The only thing Kate could have noticed
was a slight darkening of the room; something momentarily
obscured the sunlight streaming through the platform
doorway; someone sauntered into the room itself, but
Kate was signing the letter and gave the entrance
no thought. Still she could not shake off the
consciousness of somebody walking up close to the
desk where she stood and sitting down on one of the
counter stools. She refused to look up, even
though she felt that eyes were on her.
A natural impulse of defiance at the
uninvited scrutiny possessed her. And being resolved
she would not admit she was conscious of it, she turned
from the desk and looking straight toward the glass
door connecting with the dining-room, and behind the
end of the counter, she walked briskly past the intruding
presence.
As she did so, Kate somehow felt with
every step that she could not get out of the room
unchallenged. But even then she was riding to
a rude surprise for she had reached the door without
incident when she heard two words: “Slow,
Kate.” She had already laid her hand on
the knob and she turned it with indignation.
The wretched door refused to open! It was Belle’s
afternoon off and she had locked the door.
Even then a collected girl would not
have surrendered to the situation. But Kate never
could be collected at just the right time. She
was usually quite collected when it made no difference
whether she was collected or not. All she now
did was to look blankly around. A man sat at
the counter, a man she had never seen before.
He was deliberately lifting a broad horseman’s
hat from a rather round, high forehead and disclosing
a head of inoffensive-looking sandy hair, very much
sun-and-wind bleached. His smooth face, his ears
and neck and open throat, were colored by a strictly
uniform pigment tinctured by many mountain
winds into a reddish brown and burnt by many mountain
suns into a seemingly immutable bronze. The face
was long with an ample nose, a peaceful-looking mouth
and unruffled gray eyes. The man was very like
and yet unlike many of the mountain men she had seen.
She remembered afterward that this was her first impression:
at that moment she was not analyzing it: “Where
are you going?” he asked, as she stood looking
at him.
Her resentment at the rudeness rose.
Could a prophetic spirit have warned Kate that this
was to be only the first of more than one serious
encounter with the eyes steadily regarding her, her
astonishment and indignation might have been restrained.
As it was, forgetting her own position and descending
to Western brusqueness, she retorted icily: “I
can’t see how that can possibly interest you.”
If she hoped that a frigid tone and
utterance might abash her intruding questioner, they
failed. He spoke again with surprisingly even
impertinence quite as if she were as friendly
as he. “You’re wrong,” he
said. “I’m mightily interested.
I want some coffee and you don’t act to me
as if you meant to come back.”
It was undignified and improper for
her to bandy words with a heckler, but Kate had already
breathed too much of the freedom of the mountains
to resist a second retort, and said, almost without
thinking and certainly in a very positive
manner: “I am not coming back.”
“Give me a cup of coffee before you go.”
“There is no service here this afternoon.”
“Beg your pardon. There
will be one service here this afternoon. You
will serve me.” His emphasis was slight,
but unmistakable. She was so fussed she turned
to the door and grasped the knob the second time.
Her persecutor raised his left hand firmly. “You
can’t get out there,” he said.
“Why can’t I?” demanded Kate indignantly.
“Because you can’t open
the door.” She stood mute at his assurance.
“Come,” he continued, “give me some
coffee, like a good girl.”
What should she do? She did
not speak the question, but weighed it pretty rapidly
in her mind. What manner of man had she to deal
with? If not actually threatening he was extremely
domineering. While she hesitated he regarded
her calmly.
But there was one way to do as he
demanded and to punish him as well. Of the two
coffee urns kept filled in readiness for the rush in
serving a trainload of passengers, only one was now
heated. Kate stepped to the urns, murmuring
as if to herself: “I know nothing about
these.”
“I don’t either,”
he said. From the nearer urn Kate drew a cup
of coffee; it was very cold but she pushed
it with a jug of cream and a bowl of sugar, toward
him.
“A teaspoon, please?”
Kate’s excitement had already heightened her
color. She looked very much alive as she added,
impatiently, a spoon to the equipment expecting
then to be able to get out of the room. It seemed
as if this ought to big easy; it was not. Her
tormentor professed to have had no dinner and wanted
a sandwich. The sandwiches were rebelliously
hunted up a plateful was supplied.
If he was surprised at the prodigality he made no
comment, but at intervals some tantalizing word from
him entangled her in another exchange; and at each
encounter of wits, just enough fear tempered her resentment
to make her irresolute.
She was malicious enough to observe
in silence the unobtrusive pantomime by which the
enemy tried to coax a semblance of warmth into his
cold coffee. He had begun by pouring cream into
it, but the cream refused to assimilate and only made
the mixture look less inviting.
“I’m glad I met you today,”
he said, while she was getting her breath. “Looks
lonesome around here. Not much doing at the mines,
is there?”
“Not a great deal,” she answered coldly.
“How about Barb Doubleday is he up
at the mines, or here?”
He was indifferently lifting matches
from the stand at his hand, striking them and burning
them patiently against the side of his cup of coffee.
Like a flash came to Kate with his question, the thought
that this disagreeable person must be the court officer.
He looked up at her now as if waiting for an answer:
“Why do you ask?” she countered.
“Mostly because I’d like to hear you say
something.”
“Anything, I suppose,” she suggested ironically.
“That’s not far from it,” was the
reply. “Also, I want to see Barb.”
“What about?” she asked,
borrowing his own assurance. It was time, she
thought, for defensive strategy.
“Just a little business matter.”
It was long, very long afterward that Kate learned,
and fully realized, the significance of the indifferently
spoken words; when she did, she wondered that a man’s
manner could so completely mask all that lay behind
them.
“He isn’t hiring any men,”
she ventured, adapting a set phrase she had often
heard Belle use.
“And in spite of my looks,”
he returned, “I’m not hunting a job for
a wonder.”
But now that Kate wanted to hear more
he took his turn at reticence. “Where are
you from?” she asked as unconcernedly as she
could.
“Medicine Bend.”
“From the marshal’s office?”
It was foolish of her to ask. She fairly blurted
out the words. He looked at her for the first
time keenly and just the change in his
expression, undefinable but unmistakable, almost frightened
her to death.
“I was in the marshal’s
office yesterday,” he answered, picking up a
sandwich evasively. Kate was no longer doubtful.
This was the man to serve the dreaded, summons.
An instant of panic seized her. Fortunately
her persecutor was regarding his stubborn coffee as
he stirred it. Her heart, which had stopped,
started with a thump. Her thoughts cleared.
Instinct, self-preservation, asserted itself.
She thought hard and fast. The first step was
to temporize.
He looked up in time to see the blood
sweeping back into her cheeks; and almost spoiled
the first really good breath she was drawing.
In his lean, bronzed hands he clasped his cup of
coffee as if trying to put a degree of heat into it:
“What would be the extra charge for a shot at
that hot tank?” he asked, directing his glance
first at the other tank, then at Kate’s burning
face.
With all his confidence, he must have
been surprised at the revulsion of manner that greeted
him. Kate recovered her poise her
coldness vanished, a smile broke through her reserve
and her confused regret was promptly expressed:
“Did I give you coffee out of the cold tank?
How stupid!”
“And never in my life,”
said her queer customer, as if continuing her words,
“did I do anything mean to you.”
“Oh, yes, you did,” objected
Kate, coupling nervous haste with the declaration
as she tried to take the cold cup from between his
hands. The ease with which she assumed the rôle
of a lunch-counter waitress astonished her.
“What did I do?” he drawled,
resisting her attempt to make amends.
“You said I couldn’t go
out that door,” she answered, refusing to be
denied the cup.
“I was hoping if you stayed
a few minutes, you wouldn’t want to.”
A moment earlier she would have been indignant.
Now she reconciled herself to necessity. She
was, indeed, wildly hoping she might be able to coax
him not to serve any paper. And she had to repress
an absurd laugh at the thought as she set a fresh
and steaming cup before him.
While he made ready to drink it she
leaned with assured indifference against the buffet
shelf behind her. She spread her left arm and
hand innocently along its edge as she had seen waitresses
do and with her right hand, toyed with
the loose collar of her crepe blouse chatting
the while like a perfectly good waitress with her suspect.
The funny part seemed to her that he took it all
with entire seriousness, hardly laughing; only a suspicion
of a smile, playing at times around his eyes, relieved
the somberness of his lean face. His parted lips
showed regular teeth when he spoke, and gave a not
unpleasant expression to his mouth. His eyes
were as inoffensive as a mountain lake.
But there remained something stubborn
in his dry manner and at times her heart misgave her
as to the hope of dissuading him from his purpose.
Trying to form some idea of how to act, she studied
him with anxiety. All she could actually reach
as a conclusion was that he might be troublesome to
dissuade.
Yet with every moment she was the
more determined to keep him from carrying out his
mission and the more resolved to make him pay for his
Western manners. All this was running through
her head while the coffee was being sipped.
Unhappily, her father was where she could not possibly
reach him with a warning until Belle should reappear
on the scene. She tendered her now tractable
guest a second cup of coffee. It was accepted;
he talked on, asking many questions, which were answered
more or less to his satisfaction. Not that his
inquiries were impertinent; they were chiefly silly,
Kate thought. He seemed most intent on establishing
a friendly footing with a lunch-counter attendant.
When his third cup had been drunk
and payment tendered for it, and for five or six sandwiches,
Kate decided her time to escape had arrived.
She refused to accept his money: “No,”
she persisted, “I will not take a thing for
your lunch. Positively not. Oh, you may
leave your dollar on the counter, if you like it
will never go into the register.”
“Why not?”
“I’ve told you.”
“Say it again.”
“You were very patient over my blunder in giving
you cold coffee.”
“To tell you the truth,”
he remarked with candor, “it didn’t look
to me altogether like a blunder.”
“Oh, it was,” she insisted
shamelessly; but she did not feel at all sure he believed
her. “And I won’t take your money.
I want you ” her eyes fell the least
bit with her repentant words “to have
a better impression of this counter than cold coffee
would give you. We’re trying so hard to
build up a business.”
“Golly!” observed her
calm guest. “I thought a few minutes ago
you were trying to wreck one.”
“You Medicine Bend men always
make fun of this valley,” Kate complained.
“I don’t really belong in Medicine Bend,”
was his return.
“Where do you belong?”
“In the Falling Wall.”
“Oh! that awful place?”
“Why knock the Falling Wall?”
“I never heard any good of it.
No matter anyway; you may put up your money.
And some time when I am up in your country,”
she added jestingly, “you can give me
a cup of cold coffee.”
“We’ll say nothing more
about the coffee,” he declared in blunt fashion.
“Just you come!” He yielded so honestly
to deceit that Kate was half ashamed at imposing on
him.
“Tell me,” he went on,
spinning his silver dollar in leisurely fashion on
the smooth counter, “how am I going to get up
to the mines today after I look around here for Barb where
can I get a horse?”
Kate reflected a moment. “I
can get you some kind of a horse,” she
said slowly. “But it would take you forever
to get there on horseback the trail runs
around by the river. The train will get you
there first. It goes up at four o’clock.”
She knew she said it all blandly,
though conscious of her duplicity. It was not
exactly falsehood that she spoke but it
was meant to mislead. The man was regarding
her steadily with eyes that seemed to Kate not in
the least double-dealing.
“What am I going to do till
four o’clock?” he asked, making without
discussion her subtle suggestion his own.
She lifted her eyebrows disclaimingly even
shrugged her shoulders: “What are you going
to do?” he persisted. She was ready.
She looked longingly out of the window. The
sun blazed over the desert in a riot of gold.
“It’s my day off,”
she observed, adding just a suspicion of discontent
and uncertainty to her words. She fingered her
tie, too; then dropped her eyes; and added, “I
thought I might take a ride.”
He started: “Couldn’t get two horses,
could you?”
“Two?” echoed Kate, looking surprised.
He rose: “I’ll turn
up two if I have to steal ’em,” he declared,
reaching for his hat.
“That would be too much trouble
for one little ride,” Kate said ironically.
“I’ll see what I can do, first.
But,” she added, basely, “if you want
to be sure of catching the train, I should advise you
to stay right here. It backs down and doesn’t
stay but a minute just long enough to hook
on to the empties.”
Her warning had no effect. It
was not meant to have any. She knew if he got
to the mines and learned that her father was at the
Junction he would return in no time to serve him.
He was decently restrained now, but he swallowed
her bait, hook and all: “Where do you think
you can find horses?” he asked.
“Where I work.”
“Where do you work?”
“Sometimes here and sometimes
up at Mr. Doubleday’s cottage. The barn-boy
gets up a horse for me any time.”
He raised an unexpected difficulty:
“I wouldn’t feel just right, today, riding
a horse of Barb Doubleday’s,” he said doubtfully.
The words only confirmed her suspicions.
Her fears rose but her wits did not desert her:
“Ride mine,” she suggested. “I’ve
got my own horse, of course.”
He drew a breath: “All
I can say is, if you ever come over my way, I’ll
show you as good a time as I know how to.”
She put up her hand: “Wait
till you see how you like my good time.”
He was quick to come back. “I’ll
agree right now to like anything you offer and
I don’t care a hang what it is, either.”
Looking straight at him she asked
a question. Its emphasis lay in her quiet tone:
“Will you stand to that?” He looked at
her until she felt his eyes were going right through
her: “I’ve got enemies,” he
said slowly, and there was now more than a touch of
hardness in his voice; “most men have.
But the worst of ’em never claimed my word isn’t
good.”
“Then,” exclaimed Kate,
hastening to escape the serious tone, “you tend
counter while I go and see about the horses.”
“No,” he objected, “that’s
a man’s job. You tell me where to go and
I’ll get the horses.”
Kate was most firm: “If
you’re going to ride with me,” she
said, “you must do my way. Take a woman’s
job for a few minutes and see how you like it.”
He regarded her with the simplicity
of a child, but replied like a case-hardened cowboy:
“I don’t like a woman’s job, of course.
But I’m ready to do any blamed thing you say.”
“Do you suppose,” Kate
demanded with an air, “they would turn two horses
over to you up at Doubleday’s?”
She had put her foot in it: “I
tell you,” he protested, “I don’t
want to ride a horse of Doubleday’s. I’m
up here to talk to Barb Doubleday. And nobody
can say just how it’s coming out. At the
ranch they swore he was at Sleepy Cat. I rode
down there and they told me he was at the Junction,
so I took the train over here. Now you tell me
he’s at the mines that’s where
I’ll say what I’ve got to say. But
I don’t want to take any advantage. And
I don’t want to impose on his property rights
so much as a single hair. That’s exactly
what’s between us.”
Kate, established in treacherous ambush,
felt qualms at his stern, clear code.
She tried to shut him off, but he
was wrought up: “Barb swore to me once
he had nothing to do with it,” he persisted obstinately.
“All I can say is, if a man fools me once it’s
his fault; if he fools me twice, it’s mine.”
“What about a woman?”
asked Kate, trying hard to say one thing and think
another.
He opened his eyes: “I
never thought much about that. A man can’t
fight a woman,” he returned reflectively.
“And I’ve yet to see one I could fool.”
“What should you do,”
she asked, turning her back while she straightened
her hat in the buffet mirror, “if you ever met
one that fooled you?”
“No woman would ever take the trouble.”
She laughed a little: “You never can tell.”
“If a woman ever fooled me,
she’d have to fool herself first so
she’d be the loser.”
“What a philosopher!”
“First and last, I’ve
been called a good many names some full
hard but never a philosopher before.”
Kate started for the front door:
“Hold on a minute,” he objected, “what’s
to do here while you’re gone?”
“Serve coffee and sandwiches
if anybody comes in. This time of day there’s
never anybody comes in.”
He turned on his stool: “How soon’ll
you be back?”
“In a few minutes.”
“Get a good horse for yourself.”
Kate gave him a parting shot: “Of course
you think I can’t ride.”
It did not take her long to get up
the hill. Breathless, she encountered old Henry
in the garden, asked him for the ponies and almost
ran into the house. Her father was asleep.
There was no reason to stir him up over a situation
that she was resolved to handle and felt she could
handle. She got into her riding clothes in a
trice, all the time wondering whether she could hold
her wild man in leash long enough to defeat him.
Had he been more like anybody she had ever met and
known, the problem would have been less confusing.
But she determined to shut her eyes and win the fight
if she could, and to this end draft every resource.
So she thought, at least, as she caught up her little
revolver and, dropping it into the scabbard she had
belted about her waist, set forth.
She rode back one of her own ponies
and led the other. Her enemy had good ears for
when she was half way to the eating-house he walked
out on the platform and silently surveyed her approach.
Kate watched him narrowly and drew up before him
to estimate the effect. She was disappointed,
she had to confess, at his cool indifference, for she
thought her riding rig unusually pretty. It had
seemingly failed to impress her queer Westerner.
His eyes were all for the horses. “Clean
ponies,” he observed, taking the bridle rein
from her hand as he looked the two over.
“I forgot to ask what kind of
a saddle you like,” she observed indifferently.
He was scanning the horses and his eyes not being
on her she got her first real good look at her antagonist whether
he was to be her victim she was in somewhat anxious
doubt.