Lanty Foster was crouching on a low
stool before the dying kitchen fire, the better to
get its fading radiance on the book she was reading.
Beyond, through the open window and door, the fire
was also slowly fading from the sky and the mountain
ridge whence the sun had dropped half an hour before.
The view was uphill, and the sky-line of the hill
was marked by two or three gibbet-like poles from which,
on a now invisible line between them, depended certain
objects mere black silhouettes against
the sky which bore weird likeness to human
figures. Absorbed as she was in her book, she
nevertheless occasionally cast an impatient glance
in that direction, as the sunlight faded more quickly
than her fire. For the fluttering objects were
the “week’s wash” which had to be
brought in before night fell and the mountain wind
arose. It was strong at that altitude, and before
this had ravished the clothes from the line, and scattered
them along the highroad leading over the ridge, once
even lashing the shy schoolmaster with a pair of Lanty’s
own stockings, and blinding the parson with a really
tempestuous petticoat.
A whiff of wind down the big-throated
chimney stirred the log embers on the hearth, and
the girl jumped to her feet, closing the book with
an impatient snap. She knew her mother’s
voice would follow. It was hard to leave her
heroine at the crucial moment of receiving an explanation
from a presumed faithless lover, just to climb a hill
and take in a lot of soulless washing, but such are
the infelicities of stolen romance reading. She
threw the clothes-basket over her head like a hood,
the handle resting across her bosom and shoulders,
and with both her hands free started out of the cabin.
But the darkness had come up from the valley in one
stride after its mountain fashion, had outstripped
her, and she was instantly plunged in it. Still
the outline of the ridge above her was visible, with
the white, steadfast stars that were not there a moment
ago, and by that sign she knew she was late. She
had to battle against the rushing wind now, which
sung through the inverted basket over her head and
held her back, but with bent shoulders she at last
reached the top of the ridge and the level. Yet
here, owing to the shifting of the lighter background
above her, she now found herself again encompassed
with the darkness. The outlines of the poles had
disappeared, the white fluttering garments were distinct
apparitions waving in the wind, like dancing ghosts.
But there certainly was a queer misshapen bulk moving
beyond, which she did not recognize, and as she at
last reached one of the poles, a shock was communicated
to it, through the clothes-line and the bulk beyond.
Then she heard a voice say impatiently,
“What in h-ll am I running into now?”
It was a man’s voice, and, from
its elevation, the voice of a man on horseback.
She answered without fear and with slow deliberation,
“Inter our clothes-line, I reckon.”
“Oh!” said the man in
a half-apologetic tone. Then in brisker accents,
“The very thing I want! I say, can you give
me a bit of it? The ring of my saddle girth has
fetched loose. I can fasten it with that.”
“I reckon,” replied Lanty,
with the same unconcern, moving nearer the bulk, which
now separated into two parts as the man dismounted.
“How much do you want?”
“A foot or two will do.”
They were now in front of each other,
although their faces were not distinguishable to either.
Lanty, who had been following the lines with her hand,
here came upon the end knotted around the last pole.
This she began to untie.
“What a place to hang clothes,” he said
curiously.
“Mighty dryin’, tho’,” returned
Lanty laconically.
“And your house? Is it near by?”
he continued.
“Just down the ridge ye
kin see from the edge. Got a knife?” She
had untied the knot.
“No yes wait.”
He had hesitated a moment and then produced something
from his breast pocket, which he however kept in his
hand. As he did not offer it to her she simply
held out a section of the rope between her hands,
which he divided with a single cut. She saw only
that the instrument was long and keen. Then she
lifted the flap of the saddle for him as he attempted
to fasten the loose ring with the rope, but the darkness
made it impossible. With an ejaculation, he fumbled
in his pockets. “My last match!”
he said, striking it, as he crouched over it to protect
it from the wind. Lanty leaned over also, with
her apron raised between it and the blast. The
flame for an instant lit up the ring, the man’s
dark face, mustache, and white teeth set together as
he tugged at the girth, and Lanty’s brown, velvet
eyes and soft, round cheek framed in the basket.
Then it went out, but the ring was secured.
“Thank you,” said the
man, with a short laugh, “but I thought you were
a humpbacked witch in the dark there.”
“And I couldn’t make out
whether you was a cow or a b’ar,” returned
the young girl simply.
Here, however, he quickly mounted
his horse, but in the action something slipped from
his clothes, struck a stone, and bounded away into
the darkness.
“My knife,” he said hurriedly.
“Please hand it to me.” But although
the girl dropped on her knees and searched the ground
diligently, it could not be found. The man with
a restrained ejaculation again dismounted, and joined
in the search.
“Haven’t you got another match?”
suggested Lanty.
“No it was my last!” he said
impatiently.
“Just you hol’ on here,”
she said suddenly, “and I’ll run down to
the kitchen and fetch you a light. I won’t
be long.”
“No! no!” said the man
quickly; “don’t! I couldn’t
wait. I’ve been here too long now.
Look here. You come in daylight and find it, and just
keep it for me, will you?” He laughed. “I’ll
come for it. And now, if you’ll only help
to set me on that road again, for it’s so infernal
black I can’t see the mare’s ears ahead
of me, I won’t bother you any more. Thank
you.”
Lanty had quietly moved to his horse’s
head and taken the bridle in her hand, and at once
seemed to be lost in the gloom. But in a few moments
he felt the muffled thud of his horse’s hoof
on the thick dust of the highway, and its still hot,
impalpable powder rising to his nostrils.
“Thank you,” he said again,
“I’m all right now,” and in the pause
that followed it seemed to Lanty that he had extended
a parting hand to her in the darkness. She put
up her own to meet it, but missed his, which had blundered
onto her shoulder. Before she could grasp it,
she felt him stooping over her, the light brush of
his soft mustache on her cheek, and then the starting
forward of his horse. But the retaliating box
on the ear she had promptly aimed at him spent itself
in the black space which seemed suddenly to have swallowed
up the man, and even his light laugh.
For an instant she stood still, and
then, swinging the basket indignantly from her shoulder,
took up her suspended task. It was no light one
in the increasing wind, and the unfastened clothes-line
had precipitated a part of its burden to the ground
through the loosening of the rope. But on picking
up the trailing garments her hand struck an unfamiliar
object. The stranger’s lost knife!
She thrust it hastily into the bottom of the basket
and completed her work. As she began to descend
with her burden she saw that the light of the kitchen
fire, seen through the windows, was augmented by a
candle. Her mother was evidently awaiting her.
“Pretty time to be fetchin’
in the wash,” said Mrs. Foster querulously.
“But what can you expect when folks stand gossipin’
and philanderin’ on the ridge instead o’
tendin’ to their work?”
Now Lanty knew that she had not
been “gossipin’” nor “philanderin’,”
yet as the parting salute might have been open to
that imputation, and as she surmised that her mother
might have overheard their voices, she briefly said,
to prevent further questioning, that she had shown
a stranger the road. But for her mother’s
unjust accusation she would have been more communicative.
As Mrs. Foster went back grumblingly into the sitting-room
Lanty resolved to keep the knife at present a secret
from her mother, and to that purpose removed it from
the basket. But in the light of the candle she
saw it for the first time plainly and started.
For it was really a dagger! jeweled-handled
and richly wrought such as Lanty had never
looked upon before. The hilt was studded with
gems, and the blade, which had a cutting edge, was
damascened in blue and gold. Her soft eyes reflected
the brilliant setting, her lips parted breathlessly;
then, as her mother’s voice arose in the other
room, she thrust it back into its velvet sheath and
clapped it into her pocket. Its rare beauty had
confirmed her resolution of absolute secrecy.
To have shown it now would have made “no end
of talk.” And she was not sure but that
her parents would have demanded its custody! And
it was given to her by him to keep.
This settled the question of moral ethics. She
took the first opportunity to run up to her bedroom
and hide it under the mattress.
Yet the thought of it filled the rest
of her evening. When her household duties were
done she took up her novel again, partly from force
of habit and partly as an attitude in which she could
think of it undisturbed. For what was fiction
to her now? True, it possessed a certain reminiscent
value. A “dagger” had appeared in
several romances she had devoured, but she never had
a clear idea of one before. “The Count
sprang back, and, drawing from his belt a richly jeweled
dagger, hissed between his teeth,” or, more
to the purpose: “‘Take this,’
said Orlando, handing her the ruby-hilted poignard
which had gleamed upon his thigh, ‘and should
the caitiff attempt thy unguarded innocence ’”
“Did ye hear what your father
was sayin’?” Lanty started. It was
her mother’s voice in the doorway, and she had
been vaguely conscious of another voice pitched in
the same querulous key, which, indeed, was the dominant
expression of the small ranchers of that fertile neighborhood.
Possibly a too complaisant and unaggressive Nature
had spoiled them.
“Yes! no!” said Lanty abstractedly,
“what did he say?”
“If you wasn’t taken up
with that fool book,” said Mrs. Foster, glancing
at her daughter’s slightly conscious color, “ye’d
know! He allowed ye’d better not leave
yer filly in the far pasture nights. That gang
o’ Mexican horse-thieves is out again, and raided
McKinnon’s stock last night.”
This touched Lanty closely. The
filly was her own property, and she was breaking it
for her own riding. But her distrust of her parents’
interference was greater than any fear of horse-stealers.
“She’s mighty uneasy in the barn; and,”
she added, with a proud consciousness of that beautiful
yet carnal weapon upstairs, “I reckon I ken protect
her and myself agin any Mexican horse-thieves.”
“My! but we’re gettin’
high and mighty,” responded Mrs. Foster, with
deep irony. “Did you git all that outer
your fool book?”
“Mebbe,” said Lanty curtly.
Nevertheless, her thoughts that night
were not entirely based on written romance. She
wondered if the stranger knew that she had really tried
to box his ears in the darkness, also if he had been
able to see her face. His she remembered,
at least the flash of his white teeth against his
dark face and darker mustache, which was quite as soft
as her own hair. But if he thought “for
a minnit” that she was “goin’ to
allow an entire stranger to kiss her he
was mighty mistaken.” She should let him
know it “pretty quick”! She should
hand him back the dagger “quite careless like,”
and never let on that she’d thought anything
of it. Perhaps that was the reason why, before
she went to bed, she took a good look at it, and after
taking off her straight, beltless, calico gown she
even tried the effect of it, thrust in the stiff waistband
of her petticoat, with the jeweled hilt displayed,
and thought it looked charming as indeed
it did. And then, having said her prayers like
a good girl, and supplicated that she should be less
“tetchy” with her parents, she went to
sleep and dreamed that she had gone out to take in
the wash again, but that the clothes had all changed
to the queerest lot of folks, who were all fighting
and struggling with each other until she, Lanty, drawing
her dagger, rushed up single-handed among them, crying,
“Disperse, ye craven curs, disperse,
I say.” And they dispersed.
Yet even Lanty was obliged to admit
the next morning that all this was somewhat incongruous
with the baking of “corn dodgers,” the
frying of fish, the making of beds, and her other
household duties, and dismissed the stranger from
her mind until he should “happen along.”
In her freer and more acceptable outdoor duties she
even tolerated the advances of neighboring swains
who made a point of passing by “Foster’s
Ranch,” and who were quite aware that Atalanta
Foster, alias “Lanty,” was one of the
prettiest girls in the country. But Lanty’s
toleration consisted in that singular performance
known to herself as “giving them as good as they
sent,” being a lazy traversing, qualified with
scorn, of all that they advanced. How long they
would have put up with this from a plain girl I do
not know, but Lanty’s short upper lip seemed
framed for indolent and fascinating scorn, and her
dreamy eyes usually looked beyond the questioner,
or blunted his bolder glances in their velvety surfaces.
The libretto of these scenes was not exhaustive, e.g.:
The Swain (with bold, bad gayety).
“Saw that shy schoolmaster hangin’ round
your ridge yesterday! Orter know by this time
that shyness with a gal don’t pay.”
Lanty (decisively). “Mebbe
he allows it don’t get left as often as impudence.”
The Swain (ignoring the reply and
his previous attitude and becoming more direct).
“I was calkilatin’ to say that with these
yer hoss-thieves about, yer filly ain’t safe
in the pasture. I took a turn round there two
or three times last evening to see if she was all right.”
Lanty (with a flattering show of interest).
“No! Did ye, now? I was jest
wonderin"’
The Swain (eagerly). “I
did quite late, too! Why, that’s
nothin’, Miss Atalanty, to what I’d do
for you.”
Lanty (musing, with far off-eyes).
“Then that’s why she was so awful skeerd
and frightened! Just jumpin’ outer her skin
with horror. I reckoned it was a b’ar or
panther or a spook! You ought to have waited
till she got accustomed to your looks.”
Nevertheless, despite this elegant
raillery, Lanty was enough concerned in the safety
of her horse to visit it the next day with a view of
bringing it nearer home. She had just stepped
into the alder fringe of a dry “run” when
she came suddenly upon the figure of a horseman in
the “run,” who had been hidden by the
alders from the plain beyond and who seemed to be
engaged in examining the hoof marks in the dust of
the old ford. Something about his figure struck
her recollection, and as he looked up quickly she
saw it was the owner of the dagger. But he appeared
to be lighter of hair and complexion, and was dressed
differently, and more like a vaquero. Yet there
was the same flash of his teeth as he recognized her,
and she knew it was the same man.
Alas for her preparation! Without
the knife she could not make that haughty return of
it which she had contemplated. And more than that,
she was conscious she was blushing! Nevertheless
she managed to level her pretty brown eyebrows at
him, and said sharply that if he followed her to her
home she would return his property at once.
“But I’m in no hurry for
it,” he said with a laugh, the same
light laugh and pleasant voice she remembered, “and
I’d rather not come to the house just now.
The knife is in good hands, I know, and I’ll
call for it when I want it! And until then if
it’s all the same to you keep it
to yourself, keep it dark, as dark as the
night I lost it!”
“I don’t go about blabbing
my affairs,” said Lanty indignantly, “and
if it hadn’t been dark that night you’d
have had your ears boxed you know why!”
The stranger laughed again, waved
his hand to Lanty, and galloped away.
Lanty was a little disappointed.
The daylight had taken away some of her illusions.
He was certainly very good-looking, but not quite as
picturesque, mysterious, and thrilling as in the dark!
And it was very queer he certainly did
look darker that night! Who was he? And why
was he lingering near her? He was different from
her neighbors her admirers. He might
be one of those locaters, from the big towns, who
prospect the lands, with a view of settling government
warrants on them, they were always so secret
until they had found what they wanted. She did
not dare to seek information of her friends, for the
same reason that she had concealed his existence from
her mother, it would provoke awkward questions;
and it was evident that he was trusting to her secrecy,
too. The thought thrilled her with a new pride,
and was some compensation for the loss of her more
intangible romance. It would be mighty fine,
when he did call openly for his beautiful knife and
declared himself, to have them all know that she
knew about it all along.
When she reached home, to guard against
another such surprise she determined to keep the weapon
with her, and, distrusting her pocket, confided it
to the cheap little country-made corset which only
for the last year had confined her budding figure,
and which now, perhaps, heaved with an additional
pride. She was quite abstracted during the rest
of the day, and paid but little attention to the gossip
of the farm lads, who were full of a daring raid,
two nights before, by the Mexican gang on the large
stock farm of a neighbor. The Vigilant Committee
had been baffled; it was even alleged that some of
the smaller ranchmen and herders were in league with
the gang. It was also believed to be a widespread
conspiracy; to have a political complexion in its combination
of an alien race with Southwestern filibusters.
The legal authorities had been reinforced by special
detectives from San Francisco. Lanty seldom troubled
herself with these matters; she knew the exaggeration,
she suspected the ignorance of her rural neighbors.
She roughly referred it, in her own vocabulary, to
“jaw,” a peculiarly masculine quality.
But later in the evening, when the domestic circle
in the sitting-room had been augmented by a neighbor,
and Lanty had taken refuge behind her novel as an
excuse for silence, Zob Hopper, the enamored swain
of the previous evening, burst in with more astounding
news. A posse of the sheriff had just passed
along the ridge; they had “corraled” part
of the gang, and rescued some of the stock. The
leader of the gang had escaped, but his capture was
inevitable, as the roads were stopped. “All
the same, I’m glad to see ye took my advice,
Miss Atalanty, and brought in your filly,” he
concluded, with an insinuating glance at the young
girl.
But “Miss Atalanty,” curling
a quarter of an inch of scarlet lip above the edge
of her novel, here “allowed” that if his
advice or the filly had to be “took,”
she didn’t know which was worse.
“I wonder ye kin talk to sech
peartness, Mr. Hopper,” said Mrs. Foster severely;
“she ain’t got eyes nor senses for anythin’
but that book.”
“Talkin’ o’ what’s
to be ‘took,’” put in the diplomatic
neighbor, “you bet it ain’t that Mexican
leader! No, sir! he’s been ‘stopped’
before this and then got clean away all
the same! One o’ them detectives got him
once and disarmed him but he managed to
give them the slip, after all. Why, he’s
that full o’ shifts and disguises thar ain’t
no spottin’ him. He walked right under
the constable’s nose oncet, and took a drink
with the sheriff that was arter him and
the blamed fool never knew it. He kin change
even the color of his hair quick as winkin’.”
“Is he a real Mexican, a
regular Greaser?” asked the paternal Foster.
“Cos I never heard that they wuz smart.”
“No! They say he comes
o’ old Spanish stock, a bad egg they threw outer
the nest, I reckon,” put in Hopper eagerly, seeing
a strange animated interest dilating Lanty’s
eyes, and hoping to share in it; “but he’s
reg’lar high-toned, you bet! Why, I knew
a man who seed him in his own camp prinked
out in a velvet jacket and silk sash, with gold chains
and buttons down his wide pants and a dagger stuck
in his sash, with a handle just blazin’ with
jew’ls. Yes! Miss Atalanty, they say
that one stone at the top a green stone,
what they call an ’em’ral’ was
worth the price o’ a ’Frisco house-lot.
True ez you live! Eh what’s up
now?”
Lanty’s book had fallen on the
floor as she was rising to her feet with a white face,
still more strange and distorted in an affected yawn
behind her little hand. “Yer makin’
me that sick and nervous with yer fool yarns,”
she said hysterically, “that I’m goin’
to get a little fresh air. It’s just stifling
here with lies and terbacker!” With another
high laugh, she brushed past him into the kitchen,
opened the door, and then paused, and, turning, ran
rapidly up to her bedroom. Here she locked herself
in, tore open the bosom of her dress, plucked out
the dagger, threw it on the bed, where the green stone
gleamed for an instant in the candlelight, and then
dropped on her knees beside the bed with her whirling
head buried in her cold red hands.
It had all come to her in a flash,
like a blaze of lightning, the black, haunting
figure on the ridge, the broken saddle girth, the
abandonment of the dagger in the exigencies of flight
and concealment; the second meeting, the skulking
in the dry, alder-hidden “run,” the changed
dress, the lighter-colored hair, but always the same
voice and laugh the leader, the fugitive,
the Mexican horse-thief! And she, the Godforsaken
fool, the chuckle-headed nigger baby, with not half
the sense of her own filly or that sop-headed Hopper had
never seen it! She she who would
be the laughing-stock of them all she had
thought him a “locater,” a “towny”
from ’Frisco! And she had consented to keep
his knife until he would call for it, yes,
call for it, with fire and flame perhaps, the trampling
of hoofs, pistol shots and yet
Yet! he had trusted
her. Yes! trusted her when he knew a word from
her lips would have brought the whole district down
on him! when the mere exposure of that dagger would
have identified and damned him! Trusted her a
second time, when she was within cry of her house!
When he might have taken her filly without her knowing
it? And now she remembered vaguely that the neighbors
had said how strange it was that her father’s
stock had not suffered as theirs had. He
had protected them he who was now a fugitive and
their men pursuing him! She rose suddenly with
a single stamp of her narrow foot, and as suddenly
became cool and sane. And then, quite her old
self again, she lazily picked up the dagger and restored
it to its place in her bosom. That done, with
her color back and her eyes a little brighter, she
deliberately went downstairs again, stuck her little
brown head into the sitting-room, said cheerfully,
“Still yawpin’, you folks,” and quietly
passed out into the darkness.
She ran swiftly up to the ridge, impelled
by the blind memory of having met him there at night
and the one vague thought to give him warning.
But it was dark and empty, with no sound but the rushing
wind. And then an idea seized her. If he
were haunting the vicinity still, he might see the
fluttering of the clothes upon the line and believe
she was there. She stooped quickly, and in the
merciful and exonerating darkness stripped off her
only white petticoat and pinned it on the line.
It flapped, fluttered, and streamed in the mountain
wind. She lingered and listened. But there
came a sound she had not counted on, the
clattering hoofs of not one, but many, horses
on the lower road! She ran back to the house
to find its inmates already hastening towards the road
for news. She took that chance to slip in quietly,
go to her room, whose window commanded a view of the
ridge, and crouching low behind it she listened.
She could hear the sound of voices, and the dull trampling
of heavy boots on the dusty path towards the barnyard
on the other side of the house a pause,
and then the return of the trampling boots, and the
final clattering of hoofs on the road again. Then
there was a tap on her door and her mother’s
querulous voice.
“Oh! yer there, are ye?
Well it’s the best place fer
a girl with all these man’s doin’s
goin’ on! They’ve got that Mexican
horse-thief and have tied him up in your filly’s
stall in the barn till the ’Frisco
deputy gets back from rounding up the others.
So ye jest stay where ye are till they’ve come
and gone, and we’re shut o’ all that cattle.
Are ye mindin’?”
“All right, maw; ‘taint
no call o’ mine, anyhow,” returned Lanty,
through the half-open door.
At another time her mother might have
been startled at her passive obedience. Still
more would she have been startled had she seen her
daughter’s face now, behind the closed door with
her little mouth set over her clenched teeth.
And yet it was her own child, and Lanty was her mother’s
real daughter; the same pioneer blood filled their
veins, the blood that had never nourished cravens
or degenerates, but had given itself to sprinkle and
fertilize desert solitudes where man might follow.
Small wonder, then, that this frontier-born Lanty,
whose first infant cry had been answered by the yelp
of wolf and scream of panther; whose father’s
rifle had been leveled across her cradle to cover the
stealthy Indian who prowled outside, small wonder that
she should feel herself equal to these “man’s
doin’s,” and prompt to take a part.
For even in the first shock of the news of the capture
she recalled the fact that the barn was old and rotten,
that only that day the filly had kicked a board loose
from behind her stall, which she, Lanty, had lightly
returned to avoid “making a fuss.”
If his captors had not noticed it, or trusted only
to their guards, she might make the opening wide enough
to free him!
Two hours later the guard nearest
the now sleeping house, a farm hand of the Fosters’,
saw his employer’s daughter slip out and cautiously
approach him. A devoted slave of Lanty’s,
and familiar with her impulses, he guessed her curiosity,
and was not averse to satisfy it and the sense of
his own importance. To her whispers of affected,
half-terrified interest, he responded in whispers that
the captive was really in the filly’s stall,
securely bound by his wrists behind his back, and
his feet “hobbled” to a post. That
Lanty couldn’t see him, for it was dark inside,
and he was sitting with his back to the wall, as he
couldn’t sleep comf’ble lyin’ down.
Lanty’s eyes glowed, but her face was turned
aside.
“And ye ain’t reckonin’
his friends will come and rescue him?” said
Lanty, gazing with affected fearfulness in the darkness.
“Not much! There’s
two other guards down in the corral, and I’d
fire my gun and bring ’em up.”
But Lanty was gazing open-mouthed
towards the ridge. “What’s that wavin’
on the ridge?” she said in awe-stricken tones.
She was pointing to the petticoat, a
vague, distant, moving object against the horizon.
“Why, that’s some o’ the wash on
the line, ain’t it?”
“Wash two days in
the week!” said Lanty sharply.
“Wot’s gone of you?”
“Thet’s so,” muttered
the man, “and it wan’t there at sundown,
I’ll swear! P’r’aps I’d
better call the guard,” and he raised his rifle.
“Don’t,” said Lanty,
catching his arm. “Suppose it’s nothin’,
they’ll laugh at ye. Creep up softly and
see; ye ain’t afraid, are ye? If ye are,
give me yer gun, and I’ll go.”
This settled the question, as Lanty
expected. The man cocked his piece, and bending
low began cautiously to mount the acclivity. Lanty
waited until his figure began to fade, and then ran
like fire to the barn.
She had arranged every detail of her
plan beforehand. Crouching beside the wall of
the stall she hissed through a crack in thrilling whispers,
“Don’t move. Don’t speak for
your life’s sake. Wait till I hand you back
your knife, then do the best you can.” Then
slipping aside the loosened board she saw dimly the
black outline of curling hair, back, shoulders, and
tied wrists of the captive. Drawing the knife
from her pocket, with two strokes of its keen cutting
edge she severed the cords, threw the knife into the
opening, and darted away. Yet in that moment she
knew that the man was instinctively turning towards
her. But it was one thing to free a horse-thief,
and another to stop and “philander” with
him.
She ran halfway up the ridge, and
met the farm hand returning. It was only a bit
of washing after all, and he was glad he hadn’t
fired his gun. On the other hand, Lanty confessed
she had got “so skeert” being alone, that
she came to seek him. She had the shivers; wasn’t
her hand cold? It was, but thrilling even in
its coldness to the bashfully admiring man. And
she was that weak and dizzy, he must let her lean on
his arm going down; and they must go slow.
She was sure he was cold, too, and if he would wait
at the back door she would give him a drink of whiskey.
Thus Lanty, with her brain afire, her eyes and ears
straining into the darkness, and the vague outline
of the barn beyond. Another moment was protracted
over the drink of whiskey, and then Lanty, with a
faint archness, made him promise not to tell her mother
of her escapade, and she promised on her part not
to say anything about his “stalking a petticoat
on the clothesline,” and then shyly closed the
door and regained her room. He must have
got away by this time, or have been discovered; she
believed they would not open the barn door until the
return of the posse.
She was right. It was near daybreak
when they returned, and, again crouching low beside
her window, she heard, with a fierce joy, the sudden
outcry, the oaths, the wrangling voices, the summoning
of her father to the front door, and then the tumultuous
sweeping away again of the whole posse, and a blessed
silence falling over the rancho. And then Lanty
went quietly to bed, and slept like a three-year child!
Perhaps that was the reason why she
was able at breakfast to listen with lazy and even
rosy indifference to the startling events of the night;
to the sneers of the farm hands at the posse who had
overlooked the knife when they searched their prisoner,
as well as the stupidity of the corral guard who had
never heard him make a hole “the size of a house”
in the barn side! Once she glanced demurely at
Silas Briggs the farm hand and the poor
fellow felt consoled in his shame at the remembrance
of their confidences.
But Lanty’s tranquillity was
not destined to last long. There was again the
irruption of exciting news from the highroad; the Mexican
leader had been recaptured, and was now safely lodged
in Brownsville jail! Those who were previously
loud in their praises of the successful horse-thief
who had baffled the vigilance of his pursuers were
now equally keen in their admiration of the new San
Francisco deputy who, in turn, had outwitted the whole
gang. It was he who was fertile in expedients;
he who had studied the whole country, and even
risked his life among the gang, and he who had
again closed the meshes of the net around the escaped
outlaw. He was already returning by way of the
rancho, and might stop there a moment, so
that they could all see the hero. Such was the
power of success on the country-side! Outwardly
indifferent, inwardly bitter, Lanty turned away.
She should not grace his triumph, if she kept in her
room all day! And when there was a clatter of
hoofs on the road again, Lanty slipped upstairs.
But in a few moments she was summoned.
Captain Lance Wetherby, Assistant Chief of Police
of San Francisco, Deputy Sheriff and ex-U. S.
scout, had requested to see Miss Foster a few moments
alone. Lanty knew what it meant, her
secret had been discovered; but she was not the girl
to shirk the responsibility! She lifted her little
brown head proudly, and with the same resolute step
with which she had left the house the night before,
descended the stairs and entered the sitting-room.
At first she saw nothing. Then a remembered voice
struck her ear; she started, looked up, and gasping,
fell back against the door. It was the stranger
who had given her the dagger, the stranger she had
met in the run! the horse-thief himself!
No! no! she saw it all now she had cut loose
the wrong man!
He looked at her with a smile of sadness as
he drew from his breast-pocket that dreadful dagger,
the very sight of which Lanty now loathed! “This
is the second time, Miss Foster,” he said
gently, “that I have taken this knife from Murietta,
the Mexican bandit: once when I disarmed him
three weeks ago, and he escaped, and last night, when
he had again escaped and I recaptured him. After
I lost it that night I understood from you that you
had found it and were keeping it for me.”
He paused a moment and went on: “I don’t
ask you what happened last night. I don’t
condemn you for it; I can believe what a girl of your
courage and sympathy might rightly do if her pity were
excited; I only ask why did you give him
back that knife I trusted you with?”
“Why? Why did I?”
burst out Lanty in a daring gush of truth, scorn, and
temper. “Because I thought you
were that horse-thief. There!”
He drew back astonished, and then
suddenly came that laugh that Lanty remembered and
now hailed with joy. “I believe you, by
Jove!” he gasped. “That first night
I wore the disguise in which I have tracked him and
mingled with his gang. Yes! I see it all
now and more. I see that to you
I owe his recapture!”
“To me!” echoed the bewildered girl; “how?”
“Why, instead of making for
his cave he lingered here in the confines of the ranch!
He thought you were in love with him, because you freed
him and gave him his knife, and stayed to see you!”
But Lanty had her apron to her eyes,
whose first tears were filling their velvet depths.
And her voice was broken as she said,
“Then he cared a good
deal more for me than some people!”
But there is every reason to believe
that Lanty was wrong! At least later events that
are part of the history of Foster’s Rancho and
the Foster family pointed distinctly to the contrary.