So turned, Terry could not see her
clearly. He caught a glimmer of red bronze hair,
dark in shadow and brilliant in high lights, and a
sheen of greenish eyes. Otherwise, he only noted
the casual manner in which she acknowledged the introduction,
unsmiling, indifferent, as Pollard said: “Here’s
my daughter Kate. This is Terry—a new
hand.”
It seemed to Terry that as he said
this the rancher made a gesture as of warning, though
this, no doubt, could be attributed to his wish to
silently explain away the idiosyncrasy of Terry in
using his first name only. He was presented in
turn to the four men, and thought them the oddest
collection he had ever laid eyes on.
Slim Dugan was tall, but not so tall
as he looked, owing to his very small head and narrow
shoulders. His hair was straw color, excessively
silky, and thin as the hair of a year-old child.
There were other points of interest in Slim Dugan;
his feet, for instance, were small as the feet of
a girl, accentuated by the long, narrow riding boots,
and his hands seemed to be pulled out to a great and
unnecessary length. They made up for it by their
narrowness.
His exact opposite was Marty Cardiff,
chunky, fat, it seemed, until one noted the roll and
bulge of the muscles at the shoulders. His head
was settled into his fat shoulders somewhat in the
manner of Denver’s, Terry thought.
Oregon Charlie looked the part of
an Indian, with his broad nose and high cheekbones,
flat face, slanted dark eyes; but his skin was a dead
and peculiar white. He was a down-headed man,
and one could rarely imagine him opening his lips
to speak; he merely grunted as he shook hands with
the stranger.
To finish the picture, there was a
man as huge as Joe Pollard himself, and as powerful,
to judge by appearances. His face was burned to
a jovial red; his hair was red also, and there was
red hair on the backs of his freckled hands.
All these men met Terry with cordial
nods, but there was a carelessness about their demeanor
which seemed strange to Terry. In his experience,
the men of the mountains were a timid or a blustering
lot before newcomers, uneasy, and anxious to establish
their place. But these men acted as if meeting
unknown men were a part of their common, daily experience.
They were as much at their ease as social lions.
Pollard was explaining the presence of Terry.
“He’s come up to clean
out the varmints,” he said to the others.
“They been getting pretty thick on the range,
you know.”
“You came in just wrong,”
complained Kate, while the men turned four pairs of
grave eyes upon Terry and seemed to be judging him.
“I got Oregon singing at last, and he was doing
fine. Got a real voice, Charlie has. Regular
branded baritone, I’ll tell a man.”
“Strike up agin for us, Charlie,”
said Pollard good-naturedly. “You don’t
never make much more noise’n a grizzly.”
But Charlie looked down at his hands
and a faint spot of red appeared in his cheek.
Obviously he was much embarrassed. And when he
looked up, it was to fix a glance of cold suspicion
upon Terry, as though warning him not to take this
talk of social acquirements as an index to his real
character.
“Get us some coffee, Kate,”
said Pollard. “Turned off cold coming up
the hill.”
She did not rise. She had turned
around to her music again, and now she acknowledged
the order by lifting her head and sending a shrill
whistle through the room. Her father started
violently.
“Damn it, Kate, don’t do that!”
“The only thing that’ll
bring Johnny on the run,” she responded carelessly.
And, indeed, the door on the left
of the room flew open a moment later, and a wide-eyed
Chinaman appeared with a long pigtail jerking about
his head as he halted and looked about in alarm.
“Coffee for the boss and the
new hand,” said Kate, without turning her head,
as soon as she heard the door open. “Pronto,
Johnny.”
Johnny snarled an indistinct something
and withdrew muttering.
“You’ll have Johnny quitting
the job,” complained Pollard, frowning.
“You can’t scare the poor devil out of
his skin like that every time you want coffee.
Besides, why didn’t you get up and get it for
us yourself?”
Still she did not turn; but, covering
a yawn, replied: “Rather sit here and play.”
Her father swelled a moment in rage,
but he subsided again without audible protest.
Only he sent a scowl at Terry as though daring him
to take notice of this insolence. As for the
other men, they had scattered to various parts of
the room and remained there, idly, while the boss and
the new hand drank the scalding coffee of Johnny.
All this time Pollard remained deep in thought.
His meditations exploded as he banged the empty cup
back on the table.
“Kate, this stuff has got to stop. Understand?”
The soft jingling of the piano continued without pause.
“Stop that damned noise!”
The music paused. Terry felt
the long striking muscles leap into hard ridges along
his arms, but glancing at the other four, he found
that they were taking the violence of Pollard quite
as a matter of course. One was whittling, another
rolled a cigarette, and all of them, if they took any
visible notice of the argument, did so with the calmest
of side glances.
“Turn around!” roared Pollard.
His daughter turned slowly and faced
him. Not white-faced with fear, but to the unutterable
astonishment of Terry she was quietly looking her
father up and down. Pollard sprang to his feet
and struck the table so that it quivered through all
its massive length.
“Are you trying to shame me
before a stranger?” thundered the big man.
“Is that the scene?”
She flicked Terry Hollis with a glance.
“I think he’ll understand and make allowances.”
It brought the heavy fist smashing
on the table again. And an ugly feeling rose
in Hollis that the big fellow might put hands on his
daughter.
“And what d’you mean by
that? What in hell d’you mean by that?”
In place of wincing, she in turn came
to her feet gracefully. There had been such an
easy dignity about her sitting at the piano that she
had seemed tall to Terry. Now that she stood
up, he was surprised to see that she was not a shade
more than average height, beautifully and strongly
made.
“You’ve gone about far
enough with your little joke,” said the girl,
and her voice was low, but with an edge of vibrancy
that went through Hollis. “And you’re
going to stop—pronto!”
There was a flash of teeth as she
spoke, and a quiver through her body. Terry had
never seen such passion, such unreasoning, wild passion,
as that which had leaped on the girl. Though
her face was not contorted, danger spoke from every
line of it. He made himself tense, prepared for
a similar outbreak from the father, but the latter
relaxed as suddenly as his daughter had become furious.
“There you go,” he complained,
with a sort of heavy whine. “Always flying
off the handle. Always turning into a wildcat
when I try to reason with you!”
“Reason!” cried the girl. “Reason!”
Joe Pollard grew downcast under her
scorn. And Terry, sensing that the crisis of
the argument had passed, watched the other four men
in the room. They had not paid the slightest
attention to the debate during its later phases.
And two of them—Slim and huge Phil Marvin—had
begun to roll dice on a folded blanket, the little
ivories winking in the light rapidly until they came
to a rest at the farther end of the cloth. Possibly
this family strife was a common thing in the Pollard
household. At any rate, the father now passed
off from accusation to abrupt apology. “You
always get me riled at the end of the day, Kate.
Damn it! Can’t you never bear with a gent?”
The tigerish alertness passed from
Kate Pollard. She was filled all at once with
a winning gentleness and, crossing to her father, took
his heavy hands in hers.
“I reckon I’m a bad one,”
she accused herself. “I try to get over
tantrums—but—I can’t help
it! Something—just sort of grabs me
by the throat when I get mad. I—I
see red.”
“Hush up, honey,” said
the big man tenderly, and he ran his thick fingers
over her hair. “You ain’t so bad.
And all that’s bad in you comes out of me.
You forget and I’ll forget.”
He waved across the table.
“Terry’ll be thinking
we’re a bunch of wild Indians the way we been
actin’.”
“Oh!”
Plainly she was recalled to the presence
of the stranger for the first time in many minutes
and, dropping her chin in her hand, she studied the
new arrival.
He found it difficult to meet her
glance. The Lord had endowed Terry Hollis with
a remarkable share of good looks, and it was not the
first time that he had been investigated by the eyes
of a woman. But in all his life he had never
been subjected to an examination as minute, as insolently
frank as this one. He felt himself taken part
and parcel, examined in detail as to forehead, chin,
and eyes and heft of shoulders, and then weighed altogether.
In self-defense he looked boldly back at her, making
himself examine her in equal detail. Seeing her
so close, he was aware of a marvellously delicate
olive-tanned skin with delightful tints of rose just
beneath the surface. He found himself saying inwardly:
“It’s easy to look at her. It’s
very easy. By the Lord, she’s beautiful!”
As for the girl, it seemed that she
was not quite sure in her judgment. For now she
turned to her father with a faint frown of wonder.
And again it seemed to Terry that Joe Pollard made
an imperceptible sign, such as he had made to the
four men when he introduced Terry.
But now he broke into breezy talk.
“Met Terry down in Pedro’s—”
The girl seemed to have dismissed
Terry from her mind already, for she broke in:
“Crooked game he’s running, isn’t
it?”
“I thought so till today.
Then I seen Terry, here, trim Pedro for a flat twenty
thousand!”
“Oh,” nodded the girl.
Again her gaze reverted leisurely to the stranger
and with a not unflattering interest.
“And then I seen him lose most
of it back again. Roulette.”
She nodded, keeping her eyes on Terry,
and the boy found himself desiring mightily to discover
just what was going on behind the changing green of
her eyes. He was shocked when he discovered.
It came like the break of high dawn in the mountains
of the Big Bend. Suddenly she had smiled openly,
frankly. “Hard luck, partner!”
A little shivering sense of pleasure
ran through him. He knew that he had been admitted
by her—accepted.
Her father had thrown up his head.
“Someone come in the back way. Oregon,
go find out!”
Dark-eyed Oregon Charlie slipped up
and through the door. Everyone in the room waited,
a little tense, with lifted heads. Slim was studying
the last throw that Phil Marvin had made. Terry
could not but wonder what significance that “back
way” had. Presently Oregon reappeared.
“Pete’s come.”
“The hell!”
“Went upstairs.”
“Wants to be alone,” interrupted
the girl. “He’ll come down and talk
when he feels like it. That’s Pete’s
way.”
“Watching us, maybe,”
growled Joe Pollard, with a shade of uneasiness still.
“Damned funny gent, Pete is. Watches a man
like a cat; watches a gopher hole all day, maybe.
And maybe the gent he watches is a friend he’s
known for ten years. Well—let Pete
go. They ain’t no explaining him.”
Through the last part of his talk,
and through the heaviness of his voice, cut another
tone, lighter, sharper, venomous: “Phil,
you gummed them dice that last time!”
Joe Pollard froze in place; the eyes
of the girl widened. Terry, looking across the
room, saw Phil Marvin scoop up the dice and start to
his feet.
“You lie, Slim!”
Instinctively Terry slipped his hand
onto his gun. It was what Phil Marvin had done,
as a matter of fact. He stood swelling and glowering,
staring down at Slim Dugan. Slim had not risen.
His thin, lithe body was coiled, and he reminded Terry
in ugly fashion of a snake ready to strike. His
hand was not near his gun. It was the calm courage
and self-confidence of a man who is sure of himself
and of his enemy. Terry had heard of it before,
but never seen it. As for Phil, it was plain that
he was ill at ease in spite of his bulk and the advantage
of his position. He was ready to fight.
But he was not at all pleased with the prospect.
Terry again glanced at the witnesses.
Every one of them was alert, but there was none of
that fear which comes in the faces of ordinary men
when strife between men is at hand. And suddenly
Terry knew that every one of the five men in the room
was an old familiar of danger, every one of them a
past master of gun fighting!