Another day Dean and Troop “C”
were held in camp awaiting orders for special service,
and no orders came. “Old Pecksniff”
had an eye for pretty girls, a trait by no means rare
in soldiers old or young, and prettier girls than
Pappoose and Jessie he had never met. Mrs. Stevens
was accordingly bidden to invite them to luncheon that
very day, and Dean and Loomis were of the party, as
were other young people of the post, and, despite
the rising war clouds in the north and the recent
unpleasantness at Emory and an odd manner indicative
of suppressed excitement on part of both Dean and
Loomis, a very joyous time they had until the damsels
Had to drive home to dress for dinner. Folsom
had named six as the hour. Burleigh, Newhall
and the two boys were mentioned as his guests.
Burleigh accepted for self and partner, Loomis for
himself, with mental reservation. Dean at once
had begged to be excused. After the morning’s
disappearance of Burleigh and “Surly,”
as Miss Folsom promptly named the pair, Marshall had
ridden into Gate City at the side of the Folsom carriage,
and was welcomed by the old trader himself, who looked
pained when told he could not attend the dinner.
“Surely Colonel Stevens will let you off,”
said Folsom, but that obviously was not the reason.
“I’m the only officer
with my troop,” said Dean, “and so cannot
ask.”
But when Folsom took his daughter
in his arms a little later and inquired whether there
were not some graver cause behind the one assigned,
Elinor calmly answered that she thought there was,
and that the cause was Major Burleigh.
“But, daughter dear,”
said he, “that’s just one reason I wish
to bring them together. Then Dean could see how
pleasantly disposed the major is,” and he was
amazed when she replied:
“Major Burleigh may be pleasantly
disposed, but Mr. Dean is not, by any means, nor would
I be were I in his place, papa.”
“My child,” said he, “what do you
know about it?”
“Everything that Jessie knows,
besides what we heard on the train. Mar Mr.
Dean told her of several things Major Burleigh had
said and done to his discredit, and no wonder he declines
to dine with a man who has deliberately maligned him.”
“I wish I had thought of that,”
said Folsom, his knotty hands deep in the pockets
of his loose-fitting trousers. “I saw Burleigh
this morning on some business, and he seemed to want
to help Dean along. What took him out to the
fort, do you suppose?”
“I don’t know,”
she answered gravely. “He had Captain Newhall
with him, in quest of somebody who wasn’t there.”
“Ah, yes, Griggs, the sutler.
I heard of it,” interposed Folsom, fingering
his watchchain.
“Very possibly. The captain
was ugly and rude in manner and Major Burleigh very
much embarrassed. Indeed, Daddy dear, I should
not be greatly surprised if others of your party failed
to come.”
“Burleigh, do you mean, or his queer guest?”
But Pappoose did not reply. She
seemed listening intently, and then with swift, sudden
movement darted across to the heavy Navajo blanket
portiere that hung at the doorway of a little room
back of the library. Her voice was far from cordial
as she asked:
“Were you looking for any one,
Mrs. Fletcher? I thought you were in your room.”
“For Mr. Folsom, please, when
he is at leisure,” was the answer, in unruffled
tones. “I believe it easier to take active
part in the preparations than to lie there thinking.”
At one the girls were to lunch at
the fort, as has been said, and it was time for them
to dress. There were other matters on which Elinor
much wished to talk with her father and, with more
reluctance than she had yet experienced, she left
him to hear what Mrs. Fletcher might have to say.
The conference was brief enough, whatever its nature,
for presently his voice was heard at the foot of the
stairs.
“I’m going over to the
depot a few minutes, Daught. I wish to see Burleigh.
Don’t wait for me. Start whenever you are
ready. Where do the boys meet you?”
“Here, Daddy, at half-past twelve.”
It was high noon now, and the ruddy-faced
old fellow grew redder as the summer sun beat down
on his gray head, but he strode sturdily down the
broad avenue that led to the heart of the bustling
new town, turned to the right at the first cross street
beyond his own big block, and ten minutes’ brisk
tramp brought him to the gateway of Burleigh’s
stockaded inclosure. Two or three employees lounging
about the gate were gazing curiously within.
Silently they let him pass them by, but a sound of
angry voices rose upon the heated air. Just within
the gate stood the orderly trumpeter holding two horses
by the reins, one of them Marshall Dean’s, and
a sudden idea occurred to Folsom as he glanced at the
open windows of the office building. There was
no mistaking the speaker within. It was Burleigh.
“Leave my office instantly,
sir, or I’ll prefer charges that will stick ”
“Not till I’ve said what
I came to say, Major Burleigh. I’ve abundant
evidence of what you’ve been saying at my expense.
You asserted that I lost my nerve the day we met Red
Cloud’s band you who never dared get
out of the ambulance until the danger was over.
It’s common talk in the troop. At Frayne,
at Reno, and here at Emory you have maligned me just
as you did in the cars to my friend here, Mr. Loomis,
and in hearing of my sister. I will not accept
your denial nor will I leave your office till you
swallow your words.”
“Then, by God, I’ll have
you thrown out, you young whipsnapper!”
And then Folsom, with fear at his
heart, ran around to the doorway to interpose.
He came too late. There was a sound of a furious
scuffle within, a rattling of chairs, a crunching
of feet on sanded floor, and as he sprang up the steps
he saw Dean easily squirming out from the grasp of
some member of the clerical force, who, at his master’s
bidding, had thrown himself upon the young officer,
who then deftly tripped his heels from under him and
dropped him on the floor, while Loomis confronted
the others who would have made some show of obeying
orders. And then there was the whirr of a whip-lash,
a crack and snap and swish, and a red welt shot across
Burleigh’s livid face as he himself staggered
back to his desk. With raging tongue and frantic
oath he leaped out again, a leveled pistol in his
hand, but even before he could pull trigger, or Folsom
interpose, Loomis’s stick came down like a flash
on the outstretched wrist, and the pistol clattered
to the floor.
“Good God, boys! what are you
doing?” cried the trader, as he hurled himself
between them. “Stop this instantly.
Sit down, Burleigh. Come out, Dean come
out at once! And you, too, Loomis.”
“I’m entirely ready now,”
said the cavalry lieutenant, though his eyes were
flaming and his lips were rigid. “But whenever
Major Burleigh wants to finish this he can find me,”
and with these words he backed slowly to the door,
face to the panting and disordered foe.
“Finish this! you young hound,
I’ll finish you!” screamed Burleigh, as
he shook his clinched fist at the retiring pair.
“Go, boys, go!” implored
Folsom. “I’ll see you by and by.
No no sit still, Burleigh.
Don’t you speak. This must stop right here.”
And so the old man’s counsels
prevailed, and the two friends, with grave, pallid,
but determined faces, came out into the sunshine, and
with much deliberation and somewhat ostentatious calm
proceeded to where the orderly waited with the horses.
“You will see the
ladies out to camp, Loomis?” asked Dean.
“I must gallop on ahead.”
“Ay, ay, go on, I reckon ”
But on this scene there suddenly appeared
a third party, in the partial guise of an officer
and the grip of Bacchus. Lurching down the office
steps, with flushed face and bloodshot eyes, came Captain
Newhall.
“Gen’l’m’n,”
said he thickly, “le’m ‘ntroduce
m’self. Haven’t th’ honor y’r
’quain’s. I’m Ca’m New(hic)’ll.
Cap’n N-n-(hic)oohaul (this cost prodigious
effort and much balancing), an’ an’
you sherv’d that f’ler per-per-flicky
ri’. He’s dam scoun’rl gen’lemen an’
olé frien’ mine.”
For an instant he stood swaying unsteadily,
with half-extended hand. For an instant the two
young officers gazed at him in contempt, then turned
abruptly away.
“Good Lord, Marshall,”
said Loomis, as they cleared the gate, “if that’s
the only approbation this day’s work will bring
us what will the results be? You served him right,
no doubt, but ” and an ominous shake
of the head wound up the sentence.
“But or no but,” said
Dean, “it’s done now, and I’d do
it again.”
There was no dinner party at Folsom’s
that evening. At two a messenger trotted out
to the post with a note for Miss Folsom to apprise
her of the fact, and without a word or change of color
she put it into her pocket. The garrison girls
were bent on having them spend the afternoon, but
presently Miss Folsom found a moment in which to signal
to Jess, and at three they were driving home.
“You will surely come out this
evening and hear the music and have a dance,”
were the parting salutations, as with skillful hands
the young girl took up the reins.
“We hope to,” was her
smiling answer. Jess was clinging to her brother’s
hand as he stood by the wheel, and Loomis had already
clambered in beside her.
“Please come, Marshall,”
pleaded Jessie; but he shook his head.
“I must be at camp this evening,
sister mine. We go to stables in an hour.
You will come back, Loomis?”
“As soon as I’ve seen ”
and a significant nod supplied the ellipsis.
Something ominous was in the wind
and both girls knew it. Loomis, usually gay and
chatty, was oddly silent, as the light, covered wagon
sped swiftly homeward. Beside the fair charioteer
sat a young officer of the infantry who, vastly rejoicing
that Dean could not go, had laughingly possessed himself
of the vacant place, and to him Miss Folsom had to
talk. But they parted from their escorts at the
gate and hastened within doors. Just as Elinor
expected, papa had not come home. It was nearly
six when she saw him striding slowly and thoughtfully
up the road, and she met him at the gate.
“Tell me what has happened,
Daddy,” was her quiet greeting, as she linked
her hands over his burly arm, and looking into her
uplifted, thoughtful eyes, so full of intelligence
and deep affection, he bent and kissed her cheek.
“By Jove, daughter, I believe
it’s the best thing I can do. Come into
the library.”
That night the moon beamed brightly
down on the wide-spreading valley, glinting on the
peaks, still snow-tipped, far in the southern sky,
and softening the rugged faces of the nearer range,
black with their clustering beard of spruce and pine.
The band played sweetly on the broad parade until
after the tattoo drums had echoed over the plains and
the garrison belles strolled aimlessly in the elfin
light all nature so lavishly inviting,
yet so little valued now that nearly every man was
gone. Out in the camp of “C” Troop
men were flitting swiftly to and fro, horses were
starting and stamping at the picket ropes, eager eyes
and tilted ears inquiring the cause of all this stir
and bustle among the tents. In front of the canvas
home of the young commander a grave-faced group had
gathered, two gentle girls among them, one with tear-dimmed
eyes. Old Folsom stood apart in murmured conference
with Griggs, the sutler. The regimental quartermaster
was deep in consultation with Dean, the two officers
pacing slowly up and down. One or two young people
from the garrison had spent a few minutes earlier
in the evening striving to be interesting to the girls;
but Jessie’s tearful eyes and Miss Folsom’s
grave manner proved hint sufficient to induce them
to withdraw, each bidding Dean good night, safe journey
and speedy return, and the hand-clasps were kind and
cordial. The colonel himself had paid a brief
visit to camp, his adjutant in attendance, and had
given Mr. Dean ten minutes of talk concerning a country
Dean knew all about, but that “Pecksniff”
had never seen. “It is a responsibility
I own I should have expected to see placed on older
shoulders,” said he, “but prudence and and,
let me suggest, cool-headedness will probably
carry you through. You will be ready to start ”
“Ready now, sir, so far as that’s
concerned; but we start at three.”
“Oh, ah yes, of course well ah it
leaves me practically with no command, but I’ll
hope to have you back, Mr. Dean. Good-by.”
Then as he passed Folsom the colonel whispered:
“That’s ten thousand dollars as good as
thrown away.”
“Ten thousand dollars!”
answered the trader in reply. “What do you
mean?”
“That’s what those boys
are to run the gauntlet with. My ah protests
are entirely unavailing.”
For a moment Folsom stood there dumb.
“Do you mean,” he finally cried, “that that
it’s beyond Frayne that they’re going that
it’s money they’re to take?”
“Hush! Certainly, but it
mustn’t be known. Every road agent in Wyoming
would be out, and every Indian from the Platte to Hudson’s
Bay would be on the watch. He’s to take
ten men and slip through. The money comes out
from Burleigh to-night.”
The colonel turned away, and, beckoning
to his staff officer to join us, stumped onward to
the garrison. The prolonged wail of the bugle,
aided by the rising night wind, sent the solemn strains
of taps sailing down the dimly-lighted valley, and
with staring eyes old Folsom stood gazing after the
departing officers, then whirled about toward the tents.
There in front of Dean stood Pappoose, her hands clasped
lightly over the hilt of the saber the “striker”
had leaned against the lid of the mess chest but a
moment before, her lovely face smiling up into the
owner’s.
“You’ll come back by way
of Hal’s, won’t you?” she was blithely
saying. “Perhaps I can coax father to take
us there to meet you.”
“By heaven, Burleigh,”
muttered the old trader to himself, “are you
the deepest man I ever met, or only the most infernal
scoundrel?”