RETRIBUTION
Coles had advertised the auction sale
of the mares to take place immediately after the race
and though he would gladly have postponed it he had
to live up to his advertisement. Naturally the
result was disastrous. The ranchers had seen
the ragged Alcatraz win against the imported horses
and they felt they could only show their local patriotism
by failing to bid. There were one or two mocking
offers of a hundred dollars a head for the lot.
“Something pretty for my girl to ride,”
as one of the ranchers phrased it, laughing. The
result was that every one of the mares was knocked
down to Marianne at a ludicrously low price; so low
that when it was over and Coles strolled about with
her to indicate the size of her bargain she felt that
she was moving in a dream.
“It’s easy to see that
you’re not Western,” he said in the end,
“but you have a Western horse to thank for putting
this deal through—I mean Alcatraz.”
“He’s too ugly for that,”
said Marianne, and yet on her way back to the hotel
she realized that the sun-faded chestnut had truly
proved a gold mine to her. It had been, she felt,
the luckiest day of her business life, for she knew
that the price she had paid for the mares was less
than half a reasonable valuation of them. Here
was her ranch ready stocked, so to speak, with fine
horses. It only needed, now, to end the tyrannical
sway of Lew Hervey and in that fighting man of men,
Red Perris, Marianne felt that the solution lay.
Once in her room at the hotel, she
looked about her in some dismay. Of course she
was merely an employer receiving a prospective employee
to examine his qualifications, but she also remained,
in spite of herself, a girl receiving a man.
She was glad that no one was there to watch with quizzical
eye as she rearranged the furniture; she was doubly
glad that he could not watch her at the mirror.
She gave herself the most critical examination since
she left the East and on the whole she approved of
the changes. The stirring life in the open had
darkened the olive of her skin, she found, but also
had made it more translucent; the curve of her cheek
was pleasantly filled; her throat rounder; her head
better poised. And above all excitement gave
her the vital color.
She paused at this point to wonder
why a stray cowpuncher should make her flush but immediately
decided that he had nothing to do with it; it was
the purchase of the mares that kept alive the little
thrill of happiness. But Marianne was essentially
honest and when her heart jumped as she heard a swift,
light step come down the hall and pause at her door,
she admitted at once that horses had nothing to do
with the matter.
She wished ardently that she had made
the discovery sooner. As it was, before she composed
herself, he had knocked, been bidden in and stood
before her. She knew, inwardly dismayed, that
her eyes were wide, her color high, and her whole
expression one of childish expectancy. It comforted
her greatly to find that he was hardly more at ease
than she. He made futile efforts to rub some
dust from his shirt.
“I wanted to get fixed up,”
he said, “but the note said to come right
after the race—Miss Jordan.”
In fact he made a harum-scarum figure.
The fight with him of the moustaches had produced
rents invisible at a distance but distinct at close
hand and the dust and the sweat had faded the blue
of his shirt and the red of his bandana. But
the red flame of that hair and the keen blue of that
eye—they, to be sure, were not faded.
She discovered other things as he crossed the room
to her. That he was far shorter than he had seemed
when he fought in the street. Indeed, he was middle
height and slenderly made at that. She felt that
looking at him from her window and watching him ride
Rickety she had only seen the spirit of the man and
not the physical fact at all.
He shook hands. She was glad
to see that he neither peered at her slyly as a vain
man is apt to do when he meets a girl who has sought
him out nor met her sullenly as is the habit of the
bashful Westerner. His head was high, his glance
straight, and his smile appreciated her with frank
enjoyment.
She tried to match her speech with
his outright demeanor: “I have a business
offer to make. I won’t take a great deal
of your time. Ten minutes will do. Won’t
you sit down, Mr. Perris?”
She took his tattered hat and pointed
out a seat to him, noting, as she herself sat down,
that he was as erect in his chair as he had been standing.
There was something so adventurously restless about
Red Perris that she thought of a thoroughbred fresh
from the stable; just as a blooded hunter is apt to
be “too much horse under the saddle,” so
she was inclined to feel that Perris was “too
much man.” Something about him was always
moving. Either his lean fingers fretted on the
arm of the chair, or his foot stirred, or his glance
flickered, or his head turned proudly. Going
back to the thoroughbred comparison she decided that
Perris badly needed to have a race or two under his
belt before he would be worked down to normal.
She noted another thing: at close hand he was
more handsome.
In the meantime, since she had to
talk, it would be pleasanter to find some indirect
approach. One was offered by the fob which hung
outside the watchpocket of his trousers. It was
a tarnished, misshapen lump of metal.
“I can’t help asking about
that fob,” she said. “I’ve never
seen one even remotely like it.”
He fingered it with a singular smile.
“Tell you about it,” he
said amiably enough. “I was standing by
looking at a large-sized fracas one day and me doing
nothing—just as peaceful as an old plough-hoss—when
a gent ups and drills me in the leg. His bullet
had to cut through my holster and then it jammed into
my thigh bone. Put me in bed for a couple of
months and when I got out I had the slug fixed up
for a fob. Just so’s I could remember the
man that shot me. That’s about five years
back. I ain’t found him yet, but I’m
still remembering, you see?”
He finished the anecdote with a chuckle
which died out as he saw her eyes widen with horror.
Five years ago? she was thinking, he must have been
hardly more than a boy. How many other chapters
as violent as this were in his story?
“And—he didn’t
even offer to pay your doctor bill, I’ll wager?”
“Him?” Perris chuckled
again. “He’ll pay it, some day.
It’s just postponed—slow collection—that’s
all!” He shrugged the thought of it away, and
straightened a little, plainly waiting to hear her
business. But her mind was still only half on
her own affairs as she began talking.
“I have to go into the affairs
of our ranch a little,” she said, “so
that you can understand why I’ve asked you to
come here. My father was hurt by a fall from
a horse several years ago and the accident made him
an invalid. He can’t sit a saddle and because
of that he has lost all touch with his business.
Worst of all, he doesn’t seem to care. The
result was that everything went into the hands of the
foreman, but the foreman was not very successful.
As a matter of fact the ranch became a losing investment
and I came out to try to run it. I suppose that
sounds foolish?”
She looked sharply at him, but to
her delight for the first time his eyes had lighted
with a real enthusiasm.
“It sounds pretty fine to me,” said Red
Perris.
“The foreman doesn’t think
so,” she answered. “He wants his old
authority.”
“So he makes your trail all uphill?”
“By simply refusing to advise
me. My father won’t talk business.
Lew Hervey won’t. I’m trying to run
a dollar business with a cent’s worth of knowledge
and no experience. I can’t discharge Hervey;
his service has been too long and faithful. But
I want to have someone up there who will go into training
to take Hervey’s place eventually. Someone
who knows cattle and can tell me what to do now and
then. Mr. Perris, do you know the cow business?”
Some of his interest faded.
“Most folks raised in these
parts do,” he answered obliquely. “I
should think you could get a dozen anywhere.”
She explained eagerly: “It’s
not so simple. You see, Lew Hervey is rather
a rough character. In the old days I think he
was quite a fighter. I guess he still is.
And he’s gathered a lot of fighting men for
cowpunchers on the ranch. When he sees me bring
in an understudy for his part, so to speak, I’m
afraid he might make trouble unless he was convinced
it would be safer to keep his hands off the new man.”
The gloom of Perris returned.
He was still politely attentive, but his head turned,
and the eager eyes found something of interest across
the street. She knew her grip on him was failing
and she struggled to regain it. Here was her
man, she knew. Here was one who would ride the
fiercest outlaw horse on the ranch; wear out the toughest
cowboy; play with them to weariness when they wanted
to play, fight with them to exhaustion when they wanted
to fight, and as her right-hand man, advise her for
the best.
“As for terms, the right man
can make them for himself,” she concluded, hopelessly:
“Mr. Perris, I think you could be the man for
the place. What do you say to trying?”
He paused, diffidently, and she knew
that in the pause he was hunting for polite terms
of refusal.
“I’ll tell you how it
is. You’re mighty kind to make the offer.
You haven’t seen much of me and that little
bit has been—pretty rough.” He
laughed away his embarrassment. “So I appreciate
your confidence—a lot. But I’m
afraid that I’d be a tolerable lot like Hervey.”
He hurried on lest she should take offense. “You
see, I don’t like orders.”
“Of course if it were a man
who made the offer to you—” she began
angrily.
He raised his hand. There were
little touches of formal courtesy in him so contrasted
with what she had seen of him in action, so at variance
with the childishly gaudy clothes he wore, that it
put Marianne completely at sea.
“It’s just that I like
my own way. I’ve been a rolling stone all
my life. About the only moss I’ve gathered
is what you see.” He touched the dust-tarnished
gold braid on his sombrero and his twinkling eyes
invited her to mirth. But Marianne was sternly
silent. She knew that her color was gone and
that her beauty had in large part gone with it; a
reflection that did not at all help her mood or her
looks. “I get my fun out of playing a free
hand,” he was concluding. “I don’t
like partners. Not that I’m proud of it,
but so you can see where I stand. If I don’t
like a bunkie you can figure why I don’t want
a boss.”
She nodded stiffly, and at the unamiable
gesture she saw him shrug his shoulders very slightly,
his eyes wandered again as though he were seeking
for a means to end the interview.
Marianne rose.
“I see your viewpoint, Mr. Perris,”
she said coldly. “And I’m sorry you
can’t accept my offer.”
He came to his feet at the same moment,
but still he lingered a moment, turning his hat thoughtfully
so that she hoped, for an instant, that he was on
the verge of reconsidering. After all, she should
have used more persuasion; she was firmly convinced
that at heart men are very close to children.
Then his head went up and he shook away the mood which
had come over him.
“Some time I’ll come to
it,” he admitted. “But not yet a while.
I take it mighty kind of you to have thought I could
fill the bill and—I’m wishing you
all sorts of luck, Miss Jordan.”
“Thank you,” said Marianne,
and hated herself for her unbending stiffness.
At the door he turned again.
“I sure hope it’s easy for you to forget
songs,” he said.
“Songs?” echoed Marianne, and then turned
crimson with the memory.
“’You see,” explained
Red Jim Perris, “it’s a bad habit I’ve
picked up— of doing the first fool thing
that comes into my head. Good-bye, Miss Jordan.”
He was gone.
She felt, confusedly, that there were
many thing? she should have said and at the same time
there was a strange surety that sometime she would
see him again and say them. She walked absently
to the window which opened on the vacant lot to the
rear of the hotel.
Red Perris vanished from her mind,
for below her she saw Cordova in the act of tethering
Alcatraz to the rack which stood in the middle of the
lot; saddle and bridle had been removed—the
stallion wore only a stout halter.
The Mexican kept on the far side of
the rack and whipped his knot together hastily; it
was not till he sprang back from his work that she
saw the snaky length of an eight foot blacksnake uncoil
from his hand. He passed the lash slowly through
his fingers, while surveying the stallion with great
complacence. The ears of Alcatraz flattened back,
a sufficient proof that he knew what was coming; he
maintained his weary attitude, but it now seemed one
of despair. As for Marianne she refused to admit
the ugly suspicion which began to occur to her.
But Cordova left her only a moment for doubt.
The black streak curled around his
head, and through the open window she heard the crack
of the lash-end. Alcatraz did not stir under the
blow. Once more the blacksnake whirled, and Cordova
leaned back to give the stroke the full stretch of
arm and body; yet Alcatraz did not so much as lift
an ear. Only when the lash hung in mid-air did
he stir. The rope which tethered him hung slack,
and this enabled the stallion to give impetus to his
backward leap. All the weight of his body, all
the strain of his leg muscles snapped the rope taut.
It vibrated to invisibility for an instant, then parted
with a sound as loud as the fall of the whip.
The straining body of Alcatraz, so released, toppled
sidewise. He rolled like a dog in the dust, and
when, with the agility of a dog, he gained his feet,
Cordova was fleeing towards the hotel with a horror-stricken
face.
Even then she could not understand
his terror—not until she saw that Alcatraz
had wheeled and was bolting in hot pursuit. He
came like the “devil-horse” that the Mexican
called him, with his ears flattened and his mouth
gaping; he came with such velocity that Cordova, running
as only consummate terror can make a man run, seemed
to be racing on a treadmill—literally standing
still.
The picket fence which set off the
back yard of the hotel gave the man an instant of
delay—a terribly vital instant, indeed,
that seemed to Marianne to contain long, long minutes.
But here he was over and running again. In her
dread she wondered why he was not shrieking for aid,
but the face of Cordova was rigid—a nightmare
mask!
Twenty steps, now, to the hotel, and
surely there was still hope. No, for Alcatraz
sailed across the pickets with a bound that cut in
two the distance still dividing him from his master.
It had all happened, perhaps, within the space of
three breaths. Now Marianne leaned out of the
window and screamed her warning, for the faded chestnut
was on the very heels of the Mexican. He raised
his contorted face at her cry, then threw up both
his arms to her in a gesture she could never forget.
“Shoot!” yelled Cordova. “Amigo,
amigo, shoot! Quick—”
Then Alcatraz struck him!
Half the bones in his body must have
been broken by the impact. It spun him over and
over in the dust, yet as the impetus of the chestnut
carried him far past, Cordova struggled to his feet
and attempted to flee again. Alas, it was only
a step! His left leg crumpled under him.
He toppled sideways, still wriggling and twisting onwards
through the dirt—and then Alcatraz struck
him again.
This time is was no blind rush.
Back and forth, up and down, he crossed and recrossed,
wheeled and reared and stamped, until his one white
stocking was crimsoned and spurts of red flew out and
turned black in the dust.
The horror which had choked her relaxed
and Marianne shrieked again. It was that second
cry which saved a faint spark of life for Cordova for
at the sound the stallion leaped sidewise from the
body of his victim, lifted his head towards the half
fainting girl in the window, and trumpeted a great
neigh of defiance. Still neighing he swerved away
into a gallop, cleared the fence a second time, and
fled from view.