When Scipio turned his back upon the
valley it was with the intention of resting his old
mule at the place of the friendly farmer whom he had
encountered on his first memorable visit to James’
secret abode. From thence, after a night’s
rest, he would start late next day, and make the creek
soon after sundown. For the sake of Jessie he
had no desire to make a daylight entry into the camp.
The old mule certainly needed rest.
And, besides, it was pleasant to prolong the journey.
Moments such as the present were scarce enough in
life. And though Jessie was with him for all time
now, he greedily hugged to himself these hours alone
with her, when there was nothing but the fair blue
sky and waving grass, the hills and valleys, to witness
his happiness, none of the harshness of life to obtrude
upon his perfect joy; nothing, not even the merest
duties of daily life, to mar the delicious companionship
which his wife’s long-desired presence afforded
him. The whole journey was to be a sort of honeymoon,
a thousand times sweeter for the misery and unhappiness
through which they had both passed.
He thought of nothing else. The
very existence of James and his gang had passed from
his recollection. He had no mind for dangers of
any sort. He had no mind for anything or anybody
but his Jessie, his beautiful Jessie his
wife.
Had he had the least curiosity or
interest in other matters, there were many things,
strange things, about the recovery of his wife which
might have set him wondering. For instance, he
might have speculated as to the desertion of the ranch the
absence of dogs, the absence of all those signs which
tell of a busy enterprise things which could
not be adequately accounted for by the mere absence
of the head of it, even though he were accompanied
by his fighting men. He might have glanced about
among the barns and corrals, or he might
even have questioned his Jessie.
Had he done either of these things
a certain amount of enlightenment would undoubtedly
have penetrated to his unsuspicious mind. He must
inevitably have detected the hand or hands of his earthly
guardian angels in the manner in which his path had
been cleared of all obstructions.
Had he been less occupied with his
own happiness, with the joy of having Jessie once
more beside him, and chanced to look back into the
valley as he left it forever, he would certainly have
received enlightenment. But he never knew what
had been done for him, he never knew the subtle working
for his welfare.
Thus it was, all unobserved by him,
the moment he was at sufficient distance from the
ranch, three horsemen suddenly appeared from amidst
the most adjacent point of the forest on the far side
of the valley and galloped across to the house.
They ran their horses to cover amongst the buildings
and dismounted, immediately vanishing into one of
the barns.
And as they disappeared a good deal
of laughter, a good deal of forceful talk, came from
the place which had swallowed them up. Then,
after awhile, the three reappeared in the open, and
with them came an old choreman, whose joints ached,
and whose villainous temper had seriously suffered
under the harsh bonds which had held him secure from
interference with Scipio for so long.
The men herded him out before them,
quite heedless of his bitter vituperation and blasphemy.
And when they had driven him forth Sunny Oak pointed
out to him the retreating buckboard as it vanished
over the far hillside.
“Ther’ they go, you miser’ble
old son of a moose,” he cried with a laugh.
“Ther’ they go. An’ I guess
when James gits around ag’in you’ll likely
pay a mighty fine reck’nin’. An’
I’ll sure say I won’t be a heap sorry
neither. You’ve give me a power o’
trouble comin’ along out here. I ain’t
had no sort o’ rest fer hours an’
hours, an’ I hate folks that sets me busy.”
“You’re a pizenous varmint,
sure,” added Sandy, feeling that Sunny must
not be allowed all the talk. “An’
your langwidge is that bad I’ll need to git
around a Bible-class ag’in to disinfect my ears.”
“You sure will,” agreed
Toby, with one of his fatuous grins. “I
never see any feller who needed disinfectin’
more.” Then he turned upon the evil-faced
choreman and added his morsel of admonition. “Say,
old man, as you hope to git buried yourself when James
gits around ag’in, I guess you best go an’
dig that miser’ble cur o’ yours under,
’fore he gits pollutin’ the air o’
this yer valley, same as you are at the moment.
He’s cost me a goodish scrap, but I don’t
grudge it him noways. Scrappin’s an elegant
pastime, sure when you come out right end
of it.”
After that, cowed but furious, the
old man was allowed to depart, and the three guardians
of Scipio’s person deliberately returned to their
charge. Their instructions were quite clear, even
though they only partially understood the conditions
making their work necessary. Scipio must be safeguarded.
They were to form an invisible escort, clearing his
road for him and making his journey safe. So they
swung into the saddle and rode hot-foot on the trail
of their unconscious charge.
For the most part they rode silently.
Already the journey had been long and tiresomely uneventful,
and Sunny Oak particularly reveled in an impotent
peevishness which held him intensely sulky. The
widower, too, was feeling anything but amiable.
What with his recent futile work on a claim which
was the ridicule of the camp, and now the discomfort
of a dreary journey, his feelings towards Wild Bill
were none too cordial. Perhaps Toby was the most
cheerful of the three. The matters of the Trust
had been a pleasant break in the daily routine of
dispossessing himself of remittances from his friends
in the East. And the unusual effort made him
feel good.
They had reached the crown of the
hill bordering the valley, where the trail debouched
upon the prairie beyond, and the effort of easing his
horse, as the struggling beast clawed its way up the
shelving slope, at last set loose the tide of the
loafer’s ill-temper. He suddenly turned
upon his companions, his angry face dirty and sweating.
“Say,” he cried, “of
all the blamed fules I’d say we three was the
craziest ever pupped.”
Sandy turned inquiring, contemptuous
eyes in his direction. He always adopted a defensive
attitude when Sunny opened out. Toby only grinned
and waited for what was to come.
“Meanin’?” inquired Sandy in his
coldest manner.
“Meanin’? Gee! it
don’t need a mule’s intellec’ to
get my meanin’,” said the loafer witheringly.
“Wot, in the name o’ glory, would I mean
but this doggone ride we’re takin’?
Say, here’s us three muttons chasin’ glory
on the tail o’ two soppy lambs that ain’t
got savvee enough between ’em to guess the north
end of a hoss when he’s goin’ south.
An’, wot’s more, we’re doin’
it like a lot o’ cluckin’ hens chasin’
a brood o’ fule chicks. I tell you it jest
makes me sick. An’ ef I don’t git
six weeks’ rest straight on end after this is
thro’ I’ll be gettin’ plumb ‘bug,’
or or the colic, or suthin’ ornery
bum. I’ve done. Sufferin’ Creek
ain’t no place fer a peace-lovin’
feller like me, whose doin’ all he knows to
git thro’ life easy an’ without breakin’
up a natterally delicate constitootion. I’m
done. I quit.”
Sandy’s face was a study in
sneers. Not because he did not agree with the
sentiments, but Sunny always irritated him. But
Toby only grinned the harder, and for once, while
the widower was preparing an adequate retort, contrived
to forestall him.
“Seems to me, Sunny, you ain’t
got a heap o’ kick comin’ to you,”
he said in his slow way. “I allow you come
in this racket because you notioned it. Mebbe
you’ll say why you did it, else?”
This unexpected challenge from Toby
had the effect of diverting the widower’s thoughts.
He left the consideration of the snub he had been
preparing for the loafer for some future time, and
waited for the other’s reply. But Sunny
was roused, and stared angrily round upon the grinning
face of his questioner.
“Guess that ain’t no affair
of yours, anyway,” he snorted. “I
don’t stand fer questions from
no remittance guy. Gee! things is gittin’
pretty low-down when it comes to that.”
“Maybe a remittance man ain’t
a first-class callin’,” said Toby, his
grin replaced by a hot flush. “But if it
comes to that I’d say a lazy loafin’ bum
ain’t a heap o’ credit noways neither.
Howsum, them things don’t alter matters any.
An’ I, fer one, is sick o’ your grouse ’cos
that’s all it is. Say, you’re settin’
ther’ on top o’ that hoss like a badly
sculptured image that needs a week’s bathin’,
an’ talkin’ like the no-account fule most
fellers guess you to be. Wal, show us you ain’t
none o’ them things, show us you got some sort
of a man inside your hide, an’ tell us straight
why you’re out on this doggone trail when you’re
yearnin’ fer your blankets.”
The attack was so unexpected that
for once Sunny had no reply ready. And Sandy
positively beamed upon the challenger. And so
they rode on for a few moments. Then Toby broke
the silence impatiently.
“Wal?” he inquired, his
face wreathed in a grin that had none of the amiability
usual to it.
Sunny turned; and it was evident all
his good-nature was restored. He had suddenly
realized that to be baited by the fatuous Toby was
almost refreshing, and he spoke without any sort of
animosity. It would certainly have been different
had the challenge come from the hectoring widower.
“Why for do I do it an’
hate it? Say, that’s jest one o’ them
things a feller can’t tell. Y’see,
a feller grouses thro’ life, a-worritin’
hisself ‘cos things don’t seem right by
his way o’ thinkin’. That’s
natteral. He guesses he wants to do things one
way, then sudden-like, fer no reason he ken see,
he gits doin’ ’em another. That’s
natteral, too. Y’see, ther’s two
things, it seems to me, makes a feller act. One’s
his fool head, an’ the other well,
I don’t rightly know what the other is, ‘cep’
it’s his stummick. Anyways, that’s
how it is. My head makes me want to go one way,
an’ my feet gits me goin’ another.
So it is with this lay-out. An’ I guess,
ef you was sure to git to rock-bottom o’ things,
I’d say we’re all doin’ this thing
’cos Wild Bill said so.”
He finished up with a chuckle that
thoroughly upset the equilibrium of the widower, and
set him jumping at the chance of retort.
“Guess you’re scairt to death o’
Wild Bill,” he sneered.
“Wal,” drawled Sunny easily,
“I guess he’s a feller wuth bein’
scairt of which is more than you are.”
Sandy snorted defiantly. But
a further wordy war was averted by the remittance
man.
“Ther’s more of a man
to you than I allowed, Sunny,” he said sincerely.
“There sure is. Bill’s a man, whatever
else he is. He’s sure the best man I’ve
seen on Sufferin’ Creek. But you’re
wrong ’bout him bein’ the reason of us
worritin’ ourselves sick on this yer trail.
It ain’t your head which needs re-decoratin’,
neither. Nor it ain’t your stummick, which,
I allow, ain’t the most wholesome part of you.
Neither it ain’t your splay feet. You missed
it, Sunny, an’ I allus tho’t you
was a right smart guy. The reason you’re
on this doggone trail chasin’ glory wot don’t
never git around, is worryin’ along in a buckboard
ahead of us, behind olé Minky’s mule, an’
he’s hoofin’ to home at an express slug’s
gait. That’s the reason you’re on
the trail, an’ nothin’ else. You’re
jest a lazy, loafin’, dirty bum as ’ud
make mud out of a fifty-gallon bath o’ boilin’
soapsuds if you was set in it, but you was mighty
sore seein’ pore Zip kicked to death by his
rotten luck. An’ feelin’ that always
you kind o’ fergot to be tired. That’s
why you’re on this doggone trail. ’Cos
your fool heart ain’t as dirty as your carkis.”
And as he fired his last word Toby
dashed his spurs into the flanks of his jaded horse,
and galloped out of reach of the tide of vituperation
he knew full well to be flowing in his wake.