Gray was shocked at the change in
Ma Briskow. She had failed surprisingly.
Pleasure lit her face, and she fell into a brief flutter
of delight at seeing him; but as soon as their first
greeting was over he led her to her lounge and insisted
upon making her comfortable. He had tricks with
cushions and pillows, so he declared; they became his
obedient servants, and there was a knack in arranging
them the same knack that a robin uses in
building its nest. This he demonstrated quite
conclusively.
It was nice to have a great, masterful
man like this take charge of one, and Ma sighed gratefully
as she lay back. “It does kinda feel like
a bird’s nest,” she declared. “And
you kinda look like a robin, too; you’re allus
dressed so neat.”
“Exactly,” he chuckled.
“Robins are the very neatest dressers of all
the birds. But look! Like a real robin, I’ve
brought spring with me.” He opened a huge
box of long-stemmed roses and held their cool, dewy
buds against Ma Briskow’s withered face, then,
laughing and chatting, he arranged them in vases where
she could see them. Next, he drew down the shades,
shutting out the dreary afternoon, after which he lit
the gas log, and soon the room, whether by reason
of his glowing personality or his deft rearrangement
of its contents, or both, became a warm and cheerful
place.
He had brought other gifts than flowers,
too; thoughtful, expensive things that fairly took
Ma’s breath. No one had ever given her
presents; to be remembered, therefore, with useless,
delightful little luxuries filled her gentle soul
with a guilty rapture.
But these were not gifts in the ordinary
sense; they were offerings from the Duke of Dallas,
and his manner of presenting them invested every article
with ducal dignity. The Princess Pensacola had
not played for a long time, and so to recline languidly
in a beautiful Japanese kimono, with her feet in a
pair of wonderful soft boudoir slippers spun by the
duke’s private silkworms and knit by his own
oriental knitting slaves, while he paid court to her,
was doubly thrilling.
The duke certainly was a reckless
spender, but thank goodness he hadn’t bought
things for the house things just to look
at and to share with other people! He knew enough
to buy intimate things, things a woman could wear
and feel rich in. Ma hugged herself and tried
to look beautiful.
Gray was seated on the side of her
couch with her cold hand between his warm palms, and
he was telling her about the princess of Wichita Falls
when the summons to dinner interrupted them.
Ma was not hungry, and she had expected
to have a bite in her own room; but her caller was
so vigorous in his objections to this plan that she
finally agreed to come downstairs.
The Briskow household was poorly organized
as yet, and it was only natural that it should function
imperfectly; nevertheless, Gray was annoyed at the
clumsy manner in which the dinner was served.
Being a meticulous man and accustomed to comfort,
incompetent servants distressed him beyond measure,
and he soon discovered that the Briskow help was as
completely incompetent as any he had ever seen.
The butler, for instance, a pleasant-faced colored
man, had evidently come straight from the docks, for
he passed the food much as a stoker passes coal to
a boiler, while the sound of a crashing platter in
the butler’s pantry gave evidence that the second
girl was a house wrecker.
“See here, Ma!” Gray threw
down his napkin. “You have a beautiful home,
and you want it to be perfect, don’t you?”
“Why, of Course. We bought everything we’
could buy ”
“Everything except skillful
servants, and they are hard to find. You are
capable of training your cook and teaching your upstairs
girl to sweep and make beds; but the test of a well-run
house is a well-served meal. Dish-breaking ought
to be a felony, and when I become President I propose
to make the spoiling of food a capital offense.
Now then, you’re not eating a bite, anyhow,
and Gus won’t mind waiting awhile for his dinner.
With your permission, I’d like to take things
in hand and add a hundred per cent to your future
comfort?”
In some bewilderment Ma agreed that
she would do anything her guest suggested, whereupon
he rose energetically and called the three domestics
into the dining room.
“We are going to start this
dinner all over again,” he announced, “and
we are going to begin by swapping places. I am
going to serve it as a dinner should be served, and
you are going to eat it as Well, I dare
say nature will have to take its course. I shall
explain, as I go along, and I want you to remember
every word I say, every move I make. Mr. and
Mrs. Briskow are going to look on. After we have
finished you are going to serve us exactly as I served
you.”
Naturally, this proposition amazed
the “help”; in fact, its absurdity convulsed
them. The man laughed loudly; the cook buried
her ebony face in her apron; the second girl bent
double with mirth. Here was a quaint gentleman,
indeed, and a great joker. But the gentleman was
not joking. On the contrary, he brought this
levity to an abrupt end, then, gravely, ceremoniously,
he seated the trio. They sobered quickly enough
at this; they became, in fact, as funereal as three
crows; but their astonishment at what followed was
no greater than that of the Briskows.
Gray played butler with a correctness
and a poise deeply impressive to his round-eyed audience,
and as he served the courses he delivered a lecture
upon the etiquette of domestic service, the art of
cooking, and the various niceties of a servant’s
calling. Nothing could have been more impressive
than being waited upon by a person of his magnificence,
and his lecture, moreover, was delivered in a way that
drove understanding into their thick heads.
It was an uncomfortable experience
for all except Gray himself he actually
enjoyed it and when the last dish had been
removed, and he had given instructions to serve the
meal over again exactly as he had served it, the three
negroes were glad to obey. Of course they made
mistakes, but these Gray instantly corrected, and the
results of his dress rehearsal were, on the whole,
surprising.
“There!” he said, when
the ordeal had finally come to an end. “A
little patience, a little practice, and you’ll
be proud of them. Incidentally, I have saved
you a fortune in dishes.”
“I wish Allie’d been here.
She’d remember everything you said,” Ma
declared.
“Lord! Think of Mr. Gray
waitin’ on them niggers!” Gus was still
deeply shocked.
“You see what a meddlesome busybody
I am,” the guest laughed. “I don’t
know how to mind my own business, and the one luxury
I enjoy most of all is regulating other people’s
affairs.” He was still talking, still lecturing
his hearers upon the obligations prosperity had put
upon them, when he was summoned to the telephone by
a long-distance call. He returned in some agitation
to announce: “Well, at last I have business
of my own to attend.”
“Was that Buddy talkin’?”
“It was, and he gave me some
good news. He says that well on thirty-five is
liable to come in at any minute, and it looks like
a big one.” The speaker’s eyes were
glowing, and he ran on, breathlessly, “He says
they’re betting it will do better than ten thousand
barrels!”
“Ten thousand bar’ls!” Briskow
echoed.
“That’s what he said.
Of course, they can’t tell a thing about it.
Buddy’s only guessing, but I haven’t
had a big well yet.” Gray took a nervous
turn about the room.
“Ten thousand barrels!
Lord! That would help. That would do the
trick. And to think that it should come now,
this very day ” He laughed triumphantly
and ran on as if talking to himself: “’The
wicked are fatted for destruction. Their happiness
shall pass away like a torrent.’ Pull out
and leave me, eh?” A second time he laughed,
more loudly. “Luck? It isn’t
luck, it’s Destiny. The mills of the Gods
are grinding. Ma Briskow, the fairy ladies danced
upon the hearth when I was born. Do you know
what that means?”
“Ten thousand bar’ls a
day, an’ you buttlin’ for three niggers!”
gasped the head of the house.
“I’m going out on to-night’s
train and see it come in if it does come
in. I told Buddy to stop work; not to drop another
tool until I arrived. ‘Fatted for destruction.’
I like the sound of that. Ten thousand barrels!
Ho! I’ll write this day in brass. Why,
that lease will sell for a million. It it
may mean the end.”
Gray brought himself to with an effort,
hastily he kissed Ma Briskow’s faded cheek and
wrung her husband’s hand. A moment later
he was gone.
“Thirty-five,” where Buddy
was working, was only a few miles from the Briskow
ranch, therefore the boy was able to meet his sister
at Ranger and drive her directly to the old home.
The place was much the same as when they had left
it, thanks to the watchful attention of the men in
charge of the Briskow wells, and there they spent the
night. Buddy and his sister had always been close
confidants, and their long separation, their varied
experiences, left many things to be discussed.
The ranch house seemed very mean,
very insignificant to Allie, but she slipped into
one of her old dresses and prepared the supper while
Buddy straddled a kitchen chair and chattered upon
ten thousand topics of mutual interest.
“Doggone!” he exclaimed,
finally. “I hardly knew you when you stepped
off that train, but it seems like old times now, with
you hustlin’ around in that gingham.”
“I wish it was.”
“Hunh?”
“I wish, sometimes, that we’d never struck
oil.”
“Good Lord! Why?”
“Oh” Allie
turned her back and bent over the stove “for
lots of reasons! Ma never had a sick day till
lately. Now she’s failin’ fast.”
Buddy frowned at this intelligence. “And
Pa’s as restless as a squirrel. All the
time scared of losing his money.”
“Well, you got no kick coming, sis.
You’ve sure made good.”
“How?”
“I dunno You’ve got rich ways.
An’ rich looks, too!”
Allie lifted an interested face, and
her brother undertook, somewhat awkwardly, to tell
her wherein she had improved. She listened with
greedy delight, but when he had finished she shook
her head skeptically and declared: “It
sounds nice, and God knows I’ve tried hard enough,
but-there’s a difference, Bud. We’re
‘trash’ and always will be.”
Of course young Briskow’s mind
was full of business, and he could not long stay off
that absorbing topic. When, during their supper,
he announced the fact that the well on thirty-five
showed signs of coming in shortly, and that he intended
to send for Calvin Gray, Allie changed her mind about
returning home and decided to wait over until the latter
arrived.
She and Buddy talked until a late
hour that night, but although she was dying to have
him tell her about his romance, his dream of love,
he never so much as referred to it, and she could
not bring herself to disregard his reticence.
Nor could she bear to discuss with him the problem
that lay nearest her own heart. She had brooded
long over that problem, and her soul was hungry to
share its bitter secret; nevertheless, she could not
do so, for it is often easier to bare our wounds to
strangers than to those we love. If her breedings,
her bitterness of spirit manifested themselves, it
was in a fixed undertone of pessimism and in an occasional
outburst of recklessness that bewildered her brother.
On the morning of Gray’s coming
she rode with Buddy over to thirty-five. It was
a wretched, rainy day, and nothing is more bleak than
a rainy day in a drilling camp. Work had been
halted and the men were loafing in their bunk house.
Brother and sister spent the impatient hours in the
mess tent. As usual, they talked a good deal
about Calvin Gray.
“Funny, him comin’ here
a stranger, an’ gettin’ to run our whole
family, ain’t it?” Buddy said.
Allie nodded. “Funnier
thing than that is your working for him.”
Buddy was surprised, so she asked him: “Aren’t
you sore at him for what he did? For
breaking up that affair?” It was a question that
had been upon her lips more than once; she could not
credit her brother with entire sincerity when he answered,
frankly enough:
“Sore? Not the least bit.”
“Didn’t you care for her?”
“Why, sure. I was all tore
up, at first. But he did me the biggest kind
of a favor.”
Allie shook her head uncomprehendingly.
“Men are queer things. You must
have loved her, for a while.”
“I reckon I did, if you’re
a mind to call it that. But he says that sort
of thing ain’t real love.”
“’He says’!”
the girl cried, scornfully. “My God, Buddy!
Would you let him tell you ? Is
he pickin’ out women for you like he picks out
a dress for me and a hotel for Ma? How does he
know what’s the real thing?”
“She was a grafter,”
the brother explained, with a flush of embarrassment.
“She’d of probably took my money an’
quit me cold.”
“Bah!” The girl rose and,
with somber defiance in her smoldering eyes, stared
out at the desolate day. “You’d have
had her for a while, wouldn’t you? You’d
have lived while it lasted. What’s the difference
if she was a grafter? D’you think you’re
going to fall in love and marry a duchess, or something?
I wish I’d had your chance, that’s all.”
“What d’you mean by that?” Buddy
queried, sharply.
“I mean this,” Allie flamed
at him. “We’re nobodies and we’ve
got nothing but our money. A counterfeit is as
good as ever we’ll get and it’s
as good as we’re entitled to. I’d
rather know what it is to live for an hour than to
go on forever just pretending to live. If I’ve
got to be unhappy, then give me something to be unhappy
over; something to look back on. I’d rather
be But, pshaw! You don’t understand.
You couldn’t.”
“I dunno what’s got into
you lately,” Buddy declared, with a frown.
“Nothing’s got into me.
Only, what’s the use of starving when the world’s
full of good things and you’ve got the price
to buy them? I won’t do it. If ever
I get my chance, you watch me!”
Gray’s trip from the railroad
was more like a voyage than a motor journey, for the
creek beds, usually dry, were angry torrents, and the
’dobe flats were quagmires through which his
vehicle plowed hub deep; nevertheless, he was fresh
and alert when he arrived. After a buoyant greeting
to Allie, he and Buddy inspected the well, then he
issued orders for work to be resumed.
“We’re gettin’ close
to something,” young Briskow declared. “She’s
making gas an’ rumblin’ like she’d
let go any minute. We got reservoys built an’
the boiler’s moved back, so we can douse the
fire when she starts. I figger she’ll drownd
us out.”
“What are the indications at
Nelson’s well?” Gray turned his eyes in
the direction of a derrick on the adjoining property,
the top of which showed over the mesquite.
“Nothin’ extra. They
won’t tell us anything, but they’re deeper
’n we are.”
“How do you know?”
Buddy winked wisely. “We
counted the layers of cable on the bull-wheel drum.
Checked up their casing, too, an’ watched their
cuttin’s. They got their eye on us, too,
an’ they’ll be over when we blow in.”
That was an anxious afternoon, for
as the drill bit deeper into the rock it provoked
indications of a terrific force imprisoned far below.
To the observers it seemed as if that sharp-edged tool
was tap-tapping upon the thin shell of some vast reservoir
already leaking and charged to the bursting point
with a mighty pressure. An odor of gas escaped
from the casing mouth, occasionally there came hoarse,
throaty gurglings of the thick liquid at the bottom
of the well. The bailer was run frequently.
Word had gone forth that there was
something doing on thirty-five, and from the chaparral
emerged muddy motor cars bringing scouts, neighboring
lease owners, and even the members of a near-by casing
crew.
Supper was a jumpy meal, and nobody
had much to say, Allie Briskow least of all.
She was silent, intense; she curtly refused Buddy’s
offer to send her home, and when the meal was over
she followed Gray back to the derrick. He was
on edge, of course. It seemed to him that every
blow of that bit was struck upon his naked nerves,
for he had a deep conviction that this was to prove
the night of his life, and the strain of waiting was
becoming onerous. This well meant so much.
Ten thousand barrels, fifteen, five even
one thousand; it mattered little how heavy the flow,
for a good-paying well would see him through his immediate
troubles. And this was a well of some sort, or
else indications meant nothing and everybody was greatly
mistaken. Of course, a big well, something to
create a furor that was what he needed,
for that not only would bridge his financial crisis,
but also it would mean a frenzy of quick drilling,
new wells crowded close together, hundreds of thousands
of dollars poured into the earth, and the Nelsons couldn’t
stand that. It would break them break
them, and he would taste the full sweetness of revenge.
Oh, he had waited long! Nor was that all.
Once he had Henry Nelson down, and his foot on the
fellow’s throat, he’d have something to
say to Barbara Parker. He could say it then and
look her in the eyes. He wished she was here
to-night while he stood on the top of the world.
Ten thousand barrels! Twenty thousand! Twenty-thousand-barrel
gushers were not unknown. A well like that would
mean a fortune every day. But why didn’t
it start?
They were bailing again and curiosity
drew the owner in upon the derrick floor. This
time the flow might begin; at any moment now oil might
come with the water. There is some danger in standing
close to a well during this bailing process, but Gray
was like a bit of iron in the field of a magnet; spellbound,
he watched the cable as it ran smoothly off the drum,
flowed up over the crown block and down into the casing
mouth. That heavy, torpedolike weight on the end
of the line was dropping almost half a mile.
Up it came swiftly, as if greased; up, up, until it
emerged into the glare of the incandescent overhead
and hung there dripping. It was swung aside and
lowered, and out gushed its muddy contents.
Water! Black and thick as molasses,
but water nevertheless.
Buddy Briskow was running the rig,
and the dexterity with which he handled brake and
control rod gave him pride. He had seated his
sister on a bench out of the way, where she was protected
from the drizzle, and he felt her eyes upon him.
It gave him a sense of importance to have Allie watching
him at such a crisis; he wished his parents were with
her. If this well blew in big, as it seemed bound
to do, it would be a personal triumph, for not many
cub drillers could boast of bringing in a gusher the
first time. It was, in fact, no mean accomplishment
to make any sort of a well; to pierce the earth with
an absolutely vertical shaft a half mile deep and
line it with tons upon tons of heavy casing joined
air-tight and fitted to a hair’s breadth was
an engineering feat in itself. It was something
that only an oil man could appreciate. And he
was an oil man; a darn good one, too, so Buddy told
himself.
He eased the brake and the massive
bailer slid into the casing as a heavy shell slips
into the breech of a cannon. As he further released
his pressure, the cable began to pour serpentlike from
the drum. Buddy turned his wet, grimy face and
flashed a grin at Allie. She smiled back at him
faintly. Some lightninglike change in her expression,
or perhaps some occult sense of the untoward warned
him that all was not as it should be, and he jerked
his head back to attention.
There are moments of catastrophe when
for a brief interval nature slows, time stops, and
we are carried in suspense. Such an instant Buddy
Briskow experienced now. He knew at first glance
what had happened, and a frightened cry burst from
his throat, but it was a cry too short, too hoarse,
to serve as a warning.
During that moment of inattention
the bailer had stuck. Perhaps five hundred feet
below, friction had checked its plunge, and meanwhile
the velvet-running drum, spinning at its maximum velocity
by reason of the whirling bull wheel, was unreeling
its cable down upon the derrick platform. Down
it poured in giant loops, and within those coils, either
unconscious of his danger or paralyzed by its suddenness,
stood Calvin Gray.
Men schooled in hazardous enterprises
carry subconscious mental photographs of the perils
with which their callings are invested and they react
involuntarily to them. Buddy had heard of drillers
decapitated by flying cables, of human bodies caught
within those wire loops and cut in twain as if made
of lard, for when a wedged tool resumes its downward
plunge it straightens those coils above ground in
the twinkling of an eye. Instinct, rather than
reason, warned Buddy not to check the blinding revolutions
of the bull wheel. Without thought he leaped
forward into the midst of those swiftly forming loops,
and as he landed upon the slippery floor he clenched
his fist and struck with all the power he could put
behind his massive arm. Gray’s back was
to him, the blow was like that of a walking beam,
and it sent the elder man flying as a tenpin is hurled
ahead of a bowling ball. Buddy fell, too.
He went sprawling. As he slid across the muddy
floor he felt the steel cable writhing under him like
a thing alive, and the touch of it as it streamed
into the well burned his flesh. He kicked and
fought it as he would have fought the closing folds
of a python, for the bailer was falling again and
the wire loops were vanishing as the coils in a whiplash
vanish during its flight.
Buddy’s booted legs were thrown
high, he was tossed aside like a thing of paper, but
blind, half stunned, he scrambled back to his post.
By this time the whole structure of the derrick was
rocking to the mad gyrations of the bull wheel; the
giant spool was spinning with a speed that threatened
to send it flying, like the fragments of a bursting
bomb, but the youth understood dimly the danger of
stopping it too suddenly to fetch up that
plunging weight at the cable end might snap the line,
collapse the derrick, “jim” the well.
Buddy weaved dizzily in his tracks; nevertheless,
his hand was steady, and he applied a gradually increasing
pressure to the brake. Nor did he take his eyes
from his task until the drum had ceased revolving and
the runaway bailer hung motionless in the well.
When he finally looked about it seemed
to him that he had lived a long time and was very
old. Gray lay motionless where he had fallen,
and his body was twisted into a shockingly unnatural
posture. He was bleeding. Allie Briskow
was bending over him. Other dim, dreamlike figures
were swarming out of the gloom and into the radiance
of the derrick lights; there was a far-away clamor
of shouting voices. Buddy Briskow felt himself
growing deathly sick.
They carried Gray to the bunk house,
and his limbs hung loosely, his head lolled in a manner
terrifying to Buddy and his sister. As they stumbled
along beside the group, the girl cried:
“Oh, my God! Oh, my God!”
She repeated the cry over and over again in a voice
strange to her brother’s ears.
“It it wasn’t
my fault,” he told her, hoarsely. “I
aimed to save him.”
“You killed him!”
“He ain’t ”
Buddy choked and clung to her. “He’s
just stunned like. He ain’t that!”
The youth was amazed when Allie turned and cursed him
with oaths that he himself seldom ventured to employ.
But Gray was not dead. Buddy’s
blow had well-nigh broken his neck, and he had suffered
a further injury to his head in falling; nevertheless,
he responded to such medical aid as they could supply,
and in time he opened his eyes. His gaze was
dull, however, and for a long while he lay in a sort
of coma, quite as alarming as his former condition.
They brought him to at last long enough to acquaint
him with what had happened, and although it was plain
that he understood their words only dimly, he ordered
the work resumed.
When for a second time he lapsed into
semiconsciousness, it was Allie Briskow who put his
orders into execution. “You ain’t
doing any good standing around staring at him and
whispering. Bring in that well, as fast as ever
you can, and bring it in big. Now, get
out and leave him to me.”
Buddy was the last to go. He
inquired, miserably: “Honest, he ain’t
hurt bad, is he? You don’t think ”
“Get out!”
“He won’t die? Ain’t
no chance of him doin’ that, is there?”
“If he does, I’ll ”
The speaker’s face was ashen, but her eyes blazed.
“I’ll fix you, Buddy Briskow. I will,
so help me God!”
It was late that night when the well
came in. It came with a rush and a roar, drenching
the derrick with a geyser of muddy water and driving
both crew and spectators out into the gloom. Up,
up the column rose, spraying itself into mist, and
from its iron throat issued a sound unlike that of
any other phenomenon. It was a hoarse, rumbling
bellow, growing in volume and rising in pitch second
by second until it finally attained a shrieking crescendo.
Ten thousand safety valves had let go, and they steadily
gathered strength and shrillness as they functioned.
A shocking sound it became, a sound that carried for
miles, rocking the air and stunning the senses.
It beat upon the eardrums, pierced them; men shouted
at each other, but heard their own voices only faintly.
Calvin Gray had recovered his senses
sufficiently to understand the meaning of that uproar,
and he tried to get up, but Allie held him down upon
his bed. She was still struggling with him when
her brother burst into the house, shouting:
“It’s a gasser, Mr. Gray! Biggest
I ever seen.”
“Gas?” the latter mumbled,
indistinctly. “Isn’t there any oil?”
His words were almost like a whisper because of the
noise.
“Not yet. May be later.
Say, she’s a heller, ain’t she? I’ll
bet she’s makin’ twenty million feet ”
“Gasser’s no good.”
“Can’t tell yet.
We gotta shut her down easy so she don’t blow
the casing out run wild on us, understand?”
Buddy was still breathless, but he plunged out the
door and back into that sea of sound.
With a tragic intensity akin to wildness,
Gray stared up into Allie Briskow’s face.
“Worthless, eh? And they told me ten thousand
barrels.” He carried a shaking hand to
his bandaged head and tried vainly to collect his
wits. “What’s matter?” he queried,
thickly. “Everything whirling sick ”
“You had an accident, but it’s
all right; all right No, no! Please
lie still.”
“Running wild, eh? Tha’s
what hurts my head so. Blown the casing out Bad,
isn’t it? Sometimes they run wild for weeks,
years ruin everything.” He tried
again to rise, then insisted, querulously: “Goto
get oil in this well! I’ve got to!
Last chance, Allie. Got to get ten thousand
barrels!”
“Please! You mustn’t ”
Allie had her strong hands upon his shoulders; she
was arguing firmly but as gently as possible under
the circumstances, when something occurred so extraordinary,
so unexpected, as to paralyze her. Of a sudden
the interior of the dim-lit, canvas-roofed shack was
illuminated as if by a searchlight, and she turned
her head to see that the whole out-of-doors was visible
and that the night itself had turned into day.
With a cry that died weakly amid the
chaos of sound beating over her, the girl ran to the
window and looked out. What she beheld was a
nightmare scene. The well was afire. It had
exploded into flame. Where, a moment before,
it had been belching skyward an enormous stream of
gaseous vapor, all but invisible except at the casing
head, now it was a monstrous blow torch, the flaming
crest of which was tossed a hundred feet high.
Nothing in the nature of a conflagration could have
been more awe-inspiring, more confounding to the faculties
than that roaring column of consuming fire. It
was a thing incredibly huge, incredibly furious, incredibly
wild. Human figures, black against its glare,
were flying to safety, near-by silhouettes were flinging
their arms aloft and dashing backward and forward;
faces upturned to it were white and terrified.
The scattered mesquite stood against the night like
a wall, spotted with inky shadows, and, above, the
heavens resembled a boiling caldron.
It was a hellish picture; it remained
indelibly fixed upon Allie Briskow’s mind.
As she looked on in horrid fascination, she saw the
derrick change into a latticelike tower of flame, saw
its upper part begin slowly to crumble and disintegrate.
The force with which the gas issued blew the blaze
high and held it dancing, tumbling in mid-air, a phenomenon
indescribably weird and impressive. The men who
stood nearest bent their heads and shielded their
faces from the heat.
Allie tore her eyes away from the
spectacle finally. She turned back to the bed,
then she halted, for it was empty. The door, still
ajar from Buddy’s headlong exit, informed her
whence her patient had gone, and she flew after him.
She found him not half a dozen paces
away. In fact, she stumbled over his prostrate
body. With an amazon’s strength, she gathered
him into her arms, then staggered with him back to
his couch, and as she strained him to herself she
loudly called his name. Amid that demoniac din,
amid the shrieking of those million devils, freed from
the black chasms of the rock, her voice was as feeble
as the wail of a sick child.
When she had laid her inert burden
upon the bed, Allie knelt and took Gray’s head
upon her bosom. Then, for the first time, those
forces imprisoned deep within her being ran wild,
and under the red glare of that flaming geyser she
kissed his hair, his eyes, his lips. Over and
over again she kissed them with the hungry passion
of a woman starved.