As before remarked, the boy poet,
Little Billie Piper, sly and timid as he was with
the men, was about the first to make friends with this
first woman in this wild Eden. Men noted this
as they did all things that in any way touched the
life or affairs of the Widow, and made their observations
accordingly.
“Thim’s a bad lot,”
said the Irishman, as he rested his elbow on the counter,
and held his glass poised in the air; “thim’s
a bad lot fur the woman, as writes poetry.”
Then the son of Erin winked at the
row of men by his side winked right and
left lifted his glass, shut both his eyes,
and swallowed his “tarantula juice,” as
they called it in the mines.
Then this man wiped his broad mouth
on his red sleeve, hitched up the broad belt that
supported his duck breeches, and said, with another
wink:
“Jist think of Bryan; that fellow,
Lord O’Bryan. Why, gints, I tell yez he
was pizen on the six.”
But the Parson, the great rival of
Sandy for the Widow’s affections, took a deeper
interest in this than that of an idle gossip.
It was with a lofty sort of derision
in his tone and manner, that he now always spoke of
the strange little poet, as “That Boy.”
The Parson regarded him with bitter
envy, as he oftentimes, at dusk and alone, saw him
enter the Widow’s cabin. At such times the
Parson would usually stride up and down the trail,
and swear to himself till he fairly tore the bark
from the trees.
On one occasion, the boy returning
to his own cabin at an earlier hour than usual, was
met in the trail, where it ran around the spur of the
mountain, on a high bluff, by the infuriated Parson.
Little Billie, as was his custom,
gave him the trail, all of the trail, and stood quite
aside on the lower hill-side, to let him pass.
But the Parson did not pass on.
He came close up to the boy as he stood there alone
in the dusk, half trembling with fear, as the Parson
approached.
The strong man did not speak at first.
His face was terrible with rage and a strange tumult
of thought.
The stars were half hidden by the
sailing clouds, and the moon had not risen. It
was almost dark. Away up on the mountain side
a wolf called to his companion, and a lonesome night-bird,
with a sharp cracked voice, kept up a mournful monotone
in the canon below.
The boy began to tremble, as the man
towered up above him, and looked down into his uplifted
face.
“By God, youngster,” muttered
the man between his teeth. The boy sank on his
knees, as he saw the Parson look up and down the trail,
as if to make sure that no one was in sight.
Then he reached his great hand and
clutched him sharp by the shoulder:
“Come here! come! come with me!”
The broad hand tightened like a vice
on the shoulder. The boy tried to rise, but trembled
and half fell to the ground. The infuriated, half
monster man, held tight to his shoulder, and led toward
the precipice.
The boy, half lifted, half led, half
dragged, found himself powerless in the hands of the
Parson, and was soon on the brink of the canon.
“Now sir, damn you, what have
you been doing at the Widow’s?”
The boy stood trembling before him.
“Boy! do you hear; I intend
to pitch you over the rocks, and break your infernal
slim little neck!”
The boy still was silent. He
could not even lift his eyes. He was preparing
to die.
“Now sir, tell me the truth;
what have you been doing at the Widow’s?”
The boy trembled like a bird in the
clutches of a hawk, but could not speak.
The Parson looked up the trail and
down the trail; all was silent save the roar of the
water in the canon below, the interrupted howl of the
wolf on the hill, and the mournful and monotonous call
of the night-bird. He looked up through the canon
at the sky. It was a dark and cloudy night.
Now and then a star stood out in the fresco of clouds,
but it was a gloomy night.
“Now you look here,” and
he shook the boy by the shoulder and laughed like
a demon. “Don’t you know that if you
go on this way you will fall over this bluff some
night and break your cussed little neck? Don’t
you know that? You boy! You brat!”
Still the boy could not speak or even lift his face.
“I’ll save you the trouble,”
said the Parson between his teeth. “’The
boys’ will rather like it. They will say
they knew you would break your neck some night.”
The boy did not speak, but beneath
the iron clutch of the Parson settled to his knees.
“Now sir, you have just one
minute. Do you see that star? When that
flying cloud covers that star, then you die! and may
God help you and me.”
The man’s voice was husky with
rage and from the contemplation of his awful crime.
“Speak boy! speak! speak but once before I murder
you!”
The boy’s eyes were lifted to
the star, to the flying cloud that was about to cover
it, and then to the eyes of the Parson, and he, trembling,
half whispering, said, “Please, Parson, may I
pray?”
The iron hand relaxed; the man let
go his hold, and staggering back to the trail went
down the hill in silence, and into the dark, where
he belonged.
The two men who had entered the saloon
at the Forks so mysteriously and had so terrified
the bar-keeper, had disappeared. Yet Sandy, every
man, knew that these men or their agents were all
the time in their midst. No one knew the face
of Nancy Williams; everybody knew the story of her
life. At first there was terror in the camp.
Could the Widow be Nancy Williams? It was decided
that that was impossible. Then all was peace.