Those who had rushed into the outer
darkness in the wake of the highwayman returned presently.
Mere impulse and swift natural reaction from their
former enforced inactivity rather than any hope of
success had sent them hot-foot on the pursuit.
The noisy, windy night, the absolute dark, obviated
all possibility of coming up with him. Grumbling
and theorising, they returned to the room and closed
the door behind them.
Now that the tense moment of the actual
robbery had passed there was a general buzzing talk,
voices lifted in surmise, a lively excitement replacing
the cosy quiet of a few moments ago. Voices from
the spare bed room urged Ma Drury to bring an account
of the adventure, and Poke’s wife, having first
escorted the wounded man to her own bed and donned
a wrapper and shoes and stockings, gave to Lew Yates’s
women folk as circumstantial a description of the
whole affair as though she herself had witnessed it.
After a while a man here and there
began to eat, taking a slab of bread and meat in one
hand and a cup of black coffee in the other, walking
back and forth and talking thickly. The girl at
the fireplace sat stiff and still, staring at the
flames; she had lost her appetite, had quite forgotten
it in fact. At first from under the hand shading
her eyes she watched the men going for one drink after
another, the strong drink of the frontier; but after
a little, as though this had been a novel sight in
the beginning but soon lost interest for her, she let
her look droop to the fire. Fresh dry fuel had
been piled on the back log and at last a grateful
sense of warmth and sleepiness pervaded her being.
She no longer felt hunger; she was too tired, her
eyelids had grown too heavy for her to harbour the
thought of food. She settled forward in her chair
and nodded. The talk of the men, though as they
ate and drank their voices were lifted, grew fainter
and fainter in her ears, further and further away.
Finally they were blended in an indistinguishable murmur
that meant nothing.... In a doze she caught herself
wondering if the wounded man in the next room would
live. It was terribly still in there.
She was in that mental and physical
condition when, the body tired and the brain betwixt
dozing and waking, thought becomes a feverish process,
the mind snatching vivid pictures from the day’s
experience and weaving them into as illogical a pattern
as that of the crazy quilt over her shoulders.
All day long she had ridden in the swaying, lurching,
jerking stage until now in her chair, as she slipped
a little forward, she experienced the sensations of
the day. Many a time that day as the racing horses
obeying the experienced hand of the driver swept around
a sharp turn in the road she had looked down a sheer
cliff that had made her flesh quiver so that it had
been hard not to draw back and cry out. She had
seen the horses leaping forward scamper like mad runaways
down a long slope, dashing through the spray of a
rising creek to take the uphill climb on the run.
And tonight she had seen a masked man shoot down one
of her day’s companions and loot the United States
mail.... And in a register somewhere she had
written down the name of Hill’s Corners.
The place men called Dead Man’s Alley. She
had never heard the name until today. Tomorrow
she would ask the exact significance of it....
At last she was sound asleep.
She had found comfort by twisting sideways in her
chair and resting her shoulder against the warm rock-masonry
of the outer edge of the fireplace. She awoke
with a start. What had recalled her to consciousness
she did not know. Perhaps a new voice in her
ears, perhaps Poke Drury’s tones become suddenly
shrill. Or it may be that just a sudden sinking
and falling away into utter silence of all voices,
the growing still of hands upon dice cups, all eloquent
of a new breathless atmosphere in the room had succeeded
in impressing upon her sleep-drugged brain the fact
of still another vital, electrically charged moment.
She turned in her chair. Then she settled back,
wondering.
The door was open; the wind was sweeping
in; again old newspapers went flying wildly as though
in panicky fear. The men in the room were staring
even as she stared, in bewilderment. She heard
old man Adams’s tongue clicking in his toothless
old mouth. She saw Hap Smith, his expression
one of pure amazement, standing, half crouching as
though to spring, his hands like claws at his sides.
And all of this because of the man who stood in the
open doorway, looking in.
The man who had shot Bert Stone, who
had looted a mail bag, had returned! That was
her instant thought. And clearly enough it was
the thought shared by all of Poke Drury’s guests.
To be sure he carried no visible gun and his face
was unhidden. But there was the hugeness of him,
bulking big in the doorway, the spare, sinewy height
made the taller by his tall boot heels, the wide black
hat with the drooping brim from which rain drops trickled
in a quick flashing chain, the shaggy black chaps
of a cowboy in holiday attire, the soft grey shirt,
the grey neck handkerchief about a brown throat, even
the end of a faded bandana trailing from a hip pocket.
He stood stone-still a moment, looking
in at them with that queer expression in his eyes.
Then he stepped forward swiftly and closed the door.
He had glanced sharply at the girl by the fire; she
had shaded her eyes with her hand, the shadow of which
lay across her face. He turned again from her
to the men, his regard chiefly for Hap Smith.
“Well?” he said lightly,
being the first to break the silence. “What’s
wrong?”
There are moments in which it seems
as if time itself stood still. During the spellbound
fragment of time a girl, looking out from under a
cupped hand, noted a man and marvelled at him.
By his sheer physical bigness, first, he fascinated
her. He was like the night and the storm itself,
big, powerful, not the kind born to know and suffer
restraint; but rather the type of man to dwell in
such lands as stretched mile after unfenced mile “out
yonder” beyond the mountains. As he moved
he gave forth a vital impression of immense animal
power; standing still he was dynamic. A sculptor
might have carved him in stone and named the result
“Masculinity.”
The brief moment in which souls balanced
and muscles were chained passed swiftly. Strangely
enough it was old man Adams who precipitated action.
The old man was nervous; more than that, bred here,
he was fearless. Also fortune had given him a
place of vantage. His body was half screened
by that of Hap Smith and by a corner of the bar.
His eager old hand snatched out Hap Smith’s
dragging revolver, levelled it and steadied it across
the bar, the muzzle seeking the young giant who had
come a step forward.
“Hands up!” clacked the
old man in tremulous triumph. “I got you,
dad burn you!” And at the same instant Hap Smith
cried out wonderingly:
“Buck Thornton! You!”
The big man stood very still, only
his head turning quickly so that his eyes were upon
the feverish eyes of old man Adams.
“Yes,” he returned coolly.
“I’m Thornton.” And, “Got
me, have you?” he added just as coolly.
Winifred Waverly stiffened in her
chair; already tonight had she heard gunshots and
smelled powder and seen spurting red blood. A
little surge of sick horror brought its tinge of vertigo
and left her clear thoughted and afraid.
“Hands up, I say,” repeated
the old man sharply. “I got you.”
“You go to hell,” returned
Thornton, and his coolness had grown into curt insolence.
“I never saw the man yet that I’m going
to do that for.” He came on two more quick,
long strides, thrust his face forward and cried in
a voice that rang out commandingly above the crash
of the wind, “Drop that gun! Drop it!”
Old man Adams had no intention of
obeying; he had played poker himself for some fifty
odd years and knew what bluff meant. But for just
one brief instant he was taken aback, fairly shocked
into a fluttering indecision by the thunderous voice.
Then, before he could recover himself the big man
had flung a heavy wet coat into Adams’s face,
a gun had been fired wildly, the bullet ripping into
the ceiling, and Buck Thornton had sprung forward
and whipped the smoking weapon from an uncertain grasp.
Winifred Waverly, without breathing and without stirring,
saw Buck Thornton’s strong white teeth in a wide,
good humoured smile.
“I know you were just joking but...”
He whirled and fired, never lifting
the gun from his side. And a man across the room
from him cried out and dropped his own gun and grasped
his shoulder with a hand which slowly went red.
Now again she saw Buck Thornton’s
teeth. But no longer in a smile. He had
seemed to condone the act of old Adams as a bit of
senility; the look in his eyes was one of blazing
rage as this other man drew back and back from him,
muttering.
“I’d have killed you then,”
said Thornton coldly, his rage the cold wrath that
begets murder in men’s souls. “But
I shot just a shade too quick. Try it again,
or any other man here draw, and by God, I’ll
show you a dead man in ten seconds.”
He drew back and put the bar just
behind him. Then with a sudden gesture, he flung
down the revolver which had come from Hap Smith’s
holster and more recently from old man Adams’s
fingers, and his hand flashed to his arm pit and back
into plain sight, his own weapon in it.
“I don’t savvy your game,
sports,” he said with the same cool insolence.
“But if you want me to play just go ahead and
deal me a hand.”
To the last man of them they looked
at him and hesitated. It was written in large
bold script upon the faces of them that the girl’s
thought was their thought. And yet, though there
were upward a dozen of them and though Poke Drury’s
firelight flickered on several gun barrels and though
here were men who were not cowards and who did not
lack initiative, to the last man of them they hesitated.
As his glance sped here and there it seemed to stab
at them like a knife blade. He challenged them
and stood quietly waiting for the first move.
And the girl by the fire knew almost from the first
that no hostile move was forthcoming. And she
knew further that had a man there lifted his hand
Buck Thornton’s promise would have been kept
and he’d show them a dead man in ten seconds.
“Suppose,” said Thornton
suddenly, “you explain. Poke Drury, this
being your shack.... What’s the play?”
Drury moistened his lips. But
it was Hap Smith who spoke up.
“I’ve knowed you some
time, Buck,” he said bluntly. “An’
I never knowed you to go wrong. But ...
Well, not an hour ago a man your build an’ size
an’ with a bandana across his face stuck this
place up.”
“Well?” said Thornton coolly.
“At first,” went on the
stage driver heavily and a bit defiantly, “we
thought it was him come back when you come in.”
His eye met Thornton’s in a long unwavering
look. “We ain’t certain yet,”
he ended briefly.
Thornton pondered the matter, his
thumb softly caressing the hammer of his revolver.
“So that’s it, is it?” he said finally.
“That’s it,” returned Hap Smith.
“And what have you decided to do in the matter?”
Smith shrugged. “We acted
like a pack of kids,” he said. “Lettin’
you get the drop on us like this. Oh, you’re
twice as quick on the draw as the best two of us an’
we know it. An’ ... an’ we ain’t
dead sure as we ain’t made a mistake.”
His candidly honest face was troubled.
He was not sure that Thornton was the same man who
so short a time ago had shot Bert Stone. It did
not seem reasonable to Hap Smith that a man, having
successfully made his play, would return just to court
trouble.
“If you’re on the square,
Buck,” he said in a moment, “throw down
your gun an’ let’s see the linin’
of your pockets!”
“Yes?” retorted Thornton. “What
else, Mr. Smith?”
“Let us take a squint at that
bandana trailin’ out’n your back pocket,”
said Smith crisply. “If it ain’t got
deep holes cut in it!”
Now that was stupid, thought Winifred.
Nothing could be more stupid, in fact. If this
man had committed the crime and had thus voluntarily
returned to the road house, he would be prepared.
He would have emptied his pockets, he certainly would
have had enough brains to dispose of so tell-tale
a bit of evidence as a handkerchief with slits let
into it.
“Maybe,” said Thornton
quietly, and she did not detect the contemptuous insolence
under the slow words until he had nearly completed
his meaning, “you’d like to have me tell
you where I’m riding from and why? And
maybe you’d like to have me take off my shoes
so you can look in them for your lost treasures?”
Now was his contempt unhidden. He strode quickly
across the room, coming to the fireplace where the
girl sat. He took the handkerchief from his pocket,
keeping it rolled up in his hand; stooping forward
he dropped it into the fire, well behind the back log.
Then for the first time he saw her
face plainly. As he had come close to her she
had slipped from her chair and stood now, her face
lifted, looking at him. His gaze was arrested
as his eyes met hers. He stood very still, plainly
showing the surprise which he made no slightest effort
to disguise. She flushed, bit her lip, went a
fiery red. He put up his hand and removed his
hat.
“I didn’t expect,”
he said, still looking at her with that intent, openly
admiring acknowledgment of her beauty, “to see
a girl like you. Here.”
The thing which struck her was that
still there were men in the room who were armed and
distrustful of him and that he had forgotten them.
What she could not gauge was the full of the effect
she had had upon him. He had marked a female
form at the fireside, shawled by a shapeless patchwork
quilt; out of it, magically it seemed to his startled
fancies, there had stepped a superb creature with eyes
on fire with her youth, a superlatively lovely creature,
essentially feminine. From the flash of her eyes
to the curl of her hair, she was all girl. And
to Buck Thornton, man’s man of the wide open
country beyond the mountains, who had set his eyes
upon no woman for a half year, who had looked on no
woman of her obvious class and type for two years,
who had seen the woman of one half her physical loveliness
and tugging charm never, the effect was instant and
tremendous. A little shiver went through him;
his eyes caught fire.