Wild Bill had many things to think
of on his way back to Suffering Creek. He was
a tremendously alert-minded man at all times, so alert-minded
that at no time was he given to vain imaginings, and
to be alone for long together chafed and irritated
him to a degree. His life was something more
than practicality; it was vigor in an extreme sense.
He must be doing; he must be going ahead. And
it mattered very little to him whether he was using
vigor of mind or body. Just now he was using
the former to a purpose. Possibilities and scheming
flashed through his head in such swift succession
as to be enough to dazzle a man of lesser mental caliber.
The expressed object of his visit
to Spawn City was only one of several purposes he
had in hand. And though he turned up at the principal
hotel at the psychological moment when he could drop
into the big game of poker he had promised himself,
and though at that game he helped himself, with all
the calm amiability in the world, to several thousand
dollars of the “rich guys’” money,
the rest of his visit to the silver city was spent
in moving about amongst the lower haunts where congregated
the human jackals which hunt on the outskirts of such
places.
And in these places he met many friends
and acquaintances with whom he fraternized for the
time being. And his sojourn cost him a good many
dollars, dollars which he shed unstintingly, even without
counting. Nor was he the man to part with his
money in this casual manner without obtaining adequate
return, and yet all he had to show as a result of
his expedition was a word of information here and there,
a suggestion or two which would scarcely have revealed
to the outsider the interest which they held for him.
Yet he seemed satisfied. He seemed very well
satisfied indeed, and his reckless spirit warmed as
he progressed in his peregrinations.
Then, too, he “dined”
the sheriff of the county at the only restaurant worth
while. He spent more than two hours in this man’s
company, and his wine bill was in due proportion to
the hardy official’s almost unlimited capacity
for liquid refreshment. Yet even to the most
interested his purpose would have needed much explanation.
He asked so few questions. He seemed to lead
the conversation in no particular direction.
He simply allowed talk to drift whither it would.
And somehow it always seemed to drift whither he most
desired it.
Yes, his movements were quite curious
during his visit, and yet they were commonplace enough
to suggest nothing of the depth of subtlety which
really actuated them. There was even an absurd
moment which found him in a candy-store purchasing
several pounds of the most sickly candy he could buy
in so rough a place as the new silver town.
However, the time came for him at
last to get out on the road again for home. And,
having prepared his team for the journey, he hitched
them up to his spring-cart himself, paid his bill,
and, with a flourish of his whip, and a swagger which
only a team of six such magnificent horses as he possessed
could give him, left the hotel at a gallop, the steely
muscles of his arms controlling his fiery children
as easily as the harsh voice of a northern half-breed
controls a racing dog-train.
And on the journey home his thoughts
were never idle for a moment. So busy were they
that the delicious calm of the night, the wonders of
the following dawn, the glory of a magnificent sunrise
over a green world of mountain, valley and plain,
were quite lost to his unpoetic soul. The only
things which seemed able to distract his concentrated
thoughts were the fiercely buzzing mosquitoes, and
these he cursed with whole-hearted enthusiasm which
embraced a perfect vocabulary of lurid blasphemy.
Twice on the journey he halted and
unhitched his horses for feed and drink and a roll.
But the delays were short, and his vigorous methods
gave them but short respite. He cared for his
equine friends with all his might, and he drove them
in a similar manner. This was the man. A
life on a bed of roses would not have been too good
for his horses, but if he so needed it they would
have to repay him by driving over a red-hot trail.
Now the home stretch lay before him,
some twenty miles through a wonderful broken country,
all spruce and pine forests, crag and valley, threaded
by a white hard trail which wound its way amidst Nature’s
chaos in a manner similar to that in which a mountain
stream cuts its course, percolating along the path
of the least resistance.
Through this splendid country the
untiring team traveled, hauling their feather-weight
burden as though there was nothing more joyous in
life. In spite of the length of the journey the
gambler had to keep a tight pressure on the reins,
or the willing beasts would, at any moment, have broken
into a headlong gallop. Their barn lay ahead of
them, and their master sat behind them. What more
could they want?
Up a sharp incline, and the race down
the corresponding decline. The wide stretch of
valley bottom, and again a steep ascent. There
was no slackening of gait, scarcely a hard breath.
Only the gush of eager nostrils in the bright morning
air of the mountains. Now along a forest-bounded
stretch of level trail, winding, and full of protruding
tree-stumps and roots. There was no stumbling.
The surefooted thoroughbreds cleared each obstruction
with mechanical precision, and only the spring-cart
bore the burden of impact.
On, up out of the darkened valley
to a higher level above, where the high hills sloped
away upwards, admitting the dazzling daylight so that
the whole scene was lit to a perfect radiance, and
the nip of mountain air filled the lungs with an invigorating
tonic.
At last the traveler dropped down
into the wide valley, in the midst of which he first
came into touch with the higher reaches of Suffering
Creek. Here it flowed a sluggish, turgid stream,
so sullen, so heavy. It was narrow, and at points
curiously black in tone. There was none of the
freshness, the rushing, tumultuous flow of a mountain
torrent about it here. Its banks were marshy
with a wide spread of oozy soil, and miry reeds grew
in abundance. The trail cut well away from the
bed of the creek, mounting the higher land where the
soil, in curious contrast, was sandy, and the surface
deep in a silvery dust. To an observer the curiosity
of the contrast must have been striking, but Wild
Bill was not in an observant mood. He was busy
with his horses and his thoughts.
He was traveling now in a cloud of
dust. And it was this, no doubt, which accounted
for the fact that he did not see a buckboard drawn
by an aged mule until he heard a shout, and his horses
swung off the trail of their own accord. Quick
as lightning he drew them up with a violent curse.
“What in hell !”
he roared. But he broke off suddenly as the dust
began to clear, and he saw the yellow-headed figure
of Scipio seated in the buckboard, with Vada beside
him, just abreast of him.
“Mackinaw!” he cried. “What
you doin’ out here?”
So startled was the gambler at the
unexpected vision that he made no attempt to even
guess at Scipio’s purpose. He put his question
without another thought behind it.
Scipio, whose mule had jumped at the
opportunity of discontinuing its laborious effort,
and was already reaching out at the grass lining the
trail, passed a hand across his brow before answering.
It was as though he were trying to fix in his mind
the reason of his own presence there.
“Why,” he said hesitatingly,
“why, I’m out after a a prospect
I heard of. Want to get a peek at it.”
The latter was said with more assurance,
and he smiled vaguely into his friend’s face.
But Bill had gathered his scattered
wits, and had had time to think. He nodded at
little Vada, who was interestedly staring at the satin
coats of his horses.
“An’ you takin’
her out to help you locate it?” he inquired,
with a raising of his shaggy brows.
“Not just that,” Scipio
responded uncomfortably. He found it curiously
difficult to lie with Bill’s steady eyes fixed
on him. “Y’see Say, am
I near ten miles out from the camp?”
“Not by three miles.”
Bill was watching him intently. He saw the pale
eyes turn away and glance half fearfully along the
trail. Then they suddenly came back, and Scipio
gazed at the child beside him. He sighed and
lifted his reins.
“Guess I’ll get on then,”
he said in the dogged tone of a man who has made up
his mind to an unpleasant task.
But Bill had no intention of letting
him go yet. He sat back in his seat, his hand
holding his reins loosely in his lap.
“That wher’ your prospect is?” he
inquired casually.
Scipio nodded. He could not bring
himself to frame any further aggravation of the lie.
“Wher’ did you hear of
the prospect?” Bill demanded shrewdly.
“I ”
But little Vada broke in. Her
interest had been diverted by the word prospect.
“Wot’s ’prospect’?”
she demanded.
Bill laughed without any change of expression.
“Prospect is wher’ you
expect to find gold,” he explained carefully.
The child’s eyes widened, and
she was about to speak. Then she hesitated, but
finally she proceeded.
“That ain’t wot we’re
goin’ for,” she said simply. “Poppa’s
goin’ to take me wher’ momma is.
I’m goin’ to momma, an’ she’s
ever so far away. Pop told me. Jamie’s
goin’ to stay with him, an’ I’m goin’
to stay with momma, an’ an’ I
want Jamie to come too.” Tears suddenly
crowded her eyes, and slowly rolled down her sunburned
cheeks.
Just for a moment neither man spoke.
Bill’s fierce eyes were curiously alight, and
they were sternly fixed on the averted face of the
father. At last Scipio turned towards him; and
with his first words he showed his relief that further
lying was out of the question.
“I forgot somehow she
knew. Y’see ”
But Bill, who had just bitten off
a fresh chew of tobacco, gave him no chance to continue.
“Say,” he interrupted
him, “ther’s lies I hate, an’ ther’s
lies that don’t make no odds. You’ve
lied in a way I hate. You’ve lied ’cos
you had to lie, knowin’ you was doin’
wrong. If you hadn’t know’d you was
doin’ wrong you wouldn’t have needed to
lie sure. Say, you’re not only
handin’ over that kiddie to her mother, you’re
handin’ her over to that feller. Now, get
to it an’ tell me things. An’ you
needn’t to lie any.”
Scipio hung his head. These words
coming from Wild Bill suddenly put an entirely different
aspect upon his action. He saw something of the
horror he was committing as Bill saw it. He was
seeing through another man’s eyes now, where
before he had only seen through his own simple heart,
torn by the emotions his Jessie’s letter had
inspired.
He fumbled in his pocket and drew
out his wife’s letter. He looked at it,
holding it a moment, his whole heart in his eyes.
Then he reached out and passed it to the gambler.
“She’s got to have her,”
he said, with a touch of his native obstinacy and
conviction. “She’s her mother.
I haven’t a right to keep her. I ”
But Bill silenced him without ceremony.
“Don’t yap,” he
cried. “How ken I read this yer muck with
you throwin’ hot air?”
Scipio desisted, and sat staring vacantly
at the long ears of Minky’s mule. He was
gazing on a mental picture of Jessie as he considered
she must have looked when writing that letter.
He saw her distress in her beautiful eyes. There
were probably tears in her eyes, too, and the thought
hurt him and made him shrink from it. He felt
that her poor heart must have been breaking when she
had written. Perhaps James had been cruel to
her. Yes, he was sure to have been cruel to her.
Such a blackguard as he was sure to be cruel to women-folk.
No doubt she was longing to escape from him.
She was sure to be. She would never have willingly
gone away
“Tosh!” cried Bill.
And Scipio found the letter thrust out for him to
take back.
“Eh?”
“I said ‘tosh!’” replied the
gambler. “How’d you get that letter?”
“It was flung in through the window. It
was tied to a stone.”
“Yes?”
“There was a wrappin’
to it.” Then Scipio’s eyes began to
sparkle at the recollection. “It was wrote
on by the feller James,” he went on in a low
voice.
Then suddenly he turned, and his whole
manner partook of an impotent heat.
“He’d wrote I was to hand
her, Vada, over to him ten miles out on this trail or
there’d be trouble.”
Wild Bill stirred and shifted his
seat with a fierce dash of irritation. His face
was stern and his black eyes blazing. He spat
out his chew of tobacco.
“An’ you was scared to
death, like some silly skippin’ sheep. You
hadn’t bowel enough to tell him to go to hell.
You felt like handin’ him any other old thing
you’d got ’Here, go on, help
yourself.’” He flung out his arms to illustrate
his meaning. “’You got my wife; here’s
my kiddies. If you need anything else, you can
sure get my claim. Guess my shack’ll make
you an elegant summer palace.’ Gee!”
The gambler’s scorn was withering,
and with each burst of it he flourished his arms as
though handing out possessions to an imaginary James.
And every word he spoke smote Scipio, goading him and
lashing up the hatred which burnt deep down in his
heart for the man who had ruined his life.
But the little man’s thought
of Jessie was not so easily set aside, and he jumped
to defend himself.
“You don’t understand ”
he began. But the other cut him short with a
storm of scathing anger.
“No, I sure don’t understand,”
he cried, “I don’t. I sure don’t.
Guess I’m on’y jest a man. I ain’t
no sort o’ bum angel, nor sanctimonious sky-bustin’
hymn-smiter. I’m on’y a man.
An’ I kind o’ thank them as is responsible
that I ain’t nuthin’ else. Say” his
piercing eyes seemed to bore their way right down
to the little man’s heart like red-hot needles “I
ain’t got a word to say to you but you orter
be herdin’ wi’ a crowd o’ mangy
gophers. Tchah! A crowd o’ maggots
’ud cut you off’n their visitin’
list in a diseased carkis. Here’s a feller
robs you in the meanest way a man ken be robbed, an’
you’re yearnin’ to hand him more a
low-down cur of a stage-robber, a cattle-thief, the
lowest down bum ever created an’ you’d
hand over this pore innercent little kiddie to him.
Was there ever sech a white-livered sucker? Say,
you’re responsible fer that pore little
gal’s life, you’re responsible fer
her innercent soul, an’ you’d hand her
over to James, like the worstest cur in creation.
Say, I ain’t got words to tell you what you
are. You’re a white-livered bum that even
hell won’t give room to. You’re ”
“Here, hold on,” cried
Scipio, turning, with his pale eyes mildly blazing.
“You’re wrong, all wrong. I ain’t
doing it because I’m scared of James. I
don’t care nothing for his threats. I’m
scared of no man not even you. See?
My Jessie’s callin’ for her gal my
Jessie! Do you know what that means to me?
No, of course you don’t. You don’t
know my Jessie. You ain’t never loved a
wife like my Jessie. You ain’t never felt
what a kiddie is to its mother. You can’t
see as I can see. This little gal,” he
went on, tenderly laying an arm about Vada’s
small shoulders, “will, maybe, save my pore Jessie.
That pore gal has hit the wrong trail, an’ an’
I’d sacrifice everything in the world to save
her. I’d I’d sell my own
soul. I’d give it to save her.”
Scipio looked fearlessly into the
gambler’s eyes. His pale cheeks were lit
by a hectic flush of intense feeling. There was
a light in his eyes of such honesty and devotion that
the other lowered his. He could not look upon
it unmoved.
Bill sat back, for once in his life
disconcerted. All his righteous indignation was
gone out of him. He was confronted with a spectacle
such as, in his checkered career, he had never before
been brought into contact with. It was the meeting
of two strangely dissimilar, yet perfectly human,
forces. Each was fighting for what he knew to
be right. Each was speaking from the bottom of
a heart inspired by his sense of human right and loyalty.
While the gambler, without subtlety of emotion, saw
only with a sense of human justice, with a hatred of
the man who had so wronged this one, with a desire
to thwart him at every turn, the other possessed a
breadth of feeling sufficient to put out of his thoughts
all recollection of his personal wrong, if only he
could help the woman he loved.
It was a meeting of forces widely
different, yet each in its way thrilling with a wonderful
honesty of purpose. And, curiously enough, the
purpose of Scipio, who lacked so much of the other’s
intellect and force, became, in a measure, the dominating
factor. It took hold of the gambler, and stirred
him as he had never been stirred before.
Suddenly Wild Bill leaned forward.
Once more those swift, relentless eyes focused and
compelled the others.
“Zip,” he said in a tone
that was strangely thrilling, “maybe I didn’t
get all you felt all you got in that tow-head
of yours. That bein’ so, guess I owe you
amends. But I’m goin’ to ast
you to sure fergit that gal’s letter fer
awhiles. I’m goin’ to ast you
to turn that bussock-headed mule you’re drivin’
right around, and hit back for the Creek. You
do this, Zip, an’ I’ll tell you what I’m
goin’ to do. I ain’t no sentimental
slob. I ain’t got the makin’s in me
of even a store-mussed angel. See? But if
you do this I swar to you right here I’m goin’
to see your Jessie right. I swar to you I’ll
rid her of this ‘Lord’ James, an’
it’ll jest be up to you to do the rest.
Git me?”
Scipio took a breath that was something like a gasp.
“You’ll you’ll
help me get her back?” he breathed, with a glow
of hope which almost shocked his companion.
“I’m not promisin’
that,” said Bill quickly. “That’s
sure up to you. But I give it you right here,
I’ll shift this doggone skunk out
of your way.”
Scipio made no verbal reply.
Just for a moment he looked into the gimlet eyes of
the other. He saw the iron purpose there.
He saw the stern, unyielding compression of the lean,
muscular jaws. There was something tremendous
in the suggestion of power lying behind this ruffian’s
exterior. He turned away and gathered up the old
mule’s reins.
“You’ve allus been friendly to me,
Bill, so ”
He pulled off the trail and turned
the mule’s head in the direction of home.
And the rest of the gambler’s journey was done
in the wake of Minky’s buckboard.