All that day, in a silence broken
only by murmurs and side glances, Anthony and Sally
Fortune moved about the old house from window to window,
and from crack to crack, keeping a steady eye on the
commanding rocks above. In one of those murmurs
they made their resolution. When night came they
would rush the rocks, storm them from the front, and
take their chance with what might follow. But
the night promised to give but little shelter to their
stalking.
For in the late afternoon a broad
moon was already climbing up from the east; the sky
was cloudless; there was a threat of keen, revealing
moonshine for the night. Only desperation could
make them attempt to storm the rock, but by the next
morning, at the latest, reinforcements were sure to
come, and then their fight would be utterly hopeless.
So when the light of the sun mellowed,
grew yellow and slant, and the shadows sloped from
tree to tree, the two became more silent still, drawn
and pale of face, waiting. Anthony at a window,
Sally at a crack which made an excellent loophole,
they remained moveless.
It was she who noted a niche which
might serve as a loophole for one of the posse, and
she fired at it, aiming low. The clang of the
bullet against rock echoes clearly back to her, like
the soft chime of a sheep bell from the peaceful distance.
Then, as if in answer to her shot, around the edge
of the rocks appeared a moving rag of white which grew
into William Drew, bearing above his head the white
sign of the truce.
In her astonishment she looked to
Bard. He was quivering all over like a hound
held on a tight leash, with the game in sight, hungry
to be slipped upon it. The edge of his tongue
passed across his colourless lips. He was like
a man who long has ridden the white-hot desert and
is now about to drink. There was the same wild
gleam in his eyes; his hand shook with nervous eagerness
as he shifted and balanced his revolver. Listening,
in her awe, she heard the sound of his increasing panting;
a sound like the breath of a running man approaching
her swiftly.
She slipped to his side.
“Anthony!”
He did not answer; his gun steadied;
the barrel began to incline down; his left eye was
squinting. She dropped to her knees and seized
his wrist.
“Anthony, what are you going to do?”
“It’s Drew!” he
whispered, and she did not recognize his voice.
“It’s the grey man I’ve waited for.
It’s he!”
In such a tone a dying man might speak
of his hope of heaven — seeing it unroll
before him in his delirium.
“But he’s carrying the
flag of truce, Anthony. You see that?”
“I see nothing except his face.
It blots out the rest of the world. I’ll
plant my shot there — there in the middle
of those lips.”
“Anthony, that’s William
Drew, the squarest man on the range.”
“Sally Fortune, that’s
William Drew, who murdered my father!”
“Ah!” she said, with sharply
indrawn breath. “It isn’t possible!”
“I saw the shot fired.”
“But not this way, Anthony; not from behind
a wall!”
His emotion changed him, made him
almost a stranger to her. He was shaking and
palsied with eagerness.
“I could do nothing as bad as
the crime he has done. For twenty years the dread
of his coming haunted my father, broke him, aged him
prematurely. Every day he went to a secret room
and cared for his revolver — this gun here
in my hand, you see? He and I — we were
more than father and son — we were pals,
Sally. And then this devil called my father out
into the night and shot him. Damn him!”
“You’ve got to listen to me, Anthony — ”
“I’ll listen to nothing, for there he
is and — ”
She said with a sharp, rising ring
in her voice: “If you shoot at him while
he carries that white flag I’ll — I’ll
send a bullet through your head — that’s
straight! We got only one law in the mountains,
and that’s the law of honour. If you bust
that, I’m done with you, Anthony.”
“Take my gun — take
it quickly, Sally, I can’t trust myself; looking
at him, I can see the place where the bullet should
strike home.”
He forced the butt of his revolver
into her hands, rose, and stepped to the door, his
hands clasped behind his back.
“Tell me what he does.”
“He’s comin’ straight
toward us as if he didn’t fear nothin’ — grey
William Drew! He’s not packin’ a gun;
he trusts us.”
“The better way,” answered
Bard. “Bare hands — the better
way!”
“He has killed men with those
bare hands of his. I can see ’em clear — great,
blunt-fingered hands, Anthony. He’s coming
around the side of the house. I’ll go into
the front room.”
She ran past Anthony and paused in
the habitable room, spying through a crack in the
wall. And Anthony stood with his eyes tightly
closed, his head bowed. The image of the leashed
hound came more vividly to her when she glanced back
at him.
“He’s walkin’ right up the path.
There he stops.”
“Where?”
“Right beside the old grave.”
“Anthony!” called a deep voice. “Anthony,
come out to me!”
He started, and then groaned and stopped himself.
“Is the sign of the truce still over his head,
Sally?”
“Yes.”
“I daren’t go out to him — I’d
jump at his throat.”
She came beside him.
“It means something besides
war. I can see it in his face. Pain — sorrow,
Anthony, but not a wish for fightin’.”
From the left side of his cartridge
belt a stout-handled, long-bladed hunting-knife was
suspended. He disengaged the belt and tossed it
to the floor. Still he paused.
“If I go, I’ll break the truce, Sally.”
“You won’t; you’re
a man, Anthony; and remember that you’re on the
range, and the law of the range holds you.”
“Anthony!” called the deep voice without.
He shuddered violently.
“What is it?”
“It sounds — like the voice of my father
calling me! I must go!”
She clung to him.
“Not till you’re calmer.”
“My father died in my arms,” he answered;
“let me go.”
He thrust her aside and strode out through the door.
On the farther side of the grave stood
Drew, his grey head bare, and looking past him Anthony
saw the snow-clad tops of the Little Brother, grey
also in the light of the evening. And the trees
whose branches interwove above the grave — grey
also with moss. The trees, the mountain, the
old headstone, the man — they blended into
a whole.
“Anthony!” said the man, “I have
waited half my life for this!”
“And I,” said Bard, “have
waited a few weeks that seem longer than all my life,
for this!”
His own eager panting stopped him,
but he stumbled on: “I have you here in
reach at last, Drew, and I’m going to tear your
heart out, as you tore the heart out of John Bard.”
“Ah, Anthony,” said the
other, “my heart was torn out when you were
born; it was torn out and buried here.”
And to the wild eyes of Anthony it
seemed as if the great body of Drew, so feared through
the mountain-desert, was now enveloped with weakness,
humbled by some incredible burden.
After that a mist obscured his eyes;
he could not see more than an outline of the great
shape before him; his throat contracted as if a hand
gripped him there, and an odd tingling came at the
tips of his fingers. He moved forward.
“It is more than I dreamed,”
he said hoarsely, as his foot planted firmly on the
top of the grave, and he poised himself an instant
before flinging himself on the grey giant. “It
is more than I dreamed for — to face you — alone!”
And a solemn, even voice answered
him, “We are not alone.”
“Not alone, but the others are too far off to
stop me.”
“Not alone, Anthony, for your mother is here
between us.”
Like a fog under a wind, the mist
swept from the eyes of Anthony; he looked out and
saw that the face of the grey man was infinitely sad,
and there was a hungry tenderness that reached out,
enveloped, weakened him. He glanced down, saw
that his heel was on the mount of the grave; saw again
the headstone and the time-blurred inscription:
“Here sleeps Joan, the wife of William Drew.
She chose this place for rest.”
A mortal weakness and trembling seized
him. The wind puffed against his face, and he
went staggering back, his hand caught up to his eyes.
He closed his mind against the words which he had
heard.
But the deep organ voice spoke again: “Oh,
boy, your mother!”
In the stupor which came over him
he saw two faces: the stern eyes of John Bard,
and the dark, mocking beauty of the face which had
looked down to him in John Bard’s secret room.
He lowered his hand from his eyes; he stared at William
Drew, and it seemed to him that it was John Bard he
looked upon. Their names differed, but long pain
had touched them with a common greyness. And
it seemed to Anthony that it was only a moment ago
that the key turned in the lock of John Bard’s
secret room, the hidden chamber which he kept like
Bluebeard for himself, where he went like Bluebeard
to see his past; only an instant before he had turned
the key in that lock, the door opened, and this was
the scene which met his eyes — the grave,
the blurred tombstone, and the stern figure beyond.
“Joan,” he repeated; “your wife — my
mother?”
He heard a sob, not of pain, but of
happiness, and knew that the blue eyes of Sally Fortune
looked out to him from the doorway of the house.
The low voice, hurried now, broke in on him.
“When I married Joan, John Bard
fled from the range; he could not bear to look on
our happiness. You see, I had won her by chance,
and he hated me for it. If you had ever seen
her, Anthony, you would understand. I crossed
the mountains and came here and built this house, for
your mother was like a wild bird, Anthony, and I did
not dare to let men near her; then a son was born,
and she died giving him birth. Afterward I lived
on here, close to the place which she had chosen herself
for rest. And I was happy because the boy grew
every day into a more perfect picture of his dead
mother.
“One day when he was almost
three I rode off through the hills, and when I came
back the boy was gone. I rode with a posse everywhere,
hunting him; aye, Anthony, the trail which I started
then I have kept at ever since, year after year, and
here it ends where it began — at the grave
of Joan!
“Finally I came on news that
a man much like John Bard in appearance had been seen
near my house that day. Then I knew it was Bard
in fact. He had seen the image of the woman we
both loved in the boy. He was all that was left
of her on earth. After these years I can read
his heart clearly; I know why he took the boy.
“Then I left this place.
I could not bear the sight of the grave; for she slept
in peace, and I lived in hell waiting for the return
of my son.
“At last I went east; I was
at Madison Square Garden and saw you ride. It
was the face of Joan that looked back at me; and I
knew that I was close to the end of the trail.
“The next night I called out
John Bard. He had been in hell all those years,
like me, for he had waited for my coming. He begged
me to let him have you; said you loved him as a father;
I only laughed. So we fought, and he fell; and
then I saw you running over the lawn toward us.
“I remembered Joan, her pride
and her fierceness, and I knew that if I waited a
son would kill his father that night. So I turned
and fled through the trees. Anthony, do you believe
me; do you forgive me?”
The memory of the clumsy, hungered
tenderness of John Bard swept about Anthony.
He cried: “How can I believe?
My father has killed my father; what is left?”
The solemn voice replied: “Anthony, my
son!”
He saw the great, blunt-fingered hands
which had killed men, which were feared through the
length and breadth of the mountain-desert, stretched
out to him.
“Anthony Drew!” said the voice.
His hand went out, feebly, by slow
degrees, and was caught in a mighty double clasp.
Warmth flowed through him from that grasp, and a great
emotion troubled him, and a voice from deep to deep
echoed within him — the call of blood to
blood. He knew the truth, for the hate burned
out in him and left only an infinite sadness.
He said: “What of the man who loved me?
Whom I love?”
“I have done penance for that
death,” answered William Drew, “and I
shall do more penance before I die. For I am only
your father in name, but he is the father in your
thoughts and in your love. Is it true?”
“It is true,” said Anthony.
And the other, bitterly: “In
his life he was as strong as I; in his death he is
still stronger. It is his victory; his shadow
falls between us.”
But Anthony answered: “Let
us go together and bring his body and bury it at the
left side of — my mother.”
“Lad, it is the one thing we
can do together, and after that?”
A plaintive sound came to the ear
of Anthony, and he looked down to see Sally Fortune
weeping at the grave of Joan. Better than both
the men she understood, perhaps. In the deep
tenderness which swelled through him he caught a sense
of the drift of life through many generations of the
past and projecting into the future, men and women
strong and fair and each with a high and passionate
love.
The men died and the women changed,
but the love persisted with the will to live.
It came from a thousand springs, but it rolled in one
river to one sea. The past stood there in the
form of William Drew; he and Sally made the present,
and through his love of her sprang the hope of the
future.
It was all very clear to him.
The love of Bard and Drew for Joan Piotto had not
died, but passed through the flame and the torment
of the three ruined lives and returned again with
gathering power as the force which swept him and Sally
Fortune out into that river and toward that far-off
sea. The last mist was brushed from his eyes.
He saw with a piercing vision the world, himself,
life. He looked to William Drew and saw that
he was gazing on an old and broken man.
He said to the old man: “Father,
she is wiser than us both.”
And he pointed to Sally Fortune, still
weeping softly on the grave of Joan.
But William Drew had no eye for her;
he was fallen into a deep muse over the blurred inscription
on the headstone. He did not even raise his head
when Anthony touched Sally Fortune on the shoulder.
She rose, and they stole back together toward the
house. There, as they stood close together, Sally
murmured: “It is cruel to leave him alone.
He needs us now, close to him.”
His hand wandered slowly across her
hair, and he said: “Sally, how close can
we ever be to him?”
“We can only watch and wait
and try to understand,” murmured Sally Fortune.
They were so close to the door of
the ruined house, now, that a taint of burnt powder
crept out to them, a small, keen odour, and with a
sudden desire to protect her, he drew her close to
him. There was no tensing of her body when his
arm went around her and he knew with a rush of tenderness
how completely, how perfectly she accepted him.
Over the hand which held her he felt soft fingers
settle to keep it in its place, and when he looked
down he found that her face was raised, and the eyes
which brooded on him were misty bright, like the eyes
of a child when joy overflows in it, but awe keeps
it quiet.