De Launay came into the cabin the
next morning with an armload of wood to find Solange
sitting up in bed with the blankets clutched about
her, staring at the unfamiliar surroundings. He
smiled at her, and was delighted to be met with an
answering, though somewhat puzzled smile.
“You are better?” he asked.
“Yes,” she said. “And you brought
me here?”
He nodded and knelt to rebuild the
fire. When it was crackling again he straightened
up.
“I was afraid you were going to be ill.
You had a bad shock.”
Solange shuddered. “It
is true. That evil old man! He hurt my head.
But I am all right again.”
“You had better lie quiet for
a day or two, just the same. You have had a bad
blow. If you feel well enough, though, there is
something I must do. Will you be all right if
I leave you for a few hours?”
Her face darkened a little but she
nodded. “If you must. You have been
very kind, monsieur. You brought me here?”
Her eyes fell on her leather coat
flung over the end of the bunk and she flushed, looking
sideways at the man. He seemed impassive, unconscious,
and her puzzled gaze wandered over his face and form.
She noted striking differences in the tanned, lean
face and the lithe body. The skin was clear and
the eyes no longer red and swollen. He stood
upright and moved with a swift, deft certainty far
from his former slouch.
“You are changed,” she commented.
“Some,” he answered. “Fresh
air and exercise have benefited me.”
“That is true. Yet there
seems to be another difference. You look purposeful,
if I may say it.”
“I?” he seemed to protest. “What
purpose is there for me?”
“You must tell me that.”
He went out into the other room and
returned with broth for her. But she was hungry
and the broth did not satisfy her. He brought
in meat and bread, and she made a fairly hearty breakfast.
It pleased De Launay to see her enjoying the food
frankly, bringing her nearer to the earth which he,
himself, inhabited.
“The only purpose I have,”
he said, while she ate, “is that of finding
what has become of your escort. There’s
another matter, too, on which I am curious. Do
you think you can get along all right if I leave food
for you here and go down to the camp? I will be
back before evening.”
“You will be careful of that crazy old man?”
He laughed. “If I am not
mistaken he thinks I am a ghost and is frightened
out of seven years’ growth,” he said, easily.
His voice changed subtly, became swiftly grim.
“He may well be,” he added, half to himself.
Breakfast over and the camp cleared
up, De Launay took from his packs a second automatic,
hanging the holster, a left-hand one, to the bunk.
He showed Solange how to operate the mechanism and
found that she readily grasped the principle of it,
though the squat, flat weapon was incongruous in her
small hand. The rifle also he left within her
reach.
Shortly he was mounted on his way
out of the crater. He made good time through
the down timber and, in about an hour and a half, was
headed into the canyon. He searched carefully
for traces of Dave but found none. The snow was
over a foot deep and had drifted much deeper in many
spots. Especially on the talus slopes at the bottom
of the canyon had it gathered to a depth of several
feet.
Finally he came to the site of the
camp where he had rescued Solange from the mad prospector.
Here he was surprised to find no trace of the man
although the burros were scraping forlornly in the
snow on the slopes trying to uncover forage.
Camp equipment was scattered around, and a piece of
tarpaulin covered a bundle of stuff. This was
tucked away by a rock, but De Launay ran on it after
some search.
He devoted his efforts to finding
the shell from Banker’s rifle which he had seen
on the snow when he left the place. It was finally
uncovered and he put it in his pocket. Then he
left the place and headed down the canyon, searching
for signs of the cow-puncher.
He found none, since Dave had not
been in this direction. But De Launay pushed
on until almost noon. He rode high on the slopes
where the snow was shallower and where he could get
an unrestricted view of the canyon.
He was about to give it up, however,
and turn back when his horse stopped and pricked his
ears forward, raising its head. De Launay followed
this indication and saw what he took to be a clump
of sagebrush on the snow about half a mile away.
He watched it and thought it moved.
Intent observation confirmed this
impression and it was made a certainty when he saw
the black patch waver upward, stagger forward and
then fall again.
With an exclamation, De Launay spurred
his horse recklessly down the slope toward the figure
on the snow. He galloped up to it and flung himself
to the ground beside it. The figure raised itself
on arms from which the sleeves hung in tatters and
turned a pale and ghastly face toward him.
It was Sucatash.
Battered and bruised, with an arm
almost helpless and a leg as bad, the cow-puncher
was dragging himself indomitably along while his failing
strength held out. But he was almost at the end
of his resources. Hunger and weakness, wounds
and bruises, had done their work and he could have
gone little farther.
De Launay raised his head and chafed
his blue and frozen hands. The cow-puncher tried
to grin.
“Glad to see you, old-timer,”
he croaked. “You’re just about in
time.”
“What happened to you, man?”
“Don’t know. Heard
a horse nicker and then mine stumbled and pinned me.
Got a bad fall and when I come to I was lying down
the hill against some greasewood. Leg a’most
busted and an arm as bad. Horse nowhere around.
Got anything to drink? Snow ain’t much for
thirst.”
De Launay had food and water and gave
it to him. After eating ravenously for a moment
he was stronger.
“Funny thing, that horse nickerin’.
It was snowin’ and I didn’t see him.
But, after I come to I tried to climb up where I was
throwed. It was some job but I made it.
There was my horse, half covered with snow. Some
one had shot him.”
“Shot him? And then left you to lie there?”
“Just about that. There
wasn’t no tracks. Snow had filled ’em.
But I reckon that horse wasn’t just shot by
accident.”
“It was not. And Dave’s gone.”
“Dave? What’s that?”
“He’s gone. Left
the camp day before yesterday and never came back.
I wasn’t there.”
“And madame? She all right?”
“She is now.
I found her yesterday morning with Banker, the prospector.
He was trying to torture her into telling him where
that mine is located. Hurt her pretty bad.”
Sucatash lay silent for a moment. Then:
“Jumpin’ snakes!”
he said. “That fellow has got a lot comin’
to him, ain’t he?”
“He has,” said De Launay, shortly.
“More than you know.”
Again the cow-puncher was silent for a space.
“Reckon he beefed Dave?” he said at last.
“Shouldn’t be surprised,”
said De Launay. “I searched for him but
couldn’t find him. He wouldn’t get
lost or hurt. But Jim Banker’s done enough,
in any case.”
“He sure has,” said Sucatash.
De Launay helped the cow-puncher up
in front of him and turned back to the crater.
He rode past Banker’s camp without stopping,
but keeping along the slope to avoid the deeper snow
he came upon a stake set in a pile of small rocks.
This was evidently newly placed. He showed it
to Sucatash.
“The fellow’s staked ground here.
What could he have found?”
“Maybe the old lunatic thinks
he’s run onto French Pete’s strike,”
grinned Sucatash. “This don’t look
very likely to me.”
“Gone to Maryville to register
it, I suppose. That accounts for his leaving
the burros and part of his stuff. He’d travel
light.”
“He better come back heavy though.
If he aims to winter in here he’ll need bookoo
rations. It’d take some mine to make me
do it.”
Sucatash was in bad shape, and De
Launay was not particularly interested in old Jim’s
vagaries at the present time, so he made all speed
back to the crater. Sucatash, who knew of the
windfall, would not believe that the soldier had found
an entrance into the place until he had actually treaded
the game trail.
He looked backward from the heights
above the tangle after they had come through it.
“Some stronghold,” he
commented. “It’d take an army to dig
you outa here.”
They found Solange as De Launay had
left her. She was overjoyed to see Sucatash and
at the same time distressed to observe his condition.
She heard with indignation his account of his mishap
and, like De Launay, suspected Banker of being responsible
for it. Indeed, unless they assumed that some
mysterious presence was abroad at this unseasonable
time in the mountains, there was no one else to suspect.
She would have risen and assumed the
duties of nursing the cow-puncher, but De Launay forbade
it. She was still very weak and her head was
painful. The soldier therefore took upon himself
the task of caring for both of them.
He made a bed for Sucatash in the
kitchen of the cabin and went about the work of getting
them both on their feet with quiet efficiency.
This bade fair to be a task of some days’ duration
though both were strong and healthy and yielded readily
to rest and treatment.
It was night again before he had them
comfortably settled and sleeping. Once more,
with camp lantern lit, he sat before the slab table
and examined his bullets and the shell he had picked
up at Banker’s camp.
He found that both bullets fitted
it tightly. Then he turned the rim to the light
and looked at it.
Stamped in the brass were the cabalistic figures:
U. M. C. SAV. .303.
For some time he sat there, his mouth
set in straight, hard lines, his memory playing backward
over nineteen years. He recalled the men he had
known on the range, a scattered company, every one
of whom could be numbered, every one of whom had possessions,
weapons, accouterment, known to nearly all the others.
In that primitive community of few individuals the
tools of their trades were as a part of them.
Men were marked by their saddles, their chaparajos,
their weapons. A pair of silver-mounted spurs
owned by one was remarked by all the others.
Louisiana had known the weapons of
the range riders even as they knew his. The six-shooter
with which he had often performed his feats would
have been as readily recognized as he, himself.
When a new rifle appeared in the West its advent was
a matter of note.
In Maryville, then a small cow town
and outfitting place for the men of the range, there
had been one store in which weapons could be bought.
In that store, the proprietor had stocked just one
rifle of the new make. The Savage, shooting an
odd caliber cartridge, had been distrusted because
of that fact, the men of the country fearing that
they would have difficulty in procuring shells of such
an unusual caliber. Unable to sell it, he had
finally parted with it for a mere fraction of its
value to one who would chance its inconvenience.
The man who possessed it had been known far and wide
and, at that time, he was the sole owner of such a
rifle in all that region.
Yet, with this infallible clew to
the identity of French Pete’s murderer at hand,
it had been assumed that the bullet was 30-30.
De Launay envisioned that worn and
battered rifle butt projecting from the scabbard slung
to the burro in Sulphur Falls. Nineteen years,
and the man still carried and used the weapon which
was to prove his guilt.
Once more he got up and went in to
look at the sleeping girl. Should he tell her
that the murderer of her father was discovered?
What good would it do? He doubted that, if confronted
with the knowledge, she could find the fortitude to
exact the vengeance which she had vowed. And
if, faced with the facts, she drew back, what reproach
would she always visit upon herself for her weakness?
Torn between a barbaric code and her own gentle instincts,
she would be unhappy whatever eventuated.
But he was free from gentleness at
least toward every one but her. He had killed.
He was callous. Five years in the Legion des
Etrangers and fourteen more of war and preparation
for war had rendered him proof against squeamishness.
The man was a loathly thing who had slain in cold
blood, cowardly, evil, and unclean. Possibly he
had murdered within the past few days, and, at any
rate he had attempted murder and torture.
Why tell her about it? He had
no ties; no aims; nothing to regret leaving.
He had nothing but wealth which was useless to him,
but which would lift her above all unhappiness after
he was gone. And he could kill the desert rat
as he would snuff out a candle.
Yet the thought of it gave
him a qualm. The man was so contemptible; so
unutterably low and vile and cowardly. To kill
him would be like crushing vermin. He would not
fight; he would cower and cringe and shriek.
There might be a battle when they took De Launay for
the “murder,” of course, but even his
passing, desperate as he might make it, would not
entirely wipe out the disgrace of such a butchery.
He was a soldier; a commander with a glorious record,
and it went against the grain to go out of life in
an obscure brawl brought on by the slaughter of this
rat.
Still, he had dedicated himself to
the service of this girl, half in jest, perhaps, but
it was the only service left to him to perform.
He had lived his life; had his little day of glory.
It was time to go. She was his wife and to her
he would make his last gesture and depart, serving
her.
Then, as he looked at her, her eyes
opened and flashed upon him. In their depths
something gleamed, a new light more baffling than any
he had seen there before. There was fire and
softness, warmth and sweetness in it. He dropped
on his knees beside the bunk.
“What is it, mon ami?”
Solange was smiling at him, a smile that drew him
like a magnet.
“Nothing,” he said, and
rose to his feet. Her hand had strayed lightly
over his hair in that instant of forgetfulness.
“I looked to see that you were comfortable.”
“You are changed,” she
said, uncertainly. “It is better so.”
He smiled at her. “Yes.
I am changed again. I am the legionnaire.
Nameless, hopeless, careless! You must sleep,
mon enfant! Good night!”
He brushed the hand she held out to
him with his lips and turned to the door. As
he went out she heard him singing softly:
“Soldats de
la Legion, De la Legion Etrangere,
N’ayant pas de Nation, La
France est votre Mere.”
He did not see that the light in her
marvelous eyes had grown very tender. Nor did
she dream that he had made a mat of his glory for her
to walk upon.