Only one shot had been fired.
It had gone wide of its mark, the ringleader
of the Vigilantes, and had left Red Pete,
who had fired it, covered by their rifles and at their
mercy. For his hand had been cramped by hard
riding, and his eye distracted by their sudden onset,
and so the inevitable end had come. He submitted
sullenly to his captors; his companion fugitive and
horse-thief gave up the protracted struggle with a
feeling not unlike relief. Even the hot and revengeful
victors were content. They had taken their men
alive. At any time during the long chase they
could have brought them down by a rifle shot, but it
would have been unsportsmanlike, and have ended in
a free fight, instead of an example. And, for
the matter of that, their doom was already sealed.
Their end, by a rope and a tree, although not sanctified
by law, would have at least the deliberation of justice.
It was the tribute paid by the Vigilantes to that
order which they had themselves disregarded in the
pursuit and capture. Yet this strange logic of
the frontier sufficed them, and gave a certain dignity
to the climax.
“Ef you’ve got anything
to say to your folks, say it now, and say it
quick,” said the ringleader.
Red Pete glanced around him.
He had been run to earth at his own cabin in the clearing,
whence a few relations and friends, mostly women and
children, non-combatants, had outflowed, gazing vacantly
at the twenty Vigilantes who surrounded them.
All were accustomed to scenes of violence, blood-feud,
chase, and hardship; it was only the suddenness of
the onset and its quick result that had surprised them.
They looked on with dazed curiosity and some disappointment;
there had been no fight to speak of no
spectacle! A boy, nephew of Red Pete, got upon
the rain-barrel to view the proceedings more comfortably;
a tall, handsome, lazy Kentucky girl, a visiting neighbor,
leaned against the doorpost, chewing gum. Only
a yellow hound was actively perplexed. He could
not make out if a hunt were just over or beginning,
and ran eagerly backwards and forwards, leaping alternately
upon the captives and the captors.
The ringleader repeated his challenge.
Red Pete gave a reckless laugh and looked at his wife.
At which Mrs. Red Pete came forward.
It seemed that she had much to say, incoherently,
furiously, vindictively, to the ringleader. His
soul would roast in hell for that day’s work!
He called himself a man, skunkin’ in the open
and afraid to show himself except with a crowd of other
“Kiyi’s” around a house of women
and children. Heaping insult upon insult, inveighing
against his low blood, his ancestors, his dubious
origin, she at last flung out a wild taunt of his invalid
wife, the insult of a woman to a woman, until his
white face grew rigid, and only that Western-American
fetich of the sanctity of sex kept his twitching fingers
from the lock of his rifle. Even her husband noticed
it, and with a half-authoritative “Let up on
that, old gal,” and a pat of his freed left
hand on her back, took his last parting. The ringleader,
still white under the lash of the woman’s tongue,
turned abruptly to the second captive. “And
if you’ve got anybody to say ‘good-by’
to, now’s your chance.”
The man looked up. Nobody stirred
or spoke. He was a stranger there, being a chance
confederate picked up by Red Pete, and known to no
one. Still young, but an outlaw from his abandoned
boyhood, of which father and mother were only a forgotten
dream, he loved horses and stole them, fully accepting
the frontier penalty of life for the interference with
that animal on which a man’s life so often depended.
But he understood the good points of a horse, as was
shown by the ones he bestrode until a few
days before the property of Judge Boompointer.
This was his sole distinction.
The unexpected question stirred him
for a moment out of the attitude of reckless indifference,
for attitude it was, and a part of his profession.
But it may have touched him that at that moment he
was less than his companion and his virago wife.
However, he only shook his head. As he did so
his eye casually fell on the handsome girl by the doorpost,
who was looking at him. The ringleader, too, may
have been touched by his complete loneliness, for
he hesitated. At the same moment he saw
that the girl was looking at his friendless captive.
A grotesque idea struck him.
“Salomy Jane, ye might do worse
than come yere and say ‘good-by’ to a
dying man, and him a stranger,” he said.
There seemed to be a subtle stroke
of poetry and irony in this that equally struck the
apathetic crowd. It was well known that Salomy
Jane Clay thought no small potatoes of herself, and
always held off the local swain with a lazy nymph-like
scorn. Nevertheless, she slowly disengaged herself
from the doorpost, and, to everybody’s astonishment,
lounged with languid grace and outstretched hand towards
the prisoner. The color came into the gray reckless
mask which the doomed man wore as her right hand grasped
his left, just loosed by his captors. Then she
paused; her shy, fawn-like eyes grew bold, and fixed
themselves upon him. She took the chewing-gum
from her mouth, wiped her red lips with the back of
her hand, by a sudden lithe spring placed her foot
on his stirrup, and, bounding to the saddle, threw
her arms about his neck and pressed a kiss upon his
lips.
They remained thus for a hushed moment the
man on the threshold of death, the young woman in
the fullness of youth and beauty linked
together. Then the crowd laughed; in the audacious
effrontery of the girl’s act the ultimate fate
of the two men was forgotten. She slipped languidly
to the ground; she was the focus of all eyes, she
only! The ringleader saw it and his opportunity.
He shouted: “Time’s up Forward!”
urged his horse beside his captives, and the next moment
the whole cavalcade was sweeping over the clearing
into the darkening woods.
Their destination was Sawyer’s
Crossing, the headquarters of the committee, where
the council was still sitting, and where both culprits
were to expiate the offense of which that council had
already found them guilty. They rode in great
and breathless haste, a haste in which,
strangely enough, even the captives seemed to join.
That haste possibly prevented them from noticing the
singular change which had taken place in the second
captive since the episode of the kiss. His high
color remained, as if it had burned through his mask
of indifference; his eyes were quick, alert, and keen,
his mouth half open as if the girl’s kiss still
lingered there. And that haste had made them careless,
for the horse of the man who led him slipped in a
gopher-hole, rolled over, unseated his rider, and
even dragged the bound and helpless second captive
from Judge Boompointer’s favorite mare.
In an instant they were all on their feet again, but
in that supreme moment the second captive felt the
cords which bound his arms had slipped to his wrists.
By keeping his elbows to his sides, and obliging the
others to help him mount, it escaped their notice.
By riding close to his captors, and keeping in the
crush of the throng, he further concealed the accident,
slowly working his hands downwards out of his bonds.
Their way lay through a sylvan wilderness,
mid-leg deep in ferns, whose tall fronds brushed their
horses’ sides in their furious gallop and concealed
the flapping of the captive’s loosened cords.
The peaceful vista, more suggestive of the offerings
of nymph and shepherd than of human sacrifice, was
in a strange contrast to this whirlwind rush of stern,
armed men. The westering sun pierced the subdued
light and the tremor of leaves with yellow lances;
birds started into song on blue and dove-like wings,
and on either side of the trail of this vengeful storm
could be heard the murmur of hidden and tranquil waters.
In a few moments they would be on the open ridge,
whence sloped the common turnpike to “Sawyer’s,”
a mile away. It was the custom of returning cavalcades
to take this hill at headlong speed, with shouts and
cries that heralded their coming. They withheld
the latter that day, as inconsistent with their dignity;
but, emerging from the wood, swept silently like an
avalanche down the slope. They were well under
way, looking only to their horses, when the second
captive slipped his right arm from the bonds and succeeded
in grasping the reins that lay trailing on the horse’s
neck. A sudden vaquero jerk, which the well-trained
animal understood, threw him on his haunches with his
forelegs firmly planted on the slope. The rest
of the cavalcade swept on; the man who was leading
the captive’s horse by the riata, thinking only
of another accident, dropped the line to save himself
from being dragged backwards from his horse.
The captive wheeled, and the next moment was galloping
furiously up the slope.
It was the work of a moment; a trained
horse and an experienced hand. The cavalcade
had covered nearly fifty yards before they could pull
up; the freed captive had covered half that distance
uphill. The road was so narrow that only two
shots could be fired, and these broke dust two yards
ahead of the fugitive. They had not dared to fire
low; the horse was the more valuable animal.
The fugitive knew this in his extremity also, and
would have gladly taken a shot in his own leg to spare
that of his horse. Five men were detached to
recapture or kill him. The latter seemed inevitable.
But he had calculated his chances; before they could
reload he had reached the woods again; winding in and
out between the pillared tree trunks, he offered no
mark. They knew his horse was superior to their
own; at the end of two hours they returned, for he
had disappeared without track or trail. The end
was briefly told in the “Sierra Record:”
“Red Pete, the notorious horse-thief,
who had so long eluded justice, was captured and hung
by the Sawyer’s Crossing Vigilantes last week;
his confederate, unfortunately, escaped on a valuable
horse belonging to Judge Boompointer. The judge
had refused one thousand dollars for the horse only
a week before. As the thief, who is still at large,
would find it difficult to dispose of so valuable
an animal without detection, the chances are against
either of them turning up again.”
Salomy Jane watched the cavalcade
until it had disappeared. Then she became aware
that her brief popularity had passed. Mrs. Red
Pete, in stormy hysterics, had included her in a sweeping
denunciation of the whole universe, possibly for simulating
an emotion in which she herself was deficient.
The other women hated her for her momentary exaltation
above them; only the children still admired her as
one who had undoubtedly “canoodled” with
a man “a-going to be hung” a
daring flight beyond their wildest ambition.
Salomy Jane accepted the change with charming unconcern.
She put on her yellow nankeen sunbonnet, a
hideous affair that would have ruined any other woman,
but which only enhanced the piquancy of her fresh
brunette skin, tied the strings, letting
the blue-black braids escape below its frilled curtain
behind, jumped on her mustang with a casual display
of agile ankles in shapely white stockings, whistled
to the hound, and waving her hand with a “So
long, sonny!” to the lately bereft but admiring
nephew, flapped and fluttered away in her short brown
holland gown.
Her father’s house was four
miles distant. Contrasted with the cabin she
had just quitted, it was a superior dwelling, with
a long “lean-to” at the rear, which brought
the eaves almost to the ground and made it look like
a low triangle. It had a long barn and cattle
sheds, for Madison Clay was a “great”
stock-raiser and the owner of a “quarter section.”
It had a sitting-room and a parlor organ, whose transportation
thither had been a marvel of “packing.”
These things were supposed to give Salomy Jane an
undue importance, but the girl’s reserve and
inaccessibility to local advances were rather the
result of a cool, lazy temperament and the preoccupation
of a large, protecting admiration for her father, for
some years a widower. For Mr. Madison Clay’s
life had been threatened in one or two feuds, it
was said, not without cause, and it is possible
that the pathetic spectacle of her father doing his
visiting with a shotgun may have touched her closely
and somewhat prejudiced her against the neighboring
masculinity. The thought that cattle, horses,
and “quarter section” would one day be
hers did not disturb her calm. As for Mr. Clay,
he accepted her as housewifely, though somewhat “interfering,”
and, being one of “his own womankind,”
therefore not without some degree of merit.
“Wot’s this yer I’m
hearin’ of your doin’s over at Red Pete’s?
Honeyfoglin’ with a horse-thief, eh?” said
Mr. Clay two days later at breakfast.
“I reckon you heard about the
straight thing, then,” said Salomy Jane unconcernedly,
without looking round.
“What do you kalkilate Rube
will say to it? What are you goin’ to tell
him?” said Mr. Clay sarcastically.
“Rube,” or Reuben Waters,
was a swain supposed to be favored particularly by
Mr. Clay. Salomy Jane looked up.
“I’ll tell him that when
he’s on his way to be hung, I’ll kiss
him, not till then,” said the young
lady brightly.
This delightful witticism suited the
paternal humor, and Mr. Clay smiled; but, nevertheless,
he frowned a moment afterwards.
“But this yer hoss-thief got
away arter all, and that’s a hoss of a different
color,” he said grimly.
Salomy Jane put down her knife and
fork. This was certainly a new and different
phase of the situation. She had never thought
of it before, and, strangely enough, for the first
time she became interested in the man. “Got
away?” she repeated. “Did they let
him off?”
“Not much,” said her father
briefly. “Slipped his cords, and going down
the grade pulled up short, just like a vaquero agin
a lassoed bull, almost draggin’ the man leadin’
him off his hoss, and then skyuted up the grade.
For that matter, on that hoss o’ Judge Boompointer’s
he moût have dragged the whole posse of ’em
down on their knees ef he liked! Sarved ’em
right, too. Instead of stringin’ him up
afore the door, or shootin’ him on sight, they
must allow to take him down afore the hull committee
‘for an example.’ ‘Example’
be blowed! Ther’ ’s example enough
when some stranger comes unbeknownst slap onter a man
hanged to a tree and plugged full of holes. That’s
an example, and he knows what it means.
Wot more do ye want? But then those Vigilantes
is allus clingin’ and hangin’ onter
some mere scrap o’ the law they’re pretendin’
to despise. It makes me sick! Why, when
Jake Myers shot your olé Aunt Viney’s second
husband, and I laid in wait for Jake afterwards in
the Butternut Hollow, did I tie him to his hoss and
fetch him down to your Aunt Viney’s cabin ‘for
an example’ before I plugged him? No!”
in deep disgust. “No! Why, I just
meandered through the wood, careless-like, till he
comes out, and I just rode up to him, and I said”
But Salomy Jane had heard her father’s
story before. Even one’s dearest relatives
are apt to become tiresome in narration. “I
know, dad,” she interrupted; “but this
yer man, this hoss-thief, did
he get clean away without gettin’ hurt
at all?”
“He did, and unless he’s
fool enough to sell the hoss he kin keep away, too.
So ye see, ye can’t ladle out purp stuff about
a ‘dyin’ stranger’ to Rube.
He won’t swaller it.”
“All the same, dad,” returned
the girl cheerfully, “I reckon to say it, and
say more; I’ll tell him that ef he
manages to get away too, I’ll marry him there!
But ye don’t ketch Rube takin’ any such
risks in gettin’ ketched, or in gettin’
away arter!”
Madison Clay smiled grimly, pushed
back his chair, rose, dropped a perfunctory kiss on
his daughter’s hair, and, taking his shotgun
from the corner, departed on a peaceful Samaritan
mission to a cow who had dropped a calf in the far
pasture. Inclined as he was to Reuben’s
wooing from his eligibility as to property, he was
conscious that he was sadly deficient in certain qualities
inherent in the Clay family. It certainly would
be a kind of mésalliance.
Left to herself, Salomy Jane stared
a long while at the coffee-pot, and then called the
two squaws who assisted her in her household duties,
to clear away the things while she went up to her
own room to make her bed. Here she was confronted
with a possible prospect of that proverbial bed she
might be making in her willfulness, and on which she
must lie, in the photograph of a somewhat serious
young man of refined features Reuben Waters stuck
in her window-frame. Salomy Jane smiled over
her last witticism regarding him and enjoyed, it, like
your true humorist, and then, catching sight of her
own handsome face in the little mirror, smiled again.
But wasn’t it funny about that horse-thief getting
off after all? Good Lordy! Fancy Reuben hearing
he was alive and going round with that kiss of hers
set on his lips! She laughed again, a little
more abstractedly. And he had returned it like
a man, holding her tight and almost breathless, and
he going to be hung the next minute! Salomy Jane
had been kissed at other times, by force, chance, or
stratagem. In a certain ingenuous forfeit game
of the locality known as “I’m a-pinin’,”
many had “pined” for a “sweet kiss”
from Salomy Jane, which she had yielded in a sense
of honor and fair play. She had never been kissed
like this before she would never again;
and yet the man was alive! And behold, she could
see in the mirror that she was blushing!
She should hardly know him again.
A young man with very bright eyes, a flushed and sunburnt
cheek, a kind of fixed look in the face, and no beard;
no, none that she could feel. Yet he was not at
all like Reuben, not a bit. She took Reuben’s
picture from the window, and laid it on her workbox.
And to think she did not even know this young man’s
name! That was queer. To be kissed by a
man whom she might never know! Of course he knew
hers. She wondered if he remembered it and her.
But of course he was so glad to get off with his life
that he never thought of anything else. Yet she
did not give more than four or five minutes to these
speculations, and, like a sensible girl, thought of
something else. Once again, however, in opening
the closet, she found the brown holland gown she had
worn on the day before; thought it very unbecoming,
and regretted that she had not worn her best gown
on her visit to Red Pete’s cottage. On
such an occasion she really might have been more impressive.
When her father came home that night
she asked him the news. No, they had not
captured the second horse-thief, who was still at large.
Judge Boompointer talked of invoking the aid of the
despised law. It remained, then, to see whether
the horse-thief was fool enough to try to get rid
of the animal. Red Pete’s body had been
delivered to his widow. Perhaps it would only
be neighborly for Salomy Jane to ride over to the funeral.
But Salomy Jane did not take to the suggestion kindly,
nor yet did she explain to her father that, as the
other man was still living, she did not care to undergo
a second disciplining at the widow’s hands.
Nevertheless, she contrasted her situation with that
of the widow with a new and singular satisfaction.
It might have been Red Pete who had escaped.
But he had not the grit of the nameless one. She
had already settled his heroic quality.
“Ye ain’t harkenin’ to me, Salomy.”
Salomy Jane started.
“Here I’m askin’
ye if ye’ve see that hound Phil Larrabee sneaking
by yer today?”
Salomy Jane had not. But she
became interested and self-reproachful, for she knew
that Phil Larrabee was one of her father’s enemies.
“He wouldn’t dare to go by here unless
he knew you were out,” she said quickly.
“That’s what gets me,”
he said, scratching his grizzled head. “I’ve
been kind o’ thinkin’ o’ him all
day, and one of them Chinamen said he saw him at Sawyer’s
Crossing. He was a kind of friend o’ Pete’s
wife. That’s why I thought yer might find
out ef he’d been there.” Salomy Jane
grew more self-reproachful at her father’s self-interest
in her “neighborliness.” “But
that ain’t all,” continued Mr. Clay.
“Thar was tracks over the far pasture that warn’t
mine. I followed them, and they went round and
round the house two or three times, ez ef they moût
hev bin prowlin’, and then I lost ’em
in the woods again. It’s just like that
sneakin’ hound Larrabee to hev bin lyin’
in wait for me and afraid to meet a man fair and square
in the open.”
“You just lie low, dad, for
a day or two more, and let me do a little prowlin’,”
said the girl, with sympathetic indignation in her
dark eyes. “Ef it’s that skunk, I’ll
spot him soon enough and let you know whar he’s
hiding.”
“You’ll just stay where
ye are, Salomy,” said her father decisively.
“This ain’t no woman’s work though
I ain’t sayin’ you haven’t got more
head for it than some men I know.”
Nevertheless, that night, after her
father had gone to bed, Salomy Jane sat by the open
window of the sitting-room in an apparent attitude
of languid contemplation, but alert and intent of
eye and ear. It was a fine moonlit night.
Two pines near the door, solitary pickets of the serried
ranks of distant forest, cast long shadows like paths
to the cottage, and sighed their spiced breath in
the windows. For there was no frivolity of vine
or flower round Salomy Jane’s bower. The
clearing was too recent, the life too practical for
vanities like these. But the moon added a vague
elusiveness to everything, softened the rigid outlines
of the sheds, gave shadows to the lidless windows,
and touched with merciful indirectness the hideous
debris of refuse gravel and the gaunt scars of burnt
vegetation before the door. Even Salomy Jane was
affected by it, and exhaled something between a sigh
and a yawn with the breath of the pines. Then
she suddenly sat upright.
Her quick ear had caught a faint “click,
click,” in the direction of the wood; her quicker
instinct and rustic training enabled her to determine
that it was the ring of a horse’s shoe on flinty
ground; her knowledge of the locality told her it
came from the spot where the trail passed over an
outcrop of flint scarcely a quarter of a mile from
where she sat, and within the clearing. It was
no errant “stock,” for the foot was shod
with iron; it was a mounted trespasser by night, and
boded no good to a man like Clay.
She rose, threw her shawl over her
head, more for disguise than shelter, and passed out
of the door. A sudden impulse made her seize her
father’s shotgun from the corner where it stood, not
that she feared any danger to herself, but that it
was an excuse. She made directly for the wood,
keeping in the shadow of the pines as long as she could.
At the fringe she halted; whoever was there must pass
her before reaching the house.
Then there seemed to be a suspense
of all nature. Everything was deadly still even
the moonbeams appeared no longer tremulous; soon there
was a rustle as of some stealthy animal among the
ferns, and then a dismounted man stepped into the
moonlight. It was the horse-thief the
man she had kissed!
For a wild moment a strange fancy
seized her usually sane intellect and stirred her
temperate blood. The news they had told her was
not true; he had been hung, and this was his
ghost! He looked as white and spirit-like in
the moonlight, dressed in the same clothes, as when
she saw him last. He had evidently seen her approaching,
and moved quickly to meet her. But in his haste
he stumbled slightly; she reflected suddenly that
ghosts did not stumble, and a feeling of relief came
over her. And it was no assassin of her father
that had been prowling around only this
unhappy fugitive. A momentary color came into
her cheek; her coolness and hardihood returned; it
was with a tinge of sauciness in her voice that she
said:
“I reckoned you were a ghost.”
“I moût have been,”
he said, looking at her fixedly; “but I reckon
I’d have come back here all the same.”
“It’s a little riskier
comin’ back alive,” she said, with a levity
that died on her lips, for a singular nervousness,
half fear and half expectation, was beginning to take
the place of her relief of a moment ago. “Then
it was you who was prowlin’ round and makin’
tracks in the far pasture?”
“Yes; I came straight here when I got away.”
She felt his eyes were burning her,
but did not dare to raise her own. “Why,”
she began, hesitated, and ended vaguely. “How
did you get here?”
“You helped me!”
“I?”
“Yes. That kiss you gave
me put life into me gave me strength to
get away. I swore to myself I’d come back
and thank you, alive or dead.”
Every word he said she could have
anticipated, so plain the situation seemed to her
now. And every word he said she knew was the truth.
Yet her cool common sense struggled against it.
“What’s the use of your
escaping, ef you’re comin’ back here to
be ketched again?” she said pertly.
He drew a little nearer to her, but
seemed to her the more awkward as she resumed her
self-possession. His voice, too, was broken, as
if by exhaustion, as he said, catching his breath
at intervals:
“I’ll tell you. You
did more for me than you think. You made another
man o’ me. I never had a man, woman, or
child do to me what you did. I never had a friend only
a pal like Red Pete, who picked me up ‘on shares.’
I want to quit this yer what I’m doin’.
I want to begin by doin’ the square thing to
you” He stopped, breathed hard, and
then said brokenly, “My hoss is over thar, staked
out. I want to give him to you. Judge Boompointer
will give you a thousand dollars for him. I ain’t
lyin’; it’s God’s truth! I
saw it on the handbill agin a tree. Take him,
and I’ll get away afoot. Take him.
It’s the only thing I can do for you, and I
know it don’t half pay for what you did.
Take it; your father can get a reward for you, if
you can’t.”
Such were the ethics of this strange
locality that neither the man who made the offer nor
the girl to whom it was made was struck by anything
that seemed illogical or indelicate, or at all inconsistent
with justice or the horse-thief’s real conversion.
Salomy Jane nevertheless dissented, from another and
weaker reason.
“I don’t want your hoss,
though I reckon dad might; but you’re just starvin’.
I’ll get suthin’.” She turned
towards the house.
“Say you’ll take the hoss
first,” he said, grasping her hand. At the
touch she felt herself coloring and struggled, expecting
perhaps another kiss. But he dropped her hand.
She turned again with a saucy gesture, said, “Hol’
on; I’ll come right back,” and slipped
away, the mere shadow of a coy and flying nymph in
the moonlight, until she reached the house.
Here she not only procured food and
whiskey, but added a long dust-coat and hat of her
father’s to her burden. They would serve
as a disguise for him and hide that heroic figure,
which she thought everybody must now know as she did.
Then she rejoined him breathlessly. But he put
the food and whiskey aside.
“Listen,” he said; “I’ve
turned the hoss into your corral. You’ll
find him there in the morning, and no one will know
but that he got lost and joined the other hosses.”
Then she burst out. “But
you you what will become
of you? You’ll be ketched!”
“I’ll manage to get away,”
he said in a low voice, “ef ef”
“Ef what?” she said tremblingly.
“Ef you’ll put the heart in me again, as
you did!” he gasped.
She tried to laugh to move
away. She could do neither. Suddenly he
caught her in his arms, with a long kiss, which she
returned again and again. Then they stood embraced
as they had embraced two days before, but no longer
the same. For the cool, lazy Salomy Jane had been
transformed into another woman a passionate,
clinging savage. Perhaps something of her father’s
blood had surged within her at that supreme moment.
The man stood erect and determined.
“Wot’s your name?”
she whispered quickly. It was a woman’s
quickest way of defining her feelings.
“Dart.”
“Yer first name?”
“Jack.”
“Let me go now, Jack. Lie
low in the woods till to-morrow sunup. I’ll
come again.”
He released her. Yet she lingered
a moment. “Put on those things,” she
said, with a sudden happy flash of eyes and teeth,
“and lie close till I come.” And
then she sped away home.
But midway up the distance she felt
her feet going slower, and something at her heartstrings
seemed to be pulling her back. She stopped, turned,
and glanced to where he had been standing. Had
she seen him then, she might have returned. But
he had disappeared. She gave her first sigh,
and then ran quickly again. It must be nearly
ten o’clock! It was not very long to morning!
She was within a few steps of her
own door, when the sleeping woods and silent air appeared
to suddenly awake with a sharp “crack!”
She stopped, paralyzed. Another
“crack!” followed, that echoed over to
the far corral. She recalled herself instantly
and dashed off wildly to the woods again.
As she ran she thought of one thing
only. He had been “dogged” by one
of his old pursuers and attacked. But there were
two shots, and he was unarmed. Suddenly she remembered
that she had left her father’s gun standing
against the tree where they were talking. Thank
God! she may again have saved him. She ran to
the tree; the gun was gone. She ran hither and
thither, dreading at every step to fall upon his lifeless
body. A new thought struck her; she ran to the
corral. The horse was not there! He must
have been able to regain it, and escaped, after
the shots had been fired. She drew a long breath
of relief, but it was caught up in an apprehension
of alarm. Her father, awakened from his sleep
by the shots, was hurriedly approaching her.
“What’s up now, Salomy Jane?” he
demanded excitedly.
“Nothin’,” said
the girl with an effort. “Nothin’,
at least, that I can find.” She was usually
truthful because fearless, and a lie stuck in her
throat; but she was no longer fearless, thinking of
him. “I wasn’t abed; so I ran
out as soon as I heard the shots fired,” she
answered in return to his curious gaze.
“And you’ve hid my gun
somewhere where it can’t be found,” he
said reproachfully. “Ef it was that sneak
Larrabee, and he fired them shots to lure me out,
he might have potted me, without a show, a dozen times
in the last five minutes.”
She had not thought since of her father’s
enemy! It might indeed have been he who had attacked
Jack. But she made a quick point of the suggestion.
“Run in, dad, run in and find the gun; you’ve
got no show out here without it.” She seized
him by the shoulders from behind, shielding him from
the woods, and hurried him, half expostulating, half
struggling, to the house.
But there no gun was to be found.
It was strange; it must have been mislaid in some
corner! Was he sure he had not left it in the
barn? But no matter now. The danger was
over; the Larrabee trick had failed; he must go to
bed now, and in the morning they would make a search
together. At the same time she had inwardly resolved
to rise before him and make another search of the
wood, and perhaps fearful joy as she recalled
her promise! find Jack alive and well, awaiting
her!
Salomy Jane slept little that night,
nor did her father. But towards morning he fell
into a tired man’s slumber until the sun was
well up the horizon. Far different was it with
his daughter: she lay with her face to the window,
her head half lifted to catch every sound, from the
creaking of the sun-warped shingles above her head
to the far-off moan of the rising wind in the pine
trees. Sometimes she fell into a breathless,
half-ecstatic trance, living over every moment of the
stolen interview; feeling the fugitive’s arm
still around her, his kisses on her lips; hearing
his whispered voice in her ears the birth
of her new life! This was followed again by a
period of agonizing dread that he might
even then be lying, his life ebbing away, in the woods,
with her name on his lips, and she resting here inactive,
until she half started from her bed to go to his succor.
And this went on until a pale opal glow came into
the sky, followed by a still paler pink on the summit
of the white Sierras, when she rose and hurriedly
began to dress. Still so sanguine was her hope
of meeting him, that she lingered yet a moment to
select the brown holland skirt and yellow sunbonnet
she had worn when she first saw him. And she
had only seen him twice! Only twice!
It would be cruel, too cruel, not to see him again!
She crept softly down the stairs,
listening to the long-drawn breathing of her father
in his bedroom, and then, by the light of a guttering
candle, scrawled a note to him, begging him not to
trust himself out of the house until she returned
from her search, and leaving the note open on the
table, swiftly ran out into the growing day.
Three hours afterwards Mr. Madison
Clay awoke to the sound of loud knocking. At
first this forced itself upon his consciousness as
his daughter’s regular morning summons, and
was responded to by a grunt of recognition and a nestling
closer in the blankets. Then he awoke with a
start and a muttered oath, remembering the events of
last night, and his intention to get up early, and
rolled out of bed. Becoming aware by this time
that the knocking was at the outer door, and hearing
the shout of a familiar voice, he hastily pulled on
his boots, his jean trousers, and fastening a single
suspender over his shoulder as he clattered downstairs,
stood in the lower room. The door was open, and
waiting upon the threshold was his kinsman, an old
ally in many a blood-feud Breckenridge
Clay!
“You are a cool one, Mad!”
said the latter in half-admiring indignation.
“What’s up?” said the bewildered
Madison.
“You ought to be, and scootin’
out o’ this,” said Breckenridge grimly.
“It’s all very well to ‘know nothin’;’
but here Phil Larrabee’s friends hev just picked
him up, drilled through with slugs and deader nor a
crow, and now they’re lettin’ loose Larrabee’s
two half-brothers on you. And you must go like
a derned fool and leave these yer things behind you
in the bresh,” he went on querulously, lifting
Madison Clay’s dust-coat, hat, and shotgun from
his horse, which stood saddled at the door. “Luckily
I picked them up in the woods comin’ here.
Ye ain’t got more than time to get over the
state line and among your folks thar afore they’ll
be down on you. Hustle, old man! What are
you gawkin’ and starin’ at?”
Madison Clay had stared amazed and
bewildered horror-stricken. The incidents
of the past night for the first time flashed upon him
clearly hopelessly! The shot; his finding
Salomy Jane alone in the woods; her confusion and
anxiety to rid herself of him; the disappearance of
the shotgun; and now this new discovery of the taking
of his hat and coat for a disguise! She had
killed Phil Larrabee in that disguise, after provoking
his first harmless shot! She, his own child,
Salomy Jane, had disgraced herself by a man’s
crime; had disgraced him by usurping his right, and
taking a mean advantage, by deceit, of a foe!
“Gimme that gun,” he said hoarsely.
Breckenridge handed him the gun in
wonder and slowly gathering suspicion. Madison
examined nipple and muzzle; one barrel had been discharged.
It was true! The gun dropped from his hand.
“Look here, old man,”
said Breckenridge, with a darkening face, “there’s
bin no foul play here. Thar’s bin no hiring
of men, no deputy to do this job. You did
it fair and square yourself?”
“Yes, by God!” burst out
Madison Clay in a hoarse voice. “Who says
I didn’t?”
Reassured, yet believing that Madison
Clay had nerved himself for the act by an over-draught
of whiskey, which had affected his memory, Breckenridge
said curtly, “Then wake up and ‘lite’
out, ef ye want me to stand by you.”
“Go to the corral and pick me
out a hoss,” said Madison slowly, yet not without
a certain dignity of manner. “I’ve
suthin’ to say to Salomy Jane afore I go.”
He was holding her scribbled note, which he had just
discovered, in his shaking hand.
Struck by his kinsman’s manner,
and knowing the dependent relations of father and
daughter, Breckenridge nodded and hurried away.
Left to himself, Madison Clay ran his fingers through
his hair, and straightened out the paper on which
Salomy Jane had scrawled her note, turned it over,
and wrote on the back:
You might have told me you did it,
and not leave your olé father to find it out
how you disgraced yourself and him, too, by a low-down,
underhanded, woman’s trick! I’ve said
I done it, and took the blame myself, and all the
sneakiness of it that folks suspect. If I get
away alive and I don’t care much
which you needn’t foller. The
house and stock are yours; but you ain’t any
longer the daughter of your disgraced father,
Madison Clay.
He had scarcely finished the note
when, with a clatter of hoofs and a led horse, Breckenridge
reappeared at the door elate and triumphant.
“You’re in nigger luck, Mad! I found
that stole hoss of Judge Boompointer’s had got
away and strayed among your stock in the corral.
Take him and you’re safe; he can’t be outrun
this side of the state line.”
“I ain’t no hoss-thief,” said Madison
grimly.
“Nobody sez ye are, but you’d
be wuss a fool ef you didn’t
take him. I’m testimony that you found
him among your hosses; I’ll tell Judge Boompointer
you’ve got him, and ye kin send him back when
you’re safe. The judge will be mighty glad
to get him back, and call it quits. So ef you’ve
writ to Salomy Jane, come.”
Madison Clay no longer hesitated.
Salomy Jane might return at any moment, it
would be part of her “fool womanishness,” and
he was in no mood to see her before a third party.
He laid the note on the table, gave a hurried glance
around the house, which he grimly believed he was
leaving forever, and, striding to the door, leaped
on the stolen horse, and swept away with his kinsman.
But that note lay for a week undisturbed
on the table in full view of the open door. The
house was invaded by leaves, pine cones, birds, and
squirrels during the hot, silent, empty days, and at
night by shy, stealthy creatures, but never again,
day or night, by any of the Clay family. It was
known in the district that Clay had flown across the
state line, his daughter was believed to have joined
him the next day, and the house was supposed to be
locked up. It lay off the main road, and few
passed that way. The starving cattle in the corral
at last broke bounds and spread over the woods.
And one night a stronger blast than usual swept through
the house, carried the note from the table to the
floor, where, whirled into a crack in the flooring,
it slowly rotted.
But though the sting of her father’s
reproach was spared her, Salomy Jane had no need of
the letter to know what had happened. For as she
entered the woods in the dim light of that morning
she saw the figure of Dart gliding from the shadow
of a pine towards her. The unaffected cry of
joy that rose from her lips died there as she caught
sight of his face in the open light.
“You are hurt,” she said, clutching his
arm passionately.
“No,” he said. “But I wouldn’t
mind that if”
“You’re thinkin’
I was afeard to come back last night when I heard the
shootin’, but I did come,” she went
on feverishly. “I ran back here when I
heard the two shots, but you were gone. I went
to the corral, but your hoss wasn’t there, and
I thought you’d got away.”
“I did get away,”
said Dart gloomily. “I killed the man, thinkin’
he was huntin’ me, and forgettin’
I was disguised. He thought I was your father.”
“Yes,” said the girl joyfully,
“he was after dad, and you you
killed him.” She again caught his hand
admiringly.
But he did not respond. Possibly
there were points of honor which this horse-thief
felt vaguely with her father. “Listen,”
he said grimly. “Others think it was your
father killed him. When I did it for
he fired at me first I ran to the corral
again and took my hoss, thinkin’ I might be
follered. I made a clear circuit of the house,
and when I found he was the only one, and no one was
follerin’, I come back here and took off my
disguise. Then I heard his friends find him in
the wood, and I know they suspected your father.
And then another man come through the woods while
I was hidin’ and found the clothes and took them
away.” He stopped and stared at her gloomily.
But all this was unintelligible to
the girl. “Dad would have got the better
of him ef you hadn’t,” she said eagerly,
“so what’s the difference?”
“All the same,” he said
gloomily, “I must take his place.”
She did not understand, but turned
her head to her master. “Then you’ll
go back with me and tell him all?” she said
obediently.
“Yes,” he said.
She put her hand in his, and they
crept out of the wood together. She foresaw a
thousand difficulties, but, chiefest of all, that he
did not love as she did. She would not have
taken these risks against their happiness.
But alas for ethics and heroism.
As they were issuing from the wood they heard the
sound of galloping hoofs, and had barely time to hide
themselves before Madison Clay, on the stolen horse
of Judge Boompointer, swept past them with his kinsman.
Salomy Jane turned to her lover.
And here I might, as a moral romancer,
pause, leaving the guilty, passionate girl eloped
with her disreputable lover, destined to lifelong
shame and misery, misunderstood to the last by a criminal,
fastidious parent. But I am confronted by certain
facts, on which this romance is based. A month
later a handbill was posted on one of the sentinel
pines, announcing that the property would be sold
by auction to the highest bidder by Mrs. John Dart,
daughter of Madison Clay, Esq., and it was sold accordingly.
Still later by ten years the
chronicler of these pages visited a certain “stock”
or “breeding farm,” in the “Blue
Grass Country,” famous for the popular racers
it has produced. He was told that the owner was
the “best judge of horse-flesh in the country.”
“Small wonder,” added his informant, “for
they say as a young man out in California he was a
horse-thief, and only saved himself by eloping with
some rich farmer’s daughter. But he’s
a straight-out and respectable man now, whose word
about horses can’t be bought; and as for his
wife, she’s a beauty! To see her at the
‘Springs,’ rigged out in the latest fashion,
you’d never think she had ever lived out of New
York or wasn’t the wife of one of its millionaires.”