Then came a voice that startled the
two priests, for it seemed that a fourth man had entered
the room, so changed was it from the musical voice
of Pierre.
“Father Victor, the roan is
a strong horse. May I take him?”
“Pierre!” and the priest reached out his
bony hands.
But the boy did not seem to notice or to understand.
“It is a long journey, and I
will need a strong horse. It must be eight hundred
miles to that town.”
“Pierre, what claim has he upon you? What
debt have you to repay?”
And Pierre le Rouge answered: “He loved
my mother.”
“You are going?”
The boy asked in astonishment: “Would you
not have me go, Father?”
And Jean Paul Victor could not meet the sorrowful
blue eyes.
He bowed his head and answered:
“My child, I would have you go. But promise
with your hand in mine that you will come back to me
when your father is buried.”
The lean fingers caught the extended
hand of Pierre and froze about it.
“But first I have a second duty in the southland.”
“A second?”
“You taught me to shoot and
to use a knife. Once you said: ’An
eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth.’
Father Victor, my father was killed by another man.”
“Pierre, dear lad, swear to
me here on this cross that you will not raise your
hands against the murderer. ’Vengeance is
mine, saith the Lord.’”
“He must have an instrument
for his wrath. He shall work through me in this.”
“Pierre, you blaspheme.”
“‘An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a
tooth.’”
“It was a demon in me that quoted
that in your hearing, and not myself.”
“The horse, Father Victor—may I have
the roan?”
“Pierre, I command you—”
The light in the blue eyes was as
cold and steady as that in the starved eyes of Jean
Paul Victor.
“Hush!” he said calmly.
“For the sake of the love that I bear for you,
do not command me.”
The stern priest dropped his head.
He said at last: “I have nothing saving
one great and terrible treasure which I see was predestined
to you. It is the cross of Father Meilan.
You have worn it before. You shall wear it hereafter
as your own.”
He took from his own neck a silver
cross suspended by a slender silver chain, and the
boy, with startled eyes, dropped to his knees and
received the gift.
“It has brought good to all
who possessed it, but for every good thing that it
works for you it will work evil on some other.
Great is its blessing and great is its burden.
I, alas, know; but you also have heard of its history.
Do you accept it, Pierre?”
“Dear Father, with all my heart.”
The colorless hands touched the dark-red hair.
“God pardon the sins you shall commit.”
Pierre crushed the hand of Jean Paul
Victor against his lips and rushed from the room,
while the tall priest, staring down at the fingers
which had been kissed, pronounced: “I have
forged a thunderbolt, Father Gabrielle. It is
too great for my hand. Listen!” And they
heard clearly the sharp clang of a horse’s hoofs
on the hard-packed snow, loud at first, but fading
rapidly away. The wind, increasing suddenly,
shook the house furiously about them.
It was a north wind, and traveled
south before the rider of the strong roan. Over
a thousand miles of plain and hills it passed, and
down into the cattle country of the mountain-desert
which the Rockies hem on one side and the tall Sierras
on the other.
It was a trail to try even the endurance
of Pierre and the strong roan, but the boy clung to
it doggedly. On a trail that led down from the
edges of the northern mountain the roan crashed to
the ground in a plunging fall, hitting heavily on
his knees. He was dead before the boy had freed
his feet from the stirrups.
Pierre threw the saddle over his shoulder
and walked eight miles to the nearest ranch house,
where he spent practically the last cent of his money
on another horse, and drove on south once more.
There was little hope in him as day
after day slipped past. Only the ghost of a chance
remained that Martin Ryder could fight away death
for another fortnight; yet Pierre had seen many a man
from the mountain-desert stave off the end through
weeks and weeks of the bitterest suffering. His
father must be a man of the same hard durable metal,
and upon that Pierre staked all his hopes.
And always he carried the picture
of the dying man alone with his two wolf-eyed sons
who waited for his eyes to weaken. Whenever he
thought of that he touched his horse with the spurs
and rode fiercely for a time. They were his flesh
and blood, the man, and even the two wolf-eyed sons.
So he came at last to a gap in the
hills and looked down on Morgantown in the hollow,
twoscore unpainted houses sprawling along a single
street. The snow was everywhere white and pure,
and the town was like a stain on the landscape with
wisps of smoke rising and trailing across the hilltops.
Down to the edge of the town he rode,
left his cow-pony standing with hanging head outside
a saloon, strode through the swinging doors, and asked
of the bartender the way to the house of Martin Ryder.
The bartender stopped in his labor
of rubbing down the surface of his bar and stared
at the black-serge robe of the stranger, with curiosity
rather than criticism, for women, madmen, and clergymen
have the right-of-way in the mountain-desert.
He said: “Well, I’ll
be damned!—askin’ your pardon.
So old Mart Ryder has come down to this, eh?
Partner, you’re sure going to have a rough ride
getting Mart to heaven. Better send a posse along
with him, because some first-class angels are going
to get considerable riled when they sight him coming.
Ha, ha, ha! Sure I’ll show you the way.
Take the northwest road out of town and go five miles
till you see a broken-backed shack lyin’ over
to the right. That’s Mart Ryder’s
place.”
Out to the broken-backed shack rode
Pierre le Rouge, Pierre the Red, as everyone in the
north country knew him. His second horse, staunch
cow-pony that it was, stumbled on with sagging knees
and hanging head, but Pierre rode upright, at ease,
for his mind was untired.
Broken-backed indeed was the house
before which he dismounted. The roof sagged from
end to end, and the stove pipe chimney leaned at a
drunken angle. Nature itself was withered beside
that house; before the door stood a great cottonwood,
gashed and scarred by lightning, with the limbs almost
entirely stripped away from one side. Under this
broken monster Pierre stepped and through the door.
Two growls like the snarls of watch-dogs greeted him,
and two tall, unshaven men barred his way. Behind
them, from the bed in the corner, a feeble voice called:
“Who’s there?”
“In the name of God,”
said the boy gravely, for he saw a hollow-eyed specter
staring toward him from the bed in the corner, “let
me pass! I am his son!”
It was not that which made them give
back, but a shrill, faint cry of triumph from the
sick man toward which they turned. Pierre slipped
past them and stood above Martin Ryder. He was
wasted beyond belief—only the monster hand
showed what he had been.
“Son?” he queried with yearning and uncertainty.
“Pierre, your son.”
And he slipped to his knees beside
the bed. The heavy hand fell upon his hair and
stroked it.
“There ain’t no ways of
doubting it. It’s red silk, like the hair
of Irene. Seein’ you, boy, it ain’t
so hard to die. Look up! So! Pierre,
my son! Are you scared of me, boy?”
“I’m not afraid.”
“Not with them eyes you ain’t.
Now that you’re here, pay the coyotes and let
’em go off to gnaw the bones.”
He dragged out a small canvas bag
from beneath the blankets and gestured toward the
two lurkers in the corner.
“Take it, and be damned to you!”
A dirty, yellow hand seized the bag;
there was a chortle of exultation, and the two scurried
out of the room.
“Three weeks they’ve watched
an’ waited for me to go out, Pierre. Three
weeks they’ve waited an’ sneaked up to
my bed an’ sneaked away agin, seein’ my
eyes open.”
Looking into their fierce fever brightness,
Pierre understood why they had quailed. For the
man, though wrecked beyond hope of living, was terrible
still. The thick, gray stubble on his face could
not hide altogether the hard lines of mouth and jaw,
and on the wasted arm the hand was grotesquely huge.
It was horror that widened the eyes of Pierre as he
looked at Martin Ryder; it was a grim happiness that
made his lips almost smile.
“You’ve taken holy orders, lad?”
“No.”
“But the black dress?”
“I’m only a novice. I’ve sworn
no vows.”
“And you don’t hate me—you
hold no grudge against me for the sake of your mother?”
Pierre took the heavy hand.
“Are you not my father?
And my mother was happy with you. For her sake
I love you.”
“The good Father Victor. He sent you to
me.”
“I came of my own will. He would not have
let me go.”
“He—he would have kept my flesh and
blood away from me?”
“Do not reproach him. He would have kept
me from a sin.”
“Sin? By God, boy, no matter
what I’ve done, is it sin for my son to come
to me? What sin?”
“The sin of murder!”
“Ha!”
“I have come to find McGurk.”