The laughter that followed was interrupted
by a sudden barking of the dogs in the outer clearing.
Zenobia rose lazily and strode to the window.
It relieved Hale of certain embarrassing reflections
suggested by her comment.
“Ef it ain’t that God-forsaken
fool Dick bringing up passengers from the snow-bound
up stage in the road! I reckon I’ve
got suthin’ to say to that!” But the later
appearance of the apologetic Dick, with the assurance
that the party carried a permission from her father,
granted at the lower station in view of such an emergency,
checked her active opposition. “That’s
like Paw,” she soliloquized aggrievedly; “shuttin’
us up and settin’ dogs on everybody for a week,
and then lettin’ the whole stage service pass
through one door and out at another. Well, it’s
his house and his whiskey, and they kin take
it, but they don’t get me to help ’em.”
They certainly were not a prepossessing
or good-natured acquisition to the party. Apart
from the natural antagonism which, on such occasions,
those in possession always feel towards the new-comer,
they were strongly inclined to resist the dissatisfied
querulousness and aggressive attitude of these fresh
applicants for hospitality. The most offensive
one was a person who appeared to exercise some authority
over the others. He was loud, assuming, and dressed
with vulgar pretension. He quickly disposed himself
in the chair vacated by Zenobia, and called for some
liquor.
“I reckon you’ll hev to
help yourself,” said Rawlins dryly, as the summons
met with no response. “There are only two
women in the house, and I reckon their hands are full
already.”
“I call it d d uncivil
treatment,” said the man, raising his voice;
“and Hennicker had better sing smaller if he
don’t want his old den pulled down some day.
He ain’t any better than men that hev been picked
up afore now.”
“You oughter told him that,
and mebbe he’d hev come over with yer,”
returned Rawlins. “He’s a mild, soft,
easy-going man, is Hennicker! Ain’t he,
Colonel Clinch?”
The casual mention of Clinch’s
name produced the effect which the speaker probably
intended. The stranger stared at Clinch, who,
apparently oblivious of the conversation, was blinking
his cold gray eyes at the fire. Dropping his
aggressive tone to mere querulousness, the man sought
the whiskey demijohn, and helped himself and his companions.
Fortified by liquor he returned to the fire.
“I reckon you’ve heard
about this yer robbery, Colonel,” he said, addressing
Clinch, with an attempt at easy familiarity.
Without raising his eyes from the
fire, Clinch briefly assented, “I reckon.”
“I’m up yer, examining into it, for the
Express.”
“Lost much?” asked Rawlins.
“Not so much ez they might hev.
That fool Harkins had a hundred thousand dollars in
greenbacks sealed up like an ordinary package of a
thousand dollars, and gave it to a friend, Bill Guthrie,
in the bank to pick out some unlikely chap among the
passengers to take charge of it to Reno. He wouldn’t
trust the Express. Ha! ha!”
The dead, oppressive silence that
followed his empty laughter made it seem almost artificial.
Rawlins held his breath and looked at Clinch.
Hale, with the instincts of a refined, sensitive man,
turned hot with the embarrassment Clinch should have
shown. For that gentleman, without lifting his
eyes from the fire, and with no apparent change in
his demeanor, lazily asked
“Ye didn’t ketch the name o’ that
passenger?”
“Naturally, no! For when
Guthrie heard what was said agin him he wouldn’t
give his name until he heard from him.”
“And what was said agin him?” asked
Clinch musingly.
“What would be said agin a man
that give up that sum o’ money, like a chaw
of tobacco, for the asking? Why, there were but
three men, as far ez we kin hear, that did the job.
And there were four passengers inside, armed, and
the driver and express messenger on the box. Six
were robbed by three! they were a
sweet-scented lot! Reckon they must hev felt
mighty small, for I hear they got up and skedaddled
from the station under the pretext of lookin’
for the robbers.” He laughed again, and
the laugh was noisily repeated by his five companions
at the other end of the room.
Hale, who had forgotten that the stranger
was only echoing a part of his own criticism of eight
hours before, was on the point of rising with burning
cheeks and angry indignation, when the lazily uplifted
eye of Clinch caught his, and absolutely held him
down with its paralyzing and deadly significance.
Murder itself seemed to look from those cruelly quiet
and remorseless gray pupils. For a moment he forgot
his own rage in this glimpse of Clinch’s implacable
resentment; for a moment he felt a thrill of pity
for the wretch who had provoked it. He remained
motionless and fascinated in his chair as the lazy
lids closed like a sheath over Clinch’s eyes
again. Rawlins, who had probably received the
same glance of warning, remained equally still.
“They haven’t heard the
last of it yet, you bet,” continued the infatuated
stranger. “I’ve got a little statement
here for the newspaper,” he added, drawing some
papers from his pocket; “suthin’ I just
run off in the coach as I came along. I reckon
it’ll show things up in a new light. It’s
time there should be some change. All the cussin’
that’s been usually done hez been by the
passengers agin the express and stage companies.
I propose that the Company should do a little cussin’
themselves. See? P’r’aps you
don’t mind my readin’ it to ye? It’s
just spicy enough to suit them newspaper chaps.”
“Go on,” said Colonel Clinch quietly.
The man cleared his throat, with the
preliminary pose of authorship, and his five friends,
to whom the composition was evidently not unfamiliar,
assumed anticipatory smiles.
“I call it ‘Prize Pusillanimous
Passengers.’ Sort of runs easy off the
tongue, you know.
“’It now appears that
the success of the late stagecoach robbery near the
Summit was largely due to the pusillanimity not
to use a more serious word’” He
stopped, and looked explanatorily towards Clinch:
“Ye’ll see in a minit what I’m gettin’
at by that pusillanimity of the passengers themselves.
’It now transpires that there were only three
robbers who attacked the coach, and that although passengers,
driver, and express messenger were fully armed, and
were double the number of their assailants, not a
shot was fired. We mean no reflections upon the
well-known courage of Yuba Bill, nor the experience
and coolness of Bracy Tibbetts, the courteous express
messenger, both of whom have since confessed to have
been more than astonished at the Christian and lamb-like
submission of the insiders. Amusing stories of
some laughable yet sickening incidents of the occasion such
as grown men kneeling in the road, and offering to
strip themselves completely, if their lives were only
spared; of one of the passengers hiding under the seat,
and only being dislodged by pulling his coat-tails;
of incredible sums promised, and even offers of menial
service, for the preservation of their wretched carcases are
received with the greatest gusto; but we are in possession
of facts which may lead to more serious accusations.
Although one of the passengers is said to have lost
a large sum of money intrusted to him, while attempting
with barefaced effrontery to establish a rival “carrying”
business in one of the Express Company’s own
coaches ’I call that a good point.”
He interrupted himself to allow the unrestrained applause
of his own party. “Don’t you?”
“It’s just h-ll,” said Clinch musingly.
“’Yet the affair,”
resumed the stranger from his manuscript, “’is
locked up in great and suspicious mystery. The
presence of Jackson N. Stanner, Esq.’ (that’s
me), ’special detective agent to the Company,
and his staff in town, is a guaranty that the mystery
will be thoroughly probed.’ Hed to put
that in to please the Company,” he again deprecatingly
explained. “’We are indebted to this gentleman
for the facts.’”
“The pint you want to make in
that article,” said Clinch, rising, but still
directing his face and his conversation to the fire,
“ez far ez I ken see ez that no three men kin
back down six unless they be cowards, or are willing
to be backed down.”
“That’s the point what
I start from,” rejoined Stanner, “and work
up. I leave it to you ef it ain’t so.”
“I can’t say ez I agree
with you,” said the Colonel dryly. He turned,
and still without lifting his eyes walked towards the
door of the room which Zenobia had entered. The
key was on the inside, but Clinch gently opened the
door, removed the key, and closing the door again locked
it from his side. Hale and Rawlins felt their
hearts beat quickly; the others followed Clinch’s
slow movements and downcast mien with amused curiosity.
After locking the other outlet from the room, and putting
the keys in his pocket, Clinch returned to the fire.
For the first time he lifted his eyes; the man nearest
him shrank back in terror.
“I am the man,” he said
slowly, taking deliberate breath between his sentences,
“who gave up those greenbacks to the robbers.
I am one of the three passengers you have lampooned
in that paper, and these gentlemen beside me are the
other two.” He stopped and looked around
him. “You don’t believe that three
men can back down six! Well, I’ll show you
how it can be done. More than that, I’ll
show you how one man can do it; for, by the living
G-d, if you don’t hand over that paper I’ll
kill you where you sit! I’ll give you until
I count ten; if one of you moves he and you are dead
men but you first!”
Before he had finished speaking Hale
and Rawlins had both risen, as if in concert, with
their weapons drawn. Hale could not tell how or
why he had done so, but he was equally conscious,
without knowing why, of fixing his eye on one of the
other party, and that he should, in the event of an
affray, try to kill him. He did not attempt to
reason; he only knew that he should do his best to
kill that man and perhaps others.
“One,” said Clinch, lifting his derringer,
“two three ”
“Look here, Colonel I
swear I didn’t know it was you. Come d m
it! I say see here,” stammered
Stanner, with white cheeks, not daring to glance for
aid to his stupefied party.
“Four five six ”
“Wait! Here!” He produced the paper
and threw it on the floor.
“Pick it up and hand it to me. Seven eight ”
Stanner hastily scrambled to his feet,
picked up the paper, and handed it to the Colonel.
“I was only joking, Colonel,” he said,
with a forced laugh.
“I’m glad to hear it.
But as this joke is in black and white, you wouldn’t
mind saying so in the same fashion. Take that
pen and ink and write as I dictate. ’I
certify that I am satisfied that the above statement
is a base calumny against the characters of Ringwood
Clinch, Robert Rawlins, and John Hale, passengers,
and that I do hereby apologize to the same.’
Sign it. That’ll do. Now let the rest
of your party sign as witnesses.”
They complied without hesitation;
some, seizing the opportunity of treating the affair
as a joke, suggested a drink.
“Excuse me,” said Clinch
quietly, “but ez this house ain’t big enough
for me and that man, and ez I’ve got business
at Wild Cat Station with this paper, I think I’ll
go without drinkin’.” He took the
keys from his pocket, unlocked the doors, and taking
up his overcoat and rifle turned as if to go.
Rawlins rose to follow him; Hale alone
hesitated. The rapid occurrences of the last
half hour gave him no time for reflection. But
he was by no means satisfied of the legality of the
last act he had aided and abetted, although he admitted
its rude justice, and felt he would have done so again.
A fear of this, and an instinct that he might be led
into further complications if he continued to identify
himself with Clinch and Rawlins; the fact that they
had professedly abandoned their quest, and that it
was really supplanted by the presence of an authorized
party whom they had already come in conflict with all
this urged him to remain behind. On the other
hand, the apparent desertion of his comrades at the
last moment was opposed both to his sense of honor
and the liking he had taken to them. But he reflected
that he had already shown his active partisanship,
that he could be of little service to them at Wild
Cat Station, and would be only increasing the distance
from his home; and above all, an impatient longing
for independent action finally decided him. “I
think I’ll stay here,” he said to Clinch,
“unless you want me.”
Clinch cast a swift and meaning glance
at the enemy, but looked approval. “Keep
your eyes skinned, and you’re good for a dozen
of ’em,” he said sotto voce,
and then turned to Stanner. “I’m going
to take this paper to Wild Cat. If you want to
communicate with me hereafter you know where I am
to be found, unless” he smiled grimly “you’d
like to see me outside for a few minutes before I
go?”
“It is a matter that concerns
the Stage Company, not me,” said Stanner, with
an attempt to appear at his ease.
Hale accompanied Clinch and Rawlins
through the kitchen to the stables. The ostler,
Dick, had already returned to the rescue of the snow-bound
coach.
“I shouldn’t like to leave
many men alone with that crowd,” said Clinch,
pressing Hale’s hand; “and I wouldn’t
have allowed your staying behind ef I didn’t
know I could bet my pile on you. Your offerin’
to stay just puts a clean finish on it. Look
yer, Hale, I didn’t cotton much to you at first;
but ef you ever want a friend, call on Ringwood Clinch.”
“The same here, old man,”
said Rawlins, extending his hand as he appeared from
a hurried conference with the old woman at the woodshed,
“and trust to Zeenie to give you a hint ef there’s
anythin’ underhanded goin’ on. So
long.”
Half inclined to resent this implied
suggestion of protection, yet half pleased at the
idea of a confidence with the handsome girl he had
seen, Hale returned to the room. A whispered
discussion among the party ceased on his entering,
and an awkward silence followed, which Hale did not
attempt to break as he quietly took his seat again
by the fire. He was presently confronted by Stanner,
who with an affectation of easy familiarity crossed
over to the hearth.
“The old Kernel’s d d
peppery and high toned when he’s got a little
more than his reg’lar three fingers o’
corn juice, eh?”
“I must beg you to understand
distinctly, Mr. Stanner,” said Hale, with a
return of his habitual precision of statement, “that
I regard any slighting allusion to the gentleman who
has just left not only as in exceedingly bad taste
coming from you, but very offensive to myself.
If you mean to imply that he was under the influence
of liquor, it is my duty to undeceive you; he was
so perfectly in possession of his faculties as to
express not only his own but my opinion of your
conduct. You must also admit that he was discriminating
enough to show his objection to your company by leaving
it. I regret that circumstances do not make it
convenient for me to exercise that privilege; but if
I am obliged to put up with your presence in this
room, I strongly insist that it is not made unendurable
with the addition of your conversation.”
The effect of this deliberate and
passionless declaration was more discomposing to the
party than Clinch’s fury. Utterly unaccustomed
to the ideas and language suddenly confronting them,
they were unable to determine whether it was the real
expression of the speaker, or whether it was a vague
badinage or affectation to which any reply would involve
them in ridicule. In a country terrorized by practical
joking, they did not doubt but that this was a new
form of hoaxing calculated to provoke some response
that would constitute them as victims. The immediate
effect upon them was that complete silence in regard
to himself that Hale desired. They drew together
again and conversed in whispers, while Hale, with
his eyes fixed on the fire, gave himself up to somewhat
late and useless reflection.
He could scarcely realize his position.
For however he might look at it, within a space of
twelve hours he had not only changed some of his most
cherished opinions, but he had acted in accordance
with that change in a way that made it seem almost
impossible for him ever to recant. In the interests
of law and order he had engaged in an unlawful and
disorderly pursuit of criminals, and had actually
come in conflict not with the criminals, but with
the only party apparently authorized to pursue them.
More than that, he was finding himself committed to
a certain sympathy with the criminals. Twenty-four
hours ago, if anyone had told him that he would have
condoned an illegal act for its abstract justice, or
assisted to commit an illegal act for the same purpose,
he would have felt himself insulted. That he
knew he would not now feel it as an insult perplexed
him still more. In these circumstances the fact
that he was separated from his family, and as it were
from all his past life and traditions, by a chance
accident, did not disturb him greatly; indeed, he
was for the first time a little doubtful of their probable
criticism on his inconsistency, and was by no means
in a hurry to subject himself to it.
Lifting his eyes, he was suddenly
aware that the door leading to the kitchen was slowly
opening. He had thought he heard it creak once
or twice during his deliberate reply to Stanner.
It was evidently moving now so as to attract his attention,
without disturbing the others. It presently opened
sufficiently wide to show the face of Zeenie, who,
with a gesture of caution towards his companions,
beckoned him to join her. He rose carelessly
as if going out, and, putting on his hat, entered
the kitchen as the retreating figure of the young girl
glided lightly towards the stables. She ascended
a few open steps as if to a hay-loft, but stopped
before a low door. Pushing it open, she preceded
him into a small room, apparently under the roof,
which scarcely allowed her to stand upright.
By the light of a stable lantern hanging from a beam
he saw that, though poorly furnished, it bore some
evidence of feminine taste and habitation. Motioning
to the only chair, she seated herself on the edge
of the bed, with her hands clasping her knees in her
familiar attitude. Her face bore traces of recent
agitation, and her eyes were shining with tears.
By the closer light of the lantern he was surprised
to find it was from laughter.
“I reckoned you’d be right
lonely down there with that Stanner crowd, particklerly
after that little speech o’ your’n, so
I sez to Maw I’d get you up yer for a spell.
Maw and I heerd you exhort ’em! Maw allowed
you woz talkin’ a furrin’ tongue all along,
but I sakes alive! I hed to
hump myself to keep from bustin’ into a yell
when yer jist drawed them Webster-unabridged sentences
on ’em.” She stopped and rocked backwards
and forwards with a laugh that, subdued by the proximity
of the roof and the fear of being overheard, was by
no means unmusical. “I’ll tell ye
whot got me, though! That part commencing, ’Suckamstances
over which I’ve no controul.’”
“Oh, come! I didn’t
say that,” interrupted Hale, laughing.
“‘Don’t make it
convenient for me to exercise the privilege of kickin’
yer out to that extent,’” she continued;
“’but if I cannot dispense with your room,
the least I can say is that it’s a d d
sight better than your company ’or
suthin’ like that! And then the way you
minded your stops, and let your voice rise and fall
just ez easy ez if you wos a First Reader in large
type. Why, the Kernel wasn’t nowhere.
His cussin’ didn’t come within a
mile o’ yourn. That Stanner jist turned
yaller.”
“I’m afraid you are laughing
at me,” said Hale, not knowing whether to be
pleased or vexed at the girl’s amusement.
“I reckon I’m the only
one that dare do it, then,” said the girl simply.
“The Kernel sez the way you turned round after
he’d done his cussin’, and said yer believed
you’d stay and take the responsibility of the
whole thing and did, in that kam, soft,
did-anybody-speak-to-me style was the neatest
thing he’d seen yet. No! Maw says I
ain’t much on manners, but I know a man when
I see him.”
For an instant Hale gave himself up
to the delicious flattery of unexpected, unintended,
and apparently uninterested compliment. Becoming
at last a little embarrassed under the frank curiosity
of the girl’s dark eyes, he changed the subject.
“Do you always come up here
through the stables?” he asked, glancing round
the room, which was evidently her own.
“I reckon,” she answered
half abstractedly. “There’s a ladder
down thar to Maw’s room” pointing
to a trapdoor beside the broad chimney that served
as a wall “but it’s handier
the other way, and nearer the bosses if you want to
get away quick.”
This palpable suggestion borne
out by what he remembered of the other domestic details that
the house had been planned with reference to sudden
foray or escape reawakened his former uneasy reflections.
Zeenie, who had been watching his face, added, “It’s
no slouch, when b’ar or painters hang round
nights and stampede the stock, to be able to swing
yourself on to a boss whenever you hear a row going
on outside.”
“Do you mean that you ”
“Paw used, and I do now,
sense I’ve come into the room.” She
pointed to a nondescript garment, half cloak, half
habit, hanging on the wall. “I’ve
been outer bed and on Pitchpine’s back as far
ez the trail five minutes arter I heard the first
bellow.”
Hale regarded her with undisguised
astonishment. There was nothing at all Amazonian
or horsey in her manners, nor was there even the robust
physical contour that might have been developed through
such experiences. On the contrary, she seemed
to be lazily effeminate in body and mind. Heedless
of his critical survey of her, she beckoned him to
draw his chair nearer, and, looking into his eyes,
said
“Whatever possessed you to take to huntin’
men?”
Hale was staggered by the question,
but nevertheless endeavored to explain. But he
was surprised to find that his explanation appeared
stilted even to himself, and, he could not doubt, was
utterly incomprehensible to the girl. She nodded
her head, however, and continued
“Then you haven’t anythin’ agin’
George?”
“I don’t know George,”
said Hale, smiling. “My proceeding was against
the highwayman.”
“Well, he was the highwayman.”
“I mean, it was the principle
I objected to a principle that I consider
highly dangerous.”
“Well he is the principal,
for the others only helped, I reckon,” said
Zeenie with a sigh, “and I reckon he is
dangerous.”
Hale saw it was useless to explain. The girl
continued
“What made you stay here instead
of going on with the Kernel? There was suthin’
else besides your wanting to make that Stanner take
water. What is it?”
A light sense of the propinquity of
beauty, of her confidence, of their isolation, of
the eloquence of her dark eyes, at first tempted Hale
to a reply of simple gallantry; a graver consideration
of the same circumstances froze it upon his lips.
“I don’t know,” he returned awkwardly.
“Well, I’ll tell you,”
she said. “You didn’t cotton to the
Kernel and Rawlins much more than you did to Stanner.
They ain’t your kind.”
In his embarrassment Hale blundered
upon the thought he had honorably avoided.
“Suppose,” he said, with
a constrained laugh, “I had stayed to see you.”
“I reckon I ain’t your
kind, neither,” she replied promptly. There
was a momentary pause when she rose and walked to
the chimney. “It’s very quiet down
there,” she said, stooping and listening over
the roughly-boarded floor that formed the ceiling
of the room below. “I wonder what’s
going on.”
In the belief that this was a delicate
hint for his return to the party he had left, Hale
rose, but the girl passed him hurriedly, and, opening
the door, cast a quick glance into the stable beyond.
“Just as I reckoned the
horses are gone too. They’ve skedaddled,”
she said blankly.
Hale did not reply. In his embarrassment
a moment ago the idea of taking an equally sudden
departure had flashed upon him. Should he take
this as a justification of that impulse, or how?
He stood irresolutely gazing at the girl, who turned
and began to descend the stairs silently. He
followed. When they reached the lower room they
found it as they had expected deserted.
“I hope I didn’t drive
them away,” said Hale, with an uneasy look at
the troubled face of the girl. “For I really
had an idea of going myself a moment ago.”
She remained silent, gazing out of
the window. Then, turning with a slight shrug
of her shoulders, said half defiantly: “What’s
the use now? Oh, Maw! the Stanner crowd has vamosed
the ranch, and this yer stranger kalkilates to stay!”