Sibley Junction is in the sub-tropic
zone of Colorado. It lies in a hot, dry, but
immensely productive valley at an altitude of some
four thousand feet above the sea, a village laced
with irrigating ditches, shaded by big cotton-wood-trees,
and beat upon by a genial, generous-minded sun.
The boarders at the Golden Eagle Hotel can sit on
the front stoop and see the snow-filled ravines of
the mountains to the south, and almost hear the thunder
crashing round old Uncompahgre, even when the broad
leaves above their heads are pulseless and the heat
of the mid-day light is a cataract of molten metal.
It is, as I have said, a productive
land, for upon this ashen, cactus-spotted, repellent
flat men have directed the cool, sweet water of the
upper world, and wherever this life-giving fluid touches
the soil grass and grain spring up like magic.
For all its wild and beautiful setting,
Sibley is now a town of farmers and traders rather
than of miners. The wagons entering the gates
are laden with wheat and melons and peaches rather
than with ore and giant-powder, and the hotels are
frequented by ranchers of prosaic aspect, by passing
drummers for shoes and sugars, and by the barbers and
clerks of near-by shops. It is, in fact, a bit
of slow-going village life dropped between the diabolism
of Cripple Creek and the decay of Creede.
Nevertheless, now and then a genuine
trailer from the heights, or cow-man from the mesas,
does drop into town on some transient business and,
with his peculiar speech and stride, remind the lazy
town-loafers of the vigorous life going on far above
them. Such types nearly always put up at the
Eagle Hotel, which was a boarding-house advanced to
the sidewalk of the main street and possessing a register.
At the time of this story trade was
good at the Eagle for two reasons. Mrs. Gilman
was both landlady and cook, and an excellent cook,
and, what was still more alluring, Bertha, her pretty
daughter, was day-clerk and general manager.
Customers of the drummer type are very loyal to their
hotels, and amazingly sensitive to female charm therefore
Bertha, who would have been called an attractive girl
anywhere, was widely known and tenderly recalled by
every brakeman on the line. She was tall and
straight, with brown hair and big, candid, serious
eyes wistful when in repose, boyishly frank
and direct as she stood behind her desk attending
to business, or smiling as she sped her parting guests
at the door.
“I know Bertie ought to be in
school,” Mrs. Gilman said one day to a sympathetic
guest. “But what can I do? We got to
live. I didn’t come out here for my health,
but goodness knows I never expected to slave away in
a hot kitchen in this way. If Mr. Gilman had lived ”
It was her habit to leave her demonstrations even
her sentences unfinished, a peculiarity
arising partly from her need of hastening to prevent
some pot from boiling over and partly from her failing
powers. She had been handsome once but
the heat of the stove, the steam of the washtub, and
the vexation and prolonged effort of her daily life
had warped and faded and battered her into a pathetic
wreck of womanhood.
“I’m going to quit this
thing as soon as I get my son’s ranch paid for.
You see ”
She did not finish this, but her friend
understood. Bertha’s time for schooling
was past. She had already entered upon the maiden’s
land of dreams of romance. The men
who had hitherto courted her, half-laughingly, half-guiltily,
knowing that she was a child, had at last dropped
all subterfuge. To them she was a “girl,”
with all that this word means to males not too scrupulous
of the rights of women.
“I oughtn’t to quit now
when business is so good,” Mrs. Gilman returned
to the dining-room to add. “I’m full
all the time and crowded on Saturday. More and
more of the boys come down the line on purpose to
stay over Sunday. If I can stick it out a little
while ”
The reason why “the boys came
down the line to stay over Sunday,” was put
into words one day by Winchell, the barber, who took
his meals at the Eagle.
He was a cleanly shaven young man
of twenty-four or five, with a carefully tended brown
mustache which drooped below the corners of his mouth.
He began by saying to Bertha:
“I wish I could get out of my
business. Judas, but I get tired of it!
When I left the farm I never s’posed I’d
find myself nailed down to the floor of a barber-shop,
but here I am and making good money. How’d
you like to go on a ranch?” he asked, meaningly.
“I don’t believe I’d
like it. Too lonesome,” she replied, without
any attempt to coquette with the hidden meaning of
his question. “I kind o’ like this
hotel business. I enjoy having new people sifting
along every day. Seems like I couldn’t
bear to step out into private life again, I’ve
got so used to this public thing. I only wish
mother didn’t have to work so hard that’s
all that troubles me at the present time.”
Her speech was quite unlike the birdlike
chatter with which girls of her age entertain a lover.
She spoke rather slowly and with the gravity of a
man of business, and her blunt phrases made her smile
the more bewitching and her big, brown eyes the more
girlish. She did not giggle or flush she
only looked past his smirking face out into the street
where the sun’s rays lay like flame. And
yet she was profoundly moved by the man, for he was
a handsome fellow in a sleek way.
“Just the same, you oughtn’t
to be clerk,” said the barber. “It’s
no place for a girl, anyway. Housekeeping is
all right, but this clerking is too public.”
“Oh, I don’t know!
We have a mighty nice run of custom, and I don’t
see anything bad about it. I’ve met a lot
of good fellows by being here.”
The barber was silent for a moment,
then pulled out his watch. “Well, I’ve
got to get back.” He dropped his voice.
“Don’t let ’em get gay with you.
Remember, I’ve got a mortgage on you. If
any of ’em gets fresh you let me know they
won’t repeat it.”
“Don’t you worry,”
she replied, with a confident smile. “I
can take care of myself. I grew up in Colorado.
I’m no tenderfoot.”
This boast, so childish, so full of
pathetic self-assertion, was still on her lips when
a couple of men came out of the dining-room and paused
to buy some cigars at the counter. One of them
was at first sight a very handsome man of pronounced
Western sort. He wore a long, gray frock-coat
without vest, and a dark-blue, stiffly starched shirt,
over which a red necktie fluttered. His carriage
was erect, his hands large of motion, and his profile
very fine in its bold lines. His eyes were gray
and in expression cold and penetrating, his nose was
broad, and the corners of his mouth bitter. He
could not be called young, and yet he was not even
middle-aged. His voice was deep, and harsh in
accent, but as he spoke to the girl a certain sweetness
came into it.
“Well, Babe, here I am again.
Couldn’t get along without coming down to spend
Sunday seems like Williams must go to church
on Sunday or lose his chance o’ grace.”
His companion, a short man with a
black mustache that almost made a circle about his
mouth, grinned in silence.
Bertha replied, “I think I’ll
take a forenoon off to-morrow, Captain Haney, and
see that you both go to mass for once in your life.”
The big man looked at her with sudden
intensity. “If you’ll take me I’ll
go.” There was something in his voice and
eyes that startled the girl. She drew back a
little, but smiled bravely, carrying out the jest.
“I’ll call you on that.
Unless you take water, you go to church to-morrow.”
The big man shoved his companion away
and, leaning across the counter, said, in a low and
deeply significant tone:
“There ain’t a thing in
this world that you can’t do with Mart Haney not
a thing. That’s what I came down here to
tell you you can boss my ranch any day.”
The girl was visibly alarmed, but
as she still stood fascinated by his eyes and voice,
struggling to recover her serenity, another group of
diners came noisily past, and the big man, with a parting
look, went out and took a seat on one of the chairs
which stood in a row upon the walk. The hand
which held the cigar visibly trembled, and his companion
said:
“Be careful, Mart ”
Haney silenced him with a look. “You’re
on the outside here, partner.”
“I didn’t mean to butt in ”
“I understand, but this is a
matter between that little girl and me,” replied
the big man in a tone that, while friendly, ended all
further remark on the part of his companion, who rose,
after a little pause, and walked away.
Haney remained seated, buried in thought,
amazed at the fever which his encounter with the girl
had put into his blood.
It was true that he had been coming
down every Saturday for weeks leaving his
big saloon on the best evening in the week for a chance
to see this child this boyish school-girl.
In a savage, selfish, and unrestrained way he loved
her, and had determined to possess her to
buy her if necessary. He knew something of the
toil through which the weary mother plodded, and he
watched her bend and fade with a certainty that she
would one day be on his side.
When at home and afar from her, he
felt capable of seizing the girl of carrying
her back with him as the old-time savage won his bride;
but when he looked into her clear, calm eyes his villiany,
his resolution fell away from him. He found himself
not merely a man of the nearer time, but a Catholic in
training at least and the words he had planned
to utter fell dead on his lips. Libertine though
he was, there were lines over which even his lawlessness
could not break.
He was a desperate character a
man of violence and none too delicate in
his life among women; but away back in his boyhood
his good Irish mother had taught him to fight fair
and to protect the younger and weaker children, and
this training led to the most curious and unexpected
acts in his business as a gambler.
“I will not have boys at my
lay-out,” he once angrily said, to Williams,
his partner, “and I will not have women there.
I’ve sins enough to answer for without these.
Cut ’em out!” He was oddly generous now
and then, and often returned to a greenhorn money
enough to get home on. “Stay on the farm,
me lad ’tis better to milk a cow with
a mosquito on the back of your neck than to fill a
cell at Canon City.”
In other ways he was inexorable, taking
the hazards of the game with his visitors and raking
in their money with cold eyes and a steady hand.
He collected all notes remorselessly and
it was in this way that he had acquired his interests
in “The Bottom Dollar” and “The Flora”
mines “prospects” at the time,
but immensely valuable at the present. It was,
indeed, this new and measurably respectable wealth
which had determined him upon pressing his suit with
Bertha. As he sat there he came to a most momentous
conclusion. “Why not marry the girl and
live honest?” he asked himself; and being moved
by the memory of her sweetness and humor, he said,
“I will,” and the resolution filled his
heart with a strange delight.
He presented the matter first to the
mother, not with any intention of doing the right
thing, but merely because she happened into the room
before the girl returned, and because he was overflowing
with his new-found grace.
Mrs. Gilman came in wiping her face
on her apron as his mother used to do and
this touched him almost like a caress. He rose
and offered her a chair, which she accepted, highly
flattered.
“It must seem warm to you down
here, Captain?” she remarked, as she took a
seat beside him.
“It does. I wouldn’t
need to suffer it if you were doing business in Cripple.
I can’t leave go your Johnny-cake and pie; ’tis
the kind that mother didn’t make for
she was Irish.”
“I’ve thought of going
up there,” she replied, matter-of-factly, “but
I can’t stand the altitude, I’m afraid and
then down here we have my son’s little ranch
to furnish us eggs and vegetables.”
“That’s an advantage,”
he admitted; “but on the peak no one expects
vegetables it’s still a matter of
ham and eggs.”
“Is that so?” she asked, concernedly.
“’Tis indeed. I live
at the Palace Hotel, and I know. However, ’tis
not of that I intended to speak, Mrs. Gilman.
I’m distressed to see you working so hard this
warm weather. You need a rest a vacation,
I’m thinkin’.”
“You’re mighty neighborly,
Captain, to say so, but I don’t see any way
of taking it.”
“Furthermore, your daughter
is too fine to be clerkin’ here day by day.
She should be in a home of her own.”
“She ought to be in school,”
sighed the mother, “but I don’t see my
way to hiring anybody to fill her place it
would take a man to do her work.”
“It would so. She’s
a rare little business woman. Let me see, how
old is she?”
“Eighteen next November.”
“She seems like a woman of twenty.”
“I couldn’t run for a
week without her,” answered the mother, rolling
down her sleeves in acknowledgment that they had entered
upon a real conversation.
“She’s a little queen,” declared
Haney.
It was very hot and the flies were
buzzing about, but the big gambler had no mind to
these discomforts, so intent was he upon bringing his
proposal before the mother. Straightened in his
chair and fixing a keen glance upon her face, he began
his attack. “’Tis folly to allow anything
to trouble you, my dear woman if anny debt
presses, let me know, and I’ll lift it for ye.”
The weary mother felt the sincerity
of his offer, and replied, with much feeling:
“You’re mighty good, Captain Haney, but
we’re more than holding our own, and another
year will see the ranch clear. I’m just
as much obliged to you, though; you’re a true
friend.”
“But I don’t like to think
of you here for another year and Bertie
should not stand here another day with every Tom, Dick,
and Harry passin’ their blarney with her.
She’s fitter to be mistress of a big house of
her own, an’ ’tis that I’ve the mind
to give her; and I can, for I’m no longer on
the ragged edge. I own two of the best mines on
the hill, and I want her to share me good-fortune
with me.”
Mrs. Gilman, worn out as she was,
was still quick where her daughter’s welfare
was concerned, and she looked at the big man with wonder
and inquiry, and a certain accusation in her glance.
“What do you mean, Captain?”
The big gambler was at last face to
face with his decision, and with but a moment’s
hesitation replied, “As my wife, I mean, of course.”
She sank back in her chair and looked
at him with eyes of consternation. “Why,
Captain Haney! Do you really mean that?”
“I do!” He had a feeling
at the moment that he had always been honorable in
his intentions.
“But but you’re
so old I mean so much older ”
“I know I am, and I’m
rough. I don’t deny that. I’m
forty, but then I’m what they call well preserved,”
he smiled, winningly, “and I’ll soon have
an income of wan hundred thousand dollars a year.”
This turned the current of her emotion she
gasped. “One hundred thousand dollars!”
He held up a warning hand. “Sh!
now that’s between us. There are those
younger than I, ’tis true, but there is a kind
of saving grace in money. I can take you all
out of this daily tile like winkin’ all
you need to do is to say the wan word and we’ll
have a house in Colorado Springs or Denver or
even in New York. For what did you think I left
me business on the busiest day of every week?
It was to see your sweet daughter, and I came this
time to ask her to go back with me.”
“What did she say?”
“She has not said. We had
no time to talk. What I propose now is that we
take a drive out to the ranch and talk it over.
Williams will fill her place here. In fact, the
house is mine. I bought it this morning.”
The poor woman sat like one in a stupor,
comprehending little of what he said. The room
seemed to be revolving. The earth had given way
beneath her feet and the heavens were opening.
Her first sensation was one of terror. She feared
a man of such power a man who could in a
single moment, by a wave of his hand, upset her entire
world. His enormous wealth dazzled her even while
she doubted it. How could it be true while he
sat there talking to her and she in her
apron and her hair in disorder? She rose hurriedly
with instinct to make herself presentable enough to
carry on this conversation. As she stood weakly,
she apologized incoherently.
“Captain, I appreciate your
kindness you’ve always been a good
customer one I liked to do for but
I’m all upset I can’t get my
wits ”
“No hurry, madam,” he
said, with a generous intent. “To-morrow
is coming. Don’t hurry at all at
all.”
She hurried out, leaving him alone with
the clock, the cat, and the hostler, who was spraying
the sidewalk under the cotton-wood-trees. Quivering
with fear of the girl’s refusal, the gambler
rose and went out into the sunsmit streets to commune
with this new-found self.
Life was no longer simple for Mrs.
Gilman. It was, indeed, filled with a wind of
terror. Haney’s promise of relief from want
was very sweet, yet disturbingly empty, like the joy
of dreams, and yet his words took her breath clouded
her judgment, befogged her insight.
She went back to the dining-room,
where her daughter sat eating dinner, with a numbness
in her limbs and a sense of dizziness in her brain,
and dropping into a chair at the table gasped out:
“Do you know what Captain Haney just
said to me?”
“Not being a mind-reader, I
don’t,” replied the girl, calmly, though
she was moved by her mother’s white, awed face.
“He wants you!”
Bertha flushed and braced both hands
against the table as she replied, “Well, he
can’t have me!”
With the opposition in her daughter’s
tone, Mrs. Gilman was suddenly moved to argue.
“Think what it means, Bertie!
He’s rich. Did you know that? He owns
two mines.”
“I know he is a gambler and
runs two saloons. You see, the boys keep me posted,
and I’m not marrying a gambler not
this summer,” she ended, decisively.
“But he’s going to give
that up, he says.” He hadn’t said
this, but she was sure he would. “His income
is a hundred thousand dollars a year. Think of
that!”
“I don’t want to think
of it,” the girl answered, frowning slightly.
“It makes my head ache. Nobody has a right
to so much money. How did he get it?”
“Out of his mine and
oh, Bertie, he says if you’ll speak the word
we needn’t do another day’s work in this
hot, greasy old place! The house is his, anyway.
Did you know that?”
Bertha eyed her mother closely with
cool, bright, accusing eyes for a moment,
then she softened. “Poor old mammy, it’s
pretty tough lines on you no two ways about
that. You’ve got the heavy end of the job.
I’d marry most anybody to give you a rest but,
mother, Captain Haney is forty, if he’s a day,
and he’s a hard citizen. He has been a gambler
all his life. You can’t expect me to marry
a sport like him. And then there’s Ed.”
The mother’s face changed.
“A barber!” she exclaimed, scornfully.
“Yes, he’s a barber now,
but he’s going to make a break soon and get
into something else.”
“Don’t bank on Ed, Bertie;
he’ll never be anything more than he is now.
No man ever got anywhere who started in as a barber.”
“Would you rather I married
a gambler and a sure-shot? They tell me Haney
has killed his man.”
“That may be all talk.
Well, anyhow, he wants to see you and talk it over;
and oh, Bertie, it does seem a wonderful chance and
my heart’s so bad to-day it seems as though
I couldn’t see to another meal! I don’t
want you to marry him if you don’t want to I’m
not asking you to. You know I’m not.
But he is a noble-looking man and I get
awfully discouraged sometimes. It scares me to
think of dying and leaving you without any security.”
One of the waiters, half-dead with
curiosity, was edging near, under pretense of brushing
the table, and so the mistress rose and took up the
burdens of her stewardship.
“But we’ll talk it over to-night.
Don’t be hasty.”
“I won’t,” replied the girl.
She was by no means as unmoved as
she gave out. She had always admired and liked
Captain Haney, though he never moved her in the same
way that the young barber did (for Ed Winchell had
youth as well as comeliness, and there is a divine
suppleness in youth), yet he had been a welcome guest.
“A hundred thousand dollars a year! And
yet he’s been coming to our little hotel for
a year to see me!”
This consideration was the one that
moved her most. All the bland words, the jocular
phrases of his singular wooing came back to her now,
weighted with deep significance. She had called
it “joshing,” and had put it all aside,
just as she had parried the rude jests of the brakemen
of her acquaintance. Now she saw that he had been
in earnest.
She was wise beyond her years, this
calm-faced, keen-eyed girl, trained by adversity to
take care of herself. She knew instinctively that
she lived surrounded by wolves, and, much as she admired
the big frame and bold profile of Captain Haney, she
had placed him among her enemies. His coming
always pleased her but at the same time put her upon
the defensive.
Strange to say, she enjoyed her position
there in her battered little hotel. “If
it weren’t for poor old mother ”
She arrested herself and went back to the counter
with a certain timidity, a self-consciousness new
to her, fearing to face the gambler now that she knew
his intent was honorable.
The room was empty, all the men having
gone out upon the walk to escape the heat, and she
took her seat behind her desk and gave herself up to
a consideration of the life to which the possession
of so much wealth would introduce her. She could
have unlimited new gowns, she could travel, and she
could rescue her mother from drudgery and worry.
These things she could discern but of the
larger life which money could open to her she could
only vaguely dream.
The first effect of marrying Marshall
Haney would be to cut short her life in Sibley; the
second, the establishment of a home in the great camps
about them.
As she looked around the dingy room
buzzing with flies, she experienced a premonitory
pang of the pain she would suffer in going out of its
doors forever.
When Haney came back an hour later,
he read in the cold, serious look she gave him a warning,
therefore he spoke but a few words on commonplace
subjects, and returned to his seat on the walk to await
a change in her mood.
This meekness on the part of a powerful
man moved the girl, and a little later she went to
the doorway and said to the crowd generally, “It’s
a wonder some fellow wouldn’t open a cantaloupe
or something.”
Haney put his finger to his mouth
and whistled to the grocer opposite. He came
on the run, alert for trade.
“Roll up a couple of big melons,”
called Haney, largely. “We’re all
drying to cinders over here.”
The loafers cheered, but the girl
said, in a lower voice, “I was only joking.”
“What you say goes,” he replied, with
significance.
She did not stay to see the melons
cut, but went back to her desk, and he brought a choice
slice in to her.
She took it, but she said, “You
mustn’t think you own me not yet.”
Her tone was resentful. “I don’t
want you to say things like that before
people.”
“Like what?” he asked.
She did not answer.
He went on: “I don’t
mean to assume anything, God knows. I’m
only waitin’ and hopin’. I’ll
go away if you want me to and let you think it over
alone.”
“I wish you would,” she
said, realizing that this committed her to at least
a consideration of his proposal.
He held out his hand. “Good-bye till
next Saturday.”
She put her small, brown hand in his.
He crushed it hard and his bold face softened.
“I need you, my girl. Sure I do!”
And in his eyes was something very winning.