SETH PLAYS A STRONG HAND
It would seem that the Agent’s
prompt action in summoning the aid of the troops had
averted disaster. No trouble followed immediately
on Seth’s drastic treatment of Little Black
Fox, and the majority of the settlers put this result
down to the fact of the overawing effect of the cavalry.
One or two held different opinions, and amongst these
were the men of White River Farm. They were inclined
to the belief that the wounding of the chief was the
sole reason that the people remained quiet. Anyway,
not a shot was fired, much to the satisfaction of
the entire white population, and, after two weeks
had passed, by slow degrees, a large proportion of
the troops were withdrawn.
Then followed a government inquiry,
at which Seth was the principal witness. It was
a mere formality by which the affair was relegated
to the history of the State. The government knew
better than to punish the chief. After all, Little
Black Fox was a king of his race, and, however much
it might desire to be rid of the turbulent Sioux,
it would be a dangerous thing to act with a high hand.
But the matter served as an excuse
for one of those mistakes which so often have a far-reaching
effect. There was an old fort close by the Pine
Ridge Reservation, one of those ancient structures
erected by old-time traders. It had long been
untenanted, and had fallen into decay. The authorities
decided to make it habitable, and turn it into a small
military post, garrisoning it with a detachment of
about one hundred cavalry.
It was a mistake. And every white
man of experience in the district knew that it was
so. Even the Agents of the two Reservations sounded
a warning note. It is fatal to attempt to bluff
the Indian. Bluff and back the bluff. But
a handful of cavalry is no backing to any bluff.
The older settlers shook their heads; the more timorous
dared to hope; even old Roiheim, who would make profit
by the adjacency of soldiers, would willingly have
foregone the extra trade. Rube and Seth offered
no comment outside their own house; but their opinion
was worth considering.
“It won’t hurt a heap
this side of Christmas,” Rube said, on learning
the decision.
And Seth pointed his remark.
“No, not now, I guess. Mebbe spring ’ll
see things.”
These two had struck at the heart
of the thing. It was late summer, and history
has long since proved that Indians never go out on
the war-path with winter coming on. Besides,
Little Black Fox was not likely to be well of his
wound for months.
So the farmers went about their work
again. Rube and Seth took in their crops, and
devoted spare time to building operations. And
the district of White River continued its unobtrusive
prosperity.
The loss of Rosebud was no small matter
to Ma Sampson’s little household. But these
folk were far too well inured to the hard life of the
plains to voice their troubles. They sometimes
spoke of her over their meals, but for the most part
bore her silently in their thoughts. And the place
she occupied with them was surely one that anybody
might envy.
For Seth all the brightness of the
last six years had gone out of his life, and he fell
back on the almost stern devotion, which had always
been his, toward the old people who had raised him.
That, and the looking forward to the girl’s
letters from England practically made up his life.
He never permitted himself the faintest hope that he
would see her again. He had no thought of marriage
with her. If nothing else prevented, her fortune
was an impassable barrier. Besides he knew that
she would be restored to that life “high-life,”
was his word to which she properly belonged.
He never thought or hinted to himself that she would
forget them, for he had no bitterness, and was much
too loyal to think of her otherwise than as the most
true-hearted girl. He simply believed he understood
social distinctions thoroughly.
But if he were slow in matters of
love, it was his only sloth. In action he was
swift and thorough, and his perception in all matters
pertaining to the plainsman’s life was phenomenal.
It was this disposition for swift
action which sent him one day, after the troops had
withdrawn to their new post, and the plains had returned
to their usual pastoral aspect, in search of Nevil
Steyne. And it was significant that he knew just
when and where to find his man.
He rode into a clearing in the woods
down by the river. The spot was about a mile
below the wagon bridge, where the pines grew black
and ragged a touch of the primordial in
the midst of a younger growth. It was noon; a
time when the plainsman knew he would find the wood-cutter
at leisure, taking his midday meal, or lazing over
a pipe. Nor were his calculations far out.
Nevil was stretched full length beside
the smouldering embers on which his coffee billytin
was steaming out fragrant odors that blended pleasantly
with the resinous fragrance of these ancient woods.
He looked up at the sound of horse’s
hoofs, and there could be no doubt about the unfriendliness
of his expression when he recognized his visitor.
He dropped back again into his lounging attitude at
once, and his action was itself one of studied discourtesy.
Seth did not appear to notice anything.
He surveyed the clearing with a certain appreciation.
The vast timbers he beheld seemed of much more consequence
to him than the man who lived by their destruction.
However, he rode straight over to the fire and dismounted.
“Howdy?” he said, while
he loosened the cinches of his saddle.
“What’s brought you around?”
asked Nevil, ungraciously enough.
Seth turned toward the trees about him.
“Pretty tidy patch,” he
observed. “We’re wantin’ big
timbers up at the farm. Mebbe you’d notion
a contrac’?”
Nevil had noted the loosening of the
cinches. He laughed shortly.
“I’m not taking contracts,
thanks. But I’ll sell you wood which I cut
at my pleasure.”
“Cord-wood?” Seth shook
his head. “Guess we want timbers. Kind
o’ buildin’ a corral around the farm.”
“Making a fort of it?”
Nevil’s blue eyes followed the
upward curling wreath of smoke which dawdled on the
still air above the fire.
“Yup.”
“Fancy the Injuns are on the racket?”
“Wal, ‘tain’t what
they’re doin’ now. But ther’
ain’t no tellin’, an’ we’re
slack since the harvest. I ’lows the notion’s
tol’ble. Mebbe they’ll be quiet some now
Rosebud’s gone.”
There was a quiet emphasis on Seth’s final speculation.
“I heard she’d gone away for a bit.”
Nevil looked searchingly at this man whom he hated
above all men.
“Gone for good,” Seth said, with an admirable
air of indifference.
“How?”
Nevil suddenly sat up. Seth noted
the fact without even glancing in his direction.
“Wal, y’ see she’s
got folks in England. And ther’ is a heap
o’ dollars; an almighty heap. I reckon
she’d be a millionairess in this country.
Guess it takes a mighty heap o’ bills to reckon
a million in your country.”
This expansiveness was so unusual
in the man of the plains that Nevil understood at
once he had come purposely to speak of Rosebud.
He wondered why. This was the first he had heard
of Rosebud’s good fortune, and he wished to
know more. The matter had been kept from everybody.
Even Wanaha had been kept in ignorance of it.
Seth seated himself on a fallen tree-trunk,
and now looked squarely into the wood-cutter’s
thin, mean face.
“Y’ see it’s kind
o’ curious. I got that gal from the Injuns
more’n six years back, as you’ll likely
remember. Her folks, her father an’ her
ma, was killed south o’ the Reservations.
Guess they were kind o’ big folk in your country.
An’ ther’ was a feller come along awhiles
back all the way from England to find her. He
was a swell law feller; he’d hit her trail,
an’ when he comes along he said as she owned
’states in your country, a whole heap.
Guess she’s to be treated like a queen.
Dollars? Gee! She ken buy most everything.
I ’lows they ken do it slick in your country.”
Seth paused to light his pipe.
His manner was exquisitely simple. The narration
of the story of the girl’s good fortune appeared
to give him the keenest pleasure. Nevil removed
his pipe from his lips and sat chewing the end of
his ragged moustache. There was an ugly look in
his eyes as he contemplated the ashes of his fire.
He might have been staring at the ashes of his own
fortunes. However, he contrived a faint smile
when he spoke.
“Then I s’pose you’ve found out
her real name?”
“Sure. Marjorie Raynor. Her father
was Colonel Landor Raynor.”
“Ah.”
“An’ ther’ ain’t
no question o’ the dollars. She hain’t
no near folk ‘cep’ an uncle, Stephen Raynor,
an’ he don’t figger anyways, ’cause
the dollars are left to her by will. He only
comes in, the lawyer feller says, if the gal was to
die, or or get killed.”
Seth had become quite reflective;
he seemed to find a curious pleasure in thus discussing
the girl he loved with a man he at no time had any
use for.
Nevil stared uneasily. A quick,
furtive glance at Seth, who at that moment seemed
to be watching his horse, gave an inkling of his passing
thought. If a look could kill Seth would certainly
have been a dead man.
“So the whole thing’s a dead cinch for
her?”
“Yup. Now.”
Nevil gave a short laugh.
“You mean that matter
with Little Black Fox. But she brought it on
herself. She encouraged him.”
Seth was round on him in a twinkling.
“Maybe he was encouraged but not
by her.”
“Who then?”
There was unmistakable derision in
the wood-cutter’s tone. Seth shrugged.
A shadowy smile played round his lips, but his eyes
were quite serious.
“That’s it,” he
said, relapsing into his reflective manner, “the
whole thing’s mighty curious. Them law
fellers in your country are smartish. They’ve
located a deal. Don’t jest know how.
They figger that uncle feller is around either this
State or Minnesota likely this one, seein’
the Colonel was comin’ this aways when he got
killed. We got yarnin’, an’ he was
sayin’ he thought o’ huntin’ out
this uncle. I guessed ther’ wa’an’t
much need, an’ it might set him wantin’
the dollars. The law feller said he wouldn’t
get ’em anyhow ’cep’ the
gal was dead. We kind o’ left it at that.
Y’ see the whole thing for the uncle hung around
that gal bein’ dead.”
“And you think he might have
had something ” Nevil’s
words came slowly, like a man who realizes the danger
of saying too much.
“Wal, it don’t seem possible,
I guess. Them two was killed by the Injuns, sure.
An’ she I guess she ain’t never
seen him.”
A slight sigh escaped Nevil.
“That’s so,” he said deliberately.
“Howsum, I guess I’m goin’
to look around for this feller. Y’ see
Rosebud’s li’ble to like him. Mebbe
he ain’t well heeled for dollars, an’
she’s that tender-hearted she might I’ve
got his pictur’. Mebbe I’ll show
it around eh, what’s up?” Seth
inquired in his blandest tone.
Nevil suddenly sat up and there was
a desperate look in his eyes. But he controlled
himself, and, with an effort, spoke indifferently.
“Nothing. I want another pipe.”
“Ah.” Seth fumbled
through his pockets, talking the while. “The
pictur’ was took when he was most a boy.
His hair was thick an’ he hadn’t no moustache
nor nothin’, which kind o’ makes things
hard. As I was sayin’, I’m goin’
to show it around some, an’ maybe some one ’ll
rec’nize the feller. That’s why I
got yarnin’ to you. Mebbe you ken locate
him.”
As he said the last word he drew a
photograph from his pocket and thrust it into Nevil’s
hand.
The wood-cutter took it with a great
assumption of indifference, and found himself looking
down on a result of early photographic art. It
was the picture of a very young man with an overshot
mouth and a thin, narrow face. But, as Seth had
said, he wore no moustache, and his hair was still
thick.
Nevil looked long at that picture,
and once or twice he licked his lips as though they
were very dry. All the time Seth’s steady
eyes were upon his face, and the shadow of a smile
was still about his lips.
At last Nevil looked up and Seth’s
eyes held his. For a moment the two men sat thus.
Then the wood-cutter handed back the photograph and
shifted his gaze.
“I’ve never seen the original
of that about these parts,” he said a little
hoarsely.
“I didn’t figger you had,”
Seth replied, rising and proceeding to tighten up
the cinches of his saddle preparatory to departing.
“The lawyer feller gave me that. Y’
see it’s an old pictur’. ’Tain’t
as fancy as they do ’em now. Mebbe I’ll
find him later on.”
He had swung into his saddle.
Nevil had also risen as though to proceed with his
work.
“It might be a good thing for
him, since Rosebud is so well disposed,” Nevil
laughed; he had almost recovered himself.
“That’s so,” observed
Seth. “Or a mighty bad thing. Y’
can’t never tell how dollars ’ll fix a
man. Dollars has a heap to answer for.”
And with this vague remark the plainsman rode slowly
away.