Tresler was unfeignedly glad to leave
Jake Harnach behind him, but he looked very serious
as he and his companion moved on to the house.
The result of his meeting with the foreman would come
back on him later, he knew, and it was as well that
he was prepared. The meeting had been unfortunate,
but, judging by what he had heard of Jake in Forks,
he must inevitably have crossed the bully sooner or
later; Jake himself would have seen to that.
Diane Marbolt paused as she came to
the verandah. They had not spoken since their
greeting. Now she turned abruptly, and quietly
surveyed her guest. Nor was there any rudeness
in her look. Tresler felt that he was undergoing
a silent cross-examination, and waited, quietly smiling
down at her from his superior height.
At last she smiled up at him and nodded.
“Will I do?” he asked.
“I think so.”
It was a curious position, and they
both laughed. But in the girl’s manner
there was no levity.
“You are not sure? Is there
anything wrong about me? My my dress,
for instance?” Tresler laughed again; he had
missed the true significance of his companion’s
attitude toward him.
Just for a moment the dark little
face took on a look of perplexity. Then the pucker
of the brows smoothed out, and she smiled demurely
as she answered.
“Oh, I see no,”
doubtfully. Then more decidedly, “No.
You see, you are a ‘tenderfoot.’
You’ll get over it later on.”
And the last barrier of formality was set aside.
“Good,” exclaimed Tresler,
emphatically. “We are going to be friends,
Miss Marbolt. I knew it. It was only that
I feared that ‘they’ might ruin my chances
of your approbation. You see, they’ve already
caused me er trouble.”
“Yes, I think we shall be friends,”
Diane answered quietly. “In the meantime,
come along into the house and have your lunch.
It is ready, I saw you coming and so prepared it at
once. You will not mind if I sit and look on
while you eat. I have had mine. I want to
talk to you before you see my father.”
There was distinct anxiety in her
manner. More surely than all, her eyes betrayed
her uneasiness. However, he gave no sign, contenting
himself with a cordial reply.
“You are very kind. I too
should like a chat. You see, I am a ‘tenderfoot,’
and you have been kind enough to pass over my shortcomings.”
Diane led the way into the house.
And Tresler, following her, was struck with the simple
comfort of this home in the wilds. It was a roomy
two-storied house, unpretentious, but very capacious.
They entered through one of three French windows what
was evidently a useful sort of drawing-room-parlor.
Beyond this they crossed a hallway, the entrance door
of which stood open, and passed into a dining-room,
which, in its turn, opened directly into a kitchen
beyond. This room looked out on the woods at the
back. Diane explained that her father’s
sanctum was in front of this, while behind the parlor
was his bedroom, opposite the dining-room and kitchen.
The rooms up-stairs were bedrooms, and her own private
parlor.
“You see, we keep no female
servants, Mr. Tresler,” the girl said, as she
brought a pot of steaming coffee from the kitchen and
set it on the table. “I am housekeeper.
Joe Nelson, the choreman, is my helper and does all
the heavy work. He’s quite a character.”
“Yes, I know. I’ve met him,”
observed Tresler, dryly.
“Ah! Try that ham.
I don’t know about the cold pie, it may be tough.
Yes, old Joe is an Englishman; at least, he was, but
he’s quite Americanized now. He spent forty
years in Texas. He’s really an educated
man. Owned a nice ranch and got burned out.
I’m very fond of him; but it isn’t of
Joe I want to talk.”
“No.”
The man helped himself to the ham
and veal pie, and found it anything but tough.
Diane seated herself in a chair with
her back to the uncurtained window, through which
the early summer sun was staring.
“You have met Jake Harnach and
made an enemy of him,” she said suddenly, and
with simple directness.
“Yes; the latter must have come anyway.”
The girl sighed, and her eyes shone
with a brooding light. And Tresler, glancing
at her, recognized the sadness of expression he had
noticed at their first meeting, and which, he was soon
to learn, was habitual to her.
“I suppose so,” she murmured
in response. Then she roused herself, and spoke
almost sharply. “What would you have done
had he struck you? He is a man of colossal strength.”
Tresler laughed easily. “That
depends. I’m not quite sure. I should
probably have done my best to retaliate. I had
an alternative. I might have shot him.”
“Oh!” the girl said with impulsive horror.
“Well, what would you have?”
Tresler raised his eyebrows and turned his astonished
eyes upon her. “Was I to stand lamb-like
and accept a thrashing from that unconscionable ruffian?
No, no,” he shook his head. “I see
it in your eyes. You condemn the method, but not
the man. Remember, we all have a right to live if
we can. Maybe there’s no absolute necessity
that we should, but still we are permitted to do our
best. That’s the philosophy I’ve had
hammered into me with the various thrashings the school
bullies at home have from time to time administered.
I should certainly have done my best.”
“And if you had done either
of these things, I shudder to think what would have
happened. It was unfortunate, terribly unfortunate.
You do not know Jake Harnach. Oh, Mr. Tresler,”
the girl hurried on, leaning suddenly forward in her
chair, and reaching out until her small brown hand
rested on his arm, “please, please promise me
that you won’t run foul of Jake. He is
terrible. You don’t, you can’t know
him, or you would understand your danger.”
“On the contrary, Miss Marbolt.
It is because I know a great deal of him that I should
be ready to retaliate very forcibly. I thank my
stars I do know him. Had I not known of him before,
your own words would have warned me to be ready for
all emergencies. Jake must go his way and I’ll
go mine. I am here to learn ranching, not to submit
to any bulldozing. But let us forget Jake for
the moment, and talk of something more pleasant.
What a charming situation the ranch has!”
The girl dropped back in her chair.
There was no mistaking the decision of her visitor’s
words. She felt that no persuasion of hers could
alter him. With an effort she contrived to answer
him.
“Yes, it is a beautiful spot.
You have not yet had time to appreciate the perfections
of our surroundings.” She paused for him
to speak, but as he remained silent she labored on
with her thoughts set on other things. “The
foot-hills come right down almost to our very doors.
And then in the distance, above them, are the white
caps of the mountains. We are sheltered, as no
doubt you have seen, by the almost inaccessible wall
beyond the river, and the pinewoods screen us from
the northeast and north winds of winter. South
and east are miles and miles of prairie-lands.
Father has been here for eighteen years. I was
a child of four when we came. Whitewater was a
mere settlement then, and Forks wasn’t even
in existence. We hadn’t a neighbor nearer
than Whitewater in those days, except the Indians
and half-breeds. They were rough times, and father
held his place only by the subtlety of his poor blind
brain, and the arms of the men he had with him.
Jake has been with us as long as I can remember.
So you see,” she added, returning to her womanly
dread for his safety, “I know Jake. My
warning is not the idle fear of a silly girl.”
Tresler remained silent for a moment
or two. Then he asked sharply
“Why does your father keep him?”
The girl shrugged her shoulders.
“Jake is the finest ranchman in the country.”
And in the silence that followed Tresler
helped himself to more coffee, and finished off with
cheese and crackers. Neither seemed inclined
to break up the awkwardness of the pause. For
the time the man’s thoughts were wandering in
interested speculation as to the possibilities of
his future on the ranch. He was not thinking so
much of Jake, nor even of Julian Marbolt. It
was of the gentler associations with the girl beside
him associations he had never anticipated
in his wildest thoughts. She was no prairie-bred
girl. Her speech, her manner, savored too much
of civilization. Yes, he decided in his mind,
although she claimed Mosquito Bend as her home since
she was four, she had been educated elsewhere.
His thoughts were suddenly cut short. A faint
sound caught his quick ears. Then Diane’s
voice, questioning him, recalled his wandering attention.
“I understand you intend to
stay with us for three years?”
“Just as long as it will take
to learn all the business of a ranch,” he answered
readily. “I am going to become one of the ”
Again he heard the peculiar noise,
and he broke off listening. Diane was listening
too. It was a soft tap, tap, like some one knocking
gently upon a curtained door. It was irregular,
intermittent, like the tapping of a telegraph-sounder
working very slowly.
“What’s that?” he asked.
The girl had risen, and a puzzled
look was in her eyes. “The noise?
Oh, it’s father,” she said, with a shadowy
smile, and in a lowered tone. “Something
must have disturbed him. It is unusual for him
to be awake so early.”
Now they heard a door open, and the
tapping ceased. Then the door closed and the
lock turned. A moment later there came the jingle
of keys, and then shuffling footsteps accompanied
the renewed tapping.
Tresler was still listening.
He had turned toward the door, and while his attention
was fixed on the coming of the blind rancher, he was
yet aware that Diane was clearing the table with what
seemed to him unnecessary haste and noise. However,
his momentary interest was centred upon the doorway
and the passage outside, and he paid little heed to
the girl’s movements. The door stood open,
and as he looked out the sound of shuffling feet drew
nearer; then a figure passed the opening.
It was gone in a moment. But
in that moment he caught sight of a tall man wrapped
in the gray folds of a dressing-gown that reached to
his feet. That, and the sharp outline of a massive
head of close-cropped gray hair. The face was
lost, all except the profile. He saw a long,
high-bridged nose and a short, crisp grayish beard.
The tapping of the stick died slowly away. And
he knew that the blind man had passed out on to the
verandah.
Now he turned again to the girl, and
would have spoken, but she raised a warning finger
and shook her head. Then, moving toward the door,
she beckoned to him to follow.
“Father, this is Mr. Tresler.”
Tresler found himself looking down
upon a remarkable face. He acknowledged Diane’s
introduction, forgetful, for the moment, of the man’s
sightless eyes. He gripped the outstretched hand
heartily, while he took in his first impression of
a strange personality.
They were out on the verandah.
The rancher was sitting in a prim, uncushioned armchair.
He had a strong, well-moulded, pale face, the sightless
eyes of which held the attention. Tresler at once
appreciated Shaky’s description of them.
They were dreadful eyes. The
pupils were there, and, in a measure, appeared natural
except for their enormous size. They were black,
jet black, and divided from what should have been
the whites by minute rings of blue, the only suspicion
of iris they possessed. But it was the whites
that gave them their dreadful expression. They
were scarlet with inflammation an inflammation
which extended to the rims of the lids and had eaten
away the lashes. Of the rest of the face it was
impossible for him to form much of an opinion.
The iron-gray brows were depressed as though with
physical pain, and so obliterated all natural expression.
And the beard shut out the indications which the mouth
and chin might have afforded.
“You’re welcome, Mr. Tresler,”
he said, in a low, gentle tone. “I knew
you were here some time ago.”
Tresler was astonished at the quiet
refinement of his voice. He had grown so accustomed
to the high, raucous twang of the men of these wilds
that it came as a surprise to him.
“I hope I didn’t disturb
you,” he answered cheerily. “Miss
Marbolt told me you were sleeping, and ”
“You didn’t disturb me at
least, not in the way you mean. You see, I have
developed a strange sensitiveness a sort
of second sight,” he laughed a little bitterly.
“I awoke by instinct the moment you approached
the house, and heard you come in. The loss of
one sense, you see, has made others more acute.
Well, well, so you have come to learn ranching?
Diane” the blind man turned to his
daughter “describe Mr. Tresler to
me. What does he look like? Forgive me,
my dear sir,” he went on, turning with unerring
instinct to the other. “I glean a perfect
knowledge of those about me in this way.”
“Certainly.” The
object of the blind man’s interest smiled over
at the girl.
Diane hesitated in some confusion.
“Go on, child,” her father
said, with a touch of impatience in his manner.
Thus urged she began. “Mr. Tresler is tall.
Six feet.
Broad-shouldered.”
The man’s red, staring eyes
were bent on his pupil with a steady persistency.
“Yes, yes,” he urged, as the girl paused.
“Dressed in er fashionable riding
costume.”
“His face?”
“Black hair, steel-blue eyes,
black eyelashes and brows. Broad forehead ”
“Any lines?” questioned the blind man.
“Only two strong marks between the brows.”
“Go on.”
“Broad-bridged, rather large
nose; well-shaped mouth, with inclination to droop
at the corners; broad, split chin; well-rounded cheeks
and jaw.”
“Ha! clean-shaven, of course yes.”
The rancher sat silent for some moments
after Diane had finished her description. His
lips moved, as though he were talking to himself; but
no words came to those waiting. At last he stirred,
and roused from his reverie.
“You come from Springfield,
Mr. Tresler, I understand?” he said pleasantly.
“Yes.”
“Um. New England.
A good country that breeds good men,” he nodded,
with an expression that was almost a smile. “I’m
glad to be able to welcome you; I only wish I could
see. However,” he went on kindly, “you
will be able to learn ranching in all its branches
here. We breed horses and cattle. You’ll
find it rough. My foreman is not exactly gentle,
but, believe me, he knows his business. He is
the finest ranchman in the country, and I owe much
of my success to him. You must get on the right
side of Jake, though. It requires finding the
right side, I mean but it is worth seeking.”
Tresler smiled as he listened.
He thoroughly agreed with the reference to the difficulty
of finding Jake’s “right” side.
He endeavored to catch Diane’s eye, but she
avoided his gaze. As the rancher paused, he broke
in at once.
“I presume I start work in earnest to-morrow
morning?”
The blind man shook his head.
“No; better start in to-day. Our agreement
reads to-day; it must not be broken. You take
your position as one of the hands, and will be under
the control of Jake Harnach.”
“We can have tea first, though,”
put in Diane, who had followed her father’s
words with what seemed unnecessary closeness.
“Tut, tut, child,” he
replied impatiently. “Yes, we will have
tea. ’Tis all you think of. See to
it, and bring Tresler a chair; I must talk to him.”
His words were a dismissal; and after
Diane had provided a chair, she retired into the house,
leaving apprentice and master alone. And the
two men talked, as men will talk who have just come
together from the ends of the world. Tresler
avoided the details of his journey; nor did the blind
man seem in any way interested in his personal affairs.
It was the news of men, and matters concerning the
world, that they discussed. And the rancher’s
information and remarks, and keen, incisive questions,
set the newcomer wondering. He watched the face
before him, the red, sightless eyes. He studied
the quiet, gentle-voiced man, as one may study an
abstruse problem. The result was disheartening.
One long, weary expression of pain was all he beheld;
no lights and shades of emotion and interest.
It was the face of one grown patient under a lifelong
course of suffering. Tresler had listened to
the bitter cursings against this man, but as the soft
voice and cultured expressions fell upon his ears,
the easy-flowing, pointed criticisms on matters of
public interest, the broad philosophy, sometimes faintly
dashed with bitterness and cynicism, but always sound,
he found it hard to associate him with the significant
sobriquet of the ranch. Tea-time found him still
wrestling with the unsolved problem. But, with
the advent of Diane with the table and laden tray,
he set it aside for future study.
For the next half-hour he transferred
his attention to the relations between father and
daughter, as they chatted pleasantly of the ranching
prospects of the country, for the benefit of their
visitor. This was a lesser problem, and one he
came near to achieving. Before he left them,
he resolved that Diane stood in great awe, not to say
fear, of her father. This to him was astonishing,
judging by the strength of character every feature
in her face displayed. It seemed to him that
she was striving hard to bestow affection on him trying
to create an affection that had no place in her heart.
Her efforts were painfully apparent. She convinced
him at once of a lively sense of duty a
sense she was carrying to a point that was almost pitiful.
All this he felt sure of, but it was the man who finally
baffled him as he had baffled him before. How
he regarded Diane it was impossible to say. Sometimes
he could have sworn that the man’s devotion to
her was that of one who, helpless, clings to a support
which never fails him; at others, he treated her to
a sneering intolerance, which roused the young man’s
ire; and, again, he would change his tone, till the
undercurrent of absolute hatred drowned the studied
courtesy which veneered it. And when he finally
rose to leave the verandah and seek out the foreman
and report himself for duty, it was with a genuine
feeling of relief at leaving the presence of those
dreadful red eyes.
Diane was packing up the tea-things,
and Tresler still lingered on the verandah; he was
watching the blind man as he tapped his way into the
house. Then, as he disappeared, and the sound
of his shuffling feet grew faint and distant, he became
aware that Diane was standing holding the tray and
watching him. He knew, too, by her attentive
attitude, that she was listening to ascertain when
her father should be out of ear-shot. As the
sounds died away, and all became silent within the
house, she came over to him. She spoke without
pausing on her way; it seemed that she feared observation.
“Don’t forget, Mr. Tresler,
what I told you about Jake. Be warned. In
spite of what you say, you do not know him.”
“Thanks, Miss Marbolt,”
he replied warmly; “I shall not forget.”
Diane was about to speak again, but
the voice of her father, harsh and strident enough
now, reached them from the hallway.
“Come in, child, and let Tresler go to his work.”
And Tresler noted the expression of
fear that leapt into the girl’s face as she
hurriedly passed into the house. He stood for
a moment wrathful and wondering; then he strode away
toward the corrals, reflecting on the strange events
which had so swiftly followed one upon the other.
“Ye gods,” he muttered,
“this is a queer place and these are
queer people.”
Then as he saw the great figure of
Jake coming up the hill toward him, from the direction
of a small isolated hut, he went out to meet him,
unconsciously squaring himself as he drew near.
He expected an explosion; at least
an angry demonstration. But nothing of the sort
happened. The whole attitude of the man had changed
to one of studied amiability. Not only that,
but his diction was careful to a degree, as though
he were endeavoring to impress this man from the East
with his superiority over the other ranchmen.
“Well? You have seen him?”
“Yes. I have now come to
report myself ready for work,” Tresler replied
at once. He adopted a cold business tone, deeming
it best to observe this from the start.
To his surprise Jake became almost
cordial. “Good. We can do with some
hands, sure. Had a pleasant talk with the old
man?” The question came indifferently, but a
sidelong glance accompanied it as the foreman turned
away and gazed out over the distant prairie.
“I have,” replied Tresler,
shortly. “What are my orders, and where
do I sleep?”
“Then you don’t sleep
up at the house?” Jake inquired, pretending
surprise. There was a slight acidity in his tone.
“That is hardly to be expected
when the foreman sleeps down there.” Tresler
nodded, indicating the outbuildings.
“That’s so,” observed
the other, thoughtfully. “No, I guess the
old man don’t fancy folk o’ your kidney
around,” he went on, relapsing into the speech
of the bunkhouse unguardedly. “Mebbe it’s
different wi’ the other.”
Tresler could have struck him as he
beheld the meaning smile that accompanied the fellow’s
words.
“Where do I sleep?” he demanded sharply.
“Oh, I guess you’ll roll
into the bunkhouse. Likely the boys’ll fix
you for blankets till your truck comes along.
As for orders, why, we start work at sunup, and Slushy
dips out breakfast before that. Guess I’ll
put you to work in the morning; you can’t do
a deal yet, but maybe you’ll learn.”
“Then I’m not wanted to-night?”
“Guess not.” Jake
broke off. Then he turned sharply and faced his
man. “I’ve just one word to say to
you ’fore you start in,” he went on.
“We kind o’ make allowance fer ‘tenderfeet’
around here once. After that, we deal
accordin’ savee? Say, ther’
ain’t no tea-parties customary around this layout.”
Tresler smiled. If he had been
killed for it he must have smiled. In that last
remark the worthy Jake had shown his hand. And
the latter saw the smile, and his face darkened with
swift-rising anger. But he had evidently made
up his mind not to be drawn, for, with a curt “S’long,”
he abruptly strode off, leaving the other to make his
way to the bunkhouse.
The men had not yet come in for their
evening meal, but he found Arizona disconsolately
sitting on a roll of blankets just outside the door
of the quarters. He was chewing steadily, with
his face turned prairieward, gazing out over the tawny
plains as though nothing else in the world mattered
to him.
He looked up casually as Tresler came
along, and edged along the blankets to make room,
contenting himself with a laconic
“Set.”
The two men sat in silence for some
moments. The pale-faced cowpuncher seemed absorbed
in deep reflection. Tresler was thinking too;
he was thinking of Jake, whom he clearly understood
was in love with his employer’s daughter.
It was patent to the veriest simpleton. Not only
that, but he felt that Diane herself knew it.
The way the foreman had desisted from his murderous
onslaught upon himself at her coming was sufficient
evidence without the jealousy he had betrayed in his
reference to tea-parties. Now he understood, too,
that it was because the blind man was asleep, and
in going up to the house he, Tresler, would only meet
Diane, and probably spend a pleasant afternoon with
her until her father awoke, that Jake’s unreasoning
jealousy had been aroused, and he had endeavored to
forcibly detain him. He felt glad that he had
learned these things so soon. All such details
would be useful.
At last Arizona turned from his impassive
contemplation of the prairie.
“Wal?” he questioned.
And he conveyed a world of interrogation in his monosyllable.
“Jake says I begin work to-morrow.
To-night I sleep in the bunkhouse.”
“Yes, I know.”
“You know?” Tresler looked around in astonishment.
“Guess Jake’s bin ’long.
Say, I’ll shoot that feller, sure ’less
some interferin’ cuss gits along an’ does
him in fust.”
“What’s up? Anything fresh?”
For answer Arizona spat forcibly into
the little pool of tobacco-juice on the ground before
him. Then, with a vicious clenching of the teeth
“He’s a swine.”
“Which is a libel on hogs,” observed the
other, with a smile.
“Libel?” cried Arizona,
his wild eyes rolling, and his lean nostrils dilating
as his breath came short and quick. “Yes,
grin; grin like a blazin’ six-foot ape.
Mebbe y’ll change that grin later, when I tell
you what he’s done.”
“Nothing he could do would surprise me after
having met him.”
“No.” Arizona had
calmed again. His volcanic nature was a study.
Tresler, although he had only just met this man, liked
him for his very wildness. “Say, pardner,”
he went on quietly, reaching one long, lean hand toward
him, “shake! I guess I owe you gratitood
fer bluffin’ that hog. We see it all.
Say, you’ve got grit.” And the fierce
eyes looked into the other’s face.
Tresler shook the proffered hand heartily.
“But what’s his latest achievement?”
he asked, eager to learn the fresh development.
“He come along here ’bout
you. Sed we wus to fix you up in pore Dave
Steele’s bunk.”
“Yes? That’s good.
I rather expected he’d have me sleep on the floor.”
Arizona gave a snort. His anger
was rising again, but he checked it.
“Say,” he went on, “guess
you don’t know a heap. Ther’ ain’t
bin a feller slep in that bunk since Dave went
away.”
“Why?” Tresler’s interest was agog.
“Why?” Arizona’s
voice rose. “‘Cos it’s mussed all
up wi’ a crazy man’s blood. A crazy
man as wus killed right here, kind of, by Jake Harnach.”
“I heard something of it.”
“Heerd suthin’ of it?
Wal, I guess ther’ ain’t a feller around
this prairie as ain’t yelled hisself hoarse
’bout Dave. Say, he wus the harmlessest
lad as ever jerked a rope or slung a leg over a stock
saddle. An’ as slick a hand as ther’
ever wus around this ranch. I tell ye he could
teach every one of us, he wus that handy; an’
that’s a long trail, I ‘lows. Wal,
we wus runnin’ in a bunch of outlaws fer
brandin’, an’ he wus makin’ to rope
an old bull. Howsum he got him kind o’
awkward. The rope took the feller’s horns.
’Fore Dave could loose it that bull got mad,
an’ went squar’ for the corral walls an’
broke a couple o’ the bars. Dave jumped
fer it an’ got clear. Then Jake comes
hollerin’ an’ swearin’ like a stuck
hog, an’ Dave he took it bad. Y’
see no one could handle an outlaw like Dave. He
up an’ let fly at Jake, an’ cussed back.
Wot does Jake do but grab up a brandin’ iron
an’ lay it over the boy’s head. Dave
jest dropped plumb in his tracks. Then we got
around and hunched him up, an’ laid him out in
his bunk, bleedin’ awful. We plastered
him, an’ doctored him, an’ after a whiles
he come to. He lay on his back fer a month,
an’ never a sign o’ Jake or the blind
man come along, only Miss Dianny. She come, an’
we did our best. But arter a month he got up
plump crazed an’ silly-like. He died back
ther’ in Forks soon after.” Arizona
paused significantly. Then he went on. “No,
sir, ther’ ain’t bin a feller put in that
bunk sense, fer they ain’t never gotten
pore Dave’s blood off’n it. Say,
ther’ ain’t a deal as ‘ud scare us
fellers, but we ain’t sleepin’ over a
crazy man’s blood.”
“Which, apparently, I’ve
got to do,” Tresler said sharply. Then he
asked, “Is it the only spare bunk?”
“No. Ther’s Thompson’s, an’
ther’s Massy’s.”
“Then what’s the object?”
“Cussedness. It’s
a kind o’ delicate attention. It’s
fer to git back on you, knowin’ as us fellers
’ud sure tell you of Dave. It’s to
kind o’ hint to you what happens to them as
runs foul o’ him. What’s like to
happen to you.”
Arizona’s fists clenched, and
his teeth gritted with rage as he deduced his facts.
Tresler remained calm, but it did him good to listen
to the hot-headed cowpuncher, and he warmed toward
him.
“I’m afraid I must disappoint
him,” he said, when the other had finished.
“If you fellows will lend me some blankets, I’ll
sleep in Massy’s or Thompson’s bunk, and
Mr. Jake can go hang.”
Arizona shot round and peered into
Tresler’s face. “An’ you’ll
do that sure?”
“Certainly. I’m not going to sleep
in a filthy bunk.”
“Say, you’re the most cur’usest
‘tenderfoot’ I’ve seen. Shake!”
And again the two men gripped hands.
That first evening around the bunkhouse
Tresler learned a lot about his new home, and, incidentally,
the most artistic manner of cursing the flies.
He had supper with the boys, and his food was hash
and tea and dry bread. It was hard but wholesome,
and there was plenty of it. His new comrades
exercised their yarning propensities for him, around
him, at him. He listened to their chaff, boisterous,
uncultured; their savage throes of passion and easy
comradeships. They seemed to have never a care
in the world but the annoyances of the moment.
Even their hatred for the foreman and their employer
seemed to lift from them, and vanish with the sound
of the curses which they heaped upon them. It
was a new life, a new world to him; and a life that
appealed to him.
As the sun sank and the twilight waned,
the men gradually slipped away to turn in. Arizona
was the last to go. Tresler had been shown Massy’s
bunk, and friendly hands had spread blankets upon it
for him. He was standing at the foot of it in
the long aisle between the double row of trestle beds.
Arizona had just pointed out the dead man’s disused
couch, all covered with gunny sacks.
“That’s Dave’s,”
he said. “I kind o’ think you’ll
sleep easier right here. Say, Tresler,”
he went on, with a serious light in his eyes, “I’d
jest like to say one thing to you, bein’ an old
hand round these parts myself, an’ that’s
this. When you git kind o’ worried, use
your gun. Et’s easy an’ quick.
Guess you’ve plenty o’ time an’ to
spare after fer sizin’ things up.
Ther’ ain’t a man big ’nough in this
world to lift a finger ef you sez ‘no’
and has got your gun pointin’ right. S’long.”
But Tresler detained him. “Just
one moment, Arizona,” he said, imitating the
other’s impressive manner. “I’d
just like to say one thing to you, being a new hand
around these parts myself, and that’s this.
You being about my size, I wonder if you could sell
me a pair of pants, such as you fellows ordinarily
wear?”
The cowpuncher smiled a pallid, shadowy
smile, and went over to his kit-bag. He returned
a moment later with a pair of new moleskin trousers
and threw them on the bunk.
“You ken have them, I guess.
Kind o’ remembrancer fer talkin’ straight
to Jake. Say, that did me a power o’ good.”
“Thanks, but I’ll pay ”
“Not on your life, mister.”
“Then I’ll remember your advice.”
“Good. S’long.”