Pierre stared at his companion with almost open-mouthed
astonishment.
“I? A dance?”
And then his head tilted back and he laughed.
“My good times, Dick, come out
of the hills and the skyline, and the gallop of Mary.
But as for women, they bore me, Dick.”
“Even Jack?”
“She’s more man than woman.”
It was the turn of Wilbur to laugh,
and he responded uproariously until Pierre frowned
and flushed a little.
“When I see you out here on
your horse with your rifle in the boot and your six-gun
swinging low in the scabbard, and riding the fastest
bit of horseflesh on the ranges,” explained
Wilbur, “I get to thinking that you’re
pretty much king of the mountains; but in certain
respects, Pierre, you’re a child.”
Pierre stirred uneasily in his saddle.
A man must be well over thirty before he can withstand
ridicule.
He said dryly: “I’ve
an idea that I know Jack’s about as well as the
next man.” “Let it drop,” said
Wilbur, sober again, for he shared with all of Boone’s
crew a deep-rooted unwillingness to press Red Pierre
beyond a certain point. “The one subject
I won’t quarrel about is Jack, God bless her.”
“She’s the best pal,”
said Pierre soberly, “and the nearest to a man
I’ve ever met.”
“Nearest to a man?” queried
Wilbur, and smiled, but so furtively that even the
sharp eye of Red Pierre did not perceive the mockery.
He went on: “But the dance, what of that?
It’s a masquerade. There’d be no
fear of being recognized.”
Pierre was silent a moment more.
Then he said: “This girl—what
did you call her?”
“Mary.”
“And about her hair—I think you said
it was black?”
“Golden, Pierre.”
“Mary, and golden hair,”
mused Red Pierre. “I think I’ll go
to that dance.”
“With Jack? She dances wonderfully, you
know.”
“Well—with Jack.”
So they reached a tumbled ranch house
squeezed between two hills so that it was sheltered
from the storms of the winter but held all the heat
of the summer.
Once it had been a goodly building,
the home of some cattle king. But bad times had
come. A bullet in a saloon brawl put an end to
the cattle king, and now his home was a wreck of its
former glory. The northern wing shelved down
to the ground as if the building were kneeling to
the power of the wind, and the southern portion of
the house, though still erect, seemed tottering and
rotten throughout and holding together until at a
final blow the whole structure would crumple at once.
To the stables, hardly less ruinous
than the big house, Pierre and Wilbur took their horses,
and a series of whinnies greeted them from the stalls.
To look down that line of magnificent heads raised
above the partitions of the stalls was like glancing
into the stud of some crowned head who made hunting
and racing his chief end in life, for these were animals
worthy of the sport of kings.
They were chosen each from among literal
hundreds, and they were cared for far more tenderly
than the masters cared for themselves. There was
a reason in it, for upon their speed and endurance
depended the life of the outlaw. Moreover, the
policy of Jim Boone was one of actual “long
riding.”
Here he had come to a pause for a
few days to recuperate his horses and his men.
Tomorrow, perhaps, he would be on the spur again and
sweeping off to a distant point in the mountain-desert
to strike and be gone again before the rangers knew
well that he had been there. Very rarely did
one settler have another neighbor at a distance of
less than two hundred miles. It meant arduous
and continual riding, and a horse with any defect
was worse than useless because the speed of the gang
had to be the speed of the slowest horse in the lot.
It was some time before the two long
riders had completed the grooming of their horses
and had gone down the hill and into the house.
In the largest habitable room they found a fire fed
with rotten timbers from the wrecked portion of the
building, and scattered through the room a sullen
and dejected group: Mansie, Branch, Jim Boone,
and Black Morgan Gandil.
At a glance it was easy to detect
their malady; it was the horrible ennui which comes
to men who are always surrounded by one set of faces.
If a man is happily married he may bear with his wife
and his children constantly through long stretches
of time, but the glamour of life lies in the varying
personalities which a man glimpses in passing, but
never knows.
This was a rare crew. Every man
of them was marked for courage and stamina and wild
daring. Yet even so in their passive moments they
hated each other with a hate that passed the understanding
of common men.
Through seven years they had held
together, through fair weather and foul, and now each
knew from the other’s expression the words that
were about to be spoken, and each knew that the other
was reading him, and loathing what he read.
So they were apt to relapse into long
silences unless Jack was with them, for being a woman
her variety was infinite, or Pierre le Rouge, whom
all except Black Gandil loved and petted, and feared.
They were a battered crowd. Wind
and hard weather and a thousand suns had marked them,
and the hand of man had branded them. Here and
there was a touch of gray in their hair, and about
the mouth of each were lines which in such silent
moments as this one gave an expression of yearning.
“What’s up? What’s
wrong?” asked Wilbur from the door, but since
no answer was deigned he said no more.
But Pierre, like a charmed man who
dares to walk among lions, strolled easily through
the room, and looked into the face of big Boone, who
smiled faintly up to him, and Black Gandil, who scowled
doubly dark, and Bud Mansie, who shifted uneasily
in his chair and then nodded, and finally to Branch.
He dropped a hand on the massive shoulder of the blacksmith.
“Well?” he asked.
Branch let himself droop back into
his chair. His big, dull, colorless eyes stared
up to his friend.
“I dunno, lad. I’m
just weary with the sort of tired that you can’t
help by sleepin’. Understand?”
Pierre nodded, slowly, because he
sympathized. “And the trouble?”
Branch stared about as if searching
for a reason. “Jack’s upstairs sulking;
Patterson hasn’t come home yet.”
And Black Gandil, who heard all things,
said without looking up: “A man that saves
a shipwrecked fellow, he gets bad luck for thanks.”
Pierre turned a considerable eye on
him, and Gandil scowled back.
“You’ve been croaking
for six years, Morgan, about the bad luck that would
come to Jim from saving me out of the snow. It’s
never happened, has it?”
Gandil, snarling from one side of
his mouth, answered: “Where’s Patterson?”
“Am I responsible if the blockhead
has got drunk someplace?”
“Patterson doesn’t get
drunk—not that way. And he knows that
we were to start again today.”
“There ain’t no doubt of that,”
commented Branch.
“It’s the straight dope. Patterson
keeps his dates,” said Bud Mansie.
The booming bass of Jim Boone broke
in: “Shut up, the whole gang of you.
We’ve had luck for the six years Pierre has been
with us. Who calls him a Jonah?”
And Black Gandil answered: “I
do. I’ve sailed the seas. I know bad
luck when I see it.”
“You’ve been seeing it for six years.”
“The worst storms come on a
voyage that starts with fair weather. Patterson?
He’s gone; he ain’t just delayed; he’s
gone.”
It was not the first of these gloomy
prophecies which Gandil had made, but each time a
heavy gloom broke over Red Pierre. For when he
summed up the good fortune which the cross of Father
Victor had brought him, he found that he had gained
a father, and lost him at their first meeting; and
he had won money on that night of the gambling, but
it had cost the life of another man almost at once.
The horse which carried him away from the vengeance
in Morgantown had died on the way and he had been
saved from the landslide, but the girl had perished.
He had driven McGurk from the ranges,
and where would the penalty fall on those who were
near and dear to him? In a superstitious horror
he had asked himself the question a thousand times,
and finally he could hardly bear to look into the
ominous, brooding eyes of Black Gandil. It was
as if the man had a certain and evil knowledge of the
future.