On his solitary ride upward and homeward
the ranger searched his heart and found it bitter
and disloyal. Love had interfered with duty, and
pride had checked and defeated love. His path,
no longer clear and definite, looped away aimlessly,
lost in vague, obscure meanderings. His world
had suddenly grown gray.
The magnificent plan of the Chief
Forester (to which he had pledged such buoyant allegiance)
was now a thing apart, a campaign in which he was to
be merely an onlooker. It had once offered something
congenial, helpful, inspiring; now it seemed fantastic
and futile without the man who shaped it. “I
am nearing forty,” he said; “Eleanor is
right. I am wasting my time here in these hills;
but what else can I do?”
He had no trade, no business, no special
skill, save in the ways of the mountaineer, and to
return to his ancestral home at the moment seemed a
woful confession of failure.
But the cause of his deepest dismay
and doubt was the revelation to himself of the essential
lawlessness of his love, a force within him which
now made his duties as a law-enforcer sadly ironic.
After all, was not the man who presumed upon a maiden’s
passion and weakness a greater malefactor than he
who steals a pearl or strangles a man for his gold?
To betray a soul, to poison a young life, is this
not the unforgivable crime?
“Here am I, a son of the law,
complaining of the lawlessness of the West fighting
it, conquering it and yet at the same time
I permit myself to descend to the level of Neill Ballard,
to think as the barbaric man thinks.”
He burned hot with contempt of himself,
and his teeth set hard in the resolution to put himself
beyond the reach of temptation. “Furthermore,
I am concealing a criminal, cloaking a convict, when
I should be arresting him,” he pursued, referring
back to Wetherford. “And why? Because
of a girl’s romantic notion of her father, a
notion which can be preserved only by keeping his
secret, by aiding him to escape.” And even
this motive, he was obliged to confess, had not all
been on the highest plane. It was all a part
of his almost involuntary campaign to win Virginia’s
love. The impulse had been lawless, lawless as
the old-time West, and the admission cut deep into
his self-respect.
It was again dusk as he rode up to
his own hitching-pole and slipped from the saddle.
Wetherford came out, indicating by
his manner that he had recovered his confidence once
more. “How did you find things in the valley?”
he inquired, as they walked away toward the corral.
“Bad,” responded the ranger.
“In what way?”
“The chief has been dismissed
and all the rascals are chuckling with glee.
I’ve resigned from the service.”
Wetherford was aghast. “What for?”
“I will not serve under any
other chief. The best thing for you to do is
to go out when I do. I think by keeping on that
uniform you can get to the train with me.”
“Did you see Lize and my girl?”
“No, I only remained in town
a minute. It was too hot for me. I’m
done with it. Wetherford, I’m going back
to civilization. No more wild West for me.”
The bitterness of his voice touched the older man’s
heart, but he considered it merely a mood.
“Don’t lose your nerve; mebbe this ends
the reign of terror.”
“Nothing will end the moral
shiftlessness of this country but the death of the
freebooter. You can’t put new wine into
old bottles. These cattle-men, deep in their
hearts, sympathize with the wiping-out of those sheep-herders.
The cry for justice comes from the man whose ear is
not being chewed the man far off and
from the town-builder who knows the State is being
hurt by such atrocities; but the ranchers over on Deer
Creek will conceal the assassins you know
that. You’ve had experience with these
free-grass warriors; you know what they are capable
of. That job was done by men who hated the dagoes hated
’em because they were rival claimants for the
range. It’s nonsense to attempt to fasten
it on men like Neill Ballard. The men who did
that piece of work are well-known stock-owners.”
“I reckon that’s so.”
“Well, now, who’s going
to convict them? I can’t do it. I’m
going to pull out as soon as I can put my books in
shape, and you’d better go too.”
They were standing at the gate of
the corral, and the roar of the mountain stream enveloped
them in a cloud of sound.
Wetherford spoke slowly: “I
hate to lose my girl, now that I’ve seen her,
but I guess you’re right; and Lize, poor old
critter! It’s hell’s shame the way
I’ve queered her life, and I’d give my
right arm to be where I was twelve years ago; but
with a price on my head and old age comin’ on,
I don’t see myself ever again getting up to
par. It’s a losing game for me now.”
There was resignation as well as despair
in his voice and Cavanagh felt it, but he said, “There’s
one other question that may come up for decision if
that Basque died of smallpox, you may possibly take
it.”
“I’ve figured on that,
but it will take a day or two to show on me. I
don’t feel any ache in my bones yet. If
I do come down, you keep away from me. You’ve
got to live and take care of Virginia.”
“She should never have returned
to this accursed country,” Cavanagh harshly
replied, starting back toward the cabin.
The constable, smoking his pipe beside
the fireplace, did not present an anxious face; on
the contrary, he seemed plumply content as he replied
to the ranger’s greeting. He represented
very well the type of officer which these disorderly
communities produce. Brave and tireless when working
along the line of his prejudices, he could be most
laxly inefficient when his duties cut across his own
or his neighbor’s interests. Being a cattle-man
by training, he was glad of the red herring which the
Texas officer had trailed across the line of his pursuit.
This attitude still further inflamed
Cavanagh’s indignant hate of the country.
The theory which the deputy developed was transparent
folly. “It was just a case of plain robbery,”
he argued. “One of them dagoes had money,
and Neill Ballard and that man Edwards just naturally
follered him and killed the whole bunch and scooted that’s
my guess.”
Cavanagh’s outburst was prevented
by the scratching and whining of a dog at his door.
For a moment he wondered at this; his perturbed mind
had dropped the memory of the loyal collie.
As he opened the door, the brute,
more than half human in his gaze, looked beseechingly
at his new master, as if to say, “I couldn’t
help it I was so lonely. And I love
you.”
“You poor beastie,” the
ranger called, pityingly, and the dog leaped up in
a frenzy of joyous relief, putting his paws on his
breast, then dropped to the ground, and, crouching
low on his front paws, quivered and yawned with ecstasy
of worship. It seemed that he could not express
his passionate adoration, his relief, except by these
grotesque contortions.
“Come in, Laddie!” Ross
urged, but this the dog refused to do. “I
am a creature of the open air,” he seemed to
say. “My duties are of the outer world.
I have no wish for a fireside all I need
is a master’s praise and a bit of bread.”
Cavanagh brought some food, and, putting
it down outside the door, spoke to him, gently:
“Good boy! Eat that and go back to your
flock. I’ll come to see you in the morning.”
When Cavanagh, a few minutes later,
went to the door the dog was gone, and, listening,
the ranger could hear the faint, diminishing bleating
of the sheep on the hillside above the corral.
The four-footed warden was with his flock.
An hour later the sound of a horse’s
hoofs on the bridge gave warning of a visitor, and
as Cavanagh went to the door Gregg rode up, seeking
particulars as to the death of the herder and the whereabouts
of the sheep.
The ranger was not in a mood to invite
the sheepman in, and, besides, he perceived the danger
to which Wetherford was exposed. Therefore his
answers were short. Gregg, on his part, did not
appear anxious to enter.
“What happened to that old hobo I sent up?”
he asked.
Cavanagh briefly retold his story,
and at the end of it Gregg grunted. “You
say you burned the tent and all the bedding?”
“Every thread of it. It wasn’t safe
to leave it.”
“What ailed the man?”
“I don’t know, but it looked and smelled
like smallpox.”
The deputy rose with a spring. “Smallpox!
You didn’t handle the cuss?”
Cavanagh did not spare him. “Somebody
had to lend a hand. I couldn’t see him
die there alone, and he had to be buried, so I did
the job.”
Gregg recoiled a step or two, but
the deputy stood staring, the implication of all this
sinking deep. “Were you wearing the same
clothes you’ve got on?”
“Yes, but I used a slicker while working around
the body.”
“Good King!” The sweat
broke out on the man’s face. “You
ought to be arrested.”
Ross took a step toward him. “I’m
at your service.”
“Keep off!” shouted the sheriff.
Ross smiled, then became very serious.
“I took every precaution, Mr. Deputy; I destroyed
everything that could possibly carry the disease.
I burned every utensil, including the saddle, everything
but the man’s horse and his dog!”
“The dog!” exclaimed the
deputy, seized with another idea. “Not that
dog you fed just now?”
“The very same,” replied Cavanagh.
“Don’t you know a dog’s
sure to carry the poison in his hair? Why, he
jumped on you! Why didn’t you shoot
him?” he demanded, fiercely.
“Because he’s a faithful
guardian, and, besides, he was with the sheep, and
never so much as entered the tent.”
“Do you know that?”
“Not absolutely, but he seemed
to be on shy terms with the herder, and I’m
sure ”
The officer caught up his hat and
coat and started for the door. “It’s
me for the open air,” said he.
As the men withdrew Ross followed
them, and, standing in his door, delivered his final
volley. “If this State does not punish those
fiends, every decent man should emigrate out of it,
turning the land over to the wolves, the wildcats,
and other beasts of prey.”
Gregg, as he retreated, called back:
“That’s all right, Mr. Ranger, but you’d
better keep to the hills for a few weeks. The
settlers down below won’t enjoy having a man
with smallpox chassayin’ around town. They
might rope and tie you.”
Wetherford came out of his hiding-place
with a grave face. “I wonder I didn’t
think of that collie. They say a cat’s fur
will carry disease germs like a sponge. Must
be the same with a dog.”
“Well, it’s too late now,”
replied Cavanagh. “But they’re right
about our staying clear of town. They’ll
quarantine us sure. All the same, I don’t
believe the dog carried any germs of the disease.”
Wetherford, now that the danger of
arrest was over, was disposed to be grimly humorous.
“There’s no great loss without some small
gain. I don’t think we’ll be troubled
by any more visitors not even by sheriffs
or doctors. I reckon you and I are in for a couple
of months of the quiet life the kind we
read about.”
Cavanagh, now that he was definitely
out of the Forest Service, perceived the weight of
every objection which his friends and relatives had
made against his going into it. It was a lonely
life, and must ever be so. It was all very well
for a young unmarried man, who loved the woods and
hills beyond all things else, and who could wait for
advancement, but it was a sad place for one who desired
a wife. The ranger’s place was on the trail
and in the hills, and to bring a woman into these high
silences, into these lone reaches of forest and fell,
would be cruel. To bring children into them would
be criminal.
All the next day, while Wetherford
pottered about the cabin or the yard, Cavanagh toiled
at his papers, resolved to leave everything in the
perfect order which he loved. Whenever he looked
round upon his belongings, each and all so redolent
of the wilderness he found them very dear.
His chairs (which he had rived out of slabs), his
guns, his robes, his saddles and their accoutrements all
meant much to him. “Some of them must go
with me,” he said. “And when I am
settled down in the old home I’ll have one room
to myself which shall be so completely of the mountain
America that when I am within it I can fancy myself
back in the camp.”
He thought of South Africa as a possibility,
and put it aside, knowing well that no other place
could have the same indefinable charm that the Rocky
Mountains possessed, for the reason that he had come
to them at his most impressionable age. Then,
too, the United States, for all their faults, seemed
merely an extension of the English form of government.
Wetherford was also moving in deep
thought, and at last put his perplexity into a question.
“What am I to do? I’m beginning to
feel queer. I reckon the chances for my having
smallpox are purty fair. Maybe I’d better
drop down to Sulphur and report to the authorities.
I’ve got a day or two before the blossoms will
begin to show on me.”
Cavanagh studied him closely.
“Now don’t get to thinking you’ve
got it. I don’t see how you could attach
a germ. The high altitude and the winds up there
ought to prevent infection. I’m not afraid
for myself, but if you’re able, perhaps we’d
better pull out to-morrow.”
Later in the day Wetherford expressed
deeper dejection. “I don’t see anything
ahead of me anyhow,” he confessed. “If
I go back to the ‘pen’ I’ll die
of lung trouble, and I don’t know how I’m
going to earn a living in the city. Mebbe the
best thing I could do would be to take the pox and
go under. I’m afraid of big towns,”
he continued. “I always was even
when I had money. Now that I am old and broke
I daren’t go. No city for me.”
Cavanagh’s patience gave way.
“But, man, you can’t stay here! I’m
packing up to leave. Your only chance of getting
out of the country is to go when I go, and in my company.”
His voice was harsh and keen, and the old man felt
its edge; but he made no reply, and this sad silence
moved Cavanagh to repentance. His irritability
warned him of something deeply changing in his own
nature.
Approaching the brooding felon, he
spoke gently and sadly. “I’m sorry
for you, Wetherford, I sure am, but it’s up
to you to get clear away so that Lee will never by
any possible chance find out that you are alive.
She has a romantic notion of you as a representative
of the old-time West, and it would be a dreadful shock
to her if she knew you as you are. It’s
hard to leave her, I know, now that you’ve seen
her, but that’s the manly thing to do the
only thing to do.”
“Oh, you’re right of
course you’re right. But I wish I could
be of some use to her. I wish I could chore round
for the rest of my life, where I could kind o’
keep watch over her. I’d be glad enough
to play the scullion in her kitchen. But if you’re
going to take her ”
“But I’m not,” protested
Ross. “I’m going to leave her right
here. I can’t take her.”
Wetherford looked at him with steady
eyes, into which a keen light leaped. “Don’t
you intend to marry her?”
Ross turned away. “No, I don’t I
mean it is impossible!”
“Why not? Don’t tell
me you’re already married?” He said this
with menacing tone.
“No, I’m not married,
but ” He stopped without making his
meaning plain. “I’m going to leave
the country and ”
Wetherford caught him up. “I
reckon I understand what you mean. You consider
Lize and me undersirable parents not just
the kind you’d cut out of the herd of your own
free will. Well, that’s all right, I don’t
blame you so far as I’m concerned. But
you can forget me, consider me a dead one. I’ll
never bother her nor you.”
Cavanagh threw out an impatient hand.
“It is impossible,” he protested.
“It’s better for her and better for me
that I should do so. I’ve made up my mind.
I’m going back to my own people.”
Wetherford was thoroughly roused now.
Some part of his old-time fire seemed to return to
him. He rose from his chair and approached the
ranger firmly. “I’ve seen you act
like a man, Ross Cavanagh. You’ve been a
good partner these last few days a son
couldn’t have treated me better and
I hate like hell to think ill of you; but my girl
loves you I could see that. I could
see her lean to you, and I’ve got to know something
else right now. You’re going to leave here you’re
going to throw her off. What I want to know is
this: Do you leave her as good as you found her?
Come, now, I want an answer, as one man to another.”
Cavanagh’s eyes met his with
firm but sorrowful gaze. “In the sense in
which you mean, I leave her as I found her.”
The old man’s open hand shot
out toward his rescuer. “Forgive me, my
lad,” he said, humbly; “for a minute I doubted
you.”
Ross took his hand, but slowly replied:
“It will be hard for you to understand, when
I tell you that I care a great deal for your daughter,
but a man like me an Englishman cannot
marry or he ought not to marry to
himself alone. There are so many others to consider his
friends, his sisters ”
Wetherford dropped his hand.
“I see!” His tone was despairing.
“When I was young we married the girls we loved
in defiance of man, God, or the cupboard; but you
are not that kind. You may be right. I’m
nothing but a debilitated old cow-puncher branded
by the State a man who threw away his chance but
I can tell you straight, I’ve learned that nothing
but the love of a woman counts. Furthermore,”
and here his fire flashed again, “I’d
have killed you had you taken advantage of my girl!”
“Which would have been your
duty,” declared Cavanagh, wearily.
And in the face of this baffling mood,
which he felt but could not understand, the old man
fell silent.