That ride to the southern mountains
seemed to Bull Hunter to mark a great point of departure
between his old life and a new life.
He had not heard Riley, fox-faced
and wicked of eye, say to his master, “What
this big fool needs is a little kidding. Make
him think that we figure him to be a big gun.”
He had not seen Hal Dunbar make a wry face before
he nodded.
All that Bull Hunter could know was
that the three men — Riley, Dunbar, and Joe
Castor — were all exceedingly pleasant to
him on the way. Of all the men in the world,
only Pete Reeve had treated him as these men were
now doing, and it was sweet beyond measure to Bull
Hunter to be treated with considerate respect, to
have his opinion asked, to be deferred to and flattered.
As for the thousand little asides with which they
made a mock of him, they were far above his head.
It seemed only patent to Bull Hunter that he had been
accepted freely into the equal society of men.
He drew a vague comparison between
that success and his mastery of Diablo. The big
stallion was like a kitten under his hand. It
required much coaxing during the first half-day of
riding to bring Diablo within speaking distance of
the other men, but gradually he discovered that they
could do him no harm so long as the gentle voice of
Hunter was near him; thereafter he was entirely amenable
to reason. One could see that the stallion was
learning difficult lessons, but he was learning them
fast. Eye and ear and scent told him that these
creatures were dangerous. Old experience told
him that they were dangerous, and only a blind trust
in Bull Hunter enabled him to conquer the panic which
surged up in his brain time and again. But he
kept on trying, and the constant struggle against men
which had featured his life made him astonishingly
quick to pick up new facts. The first step had
been the hard one, and it seemed to Bull Hunter that
the close-knit, smooth-flowing muscles beneath him
were carrying him onward into the esteem of all men.
To Diablo he gave the praise, and after Diablo to
little freckled Tod, and to Pete Reeve, the fighter.
As for taking any credit for himself, that idea never
came to him for a moment.
The long trip took two days.
They crossed the green, rolling hills; they passed
the foothills, and climbing steadily they came onto
a broad, high plateau — it was a natural
kingdom, this ranch of the Dunbars. The fence
around it was the continuous range of mountains skirting
the plateau on all sides, and in every direction up
to those blue summits as far as the eye carried, stretched
the land which owned Hal Dunbar as master. To
Bull Hunter, when they reached the crest, and the
broad domain was pointed out to him, this seemed a
princely stretch indeed, and Hal Dunbar was more like
a king than ever. It was easy to forgive pride
in such a man and a certain asperity of temper.
How could so rich and powerful a man be like others?
The ranch house was worthy of such
a holding. A heavy growth of beautiful silver
spruce swept up the slope of some hills, and riding
through the forest, one caught the first glimpse of
the building. It was spread out carelessly, the
foundations laid deep to cover the irregularities
of the ground. It was a heterogeneous mass, obviously
not the work of any one builder. Here a one-story
wing rambled far to the side, built heavily, of logs
rudely squared, and there was a three-story frame
section of the house; and still again there was a
tall tower effect of rough stone. As for the barns
and sheds which swept away down the farther and lower
slopes, the meanest of them looked to Bull as though
it might have made a home of more than average comfort.
The three other riders noted the gaping
astonishment of Bull and passed the wink quietly around.
To Hal Dunbar it was growing more and more annoying
that he had to trouble himself with such a clod of
a man and use diplomacy where contemptuous force would
have been so much more after his heart. But he
continued to follow the scheme first laid down for
his pursuit by clever Riley, and when they came to
the wide-ranging stable he assigned the black stallion
to a roomy box stall. Bull Hunter thanked him
for the courtesy as though it had been a direct personal
favor; as a matter of fact, Hal felt that he was merely
taking care of a horse which was already as good as
his.
Coming back toward the house Bull
walked slowly in the rear of the little party.
He wanted to take plenty of time and drink in the
astonishing details of what to him was a palace.
And about the weather-beaten old house he felt that
there was a touch of mystery of a more or less feudal
romance. Climbing the steps to the porch he turned;
a broad sweep of hills opened above the tops of the
spruces, and the blue mountains were piled beyond.
While he stood, a door slammed, and
he heard a girl’s mellow voice calling, “Hello,
Hal, what luck?”
“What luck? No luck!”
grumbled young Dunbar. “All the luck has
gone the way of my ... friend ... here.”
He brought out the last words jokingly. “This
is Charlie Hunter, commonly called Bull for reasons
you may guess. Bull, this is Mary Hood.”
Bull had turned lumberingly, and he
found himself staring at a girl in a more formal riding
outfit than he had ever seen before, with tall boots
of soft red leather, and a little round black hat set
on her hair, and a coat fitted somewhat closely.
The rather masculine outfit only served to make her
freer, more independent, more delightfully herself,
Bull Hunter thought. She looked him up and down
and reserved judgment, it seemed.
“He rode Diablo,” Dunbar was explaining.
“And that’s why you brought
him?” she asked, flashing a queer glance at
Hal.
Then she came a pace down the steps
and shook hands with Bull. He took the small
hand carefully, with a fear that the bones would break
unless he were excessively gentle. At last she
laughed so frankly that a tingle went through his
big body, and he peered closely at her. As a
rule the laughter of others made him hot with shame,
but this laughter was different; it seemed to invite
him into a pleasant secret.
“I’m glad to meet the
man who conquered Diablo,” she was saying.
“I didn’t beat Diablo,”
he hastened to explain. “We just sort of
reached an understanding. He saw that I didn’t
mean him any harm — so he let me ride him.
That’s all there was to it!”
He saw her eyes narrow a trifle as
she looked down at him, for she had drawn back to
the level of the porch. Was she despising him
and condemning him merely because he had told her
the truth? He flushed at the thought, and then
he was called into the house by Dunbar and brought
to a room. The size of it inspired him with a
profound awe, and he was still gaping when Dunbar
left him.
In the hall the master of the house
met Riley, and the fox-faced lieutenant drew him aside.
“I’ve got a plan,” he said.
“You’re full of plans,” muttered
Dunbar evilly.
All the way home he had been striving
to find some way of explaining his lack of success
with the stallion to Mary Hood. She had grown
up on the ranch with him, for her father had been
the manager of the ranch for twenty years; and she
had grown up with the feeling that Hal Dunbar was
infallible and invincible.
“Did you see the big hulk look at Mary Hood?”
Riley asked.
The name came pat with the unpleasant
part of Hal’s brooding, and his scowl grew blacker.
“What about it?”
“Looked at her as though she
was an angel — touched her hand as though
it was fire. I tell you, Hal, she knocked Hunter
clean off his balance.”
“Not the first she’s done
that to,” said Hal with meaning.
“Maybe not. Maybe not,”
said Riley rather hastily. “But I been
thinking. Suppose you go to Mary and tell her
that you’re dead set on keeping this Hunter
with you. Tell her that he’s a hard fellow
to handle, that he likes her, and that the best way
to make sure of him is for her to be nice to him.
She can do that easy. She takes nacheral to flirting.”
“Flirt with that thick-head? She’d
laugh in my face.”
“She’d do more than that for you, Hal.”
“H’m,” grunted Dunbar,
greatly mollified. “I ask her to make Hunter
happy. What comes of it? If her father sees
Hunter make eyes at her he’ll blow the head
off the clodhopper.”
“I know.” Riley nodded.
“He’s always afraid she’ll take a
fancy to one of the hands and run off with him, or
something like that. He’s dead set agin’
her saying two words to anybody like me, say!”
He gritted his teeth and flushed at
the thought. Then he continued. “But
that’s just what you want. You want to get
Hunter’s head blown off, don’t you?”
Dunbar caught the shoulder of Riley
and whirled him around.
“Are you talking murder to me, Riley?”
“I’m talking sense,” said Riley.
“By the Lord,” growled
Dunbar, “you’re a plain bad one, Riley.
You like deviltry for the sake of the deviltry itself.
You want me to get — ”
“How much do you want the black hoss, chief?”
Dunbar sighed.
“You can’t touch him,
after him saving your life, and I can’t touch
him, because everybody knows that I’m your man.
But suppose you get the girl and Hunter planted?
Then when Jack Hood rides in this afternoon, I’ll
take him where he can see ’em together.
Leave the rest to me. Will you? I’ll
have Jack Hood scared she’s going to elope before
morning, and Jack will do the rest. You know his
way.”
“Suppose Hood gets killed?”
“Killed — by that?
Jack Hood? Why, you know he’s near as good
as you with his gat!”
Dunbar nodded slowly. After all, the scheme was
a simple one.
“Well?” whispered Riley.
“You and the devil win,”
said Hal. “After all, what’s this
Hunter amount to? Nothing. And I need the
horse!”
He executed the first step of the
scheme instantly. He went downstairs and found
the girl still on the veranda. She began to mock
him at once.
“You’ll go to heaven,
Hal, giving a home to the man who beats you.”
He managed to smile, although the
words were poison to him. He had loved her as
long as he could remember, and sooner or later she
would be his wife, but the period remained indefinitely
in the future as the whims of the girl changed.
It was for that reason, as Hal very well knew, that
her father became furious when she smiled at another
man. The rich marriage was his goal; and when
a second man stepped onto the stage, old Jack Hood
was ready to fight. Hal saw a way of stopping
her gibes and proving his good intentions toward Hunter
all in a breath.
“He saved my life, Mary.
I lost a stirrup, and the devil of a horse threw me.”
Briefly he sketched in the story of
the rescue, and how Bull Hunter afterward had ridden
the horse without spurs, without a bridle. Before
he ended her eyes were shining.
“That’s what he meant
when he said he hadn’t beaten Diablo. I
understand now. At the time I thought he was a
little simple, Hal.”
“He’s not exceptionally
clever, Mary,” said Hal, “and that’s
where the point comes in of what I want you to do.
Hunter is apt to take a fancy that he isn’t
wanted here — that he’s being kept out
of charity because he saved my life. Nothing
I can say will convince him. I want you to give
him a better reason for staying around. Will you
do it — as a great favor?”
She dropped her chin into her hand and studied him.
“Just what are you driving at, Hal?”
“You know what I mean well enough.
I want you to waste a smile or two on him, Mary.
Will you do that? Make him think you like him
a good deal, that you’re glad to have him around.
Will you? Take him out for a walk this afternoon
and get him to tell you the story of his life.
You can always make a man talk and generally you turn
them into fools. You’ve done it with me,
often enough,” he added gloomily.
“Flirt with that big, quiet
fellow?” she said gravely. “Hal, you’re
criminal. Besides, you know that I don’t
flirt. It’s just the opposite. When
I like a man I’m simply frank about it.”
“But you have a way of being
frank so that a poor devil usually thinks you want
to marry him, and then there’s the devil to pay.
You know it perfectly well.”
“That’s not true, Hal!”
“I won’t argue. But will you do it?”
“Absolutely not!”
“It might be quite a game.
He may not be altogether a fool. And suppose
he were to wake up? Suppose he’s simply
half-asleep?”
He saw a gleam of excitement come
in her eyes and wisely left her without another word.
After things had reached a certain point Mary could
be generally trusted to carry the action on.