At that Mary, who stood with her hand
on the latch, whirled and stood wide-eyed, her astonishment
greater than her fear, for that whisper told her a
thousand things.
Through her mind all the time that
she stayed in the cabin there had passed a curious
surmise that this very place might be the covert of
Pierre le Rouge. There was a fatality about it,
for the invisible Power which had led her up the valley
of the Old Crow surely would not make mistakes.
In her search for Pierre, Providence
brought her to this place, and Providence could not
be wrong. This, a vague emotion stirring in her
somewhere between reason and the heart, grew to an
almost certain knowledge as she heard the whisper,
the faint, heartbroken whisper: “Pierre!”
And when she turned to the boy again,
noting the shirts and the chaps hanging at the wall,
she knew they belonged to Pierre as surely as if she
had seen him hang them there.
The fingers of Jack were twisted around
the butt of his revolver, white with the intensity
of the pressure.
Now he cried: “Get out!
You’ve done your work; get out!”
But Mary stepped straight toward the
murderous, pale face. “I’ll stay,”
she said, “and wait for Pierre.”
The boy blanched.
“Stay?” he echoed.
The heart of Mary went out to this
trusted companion who feared for his friend.
She said gently: “Listen;
I’ve come all this way looking for Pierre, but
not to harm him or to betray him, I’m his friend.
Can’t you trust me Jack?”
“Trust you? No more than
I’ll trust what came with you!”
And the fierce black eyes lingered
on Mary and then fled past her toward the door, as
if the boy debated hotly and silently whether or not
it would be better to put an end to this intruder,
but stayed his hand, fearing that Power which had
followed her up the valley of the Old Crow.
It was that same invisible guardian
who made Mary strong now; it was like the hand of
a friend on her shoulder, like the voice of a friend
whispering reassuring words at her ear. She faced
those blazing, black eyes steadily. It would
be better to be frank, wholly frank.
“This is the house of Pierre.
I know it as surely as if I saw him sitting here now.
You can’t deceive me. And I’ll stay.
I’ll even tell you why. Once he said that
he loved me, Jack, but he left me because of a strange
superstition; and so I’ve followed to tell him
that I want to be near no matter what fate hangs over
him.”
And the boy, whiter still, and whiter,
looked at her with clearing, narrowing eyes.
“So you’re one of them,”
said the boy softly; “you’re one of the
fools who listen to Red Pierre. Well, I know
you; I’ve known you from the minute I seen you
crouched there at the fire. You’re the one
Pierre met at the dance at the Crittenden schoolhouse.
Tell me!”
“Yes,” said Mary, marveling greatly.
“And he told you he loved you?”
“Yes.” It was a fainter
voice now, and the color was going up her cheeks.
The lad fixed her with his cold scorn
and then turned on his heel and slipped into an easy
position on the bunk.
“Then wait for him to come.
He’ll be here before morning.”
But Mary followed across the room
and touched the shoulder of Jack. It was as if
she touched a wild wolf, for the lad whirled and struck
her hand away in an outburst of silent fury.
“Why shouldn’t I stay?
He hasn’t—he hasn’t changed—Jack?”
The insolent black eyes looked up
and scanned her slowly from head to foot. Then
he laughed in the same deliberate manner.
“No, I guess he thinks as much
of you now as he ever did.”
“You are lying to me,”
said the girl faintly, but the terror in her eyes
said another thing.
“He thinks as much of you as
he ever did. He thinks as much of you as he does
of the rest of the soft-handed, pretty-faced fools
who listen to him and believe him. I suppose—”
He broke off to laugh heartily again,
with a jarring, forced note which escaped Mary.
“I suppose that he made love
to you one minute and the next told you that bad luck—something
about the cross—kept him away from you?”
Each slow word was like a blow of
a fist. Mary closed her eyes to shut out the
scorn of that handsome, boyish face; closed her eyes
to summon out from the dark of her mind the picture
of Pierre le Rouge as he had told her of his love;
and then she heard the voice of Pierre renouncing
her.
She opened her eyes again. She
cried: “It is all a lie! If he is not
true, there’s no truth in the world.”
“If you come down to that,”
said the boy coldly, “there ain’t much
wasted this side of the Rockies. It’s about
as scarce as rain.”
He continued in an almost kindly tone:
“What would you do with a wild man like Red
Pierre? Run along; git out of here; grab your
horse, and beat it back to civilization; there ain’t
no place for you up here in the wilderness.”
“What would I do with him?” cried the
girl. “Love him!”
It seemed as though her words, like
whips, lashed the boy back to his murderous anger.
He lay with blazing eyes, watching her for a moment,
too moved to speak. At last he propped himself
on one elbow, shook a small, white-knuckled fist under
the nose of Mary, and cried: “Then what
would he do with you?”
He went on: “Would he wear
you around his neck like a watch charm?”
“I’d bring him back with
me—back into the East, and he would be lost
among the crowds and never suspected of his past.”
“You’d bring Pierre
anywhere? Say, lady, that’s like hearing
the sheep talk about leading the wolf around by the
nose. If all the men in the ranges can’t
catch him, or make him budge an inch out of the way
he’s picked, do you think you could stir him?”
Jeering laughter shook him; it seemed
that he would never be done with his laughter, yet
there was a hint of the hysterically mirthless in
it. It came to a jarring stop.
He said: “D’you think
he’s just bein’ driven around by chance?
Lady, d’you think he even wants to get
out of this life of his? No, he loves it!
He loves the danger. D’you think a man that’s
used to breathing in a whirlwind can get used to living
in calm air? It can’t be done!”
And the girl answered steadily:
“For every man there is one woman, and for that
woman the man will do strange things.”
“You poor, white-faced, whimpering
fool,” snarled the boy, gripping at his gun
again, “d’you dream that you’re the
one that’s picked out for Pierre? No, there’s
another!”
“Another? A woman who—”
“Who loves Pierre—a
woman that’s fit for him. She can ride like
a man; she can shoot almost as straight and as fast
as Pierre; she can handle a knife; and she’s
been through hell for Pierre, and she’ll go
through it again. She can ride the trail all day
with him and finish it less fagged than he is.
She can chop down a tree as well as he can, and build
a fire better. She can hold up a train with him
or rob a bank and slip through a town in the middle
of the night and laugh with him about it afterward
around a campfire. I ask you, is that the sort
of a woman that’s meant for Pierre?”
And Mary answered, with bowed head: “She
is.”
She cried instantly afterward, cutting
short the look of wild triumph on the face of the
boy: “But there’s no such woman; there’s
no one who could do these things! I know it!”
The boy sprang to his feet, flushing
as red as the girl was white.
“You fool, if you’re blind
and got to have your eyes open to see, look at the
woman!”
And she tore the wide-brimmed sombrero
from her head. Down past the shoulders flooded
a mass of blue-black hair. The firelight flickered
and danced across the silken shimmer of it. It
swept wildly past the waist, a glorious, night-dark
tide in which the heart of a strong man could be tangled
and lost. With quivering lips Jacqueline cried:
“Look at me! Am I worthy of him?”
Short step by step Mary went back,
staring with fascinated eyes as one who sees some
devilish, midnight revelry, and shrinks away from it
lest the sight should blast her. She covered her
eyes with her hands but instantly strong grips fell
on her wrists and her hands were jerked down from
her face. She looked up into the eyes of a beautiful
tigress.
“Answer me—your yellow
hair against mine—your child fingers against
my grip—are you equal with me?”
But the strength of Jacqueline faded
and grew small; her arms fell to her side; she stepped
back, with a rising pallor taking the place of the
red. For Mary, brushing her hands, one gloved
and one bare, before her eyes, returned the stare
of the mountain girl with equal scorn. A mighty
loathing filled up her veins in place of strength.
“Tell me,” she said, “was—was
this man living with you when he came to me and—and
made speeches—about love?”
“Bah! He was living with
me. I tell you, he came back and laughed with
me about it, and told me about your baby-blue eyes
when they filled with tears; laughed and laughed and
laughed, I tell you, as I could laugh now.”
The other twisted her hands together,
moaning: “And I have followed him, even
to the place where he keeps his—woman?
Ah, how I hate myself: how I despise myself.
I’m unclean—unclean in my own eyes!”
“Wait!” called Jacqueline.
“You are leaving too soon. The night is
cold.”
“I am going. There is no need to gibe at
me.”
“But wait—he will
want to see you! I will tell him that you have
been here—that you came clear up the valley
of the Old Crow to see him and beg him on your knees
to love you—he’ll be angry to have
missed the scene!”
But the door closed on Mary as she
fled with her hands pressed against her ears.