers were tuning up and
couples gathering for a quadrille. Denver came to claim Miss Messiter for
a partner. Apparently even the existence of the vanished Holloway was
forgotten. But Helen remembered it, and pondered over the affair long
after daylight had come and brought with it an end to the festivities.
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yesterday, and as the boys was out of smokin' he come home that way."
"I suppose you'll all go?"
"I reckon."
"And you'll ride?"
"I aim to sit in."
"At the roping, too?"
"No, m'm. I ain't so much with the rope. It takes a Mexican to snake a
rope."
"Then I'll be able to borrow only a thousand dollars from you to help
buy that bunch of young cows we were speaking about," she mocked.
"Only a thousand," he grinned. "And it ain't a cinch I'll win. There are
three or four straightup riders on this range. A fellow come from the Hole-
in-the-Wall and won out last year."
"And where were you?"
"Oh, I took second prize," he explained, with obvious indifference.
"Well, you had better get first this year. We'll have to show them the
Lazy D hasn't gone to sleep."
"Sure thing," he agreed.
"Has that buyer from Cheyenne turned up yet?" she asked, reverting to
business.
"Not yet. Do y'u want I should make the cut soon as he comes?"
"Don't you think his price is a little low--twenty dollars from brand
up?"
"It's a scrub bunch. We want to get rid of them, anyway. But you're the
doctor," he concluded slangily.
She thought a moment. "We'll let him have them, but don't make the
cut till I come back. I'm going to ride over to the Twin Buttes."
His admiring eyes followed her as she went toward the pony that was
waiting saddled with the rein thrown to the ground. She carried her slim,
lithe figure with a grace, a lightness, that few women could have rivaled.
When she had swung to the saddle, she half-turned in her seat to call an
order to the foreman.
"I think, Mac, you had better run up those horses from Eagle Creek.
Have Denver and Missou look after them."
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McWilliams.
"With a two-by-four, I suppose," laughed Bannister.
"Shouldn't wonder. But, looking y'u over casual, it occurs to me he
might get sick of his job befo' he turned y'u loose," McWilliams admitted,
with a glance of admiration at the clean power showing in the other's
supple lines.
Nor could either the foreman or his mistress deny the tribute of their
respect to the bravado of this scamp who sat so jauntily his seat regardless
of what the next moment might bring forth. Three wounded men were
about the place, all presumably quite willing to get a clean shot at him in
the open. One of them had taken his chance already, and missed. Their
visitor had no warrant for knowing that a second might not any instant try
his luck with better success. Yet he looked every inch the man on
horseback, no whit disturbed, not the least conscious of any danger. Tall,
spare, broad shouldered, this berry-brown young man, crowned with
close-cropped curls, sat at the gates of the enemy very much at his insolent
case.
"I came over to pay my party call," he explained.
"It really wasn't necessary. A run in the machine is not a formal
function."
"Maybe not in Kalamazoo."
"I thought perhaps you had come to get my purse and the sixty-three
dollars," she derided.
"No, ma'am; nor yet to get that bunch of cows I was going to rustle
from you to buy an auto. I came to ask you to go riding with me."
The audacity of it took her breath. Of all the outrageous things she had
ever heard, this was the cream. An acknowledged outlaw, engaged in feud
with her retainers over that deadly question of the run of the range, he had
sauntered over to the ranch where lived a dozen of his enemies, three of
them still scarred with his bullets, merely to ask her to go riding with him.
The magnificence of his bravado almost obliterated its impudence. Of
course she would not think of going. The idea! But her eyes glowed with
appreciation of his courage, not the less because the consciousness of it
was so conspicuously absent from his manner.
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"I think not, Mr. Bannister" and her face almost imperceptibly
stiffened. "I don't go riding with strangers, nor with men who shoot my
boys. And I'll give you a piece of advice, sir. That is, to burn the wind back
to your home. Otherwise I won't answer for your life. My punchers don't
love you, and I don't know how long I can keep them from you. You're not
wanted here any more than you were at the dance the other evening."
McWilliams nodded. "That's right. Y'u better roll your trail, seh; and if
y'u take my advice, you'll throw gravel lively. I seen two of the boys
cutting acrost that pasture five minutes ago. They looked as if they might
be haided to cut y'u off, and I allow it may be their night to howl. Miss
Messiter don't want to be responsible for y'u getting lead poisoning."
"Indeed!" Their visitor looked politely interested. "This solicitude for
me is very touching. I observe that both of you are carefully blocking me
from the bunkhouse in order to prevent another practice-shot. If I can't
persuade you to join me in a ride, Miss Messiter, I reckon I'll go while I'm
still unpunctured." He bowed, and gathered the reins for departure.
"One moment! Mr. McWilliams and I are going with you," the girl
announced.
"Changed your mind? Think you'll take a little pasear, after all?"
"I don't want to be responsible for your killing. We'll see you safe off
the place," she answered curtly.
The foreman fell in on one side of Bannister, his mistress on the other.
They rode in close formation, to lessen the chance of an ambuscade.
Bannister alone chatted at his debonair ease, ignoring the responsibility
they felt for his safety.
"I got my ride, after all," he presently chuckled. "To be sure, I wasn't
expecting Mr. McWilliams to chaperon us. But that's an added pleasure."
"Would it be an added pleasure to get bumped off to kingdom come?"
drawled the foreman, giving a reluctant admiration to his aplomb.
"Thinking of those willing boys of yours again, are you?" laughed
Bannister. "They're ce'tainly a heap prevalent with their hardware, but
their hunting don't seem to bring home any meat."
"By the way, how IS your ankle, Mr. Bannister? I forgot to ask." This
shot from the young woman.
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He enjoyed it with internal mirth. "They did happen on the target that
time," he admitted. "Oh, it's getting along fine, but I aim to do most of my
walking on horseback for a while."
They swept past the first dangerous grove of cottonwoods in safety,
and rounded the boundary fence corner.
"They're in that bunch of pines over there," said the foreman, after a
single sweep of his eyes in that direction.
"Yes, I see they are. You oughtn't to let your boys wear red bandannas
when they go gunning, Miss Messiter. It's an awful careless habit."
Helen herself could see no sign of life in the group of pines, but she
knew their keen, trained eyes had found what hers could not. Riding with
one or another of her cowboys, she had often noticed how infallibly they
could read the country for miles around. A scattered patch on a distant
hillside, though it might be a half-hour's ride from them, told them a great
deal more than seemed possible. To her the dark spots sifted on that slope
meant scrub underbrush, if there was any meaning at all in them. But her
riders could tell not only whether they were alive, but could differentiate
between sheep and cattle. Indeed, McWilliams could nearly always tell
whether they were HER cattle or not. He was unable to explain to her how
he did it. By a sort of instinct, she supposed.
The pines were negotiated in safety, and on the part of the men with a
carelessness she could not understand. For after they had passed there was
a spot between her shoulder-blades that seemed to tingle in expectation of
a possible bullet boring its way through. But she would have died rather
than let them know how she felt.
Perhaps Bannister understood, however, for he remarked casually: "I
wouldn't be ambling past so leisurely if I was riding alone. It makes a heap
of difference who your company is, too. Those punchers wouldn't take a
chance at me now for a million dollars."
"No, they're some haidstrong, but they ain't plumb locoed," agreed
Mac.
Fifteen minutes later Helen drew up at the line corner. "We'll part
company here, Mr. Bannister. I don't think there is any more danger from
my men."
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"Before we part there is something I want to say. I hold that a man has
as much right to run sheep on these hills as cows. It's government land,
and neither one of us owns it. It's bound to be a case of the survival of the
fittest. If sheep are hardier and more adapted to the country, then cows
have got to vamos. That's nature, as it looks to me. The buffalo and the
antelope have gone, and I guess cows have got to take their turn."
Her scornful eyes burned him. "You came to tell me that, did you?
Well, I don't believe a word of it. I'll not yield my rights without a fight.
You may depend on that."
"Here, too," nodded her foreman. "I'm with my boss clear down the
line. And as soon as she lets me turn loose my six-gun, you'll hear it pop,
seh."
"I have not a doubt of it, Mr. McWilliams," returned the sheepman
blithely. "In the meantime I was going to say that though most of my
interests are in sheep instead of cattle--"
"I thought most of your interests were in other people's property,"
interrupted the young woman.
"It goes into sheep ultimately," he smiled. "Now, what I am trying to
get at is this: I'm in debt to you a heap, Miss Messiter, and since I'm not all
yellow cur, I intend to play fair with you. I have ordered my sheep back
across the deadline. You can have this range to yourself for your cattle.
The fight's off so far as we personally are concerned."
A hint of deeper color touched her cheeks. Her manner had been
cavalier at best; for the most part frankly hostile; and all the time the man
was on an errand of good-will. Certainly he had scored at her expense, and
she was ashamed of herself.
"Y'u mean that you're going to respect the deadline? asked Mac in
surprise.
"I didn't say quite that," explained the sheepman. "What I said was that
I meant to keep on my side of it so far as the Lazy D cattle are concerned.
I'll let your range alone."
"But y'u mean to cross it down below where the Bar Double-E cows
run?"
Bannister's gay smile touched the sardonic face. "Do you invite the
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public to examine your hand when you sit into a game of poker, Mr.
McWilliams?"
"You're dead right. It's none of my business what y'u do so long as y'u
keep off our range," admitted the foreman. "And next time the
conversation happens on Mr. Bannister, I'll put in my little say-so that he
ain't all black."
"That's very good of you, sir," was the other's ironical retort.
The girl's gauntleted hand offered itself impulsively. "We can't be
friends under existing circumstances, Mr. Bannister. But that does not alter
the fact that I owe you an apology. You came as a peace envoy, and one of
my men shot at you. Of course, he did not understand the reason why you
came, but that does not matter. I did not know your reason myself, and I
know I have been very inhospitable."
"Are you shaking hands with Ned Bannister the sheepman or Ned
Bannister the outlaw?" asked the owner of that name, with a queer little
smile that seemed to mock himself.
"With Ned Bannister the gentleman. If there is another side to him I
don't know it personally."
He flushed underneath the tan, but very plainly with pleasure. "Your
opinions are right contrary to Hoyle, ma'am. Aren't you aware that a
sheepman is the lowest thing that walks? Ask Mr. McWilliams."
"I have known stockmen of that opinion, but--"
The foreman's sentence was never finished. From a clump of bushes a
hundred yards away came the crack of a rifle. A bullet sang past, cutting a
line that left on one side of it Bannister, on the other Miss Messiter and her
foreman. Instantly the two men slid from their horses on the farther side,
dragged down the young woman behind the cover of the broncos, and
arranged the three ponies so as to give her the greatest protection available.
Somehow the weapons that garnished them had leaped to their hands
before their feet touched the ground.
"That coyote isn't one of our men. I'll back that opinion high," said
McWilliams promptly.
"Who is he?" the girl whispered.
"That's what we're going to find out pretty soon," returned Bannister
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grimly. "Chances are it's me he is trying to gather. Now, I'm going to make
a break for that cottonwood. When I go, you better run up a white
handkerchief and move back from the firing-line. Turn Buck loose when
you leave. He'll stay around and come when I whistle."
He made a run for it, zigzagging through the sage-brush so swiftly as
to offer the least certain mark possible for a sharpshooter. Yet twice the
rifle spoke before he reached the cottonwood.
Meanwhile Mac had fastened the handkerchief of his mistress on the
end of a switch he had picked up and was edging out of range. His tense,
narrowed gaze never left the bush-clump from which the shots were being
pumped, and he was careful during their retreat to remain on the danger
side of the road, in order to cover Helen.
"I guess Bannister's right. He don't want us, whoever he is."
And even as he murmured it, the wind of a bullet lifted his hat from
his head. He picked it up and examined it. The course of the bullet was
marked by a hole in the wide brim, and two more in the side and crown.
"He ce'tainly ventilated it proper. I reckon, ma'am, we'll make a run for
it. Lie low on the pinto's neck, with your haid on the off side. That's right.
Let him out."
A mile and a half farther up the road Mac reined in, and made the
Indian peace-sign. Two dejected figures came over the hill and resolved
themselves into punchers of the Lazy D. Each of them trailed a rifle by his
side.
"You're a fine pair of ring-tailed snorters, ain't y'u?" jeered the foreman.
"Got to get gay and go projectin' round on the shoot after y'u got your
orders to stay hitched. Anything to say for yo'selves?"
If they had it was said very silently.
"Now, Miss Messiter is going to pass it up this time, but from now on
y'u don't go off on any private massacrees while y'u punch at the Lazy D.
Git that? This hyer is the last call for supper in the dining-cah. If y'u miss
it, y'u'll feed at some other chuckhouse." Suddenly the drawl of his
sarcasm vanished. His voice carried the ring of peremptory command.
"Jim, y'u go back to the ranch with Miss Messiter, AND KEEP YOUR
EYES OPEN. Missou, I need y'u. We're going back. I reckon y'u better
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"I can bear it no longer," she told herself at last, and in another
moment was in the saddle plying her pinto with the quirt.
But before she reached the first cottonwoods she saw them coming.
Her glasses swept the distant group, and with a shiver she made out the
dreadful truth. They were coming slowly, carrying something between
them. The girl did not need to be told that the object they were bringing
home was their dead or wounded.
A figure on horseback detached itself from the huddle of men and
galloped towards her. He was coming to break the news. But who was the
victim? Bannister or McWilliams she felt sure, by reason of the sinking
heart in her; and then it came home that she would be hard hit if it were
either.
The approaching rider began to take distinct form through her glasses.
As he pounded forward she recognized him. It was the man nicknamed
Denver. The wind was blowing strongly from her to him, and while he
was still a hundred yards away she hurled her question.
His answer was lost in the wind sweep, but one word of it she caught.
That word was "Mac."
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bed, retraced his steps for about a stone-throw, and again crawled up the
bank.
For a long time he lay face down in the grass, his gaze riveted to the
spot where he knew his opponent to be hidden. A faint rustle not born of
the wind stirred the sage. Still Bannister waited. A less experienced
plainsman would have blazed away and exposed his own position. But not
this young man with the steel-wire nerves. Silent as the coming of dusk,
no breaking twig or displaced brush betrayed his self-contained presence.
Something in the clump he watched wriggled forward and showed
indistinctly through an opening in the underscrub. He whipped his rifle
into position and fired twice. The huddled brown mass lurched forward
and disappeared.
"Wonder if I got him? Seems to me I couldn't have missed clean,"
thought Bannister.
Silence as before, vast and unbroken.
A scramble of running feet tearing a path through the brush, a
crouching body showing darkly for an eyeflash, and then the pounding of
a horse's retreating feet.
Bannister leaped up, ran lightly across the intervening space, and with
his repeater took a potshot at the galloping horseman.
"Missed!" he muttered, and at once gave a sharp whistle that brought
his pony to him on the trot. He vaulted to the saddle and gave chase. It was
rough going, but nothing in reason can stop a cow-pony. As sure footed as
a mountain goat, as good a climber almost as a cat, Buck followed the
flying horseman over perilous rock rims and across deep-cut creek beds.
Pantherlike he climbed up the steep creek sides without hesitation, for the
round-up had taught him never to falter at stiff going so long as his rider
put him at it.
It was while he was clambering out of the sheer sides of a wash that
Bannister made a discovery. The man he pursued was wounded.
Something in the manner of the fellow's riding had suggested this to him,
but a drop of blood splashed on a stone that happened to meet his eye
made the surmise a certainty.
He was gaining now--not fast, almost imperceptibly, but none the less
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surely. He could see the man looking over his shoulder, once, twice, and
then again, with that hurried, fearful glance that measures the approach of
retribution. Barring accidents, the man was his.
But the unforeseen happened. Buck stepped in the hole of a prairie dog
and went down. Over his head flew the rider like a stone from a catapult.
How long Ned Bannister lay unconscious he never knew. But when he
came to himself it was none too soon. He sat up dizzily and passed his
hand over his head. Something had happened.
What was it? Oh, yes, he had been thrown from his horse. A wave of
recollection passed over him, and his mind was clear once more. Presently
he got to his feet and moved rather uncertainly toward Buck, for the horse
was grazing quietly a few yards from him.
But half way to the pony he stopped. Voices, approaching by way of
the bed of Dry Creek, drifted to him.
"He must 'a' turned and gone back. Mebbe he guessed we was there."
And a voice that Bannister knew, one that had a strangely penetrant,
cruel ring of power through the drawl, made answer: "Judd said before he
fainted he was sure the man was Ned Bannister. I'd ce'tainly like to meet
up with my beloved cousin right now and even up a few old scores. By
God, I'd make him sick before I finished with him!"
"I'll bet y'u would, Cap," returned the other, admiringly. "Think we'd
better deploy here and beat up the scenery a few as we go?"
There are times when the mind works like lightning, flashes its
messages on the wings of an electric current. For Bannister this was one of
them. The whole situation lighted for him plainly as if it had been
explained for an hour.
His cousin had been out with a band of his cut-throats on some errand,
and while returning to the fastnesses of the Shoshone Mountains had
stopped to noon at a cow spring three or four miles from the Lazy D. Judd
Morgan, whom he knew to be a lieutenant of the notorious bandit, had
ridden toward the ranch in the hope of getting an opportunity to vent his
anger against its mistress or some of her men. While pursuing the
renegade Bannister had stumbled into a hornet's nest, and was in imminent
danger of being stung to death. Even now the last speaker was scrambling
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to-day. Bring him into camp and we'll take him along with us," he said
carelessly, and walked away to his horse in the creek bed.
Two of the men started forward, but they stopped half way, as if rooted
to the ground. For a galloping horseman suddenly drew up at the very
point for which they were starting. He leaped to the ground and warned
them back with his rifle. While he covered them a second man rode up and
lifted Bannister to his saddle.
"Ready, Mac," he gave the word, and both horses disappeared with
their riders over the brow of the hill. When the surprised desperadoes
recovered themselves and reached that point the rescuers had disappeared
in the heavy brush.
The alarm was at once given, and their captain, cursing them in a
raucous bellow for their blunder, ordered immediate pursuit. It was some
little time before the trail of the fugitives was picked up, but once
discovered they were over hauled rapidly.
"We're not going to get out without swapping lead," McWilliams
admitted anxiously. "I wisht y'u wasn't hampered with that load, but I
reckon I'll have to try to stand them off alone."
"We bucked into a slice of luck when I opened on his bronc
mavericking around alone. Hadn't been for that we could never have made
it," said Missou, who never crossed a bridge until he came to it.
"We haven't made it yet, old hoss, not by a long mile, and two more on
top o' that. They're beginning to pump lead already. Huh! Got to drap your
pills closer'n that 'fore y'u worry me."
"I believe he's daid, anyway," said Missou presently, peering down
into the white face of the unconscious man.
"Got to hang onto the remains, anyhow, for Miss Helen. Those coyotes
are too much of the wolf breed to leave him with them."
"Looks like they're gittin' the aim some better," equably remarked the
other a minute later, when a spurt of sand flew up in front of him.
"They're ce'tainly crowding us. I expaict I better send them a 'How-de-
do?' so as to discourage them a few." He took as careful aim as he could
on the galloping horse, but his bullet went wide.
"They're gaining like sixty. It's my offhand opinion we better stop at
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that bunch of trees and argue some with them. No use buck-jumpin' along
to burn the wind while they drill streaks of light through us."
"All right. Take the trees. Y'u'll be able to get into the game some
then."
They debouched from the road to the little grove and slipped from
their horses.
"Deader'n hell," murmured Missou, as he lifted the limp body from his
horse. " But I guess we'll pack what's left back to the little lady at the Lazy
D."
The leader of the pursuers halted his men just out of range and came
forward alone, holding his right hand up in the usual signal of peace. In
appearance he was not unlike Ned Bannister. There was the same long,
slim, tiger build, with the flowing muscles rippling easily beneath the
loose shirt; the same effect of power and dominance, the same clean,
springy stride. The pose of the head, too, even the sweep of salient jaw,
bore a marked resemblance. But similarity ceased at the expression. For
instead of frankness there lurked here that hint of the devil of strong
passion uncontrolled. He was the victim of his own moods, and in the
space of an hour one might, perhaps, read in that face cold cunning, cruel
malignity, leering ribaldry, as well as the hard-bitten virtues of unflinching
courage and implacable purpose.
"I reckon you're near enough," suggested Mac, when the man had
approached to within a hundred feet of the tree clump.
"Y'u're drawing the dead-line," the other acknowledged, indolently. "It
won't take ten words to tell y'u what I want and mean to have. I'm giving
y'u two minutes to hand me over the body of Ned Bannister. If y'u don't
see it that way I'll come and make a lead mine of your whole outfit."
"Y'u can't come too quick, seh. We're here a-shootin', and don't y'u
forget it," was McWilliams's prompt answer.
The sinister face of the man from the Shoshones darkened. "Y'u've
signed your own death warrants," he let out through set teeth, and at the
word swung on his heel.
"The ball's about to open. Pardners for a waltz. Have a dust-cutter,
Mac, before she grows warm."
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The puncher handed over his flask, and the other held it before his eye
and appraised the contents in approved fashion. " Don't mind if I do.
Here's how!"
"How!" echoed Missou, in turn, and tipped up the bottle till the liquor
gurgled down his baked throat.
"He's fanning out his men so as to, get us both at the front and back
door. Lucky there ain't but four of them."
"I guess we better lie back to back," proposed Missou. "If our luck's
good I reckon they're going to have a gay time rushing this fort."
A few desultory shots had already been dropped among the
cottonwoods, and returned by the defendants when Missou let out a yell of
triumph.
"Glory Hallelujah! Here comes the boys splittin' down the road hell-
for-leather. That lopsided, ring-tailed snorter of a hawss-thief is gathering
his wolves for a hike back to the tall timber. Feed me a cigareet, Mac. I
plumb want to celebrate."
It was as the cow-puncher had said. Down the road a cloud of dust was
sweeping toward them, in the centre of which they made out three
hardriding cowboys from the ranch. Farther back, in the distance, was
another dust whirl. The outlaw chief's hard, vigilant gaze swept over the
reinforcements! and decided instantly that the game had gone against him
for the present. He whistled shrilly twice, and began a slow retreat toward
the hills. The miscreants flung a few defiant shots at the advancing
cowmen, and disappeared, swallowed up in the earth swells.
The homeward march was a slow one, for Bannister had begun to
show signs of consciousness and it was necessary to carry him with
extreme care. While they were still a mile from the ranch house the pinto
and its rider could be seen loping toward them.
"Ride forward, Denver, and tell Miss Helen we're coming. Better have
her get everything fixed to doctor him soon as we get there. Give him the
best show in the world, and he'll still be sailing awful close to the divide.
I'll bet a hundred plunks he'll cash in, anyway."
"DONE!"
The voice came faintly from the improvised litter. Mac turned with a
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start, for he had not known that Bannister was awake to his surroundings.
The man appeared the picture of helplessness, all the lusty power and
vigor stricken out of him; but his indomitable spirit still triumphed over
the physical collapse, for as the foreman looked a faint smile touched the
ashen lips. It seemed to say: "Still in the ring, old man."
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was a wilder look in his eyes, and she knew that delirium was beginning.
At intervals it lasted for long; indeed, until the doctor came next morning
in the small hours. He talked of many things Helen Messiter did not
understand, of incidents in his past life, some of them jerky with the
excitement of a tense moment, others apparently snatches of talk with
relatives. It was like the babbling of a child, irrelevant and yet often
insistent. He would in one breath give orders connected with the lambing
of his sheep, in the next break into football talk, calling out signals and
imploring his men to hold them or to break through and get the ball. Once
he broke into curses, but his very oaths seemed to come from a clean heart
and missed the vulgarity they might have had. Again his talk rambled
inconsequently over his youth, and he would urge himself or someone else
of the same name to better life.
"Ned, Ned, remember your mother," he would beseech. "She asked me
to look after you. Don't go wrong." Or else it would be, "Don't disgrace
the general, Ned. You'll break his heart if you blacken the old name." To
this theme he recurred repeatedly, and she noticed that when he imagined
himself in the East his language was correct and his intonation cultured,
though still with a suggestion of a Southern softness.
But when he spoke of her his speech lapsed into the familiar drawl of
Cattleland. "I ain't such a sweep as y'u think, girl. Some day I'll sure tell
y'u all about it, and how I have loved y'u ever since y'u scooped me up in
your car. You're the gamest little lady! To see y'u come a-sailin' down after
me, so steady and businesslike, not turning a hair when the bullets
hummed--I sure do love y'u, Helen." And then he fell upon her first name
and called her by it a hundred times softly to himself.
This happened when she was alone with him, just before the doctor
came. She heard it with starry eyes and with a heart that flushed for joy a
warmer color into her cheeks. Brushing back the short curls, she kissed his
damp forehead. It was in the thick of the battle, before he had weathered
that point where the issues of life and death pressed closely, and even in
the midst of her great fears it brought her comfort. She was to think often
of it later, and always the memory was to be music in her heart. Even
when she denied her love for him, assured herself it was impossible she
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could care for so shameful a villain, even then it was a sweet torture to
allow herself the luxury of recalling his broken delirious phrases. At the
very worst he could not be as bad as they said; some instinct told her this
was impossible. His fearless devil-may-care smile, his jaunty, gallant
bearing, these pleaded against the evidence for him. And yet was it
conceivable that a man of spirit, a gentleman by training at least, would let
himself lie under the odium of such a charge if he were not guilty? Her
tangled thoughts fought this profitless conflict for days. Nor could she
dismiss it from her mind. Even after he began to mend she was still on the
rack. For in some snatch of good talk, when the fine quality of the man
seemed to glow in his face, poignant remembrance would stab her with
recollection of the difference between what he was and what he seemed to
be.
One of the things that had been a continual surprise to Helen was the
short time required by these deep-cheated and clean-blooded Westerners to
recover from apparently serious wounds. It was scarce more than two
weeks since Bannister had filled the bunkhouse with wounded men, and
already two of them were back at work and the third almost fit for service.
For perhaps three days the sheepman's life hung in the balance, after
which his splendid constitution and his outdoor life began to tell. The
thermometer showed that the fever had slipped down a notch, and he was
now sleeping wholesomely a good part of his time. Altogether, unless for
some unseen contingency, the doctor prophesied that the sheepman was
going to upset the probabilities and get well.
"Which merely shows, ma'am, what is possible when you give a sound
man twenty-four hours a day in our hills for a few years," he added.
"Thanks to your nursing he's going to shave through by the narrowest
margin possible. I told him to-day that he owed his life to you, Miss
Messiter."
"I don't think you need have told him that Doctor," returned that young
woman, not a little vexed at him, "especially since you have just been
telling me that he owes it to Wyoming air and his own soundness of
constitution."
When she returned to the sickroom to give her patient his medicine he
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wanted to tell her what the doctor had said, but she cut him off ruthlessly
and told him not to talk.
"Mayn't I even say 'Thank you?'" he wanted to know.
"No; you talk far too much as it is."
He smiled "All right. Y'u sit there in that chair, where I can see y'u
doing that fancywork and I'll not say a word. It'll keep, all right, what I
want to say."
"I notice you keep talking," she told him, dryly.
"Yes, ma'am. Y'u had better have let me say what I wanted to, but I'll
be good now."
He fell asleep watching her, and when he awoke she was still sitting
there, though it was beginning to grow dark. He spoke before she knew he
was awake.
"I'm going to get well, the doctor thinks."
"Yes, he told me," she answered.
"Did he tell y'u it was your nursing saved me?"
"Please don't think about that."
"What am I to think about? I owe y'u a heap, and it keeps piling up. I
reckon y'u do it all because it's your Christian duty?" he demanded.
"It is my duty, isn't it?"
"I didn't say it wasn't, though I expaict Bighorn County will forget to
give y'u a unanimous vote of thanks for doing it. I asked if y'u did it
because it was your duty?"
"The reason doesn't matter so that I do it," she answered, steadily.
"Reasons matter some, too, though they ain't as important as actions
out in this country. Back in Boston they figure more, and since y'u used to
go to school back there y'u hadn't ought to throw down your professor of
ethics."
"Don't you think you have talked enough for the present?" she smiled,
and added: "If I make you talk whenever I sit beside you I shall have to
stay away."
"That's where y'u've ce'tainly got the drop on me, ma'am. I'm a clam
till y'u give the word."
Before a week he was able to sit up in a chair for an hour or two, and
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soon after could limp into the living room with the aid of a walking stick
and his hostess. Under the tan he still wore an interesting pallor, but there
could be no question that he was on the road to health.
"A man doesn't know what he's missing until he gets shot up and is
brought to the Lazy D hospital, so as to let Miss Messiter exercise her
Christian duty on him," he drawled, cheerfully, observing the sudden glow
on her cheek brought by the reference to his unanswered question.
He made the lounge in the big sunny window his headquarters. From it
he could look out on some of the ranch activities when she was not with
him, could watch the line riders as they passed to and fro and command a
view of one of the corrals. There was always, too, the turquoise sky, out of
which poured a flood of light on the roll of hilltops. Sometimes he read to
himself, but he was still easily tired, and preferred usually to rest. More
often she read aloud to him while he lay back with his leveled eyes
gravely on her till the gentle, cool abstraction she affected was disturbed
and her perplexed lashes rose to reproach the intensity of his gaze.
She was of those women who have the heavenborn faculty of making
home of such fortuitous elements as are to their hands. Except her piano
and such knickknacks as she had brought in a single trunk she had had to
depend upon the resources of the establishment to which she had come,
but it is wonderful how much can be done with some Navajo rugs, a
bearskin, a few bits of Indian pottery and woven baskets and a judicious
arrangement of scenic photographs. In a few days she would have her
pictures from Kalamazoo, pending which her touch had transformed the
big living room from a cheerless barn into a spot that was a comfort to the
eye and heart. To the wounded man who lay there slowly renewing the
blood he had lost the room was the apotheosis of home, less, perhaps, by
reason of what it was in itself than because it was the setting for her
presence--for her grave, sympathetic eyes, the sound of her clear voice, the
light grace of her motion. He rejoiced in the delightful intimacy the
circumstances made necessary. To hear snatches of joyous song and gay
laughter even from a distance, to watch her as she came in and out on her
daily tasks, to contest her opinions of books and life and see how eagerly
she defended them; he wondered himself at the strength of the appeal
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these simple things made to him. Already he was dreading the day when
he must mount his horse and ride back into the turbulent life from which
she had for a time, snatched him.
"I'll hate to go back to sheepherding," he told her one day at lunch,
looking at her across a snow-white tablecloth upon which were a service
of shining silver, fragile china teacups and plates stamped Limoges.
He was at the moment buttering a delicious French roll and she was
daintily pouring tea from an old family heirloom. The contrast between
this and the dust and the grease of a midday meal at the end of a "chuck
wagon" lent accent to his smiling lamentation.
"A lot of sheepherding you do," she derided.
"A shepherd has to look after his sheep, y'u know."
"You herd sheep just about as much as I punch cows."
"I have to herd my herders, anyhow, and that keeps me on the move."
"I'm glad there isn't going to be any more trouble between you and the
Lazy D. And that reminds me of another thing. I've often wonered who
those men could have been that attacked you the day you were hurt."
She had asked the question almost carelessly, without any thought that
this might be something he wished to conceal, but she recognized her
mistake by the wariness that filmed his eyes instantly.
"Room there for a right interesting guessing contest," he replied.
"You wouldn't need to guess," she charged, on swift impulse.
"Meaning that I know?"
"You do know. You can't deny that you now."
"Well, say that I know?"
"Aren't you going to tell?"
He shook his head. "Not just yet. I've got private reasons for keeping it
quiet a while."
"I'm sure they are creditable to you," came her swift ironic retort.
"Sure," he agreed, whimsically. "I must live up to the professional
standard. Honor among thieves, y'u know."
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continued to devote even her eyes to its consumption, while the foreman
opened a casual conversation with the drug clerk and lit his cigar.
"How are things coming in Gimlet Butte?" he asked, by way of
prolonging his stay rather than out of desire for information.
Yes, she certainly had the longest, softest lashes he had ever seen, and
the ripest of cherry lips, behind the smiling depths of which sparkled two
rows of tiny pearls. He wished she would look at HIM and smile again.
There wasn't any use trying to melt a sundae with it, anyhow.
"Sure, it's a good year on the range and the price of cows jumping," he
heard his sub-conscious self make answer to the patronizing inquiries of
him of the "boiled" shirt.
Funny how pretty hair of that color was especially when there was so
much of it. You might call it a sort of coppery gold where the little curls
escaped in tendrils and ran wild. A fellow--"
"Yes, I reckon most of the boys will drop around to the Fourth of July
celebration. Got to cut loose once in a while, y'u know."
A shy glance shot him and set him a-tingle with a queer delight.
Gracious, what pretty dark velvety lashes she had!
She was rising already, and as she paid for the ice cream that innocent
gaze smote him again with the brightest of Irish eyes conceivable. It
lingered for just a ponderable sunlit moment or him. She had smiled once
more.
After a decent interval Mac pursued his petit charmer to the hotel. She
was seated on the porch reading a magazine, and was absorbedly
unconscious of him when he passed. For a few awkward moments he hung
around the office, then returned to the porch and took the chair most
distant from her. He had sat there a long ten minutes before she let her
hands and the magazine fall into her lap and demurely gave him his
chance.
"Can you tell me how far it is to the Lazy D ranch?"
"Seventy-two miles as the crow flies, ma'am."
"Thank you."
The conversation threatened to die before it was well born.
Desperately McWilliams tried to think of something to say to keep it alive
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"Why didn't one of them walk over after supper?" she demanded,
geverely.
He curbed the smile that was twitching at his facial muscles.
"Well, o' course it ain't so far,--only forty-three miles--still--"
"Forty-three miles to the post-office?"
"Yes, ma'am, only forty-three. If you'll excuse me this time--"
"Is it really forty-three?"
He saw that her sudden smile had brought out the dimples in the oval
face and that her petulance had been swept away by his astounding
information.
"Forty-three, sure as shootin', except twict a week when it comes to
Slauson's, and that's only twenty miles," he assured her. "Used to be
seventy-two, but the Government got busy with its rural free delivery, and
now we get it right at our doors."
"You must have big doors," she laughed.
"All out o' doors," he punned. "Y'u see, our house is under our hat, and
like as not that's twenty miles from the ranchhouse when night falls."
"Dear me!" She swept his graceful figure sarcastically. "And, of course,
twenty miles from a brush, too."
He laughed with deep delight at her thrust, for the warm youth in him
did not ask for pointed wit on the part of a young woman so attractive and
with a manner so delightfully provoking.
"I expaict I have gathered up some scenery on the journey. I'll go brush
it off and get ready for supper. I'd admire to sit beside y'u and pass the
butter and the hash if y'u don't object. Y'u see, I don't often meet up with
ladies, and I'd ought to improve my table manners when I get a chanct
with one so much older than I am and o' course so much more
experienced."
"I see you don't intend to pass any honey with the hash," she flashed,
with a glimpse of the pearls.
"DIDN'T y'u say y'u was older than me? I believe I've plumb forgot
how old y'u said y'u was, Miss Darling."
"Your memory's such a sieve it wouldn't be worth while telling you.
After you've been to school a while longer maybe I'll try you again."
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while he had her all to himself. He wasn't at all sure how deep this went,
but he had the satisfaction of hearing his first name, the one she had told
him she had no need of, fall tentatively from her pretty lips before the
other boys caught a glimpse of her.
Shortly after his arrival at the ranch Mac went to make his report to his
mistress of some business matters connected with the trip.
"I see you got back safely with the old lady," she laughed when she
caught sight of him.
His look reproached her. "Y'u said a spinster."
"But it was you that insisted on the rheumatism. By the way, did you
ask her about it?"
"We didn't get that far," he parried.
"Oh! How far did you get?" She perched herself on the porch railing
and mocked him with her friendly eyes. Her heart was light within her and
she was ready for anything in the way of fun, for the doctor had just
pronounced her patient out of danger if he took proper care of himself.
"About as fur as I got with y'u, ma'am," he audaciously retorted.
"We might disagree as to how far that is," she flung back gayly with
heightened color.
"No, ma'am, I don't think we would."
"But, gracious! You're not a Mormon. You don't want us both, do
you?" she demanded, her eyes sparkling with the exhilaration of the tilt.
"Could I get either one of y'u, do y'u reckon? That's what's worrying
me."
"I see, and so you intend to keep us both on the string."
His joyous laughter echoed hers. "I expaict y'u would call that
presumption or some other dictionary word, wouldn't y'u?"
"In anybody else perhaps, but surely not in Mr. McWilliams."
"I'm awful glad to be trotting in a class by myself."
"And you'll let us know when you have made your mind up which of
us it is to be?"
"Well, mine ain't the only mind that has to be made up," he drawled.
She took this up gleefully. "I can't answer for Nora, but I'll jump at the
chance-- if you decide to give it to me."
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charms as the Bighorn country, Wyoming. Here she might have her pick of
a hundred, and every one of them picturesquely begirt with flannel shirt,
knotted scarf at neck, an arsenal that bristled, and a sun-tan that could be
achieved only in the outdoors of the Rockies. Certainly these knights of
the saddle radiated a romance with which even her floorwalker
"gentleman friend " could not compete.
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her throat.
Vague fancies filtered through her mind, weird imaginings born of the
night in a mind that had been swept from the moorings of reason. So that
with no sensible surprise there came to her in that moonlit sea of desert the
sound of a voice a clear sweet tenor swelling bravely in song with the very
ecstacy of pathos.
It was the prison song from "Il Trovatore," and the desolation of its
lifted appeal went to the heart like water to the roots of flowers.
Ah! I have sigh'd to rest me. Deep in the quiet grave.
The girl's sob caught in her breast, stilled with the awe of that
heavenly music. So for an instant she waited before it was borne in on her
that the voice was a human one, and that the heaven from which it
descended was the hilltop above her.
A wild laugh, followed by an oath, cut the dying echoes of the song.
She could hear the swish of a quirt falling again and again, and the sound
of trampling hoofs thudding on the hard, sun-cracked ground. Startled, she
sprang to her feet, and saw silhouetted against the skyline a horse and his
rider fighting for mastery.
The battle was superb while it lasted. The horse had been a famous
outlaw, broken to the saddle by its owner out of the sheer passion for
victory, but there were times when its savage strength rebelled at abject
submission, and this was one of them. It swung itself skyward, and came
down like a pile-driver, camel-backed, and without joints in the legs.
Swiftly it rose again lunging forward and whirling in the air, then jarred
down at an angle. The brute did its malevolent best, a fury incarnate. But
the ride, was a match, and more than a match, for it. He sat the saddle like
a Centaur, with the perfect: unconscious grace of a born master, swaying
in his seat as need was, and spurring the horse to a blinder fury.
Sudden as had been the start, no less sudden was the finish of the
battle. The bronco pounded to a stiff-legged standstill, trembled for a long
minute like an aspen, and sank to a tame surrender, despite the sharp spurs
roweling its bloody sides.
"Ah, my beauty. You've had enough, have you?" demanded the cruel,
triumphant voice of the rider. "You would try that game, would you? I'll
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teach you."
"Stop spurring that horse, you bully."
The man stopped, in sheer amazement at this apparition which had
leaped out of the ground almost at his feet. His wary glance circled the
hills to make sure she was alone.
"Ce'tainly, ma'am. We're sure delighted to meet up with you. Ain't we,
Two-step?"
For himself, he spoke the simple truth. He lived in his sensations,
spurring himself to fresh ones as he had but just now been spurring his
horse to sate the greed of conquest in him. And this high-spirited, gallant
creature--he could feel her vital courage in the very ring of her voice--
offered a rare fillip to his jaded appetite. The dusky, long-lashed eyes
which always give a woman an effect of beauty, the splendid fling of head,
and the piquant, finely cut features, with their unconscious tale of Brahmin
caste, the long lines of the supple body, willowy and yet plump as a
partridge--they went to his head like strong wine. Here was an adventure
from the gods--a stubborn will to bend, the pride of a haughty young
beauty to trail in the dust, her untamed heart to break if need be. The lust
of the battle was on him already. She was a woman to dream about,
"Sweeter than the lids of Juno's eyes, Or Cytherea's breath,"
he told himself exultantly as he slid from his horse and stood bowing
before her.
And he, for his part, was a taking enough picture of devil-may-care
gallantry gone to seed. The touch of jaunty impudence in his humility, not
less than the daring admiration of his handsome eyes and the easy, sinuous
grace of his flexed muscles, labeled him what he was--a man bold and
capable to do what he willed, and a villain every inch of him.
Said she, after that first clash of stormy eyes with bold, admiring ones:
"I am lost--from the Lazy D ranch."
"Why, no, you're found," he corrected, white teeth flashing in a smile.
"My motor ran out of gasolene this afternoon. I've been"--there was a
catch in her voice--"wandering ever since."
"You're played out, of course, and y'u've had no supper," he said, his
quiet close gaze on her.
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"Yes, I'm played out and my nerve's gone." She laughed a little
hysterically. "I expect I'm hungry and thirsty, too, though I hadn't noticed
it before."
He whirled to his saddle, and had the canteen thongs unloosed in a
moment. While she drank he rummaged from his saddle-bags some
sandwiches of jerky and a flask of whiskey. She ate the sandwiches, he the
while watching her with amused sympathy in his swarthy countenance.
"You ain't half-bad at the chuck-wagon, Miss Messiter," he told her.
She stopped, the sandwich part way to her mouth. "I don't remember
your face. I've met so many people since I came to the Lazy D. Still, I
think I should remember you."
He immediately relieved of duty her quasi apology. "You haven't seen
my face before," he laughed, and, though she puzzled over the double
meaning that seemed to lurk behind his words and amuse him, she could
not find the key to it.
It was too dark to make out his features at all clearly, but she was sure
she had seen him before or somebody that looked very much like him.
"Life on the range ain't just what y'u can call exciting," he continued,
"and when a young lady fresh from back East drops among us while
sixguns are popping, breaks up a likely feud and mends right neatly all the
ventilated feudists it's a corollary to her fun that's she is going to become
famous."
What he said was true enough. The unsolicited notoriety her exploit
had brought upon her had been its chief penalty. Garbled versions of it had
appeared with fake pictures in New York and Chicago Sunday
supplements, and all Cattleland had heard and discussed it. No matter into
what unfrequented canon she rode, some silent cowpuncher would look at
her as they met with admiring eyes behind which she read a knowledge of
the story. It was a lonely desolate country, full of the wide deep silences of
utter emptiness, yet there could be no footfall but the whisper of it was
bruited on the wings of the wind.
"Do you know where the Lazy D ranch is from here?" she asked.
He nodded.
"Can you take me home?"
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"I surely can. But not to-night. You're more tired than y'u know. We'll
camp here, and in the mo'ning we'll hit the trail bright and early."
This did not suit her at all. "Is it far to the Lazy D?" she inquired
anxiously.
"Every inch of forty miles. There's a creek not more than two hundred
yards from here. We'll stay there till morning," he made answer in a matter
of course voice, leading the way to the place he had mentioned.
She followed, protesting. Yet though it was not in accord with her
civilized sense of fitness, she knew that what he proposed was the
common sense solution. She was tired and worn out, and she could see
that his broncho had traveled far.
Having reached the bank of the creek, he unsaddled, watered his horse
and picketed it, and started a fire. Uneasily she watched him.
"I don't like to sleep out. Isn't there a ranchhouse near?"
"Y'u wouldn't call it near by the time we had reached it. What's to
hinder your sleeping here? Isn't this room airy enough? And don't y'u like
the system of lighting? 'Twas patented I forget how many million years
ago. Y'u ain't going to play parlor girl now after getting the reputation
y'u've got for gameness, are y'u?"
But he knew well enough that it was no silly schoolgirl fear she had,
but some deep instinct in her that distrusted him and warned her to beware.
So, lightly he took up the burden of the talk while he gathered cottonwood
branches for the fire.
"Now if I'd only thought to bring a load of lumber and some
carpenters--and a chaperon," he chided himself in burlesque, his bold eyes
closely on the girl's face to gloat on the color that flew to her cheeks at his
suggestion.
She hastened to disclaim lightly the feeling he had unmasked in her.
"It is a pity, but it can't be helped now. I suppose I am cross and don't seem
very grateful. I'm tired out and nervous, but I am sure that I'll enjoy
sleeping out. If I don't I shall not be so ungenerous as to blame you."
He soon had a cup of steaming coffee ready for her, and the heat of it
made a new woman of her. She sat in the warm fire glow, and began to
feel stealing over her a delightful reaction of languor. She told herself
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their left. She was not satisfied, and yet she had not grounds enough upon
which to base a suspicion. For surely the figure she had seen had been that
of a man.
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not."
"I don't remember blaming y'u. The fact is I thought it awful white of
y'u to do your Christian duty so thorough, me being such a miscreant," he
drawled.
"You gave me no chance to think well of you."
"But yet y'u did your duty from A to Z."
"We're not talking about my duty," she flashed back. "My point is that
you weren't fair to me. If I thought ill of you how could I help it?"
"I expaict your Kalamazoo conscience is worryin' y'u because y'u
misjudged me."
"It isn't," she denied instantly.
"I ain't of a revengeful disposition. I'll forgive y'u for doing your duty
and saving my life twice," he said, with a smile of whimsical irony.
"I don't want your forgiveness."
"Well, then for thinking me a 'bad man.'"
"You ought to beg my pardon. I was a friend, at least you say I acted
like one--and you didn't care enough to right yourself with me."
"Maybe I cared too much to risk trying it. I knew there would be proof
some time, and I decided to lie under the suspicion until I could get it. I
see now that wasn't kind or fair to you. I am sorry I didn't tell y'u all about
it. May I tell y'u the story now?"
"If you wish."
It was a long story, but the main points can be told in a paragraph. The
grandfather of the two cousins, General Edward Bannister, had worn the
Confederate gray for four years, and had lost an arm in the service of the
flag with the stars and bars. After the war he returned to his home in
Virginia to find it in ruins, his slaves freed and his fields mortgaged. He
had pulled himself together for another start, and had practiced law in the
little town where his family had lived for generations. Of his two sons, one
was a ne'er-do-well. He was one of those brilliant fellows of whom much
is expected that never develops. He had a taste for low company, married
beneath him, and, after a career that was a continual mortification and
humiliation to his father, was killed in a drunken brawl under disgraceful
circumstances, leaving behind a son named for the general. The second
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son of General Bannister also died young, but not before he had proved his
devotion to his father by an exemplary life. He, too, was married and left
an only son, also named for the old soldier. The boys were about of an age
and were well matched in physical and mental equipment. But the general,
who had taken them both to live with him, soon discovered that their
characters were as dissimilar as the poles. One grandson was frank,
generous, open as the light; the other was of a nature almost degenerate. In
fact, each had inherited the qualities of his father. Tales began to come to
the old general's ears that at first he refused to credit. But eventually it was
made plain to him that one of the boys was a rake of the most
objectionable type.
There were many stormy scenes between the general and his grandson,
but the boy continued to go from bad to worse. After a peculiarly flagrant
case, involving the character of a respectable young girl, young Ned
Bannister was forbidden his ancestral home. It had been by means of his
cousin that this last iniquity of his had been unearthed, and the boy had
taken it to his grandfather in hot indignation as the last hope of protecting
the reputation of the injured girl. From that hour the evil hatred of his
cousin, always dormant in the heart, flamed into active heat. The disowned
youth swore to be revenged. A short time later the general died, leaving
what little property he had entirely to the one grandson. This stirred again
the bitter rage of the other. He set fire to the house that had been willed his
cousin, and took a train that night for Wyoming. By a strange irony of fate
they met again in the West years later, and the enmity between them was
renewed, growing every month more bitter on the part of the one who
called himself the King of the Bighorn Country.
She broke the silence after his story with a gentle "Thank you. I can
understand why you don't like to tell the story."
"I am very glad of the chance to tell it to you," he answered.
"When you were delirious you sometimes begged some one you called
Ned not to break his mother's heart. I thought then you might be speaking
to yourself as ill people do. Of course I see now it was your cousin that
was on your mind."
"When I was out of my head I must have talked a lot of nonsense," he
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of use in y'u exposing yourself so careless. Y'u take a hot footbath and
some of that medicine, Denver, then go right straight to bed, and in the
mo'ning y'u'll be good as new. Honest, y'u won't know yourself."
"Y'u got the best heart, Mac." Nora giggled.
"Since I'm foreman I got to be a mother to y'u boys, ain't I?" "Y'u're
liable to be a grandmother to us if y'u keep on," came back the young
giant.
"Y'u plumb discourage me, Denver," sighed the foreman.
"No, sir! The way I look at it, a fellow's got to take some risk. Now,
y'u cayn't tell some things. I figure I ain't half so likely to catch pneumony
as y'u would be to get heart trouble if y'u went walking with Miss Nora,"
returned Denver.
A perfect gravity sat on both their faces during the progress of most of
their repartee.
"If your throat's so bad, Mr. Halliday, I'll put a kerosene rag round it
for you when we get back," Nora said, with a sweet little glance of
sympathy that the foreman did not enjoy.
Denver, otherwise "Mr. Halliday," beamed. "Y'u're real kind, ma'am.
I'll bet that will help it on the outside much as Mac's medicine will inside."
"What'll y'u do for my heart, ma'am, if it gits bad the way Denver
figures it will?"
"Y'u might try a mustard plaster," she gurgled, with laughter.
For once the debonair foreman's ready tongue had brought him to
defeat. He was about to retire from the field temporarily when Nora
herself offered first aid to the wounded.
"We would like to have you come along with us, Mr. McWilliams. I
want you to come if you can spare the time."
The soft eyes telegraphed an invitation with such a subtle suggestion
of a private understanding that Mac was instantly encouraged to accept.
He knew, of course, that she was playing them against each other and
sitting back to enjoy the result, but he was possessed of the hope common
to youths in his case that he really was on a better footing with her than the
other boys. This opinion, it may be added, was shared by Denver, Frisco
and even Reddy as regards themselves. Which is merely another way of
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putting the regrettable fact that this very charming young woman was
given to coquetting with the hearts of her admirers.
"Any time y'u get oneasy about that cough y'u go right on home,
Denver. Don't stay jest out of politeness. We'll never miss y'u, anyhow,"
the foreman assured him.
"Thank y'u, Mac. But y'u see I got to stay to keep Miss Nora from
getting bored."
"Was it a phrenologist strung y'u with the notion y'u was a cure for
lonesomeness?"
"Shucks! I don't make no such claims. The only thing is it's a comfort
when you're bored to have company. Miss Nora, she's so polite. But, y'u
see, if I'm along I can take y'u for a walk when y'u get too bad."
They reached the little trail that ran up to Lee Ming's place, and
Denver suggested that Mac run in with the bundle so as to save Nora the
climb.
"I'd like to, honest I would. But since y'u thought of it first I won't steal
the credit of doing Miss Nora a good turn. We'll wait right here for y'u till
y'u come back."
"We'll all go up together," decided Nora, and honors were easy.
In the pleasant moonlight they sauntered back, two of them still
engaged in lively badinage. while the third played chorus with
appreciative little giggles and murmurs of "Oh, Mr. Halliday!" and "You
know you're just flattering me, Mr. McWilliams."
If they had not been so absorbed in their gay foolishness the two men
might not have walked so innocently into the trap waiting for them at their
journey's end. As it was, the first intimation they had of anything unusual
was a stern command to surrender.
"Throw up your hands. Quick, you blank fools!"
A masked man covered them, in each hand a six-shooter, and at his
summons the arms of the cow-punchers went instantly into the air.
Nora gave an involuntary little scream of dismay.
"Y'u don't need to be afraid, lady. Ain't nobody going to hurt you, I
reckon," the masked man growled.
" Sure they won't," Mac reassured her, adding ironically: "This gun-
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but against the man whom her heart acknowledged as her lover.
He laughed. "Y'u're still hoping to make a Sunday school
superintendent out of me, I see. Y'u haven't forgot all your schoolmarm
ways yet, but I'll teach y'u to forget them."
The other cousin watched him with a cool, quiet glance that never
wavered. The outlaw was heavily armed, but his weapons were sheathed,
and, though there was a wary glitter behind the vindictive exultation in his
eyes, his capable hands betrayed no knowledge of the existence of his
revolvers. It was, he knew, to be a moral victory, if one at all.
"Hope I'm not disturbing any happy family circle," he remarked, and,
taking two limping steps forward, he lifted the book from the girl's
unresisting hands. "H'm! Barrie. I don't go much on him. He's too sissy for
me. But I could have guessed the other Ned Bannister would be reading
something like that," he concluded, a flicker of sneering contempt crossing
his face.
"Perhaps y'u'll learn some time to attend to your own business," said
the man on the couch quietly.
Hatred gleamed in the narrowed slits from which the soul of the other
cousin looked down at him. "I'm a philanthropist, and my business is
attending to other people's. They raise sheep, for instance, and I market
them."
The girl hastily interrupted. She had not feared for herself, but she
knew fear for the indomitable man she had nursed back to life. "Won't you
sit down, Mr. Bannister? Since you don't approve our literature, perhaps
we can find some other diversion more to your taste." She smiled faintly.
The man turned in smiling divination of her purpose, and sat down to
play with her as a cat does with a mouse.
"Thank y'u, Miss Messiter, I believe I will. I called to thank y'u for
your kindness to my cousin as well as to inquire about you. The word goes
that y'u pulled my dear cousin back when death was reaching mighty
strong for him. Of course I feel grateful to y'u. How is he getting along
now?"
"He's doing very well, I think."
"That's ce'tainly good hearing," was his ironical response. "How come
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sun of the Rockies; with muscles knit like steel, and hearts toughened to
endure any blizzard they might meet. Only the humorous wrinkles about
the corners of their eyes gave them away for the cheerful sons of mirth
that they were.
"Bob Austin on Two-Step," announced the megaphone man, and a
little stir eddied through the group gathered at the lane between the arena
and the corral.
A meek-looking buckskin was driven into the arena. The embodiment
of listlessness, it apparently had not ambition enough to flick a fly from its
flank with its tail. Suddenly the bronco's ears pricked, its sharp eyes
dilated. A man was riding forward, the loop of a lariat circling about his
head. The rope fell true, but the wily pony side-stepped, and the loop
slithered to the ground. Again the rope shot forward, dropped over the
pony's head and tightened. The roper's mustang braced its forefeet, and
brought the buckskin up short. Another rope swept over its head. It stood
trembling, unable to move without strangling itself.
A picturesque youth in flannel shirt and chaps came forward, dragging
blanket, saddle and bridle. At sight of him the horse gave a spasmodic
fling, then trembled again violently. A blind was coaxed over its eyes and
the bridle slipped on. Quickly and warily, with deft fingers, the young man
saddled and cinched. He waved a hand jauntily to the ropers. The lariats
were thrown off as the puncher swung to the saddle. For an instant the
buckskin stood bewildered, motionless as a statue. There was a sudden
leap forward high in air, and Bob Austin, alias "Texas," swung his
sombrero with a joyous whoop.
"Fan him! Fan him!" screamed the spectators, and the rider's quirt
went up and down like a piston-rod.
Round and round went Two-Step in a vicious circle, "swapping ends"
with dizzying rapidity. Suddenly he went forward as from a catapult, and
came to sudden halt in about five seconds. But Texas's knees still clung,
viselike, to the sides of the pony. A series of quick bucks followed, the
buckskin coming down with back humped, all four legs stiff as iron posts.
The jar on the rider would have been like a pile-driver falling on his head
had he not let himself grow limp. The buckskin plunged forward again in
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frenzied leaps, ending in an unexpected jump to one side. Alas for Texas!
One moment he was jubilantly plying quirt and spurs, the next he found
himself pitching sideways. To save himself he caught at the saddle-horn.
"He's hunting leather," shouted a hundred voices. One of the judges
rode out and waved a hand. Texas slipped to the ground disqualified, and
made his dejected way back to his deriding comrades. Some of them had
endured similar misfortunes earlier in the day. Therefore they found much
pleasure in condoling with him.
"If he'd only recollected to saw off the horn of his saddle, then he
couldn't 'a' found it when he went to hunt leather," mournfully commented
one puncher in a shirt of robin's egg blue.
"'Twould have been most as good as to take the dust, wouldn't it?"
retorted Texas gently, and the laugh was on the gentleman in blue, because
he had been thrown earlier in the day.
"A fellow's hands sure get in his way sometimes. I reckon if you'd tied
your hands, Tex, you'd been riding that rocking-hawss yet," suggested
Denver amiably.
"Sometimes it's his foot he puts in it. There was onct a gent
disqualified for riding on his spurs," said Texas reminiscently.
At which hit Denver retired, for not three hours before he had been
detected digging his spurs into the cinch to help him stick to the saddle.
"Jim McWilliams will ride Dead Easy," came the announcement
through the megaphone, and a burst of cheering passed along the grand
stand, for the sunny smile of the foreman of the Lazy D made him a
general favorite. Helen leaned forward and whispered something gaily to
Nora, who sat in the seat in front of her. The Irish girl laughed and blushed,
but when her mistress looked up it was her turn to feel the mounting color
creep into her cheeks. For Ned Bannister, arrayed in all his riding finery,
was making his way along the aisle to her.
She had not seen him since he had ridden away from the Lazy D ten
days before, quite sufficiently recovered from his wounds to take up the
routine of life again. They had parted not the best of friends, for she had
not yet forgiven him for his determination to leave with his cousin on the
night that she had been forced to insist on his remaining. He had put her in
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a false position, and he had never explained to her why. Nor could she
guess the reason--for he was not a man to harvest credit for himself by
explaining his own chivalry.
Since her heart told her how glad she was he had come to her box to
see her, she greeted him with the coolest little nod in the world.
"Good morning, Miss Messiter. May I sit beside y'u?" he asked.
"Oh, certainly!" She swept her skirts aside carelessly and made room
for him. "I thought you were going to ride soon."
"No, I ride last except for Sanford, the champion. My cousin rides just
before me. He's entered under the name of Jack Holloway."
She was thinking that he had no business to be riding, that his wounds
were still too fresh, but she did not intend again to show interest enough in
his affairs to interfere even by suggestion. Her heart had been in her mouth
every moment of the time this morning while he had been tossed hither
and thither on the back of his mount. In his delirium he had said he loved
her. If he did, why should he torture her so? It was well enough for sound
men to risk their lives, but--
A cheer swelled in the grand stand and died breathlessly away.
McWilliams was setting a pace it would take a rare expert to equal. He
was a trick rider, and all the spectacular feats that appealed to the onlooker
were his. While his horse was wildly pitching, he drank a bottle of pop and
tossed the bottle away. With the reins in his teeth he slipped off his coat
and vest, and concluded a splendid exhibition of skill by riding with his
feet out of the stirrups. He had been smoking a cigar when he mounted.
Except while he had been drinking the pop it had been in his mouth from
beginning to end, and, after he had vaulted from the pony's back, he
deliberately puffed a long smoke-spiral into the air, to show that his cigar
was still alight. No previous rider had earned so spontaneous a burst of
applause. "He's ce'tainly a pure when it comes to riding," acknowledged
Bannister. "I look to see him get either first or second."
"Whom do you think is his most dangerous rival?" Helen asked.
"My cousin is a straight-up rider, too. He's more graceful than Mac, I
think, but not quite so good on tricks. It will be nip and tuck."
"How about your cousin's cousin?" she asked, with bold irony.
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"He hopes he won't have to take the dust," was his laughing answer.
The next rider suffered defeat irrevocably before he had been thirty
seconds in the saddle. His mount was one of the most cunning of the
outlaw ponies of the Northwest, and it brought him to grief by jamming
his leg hard against the fence. He tried in vain to spur the bronco into the
middle of the arena, but after it drove at a post for the third time and
ground his limb against it, he gave up to the pain and slipped off.
"That isn't fair, is it?" Helen asked of the young man sitting beside her.
He shrugged his lean, broad shoulders. "He should have known how to
keep the horse in the open. Mac would never have been caught that way."
"Jack Holloway on Rocking Horse," the announcer shouted.
It took four men and two lariats to subdue this horse to a condition
sufficiently tame to permit of a saddle being slipped on. Even then this
could not be accomplished without throwing the bronco first. The result
was that all the spirit was taken out of the animal by the preliminary ordeal,
so that when the man from the Shoshone country mounted, his steed was
too jaded to attempt resistance.
"Thumb him! Thumb him!" the audience cried, referring to the
cowboy trick of running the thumbs along a certain place in the shoulder
to stir the anger of the bucker.
But the rider slipped off with disgust. "Give me another horse," he
demanded, and after a minute's consultation among the judges a second
pony was driven out from the corral. This one proved to be a Tartar. It
went off in a frenzy of pitching the moment its rider dropped into the
saddle.
"Y'u'll go a long way before you see better ridin' than his and Mac's.
Notice how he gives to its pitching," said Bannister, as he watched his
cousin's perfect ease in the cyclone of which he was the center.
"I expect it depends on the kind of a 'hawss,'" she mocked. "He's riding
well, isn't he?"
"I don't know any that ride better."
The horse put up a superb fight, trying everything it knew to unseat
this demon clamped to its back. It possessed in combination all the worst
vices, was a weaver, a sunfisher and a fence-rower, and never had it tried
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so desperately to maintain its record of never having been ridden. But the
outlaw in the saddle was too much for the outlaw underneath. He was
master, just as he was first among the ruffians whom he led, because there
was in him a red-hot devil of wickedness that would brook no rival.
The furious bronco surrendered without an instant's warning, and its
rider slipped at once to the ground. As he sauntered through the dust
toward the grand stand, Helen could not fail to see how his vanity sunned
itself in the applause that met his performance. His equipment was perfect
to the least detail. The reflection from a lady's looking-glass was no
brighter than the silver spurs he jingled on his sprightly heels. Strikingly
handsome in a dark, sinister way, one would say at first sight, and later
would chafe at the justice of a verdict not to be denied.
Ned Bannister rose from his seat beside Helen. "Wish me luck," he
said, with his gay smile.
"I wish you all the luck you deserve," she answered.
"Oh, wish me more than that if y'u want me to win."
"I didn't say I wanted you to win. You take the most unaccountable
things for granted."
"I've a good mind to win, then, just to spite y'u," he laughed.
"As if you could," she mocked; but her voice took a softer intonation
as she called after him in a low murmur: "Be careful, please."
His white teeth flashed a smile of reassurance at her. "I've never been
killed yet."
"Ned Bannister on Steamboat," sang out the megaphone man.
"I'm ce'tainly in luck. Steamboat's the worst hawss on the range," he
told himself, as he strode down the grand stand to enter the arena.
The announcement of his name created for the second time that day a
stir of unusual interest. Everybody in that large audience had heard of Ned
Bannister; knew of his record as a "bad man" and his prowess as the king
of the Shoshone country; suspected him of being a train and bank robber
as well as a rustler. That he should have the boldness to enter the contest in
his own name seemed to show how defiant he was of the public sentiment
against him, and how secure he counted himself in flaunting this contempt.
As for the sheepman, the notoriety that his cousin's odorous reputation had
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thrust upon him was extremely distasteful as well as dangerous, but he had
done nothing to disgrace his name, and he meant to use it openly. He could
almost catch the low whispers that passed from mouth to mouth about
him.
"Ain't it a shame that a fellow like that, leader of all the criminals that
hide in the mountains, can show himself openly before ten thousand
honest folks?" That he knew to be the purport of their whispering, and
along with it went a recital of the crimes he had committed. How he was a
noted "waddy," or cattle-rustler; how he and his gang had held up three
trains in eighteen months; how he had killed Tom Mooney, Bob Carney
and several others--these were the sorts of things that were being said
about him, and from the bottom of his soul he resented his impotency to
clear his name.
There was something in Bannister's riding that caught Helen's fancy at
once. It was the unconscious grace of the man, the ease with which he
seemed to make himself a very part of the horse. He attempted no tricks,
rode without any flourishes. But the perfect poise of his lithe body as it
gave with the motions of the horse, proclaimed him a born rider; so
finished, indeed, that his very ease seemed to discount the performance.
Steamboat had a malevolent red eye that glared hatred at the oppressor
man, and to-day it lived up to its reputation of being the most vicious and
untamed animal on the frontier. But, though it did its best to unseat the
rider and trample him underfoot, there was no moment when the issue
seemed in doubt save once. The horse flung itself backward in a
somersault, risking its own neck in order to break its master's. But he was
equal to the occasion; and when Steamboat staggered again to its feet
Bannister was still in the saddle. It was a daring and magnificent piece of
horsemanship, and, though he was supposed to be a desperado and a
ruffian, his achievement met with a breathless gasp, followed by
thunderous applause.
The battle between horse and man was on again, for the animal was as
strong almost in courage as the rider. But Steamboat's confidence had been
shaken as well as its strength. Its efforts grew less cyclonic. Foam covered
its mouth and flecked its sides. The pitches were easy to foresee and meet.
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Helen Messiter and Nora Darling through a riotous three hours of carnival,
taking care to get them back to their hotel before the night really began "to
howl."
But after they had left the young women, neither of them cared to
sleep yet. They were still in costume, Mac dressed as a monk, and his
friend as a Stuart cavalier, and the spirit of frolic was yet strong in them.
"I expaict, mebbe, we better hunt in couples if we're going to help
paint the town," smiled Mac, and his friend had immediately agreed.
It must have been well after midnight that they found themselves
"bucking the tiger" in a combination saloon and gambling-house, whose
patrons were decidedly cosmopolitan in character. Here white and red and
yellow men played side by side, the Orient and the Occident and the
aboriginal alike intent on the falling cards and the little rolling ball. A good
many of them were still in their masks and dominos, though these, for the
most part, removed their vizors before playing.
Neither McWilliams nor his friend were betting high, and the luck had
been so even that at the end of two hours' play neither of them had at any
time either won or lost more than fifteen dollars. In point of fact, they
were playing not so much to win as just to keep in touch with the gay,
youthful humor of the night.
They were getting tired of the game when two men jingled in for a
drink. They were talking loudly together, and it was impossible to miss the
subject of their conversation.
McWilliams gave a little jerk of his head toward one of them. "Judd
Morgan," his lips framed without making a sound.
Bannister nodded.
"Been tanking up all day," Mac added. "Otherwise his tongue would
not be shooting off so reckless."
A silence had fallen over the assembly save for the braggarts at the bar.
Men looked at each other, and then furtively at Bannister. For Morgan,
ignorant of who was sitting quietly with his back to him at the faro-table,
was venting his hate of Bannister and McWilliams.
"Both in the same boat. Did y'u see how Mac ran to help him to-day?
Both waddies. Both rustlers. Both train robbers. Sho! I got through putting
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"I mean that next to your cousin Judd was leader of that Shoshone-
Teton bunch."
"How do y'u know?"
"I suspected it a long time, but I knew for sure the day that your cousin
held up the ranch. The man that was in charge of the crowd outside was
Morgan. I could swear to it. I knew him soon as I clapped eyes to him, but
I was awful careful to forget to tell him I recognized him."
"That means we are in more serious trouble than I had supposed."
"Y'u bet it does. We're in a hell of a hole, figure it out any way y'u like.
Instead of having shot up a casual idiot, I've killed Ned Bannister's right-
hand man. That will be the excuse--shooting Morgan. But the real trouble
is that I won the championship belt from your cousin. He already hated y'u
like poison, and he don't love me any too hard. He will have us arrested by
his sheriff here. Catch the point. Y'U'RE NED BANNISTER, THE
OUTLAW, AND I'M HIS RIGHT-BOWER. That's the play he's going to
make, and he's going to make it right soon."
"I don't care if he does. We'll fight him on his own ground. We'll prove
that he's the miscreant and not us."
"Prove nothing," snarled McWilliams. "Do y'u reckon he'll give us a
chance to prove a thing? Not on your life. He'll have us jailed first thing;
then he'll stir up a sentiment against us, and before morning there will be a
lynchingbee, and y'u and I will wear the neckties. How do y'u like the
looks of it?"
"But y'u have a lot of friends. They won't stand for anything like that."
"Not if they had time to stop it. Trouble is, fellow's friends think awful
slow. They'll arrive in time to cut us down and be the mourners. No, sir!
It's a hike for Jimmie Mac on the back of the first bronc he can slap a
saddle on."
Bannister frowned. "I don't like to run before the scurvy scoundrels."
"Do y'u suppose I'm enjoying it? Not to any extent, I allow. But that
sweet relative of yours holds every ace in the deck, and he'll play them,
too. He owns the law in this man's town, and he owns the lawless. But the
best card he holds is that he can get a thousand of the best people here to
join him in hanging the 'king' of the Shoshone outlaws. Explanations
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nothing! Y'u rode under the name of Bannister, didn't y'u? He's Jack
Holloway."
"It does make a strong combination," admitted the sheepman.
"Strong! It's invincible. I can see him playing it, laughing up his sleeve
all the time at the honest fools he is working. No, sir! I draw out of a game
like that. Y'u don't get a run for your money."
"Of course he knows already what has happened," mused Bannister.
"Sure he knows. That fellow with Morgan made a bee-line for him.
Just about now he's routing the sheriff out of his bed. We got no time to
lose. Thing is, to burn the wind out of this town while we have the
chance."
"I see. It won't help us any to be spilling lead into a sheriff's posse.
That would ce'tainly put us in the wrong."
"Now y'u're shouting. If we're honest men why don't we surrender
peaceable? That's the play the 'king' is going to make in this town. Now if
we should spoil a posse and bump off one or two of them, we couldn't pile
up evidence enough to get a jury to acquit. No, sir! We can't surrender and
we can't fight. Consequence is, we got to roll our tails immediate."
"We have an appointment with Miss Messiter and Nora for to-morrow
morning. We'll have to leave word we can't keep it."
"Sure. Denver and Missou are playing the wheel down at the Silver
Dollar. I reckon we better make those boys jump and run errands for us
while we lie low. I'll drop in casual and give them the word. Meet y'u here
in ten minutes. Whatever y'u do, keep that mask on your face."
"Better meet farther from the scene of trouble. Suppose we say the
north gate of the grand stand?"
"Good enough. So-long."
The first faint streaks of day were beginning to show on the horizon
when Bannister reached the grand stand. He knew that inside of another
half-hour the little frontier town would be blinking in the early morning
sunlight that falls so brilliantly through the limpid atmosphere. If they
were going to leave without fighting their way out there was no time to
lose.
Ten minutes slowly ticked away.
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He glanced at his watch. "Five minutes after four. I wish I had gone
with Mac. He may have been recognized."
But even as the thought flitted through his mind, the semi-darkness
opened to let a figure out of it.
"All quiet along the Potomac, seh?" asked the foreman's blithe voice.
"Good. I found the boys and got them started." He flung down a Mexican
vaquero's gaily trimmed costume. "Get into these, seh. Denver shucked
them for me. That coyote must have noticed what we wore before he slid
out. Y'u can bet the orders are to watch for us as we were dressed then."
"What are y u going to do?"
"Me? I'm scheduled to be Aaron Burr, seh. Missou swaps with me
when he gets back here. They're going to rustle us some white men's
clothes, too, but we cayn't wear them till we get out of town on account of
showing our handsome faces."
"What about horses?"
"Denver is rustling some for us. Y'u better be scribbling your billy-doo
to the girl y'u leave behind y'u, seh."
"Haven't y'u got one to scribble?" Bannister retorted. "Seems to me y'u
better get busy, too."
So it happened that when Missou arrived a few minutes later he found
this pair of gentlemen, who were about to flee for their lives, busily
inditing what McWilliams had termed facetiously billets-doux. Each of
them was trying to make his letter a little warmer than friendship allowed
without committing himself to any chance of a rebuff. Mac got as far as
Nora Darling, absentmindedly inserted a comma between the words, and
there stuck hopelessly. He looked enviously across at Bannister, whose
pencil was traveling rapidly down his note-book.
"My, what a swift trail your pencil leaves on that paper. That's going
some. Mine's bogged down before it got started. I wisht y'u would start me
off."
"Well, if you ain't up and started a business college already. I had
ought to have brought a typewriter along with me," murmured Missou
ironically.
"How are things stacking? Our friends the enemy getting busy yet?"
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yards, and dismounted at a barb-wire fence which ran parallel with the
road. The foreman's wire-clippers severed the strands one by one, and they
led their horses through the gap. They crossed an alfalfa-field, jumped an
irrigation ditch, used the clippers again, and found themselves in a large
pasture. It was getting lighter every moment, and while they were still in
the pasture a voice hailed them from the road in an unmistakable
command to halt.
They bent low over the backs of their ponies and gave them the spur.
The shot they had expected rang out, passing harmlessly over them.
Another followed, and still another.
"That's right. Shoot up the scenery. Y'u don't hurt us none," the
foreman said, apostrophizing the man behind the gun.
The next clipped fence brought them to the open country. For half an
hour they rode swiftly without halt. Then McWilliams drew up.
"Where are we making for?"
"How about the Wind River country?"
"Won't do. First off, they'll strike right down that way after us. What's
the matter with running up Sweetwater Creek and lying out in the bad
lands around the Roubideaux?"
"Good. I have a sheep-camp up that way. I can arrange to have grub
sent there for us by a man I can trust."
"All right. The Roubideaux goes."
While they were nooning at a cow-spring, Bannister, lying on his back,
with his face to the turquoise sky, became aware that a vagrant impulse
had crystallized to a fixed determination. He broached it at once to his
companion.
"One thing is a cinch, Mac. Neither y'u nor I will be safe in this
country now until we have broken up the gang of desperadoes that is
terrorizing this country. If we don't get them they will get us. There isn't
any doubt about that. I'm not willing to lie down before these miscreants.
What do y'u say?"
"I'm with y'u, old man. But put a name to it. What are y'u proposing?"
"I'm proposing that y'u and I make it our business not to have any
other business until we clean out this nest of wolves. Let's go right after
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to satisfy y'u, my friend. Y'u and I know that my cousin, Ned Bannister,
doesn't acknowledge any law, written or unwritten. He's a devil and he has
no fear. Didn't he kidnap her before?"
"He surely would never dare touch those young ladies. But--I don't
know. Bann, I guess we better roll along toward the Lazy D country, after
all."
"I think so." Ned looked at his friend with smiling drollery. "I thought
y'u smoked your troubles away, Jim. This one seems to worry y'u."
McWilliams grinned sheepishly. "There's one trouble won't be smoked
away. It kinder dwells. "Then, apparently apropos of nothing, he added,
irrelevantly: "Wonder what Denver's doing right now?"
"Probably keeping that appointment y'u ran away from," bantered his
friend.
"I'll bet he is. Funny how some men have all the luck," murmured the
despondent foreman.
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left them to all intents alone. At a touch of her fingers the handbag in her
lap flew open and a little ivory-hilted revolver lay in her hand.
"You may break me, but you'll never bend me an inch."
He looked at the little gun and laughed ironically. "Sho! If y'u should
hit me with that and I should find it out I might get mad at y'u."
"Did I say it was for you?" she said coldly; and again the shock of
joined eyes ended in drawn battle.
"Have y'u the nerve?" He looked her over, so dainty and so resolute, so
silken strong; and he knew he had his answer.
His smoldering eyes burned with desire to snatch her to him and ride
away into the hills. For he was a man who lived in his sensations. He had
won many women to their hurt, but it was the joy of conflict that made the
pursuit worth while to him; and this young woman, who could so
delightfully bubble with little laughs ready to spill over and was yet
possessed of a spirit so finely superior to the tenderness of her soft, round,
maidenly curves, allured him mightily to the attack.
She dropped the revolver back into the bag and shut the clasp with a
click, "And now I think, Mr. Bannister, that I'll not detain you any longer.
We understand each other sufficiently."
He rose with a laugh that mocked. "I expaict to spend quite a bit of
time understanding y'u one of these days. In the meantime this is to our
better acquaintance."
Deliberately, without the least haste, he stooped and kissed her before
she could rally from the staggering surprise of the intention she read in his
eyes too late to elude. Then, with the coolest bravado in the world, he
turned on his heel and strolled away.
Angry sapphires gleamed at him from under the long, brown lashes.
She was furious, aghast, daunted. By the merest chance she was sitting in
a corner of the box, so screened from observation that none could see. But
the insolence of him, the reckless defiance of all standards of society,
shook her even while it enraged her. He had put forth his claim like a
braggart, but he had made good with an audacity superb in its effrontery.
How she hated him! How she feared him! The thoughts were woven
inseparably in her mind. Mephisto himself could not have impressed
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seconds," announced their spokesman, and at the words a great cheer went
up. Bannister had made his tie in record time.
Impudently the scoundrel sauntered up to the grand stand, bowed
elaborately to Miss Messiter, and perched himself on the fence, where he
might be the observed of all observers. It was curious, she thought, how
his vanity walked hand in hand with so much power and force. He was
really extraordinarily strong, but no debutante's self-sufficiency could
have excelled his. He was so frankly an egotist that it ceased to be a
weakness.
Back in her room at the hotel an hour later Helen paced up and down
under a nervous strain foreign to her temperament. She was afraid; for the
first time in her life definitely afraid. This man pitted against her had
deliberately divorced his life from morality. In him lay no appeal to any
conscience court of last resort. But the terror of this was not for herself
principally, but for her flying lover. With his indubitable power, backed by
the unpopularity of the sheepman in this cattle country, the King of the
Bighorn could destroy his cousin if he set himself to do so. Of this she was
convinced, and her conviction carried a certainty that he had the will as
well as the means. If he had lacked anything in motive she herself had
supplied one. For she was afraid that this villain had read her heart.
And as her hand went fluttering to her heart she found small comfort
in the paper lying next it that only a few hours before had brought her joy.
For at any moment a messenger might come in to tell her that the writer of
it had been captured and was to be dealt with summarily in frontier
fashion. At best her lover and her friend were but fugitives from justice.
Against them were arrayed not only the ruffian followers of their enemy,
but also the lawfully constituted authorities of the county. Even if they
should escape to-day the net would tighten on them, and they would
eventually be captured.
For the third time since coming to Wyoming Helen found refuge in
tears.
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by Miss Messiter.
"Hello, Henderson! y'u seen anything of Jim McWilliams and another
fellow riding acrost this way?" asked Reddy.
"Nope," answered the cowman promptly. But immediately he modified
his statement to add that he had seen two men riding toward Dry Creek a
couple of hours ago. "They was going kinder slow. Looked to me sorter
like one of them was hurt and the other was helping him out," he
volunteered.
The sheriff looked significantly at one of his men and nodded.
"You didn't recognize the horses, I reckon?"
"Come to think of it, one of the ponies did look like Jim's roan. What's
up, boys? Anything doing?"
"Nothing particular. We want to see Jim, that's all. So long."
What Henderson had guessed was the truth. The continuous hard
riding had been too much for Bannister and his wound had opened anew.
They were at the time only a few miles from a shack on Dry Creek, where
the Lazy D punchers sometimes put up. McWilliams had attended the
wound as best he could, and after a few hours' rest had headed for the
cabin in the hills. They were compelled to travel very slowly, since the
motion kept the sheepman's wound continually bleeding. But about noon
they reached the refuge they had been seeking and Bannister lay down on
the bunk with their saddle blankets under him. He soon fell asleep, and
Mac took advantage of this to set out on a foraging expedition to a ranch
not far distant. Here he got some bread, bacon, milk and eggs from a man
he could trust and returned to his friend.
It was dark by the time he reached the cabin. He dismounted, and with
his arms full of provisions pushed into the hut.
"Awake, Bann?" he asked in a low voice.
The answer was unexpected. Something heavy struck his chest and
flung him back against the wall. Before he could recover his balance he
was pinioned fast. Four men had hurled themselves upon him.
"We've got you, Jim. Not a mite o' use resisting," counseled the sheriff.
"Think I don't savez that? I can take a hint when a whole Methodist
church falls on me. Who are y'u, anyhow?"
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"Y'u don't need to tell me that, Tom Burns' Y'u ain't a man--nothing
but a stuffed skin worked by a string. When that miscreant Bannister pulls
the string y'u jump. He's jerked it now, so y'u're taking us back to him. I
can prove that coyote Morgan shot at me first, but that doesn't cut any ice
with you."
"What made you light out so sudden, then?" demanded the aggrieved
Burns triumphantly.
"Because I knew you. That's a plenty good reason. I'm not asking
anything for myself. All I say is that my friend isn't fit to travel yet. Let
him stay here under a guard till he is."
"He was fit enough to get here. By thunder, he's fit to go back!"
"Y'u've said enough, Mac," broke in Bannister. "It's awfully good of
y'u to speak for me, but I would rather see it out with you to a finish. I
don't want any favors from this yellow dog of my cousin."
The "yellow dog" set his teeth and swore vindictively behind them. He
was already imagining an hour when these insolent prisoners of his would
sing another tune.
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"Yes, ma'am. But that doesn't look good to most people. They say he
had his friends come to take him away so y'u wouldn't hold him and let us
boys get him. This cousin business is a fairy tale the way they size it up.
How come this cousin to let him go if he held up the ranch to put the sick
man out of business? No, miss. This country has made up its mind that
your friend is the original Ned Bannister. My opinion is that nothing on
earth can save him."
"I don't want your opinion. I'm going to save him, I tell you; and you
are going to help. Are his friends nothing but a bunch of quitters?" she
cried, with sparkling eyes.
"I didn't know I was such a great friend of his," answered the cowboy
sulkily.
"You're a friend of Jim McWilliams, aren't you? Are you going to
sneak away and let these curs hang him?"
Denver flushed. "Y'u're dead right, Miss Helen. I guess I'll see it out
with you. What's the orders?"
"I want you to help me organize a defense. Get all Mac's friends stirred
up to make a fight for him. Bring as many of them in to see me during the
day as you can. If you see any of the rest of the Lazy D boys send them in
to me for instructions. Report yourself every hour to me. And make sure
that at least three of your friends that you can trust are hanging round the
jail all day so as to be ready in case any attempt is made to storm it before
dark." "I'll see to it." Denver hung on his heel a moment before leaving.
"It's only square to tell y'u, Miss Helen, that this means war here tonight.
These streets are going to run with blood if we try to save them."
"I'm taking that responsibility," she told him curtly; but a moment later
she added gently: "I have a plan, my friend, that may stop this outrage yet.
But you must do your best for me." She smiled sadly at him. "You're my
foreman, to-day, you know."
"I'm going to do my level best, y'u may tie to that," he told her
earnestly.
"I know you will." And their fingers touched for an instant.
Through a window the girl could see a crowd pouring down the street
toward the hotel. She flew up the stairs and out upon the second-story
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housekeeping. Have you the telegram, Missou?" For that young man was
standing in the doorway.
He handed her the yellow slip. She ripped open the envelope and read:
Company B en route. Railroad connections uncertain Postpone crisis long
as possible. May reach Gimlet Butte by ten-thirty.
Her first thought was of unspeakable relief. The militia was going to
take a hand. The boys in khaki would come marching down the street, and
everything would be all right. But hard on the heels of her instinctive
gladness trod the sober second thought. Ten-thirty at best, and perhaps
later! Would they wait that long, or would they do their cowardly work as
soon as night fell She must contrive to delay them till the train drew in.
She must play for those two lives with all her woman's wit; must match
the outlaw's sinister cunning and fool him into delay. She knew he would
come if she sent for him. But how long could she keep him? As long as he
was amused at her agony, as long as his pleasure in tormenting her was
greater than his impatience to be at his ruffianly work. Oh, if she ever
needed all her power it would be to-night.
Throughout the day she continued to receive hourly reports from
Denver, who always brought with him four or five honest cowpunchers
from up-country to listen to the strange tale she unfolded to them. It was,
of course, in part, the spell of her sweet personality, of that shy appeal she
made to the manhood in them; but of those who came, nearly all believed,
for the time at least, and aligned themselves on her side in the struggle that
was impending. Some of these were swayed from their allegiance in the
course of the day, but a few she knew would remain true.
Meanwhile, all through the day, the enemy was busily at work. As
Denver had predicted, free liquor was served to all who would drink. The
town and its guests were started on a grand debauch that was to end in
violence that might shock their sober intelligence. Everywhere poisoned
whispers were being flung broadcast against the two men waiting in the
jail for what the night would bring forth.
Dusk fell on a town crazed by bad whiskey and evil report. The deeds
of Bannister were hashed and rehashed at every bar, and nobody related
them with more ironic gusto than the man who called himself Jack
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Holloway. There were people in town who knew his real name and
character, but of these the majority were either in alliance with him or
dared not voice their knowledge. Only Miss Messiter and her punchers
told the truth, and their words were blown away like chaff.
From the first moment of darkness Helen had the outlaw leader
dogged by two of her men. Since neither of these were her own riders this
was done without suspicion. At intervals of every quarter of an hour they
reported to her in turn. Bannister was beginning to drink heavily, and she
did not want to cut short his dissipation by a single minute. Yet she had to
make sure of getting his attention before he went too far.
It was close to nine when she sent him a note, not daring to delay a
minute longer. For the reports of her men were all to the same effect, that
the crisis would not now be long postponed. Bannister, or Holloway, as he
chose to call himself, was at the bar with his lieutenants in evil when the
note reached him. He read it with a satisfaction he could not conceal. So!
He had brought her already to her knees. Before he was through with her
she should grovel in the dust before him.
"I'll be back in a few minutes. Do nothing till I return," he ordered, and
went jingling away to the Elk House.
The young woman's anxiety was pitiable, but she repressed it sternly
when she went to meet the man she feared; and never had it been more in
evidence than in this hour of her greatest torture. Blithely she came
forward to meet him, eye challenging eye gayly. No hint of her anguish
escaped into her manner. He read there only coquetry, the eternal sex
conflict, the winsome defiance of a woman hitherto the virgin mistress of
all assaults upon her heart's citadel. It was the last thing he had expected to
see, but it was infinitely more piquant, more intoxicating, than desperation.
She seemed to give the lie to his impression of her love for his cousin; and
that, too, delighted his pride.
"You will sit down?"
Carelessly, almost indolently, she put the question, her raised eyebrows
indicating a chair with perfunctory hospitality. He had not meant to sit,
had expected only to gloat a few minutes over her despair; but this
situation called for more deliberation. He had yet to establish the mastery
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made answer softly, flashing him the proper look of inviting disdain from
under her silken lashes.
He leaned forward, elbow on the chair-arm and chin in hand. "We'll
agree about it one of these days."
"Think so?" she returned airily.
"I don't think. I know."
Just an eyebeat her gaze met his, with that hint of shy questioning, of
puzzled doubt that showed a growing interest. "I wonder," she murmured,
and recovered herself little laugh.
How she hated her task, and him! She was a singularly honest woman,
but she must play the siren; must allure this scoundrel to forgetfulness,
with a hurried and yet elude the very familiarity her manner invited. She
knew her part, the heartless enticing coquette, compounded half of passion
and half of selfishness. It was a hateful thing to do, this sacrifice of her
personal reticence, of the individual abstraction in which she wrapped
herself as a cloak, in order to hint at a possibility of some intimacy of
feeling between them. She shrank from it with a repugnance hardly to be
overcome, but she held herself with an iron will and consummate art to the
role she had undertaken. Two lives hung on her success. She must not
forget that. She would not let herself forget that--and one of them that of
the man she loved.
So, bravely she played her part, repelling always with a hint of
invitation, denying with the promise in her fascinated eyes of ultimate
surrender to his ardor. In the zest of the pursuit the minutes slipped away
unnoticed. Never had a woman seemed to him more subtly elusive, and
never had he felt more sure of himself. Her charm grew on him, stirred his
pulses to a faster beat. For it was his favorite sport, and this warm, supple
young creature, who was to be the victim of his bow and arrow, showed
herself worthy of his mettle.
The clock downstairs struck the half-hour, and Bannister, reminded of
what lay before him outside, made a move to go. Her alert eyes had been
expecting it, and she forestalled him by a change of tactics. Moved
apparently by impulse, she seated herself on the piano-stool, swept the
keys for an instant with her fingers, and plunged into the brilliant
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"I make you a present of the information. I love him, and I despise you.
Nothing can change those facts," she retorted whitely.
"Mebbe, but some day y'u'll crawl on your knees to beg my pardon for
having told me so."
"There is your overweening vanity again," she commented.
"I'm going to break y'u, my beauty, so that y'u'll come running when I
snap my fingers."
"We'll see."
"And in the meantime I'll go hang your lover." He bowed ironically,
swung on his jingling heel, and strode out of the room.
She stood there listening to his dying footfalls, then covered her face
with her hands, as if to press back the dreadful vision her mind conjured.
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of the stairs, with four stalwart plainsmen back of him. The rush of many
feet came up pell-mell, and he flung the leaders back on those behind.
"Hold on there. This isn't a free-lunch counter. Don't you see we're
crowded up here already?"
"What's eating you ? Whyfor, can't we come?" growled one of the
foremost nursing an injured nose.
"I've just explained to you, son, that it's crowded. Folks are prevalent
enough up here right now. Send up that bunch of keys and we'll bring your
meat to you fast enough."
"What's that? What's that?" The outlaw chief pushed his way through
the dense mob at the door and reached the stairway.
"He won't let us up," growled one of them.
"Who won't?" demanded Bannister sharply, and at once came leaping
up the stairs.
"Nothing doing," drawled Frisco, and tossed him over the railing on to
the heads of his followers below.
They carried Bannister into the open air, for his head had struck the
newel-post in his descent. This gave the defense a few minutes respite.
"They're going to come a-shooting next time," remarked Denver. "Just
as soon as he comes back from bye-low land you'll see things hum."
"Y'u bet," agreed Missou. We'll last about three minutes when the
stampede begins."
The scream of an engine pierced the night.
Denver's face lit. "Make it five minutes, Missou, and Mac is safe. At
least, I'm hoping so awful hard. Miss Helen wired for the militia from
Sheridan this nothing. Chances are they're on that train. I couldn't tell you
earlier because she made me promise not to. She was afraid it might leak
out and get things started sooner. "
Weak but furious, the miscreant from the Shoshones returned to the
attack. "Break in the back door and sneak up behind on those fellows.
We'll have the men we want inside of fifteen minutes," he promised the
mob.
"We'll rush them from both sides, and show those guys on the landing
whether they can stop us," added Bostwick.
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Suddenly some one raised the cry, "The soldiers!" Bannister looked up
the street and swore a vicious oath. Swinging down the road at double
time came a company of militia in khaki. He was mad with baffled fury,
but he made good his retreat at once and disappeared promptly into the
nearest dark alley.
The mob scattered by universal impulse; disintegrated so promptly that
within five minutes the soldiers held the ground alone, save for the
officials of the prison and Denver's little band.
A boyish lieutenant lately out of the Point, and just come in to a
lieutenancy in the militia, was in command. "In time?" he asked anxiously,
for this was his first independent expedition.
"Y'u bet," chuckled Denver. "We're right glad to see you, and I'll bet
those boys in the cage ain't regretting your arrival any. Fifteen minutes
later and you would have been in time to hold the funeral services, I
reckon." "Where is Miss Messiter?" asked the young officer.
"She's at the Elk House, colonel. I expect some of us better drift over
there and tell her it's all right. She's the gamest little woman that ever
crossed the Wyoming line. Hadn't been for her these boys would have
been across the divide hours ago. She's a plumb thoroughbred. Wouldn't
give up an inch. All day she has generaled this thing; played a mighty
weak hand for a heap more than it was worth. Sand? Seh: she's grit clear
through, if anybody asks you." And Denver told the story of the day,
making much of her unflinching courage and nothing of her men's
readiness to back whatever steps she decided upon.
It was ten minutes past eleven when a smooth young, apple-cheeked
lad in khaki presented himself before Helen Messiter with a bow never
invented outside of West Point.
"I am Lieutenant Beecher. Governor Raleigh presents his compliments
by me, Miss Messiter, and is very glad to be able to put at your service
such forces as are needed to quiet the town."
"You were in time?" she breathed.
"With about five minutes to spare. I am having the prisoners brought
here for the night if you do not object. In the morning I shall investigate
the affair, and take such steps as are necessary. In the meantime you may
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"Y'u're the best friend a man ever had. That's all I can say."
"It's enough, since you mean it, even though it isn't true," she answered
gently.
Their eyes met, fastened for an instant, and by common consent
looked away.
As it chanced they were close to the window, their shadows reflected
on the blind. A man, slipping past in the street on horseback, stopped at
sight of that lighted window, with the moving shadows, in an
uncontrollable white fury. He slid from the saddle, threw the reins over the
horse's head to the ground, and slipped his revolver from its holster and
back to make sure that he could draw it easily. Then he passed springily
across the road to the hotel and up the stairs. He trod lightly, stealthily, and
by his very wariness defeated his purpose of eluding observation. For a
pair of keen eyes from the hotel office glimpsed the figure stealing past so
noiselessly, and promptly followed up the stairway.
"Hope I don't intrude at this happy family gathering."
Helen, who had been pouring a glass of cordial for the spent and
wounded sheepman, put the glass down on the table and turned at sound of
the silken, sinister voice. After one glance at the vindictive face, from the
cold eyes of which hate seemed to smolder, she took an instinctive step
toward her lover. The cold wave that drenched her heart accompanied an
assurance that the man in the doorway meant trouble.
His sleek smile arrested her. He was standing with his feet apart, his
hands clasped lightly behind his back, as natty and as well groomed as was
his wont.
"Ah, make the most of what ye yet may spend, Before ye, too, into the
Dust descend; Dust into Dust, and under Dust to lie, Sans Wine, sans Song,
sans Singer, and--sans End!"
he misquoted, with a sneer; and immediately interrupted his irony to
give way to one of his sudden blind rages.
With incredible swiftness his right hand moved forward and up,
catching revolver from scabbard as it rose. But by a fraction of a second
his purpose had been anticipated. A closed fist shot forward to the salient
jaw in time to fling the bullets into the ceiling. An arm encircled the
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outlaw's neck, and flung him backward down the stairs. The railing broke
his fall, and on it his body slid downward, the weapon falling from his
hand. He pulled himself together at the foot of the stairs, crouched for an
upward rush, but changed his mind instantly. The young officer who had
flung him down had him covered with his own six-shooter. He could hear
footsteps running toward him, and he knew that in a few seconds he would
be in the hands of the soldiers. Plunging out of the doorway, the desperado
vaulted to the saddle and drove his spurs home. For a minute hoofs
pounded on the hard, white road. Then the night swallowed him and the
echo of his disappearance.
"That was Bannister of the Shoshones and the Tetons," the girl's white
lips pronounced to Lieutenant Beecher.
"And I let him get away from me," the disappointed lad groaned.
"Why, I had him right in my hands. I could have throttled him as easy. But
how was I to know he would have nerve enough to come rushing into a
hotel full of soldiers hunting him?"
"Y'u have a very persistent cousin, Mr. Bannister," said McWilliams,
coming forward from the alcove with shining eyes. "And I must say he's
game. Did y'u ever hear the like? Come butting in here as cool as if he
hadn't a thing to do but sing out orders like he was in his own home. He
was that easy."
"It seems to me that a little of the praise is due Lieutenant Beecher. If
he hadn't dealt so competently with the situation murder would have been
done. Did you learn your boxing at the Academy, Lieutenant?" Helen
asked, trying to treat the situation lightly in spite of her hammering heart.
"I was the champion middleweight of our class," Beecher could not
help saying boyishly, with another of his blushes.
"I can easily believe it," returned Helen.
"I wish y'u would teach me how to double up a man so prompt and
immediate," said the admiring foreman.
"I expect I'm under particular obligations to that straight right to the
chin, Lieutenant," chimed in the sheepman. "The fact is that I don't seem
to be able to get out anything except thanks these days. I ought to send my
cousin a letter thanking him for giving me a chance to owe so much
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"Yep! When I was working on the Silver Dollar. Must a-been three
years ago, I reckon, when Jerry Miller got that chapping."
"Threw down the outfit in a row they had with the Lafferty crowd,
didn't he?" asked Denver.
Frisco nodded.
Mac got up, glanced round, and reached for his hat. "I reckon I'll have
to be going," he said, and forthright departed.
Reddy reached for HIS hat and rose. "I got to go and have a talk with
Mac," he explained.
Denver got to the door first and his big frame filled it.
"Don't hurry, Reddy. It ain't polite to rush away right after dinner.
Besides, Mac will be here all day. He ain't starting for New York."
"Y'u're gittin' blamed particular. Mac he went right out."
"But Mac didn't have a most particular engagement with the boys.
There's a difference."
"Why, I ain't got--" Reddy paused and looked around helplessly.
"Gents, I move y'u that it be the horse sense of the Lazy D that our
friend Mr. Reddy Reeves be given gratis one chapping immediately if not
sooner. The reason for which same being that he played a lowdown trick
on the outfit whose bread he was eating."
"Oh, quit your foolin', boys," besought the victim anxiously.
"And that Denver, being some able-bodied and having a good reach,
be requested to deliver same to the gent needing it," concluded Missou.
Reddy backed in alarm to the wall. "Y'u boys don't want to get gay
with me. Y'u can't monkey with--"
Motion carried unanimously.
Just as Reddy whipped out his revolver Denver's long leg shot out and
his foot caught the wrist behind the weapon. When Reddy next took
cognizance of his surroundings he was serving as a mattress for the
anatomy of three stalwart riders. He was gently deposited face down on
his bunk with a one-hundred-eighty-pound live peg at the end of each arm
and leg.
"All ready, Denver," announced Frisco from the end of the left foot.
Denver selected a pair of plain leather chaps with care and proceeded
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book,
"'Sugar is sweet, The sky is blue, Grass is green And so are you.'
I reckon, being a perfect gentleman, he meant--"
"You know very well you wrote that in yourself and pretended it was
Mr. Halliday, signing his name and everything. It wasn't a bit nice of you."
"Now do I look like a forger?" he wanted to know with innocence on
his cherubic face.
"Anyway you know it was mean. Mr. Halliday wouldn't do such a
thing. You take your arm down and keep it where it belongs, Mr.
McWilliams."
"That ain't my name, Nora, darling, and I'd like to know where my arm
belongs if it isn't round the prettiest girl in Wyoming. What's the use of
being engaged if--"
"I'm not sure I'm going to stay engaged to you," announced the young
woman coolly, walking at the opposite edge of the path from him.
"Now that ain't any way to talk "
"You needn't lecture me. I'm not your wife and I don't think I'm going
to be," cut in Nora, whose temper was ruffled on account of having had to
wait for him as well as for other reasons.
"Y'u surely wouldn't make me sue y'u for breach of promise, would
y'u?" he demanded, with a burlesque of anxiety that was the final straw.
Nora turned on her heel and headed for the house.
"Now don't y'u get mad at me, honey. I was only joking," he explained
as he pursued her.
"You think you can laugh at me all you please. I'll show you that you
can't," she informed him icily.
"Sho! I wasn't laughing at y'u. What tickled me--"
"I'm not interested in your amusement, Mr. McWilliams."
"What's the use of flying out about a little thing like that? Honest, I
don't even know what you're mad at me for," the perplexed foreman
averred.
"I'm not mad at you, as you call it. I'm simply disgusted."
And with a final "Good night" flung haughtily over her shoulder Miss
Nora Darling disappeared into the house.
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Mac took off his hat and gazed at the door that had been closed in his
face. He scratched his puzzled poll in vain.
"I ce'tainly got mine good and straight just like Reddy got his. But
what in time was it all about? And me thinkin' I was a graduate in the
study of the ladies. I reckon I never did get jarred up so. It's plumb
discouraging."
If he could have caught a glimpse of Nora at that moment, lying on her
bed and crying as if her heart would break, Mac might have found the
situation less hopeless.
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both allured and maddened. "I did rather do you that time," she allowed.
"This is the return match. You won then. I win now," he told her, with
a look that chilled.
"Indeed! But isn't that rather discounting the future?"
"Only the immediate future. Y'u're mine, my beauty, and I mean to
take y'u with me."
Just a disdainful sweep of her eyes she gave him as she rose from the
piano-stool and rearranged the lamps. "You mean so much that never
comes to pass, Mr. Bannister. The road to the nether regions is paved with
good intentions, we are given to understand. Not that yours can by any
stretch of imagination be called 'good intentions.'"
"Contrariwise, then, perhaps the road to heaven may be paved with
evil intentions. Since y'u travel the road with me, wherever it may lead, it
were but gallant to hope so."
He took three sharp steps toward her and stood looking down in her
face, her sweet slenderness so close to him that the perfume mounted to
his brain. Surely no maiden had ever been more desirable than this one,
who held him in such contemptuous estimation that only her steady eyes
moved at his approach. These held to his and defied him, while she stood
leaning motionless against the table with such strong and supple grace.
She knew what he meant to do, hated him for it, and would not give him
the satisfaction of flying an inch from him or struggling with him.
"Your eyes are pools of splendor. That's right. Make them flash fire. I
love to see such spirit, since it offers a more enticing pleasure in
breaking," he told her, with an admiration half ironic but wholly genuine.
"Pools of splendor, my beauty! Therefore I salute them."
At the touch of his lips upon her eyelids a shiver ran through her, but
still she made no movement, was cold to him as marble. "You coward!"
she said softly, with an infinite contempt.
"Your lips," he continued to catalogue, "are ripe as fresh flesh of
Southern fruit. No cupid ever possessed so adorable a mouth. A worshiper
of Eros I, as now I prove."
This time it was the mouth he kissed, the while her unconquered spirit
looked out of the brave eyes, and fain would have murdered him. In turn
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he kissed her cold cheeks, the tip of one of her little ears, the small,
clenched fist with which she longed to strike him.
"Are you quite through?"
"For the present, and now, having put the seal of my ownership on her
more obvious charms, I'll take my bride home."
"I would die first."
"Nay, you'll die later, Madam Bannister, but not for many years, I
hope," he told her, with a theatrical bow.
"Do you think me so weak a thing as your words imply?"
"Rather so strong that the glory of overcoming y'u fills me with joy.
Believe me, madam, though your master I am not less your slave," he
mocked.
"You are neither my master nor my slave, but a thing I detest," she said,
in a low voice that carried extraordinary intensity.
"And obey," he added, suavely. "Come, madam, to horse, for our
honeymoon."
"I tell you I shall not go."
"Then, in faith, we'll re-enact a modern edition of 'The Taming of the
Shrew.' Y'u'll find me, sweet, as apt at the part as old Petruchio." He paced
complacently up the room and back, and quoted glibly:
"And thus I'll curb her mad and headstrong humor. He that knows
better how to tame a shrew, Now let him, speak; 'tis charity to show."
"Would you take me against my will?"
"Y'u have said it. What's your will to me? What I want I take. And I
sure want my beautiful shrew." His half-shuttered eyes gloated on her as
he rattled off a couple more lines from the play he had mentioned.
"Kate, like the hazel-twig, Is straight and slender, and as brown in hue
As hazel-nuts, and sweeter than the kernels."
She let a swift glance travel anxiously to the door. "You are in a very
poetical mood to-day."
"As befits a bridegroom, my own." He stepped lightly to the window
and tapped twice on the pane. "A signal to bring the horses round. If y'u
have any preparations to make, any trousseau to prepare, y'u better set that
girl of yours to work."
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The outlaw intentionally misunderstood. "If I've got to take y'u, then
we'll say y'u go dead rather than alive."
"He was going to take Nora and me with him," Helen explained to her
friends.
Instantly the man swung round on her. "But now I've changed my
mind, ma'am. I'm going to take my cousin with me instead of y'u ladies."
Helen caught his meaning first, and flashed it whitely to her lover. It
dawned on him more slowly.
"I see y'u remember, Miss Messiter," he continued, with a cruel, silken
laugh. "He gave me his parole to go with me whenever I said the word. I'm
saying it now." He sat down astride a chair, put his chin on the back cross-
bar, and grinned malevolently from one to another.
"What's come over this happy family? It don't look so joyous all of a
sudden. Y'u don't need to worry, ma'am, I'll send him back to y'u all right--
alive or dead. With his shield or on it, y'u know. Ha! ha!"
"You will not go with him?" It was wrung from Helen as a low cry,
and struck her lover's heart.
"I must," he answered. "I gave him my word, y'u remember."
"But why keep it? You know what he is, how absolutely devoid of
honor."
"That is not quite the question, is it?" he smiled.
"Would he keep his word to you?"
"Not if a lie would do as well. But that isn't the point, either."
"It's quixotic--foolish--worse than that--ridiculous," she implored.
"Perhaps, but the fact remains that I am pledged."
"'I could not love thee, dear, so much Loved I not honor more,'"
murmured the villain in the chair, apparently to the ceiling. "Dear Ned,
he always was the soul of honor. I'll have those lines carved on his
tombstone."
"You see! He is already bragging that he means to kill you," said the
girl.
"I shall go armed," the sheepman answered.
"Yes, but he will take you into the mountain fastnesses, where the men
that serve him will do his bidding. What is one man among so many?"
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"I'll dry my socks every time I get my feet wet for fear of taking cold,"
he laughed.
"But you will, won't you?"
"I'll be very careful, Helen," he promised more gravely.
Even then she could hardly let him go, clinging to him with a
reluctance to separate that was a new experience to her independent,
vigorous youth. In the end he unloosened her arm, kissed her once, and
hurried out of the room. In the hallway he met McWilliams, also hurryin
out from a tearful farewell on the part of Nora.
Bannister, the outlaw, already mounted, was waiting for them. "Y'u did
get through at last, he drawled insolently. "Well, if y'u'll kindly give orders
to your seven-foot dwarf to point the Winchester another way I'll collect
my men an we'll be moving."
For, though the outlaw had left his men in command of the ranch when
he went into the house, he found the situation reversed on his return. With
the arrival of reinforcements, in the persons of McWilliams and his friend,
it had been the turn of the raiders to turn over their weapons.
"All right, Denver," nodded the foreman.
The outlaw chief whistled for his men, and with their guests they rode
into the silent, desert night.
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again. It led in and out among the foot-hills slopping upward gradually
toward the first long blue line of the Shoshones that stretched before them
in the distance. Their nooning was at running stream called Smith's Creek,
and by nightfall the party was well up in the higher foot hills.
In the course of the day and the second night both the sheepman and
his friend made attempt to establish a more cordial relationship with
Chalkeye, but so far as any apparent results went their efforts were vain.
He refused grimly to meet their overtures half way, even though it was
plain from his manner that a break between him and his chief could not
long be avoided.
All day by crooked trails they pushed forward, and as the party
advanced into the mountains the gloom of the mournful pines and
frowning peaks invaded its spirits. Suspicion and distrust went with it,
camped at night by the rushing mountain stream, lay down to sleep in the
shadows at every man's shoulder. For each man looked with an ominous
eye on his neighbor, watchful of every sudden move, of every careless
word that might convey a sudden meaning.
Along a narrow rock-rim trail far above a steep canon, whose walls
shot precipitously down, they were riding in single file, when the outlaw
chief pushed his horse forward between the road wall and his cousin's
bronco. The sheepman immediately fell back.
"I reckon this trail isn't wide enough for two--unless y'u take the
outside," he explained quietly.
The outlaw, who had been drinking steadily ever since leaving the
Lazy D, laughed his low, sinister cackle. "Afraid of me, are y'u? Afraid I'll
push y'u off?"
"Not when I'm inside and you don't have chance."
"'Twas a place about like this I drove for thousand of your sheep over
last week. With sheep worth what they are I'm afraid it must have cost y'u
quite a bit. Not that y'u'll miss it where you are going," he hastened to add.
"It was very like you to revenge yourself on dumb animals."
"Think so?" The "King's" black gaze rested on him. "Y'u'll sing a
different song soon Mr. Bannister. It's humans I'll drive next time and don't
y'u forget it."
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The man came back with palpable hesitancy. "I was aiming to go and
get the boys to bury them. My God, did you ever see anything so quick?
They drilled through each other like lightning."
Mac looked him over with dry contempt. "My friend, y'u're too tender
for a genuwine A1 bad man. If I was handing y'u a bunch of advice it
would be to get back to the prosaic paths of peace right prompt. And while
we're on the subject I'll borrow your guns. Y'u're scared stiff and it might
get into your fool coconut to plug one of us and light out. I'd hate to see
y'u commit suicide right before us, so I'll just natcherally unload y'u."
He was talking to lift the strain, and it was for the same purpose that
Bannister moved over to Hughie, who sat with his face in his hands, trying
to shut out the horror of what he had seen.
The sheepman dropped a hand on his shoulder gently. "Brace up, boy!
Don't you see that the very best thing that could have happened is this. It's
best for y'u, best for the rest of the gang and best for the whole cattle
country. We'll have peace here at last. Now he's gone, honest men are
going to breathe easy. I'll take y'u in hand and set y'u at work on one of my
stations, if y'u like. Anyhow, you'll have a chance to begin life again in a
better way."
"That's right," agreed the blatant youth. "I'm sick of rustling the mails
and other folks' calves. I'm glad he got what was coming to him," he
concluded vindictively, with a glance at his dead chief and a sudden
raucous oath.
McWilliams's cold blue eye transfixed him "Hadn't you better be a
little careful how your mouth goes off? For one thing, he's daid now; and
for another, he happens to be Mr. Bannister's cousin."
"But--weren't they enemies?"
"That's how I understand it. But this man's passed over the range. A
MAN doesn't unload his hatred on dead folks--and I expect if y'u'll study
him, even y'u will be able to figure out that my friend measures up to the
size of a real man."
"I don't see why if--"
"No, I don't suppose y'u do," interrupted the foreman, turning on his
heel. Then to Bannister, who was looking down at his cousin with a stony
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face: "I reckon, Bann, we better make arrangements to have the bodies
buried right here in the valley," he said gently.
Bannister was thinking of early days, of the time when this miscreant,
whose light had just been put out so instantaneously, had played with him
day in and day out. They had attended their first school together, had
played marbles and prisoners' base a hundred times against each other. He
could remember how they used to get up early in the morning to go fishing
with each other. And later, when each began, unconsciously, to choose the
path he would follow in already beginning to settle into an established fact.
He could see now, by looking back on trifles of their childhood, that his
cousin had been badly handicapped in his fight with himself against the
evil in him. He had inherited depraved instincts and tastes, and with them
somewhere in him a strand of weakness that prevented him from slaying
the giants he had to oppose in the making of a good character. From bad to
worse he had gone, and here he lay with the drizzling rain on his white
face, a warning and a lesson to wayward youths just setting their feet in
the wrong direction. Surely it was kismet.
Ned Bannister untied the handkerchief from his neck and laid it across
the face of his kinsman. A moment longer he looked down, then passed his
hands across his eyes and seemed to brush away the memories that
thronged him. He stepped forward to the fire and warmed his hands.
"We'll go on, Mac, to the rendezvous he had appointed with his outfit.
We ought to reach there by noon, and the boys can send a wagon back to
get the bodies."
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black coffee. Before sun rose every man was at his post far up on the
Squaw Creek ridges ready to begin the drive.
Later in the day Helen rode to the parade grounds, toward which a
stream of cattle was pouring down the canyon of the creek. Every gulch
tributary to the creek contributed its quota of wild cows and calves. These
came romping down the canyon mouth, where four picked men, with a
bunch of tame cows in front of them, stopped the rush of flying cattle.
Lunch was omitted, and branding began at once. Every calf belonging to a
Lazy D cow, after being roped and tied, was flanked with the great D
which indicated its ownership by Miss Messiter, and on account of the
recumbent position of which letter the ranch had its name.
It was during the branding that a boyish young fellow rode up and
handed Helen a note. Her heart pumped rapidly with relief, for one glance
told her that it was in the handwriting of the Ned Bannister she loved. She
tore it open and glanced swiftly through it.
DEAR FRIEND: Two hours ago my cousin was killed by one of his
own men. I am sending back to you a boy who had been led astray by him,
and it would be a great service to me if you would give him something to
do till I return. His name is Hugh Rogers. I think if you trust him he will
prove worthy of it.
Jim and I are going to stay here a few days longer to finish the work
that is begun. We hope to meet and talk with as many of the men
implicated in my cousin's lawlessness as is possible. What the result will
be I cannot say. We do not consider ourselves in any danger whatever,
though we are not taking chances. If all goes well we shall be back within
a few days.
I hope you are not missing Jim too much at the roundup. Sincerely,
NED BANNISTER
She liked the letter because there was not a hint of the relationship
between them to be read in it. He had guarded her against the chance of its
falling into the wrong hands and creating talk about them.
She turned to Hughie. "Can you ride?"
"In a way, ma'am. I can't ride like these men." His glance indicated a
cow-puncher pounding past after a wild steer that had broken through the
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no horsewoman her mistress took her out one day in her motor. The drive
had been that day on Bronco Mesa, and had finished in the natural corral
made by Bear Canon, fenced with a cordon of riders at the end opening to
the plains below. After watching for two hours the busy scenes of cutting
out, roping and branding, Helen wheeled her car and started down the
canyon on their return.
Now, a herd of wild cattle is uncertain as an April day's behavior.
Under the influence of the tame valley cattle among which they are driven,
after a little milling around, the whole bunch may gentle almost
immediately, or, on the other hand, it may break through and go crashing
away on a wild stampede at a moment's notice. Every experienced
cowman knows enough to expect the unexpected.
At Bronco Mesa the round-up had proceeded with unusual facility.
Scores of wiry, long-legged steers had drifted down the ridges or gulches
that led to the canon; and many a cow, followed by its calf, had stumbled
forward to the herd and apparently accepted the inevitable. But before
Helen Messiter had well started out of the canyon's mouth the situation
changed absolutely.
A big hill steer, which had not seen a man for a year, broke through the
human corral with a bellow near a point where Reddy kept guard. The
puncher wheeled and gave chase, Before the other men could close the
opening a couple of two-year-olds seized the opportunity and followed its
lead. A second rider gave chase, and at once, as if some imp of mischief
had stirred them, fifty tails went up in wild flight. Another minute and the
whole herd was in stampede.
Down the gulch the five hundred cattle thundered toward the motor car,
which lay directly in their path. Helen turned, appreciated the danger, and
put the machine at its full speed. The road branched for a space of about
fifty yards, and in her excitement she made the mistake of choosing the
lower, more level, one. Into a deep sand bed they plowed, the wheels
sinking at every turn. Slower and slower went the car; finally came to a
full stop.
Nora glanced back in affright at the two hundred and fifty tons of beef
that was charging wildly toward them. "What shall we do?" she gasped,
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took it without apparent hesitation. Into the ear of the bullock he sent the
lead crashing. The brute stumbled and went down head over heels. Its
flying hoofs struck the flanks of the pony, but the bronco stuck to its feet,
and next moment staggered out from among the herd stragglers and came
to halt.
The man slid from its back and lifted down the half-fainting girl. She
clung to him, white a trembling. "Oh, it was horrible, Ned!" She could still
look down in imagination upon the sea of dun backs that swayed and
surged about them like storm-tossed waves.
"It was a near thing, but we made it, girl. So did Jim. He got out before
we did. It's all past now. You can remember it as the most exciting
experience of your life."
She shuddered. "I don't want to remember it at all." And so shaken was
she that she did not realize that his arm was about her the while she
sobbed on his shoulder.
"A cattle stampede is a nasty thing to get in front of. Never mind. It's
done with now and everybody's safe."
She drew a long breath. "Yes, everybody's safe and you are back home.
Why didn't you come after your cousin was killed?"
"I had to finish my work."
"And DID you finish it?"
"I think we did. There will be no more Shoshone gang. It's members
have scatted in all directions."
"I'm glad you stayed, then. We can live at peace now." And presently
she added: "I knew you would not come back until you had done what you
set out to do. You're very obstinate, sir. Do you know that?"
"Perseverance, I call it," he smiled, glad to see that she was recovering
her lightness of tone.
"You don't always insist on putting your actions in the most favorable
light. Do you remember the first day I ever saw you?"
"Am I likely ever to forget it?" he smiled fondly.
"I didn't mean THAT. What I was getting at was that you let me go
away from you thinking you were 'the king.' I haven't forgiven you
entirely for that."
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the day? Besides, I want time to change my mind if I should decide to."
"That's what I'm afraid of," he laughed joyfully. "So I have to insist on
an early marriage."
"Insist?" she demurred.
"I've been told on the best of authority that I'm very obstinate," he
gayly answered.
"I have a mind of my own myself. If I ever marry you be sure I shall
name the day, sir."
"Will y'u marry me the day Nora does Jim?"
"We'll see." The eyes slanted at him under the curved lashes, teased
him delightfully. "Did Nora tell you she was going to marry Jim?"
Bannister looked mildly hurt. "My common sense has been telling it to
me a month."
"How long has your common sense been telling you about us?"
"I didn't use it when I fell in love with y'u," he boldly laughed.
"Of all things to say!"
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