Collected works of zane.., p.489

Collected Works of Zane Grey, page 489

 

Collected Works of Zane Grey
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  She looked as if she might have exaggerated her doubt of injuries, but certainly she had not overestimated her state of mind. Any blaze Helen had heretofore seen in those quick eyes was tame compared to this one. It actually leaped. Bo was more than pretty then. Manifestly Roy was admiring her looks, but Carmichael saw beyond her charm. And slowly he was growing pale.

  “I rode out the south range — as I was told,” began Bo, breathing hard and trying to control her feelings. “That’s the ride you usually take, Nell, and you bet — if you’d taken it to-day — you’d not be here now.... About three miles out I climbed off the range up that cedar slope. I always keep to high ground. When I got up I saw two horsemen ride out of some broken rocks off to the east. They rode as if to come between me and home. I didn’t like that. I circled south. About a mile farther on I spied another horseman and he showed up directly in front of me and came along slow. That I liked still less. It might have been accident, but it looked to me as if those riders had some intent. All I could do was head off to the southeast and ride. You bet I did ride. But I got into rough ground where I’d never been before. It was slow going. At last I made the cedars and here I cut loose, believing I could circle ahead of those strange riders and come round through Pine. I had it wrong.”

  Here she hesitated, perhaps for breath, for she had spoken rapidly, or perhaps to get better hold on her subject. Not improbably the effect she was creating on her listeners began to be significant. Roy sat absorbed, perfectly motionless, eyes keen as steel, his mouth open. Carmichael was gazing over Bo’s head, out of the window, and it seemed that he must know the rest of her narrative. Helen knew that her own wide-eyed attention alone would have been all-compelling inspiration to Bo Rayner.

  “Sure I had it wrong,” resumed Bo. “Pretty soon heard a horse behind. I looked back. I saw a big bay riding down on me. Oh, but he was running! He just tore through the cedars. ... I was scared half out of my senses. But I spurred and beat my mustang. Then began a race! Rough going — thick cedars — washes and gullies I had to make him run — to keep my saddle — to pick my way. Oh-h-h! but it was glorious! To race for fun — that’s one thing; to race for your life is another! My heart was in my mouth — choking me. I couldn’t have yelled. I was as cold as ice — dizzy sometimes — blind others — then my stomach turned — and I couldn’t get my breath. Yet the wild thrills I had!... But I stuck on and held my own for several miles — to the edge of the cedars. There the big horse gained on me. He came pounding closer — perhaps as close as a hundred yards — I could hear him plain enough. Then I had my spill. Oh, my mustang tripped — threw me ‘way over his head. I hit light, but slid far — and that’s what scraped me so. I know my knee is raw.... When I got to my feet the big horse dashed up, throwing gravel all over me — and his rider jumped off.... Now who do you think he was?”

  Helen knew, but she did not voice her conviction. Carmichael knew positively, yet he kept silent. Roy was smiling, as if the narrative told did not seem so alarming to him.

  “Wal, the fact of you bein’ here, safe an’ sound, sorta makes no difference who thet son-of-a-gun was,” he said.

  “Riggs! Harve Riggs!” blazed Bo. “The instant I recognized him I got over my scare. And so mad I burned all through like fire. I don’t know what I said, but it was wild — and it was a whole lot, you bet.

  “You sure can ride,’ he said.

  “I demanded why he had dared to chase me, and he said he had an important message for Nell. This was it: ‘Tell your sister that Beasley means to put her off an’ take the ranch. If she’ll marry me I’ll block his deal. If she won’t marry me, I’ll go in with Beasley.’ Then he told me to hurry home and not to breathe a word to any one except Nell. Well, here I am — and I seem to have been breathing rather fast.”

  She looked from Helen to Roy and from Roy to Las Vegas. Her smile was for the latter, and to any one not overexcited by her story that smile would have told volumes.

  “Wal, I’ll be doggoned!” ejaculated Roy, feelingly.

  Helen laughed.

  “Indeed, the working of that man’s mind is beyond me.... Marry him to save my ranch? I wouldn’t marry him to save my life!”

  Carmichael suddenly broke his silence.

  “Bo, did you see the other men?”

  “Yes. I was coming to that,” she replied. “I caught a glimpse of them back in the cedars. The three were together, or, at least, three horsemen were there. They had halted behind some trees. Then on the way home I began to think. Even in my fury I had received impressions. Riggs was SURPRISED when I got up. I’ll bet he had not expected me to be who I was. He thought I was NELL!... I look bigger in this buckskin outfit. My hair was up till I lost my hat, and that was when I had the tumble. He took me for Nell. Another thing, I remember — he made some sign — some motion while I was calling him names, and I believe that was to keep those other men back.... I believe Riggs had a plan with those other men to waylay Nell and make off with her. I absolutely know it.”

  “Bo, you’re so — so — you jump at wild ideas so,” protested Helen, trying to believe in her own assurance. But inwardly she was trembling.

  “Miss Helen, that ain’t a wild idee,” said Roy, seriously. “I reckon your sister is pretty close on the trail. Las Vegas, don’t you savvy it thet way?”

  Carmichael’s answer was to stalk out of the room.

  “Call him back!” cried Helen, apprehensively.

  “Hold on, boy!” called Roy, sharply.

  Helen reached the door simultaneously with Roy. The cowboy picked up his sombrero, jammed it on his head, gave his belt a vicious hitch that made the gun-sheath jump, and then in one giant step he was astride Ranger.

  “Carmichael! Stay!” cried Helen.

  The cowboy spurred the black, and the stones rang under iron-shod hoofs.

  “Bo! Call him back! Please call him back!” importuned Helen, in distress.

  “I won’t,” declared Bo Rayner. Her face shone whiter now and her eyes were like fiery flint. That was her answer to a loving, gentle-hearted sister; that was her answer to the call of the West.

  “No use,” said Roy, quietly. “An’ I reckon I’d better trail him up.”

  He, too, strode out and, mounting his horse, galloped swiftly away.

  It turned out that Bo, was more bruised and scraped and shaken than she had imagined. One knee was rather badly cut, which injury alone would have kept her from riding again very soon. Helen, who was somewhat skilled at bandaging wounds, worried a great deal over these sundry blotches on Bo’s fair skin, and it took considerable time to wash and dress them. Long after this was done, and during the early supper, and afterward, Bo’s excitement remained unabated. The whiteness stayed on her face and the blaze in her eyes. Helen ordered and begged her to go to bed, for the fact was Bo could not stand up and her hands shook.

  “Go to bed? Not much,” she said. “I want to know what he does to Riggs.”

  It was that possibility which had Helen in dreadful suspense. If Carmichael killed Riggs, it seemed to Helen that the bottom would drop out of this structure of Western life she had begun to build so earnestly and fearfully. She did not believe that he would do so. But the uncertainty was torturing.

  “Dear Bo,” appealed Helen, “you don’t want — Oh! you do want Carmichael to — to kill Riggs?”

  “No, I don’t, but I wouldn’t care if he did,” replied Bo, bluntly.

  “Do you think — he will?”

  “Nell, if that cowboy really loves me he read my mind right here before he left,” declared Bo. “And he knew what I thought he’d do.”

  “And what’s — that?” faltered Helen.

  “I want him to round Riggs up down in the village — somewhere in a crowd. I want Riggs shown up as the coward, braggart, four-flush that he is. And insulted, slapped, kicked — driven out of Pine!”

  Her passionate speech still rang throughout the room when there came footsteps on the porch. Helen hurried to raise the bar from the door and open it just as a tap sounded on the door-post. Roy’s face stood white out of the darkness. His eyes were bright. And his smile made Helen’s fearful query needless.

  “How are you-all this evenin’?” he drawled, as he came in.

  A fire blazed on the hearth and a lamp burned on the table. By their light Bo looked white and eager-eyed as she reclined in the big arm-chair.

  “What ‘d he do?” she asked, with all her amazing force.

  “Wal, now, ain’t you goin’ to tell me how you are?”

  “Roy, I’m all bunged up. I ought to be in bed, but I just couldn’t sleep till I hear what Las Vegas did. I’d forgive anything except him getting drunk.”

  “Wal, I shore can ease your mind on thet,” replied Roy. “He never drank a drop.”

  Roy was distractingly slow about beginning the tale any child could have guessed he was eager to tell. For once the hard, intent quietness, the soul of labor, pain, and endurance so plain in his face was softened by pleasurable emotion. He poked at the burning logs with the toe of his boot. Helen observed that he had changed his boots and now wore no spurs. Then he had gone to his quarters after whatever had happened down in Pine.

  “Where IS he?” asked Bo.

  “Who? Riggs? Wal, I don’t know. But I reckon he’s somewhere out in the woods nursin’ himself.”

  “Not Riggs. First tell me where HE is.”

  “Shore, then, you must mean Las Vegas. I just left him down at the cabin. He was gettin’ ready for bed, early as it is. All tired out he was an’ thet white you wouldn’t have knowed him. But he looked happy at thet, an’ the last words he said, more to himself than to me, I reckon, was, ‘I’m some locoed gent, but if she doesn’t call me Tom now she’s no good!’”

  Bo actually clapped her hands, notwithstanding that one of them was bandaged.

  “Call him Tom? I should smile I will,” she declared, in delight. “Hurry now — what ‘d—”

  “It’s shore powerful strange how he hates thet handle Las Vegas,” went on Roy, imperturbably.

  “Roy, tell me what he did — what TOM did — or I’ll scream,” cried Bo.

  “Miss Helen, did you ever see the likes of thet girl?” asked Roy, appealing to Helen.

  “No, Roy, I never did,” agreed Helen. “But please — please tell us what has happened.”

  Roy grinned and rubbed his hands together in a dark delight, almost fiendish in its sudden revelation of a gulf of strange emotion deep within him. Whatever had happened to Riggs had not been too much for Roy Beeman. Helen remembered hearing her uncle say that a real Westerner hated nothing so hard as the swaggering desperado, the make-believe gunman who pretended to sail under the true, wild, and reckoning colors of the West.

  Roy leaned his lithe, tall form against the stone mantelpiece and faced the girls.

  “When I rode out after Las Vegas I seen him ‘way down the road,” began Roy, rapidly. “An’ I seen another man ridin’ down into Pine from the other side. Thet was Riggs, only I didn’t know it then. Las Vegas rode up to the store, where some fellars was hangin’ round, an’ he spoke to them. When I come up they was all headin’ for Turner’s saloon. I seen a dozen hosses hitched to the rails. Las Vegas rode on. But I got off at Turner’s an’ went in with the bunch. Whatever it was Las Vegas said to them fellars, shore they didn’t give him away. Pretty soon more men strolled into Turner’s an’ there got to be ‘most twenty altogether, I reckon. Jeff Mulvey was there with his pards. They had been drinkin’ sorta free. An’ I didn’t like the way Mulvey watched me. So I went out an’ into the store, but kept a-lookin’ for Las Vegas. He wasn’t in sight. But I seen Riggs ridin’ up. Now, Turner’s is where Riggs hangs out an’ does his braggin’. He looked powerful deep an’ thoughtful, dismounted slow without seein’ the unusual number of hosses there, an’ then he slouches into Turner’s. No more ‘n a minute after Las Vegas rode down there like a streak. An’ just as quick he was off an’ through thet door.”

  Roy paused as if to gain force or to choose his words. His tale now appeared all directed to Bo, who gazed at him, spellbound, a fascinated listener.

  “Before I got to Turner’s door — an’ thet was only a little ways — I heard Las Vegas yell. Did you ever hear him? Wal, he’s got the wildest yell of any cow-puncher I ever beard. Quicklike I opened the door an’ slipped in. There was Riggs an’ Las Vegas alone in the center of the big saloon, with the crowd edgin’ to the walls an’ slidin’ back of the bar. Riggs was whiter ‘n a dead man. I didn’t hear an’ I don’t know what Las Vegas yelled at him. But Riggs knew an’ so did the gang. All of a sudden every man there shore seen in Las Vegas what Riggs had always bragged HE was. Thet time comes to every man like Riggs.

  “‘What ‘d you call me?’ he asked, his jaw shakin’.

  “‘I ‘ain’t called you yet,’ answered Las Vegas. ‘I just whooped.’

  “‘What d’ye want?’

  “‘You scared my girl.’

  “‘The hell ye say! Who’s she?’ blustered Riggs, an’ he began to take quick looks ‘round. But he never moved a hand. There was somethin’ tight about the way he stood. Las Vegas had both arms half out, stretched as if he meant to leap. But he wasn’t. I never seen Las Vegas do thet, but when I seen him then I understood it.

  “‘You know. An’ you threatened her an’ her sister. Go for your gun,’ called Las Vegas, low an’ sharp.

  “Thet put the crowd right an’ nobody moved. Riggs turned green then. I almost felt sorry for him. He began to shake so he’d dropped a gun if he had pulled one.

  “‘Hyar, you’re off — some mistake — I ‘ain’t seen no gurls — I—’

  “‘Shut up an’ draw!’ yelled Las Vegas. His voice just pierced holes in the roof, an’ it might have been a bullet from the way Riggs collapsed. Every man seen in a second more thet Riggs wouldn’t an’ couldn’t draw. He was afraid for his life. He was not what he had claimed to be. I don’t know if he had any friends there. But in the West good men an’ bad men, all alike, have no use for Riggs’s kind. An’ thet stony quiet broke with haw — haw. It shore was as pitiful to see Riggs as it was fine to see Las Vegas.

  “When he dropped his arms then I knowed there would be no gun-play. An’ then Las Vegas got red in the face. He slapped Riggs with one hand, then with the other. An’ he began to cuss him. I shore never knowed thet nice-spoken Las Vegas Carmichael could use such language. It was a stream of the baddest names known out here, an’ lots I never heard of. Now an’ then I caught somethin’ like low-down an’ sneak an’ four-flush an’ long-haired skunk, but for the most part they was just the cussedest kind of names. An’ Las Vegas spouted them till he was black in the face, an’ foamin’ at the mouth, an’ hoarser ‘n a bawlin’ cow.

  “When he got out of breath from cussin’ he punched Riggs all about the saloon, threw him outdoors, knocked him down an’ kicked him till he got kickin’ him down the road with the whole haw-hawed gang behind. An’ he drove him out of town!”

  CHAPTER XVIII

  FOR TWO DAYS Bo was confined to her bed, suffering considerable pain, and subject to fever, during which she talked irrationally. Some of this talk afforded Helen as vast an amusement as she was certain it would have lifted Tom Carmichael to a seventh heaven.

  The third day, however, Bo was better, and, refusing to remain in bed, she hobbled to the sitting-room, where she divided her time between staring out of the window toward the corrals and pestering Helen with questions she tried to make appear casual. But Helen saw through her case and was in a state of glee. What she hoped most for was that Carmichael would suddenly develop a little less inclination for Bo. It was that kind of treatment the young lady needed. And now was the great opportunity. Helen almost felt tempted to give the cowboy a hint.

  Neither this day, nor the next, however, did he put in an appearance at the house, though Helen saw him twice on her rounds. He was busy, as usual, and greeted her as if nothing particular had happened.

  Roy called twice, once in the afternoon, and again during the evening. He grew more likable upon longer acquaintance. This last visit he rendered Bo speechless by teasing her about another girl Carmichael was going to take to a dance. Bo’s face showed that her vanity could not believe this statement, but that her intelligence of young men credited it with being possible. Roy evidently was as penetrating as he was kind. He made a dry, casual little remark about the snow never melting on the mountains during the latter part of March; and the look with which he accompanied this remark brought a blush to Helen’s cheek.

  After Roy had departed Bo said to Helen: “Confound that fellow! He sees right through me.”

  “My dear, you’re rather transparent these days,” murmured Helen.

  “You needn’t talk. He gave you a dig,” retorted Bo. “He just knows you’re dying to see the snow melt.”

  “Gracious! I hope I’m not so bad as that. Of course I want the snow melted and spring to come, and flowers—”

  “Hal Ha! Ha!” taunted Bo. “Nell Rayner, do you see any green in my eyes? Spring to come! Yes, the poet said in the spring a young man’s fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love. But that poet meant a young woman.”

  Helen gazed out of the window at the white stars.

  “Nell, have you seen him — since I was hurt?” continued Bo, with an effort.

  “Him? Who?”

  “Oh, whom do you suppose? I mean Tom!” she responded, and the last word came with a burst.

  “Tom? Who’s he? Ah, you mean Las Vegas. Yes, I’ve seen him.”

  “Well, did he ask a-about me?”

  “I believe he did ask how you were — something like that.”

  “Humph! Nell, I don’t always trust you.” After that she relapsed into silence, read awhile, and dreamed awhile, looking into the fire, and then she limped over to kiss Helen good night and left the room.

  Next day she was rather quiet, seeming upon the verge of one of the dispirited spells she got infrequently. Early in the evening, just after the lights had been lit and she had joined Helen in the sitting-room, a familiar step sounded on the loose boards of the porch.

 

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