Toward the close of the next day Jack
Hare arrived at Seeping Springs. A pile of gray
ashes marked the spot where the trimmed logs had lain.
Round the pool ran a black circle hard packed into
the ground by many hoofs. Even the board flume
had been burned to a level with the glancing sheet
of water. Hare was slipping Silvermane’s
bit to let him drink when he heard a halloo.
Dave Naab galloped out of the cedars, and presently
August Naab and his other sons appeared with a pack-train.
“Now you’ve played bob!”
exclaimed Dave. He swung out of his saddle and
gripped Hare with both hands. “I know what
you’ve done; I know where you’ve been.
Father will be furious, but don’t you care.”
The other Naabs trotted down the slope
and lined their horses before the pool. The sons
stared in blank astonishment; the father surveyed the
scene slowly, and then fixed wrathful eyes on Hare.
“What does this mean?”
he demanded, with the sonorous roll of his angry voice.
Hare told all that had happened.
August Naab’s gloomy face worked,
and his eagle-gaze had in it a strange far-seeing
light; his mind was dwelling upon his mystic power
of revelation.
“I see I see,” he said haltingly.
“Ki yi-i-i!”
yelled Dave Naab with all the power of his lungs.
His head was back, his mouth wide open, his face red,
his neck corded and swollen with the intensity of
his passion.
“Be still boy!”
ordered his father. “Hare, this was madness but
tell me what you learned.”
Briefly Hare repeated all that he
had been told at the Bishop’s, and concluded
with the killing of Martin Cole by Dene.
August Naab bowed his head and his
giant frame shook under the force of his emotion.
Martin Cole was the last of his life-long friends.
“This this outlaw you
say you ran him down?” asked Naab, rising haggard
and shaken out of his grief.
“Yes. He didn’t recognize
me or know what was coming till Silvermane was on
him. But he was quick, and fell sidewise.
Silvermane’s knee sent him sprawling.”
“What will it all lead to?”
asked August Naab, and in his extremity he appealed
to his eldest son.
“The bars are down,” said
Snap Naab, with a click of his long teeth.
“Father,” began Dave Naab
earnestly, “Jack has done a splendid thing.
The news will fly over Utah like wildfire. Mormons
are slow. They need a leader. But they can
follow and they will. We can’t cure these
evils by hoping and praying. We’ve got
to fight!”
“Dave’s right, dad, it
means fight,” cried George, with his fist clinched
high.
“You’ve been wrong, father,
in holding back,” said Zeke Naab, his lean jaw
bulging. “This Holderness will steal the
water and meat out of our children’s mouths.
We’ve got to fight!”
“Let’s ride to White Sage,”
put in Snap Naab, and the little flecks in his eyes
were dancing. “I’ll throw a gun on
Dene. I can get to him. We’ve been
tolerable friends. He’s wanted me to join
his band. I’ll kill him.”
He laughed as he raised his right
hand and swept it down to his left side; the blue
Colt lay on his outstretched palm. Dene’s
life and Holderness’s, too, hung in the balance
between two deadly snaps of this desert-wolf’s
teeth. He was one of the Naabs, and yet apart
from them, for neither religion, nor friendship, nor
life itself mattered to him.
August Naab’s huge bulk shook
again, not this time with grief, but in wrestling
effort to withstand the fiery influence of this unholy
fighting spirit among his sons.
“I am forbidden.”
His answer was gentle, but its very
gentleness breathed of his battle over himself, of
allegiance to something beyond earthly duty. “We’ll
drive the cattle to Silver Cup,” he decided,
“and then go home. I give up Seeping Springs.
Perhaps this valley and water will content Holderness.”
When they reached the oasis Hare was
surprised to find that it was the day before Christmas.
The welcome given the long-absent riders was like
a celebration. Much to Hare’s disappointment
Mescal did not appear; the homecoming was not joyful
to him because it lacked her welcoming smile.
Christmas Day ushered in the short
desert winter; ice formed in the ditches and snow
fell, but neither long resisted the reflection of the
sun from the walls. The early morning hours were
devoted to religious services. At midday dinner
was served in the big room of August Naab’s
cabin. At one end was a stone fireplace where
logs blazed and crackled.
In all his days Hare had never seen
such a bountiful board. Yet he was unable to
appreciate it, to share in the general thanksgiving.
Dominating all other feeling was the fear that Mescal
would come in and take a seat by Snap Naab’s
side. When Snap seated himself opposite with
his pale little wife Hare found himself waiting for
Mescal with an intensity that made him dead to all
else. The girls, Judith, Esther, Rebecca, came
running gayly in, clad in their best dresses, with
bright ribbons to honor the occasion. Rebecca
took the seat beside Snap, and Hare gulped with a
hard contraction of his throat. Mescal was not
yet a Mormon’s wife! He seemed to be lifted
upward, to grow light-headed with the blessed assurance.
Then Mescal entered and took the seat next to him.
She smiled and spoke, and the blood beat thick in his
ears.
That moment was happy, but it was
as nothing to its successor. Under the table-cover
Mescal’s hand found his, and pressed it daringly
and gladly. Her hand lingered in his all the
time August Naab spent in carving the turkey lingered
there even though Snap Naab’s hawk eyes were
never far away. In the warm touch of her hand,
in some subtle thing that radiated from her Hare felt
a change in the girl he loved. A few months had
wrought in her some indefinable difference, even as
they had increased his love to its full volume and
depth. Had his absence brought her to the realization
of her woman’s heart?
In the afternoon Hare left the house
and spent a little while with Silvermane; then he
wandered along the wall to the head of the oasis,
and found a seat on the fence. The next few weeks
presented to him a situation that would be difficult
to endure. He would be near Mescal, but only
to have the truth forced cruelly home to him every
sane moment that she was not for him.
Out on the ranges he had abandoned himself to dreams
of her; they had been beautiful; they had made the
long hours seem like minutes; but they had forged chains
that could not be broken, and now he was hopelessly
fettered.
The clatter of hoofs roused him from
a reverie which was half sad, half sweet. Mescal
came tearing down the level on Black Bolly. She
pulled in the mustang and halted beside Hare to hold
out shyly a red scarf embroidered with Navajo symbols
in white and red beads.
“I’ve wanted a chance
to give you this,” she said, “a little
Christmas present.”
For a few seconds Hare could find no words.
“Did you make it for me, Mescal?”
he finally asked. “How good of you!
I’ll keep it always.”
“Put it on now let me tie it there!”
“But, child. Suppose he they
saw it?”
“I don’t care who sees it.”
She met him with clear, level eyes.
Her curt, crisp speech was full of meaning. He
looked long at her, with a yearning denied for many
a day. Her face was the same, yet wonderfully
changed; the same in line and color, but different
in soul and spirit. The old sombre shadow lay
deep in the eyes, but to it had been added gleam of
will and reflection of thought. The whole face
had been refined and transformed.
“Mescal! What’s happened?
You’re not the same. You seem almost happy.
Have you has he given you up?”
“Don’t you know Mormons
better than that? The thing is the same so
far as they’re concerned.”
“But Mescal are you
going to marry him? For God’s sake, tell
me.”
“Never.” It was a
woman’s word, instant, inflexible, desperate.
With a deep breath Hare realized where the girl had
changed.
“Still you’re promised,
pledged to him! How’ll you get out of it?”
“I don’t know how.
But I’ll cut out my tongue, and be dumb as my
poor peon before I’ll speak the word that’ll
make me Snap Naab’s wife.”
There was a long silence. Mescal
smoothed out Bolly’s mane, and Hare gazed up
at the walls with eyes that did not see them.
Presently he spoke. “I’m
afraid for you. Snap watched us to-day at dinner.”
“He’s jealous.”
“Suppose he sees this scarf?”
Mescal laughed defiantly. It was bewildering
for Hare to hear her.
“He’ll Mescal,
I may yet come to this.” Hare’s laugh
echoed Mescal’s as he pointed to the enclosure
under the wall, where the graves showed bare and rough.
Her warm color fled, but it flooded
back, rich, mantling brow and cheek and neck.
“Snap Naab will never kill you,” she said
impulsively.
“Mescal.”
She swiftly turned her face away as his hand closed
on hers.
“Mescal, do you love me?”
The trembling of her fingers and the
heaving of her bosom lent his hope conviction.
“Mescal,” he went on, “these past
months have been years, years of toiling, thinking,
changing, but always loving. I’m not the
man you knew. I’m wild I’m
starved for a sight of you. I love you! Mescal,
my desert flower!”
She raised her free hand to his shoulder
and swayed toward him. He held her a moment,
clasped tight, and then released her.
“I’m quite mad!”
he exclaimed, in a passion of self-reproach. “What
a risk I’m putting on you! But I couldn’t
help it. Look at me Just once please
Mescal, just one look.... Now go.”
The drama of the succeeding days was
of absorbing interest. Hare had liberty; there
was little work for him to do save to care for Silvermane.
He tried to hunt foxes in the caves and clefts; he
rode up and down the broad space under the walls;
he sought the open desert only to be driven in by
the bitter, biting winds. Then he would return
to the big living-room of the Naabs and sit before
the burning logs. This spacious room was warm,
light, pleasant, and was used by every one in leisure
hours. Mescal spent most of her time there.
She was engaged upon a new frock of buckskin, and
over this she bent with her needle and beads.
When there was a chance Hare talked with her, speaking
one language with his tongue, a far different one
with his eyes. When she was not present he looked
into the glowing red fire and dreamed of her.
In the evenings when Snap came in
to his wooing and drew Mescal into a corner, Hare
watched with covert glance and smouldering jealousy.
Somehow he had come to see all things and all people
in the desert glass, and his symbol for Snap Naab
was the desert-hawk. Snap’s eyes were as
wild and piercing as those of a hawk; his nose and
mouth were as the beak of a hawk; his hands resembled
the claws of a hawk; and the spurs he wore, always
bloody, were still more significant of his ruthless
nature. Then Snap’s courting of the girl,
the cool assurance, the unhastening ease, were like
the slow rise, the sail, and the poise of a desert-hawk
before the downward lightning-swift swoop on his quarry.
It was intolerable for Hare to sit
there in the evenings, to try to play with the children
who loved him, to talk to August Naab when his eye
seemed ever drawn to the quiet couple in the corner,
and his ear was unconsciously strained to catch a
passing word. That hour was a miserable one for
him, yet he could not bring himself to leave the room.
He never saw Snap touch her; he never heard Mescal’s
voice; he believed that she spoke very little.
When the hour was over and Mescal rose to pass to
her room, then his doubt, his fear, his misery, were
as though they had never been, for as Mescal said
good-night she would give him one look, swift as a
flash, and in it were womanliness and purity, and
something beyond his comprehension. Her Indian
serenity and mysticism veiled yet suggested some secret,
some power by which she might yet escape the iron
band of this Mormon rule. Hare could not fathom
it. In that good-night glance was a meaning for
him alone, if meaning ever shone in woman’s
eyes, and it said: “I will be true to you
and to myself!”
Once the idea struck him that as soon
as spring returned it would be an easy matter, and
probably wise, for him to leave the oasis and go up
into Utah, far from the desert-canyon country.
But the thought refused to stay before his consciousness
a moment. New life had flushed his veins here.
He loved the dreamy, sleepy oasis with its mellow sunshine
always at rest on the glistening walls; he loved the
cedar-scented plateau where hope had dawned, and the
wind-swept sand-strips, where hard out-of-door life
and work had renewed his wasting youth; he loved the
canyon winding away toward Coconina, opening into wide
abyss; and always, more than all, he loved the Painted
Desert, with its ever-changing pictures, printed in
sweeping dust and bare peaks and purple haze.
He loved the beauty of these places, and the wildness
in them had an affinity with something strange and
untamed in him. He would never leave them.
When his blood had cooled, when this tumultuous thrill
and swell had worn themselves out, happiness would
come again.
Early in the winter Snap Naab had
forced his wife to visit his father’s house
with him; and she had remained in the room, white-faced,
passionately jealous, while he wooed Mescal. Then
had come a scene. Hare had not been present,
but he knew its results. Snap had been furious,
his father grave, Mescal tearful and ashamed.
The wife found many ways to interrupt her husband’s
lovemaking. She sent the children for him; she
was taken suddenly ill; she discovered that the corral
gate was open and his cream-colored pinto, dearest
to his heart, was running loose; she even set her
cottage on fire.
One Sunday evening just before twilight
Hare was sitting on the porch with August Naab and
Dave, when their talk was interrupted by Snap’s
loud calling for his wife. At first the sounds
came from inside his cabin. Then he put his head
out of a window and yelled. Plainly he was both
impatient and angry. It was nearly time for him
to make his Sunday call upon Mescal.
“Something’s wrong,” muttered Dave.
“Hester! Hester!” yelled Snap.
Mother Ruth came out and said that Hester was not
there.
“Where is she?” Snap banged
on the window-sill with his fists. “Find
her, somebody Hester!”
“Son, this is the Sabbath,”
called Father Naab, gravely. “Lower your
voice. Now what’s the matter?”
“Matter!” bawled Snap,
giving way to rage. “When I was asleep Hester
stole all my clothes. She’s hid them she’s
run off there’s not a d n
thing for me to put on! I’ll ”
The roar of laughter from August and
Dave drowned the rest of the speech. Hare managed
to stifle his own mirth. Snap pulled in his head
and slammed the window shut.
“Jack,” said August, “even
among Mormons the course of true love never runs smooth.”
Hare finally forgot his bitter humor
in pity for the wife. Snap came to care not at
all for her messages and tricks, and he let nothing
interfere with his evening beside Mescal. It was
plain that he had gone far on the road of love.
Whatever he had been in the beginning of the betrothal,
he was now a lover, eager, importunate. His hawk’s
eyes were softer than Hare had ever seen them; he
was obliging, kind, gay, an altogether different Snap
Naab. He groomed himself often, and wore clean
scarfs, and left off his bloody spurs. For eight
months he had not touched the bottle. When spring
approached he was madly in love with Mescal.
And the marriage was delayed because his wife would
not have another woman in her home.
Once Hare heard Snap remonstrating with his father.
“If she don’t come to
time soon I’ll keep the kids and send her back
to her father.”
“Don’t be hasty, son.
Let her have time,” replied August. “Women
must be humored. I’ll wager she’ll
give in before the cottonwood blows, and that’s
not long.”
It was Hare’s habit, as the
days grew warmer, to walk a good deal, and one evening,
as twilight shadowed the oasis and grew black under
the towering walls, he strolled out toward the fields.
While passing Snap’s cottage Hare heard a woman’s
voice in passionate protest and a man’s in strident
anger. Later as he stood with his arm on Silvermane,
a woman’s scream, at first high-pitched, then
suddenly faint and smothered, caused him to grow rigid,
and his hand clinched tight. When he went back
by the cottage a low moaning confirmed his suspicion.
That evening Snap appeared unusually
bright and happy; and he asked his father to name
the day for the wedding. August did so in a loud
voice and with evident relief. Then the quaint
Mormon congratulations were offered to Mescal.
To Hare, watching the strange girl with the distressingly
keen intuition of an unfortunate lover, she appeared
as pleased as any of them that the marriage was settled.
But there was no shyness, no blushing confusion.
When Snap bent to kiss her his first kiss she
slightly turned her face, so that his lips brushed
her cheek, yet even then her self-command did not
break for an instant. It was a task for Hare
to pretend to congratulate her; nevertheless he mumbled
something. She lifted her long lashes, and there,
deep beneath the shadows, was unutterable anguish.
It gave him a shock. He went to his room, convinced
that she had yielded; and though he could not blame
her, and he knew she was helpless, he cried out in
reproach and resentment. She had failed him,
as he had known she must fail. He tossed on his
bed and thought; he lay quiet, wide-open eyes staring
into the darkness, and his mind burned and seethed.
Through the hours of that long night he learned what
love had cost him.
With the morning light came some degree
of resignation. Several days went slowly by,
bringing the first of April, which was to be the wedding-day.
August Naab had said it would come before the cottonwoods
shed their white floss; and their buds had just commenced
to open. The day was not a holiday, and George
and Zeke and Dave began to pack for the ranges, yet
there was an air of jollity and festivity. Snap
Naab had a springy step and jaunty mien. Once
he regarded Hare with a slow smile.
Piute prepared to drive his new flock
up on the plateau. The women of the household
were busy and excited; the children romped.
The afternoon waned into twilight,
and Hare sought the quiet shadows under the wall near
the river trail. He meant to stay there until
August Naab had pronounced his son and Mescal man
and wife. The dull roar of the rapids borne on
a faint puff of westerly breeze was lulled into a
soothing murmur. A radiant white star peeped over
the black rim of the wall. The solitude and silence
were speaking to Hare’s heart, easing his pain,
when a soft patter of moccasined feet brought him bolt
upright.
A slender form rounded the corner
wall. It was Mescal. The white dog Wolf
hung close by her side. Swiftly she reached Hare.
“Mescal!” he exclaimed.
“Hush! Speak softly,”
she whispered fearfully. Her hands were clinging
to his.
“Jack, do you love me still?”
More than woman’s sweetness
was in the whisper; the portent of indefinable motive
made Hare tremble like a shaking leaf.
“Good heavens! You are
to be married in a few minutes What do you
mean? Where are you going? this buckskin suit and
Wolf with you Mescal!”
“There’s no time only
a word hurry do you love me still?”
she panted, with great shining eyes close to his.
“Love you? With all my soul!”
“Listen,” she whispered,
and leaned against him. A fresh breeze bore the
boom of the river. She caught her breath quickly:
“I love you! I love you! Good-bye!”
She kissed him and broke from his
clasp. Then silently, like a shadow, with the
white dog close beside her, she disappeared in the
darkness of the river trail.
She was gone before he came out of
his bewilderment. He rushed down the trail; he
called her name. The gloom had swallowed her,
and only the echo of his voice made answer.