of the outcome. They swept down upon Separ like all the hordes of legend– more egregiously, perhaps, because they were play-acting and no serious horde would go on so. Our final hundred yards of speed and copious howling brought all dwellers in Separ out to gaze and disappear like rabbits–all save the new agent in the station. Nobody ran out or in there, and the horde whirled up to the tiny, defenceless building and leaped to earth–except Lin and me; we sat watching. The innocent door stood open wide to any cool breeze or invasion, and Honey Wiggin tramped in foremost, hat lowering over eyes and pistol prominent. He stopped rooted, staring, and his mouth came open slowly; his hand went feeling up for his hat, and came down with it by degrees as by degrees his grin spread. Then in a milky voice, he said: “Why, excuse me, ma’am! Good-morning.”
There answered a clear, long, rippling, ample laugh. It came out of the open door into the heat; it made the sun-baked air merry; it seemed to welcome and mock; it genially hovered about us in the dusty quiet of Separ; for there was no other sound anywhere at all in the place, and the great plain stretched away silent all round it. The bulging water-tank shone overhead in bland, ironic safety.
The horde stood blank; then it shifted its legs, looked sideways at itself, and in a hesitating clump reached the door, shambled in, and removed its foolish hat.
“Good-morning, gentlemen,” said Jessamine Buckner, seated behind her railing; and various voices endeavored to reply conventionally.
“If you have any letters, ma’am,” said the Virginian, more inventive, “I’ll take them. Letters for Judge Henry’s.” He knew the judge’s office was seventy miles from here.
“Any for the C. Y.?” muttered another, likewise knowing better.
It was a happy, if simple, thought, and most of them inquired for the mail. Jessamine sought carefully, making them repeat their names, which some did guiltily: they foresaw how soon the lady would find out no letters ever came for these names!
There was no letter for any one present.
“I’m sorry, truly,” said Jessamine behind the railing. “For you seemed real anxious to get news. Better luck next time! And if I make mistakes, please everybody set me straight, for of course I don’t understand things yet.”
“Yes, m’m.”
“Good-day, m’m.”
“Thank yu’, m’m.’
They got themselves out of the station and into their saddles.
“No, she don’t understand things yet,” soliloquized the Virginian. “Oh dear, no.” He turned his slow, dark eyes upon us. “You Lin McLean,” said he, in his gentle voice, “you have cert’nly fooled me plumb through this mawnin’.”
Then the horde rode out of town, chastened and orderly till it was quite small across the sagebrush, when reaction seized it. It sped suddenly and vanished in dust with far, hilarious cries and here were Lin and I, and here towered the water-tank, shining and shining.
Thus did Separ’s vigilante take possession and vindicate Lin’s knowledge of his kind. It was not three days until the Virginian, that lynx observer, fixed his grave eyes upon McLean “‘Neighbor’ is as cute a name for a six-shooter as ever I heard,” said he. “But she’ll never have need of your gun in Separ–only to shoot up peaceful playin’-cyards while she hearkens to your courtin’.”
That was his way of congratulation to a brother lover. “Plumb strange,” he said to me one morning after an hour of riding in silence, “how a man will win two women while another man gets aged waitin’ for one.”
“Your hair seems black as ever,” said I.
“My hopes ain’t so glossy any more,” he answered. “Lin has done better this second trip.”
“Mrs. Lusk don’t count,” said I.
“I reckon she counted mighty plentiful when he thought he’d got her clamped to him by lawful marriage. But Lin’s lucky.” And the Virginian fell silent again.
Lucky Lin bestirred him over his work, his plans, his ranch on Box Elder that was one day to be a home for his lady. He came and went, seeing his idea triumph and his girl respected. Not only was she a girl, but a good shot too. And as if she and her small, neat home were a sort of possession, the cow-punchers would boast of her to strangers. They would have dealt heavily now with the wretch who should trifle with the water-tank. When camp came within visiting distance, you would see one or another shaving and parting his hair. They wrote unnecessary letters, and brought them to mail as excuses for an afternoon call. Honey Wiggin, more original, would look in the door with his grin, and hold up an ace of clubs. “I thought maybe yu’ could spare a minute for a shootin’-match,” he would insinuate; and Separ now heard no more objectionable shooting than this. Texas brought her presents of game–antelope, sage-chickens– but, shyness intervening, he left them outside the door, and entering, dressed in all the “Sunday” that he had, would sit dumbly in the lady’s presence. I remember his emerging from one of these placid interviews straight into the hands of his tormentors.
“If she don’t notice your clothes, Texas,” said the Virginian, “just mention them to her.”
“Now yer’ve done offended her,” shrilled Manassas Donohoe. “She heard that.”
“She’ll hear you singin’ sooprano,” said Honey Wiggin. “It’s good this country has reformed, or they’d have you warblin’ in some dance-hall and corrupt your morals.”
“You sca’cely can corrupt the morals of a soprano man,” observed the Virginian. “Go and play with Billy till you can talk bass.”
But it was the boldest adults that Billy chose for playmates. Texas he found immature. Moreover, when next he came, he desired play with no one. Summer was done. September’s full moon was several nights ago; he had gone on his hunt with Lin, and now spelling-books were at hand. But more than this clouded his mind, he had been brought to say good-bye to Jessamine Buckner, who had scarcely seen him, and to give her a wolverene-skin, a hunting trophy. “She can have it,” he told me. “I like her.” Then he stole a look at his guardian. “If they get married and send me back to mother,” said he, “I’ll run away sure.” So school and this old dread haunted the child, while for the man, Lin the lucky, who suspected nothing of it, time was ever bringing love nearer to his hearth. His Jessamine had visited Box Elder, and even said she wanted chickens there; since when Mr. McLean might occasionally have been seen at his cabin, worrying over barn-yard fowls, feeding and cursing them with equal care. Spring would see him married, he told me.
“This time right!” he exclaimed. “And I want her to know Billy some more before he goes to Bear Creek.”
“Ah, Bear Creek!” said Billy, acidly. “Why can’t I stay home?”
“Home sounds kind o’ slick,” said Lin to me. “Don’t it, now? ‘Home’ is closer than ‘neighbor,’ you bet! Billy, put the horses in the corral, and ask Miss Buckner if we can come and see her after supper. If you’re good, maybe she’ll take yu’ for a ride to-morrow. And, kid, ask her about Laramie.”
Again suspicion quivered over Billy’s face, and he dragged his horses angrily to the corral.
Lin nudged me, laughing. “I can rile him every time about Laramie,” said he, affectionately. “I wouldn’t have believed the kid set so much store by me. Nor I didn’t need to ask Jessamine to love him for my sake. What do yu’ suppose? Before I’d got far as thinking of Billy at all–right after Edgeford, when my head was just a whirl of joy–Jessamine says to me one day, ‘Read that.’ It was Governor Barker writin’ to her about her brother and her sorrow.” Lin paused. “And about me. I can’t never tell you–but he said a heap I didn’t deserve. And he told her about me picking up Billy in Denver streets that time, and doing for him because his own home was not a good one. Governor Barker wrote Jessamine all that; and she said, ‘Why did you never tell me?’ And I said it wasn’t anything to tell. And she just said to me, ‘It shall be as if he was your son and I was his mother.’ And that’s the first regular kiss she ever gave me I didn’t have to take myself. God bless her! God bless her!”
As we ate our supper, young Billy burst out of brooding silence: “I didn’t ask her about Laramie. So there!”
“Well, well, kid,” said the cow-puncher, patting his head, “yu’ needn’t to, I guess.”
But Billy’s eye remained sullen and jealous. He paid slight attention to the picture-book of soldiers and war that Jessamine gave him when we went over to the station. She had her own books, some flowers in pots, a rocking-chair, and a cosey lamp that shone on her bright face and dark dress. We drew stools from the office desks, and Billy perched silently on one.
“Scanty room for company!” Jessamine said. “But we must make out this way–till we have another way.” She smiled on Lin, and Billy’s face darkened. “Do you know,” she pursued to me, “with all those chickens Mr. McLean tells me about, never a one has he thought to bring here.”
“Livin’ or dead do you want ’em?” inquired Lin.
“Oh, I’ll not bother you. Mr. Donohoe says he will–“
“Texas? Chickens? Him? Then he’ll have to steal ’em!” And we all laughed together.
“You won’t make me go back to Laramie, will you?” spoke Billy, suddenly, from his stool.
“I’d like to see anybody try to make you?” exclaimed Jessamine. “Who says any such thing?”
“Lin did,” said Billy.
Jessamine looked at her lover reproachfully. “What a way to tease him!” she said. “And you so kind. Why, you’ve hurt his feelings!”
“I never thought,” said Lin the boisterous. “I wouldn’t have.”
“Come sit here, Billy,” said Jessamine. “Whenever he teases, you tell me, and we’ll make him behave.”
“Honest?” persisted Billy.
“Shake hands on it,” said Jessamine.
“Cause I’ll go to school. But I won’t go back to Laramie for no one. And you’re a-going to be Lin’s wife, honest?”
“Honest! Honest!” And Jessamine, laughing, grew red beside her lamp.
“Then I guess mother can’t never come back to Lin, either,” stated Billy, relieved.
Jessamine let fall the child’s hand.
“Cause she liked him onced, and he liked her.”
Jessamine gazed at Lin.
“It’s simple,” said the cow-puncher. “It’s all right.”
But Jessamine sat by her lamp, very pale.
“It’s all right,” repeated Lin in the silence, shifting his foot and looking down. “Once I made a fool of myself. Worse than usual.”
“Billy?” whispered Jessamine. “Then you–But his name is Lusk!”
“Course it is,” said Billy. “Father and mother are living in Laramie.”
“It’s all straight,” said the cow-puncher. “I never saw her till three years ago. I haven’t anything to hide, only–only–only it don’t come easy to tell.”
I rose. “Miss Buckner,” said I, “he will tell you. But he will not tell you he paid dearly for what was no fault of his. It has been no secret. It is only something his friends and his enemies have forgotten.”
But all the while I was speaking this, Jessamine’s eyes were fixed on Lin, and her face remained white.
I left the girl and the man and the little boy together, and crossed to the hotel. But its air was foul, and I got my roll of camp blankets to sleep in the clean night, if sleeping-time should come; meanwhile I walked about in the silence To have taken a wife once in good faith, ignorant she was another’s, left no stain, raised no barrier. I could have told Jessamine the same old story myself–or almost; but what had it to do with her at all? Why need she know? Reasoning thus, yet with something left uncleared by reason that I could not state, I watched the moon edge into sight, heavy and rich-hued, a melon-slice of glow, seemingly near, like a great lantern tilted over the plain. The smell of the sage-brush flavored the air; the hush of Wyoming folded distant and near things, and all Separ but those three inside the lighted window were in bed. Dark windows were everywhere else, and looming above rose the water-tank, a dull mass in the night, and forever somehow to me a Sphinx emblem, the vision I instantly see when I think of Separ. Soon I heard a door creaking. It was Billy, coming alone, and on seeing me he walked up and spoke in a half-awed voice.
“She’s a-crying,” said he.
I withheld from questions, and as he kept along by my side he said: “I’m sorry. Do you think she’s mad with Lin for what he’s told her? She just sat, and when she started crying he made me go away.”
“I don’t believe she’s mad,” I told Billy; and I sat down on my blanket, he beside me, talking while the moon grew small as it rose over the plain, and the light steadily shone in Jessamine’s window. Soon young Billy fell asleep, and I looked at him, thinking how in a way it was he who had brought this trouble on the man who had saved him and loved him. But that man had no such untender thoughts. Once more the door opened, and it was he who came this time, alone also. She did not follow him and stand to watch him from the threshold, though he forgot to close the door, and, coming over to me, stood looking down.
“What?” I said at length.
I don’t know that he heard me. He stooped over Billy and shook him gently. “Wake, son,” said he. “You and I must get to our camp now.”
“Now?” said Billy. “Can’t we wait till morning?”
“No, son. We can’t wait here any more. Go and get the horses and put the saddles on.” As Billy obeyed, Lin looked at the lighted window. “She is in there,” he said. “She’s in there. So near.” He looked, and turned to the hotel, from which he brought his chaps and spurs and put them on. “I understand her words,” he continued. “Her words, the meaning of them. But not what she means, I guess. It will take studyin’ over. Why, she don’t blame me!” he suddenly said, speaking to me instead of to himself.
“Lin,” I answered, “she has only just heard this, you see. Wait awhile.”
“That’s not the trouble. She knows what kind of man I have been, and she forgives that just the way she did her brother. And she knows how I didn’t intentionally conceal anything. Billy hasn’t been around, and she never realized about his mother and me. We’ve talked awful open, but that was not pleasant to speak of, and the whole country knew it so long–and I never thought! She don’t blame me. She says she understands; but she says I have a wife livin’.”
“That is nonsense,” I declared.
“Yu’ mustn’t say that,” said he. “She don’t claim she’s a wife, either. She just shakes her head when I asked her why she feels so. It must be different to you and me from the way it seems to her. I don’t see her view; maybe I never can see it; but she’s made me feel she has it, and that she’s honest, and loves me true–” His voice broke for a moment. “She said she’d wait.”
“You can’t have a marriage broken that was never tied,” I said. “But perhaps Governor Barker or Judge Henry–“
“No,” said the cow-puncher. “Law couldn’t fool her. She’s thinking of something back of law. She said she’d wait–always. And when I took it in that this was all over and done, and when I thought of my ranch and the chickens–well, I couldn’t think of things at all, and I came and waked Billy to clear out and quit.”
“What did you tell her?” I asked.
“Tell her? Nothin’, I guess. I don’t remember getting out of the room. Why, here’s actually her pistol, and she’s got mine!”
“Man, man!” said I, “go back and tell her to keep it, and that you’ll wait too–always!”
“Would yu’?”
“Look!” I pointed to Jessamine standing in the door.
I saw his face as he turned to her, and I walked toward Billy and the horses. Presently I heard steps on the wooden station, and from its black, brief shadow the two came walking, Lin and his sweetheart, into the moonlight. They were not speaking, but merely walked together in the clear radiance, hand in hand, like two children. I saw that she was weeping, and that beneath the tyranny of her resolution her whole loving, ample nature was wrung. But the strange, narrow fibre in her would not yield! I saw them go to the horses, and Jessamine stood while Billy and Lin mounted. Then quickly the cow-puncher sprang down again and folded her in his arms.
“Lin, dear Lin! dear neighbor!” she sobbed. She could not withhold this last good-bye.
I do not think he spoke. In a moment the horses started and were gone, flying, rushing away into the great plain, until sight and sound of them were lost, and only the sage-brush was there, bathed in the high, bright moon. The last thing I remember as I lay in my blankets was Jessamine’s window still lighted, and the water-tank, clear-lined and black, standing over Separ.
DESTINY AT DRYBONE
PART I
Children have many special endowments, and of these the chiefest is to ask questions that their elders must skirmish to evade. Married people and aunts and uncles commonly discover this, but mere instinct does not guide one to it. A maiden of twenty-three will not necessarily divine it. Now except in one unhappy hour of stress and surprise, Miss Jessamine Buckner had been more than equal to life thus far. But never yet had she been shut up a whole day in one room with a boy of nine. Had this experience been hers, perhaps she would not have written to Mr. McLean the friendly and singular letter in which she hoped he was well, and said that she was very well, and how was dear little Billy? She was glad Mr. McLean had stayed away. That was just like his honorable nature, and what she expected of him. And she was perfectly happy at Separ, and “yours sincerely and always, ‘Neighbor.'” Postscript. Talking of Billy Lusk–if Lin was busy with gathering the cattle, why not send Billy down to stop quietly with her. She would make him a bed in the ticket-office, and there she would be to see after him all the time. She knew Lin did not like his adopted child to be too much in cow-camp with the men. She would adopt him, too, for just as long as convenient to Lin–until the school opened on Bear Creek, if Lin so wished. Jessamine wrote a good deal about how much better care any woman can take of a boy of Billy’s age than any man knows. The stage-coach brought the answer to this remarkably soon– young Billy with a trunk and a letter of twelve pages in pencil and ink– the only writing of this length ever done by Mr. McLean.
“I can write a lot quicker than Lin,” said Billy, upon arriving. “He was fussing at that away late by the fire in camp, an’ waked me up crawling in our bed. An’ then he had to finish it next night when he went over to the cabin for my clothes.”
“You don’t say!” said Jessamine. And Billy suffered her to kiss him again.
When not otherwise occupied Jessamine took the letter out of its locked box and read it, or looked at it. Thus the first days had gone finely at Separ, the weather being beautiful and Billy much out-of-doors. But sometimes the weather changes in Wyoming; and now it was that Miss Jessamine learned the talents of childhood.
Soon after breakfast this stormy morning Billy observed the twelve pages being taken out of their box, and spoke from his sudden brain. “Honey Wiggin says Lin’s losing his grip about girls,” he remarked. “He says you couldn’t ‘a’ downed him onced. You’d ‘a’ had to marry him. Honey says Lin ain’t worked it like he done in old times.”
“Now I shouldn’t wonder if he was right,” said Jessamine, buoyantly. “And that being the case, I’m going to set to work at your things till it clears, and then we’ll go for our ride.”
“Yes,” said Billy. When does a man get too old to marry?”
“I’m only a girl, you see. I don’t know.”
“Yes. Honey said he wouldn’t ‘a’ thought Lin was that old. But I guess he must be thirty.”
“Old!” exclaimed Jessamine. And she looked at a photograph upon her table.
“But Lin ain’t been married very much,” pursued Billy. “Mother’s the only one they speak of. You don’t have to stay married always, do you?”
“It’s better to,” said Jessamine.
“Ah, I don’t think so,” said Billy, with disparagement. “You ought to see mother and father. I wish you would leave Lin marry you, though,” said the boy, coming to her with an impulse of affection. “Why won’t you if he don’t mind?”
She continued to parry him, but this was not a very smooth start for eight in the morning. Moments of lull there were, when the telegraph called her to the front room, and Billy’s young mind shifted to inquiries about the cipher alphabet. And she gained at least an hour teaching him to read various words by the sound. At dinner, too, he was refreshingly silent. But such silences are unsafe, and the weather was still bad. Four o’clock found them much where they had been at eight.
“Please tell me why you won’t leave Lin marry you.” He was at the window, kicking the wall.
“That’s nine times since dinner,” she replied, with tireless good humor. “Now if you ask me twelve–“
“You’ll tell?” said the boy, swiftly.
She broke into a laugh. “No. I’ll go riding and you’ll stay at home. When I was little and would ask things beyond me, they only gave me three times.”
“I’ve got two more, anyway. Ha-ha!”
“Better save ’em up, though.”
“What did they do to you? Ah, I don’t want to go a-riding. It’s nasty all over.” He stared out at the day against which Separ’s doors had been tight closed since morning. Eight hours of furious wind had raised the dust like a sea. “I wish the old train would come,” observed Billy, continuing to kick the wall. “I wish I was going somewheres.” Smoky, level, and hot, the south wind leapt into Separ across five hundred unbroken miles. The plain was blanketed in a tawny eclipse. Each minute the near buildings became invisible in a turbulent herd of clouds. Above this travelling blur of the soil the top of the water-tank alone rose bulging into the clear sun. The sand spirals would lick like flames along the bulk of the lofty tub, and soar skyward. It was not shipping season. The freight-cars stood idle in a long line. No cattle huddled in the corrals. No strangers moved in town. No cow-ponies dozed in front of the saloon. Their riders were distant in ranch and camp. Human noise was extinct in Separ. Beneath the thunder of the sultry blasts the place lay dead in its flapping shroud of dust. “Why won’t you tell me?” droned Billy. For some time he had been returning, like a mosquito brushed away.
“That’s ten times,” said Jessamine, promptly.
“Oh, goodness! Pretty soon I’ll not be glad I came. I’m about twiced as less glad now.”
“Well,” said Jessamine, “there’s a man coming to-day to mend the government telegraph-line between Drybone and McKinney. Maybe he would take you back as far as Box Elder, if you want to go very much. Shall I ask him?”
Billy was disappointed at this cordial seconding of his mood. He did not make a direct rejoinder. “I guess I’ll go outside now,” said he, with a threat in his tone.
She continued mending his stockings. Finished ones lay rolled at one side of her chair, and upon the other were more waiting her attention.
“And I’m going to turn back hand-springs on top of all the freight-cars,” he stated, more loudly.
She indulged again in merriment, laughing sweetly at him, and without restraint.
“And I’m sick of what you all keep a-saying to me!” he shouted. “Just as if I was a baby.”
“Why, Billy, who ever said you were a baby?”
“All of you do. Honey, and Lin, and you, now, and everybody. What makes you say ‘that’s nine times, Billy; oh, Billy, that’s ten times,’ if you don’t mean I’m a baby? And you laugh me off, just like they do, and just like I was a regular baby. You won’t tell me–“
“Billy, listen. Did nobody ever ask you something you did not want to tell them?”
“That’s not a bit the same, because–because–because I treat ’em square and because it’s not their business. But every time I ask anybody ‘most anything, they say I’m not old enough to understand; and I’ll be ten soon. And it is my business when it’s about the kind of a mother I’m agoing to have. Suppose I quit acting square, an’ told ’em, when they bothered me, they weren’t young enough to understand! Wish I had. Guess I will, too, and watch ’em step around.” For a moment his mind dwelt upon this, and he whistled a revengeful strain.
“Goodness, Billy!” said Jessamine, at the sight of the next stocking. “The whole heel is scorched off.”
He eyed the ruin with indifference. “Ah, that was last month when I and Lin shot the bear in the swamp willows. He made me dry off my legs. Chuck it away.”
“And spoil the pair? No, indeed!”
“Mother always chucked ’em, an’ father’d buy new ones till I skipped from home. Lin kind o’ mends ’em.”
“Does he?” said Jessamine, softly. And she looked at the photograph.
“Yes. What made you write him for to let me come and bring my stockin’s and things?”
“Don’t you see, Billy, there is so little work at this station that I’d be looking out of the window all day just the pitiful way you do?”
“Oh!” Billy pondered. “And so I said to Lin,” he continued, “why didn’t he send down his own clothes, too, an’ let you fix ’em all. And Honey Wiggin laughed right in his coffee-cup so it all sploshed out. And the cook he asked me if mother used to mend Lin’s clothes. But I guess she chucked ’em like she always did father’s and mine. I was with father, you know, when mother was married to Lin that time.” He paused again, while his thoughts and fears struggled. “But Lin says I needn’t ever go back,” he went on, reasoning and confiding to her. “Lin don’t like mother any more, I guess.” His pondering grew still deeper, and he looked at Jessamine for some while. Then his face wakened with a new theory. “Don’t Lin like you any more?” he inquired.
“Oh,” cried Jessamine, crimsoning, “yes! Why, he sent you to me!”
“Well, he got hot in camp when I said that about sending his clothes to you. He quit supper pretty soon, and went away off a walking. And that’s another time they said I was too young. But Lin don’t come to see you any more.”
“Why, I hope he loves me,” murmured Jessamine. “Always.”
“Well, I hope so too,” said Billy, earnestly. “For I like you. When I seen him show you our cabin on Box Elder, and the room he had fixed for you, I was glad you were coming to be my mother. Mother used to be awful. I wouldn’t ‘a’ minded her licking me if she’d done other things. Ah, pshaw! I wasn’t going to stand that.” Billy now came close to Jessamine. “I do wish you would come and live with me and Lin,” said he. “Lin’s awful nice.”
“Don’t I know it?” said Jessamine, tenderly.
“Cause I heard you say you were going to marry him,” went on Billy. “And I seen him kiss you and you let him that time we went away when you found out about mother. And you’re not mad, and he’s not, and nothing happens at all, all the same! Won’t you tell me, please?”
Jessamine’s eyes were glistening, and she took him in her lap. She was not going to tell him that he was too young this time. But whatever things she had shaped to say to the boy were never said.
Through the noise of the gale came the steadier sound of the train, and the girl rose quickly to preside over her ticket-office and duties behind the railing in the front room of the station. The boy ran to the window to watch the great event of Separ’s day. The locomotive loomed out from the yellow clots of drift, paused at the water-tank, and then with steam and humming came slowly on by the platform. Slowly its long dust-choked train emerged trundling behind it, and ponderously halted. There was no one to go. No one came to buy a ticket of Jessamine. The conductor looked in on business, but she had no telegraphic orders for him. The express agent jumped off and looked in for pleasure. He received his daily smile and nod of friendly discouragement. Then the light bundle of mail was flung inside the door. Separ had no mail to go out. As she was picking up the letters young Billy passed her like a shadow, and fled out. Two passengers had descended from the train, a man and a large woman. His clothes were loose and careless upon him. He held valises, and stood uncertainly looking about him in the storm. Her firm, heavy body was closely dressed. In her hat was a large, handsome feather. Along between the several cars brakemen leaned out, watched her, and grinned to each other. But her big, hard-shining blue eyes were fixed curiously upon the station where Jessamine was.
“It’s all night we may be here, is it?” she said to the man, harshly.
“How am I to help that?” he retorted.
“I’ll help it. If this hotel’s the sty it used to be, I’ll walk to Tommy’s. I’ve not saw him since I left Bear Creek.”
She stalked into the hotel, while the man went slowly to the station. He entered, and found Jessamine behind her railing, sorting the slim mail.
“Good-evening,” he said. “Excuse me. There was to be a wagon sent here.”
“For the telegraph-mender? Yes, sir. It came Tuesday. You’re to find the pole-wagon at Drybone.”
This news was good, and all that he wished to know. He could drive out and escape a night at the Hotel Brunswick. But he lingered, because Jessamine spoke so pleasantly to him. He had heard of her also.
“Governor Barker has not been around here?” he said.
“Not yet, sir. We understand he is expected through on a hunting-trip.”
“I suppose there is room for two and a trunk on that wagon?”
“I reckon so, sir.” Jessamine glanced at the man, and he took himself out. Most men took themselves out if Jessamine so willed; and it was mostly achieved thus, in amity.
On the platform the man found his wife again.
“Then I needn’t to walk to Tommy’s,” she said. “And we’ll eat as we travel. But you’ll wait till I’m through with her.” She made a gesture toward the station.
“Why–why–what do you want with her. Don’t you know who she is?”
“It was me told you who she was, James Lusk. You’ll wait till I’ve been and asked her after Lin McLean’s health, and till I’ve saw how the likes of her talks to the likes of me.”
He made a feeble protest that this would do no one any good.
“Sew yourself up, James Lusk. If it has been your idea I come with yus clear from Laramie to watch yus plant telegraph-poles in the sage-brush, why you’re off. I ain’t heard much ‘o Lin since the day he learned it was you and not him that was my husband. And I’ve come back in this country to have a look at my old friends–and” (she laughed loudly and nodded at the station) “my old friends’ new friends!”
Thus ordered, the husband wandered away to find his wagon and the horse.
Jessamine, in the office, had finished her station duties and returned to her needle. She sat contemplating the scorched sock of Billy’s, and heard a heavy step at the threshold. She turned, and there was the large woman with the feather quietly surveying her. The words which the stranger spoke then were usual enough for a beginning. But there was something of threat in the strong animal countenance, something of laughter ready to break out. Much beauty of its kind had evidently been in the face, and now, as substitute for what was gone, was the brag look of assertion that it was still all there. Many stranded travellers knocked at Jessamine’s door, and now, as always, she offered the hospitalities of her neat abode, the only room in Separ fit for a woman. As she spoke, and the guest surveyed and listened, the door blew shut with a crash.
Outside, in a shed, Billy had placed the wagon between himself and his father.
“How you have grown!” the man was saying; and he smiled. “Come, shake hands. I did not think to see you here.”
“Dare you to touch me!” Billy screamed. “No, I’ll never come with you. Lin says I needn’t to.”
The man passed his hand across his forehead, and leaned against the wheel. “Lord, Lord!” he muttered.
His son warily slid out of the shed and left him leaning there.
PART II
Lin McLean, bachelor, sat out in front of his cabin, looking at a small bright pistol that lay in his hand. He held it tenderly, cherishing it, and did not cease slowly to polish it. Revery filled his eyes, and in his whole face was sadness unmasked, because only the animals were there to perceive his true feelings. Sunlight and waving shadows moved together upon the green of his pasture, cattle and horses loitered in the opens by the stream. Down Box Elder’s course, its valley and golden-chimneyed bluffs widened away into the level and the blue of the greater valley. Upstream the branches and shining, quiet leaves entered the mountains where the rock chimneys narrowed to a gateway, a citadel of shafts and turrets, crimson and gold above the filmy emerald of the trees. Through there the road went up from the cotton-woods into the cool quaking asps and pines, and so across the range and away to Separ. Along the ridge-pole of the new stable, two hundred yards down-stream, sat McLean’s turkeys, and cocks and hens walked in front of him here by his cabin and fenced garden. Slow smoke rose from the cabin’s chimney into the air, in which were no sounds but the running water and the afternoon chirp of birds. Amid this framework of a home the cow-puncher sat, lonely, inattentive, polishing the treasured weapon as if it were not already long clean. His target stood some twenty steps in front of him–a small cottonwood-tree, its trunk chipped and honeycombed with bullets which he had fired into it each day for memory’s sake. Presently he lifted the pistol and looked at its name–the word “Neighbor” engraved upon it.
“I wonder,” said he, aloud, “if she keeps the rust off mine?” Then he lifted it slowly to his lips and kissed the word “Neighbor.”
The clank of wheels sounded on the road, and he put the pistol quickly down. Dreaminess vanished from his face. He looked around alertly, but no one had seen him. The clanking was still among the trees a little distance up Box Elder. It approached deliberately, while he watched for the vehicle to emerge upon the open where his cabin stood; and then they came, a man and a woman. At sight of her Mr. McLean half rose, but sat down again. Neither of them had noticed him, sitting as they were in silence and the drowsiness of a long drive. The man was weak-faced, with good looks sallowed by dissipation, and a vanquished glance of the eye. As the woman had stood on the platform at Separ, so she sat now, upright, bold, and massive. The brag of past beauty was a habit settled upon her stolid features. Both sat inattentive to each other and to everything around them. The wheels turned slowly and with a dry, dead noise, the reins bellied loosely to the shafts, the horse’s head hung low. So they drew close. Then the man saw McLean, and color came into his face and went away.
“Good-evening,” said he, clearing his throat. “We heard you was in cow-camp.”
The cow-puncher noted how he tried to smile, and a freakish change crossed his own countenance. He nodded slightly, and stretched his legs out as he sat.
“You look natural,” said the woman, familiarly.
“Seem to be fixed nice here,” continued the man. “Hadn’t heard of it. Well, we’ll be going along. Glad to have seen you.”
“Your wheel wants greasing,” said McLean, briefly, his eye upon the man.
“Can’t stop. I expect she’ll last to Drybone. Good-evening.”
“Stay to supper,” said McLean, always seated on his chair.
“Can’t stop, thank you. I expect we can last to Drybone.” He twitched the reins.
McLean levelled a pistol at a chicken, and knocked off its head. “Better stay to supper,” he suggested, very distinctly.
“It’s business, I tell you. I’ve got to catch Governor Barker before he–“
The pistol cracked, and a second chicken shuffled in the dust. “Better stay to supper,” drawled McLean.
The man looked up at his wife.
“So yus need me!” she broke out. “Ain’t got heart enough in yer played-out body to stand up to a man. We’ll eat here. Get down.”
The husband stepped to the ground. “I didn’t suppose you’d want–“
“Ho! want? What’s Lin, or you, or anything to me? Help me out.”
Both men came forward. She descended, leaning heavily upon each, her blue staring eyes fixed upon the cow-puncher.
“No, yus ain’t changed,” she said. “Same in your looks and same in your actions. Was you expecting you could scare me, you, Lin McLean?”
“I just wanted chickens for supper,” said he.
Mrs. Lusk gave a hard high laugh. “I’ll eat ’em. It’s not I that cares. As for–” She stopped. Her eye had fallen upon the pistol and the name “Neighbor.” “As for you,” she continued to Mr. Lusk, “don’t you be standing dumb same as the horse.”
“Better take him to the stable, Lusk,” said McLean.
He picked the chickens up, showed the woman to the best chair in his room, and went into his kitchen to cook supper for three. He gave his guests no further attention, nor did either of them come in where he was, nor did the husband rejoin the wife. He walked slowly up and down in the air, and she sat by herself in the room. Lin’s steps as he made ready round the stove and table, and Lusk’s slow tread out in the setting sunlight, were the only sounds about the cabin. When the host looked into the door of the next room to announce that his meal was served, the woman sat in her chair no longer, but stood with her back to him by a shelf. She gave a slight start at his summons, and replaced something. He saw that she had been examining “Neighbor,” and his face hardened suddenly to fierceness as he looked at her; but he repeated quietly that she had better come in. Thus did the three sit down to their meal. Occasionally a word about handing some dish fell from one or other of them, but nothing more, until Lusk took out his watch and mentioned the hour.
“Yu’ve not ate especially hearty,” said Lin, resting his arms upon the table.
“I’m going,” asserted Lusk. “Governor Barker may start out. I’ve got my interests to look after.”
“Why, sure,” said Lin. “I can’t hope you’ll waste all your time on just me.”
Lusk rose and looked at his wife. “It’ll be ten now before we get to Drybone,” said he. And he went down to the stable.
The woman sat still, pressing the crumbs of her bread. “I know you seen me,” she said, without looking at him.
“Saw you when?”
“I knowed it. And I seen how you looked at me.” She sat twisting and pressing the crumb. Sometimes it was round, sometimes it was a cube, now and then she flattened it to a disk. Mr. McLean seemed to have nothing that he wished to reply.
“If you claim that pistol is yourn,” she said next, “I’ll tell you I know better. If you ask me whose should it be if not yourn, I would not have to guess the name. She has talked to me, and me to her.”
She was still looking away from him at the bread-crumb, or she could have seen that McLean’s hand was trembling as he watched her leaning on his arms.
“Oh yes, she was willing to talk to me!” The woman uttered another sudden laugh. “I knowed about her–all. Things get heard of in this world. Did not all about you and me come to her knowledge in its own good time, and it done and gone how many years? My, my, my!” Her voice grew slow and absent. She stopped for a moment, and then more rapidly resumed: “It had travelled around about you and her like it always will travel. It was known how you had asked her, and how she had told you she would have you, and then told you she would not when she learned about you and me. Folks that knowed yus and folks that never seen yus in their lives had to have their word about her facing you down you had another wife, though she knowed the truth about me being married to Lusk and him livin’ the day you married me, and ten and twenty marriages could not have tied you and me up, no matter how honest you swore to no hinderance. Folks said it was plain she did not want yus. It give me a queer feelin’ to see that girl. It give me a wish to tell her to her face that she did not love yus and did not know love. Wait–wait, Lin! Yu’ never hit me yet.”
“No,” said the cow-puncher. “Nor now. I’m not Lusk.”
“Yu’ looked so–so bad, Lin. I never seen yu’ look so bad in old days. Wait, now, and I must tell it. I wished to laugh in her face and say, ‘What do you know about love?’ So I walked in. Lin, she does love yus!”
“Yes,” breathed McLean.
“She was sittin’ back in her room at Separ. Not the ticket-office, but–“
“I know,” the cow-puncher said. His eyes were burning.
“It’s snug, the way she has it. ‘Good-afternoon,’ I says. ‘Is this Miss Jessamine Buckner?'”
At his sweetheart’s name the glow in Lin’s eyes seemed to quiver to a flash.
“And she spoke pleasant to me–pleasant and gay-like. But a woman can tell sorrow in a woman’s eyes. And she asked me would I rest in her room there, and what was my name. ‘They tell me you claim to know it better than I do,’ I says. ‘They tell me you say it is Mrs. McLean.’ She put her hand on her breast, and she keeps lookin’ at me without never speaking. ‘Maybe I am not so welcome now,’ I says. ‘One minute,’ says she. ‘Let me get used to it.’ And she sat down.
“Lin, she is a square-lookin’ girl. I’ll say that for her.
“I never thought to sit down onced myself; I don’t know why, but I kep’ a-standing, and I took in that room of hers. She had flowers and things around there, and I seen your picture standing on the table, and I seen your six-shooter right by it–and, oh, Lin, hadn’t I knowed your face before ever she did, and that gun you used to let me shoot on Bear Creek? It took me that sudden! Why, it rushed over me so I spoke right out different from what I’d meant and what I had ready fixed up to say.
“‘Why did you do it?’ I says to her, while she was a-sitting. ‘How could you act so, and you a woman?’ She just sat, and her sad eyes made me madder at the idea of her. ‘You have had real sorrow,’ says I, ‘if they report correct. You have knowed your share of death, and misery, and hard work, and all. Great God! ain’t there things enough that come to yus uncalled for and natural, but you must run around huntin’ up more that was leavin’ yus alone and givin’ yus a chance? I knowed him onced. I knowed your Lin McLean. And when that was over, I knowed for the first time how men can be different.’ I’m started, Lin, I’m started. Leave me go on, and when I’m through I’ll quit. ‘Some of ’em, anyway,’ I says to her, ‘has hearts and self-respect, and ain’t hogs clean through.’
“‘I know,” she says, thoughtful-like.
“And at her whispering that way I gets madder.
“‘You know!’ I says then. ‘What is it that you know? Do you know that you have hurt a good man’s heart? For onced I hurt it myself, though different. And hurts in them kind of hearts stays. Some hearts is that luscious and pasty you can stab ’em and it closes up so yu’d never suspicion the place–but Lin McLean! Nor yet don’t yus believe his is the kind that breaks–if any kind does that. You may sit till the gray hairs, and you may wall up your womanhood, but if a man has got manhood like him, he will never sit till the gray hairs. Grief over losin’ the best will not stop him from searchin’ for a second best after a while. He wants a home, and he has got a right to one,’ says I to Miss Jessamine. ‘You have not walled up Lin McLean,’ I says to her. Wait, Lin, wait. Yus needn’t to tell me that’s a lie. I know a man thinks he’s walled up for a while.”
“She could have told you it was a lie,” said the cow-puncher.
“She did not. ‘Let him get a home,’ says she. ‘I want him to be happy.’ ‘That flash in your eyes talks different,’ says I. ‘Sure enough yus wants him to be happy. Sure enough. But not happy along with Miss Second Best.’
“Lin, she looked at me that piercin’!
“And I goes on, for I was wound away up. ‘And he will be happy, too,’ I says. ‘Miss Second Best will have a talk with him about your picture and little “Neighbor,” which he’ll not send back to yus, because the hurt in his heart is there. And he will keep ’em out of sight somewheres after his talk with Miss Second Best.’ Lin, Lin, I laughed at them words of mine, but I was that wound up I was strange to myself. And she watchin’ me that way! And I says to her: ‘Miss Second Best will not be the crazy thing to think I am any wife of his standing in her way. He will tell her about me. He will tell how onced he thought he was solid married to me till Lusk came back; and she will drop me out of sight along with the rest that went nameless. They was not uncomprehensible to you, was they? You have learned something by livin’, I guess! And Lin–your Lin, not mine, nor never mine in heart for a day so deep as he’s yourn right now– he has been gay–gay as any I’ve knowed. Why, look at that face of his! Could a boy with a face like that help bein’ gay? But that don’t touch what’s the true Lin deep down. Nor will his deep-down love for you hinder him like it will hinder you. Don’t you know men and us is different when it comes to passion? We’re all one thing then, but they ain’t simple. They keep along with lots of other things. I can’t make yus know, and I guess it takes a woman like I have been to learn their nature. But you did know he loved you, and you sent him away, and you’ll be homeless in yer house when he has done the right thing by himself and found another girl.’
“Lin, all the while I was talkin’ all I knowed to her, without knowin’ what I’d be sayin’ next, for it come that unexpected, she was lookin’ at me with them steady eyes. And all she says when I quit was, ‘If I saw him I would tell him to find a home.'”
“Didn’t she tell yu’ she’d made me promise to keep away from seeing her?” asked the cow-puncher.
Mrs. Lusk laughed. “Oh, you innocent!” said she.
“She said if I came she would leave Separ,” muttered McLean, brooding.
Again the large woman laughed out, but more harshly.
“I have kept my promise,” Lin continued.
“Keep it some more. Sit here rotting in your chair till she goes away. Maybe she’s gone.”
“What’s that?” said Lin. But still she only laughed harshly. “I could be there by to-morrow night,” he murmured. Then his face softened. “She would never do such a thing!” he said, to himself.
He had forgotten the woman at the table. While she had told him matters that concerned him he had listened eagerly. Now she was of no more interest than she had been before her story was begun. She looked at his eyes as he sat thinking and dwelling upon his sweetheart. She looked at him, and a longing welled up into her face. A certain youth and heavy beauty relighted the features.
“You are the same, same Lin everyways,” she said. “A woman is too many for you still, Lin!” she whispered.
At her summons he looked up from his revery.
“Lin, I would not have treated you so.”
The caress that filled her voice was plain. His look met hers as he sat quite still, his arms on the table. Then he took his turn at laughing.
“You!” he said. “At least I’ve had plenty of education in you.”
“Lin, Lin, don’t talk that brutal to me to-day. If yus knowed how near I come shooting myself with ‘Neighbor.’ That would have been funny!
“I knowed yus wanted to tear that pistol out of my hand because it was hern. But yus never did such things to me, fer there’s a gentleman in you somewheres, Lin. And yus didn’t never hit me, not even when you come to know me well. And when I seen you so unexpected again to-night, and you just the same old Lin, scaring Lusk with shooting them chickens, so comic and splendid, I could ‘a’ just killed Lusk sittin’ in the wagon. Say, Lin, what made yus do that, anyway?”
“I can’t hardly say,” said the cow-puncher. “Only noticing him so turruble anxious to quit me–well, a man acts without thinking.”
“You always did, Lin. You was always a comical genius. Lin, them were good times.”
“Which times?”
“You know. You can’t tell me you have forgot.”
“I have not forgot much. What’s the sense in this?”
“Yus never loved me!” she exclaimed.
“Shucks!”
“Lin, Lin, is it all over? You know yus loved me on Bear Creek. Say you did. Only say it was once that way.” And as he sat, she came and put her arms round his neck. For a moment he did not move, letting himself be held; and then she kissed him. The plates crashed as he beat and struck her down upon the table. He was on his feet, cursing himself. As he went out of the door, she lay where she had fallen beneath his fist, looking after him and smiling.
McLean walked down Box Elder Creek through the trees toward the stable, where Lusk had gone to put the horse in the wagon. Once he leaned his hand against a big cotton-wood, and stood still with half-closed eyes. Then he continued on his way. “Lusk!” he called, presently, and in a few steps more, “Lusk!” Then, as he came slowly out of the trees to meet the husband he began, with quiet evenness, “Your wife wants to know–” But he stopped. No husband was there. Wagon and horse were not there. The door was shut. The bewildered cow-puncher looked up the stream where the road went, and he looked down. Out of the sky where daylight and stars were faintly shining together sounded the long cries of the night hawks as they sped and swooped to their hunting in the dusk. From among the trees by the stream floated a cooler air, and distant and close by sounded the splashing water. About the meadow where Lin stood his horses fed, quietly crunching. He went to the door, looked in, and shut it again. He walked to his shed and stood contemplating his own wagon alone there. Then he lifted away a piece of trailing vine from the gate of the corral, while the turkeys moved their heads and watched him from the roof. A rope was hanging from the corral, and seeing it, he dropped the vine. He opened the corral gate, and walked quickly back into the middle of the field, where the horses saw him and his rope, and scattered. But he ran and herded them, whirling the rope, and so drove them into the corral, and flung his noose over two. He dragged two saddles–men’s saddles– from the stable, and next he was again at his cabin door with the horses saddled. She was sitting quite still by the table where she had sat during the meal, nor did she speak or move when she saw him look in at the door.
“Lusk has gone,” said he. “I don’t know what he expected you would do, or I would do. But we will catch him before he gets to Drybone.”
She looked at him with her dumb stare. “Gone?” she said.
“Get up and ride,” said McLean. “You are going to Drybone.”
“Drybone?” she echoed. Her voice was toneless and dull.
He made no more explanations to her, but went quickly about the cabin. Soon he had set it in order, the dishes on their shelves, the table clean, the fire in the stove arranged; and all these movements she followed with a sort of blank mechanical patience. He made a small bundle for his own journey, tied it behind his saddle, brought her horse beside a stump. When at his sharp order she came out, he locked his cabin and hung the key by a window, where travellers could find it and be at home.
She stood looking where her husband had slunk off. Then she laughed. “It’s about his size,” she murmured.
Her old lover helped her in silence to mount into the man’s saddle–this they had often done together in former years–and so they took their way down the silent road. They had not many miles to go, and after the first two lay behind them, when the horses were limbered and had been put to a canter, they made time quickly. They had soon passed out of the trees and pastures of Box Elder and came among the vast low stretches of the greater valley. Not even by day was the river’s course often discernible through the ridges and cheating sameness of this wilderness; and beneath this half-darkness of stars and a quarter moon the sage spread shapeless to the looming mountains, or to nothing.
“I will ask you one thing,” said Lin, after ten miles.
The woman made no sign of attention as she rode beside him.
“Did I understand that she–Miss Buckner, I mean–mentioned she might be going away from Separ?”
“How do I know what you understood?”
“I thought you said–“
“Don’t you bother me, Lin McLean.” Her laugh rang out, loud and forlorn– one brief burst that startled the horses and that must have sounded far across the sage-brush. “You men are rich,” she said.
They rode on, side by side, and saying nothing after that. The Drybone road was a broad trail, a worn strip of bareness going onward over the endless shelvings of the plain, visible even in this light; and presently, moving upon its grayness on a hill in front of them, they made out the wagon. They hastened and overtook it.
“Put your carbine down,” said McLean to Lusk. “It’s not robbers. It’s your wife I’m bringing you.” He spoke very quietly.
The husband addressed no word to the cow-puncher “Get in, then,” he said to his wife.
“Town’s not far now,” said Lin. “Maybe you would prefer riding the balance of the way?”
“I’d–” But the note of pity that she felt in McLean’s question overcame her, and her utterance choked. She nodded her head, and the three continued slowly climbing the hill together.
From the narrows of the steep, sandy, weather-beaten banks that the road slanted upward through for a while, they came out again upon the immensity of the table-land. Here, abruptly like an ambush, was the whole unsuspected river close below to their right, as if it had emerged from the earth. With a circling sweep from somewhere out in the gloom it cut in close to the lofty mesa beneath tall clean-graded descents of sand, smooth as a railroad embankment. As they paused on the level to breathe their horses, the wet gulp of its eddies rose to them through the stillness. Upstream they could make out the light of the Drybone bridge, but not the bridge itself; and two lights on the farther bank showed where stood the hog-ranch opposite Drybone. They went on over the table-land and reached the next herald of the town, Drybone’s chief historian, the graveyard. Beneath its slanting headboards and wind-shifted sand lay many more people than lived in Drybone. They passed by the fence of this shelterless acre on the hill, and shoutings and high music began to reach them. At the foot of the hill they saw the sparse lights and shapes of the town where ended the gray strip of road. The many sounds–feet, voices, and music–grew clearer, unravelling from their muffled confusion, and the fiddling became a tune that could be known.”
“There’s a dance to-night,” said the wife to the husband. “Hurry.”
He drove as he had been driving. Perhaps he had not heard her.
“I’m telling you to hurry,” she repeated. “My new dress is in that wagon. There’ll be folks to welcome me here that’s older friends than you.”
She put her horse to a gallop down the broad road toward the music and the older friends. The husband spoke to his horse, cleared his throat and spoke louder, cleared his throat again and this time his sullen voice carried, and the animal started. So Lusk went ahead of Lin McLean, following his wife with the new dress at as good a pace as he might. If he did not want her company, perhaps to be alone with the cow-puncher was still less to his mind.
“It ain’t only her he’s stopped caring for,” mused Lin, as he rode slowly along. “He don’t care for himself any more.”
PART III
To-day, Drybone has altogether returned to the dust. Even in that day its hour could have been heard beginning to sound, but its inhabitants were rather deaf. Gamblers, saloon-keepers, murderers, outlaws male and female, all were so busy with their cards, their lovers, and their bottles as to make the place seem young and vigorous; but it was second childhood which had set in.
Drybone had known a wholesome adventurous youth, where manly lives and deaths were plenty. It had been an army post. It had seen horse and foot, and heard the trumpet. Brave wives had kept house for their captains upon its bluffs. Winter and summer they had made the best of it. When the War Department ordered the captains to catch Indians, the wives bade them Godspeed. When the Interior Department ordered the captains to let the Indians go again, still they made the best of it. You must not waste Indians. Indians were a source of revenue to so many people in Washington and elsewhere. But the process of catching Indians, armed with weapons sold them by friends of the Interior Department, was not entirely harmless. Therefore there came to be graves in the Drybone graveyard. The pale weather-washed head-boards told all about it: “Sacred to the memory of Private So-and-So, killed on the Dry Cheyenne, May 6, 1875.” Or it would be, “Mrs. So-and-So, found scalped on Sage Creek.” But even the financiers at Washington could not wholly preserve the Indian in Drybone’s neighborhood. As the cattle by ten thousands came treading with the next step of civilization into this huge domain, the soldiers were taken away. Some of them went West to fight more Indians in Idaho, Oregon, or Arizona. The battles of the others being done, they went East in better coffins to sleep where their mothers or their comrades wanted them. Though wind and rain wrought changes upon the hill, the ready-made graves and boxes which these soldiers left behind proved heirlooms as serviceable in their way as were the tenements that the living had bequeathed to Drybone. Into these empty barracks came to dwell and do business every joy that made the cow-puncher’s holiday, and every hunted person who was baffling the sheriff. For the sheriff must stop outside the line of Drybone, as shall presently be made clear. The captain’s quarters were a saloon now; professional cards were going in the adjutant’s office night and day; and the commissary building made a good dance-hall and hotel. Instead of guard-mounting, you would see a horse-race on the parade-ground, and there was no provost-sergeant to gather up the broken bottles and old boots. Heaps of these choked the rusty fountain. In the tufts of yellow, ragged grass that dotted the place plentifully were lodged many aces and queens and ten-spots, which the Drybone wind had blown wide from the doors out of which they had been thrown when a new pack was called for inside. Among the grass tufts would lie visitors who had applied for beds too late at the dance-hall, frankly sleeping their whiskey off in the morning air.
Above, on the hill, the graveyard quietly chronicled this new epoch of Drybone. So-and-so was seldom killed very far out of town, and of course scalping had disappeared. “Sacred to the memory of Four-ace Johnston, accidently shot, Sep. 4, 1885.” Perhaps one is still there unaltered: “Sacred to the memory of Mrs. Ryan’s babe. Aged two months.” This unique corpse had succeeded in dying with its boots off.
But a succession of graves was not always needed to read the changing tale of the place, and how people died there; one grave would often be enough. The soldiers, of course, had kept treeless Drybone supplied with wood. But in these latter days wood was very scarce. None grew nearer than twenty or thirty miles–none, that is, to make boards of a sufficient width for epitaphs. And twenty miles was naturally far to go to hew a board for a man of whom you knew perhaps nothing but what he said his name was, and to whom you owed nothing, perhaps, but a trifling poker debt. Hence it came to pass that headboards grew into a sort of directory. They were light to lift from one place to another. A single coat of white paint would wipe out the first tenant’s name sufficiently to paint over it the next comer’s. By this thrifty habit the original boards belonging to the soldiers could go round, keeping pace with the new civilian population; and though at first sight you might be puzzled by the layers of names still visible beneath the white paint, you could be sure that the clearest and blackest was the one to which the present tenant had answered.
So there on the hill lay the graveyard, steadily writing Drybone’s history, and making that history lay the town at the bottom–one thin line of houses framing three sides of the old parade ground. In these slowly rotting shells people rioted, believing the golden age was here, the age when everybody should have money and nobody should be arrested. For Drybone soil, you see, was still government soil, not yet handed over to Wyoming; and only government could arrest there, and only for government crimes. But government had gone, and seldom worried Drybone! The spot was a postage-stamp of sanctuary pasted in the middle of Wyoming’s big map, a paradise for the Four-ace Johnstons. Only, you must not steal a horse. That was really wicked, and brought you instantly to the notice of Drybone’s one official–the coroner! For they did keep a coroner–Judge Slaghammer. He was perfectly illegal, and lived next door in Albany County. But that county paid fees and mileage to keep tally of Drybone’s casualties. His wife owned the dance-hall, and between their industries they made out a living. And all the citizens made out a living. The happy cow-punchers on ranches far and near still earned and instantly spent the high wages still paid them. With their bodies full of youth and their pockets full of gold, they rode into town by twenties, by fifties, and out again next morning, penniless always and happy. And then the Four-ace Johnstons would sit card-playing with each other till the innocents should come to town again.
To-night the innocents had certainly come to town, and Drybone was furnishing to them all its joys. Their many horses stood tied at every post and corner–patient, experienced cow-ponies, well knowing it was an all-night affair. The talk and laughter of the riders was in the saloons; they leaned joking over the bars, they sat behind their cards at the tables, they strolled to the post-trader’s to buy presents for their easy sweethearts their boots were keeping audible time with the fiddle at Mrs. Slaghammer’s. From the multitude and vigor of the sounds there, the dance was being done regularly. “Regularly” meant that upon the conclusion of each set the gentleman led his lady to the bar and invited her to choose and it was also regular that the lady should choose. Beer and whiskey were the alternatives.
Lin McLean’s horse took him across the square without guiding from the cow-puncher, who sat absently with his hands folded upon the horn of his saddle. This horse, too, was patient and experienced, and could not know what remote thoughts filled his master’s mind. He looked around to see why his master did not get off lightly, as he had done during so many gallant years, and hasten in to the conviviality. But the lonely cow-puncher sat mechanically identifying the horses of acquaintances.
“Toothpick Kid is here,” said he, “and Limber Jim, and the Doughie. You’d think he’d stay away after the trouble he–I expect that pinto is Jerky Bill’s.”
“Go home!” said a hearty voice.
McLean eagerly turned. For the moment his face lighted from its sombreness. “I’d forgot you’d be here,” said he. And he sprang to the ground. “It’s fine to see you.”
“Go home!” repeated the Governor of Wyoming, shaking his ancient friend’s hand. “You in Drybone to-night, and claim you’re reformed?
“Yu’ seem to be on hand yourself,” said the cow-puncher, bracing to be jocular, if he could.
“Me! I’ve gone fishing. Don’t you read the papers? If we poor governors can’t lock up the State House and take a whirl now and then–“
“Doc,” interrupted Lin, “it’s plumb fine to see yu’!” Again he shook hands.
“Why, yes! we’ve met here before, you and I.” His Excellency the Hon. Amory W. Barker, M.D., stood laughing, familiar and genial, his sound white teeth shining. But behind his round spectacles he scrutinized McLean. For in this second hand-shaking was a fervor that seemed a grasp, a reaching out, for comfort. Barker had passed through Separ. Though an older acquaintance than Billy, he had asked Jessamine fewer and different questions. But he knew what he knew. “Well, Drybone’s the same old Drybone,” said he. “Sweet-scented hole of iniquity! Let’s see how you walk nowadays.”
Lin took a few steps.
“Pooh! I said you’d never get over it.” And his Excellency beamed with professional pride. In his doctor days Barker had set the boy McLean’s leg; and before it was properly knit the boy had escaped from the hospital to revel loose in Drybone on such another night as this. Soon he had been carried back, with the fracture split open again.
“It shows, does it?” said Lin. “Well, it don’t usually. Not except when I’m–when I’m–“
“Down?” suggested his Excellency.
“Yes, Doc. Down,” the cow-puncher confessed.
Barker looked into his friend’s clear hazel eyes.
Beneath their dauntless sparkle was something that touched the Governor’s good heart. “I’ve got some whiskey along on the trip–Eastern whiskey,” said he. “Come over to my room awhile.”
“I used to sleep all night onced,” said McLean, as they went. “Then I come to know different. But I’d never have believed just mere thoughts could make yu’–make yu’ feel like the steam was only half on. I eat, yu’ know!” he stated, suddenly. “And I expect one or two in camp lately have not found my muscle lacking. Feel me, Doc.”
Barker dutifully obeyed, and praised the excellent sinews.
Across from the dance-hall the whining of the fiddle came, high and gay; feet blurred the talk of voices, and voices rose above the trampling of feet. Here and there some lurking form stumbled through the dark among the rubbish; and clearest sound of all, the light crack of billiard balls reached dry and far into the night Barker contemplated the stars and calm splendid dimness of the plain. “‘Though every prospect pleases, and only man is vile,'” he quoted. “But don’t tell the Republican party I said so.”
“It’s awful true, though, Doc. I’m vile myself. Yu’ don’t know. Why, I didn’t know!”
And then they sat down to confidences and whiskey; for so long as the world goes round a man must talk to a man sometimes, and both must drink over it. The cow-puncher unburdened himself to the Governor; and the Governor filled up his friend’s glass with the Eastern whiskey, and nodded his spectacles, and listened, and advised, and said he should have done the same, and like the good Governor that he was, never remembered he was Governor at all with political friends here who had begged a word or two. He became just Dr. Barker again, the young hospital surgeon (the hospital that now stood a ruin), and Lin was again his patient—-Lin, the sun-burnt free-lance of nineteen, reckless, engaging, disobedient, his leg broken and his heart light, with no Jessamine or conscience to rob his salt of its savor. While he now told his troubles, the quadrilles fiddled away careless as ever, and the crack of the billiard balls sounded as of old.
“Nobody has told you about this, I expect,” said the lover. He brought forth the little pistol, “Neighbor.” He did not hand it across to Barker, but walked over to Barker’s chair, and stood holding it for the doctor to see. When Barker reached for it to see better, since it was half hidden in the cow-puncher’s big hand, Lin yielded it to him, but still stood and soon drew it back. “I take it around,” he said, “and when one of those stories comes along, like there’s plenty of, that she wants to get rid of me, I just kind o’ take a look at ‘Neighbor’ when I’m off where it’s handy, and it busts the story right out of my mind. I have to tell you what a fool I am.”
“The whiskey’s your side,” said Barker. “Go on.”
“But, Doc, my courage has quit me. They see what I’m thinking about just like I was a tenderfoot trying his first bluff. I can’t stick it out no more, and I’m going to see her, come what will.
“I’ve got to. I’m going to ride right up to her window and shoot off ‘Neighbor,’ and if she don’t come out I’ll know–“
A knocking came at the Governor’s room, and Judge Slaghammer entered. “Not been to our dance, Governor?” said he.
The Governor thought that perhaps he was tired, that perhaps this evening he must forego the pleasure.
“It may be wiser. In your position it may be advisable,” said the coroner. “They’re getting on rollers over there. We do not like trouble in Drybone, but trouble comes to us–as everywhere.”
“Shooting,” suggested his Excellency, recalling his hospital practice.
“Well, Governor, you know how it is. Our boys are as big-hearted as any in this big-hearted Western country. You know, Governor. Those generous, warm-blooded spirits are ever ready for anything.”
“Especially after Mrs. Slaghammer’s whiskey,” remarked the Governor.
The coroner shot a shrewd eye at Wyoming’s chief executive. It was not politically harmonious to be reminded that but for his wife’s liquor a number of fine young men, with nothing save youth untrained and health the matter with them, would to-day be riding their horses instead of sleeping on the hill. But the coroner wanted support in the next campaign. “Boys will be boys,” said he. “They ain’t pulled any guns to-night. But I come away, though. Some of ’em’s making up pretty free to Mrs. Lusk. It ain’t suitable for me to see too much. Lusk says he’s after you,” he mentioned incidentally to Lin. “He’s fillin’ up, and says he’s after you.” McLean nodded placidly, and with scant politeness. He wished this visitor would go. But Judge Slaghammer had noticed the whiskey. He filled himself a glass. “Governor, it has my compliments,” said he. “Ambrosier. Honey-doo.”
“Mrs. Slaghammer seems to have a large gathering,” said Barker.
“Good boys, good boys!” The judge blew importantly, and waved his arm. “Bull-whackers, cow-punchers, mule-skinners, tin-horns. All spending generous. Governor, once more! Ambrosier. Honey-doo.” He settled himself deep in a chair, and closed his eyes.
McLean rose abruptly. “Good-night,” said he. “I’m going to Separ.”
“Separ!” exclaimed Slaghammer, rousing slightly. “Oh, stay with us, stay with us.” He closed his eyes again, but sustained his smile of office.
“You know how well I wish you,” said Barker to Lin. “I’ll just see you start.”
Forthwith the friends left the coroner quiet beside his glass, and walked toward the horses through Drybone’s gaping quadrangle. The dead ruins loomed among the lights of the card-halls, and always the keen jockey cadences of the fiddle sang across the night. But a calling and confusion were set up, and the tune broke off.
“Just like old times!” said his Excellency. “Where’s the dump-pile!” It was where it should be, close by, and the two stepped behind it to be screened from wandering bullets. “A man don’t forget his habits,” declared the Governor. “Makes me feel young again.”
“Makes me feel old,” said McLean. “Hark!”
“Sounds like my name,” said Barker. They listened. “Oh yes. Of course. That’s it. They’re shouting for the doctor. But we’ll just spare them a minute or so to finish their excitement.”
“I didn’t hear any shooting,” said McLean. “It’s something, though.”
As they waited, no shots came; but still the fiddle was silent, and the murmur of many voices grew in the dance-hall, while single voices wandered outside, calling the doctor’s name.
“I’m the Governor on a fishing-trip,” said he. “But it’s to be done, I suppose.”
They left their dump-hill and proceeded over to the dance. The musician sat high and solitary upon two starch-boxes, fiddle on knee, staring and waiting. Half the floor was bare; on the other half the revellers were densely clotted. At the crowd’s outer rim the young horsemen, flushed and swaying, retained their gaudy dance partners strongly by the waist, to be ready when the music should resume. “What is it?” they asked. “Who is it?” And they looked in across heads and shoulders, inattentive to the caresses which the partners gave them.
Mrs. Lusk was who it was, and she had taken poison here in their midst, after many dances and drinks.
“Here’s Doc!” cried an older one.
“Here’s Doc!” chorused the young blood that had come into this country since his day. And the throng caught up the words: “Here’s Doc! here’s Doc!”
In a moment McLean and Barker were sundered from each other in this flood. Barker, sucked in toward the centre but often eddied back by those who meant to help him, heard the mixed explanations pass his ear unfinished–versions, contradictions, a score of facts. It had been wolf-poison. It had been “Rough on Rats.” It had been something in a bottle. There was little steering in this clamorous sea; but Barker reached his patient, where she sat in her new dress, hailing him with wild inebriate gayety.
“I must get her to her room, friends,” said he.
“He must get her to her room,” went the word. “Leave Doc get her to her room.” And they tangled in their eagerness around him and his patient.
“Give us ‘Buffalo Girls!'” shouted Mrs. Lusk…. “‘Buffalo Girls,’ you fiddler!”
“We’ll come back,” said Barker to her.
“‘Buffalo Girls,’ I tell yus. Ho! There’s no sense looking at that bottle, Doc. Take yer dance while there’s time!” She was holding the chair.
“Help him!” said the crowd. “Help Doc.”
They took her from her chair, and she fought, a big pink mass of ribbons, fluttering and wrenching itself among them.
“She has six ounces of laudanum in her,” Barker told them at the top of his voice. “It won’t wait all night.”
“I’m a whirlwind!” said Mrs. Lusk. “That’s my game! And you done your share,” she cried to the fiddler. “Here’s my regards, old man! ‘Buffalo Girls’ once more!”
She flung out her hand, and from it fell notes and coins, rolling and ringing around the starch boxes. Some dragged her on, while some fiercely forbade the musician to touch the money, because it was hers, and she would want it when she came to. Thus they gathered it up for her. But now she had sunk down, asking in a new voice where was Lin McLean. And when one grinning intimate reminded her that Lusk had gone to shoot him, she laughed out richly, and the crowd joined her mirth. But even in the midst of the joke she asked again in the same voice where was Lin McLean. He came beside her among more jokes. He had kept himself near, and now at sight of him she reached out and held him. “Tell them to leave me go to sleep, Lin,” said she.
Barker saw a chance. “Persuade her to come along,” said he to McLean. “Minutes are counting now.”
“Oh, I’ll come,” she said, with a laugh, overhearing him, and holding still to Lin.
The rest of the old friends nudged each other. “Back seats for us,” they said. “But we’ve had our turn in front ones.” Then, thinking they would be useful in encouraging her to walk, they clustered again, rendering Barker and McLean once more well-nigh helpless. Clumsily the escort made its slow way across the quadrangle, cautioning itself about stones and holes. Thus, presently, she was brought into the room. The escort set her down, crowding the little place as thick as it would hold; the rest gathered thick at the door, and all of them had no thought of departing. The notion to stay was plain on their faces.
Barker surveyed them. “Give the doctor a show now, boys,” said he. “You’ve done it all so far. Don’t crowd my elbows. I’ll want you,” he whispered to McLean.
At the argument of fair-play, obedience swept over them like a veering of wind. “Don’t crowd his elbows,” they began to say at once, and told each other to come away. “We’ll sure give the Doc room. You don’t want to be shovin’ your auger in, Chalkeye. You want to get yourself pretty near absent.” The room thinned of them forthwith. “Fix her up good, Doc,” they said, over their shoulders. They shuffled across the threshold and porch with roundabout schemes to tread quietly. When one or other stumbled on the steps and fell, he was jerked to his feet. “You want to tame yourself,” was the word. Then, suddenly, Chalkeye and Toothpick Kid came precipitately back. “Her cash,” they said. And leaving the notes and coins, they hastened to catch their comrades on the way back to the dance
“I want you,” repeated Barker to McLean.
“Him!” cried Mrs. Lusk, flashing alert again. “Jessamine wants him about now, I guess. Don’t keep him from his girl!” And she laughed her hard, rich laugh, looking from one to the other. “Not the two of yus can’t save me,” she stated, defiantly. But even in these last words a sort of thickness sounded.
“Walk her up and down,” said Barker. “Keep her moving. I’ll look what I can find. Keep her moving brisk.” At once he was out of the door; and before his running steps had died away, the fiddle had taken up its tune across the quadrangle.
“‘Buffalo Girls!'” exclaimed the woman. “Old times! Old times!”
“Come,” said McLean. “Walk.” And he took her.
Her head was full of the music. Forgetting all but that, she went with him easily, and the two made their first turns around the room. Whenever he brought her near the entrance, she leaned away from him toward the open door, where the old fiddle tune was coming in from the dark. But presently she noticed that she was being led, and her face turned sullen.
“Walk,” said McLean.
“Do you think so?” said she, laughing. But she found that she must go with him. Thus they took a few more turns.
“You’re hurting me,” she said next. Then a look of drowsy cunning filled her eyes, and she fixed them upon McLean’s dogged face. “He’s gone, Lin,” she murmured, raising her hand where Barker had disappeared.
She knew McLean had heard her, and she held back on the quickened pace that he had set.
“Leave me down. You hurt,” she pleaded, hanging on him.
The cow-puncher put forth more strength.
“Just the floor,” she pleaded again. “Just one minute on the floor. He’ll think you could not keep me lifted.”
Still McLean made no answer, but steadily led her round and round, as he had undertaken.
“He’s playing out!” she exclaimed. “You’ll be played out soon.” She laughed herself half-awake. The man drew a breath, and she laughed more to feel his hand and arm strain to surmount her increasing resistance. “Jessamine!” she whispered to him. “Jessamine! Doc’ll never suspicion you, Lin.”
“Talk sense,” said he.
“It’s sense I’m talking. Leave me go to sleep. Ah, ah, I’m going! I’ll go; you can’t–“
“Walk, walk!” he repeated. He looked at the door. An ache was numbing his arms.
“Oh yes, walk! What can you and all your muscle–Ah, walk me to glory, then, craziness! I’m going; I’ll go. I’m quitting this outfit for keeps. Lin, you’re awful handsome to-night! I’ll bet–I’ll bet she has never seen you look so. Let me–let me watch yus. Anyway, she knows I came first!”
He grasped her savagely. “First! You and twenty of yu’ don’t–God!! what do I talk to her for?”
“Because–because–I’m going; I’ll go. He slung me off–but he had to sling–you can’t–stop–“
Her head was rolling, while the lips smiled. Her words came through deeper and deeper veils, fearless, defiant, a challenge inarticulate, a continuous mutter. Again he looked at the door as he struggled to move with her dragging weight. The drops rolled on his forehead and neck, his shirt was wet, his hands slipped upon her ribbons. Suddenly the drugged body folded and sank with him, pulling him to his knees. While he took breath so, the mutter went on, and through the door came the jigging fiddle. A fire of desperation lighted in his eyes. “Buffalo Girls!” he shouted, hoarsely, in her ear, and got once more on his feet with her as though they were two partners in a quadrille. Still shouting her to wake, he struck a tottering sort of step, and so, with the bending load in his grip, strove feebly to dance the laudanum away.
Feet stumbled across the porch, and Lusk was in the room. “So I’ve got you!” he said. He had no weapon, but made a dive under the bed and came up with a carbine. The two men locked, wrenching impotently, and fell together. The carbine’s loud shot rang in the room, but did no harm; and McLean lay sick and panting upon Lusk as Barker rushed in.
“Thank God!” said he, and flung Lusk’s pistol down. The man, deranged and encouraged by drink, had come across the doctor, delayed him, threatened him with his pistol, and when he had torn it away, had left him suddenly and vanished. But Barker had feared, and come after him here. He glanced at the woman slumbering motionless beside the two men. The husband’s brief courage had gone, and he lay beneath McLean, who himself could not rise. Barker pulled them apart.
“Lin, boy, you’re not hurt?” he asked, affectionately, and lifted the cow-puncher.
McLean sat passive, with dazed eyes, letting himself be supported.
“You’re not hurt?” repeated Barker.
“No,” answered the cow-puncher, slowly. “I guess not.” He looked about the room and at the door. “I got interrupted,” he said.
“You’ll be all right soon,” said Barker.
“Nobody cares for me!” cried Lusk, suddenly, and took to querulous weeping.
“Get up,” ordered Barker, sternly.
“Don’t accuse me, Governor,” screamed Lusk. “I’m innocent.” And he rose.
Barker looked at the woman and then at the husband. “I’ll not say there was much chance for her,” he said. “But any she had is gone through you. She’ll die.”
“Nobody cares for me!” repeated the man. “He has learned my boy to scorn me.” He ran out aimlessly, and away into the night, leaving peace in the room.
“Stay sitting,” said Barker to McLean, and went to Mrs. Lusk.
But the cow-puncher, seeing him begin to lift her toward the bed without help, tried to rise. His strength was not sufficiently come back, and he sank as he had been. “I guess I don’t amount to much,” said he. “I feel like I was nothing.”
“Well, I’m something,” said Barker, coming back to his friend, out of breath. “And I know what she weighs.” He stared admiringly through his spectacles at the seated man.
The cow-puncher’s eyes slowly travelled over his body, and then sought Barker’s face. “Doc,” said he, “ain’t I young to have my nerve quit me this way?”
His Excellency broke into his broad smile.
“I know I’ve racketed some, but ain’t it ruther early?” pursued McLean, wistfully.
“You six-foot infant!” said Barker. “Look at your hand.”
Lin stared at it–the fingers quivering and bloody, and the skin grooved raw between them. That was the buckle of her belt, which in the struggle had worked round and been held by him unknowingly. Both his wrists and his shirt were ribbed with the pink of her sashes. He looked over at the bed where lay the woman heavily breathing. It was a something, a sound, not like the breath of life; and Barker saw the cow-puncher shudder.
“She is strong,” he said. “Her system will fight to the end. Two hours yet, maybe. Queer world!” he moralized. “People half killing themselves to keep one in it who wanted to go–and one that nobody wanted to stay!”
McLean did not hear. He was musing, his eyes fixed absently in front of him. “I would not want,” he said, with hesitating utterance–“I’d not wish for even my enemy to have a thing like what I’ve had to do to-night.”
Barker touched him on the arm. “If there had been another man I could trust–“
“Trust!” broke in the cow-puncher. “Why, Doc, it is the best turn yu’ ever done me. I know I am a man now–if my nerve ain’t gone.”
“I’ve known you were a man since I knew you!” said the hearty Governor. And he helped the still unsteady six-foot to a chair. “As for your nerve, I’ll bring you some whiskey now. And after”–he glanced at the bed–“and tomorrow you’ll go try if Miss Jessamine won’t put the nerve–“
“Yes, Doc, I’ll go there, I know. But don’t yu’–don’t let’s while she’s– I’m going to be glad about this, Doc, after awhile, but–“
At the sight of a new-comer in the door, he stopped in what his soul was stammering to say. “What do you want, Judge?” he inquired, coldly.
“I understand,” began Slaghammer to Barker–“I am informed–“
“Speak quieter, Judge,” said the cow-puncher.
“I understand,” repeated Slaghammer, more official than ever, “that there was a case for the coroner.”
“You’ll be notified,” put in McLean again. “Meanwhile you’ll talk quiet in this room.”
Slaghammer turned, and saw the breathing mass on the bed.
“You are a little early, Judge,” said Barker, “but–“
“But your ten dollars are safe,” said McLean.
The coroner shot one of his shrewd glances at the cow-puncher, and sat down with an amiable countenance. His fee was, indeed, ten dollars; and he was desirous of a second term.
“Under the apprehension that it had already occurred–the misapprehension–I took steps to impanel a jury,” said he, addressing both Barker and McLean. “They are–ah–waiting outside. Responsible men, Governor, and have sat before. Drybone has few responsible men to-night, but I procured these at a little game where they were–ah–losing. You may go back, gentlemen,” said he, going to the door. “I will summon you in proper time.” He looked in the room again. “Is the husband not intending–“
“That’s enough, Judge,” said McLean. “There’s too many here without adding him.”
“Judge,” spoke a voice at the door, “ain’t she ready yet?”
“She is still passing away,” observed Slaghammer, piously.
“Because I was thinking,” said the man–“I was just–You see, us jury is dry and dead broke. Doggonedest cards I’ve held this year, and–Judge, would there be anything out of the way in me touching my fee in advance, if it’s a sure thing?”
“I see none, my friend,” said Slaghammer, benevolently, “since it must be.” He shook his head and nodded it by turns. Then, with full-blown importance, he sat again, and wrote a paper, his coroner’s certificate. Next door, in Albany County, these vouchers brought their face value of five dollars to the holder; but on Drybone’s neutral soil the saloons would always pay four for them, and it was rare that any jury-man could withstand the temptation of four immediate dollars. This one gratefully received his paper, and, cherishing it like a bird in the hand, he with his colleagues bore it where they might wait for duty and slake their thirst.
In the silent room sat Lin McLean, his body coming to life more readily than his shaken spirit. Barker, seeing that the cow-puncher meant to watch until the end, brought the whiskey to him. Slaghammer drew documents from his pocket to fill the time, but was soon in slumber over them. In all precincts of the quadrangle Drybone was keeping it up late. The fiddle, the occasional shouts, and the crack of the billiard-balls travelled clear and far through the vast darkness outside. Presently steps unsteadily drew near, and round the corner of the door a voice, plaintive and diffident, said, “Judge, ain’t she most pretty near ready?”
“Wake up, Judge!” said Barker. “Your jury has gone dry again.”
The man appeared round the door–a handsome, dishevelled fellow–with hat in hand, balancing himself with respectful anxiety. Thus was a second voucher made out, and the messenger strayed back happy to his friends. Barker and McLean sat wakeful, and Slaghammer fell at once to napping. From time to time he was roused by new messengers, each arriving more unsteady than the last, until every juryman had got his fee and no more messengers came. The coroner slept undisturbed in his chair. McLean and Barker sat. On the bed the mass, with its pink ribbons, breathed and breathed, while moths flew round the lamp, tapping and falling with light sounds. So did the heart of the darkness wear itself away, and through the stone-cold air the dawn began to filter and expand.
Barker rose, bent over the bed, and then stood. Seeing him, McLean stood also.
“Judge,” said Barker, quietly, “you may call them now.” And with careful steps the judge got himself out of the room to summon his jury.
For a short while the cow-puncher stood looking down upon the woman. She lay lumped in her gaudiness, the ribbons darkly stained by the laudanum; but into the stolid, bold features death had called up the faint-colored ghost of youth, and McLean remembered all his Bear Creek days. “Hind sight is a turruble clear way o’ seein’ things,” said he. “I think I’ll take a walk.”
“Go,” said Barker. “The jury only need me, and I’ll join you.”
But the jury needed no witness. Their long waiting and the advance pay had been too much for these responsible men. Like brothers they had shared each others’ vouchers until responsibility had melted from their brains and the whiskey was finished. Then, no longer entertained and growing weary of Drybone, they had remembered nothing but their distant beds. Each had mounted his pony, holding trustingly to the saddle, and thus, unguided, the experienced ponies had taken them right. Across the wide sagebrush and up and down the river they were now asleep or riding, dispersed irrevocably. But the coroner was here. He duly received Barker’s testimony, brought his verdict in, and signed it, and even while he was issuing to himself his own proper voucher for ten dollars came Chalkeye and Toothpick Kid on their ponies, galloping, eager in their hopes and good wishes for Mrs. Lusk. Life ran strong in them both. The night had gone well with them. Here was the new day going to be fine. It must be well with everybody.
“You don’t say!” they exclaimed, taken aback. “Too bad.”
They sat still in their saddles, and upon their reckless, kindly faces thought paused for a moment. “Her gone!” they murmured. “Hard to get used to the idea. What’s anybody doing about the coffin?”
“Mr. Lusk,” answered Slaghammer, “doubtless–“
“Lusk! He’ll not know anything this forenoon. He’s out there in the grass. She didn’t think nothing of him. Tell Bill–not Dollar Bill, Jerky Bill, yu’ know; he’s over the bridge–to fix up a hearse, and we’ll be back.” The two drove their spurs in with vigorous heels, and instantly were gone rushing up the road to the graveyard.
The fiddle had lately ceased, and no dancers stayed any longer in the hall. Eastward the rose and gold began to flow down upon the plain over the tops of the distant hills. Of the revellers, many had never gone to bed, and many now were already risen from their excesses to revive in the cool glory of the morning. Some were drinking to stay their hunger until breakfast; some splashed and sported in the river, calling and joking; and across the river some were holding horse-races upon the level beyond the hog-ranch. Drybone air rang with them. Their lusty, wandering shouts broke out in gusts of hilarity. Their pistols, aimed at cans or prairie dogs or anything, cracked as they galloped at large. Their speeding, clear-cut forms would shine upon the bluffs, and, descending, merge in the dust their horses had raised. Yet all this was nothing in the vastness of the growing day.
Beyond their voices the rim of the sun moved above the violet hills, and Drybone, amid the quiet, long, new fields of radiance, stood august and strange.
Down along the tall, bare slant from the graveyard the two horsemen were riding back. They could be seen across the river, and the horse-racers grew curious. As more and more watched, the crowd began to speak. It was a calf the two were bringing. It was too small for a calf. It was dead. It was a coyote they had roped. See it swing! See it fall on the road!
“It’s a coffin, boys!” said one, shrewd at guessing.
At that the event of last night drifted across their memories, and they wheeled and spurred their ponies. Their crowding hoofs on the bridge brought the swimmers from the waters below and, dressing, they climbed quickly to the plain and followed the gathering. By the door already were Jerky Bill and Limber Jim and the Doughie and always more, dashing up with their ponies; halting with a sharp scatter of gravel to hear and comment. Barker was gone, but the important coroner told his news. And it amazed each comer, and set him speaking and remembering past things with the others. “Dead!” each one began. “Her, does he say?”
“Why, pshaw!”
“Why, Frenchy said Doc had her cured!”
Jack Saunders claimed she had rode to Box Elder with Lin McLean. “Dead? Why, pshaw!”
“Seems Doc couldn’t swim her out.”
“Couldn’t swim her out?”
“That’s it. Doc couldn’t swim her out.”
“Well–there’s one less of us.”
“Sure! She was one of the boys.”
“She grub-staked me when I went broke in ’84.”
“She gave me fifty dollars onced at Lander, to buy a saddle.”
“I run agin her when she was a biscuit-shooter.”
“Sidney, Nebraska. I run again her there, too.”
“I knowed her at Laramie.”
“Where’s Lin? He knowed her all the way from Bear Creek to Cheyenne.”
They laughed loudly at this.
“That’s a lonesome coffin,” said the Doughie. “That the best you could do?”
“You’d say so!” said Toothpick Kid.
“Choices are getting scarce up there,” said Chalkeye. “We looked the lot over.”
They were arriving from their search among the old dug-up graves on the hill. Now they descended from their ponies, with the box roped and rattling between them. “Where’s your hearse, Jerky?” asked Chalkeye.
“Have her round in a minute,” said the cowboy, and galloped away with three or four others.
“Turruble lonesome coffin, all the same,” repeated the Doughie. And they surveyed the box that had once held some soldier.
“She did like fixin’s,” said Limber Jim.
“Fixin’s!” said Toothpick Kid. “That’s easy.”
While some six of them, with Chalkeye, bore the light, half-rotted coffin into the room, many followed Toothpick Kid to the post-trader’s store. Breaking in here, they found men sleeping on the counters. These had been able to find no other beds in Drybone, and lay as they had stretched themselves on entering. They sprawled in heavy slumber, some with not even their hats taken off and some with their boots against the rough hair of the next one. They were quickly pushed together, few waking, and so there was space for spreading cloth and chintz. Stuffs were unrolled and flung aside till many folds and colors draped the motionless sleepers, and at length a choice was made. Unmeasured yards of this drab chintz were ripped off, money treble its worth was thumped upon the counter, and they returned, bearing it like a streamer to the coffin. While the noise of their hammers filled the room, the hearse came tottering to the door, pulled and pushed by twenty men. It was an ambulance left behind by the soldiers, and of the old-fashioned shape, concave in body, its top blown away in winds of long ago; and as they revolved, its wheels dished in and out like hoops about to fall. While some made a harness from ropes, and throwing the saddles off two ponies backed them to the vehicle, the body was put in the coffin, now covered by the chintz. But the laudanum upon the front of her dress revolted those who remembered their holidays with her, and turning the woman upon her face, they looked their last upon her flashing, colored ribbons, and nailed the lid down. So they carried her out, but the concave body of the hearse was too short for the coffin; the end reached out, and it might have fallen. But Limber Jim, taking the reins, sat upon the other end, waiting and smoking. For all Drybone was making ready to follow in some way. They had sought the husband, the chief mourner. He, however, still lay in the grass of the quadrangle, and despising him as she had done, they left him to wake when he should choose. Those men who could sit in their saddles rode escort, the old friends nearest, and four held the heads of the frightened cow-ponies who were to draw the hearse. They had never known harness before, and they plunged with the men who held them. Behind the hearse the women followed in a large ranch-wagon, this moment arrived in town. Two mares drew this, and their foals gambolled around them. The great flat-topped dray for hauling poles came last, with its four government mules. The cow-boys had caught sight of it and captured it. Rushing to the post-trader’s, they carried the sleeping men from the counter and laid them on the dray. Then, searching Drybone outside and in for any more incapable of following, they brought them, and the dray was piled.
Limber Jim called for another drink and, with his cigar between his teeth, cracked his long bull-whacker whip. The ponies, terrified, sprang away, scattering the men that held them, and the swaying hearse leaped past the husband, over the stones and the many playing-cards in the grass. Masterfully steered, it came safe to an open level, while the throng cheered the unmoved driver on his coffin, his cigar between his teeth.
“Stay with it, Jim!” they shouted. “You’re a king!”
A steep ditch lay across the flat where he was veering, abrupt and nearly hidden; but his eye caught the danger in time, and swinging from it leftward so that two wheels of the leaning coach were in the air, he faced the open again, safe, as the rescue swooped down upon him. The horsemen came at the ditch, a body of daring, a sultry blast of youth. Wheeling at the brink, they turned, whirling their long ropes. The skilful nooses flew, and the ponies, caught by the neck and foot, were dragged back to the quadrangle and held in line. So the pageant started the wild ponies quivering but subdued by the tightened ropes, and the coffin steady in the ambulance beneath the driver. The escort, in their fringed leather and broad hats, moved slowly beside and behind it, many of them swaying, their faces full of health, and the sun and the strong drink. The women followed, whispering a little; and behind them the slow dray jolted, with its heaps of men waking from the depths of their whiskey and asking what this was. So they went up the hill. When the