Lee was waiting on the porch of the
hotel, tense with excitement, straining her ears and
eyes to see what was taking place.
The night had started with a small
sickle of moon, but this had dropped below the range,
leaving the street dark, save where the lights from
the windows of the all-night eating-houses and saloons
lay out upon the walk, and, while she stood peering
out, the sound of rancorous howling and shrill whooping
came to her ears with such suggestion of ferocity that
she shivered.
Every good and honorable trait seemed
lost out of her neighbors. She saw the whole
country but as a refuge for criminals, ungovernable
youths, and unsexed women a wilderness
of those who had no regard for any code of morals
which interfered with their own desires. Her memories
of the past freshened as she listened. In such
wise she had shuddered, as a child, while troops of
celebrating cowboys rode up and down the streets.
In such wise, too, the better (and more timid) element
of the town had put out their lights and retired,
leaving their drunken helots and the marshal to fight
it out in vague tumult.
A few of the hotel guests had gone
to bed, but the women were up, excited and nervous,
starting at every fresh outburst of whooping, knowing
that their sons or husbands were out in the street
“to see the fun,” and that they might
meet trouble.
At last Lee discerned her mother returning
from Halsey’s, followed by three men. Withdrawing
from the little porch whereon she had been standing,
she reentered the house to meet her mother in the hall.
“Where is Mr. Cavanagh?” she asked.
“Out in the dining-room.
You see, Mike Halsey is no kind o’ use.
He vamoosed and left Ross down there alone, with his
two prisoners and the lights likely to be turned out
on him. So I offered the caffy as a calaboose.
They are sure in for a long and tedious night.”
Lee was alarmed at her mother’s
appearance. “You must go to bed. You
look ghastly.”
“I reckon I’d better lie
down for a little while, but I can’t sleep.
Ross may need me. There isn’t a man to
help him but me, and that loafer Ballard is full of
gall. He’s got it in for Ross, and will
make trouble if he can.”
“What can we do?”
“Shoot!” replied Lize,
with dry brevity. “I wouldn’t mind
a chance to plug some of the sweet citizens of this
town. I owe them one or two.”
With this sentence in her ears, Lee
Virginia went to her bed, but not to slumber.
Her utter inability either to control her mother’s
action or to influence that of the mob added to her
uneasiness.
The singing, shouting, trampling of
the crowd went on, and once a group of men halted
just outside her window, and she heard Neill Ballard
noisily, drunkenly arguing as to the most effective
method of taking the prisoners. His utterances,
so profane and foul, came to her like echoes from out
an inferno. The voices were all at the moment
like the hissing of serpents, the snarling of tigers.
How dared creatures of this vile type use words of
contempt against Ross Cavanagh?
“Come on, boys!” urged
Ballard, his voice filled with reckless determination.
“Let’s run him.”
As they passed, the girl sprang up
and went to her mother’s room to warn her of
the threatened attack.
Lize was already awake and calmly
loading a second revolver by the light of the electric
bulb.
“What are you doing?”
the girl asked, her blood chilling at sight of the
weapon.
“Hell’s to pay out there,
and I’m going to help pay it.” A jarring
blow was heard. “Hear that! They’re
breaking in ” She started to leave
the room.
Lee stopped her. “Where are you going?”
“To help Ross. Here!”
She thrust the handle of a smaller weapon into Lee’s
hand. “Ed Wetherford’s girl ought
to be able to take care of herself. Come on!”
With a most unheroic horror benumbing
her limbs, Lee followed her mother through the hall.
The sound of shouts and the trampling of feet could
be heard, and she came out into the restaurant just
in time to photograph upon her brain a scene whose
significance was at once apparent. On a chair
between his two prisoners, and confronting Ballard
at the head of a crowd of frenzied villains, stood
the ranger, a gleaming weapon in his hand, a look
of resolution on his face.
What he had said, or what he intended
to do, she did not learn, for her mother rushed at
the invaders with the mad bravery of a she-bear.
“Get out of here!” she snarled, thrusting
her revolver into the very mouth of the leader.
They all fell back in astonishment and fear.
Ross leaped to her side. “Leave
them to me!” he said. “I’ll
clear the room.”
“Not on your life! This
is my house. I have the right to smash the fools.”
And she beat them over the heads with her pistol-barrel.
Recognizing that she was minded to
kill, they retreated over the threshold, and Ross,
drawing the door close behind them, turned to find
Lee Virginia confronting Edwards, who had attempted
to escape into the kitchen. The girl’s
face was white, but the eye of her revolver stared
straight and true into her prisoner’s face.
With a bound Ross seized him and flung
him against the wall. “Get back there!”
he shouted. “You must take your medicine
with your boss.”
The old fellow hurriedly replaced
his ragged hat, and, folding his arms, sank back into
his chair with bowed head, while Lize turned upon Joe
Gregg. “What the devil did you go into this
kind of deal for? You knew what the game laws
was, didn’t you? Your old dad is all for
State regulation, and here you are breaking a State
law. Why don’t you stand up for the code
like a sport?”
Joe, who had been boasting of the
smiles he had drawn from Lee, did not relish this
tongue-lashing from her mother, but, assuming a careless
air, he said, “I’m all out of smokes;
get me a box, that’s a good old soul.”
Lize regarded him with the expression
of one nonplussed. “You impudent little
cub!” she exclaimed. “What you need
is a booting!”
The ranger addressed himself to Lee.
“I want to thank you for a very opportune intervention.
I didn’t know you could handle a gun so neatly.”
She flushed with pleasure. “Oh
yes, I can shoot. My father taught me when I
was only six years old.”
As she spoke, Ross caught the man
Edwards studying them with furtive glance, but, upon
being observed, he resumed his crouching attitude,
which concealed his face beneath the rim of his weather-worn
hat. It was evident that he was afraid of being
recognized. He had the slinking air of the convict,
and his form, so despairing in its lax lines, appealed
to Lee with even greater poignancy than his face.
“I’m sorry,” she said to him, “but
it was my duty to help Mr. Cavanagh.”
He glanced up with a quick sidewise
slant. “That’s all right, miss; I
should have had sense enough to keep out of this business.”
He spoke with difficulty, and his voice was hoarse
with emotion.
Lize turned to Lee. “The
Doc said ‘no liquor,’ but I guess here’s
where I draw one I feel faint.”
Ross hurried to her side, while young
Gregg tendered a handsome flask. “Here’s
something.”
Lize put it away. “Not
from you. Just reach under my desk, Ross; you’ll
find some brandy there. That’s it,”
she called, as he produced a bottle. Clutching
it eagerly, she added: “They say it’s
poison, but it’s my meat to-night.”
She was, in truth, very pale, and
her hands were trembling in a weakness that went to
her daughter’s heart. Lee admired her bravery,
her manlike readiness of action, but her words, her
manner (now that the stress of the battle was over),
hurt and shamed her. Little remained of the woman
in Lize, and the old sheep-herder eyed her with furtive
curiosity.
“I was afraid you’d shoot,”
Lize explained to Ross, “and I didn’t want
you to muss up your hands on the dirty loafers.
I had the right to kill; they were trespassers, and
I’d ‘a’ done it, too.”
“I don’t think they intended
to actually assault me,” he said, “but
it’s a bit discouraging to find the town so
indifferent over both the breaking of the laws and
the doings of a drunken mob. I’m afraid
the most of them are a long way from law-abiding people
yet.”
Joe, who did not like the position
in which he stood as respecting Lee, here made an
offer of aid. “I don’t suppose my
word is any good now, but if you’ll let me do
it I’ll go out and round up Judge Higley.
I think I know where he is.”
To this Lize objected. “You
can’t do that, Ross; you better hold the fort
right here till morning.”
Lee was rather sorry, too, for young
Gregg, who bore his buffeting with the imperturbable
face of the heroes of his class. He had gone into
this enterprise with much the same spirit in which
he had stolen gates and misplaced signs during his
brief college career, and he was now disposed (in
the presence of a pretty girl) to carry it out with
undiminished impudence. “It only means
a fine, anyway,” he assured himself.
Cavanagh did not trust Gregg, either,
and as this was the first time he had been called
upon to arrest men for killing game out of season,
he could not afford to fail of any precaution.
Tired and sleepy as he was, he must remain on guard.
“But you and your daughter must go to bed at
once,” he urged.
Lize, under the spur of her dram,
talked on with bitter boldness. “I’m
going to get out o’ this town as soon as I can
sell. I won’t live in it a minute longer
than I have to. It used to have men into it; now
they’re only hobos. It’s neither
the old time nor the new; it’s just a betwixt
and between, with a lot o’ young cubs like Joe
Gregg pretendin’ to be tough. I never thought
I’d be sighin’ for horse-cars, but these
rowdy chumps like Neill Ballard give me a pain.
Not one of ’em has sand enough to pull a gun
in the open, but they’d plug you from a dark
alley or fire out of a crowd. It was different
in the old days. I’ve seen men walk out
into that street, face each other, and open fire quiet
as molasses. But now it’s all talk and
blow. The men have all grown old or got
out.”
To this Gregg listened with expressionless
visage, his eyes dreamily fixed on Lee’s face;
but his companion, the old herder, seemed to palpitate
with shame and fear. And Ross had the feeling
at the moment that in this ragged, unkempt old hobo
was the skeleton of one of the old-time heroes.
He was wasted with drink and worn by wind and rain,
but he was very far from being commonplace. “Here
they come again!” called Lize, as the hurry
of feet along the walk threatened another attack.
Ross Cavanagh again drew his revolver and stood at
guard, and Lize recovering her own weapon took a place
by his side.
With the strength of a bear the new
assailant shook the bolted door. “Let me
in!” he roared.
“Go to hell!” replied Lize, calmly.
“It’s dad!” called young Gregg.
“Go away, you chump.”
“Let me in or I’ll smash this door!”
retorted Gregg.
“You smash that door, old Bullfrog,”
announced Lize, “and I’ll carry one of
your lungs away. I know your howl it
don’t scare me. I’ve stood off one
whole mob to-night, and I reckon I’m good for
you. If you want to get in here you hunt up the
judge of this town and the constable.”
After a pause Sam called, “Are you there, son?”
“You bet he is,” responded Lize, “and
here he’ll stay.”
Joe added: “And you’d
better take the lady’s advice, pop. She
has the drop on you.”
The old rancher muttered a fierce
curse while Ross explained the situation. “I’m
as eager to get rid of these culprits as any one can
be, but they must be taken by proper authority.
Bring a writ from the magistrate and you may have
them and welcome.”
Gregg went away without further word,
and Lize said: “He’ll find Higley
if he’s in town; and he is in town, for
I saw him this afternoon. He’s hiding out
to save himself trouble.”
Lee Virginia, with an understanding
of what the ranger had endured, asked: “Can’t
I get you something to eat? Would you like some
coffee?”
“I would, indeed,” he answered, and his
tone pleased her.
She hurried away to get it while Cavanagh
disposed his prisoners behind a couple of tables in
the corner. “I guess you’re in for
a night of it,” he remarked, grimly. “So
make yourselves as comfortable as you can. Perhaps
your experience may be a discouragement to others of
your kind.”
Lee returned soon with a pot of fresh
coffee and some sandwiches, the sight of which roused
young Gregg to impudent remark. “Well, notice
that! And we’re left out!” But Edwards
shrank into the shadow, as if the light hurt him.
Ross thanked Lee formally, but there
was more than gratitude in his glance, and she turned
away to hide her face from other eyes. Strange
place it was for the blooming of love’s roses,
but they were in her cheeks as she faced her mother;
and Lize, with fresh acknowledgment of her beauty,
broke out again: “Well, this settles it.
I’m going to get out of this town, dearie.
I’m done. This ends the cattle country for
me. I don’t know how I’ve put up
with these yapps all these years. I’ve been
robbed and insulted and spit upon just long enough.
I won’t have you dragged into this mess.
I ought to have turned you back the day you landed
here.”
The old man in the corner was listening,
straining his attention in order to catch every word
she uttered, and Ross again caught a gleam in his eyes
which puzzled him. Before he had time to turn
his wonder over in his mind they all caught the sound
of feet along the walk, but this time the sound was
sedate and regular, like the movement of police.
Both prisoners rose to their feet
as Cavanagh again stood alert. The feet halted;
a sharp rap sounded on the door.
“Who’s there?” demanded Lize.
“The law!” replied a wheezy voice.
“Open in the name of the law!”
“It’s old Higley,” announced Lize.
“Open the door, Ross.”
“Come in, Law,” she called,
ironically, as the justice appeared. “You
look kind of mice-eaten, but you’re all the
law this blame town can sport. Come in and do
your duty.”
Higley (a tall man, with a rusty brown
beard, very much on his dignity) entered the room,
followed by a short, bullet-headed citizen in a rumpled
blue suit with a big star on his breast. Behind
on the sidewalk Ballard and a dozen of his gang could
be seen. Sam Gregg, the moving cause of this
resurrection of law and order, followed the constable,
bursting out big curses upon his son. “You
fool,” he began, “I warned you not to monkey
with them sheep. You ”
Higley had the grace to stop that.
“Let up on the cuss-words, Sam; there are ladies
present,” said he, nodding toward Lee. Then
he opened upon Cavanagh. “Well, sir, what’s
all this row? What’s your charge against
these men?”
“Killing mountain sheep.
I caught them with the head of a big ram upon their
pack.”
“Make him show his commission,”
shouted Gregg. “He’s never been commissioned.
He’s no game warden.”
Higley hemmed. “I ah Oh,
his authority is all right, Sam; I’ve seen it.
If he can prove that these men killed the sheep, we’ll
have to act.”
Cavanagh briefly related how he had
captured the men on the trail. “The head
of the ram is at the livery barn with my horse.”
“How about that?” asked Higley, turning
to Joe.
“I guess that’s right,”
replied the insolent youth. “We killed the
sheep all right.”
Higley was in a corner. He didn’t
like to offend Gregg, and yet the case was plain.
He met the issue blandly. “Marshal, take
these men into custody!” Then to Ross:
“We’ll relieve you of their care, Mr. Cavanagh.
You may appear to-morrow at nine.”
It was a farcical ending to a very
arduous thirty-six-hour campaign, and Ross, feeling
like a man who, having rolled a huge stone to the top
of a hill, has been ordered to drop it, said, “I
insist on the maximum penalty of the law, Justice
Higley, especially for this man!” He indicated
Joe Gregg.
“No more sneaking, Higley,”
added Lize, uttering her distrust in blunt phrase.
“You put these men through or I’ll make
you trouble.”
Higley turned, and with unsteady solemnity
saluted. “Fear not my government, madam,”
said he, and so made exit.
After the door had closed behind them,
Cavanagh bitterly complained. “I’ve
delivered my prisoners over into the hands of their
friends. I feel like a fool. What assurance
have I that they will ever be punished?”
“You have Higley’s word,”
retorted Lize, with ironic inflection. “He’ll
fine ’em as much as ten dollars apiece, and confiscate
the head, which is worth fifty.”
“No matter what happens now,
you’ve done your duty,” added Lee Virginia,
with intent to comfort him.
Lize, now that the stress of the battle
was over, fell a-tremble. “I reckon I’ll
have to go to bed,” she admitted. “I’m
all in. This night service is wearing.”
Ross was alarmed at the sudden droop
of her head. “Lean on me,” he said,
“it’s my turn to be useful.”
She apologized. “I can’t
stand what I could once,” she confessed, as he
aided her into the hotel part of the building.
“It’s my nerve seem’s
like it’s all gone. I go to pieces like
a sick girl.”
She did, indeed, resemble the wreck
of a woman as she lay out upon her bed, her hands
twitching, her eyes closed, and Ross was profoundly
alarmed. “You need the doctor,” he
urged. “Let me bring him.”
“No,” she said, huskily,
but with decision, “I’m only tired I’ll
be all right soon. Send the people away; tell
’em to go to bed.”
For half an hour Cavanagh remained
in the room waiting to see if the doctor’s services
would be required, but at the end of that time, as
she had apparently fallen asleep, he rose and tiptoed
out into the hall.
Lee followed, and they faced each
other in such intimacy as the shipwrecked feel after
the rescue. The house was still astir with the
feet of those to whom the noises of the night had
been a terror or a lure, and their presence, so far
from being a comfort, a protection, filled the girl’s
heart with fear and disgust. The ranger explained
the outcome of the turmoil, and sent the excited folk
to their beds with the assurance that all was quiet
and that their landlady was asleep.
When they were quite alone Lee said:
“You must not go out into the streets to-night.”
“There’s no danger.
These hoodlums would not dare to attack me.”
“Nevertheless, you shall not
go!” she declared. “Wait a moment,”
she commanded, and reentered her mother’s room.
As he stood there at Lize Wetherford’s
door, and his mind went back over her brave deed,
which had gone far to atone for her vulgarity, his
respect for her deepened. Her resolute insistence
upon law showed a complete change of front. “There
is more good in her than I thought,” he admitted,
and it gave him pleasure, for it made Lee Virginia’s
character just that much more dependable. He
thrilled with a new and wistful tenderness as the
girl opened the door and stepped out, close beside
him.
“Her breathing is quieter,”
she whispered. “I think she’s going
to sleep. It’s been a terrible night!
You must be horribly tired. I will find you some
place to sleep.”
“It has been a strenuous campaign,”
he admitted. “I’ve been practically
without sleep for three nights, but that’s all
in my job. I won’t mind if Higley will
‘soak’ those fellows properly.”
She looked troubled. “I
don’t know what to do about a bed for you; everything
is taken except the couch in the front room.”
“Don’t trouble, I beg
of you. I can pitch down anywhere. I’m
used to hard beds. I must be up early to-morrow,
anyway.”
“Please don’t go till
after breakfast,” she smiled, wanly, “I
may need you.”
He understood. “What did the doctor say?”
“He said mother was in a very
low state of vitality and that she must be very careful,
which was easy enough to say. But how can I get
her to rest and to diet? You have seen how little
she cares for the doctor’s orders. He told
her not to touch alcohol.”
“She is more like a man than a woman,”
he answered.
She led the way into the small sitting-room
which lay at the front of the house, and directly
opposite the door of her own room. It was filled
with shabby parlor furniture, and in one corner stood
a worn couch. “I’m sorry, but I can
offer nothing better,” she said. “Every
bed is taken, but I have plenty of blankets.”
There was something delightfully suggestive
in being thus waited upon by a young and handsome
woman, and the ranger submitted to it with the awkward
grace of one unaccustomed to feminine care. The
knowledge that the girl was beneath him in birth,
and that she was considered to be (in a sense) the
lovely flower of a corrupt stock, made the manifest
innocency of her voice and eyes the more appealing.
He watched her moving about the room with eyes in
which a furtive flame glowed.
“This seems a long way from
that dinner at Redfield’s, doesn’t it?”
he remarked, as she turned from spreading the blankets
on the couch.
“It is another world,”
she responded, and her face took on a musing gravity.
Then they faced each other in silence,
each filled with the same delicious sense of weakness,
of danger, reluctant to say good-night, longing for
the closer touch which dawning love demanded, and
yet something in the girl defended her,
defeated him.
“You must call me if I can be
of any help,” he repeated, and his voice was
tremulous with feeling.
“I will do so,” she answered.
Still they did not part. His
voice was very tender as he said, “I don’t
like to see you exposed to such experiences.”
“I was not afraid only for you a
little,” she answered.
“The Redfields like you.
Eleanor told me she would gladly help you. Why
do you stay here?”
“I cannot leave my mother.”
“I’m not so sure of your
duty in that regard. She got on without you for
ten years. You have a right to consider yourself.
You don’t belong here.”
“Neither do you,” she retorted.
“Oh yes, I do at
least, the case is different with me; my work is here.
It hurts me to think of going back to the hills, leaving
you here in the midst of these wolves.”
He was talking now in the low, throbbing
utterance of a man carried out of himself. “It
angers me to think that the worst of these loafers,
these drunken beasts, can glare at you can
speak to you. They have no right to breathe the
same air with one like you.”
She did not smile at this; his voice,
his eyes were filled with the gravity of the lover
whose passion is not humorous. Against his training,
his judgment, he was being drawn into closer and closer
union with this daughter of violence, and he added:
“You may not see me in the morning.”
“You must not go without seeing
my mother. You must have your breakfast with
us. It hurt us to think you didn’t come
to us for supper.”
Her words meant little, but the look
in her eyes, the music in her voice, made him shiver.
He stammered: “I I must return
to my duties to-morrow. I should go back to-night.”
“You mustn’t do that.
You can’t do that. You are to appear before
the judge.”
He smiled. “That is true. I’d
forgotten that.”
Radiant with relief, she extended
her hand. “Good-night, then. You must
sleep.”
He took her hand and drew her toward
him, then perceiving both wonder and fear in her eyes,
he conquered himself. “Good-night,”
he repeated, dropping her hand, but his voice was
husky with its passion.
Tired as he was, the ranger could
not compose himself to sleep. The memory of the
girl’s sweet face, the look of half-surrender
in her eyes, the knowledge that she loved him, and
that she was lying but a few yards from him, made
slumber impossible. At the moment she seemed altogether
admirable, entirely worthy to be won.