Jacqueline ran to the door and threw it open.
“Ride down the valley!”
she cried. “That’s right. He’s
coming up, and he’ll meet you on the way.
He’ll be glad—to see you!”
She saw the rider swing sharply about,
and the clatter of the galloping hoofs died out up
the valley; then she closed the door, dropped the
latch, and, running to the middle of the room, threw
up her arms and cried out, a wild, shrill yell of
triumph like the call of the old Indian brave when
he rises with the scalp of his murdered enemy dripping
in his hand.
The extended arms she caught back
to her breast, and stood there with head tilted back,
crushing her delight closer to her heart.
And she whispered: “Pierre! Mine,
mine! Pierre!”
Next she went to the steel mirror
on the wall and looked long at the flushed, triumphant
image. At length she started, like one awakening
from a happy dream, and hurriedly coiled the thick,
soft tresses about her head. Never before had
she lingered so over a toilet, patting each lock into
place, twisting her head from side to side like a peacock
admiring its image.
Now she looked about hungrily for
a touch of color and uttered a little moan of vexation
when she saw nothing, till her eyes, piercing through
the gloom of a dim corner, saw a spray of autumn leaves,
long left there and still stained with beauty.
She fastened them at the breast of her shirt, and
so arrayed began to cook. Never was there a merrier
cook, not even some jolly French chef with a heart
made warm with good red wine, for she sang as she
worked, and whenever she had to cross the room it
was with a dancing step. Spring was in her blood,
warm spring that sets men smiling for no cause except
that they are living, and rejoicing with the whole
awakening world.
So it was with Jacqueline. Ever
and anon as she leaned over the pans and stirred the
fire she raised her head and remained a moment motionless,
waiting for a sound, yearning to hear, and each time
she had to look down again with a sigh.
As it was, he took her by surprise,
for he entered with the soft foot of the hunted and
remained an instant searching the room with a careful
glance. Not that he suspected, not that he had
not relaxed his guard and his vigilance the moment
he caught sight of the flicker of light through the
mass of great boulders, but the lifelong habit of
watchfulness remained with him.
Even when he spoke face to face with
a man, he never seemed to be giving more than half
his attention, for might not someone else approach
if he lost himself in order to listen to any one voice?
He had covered half the length of the room with that
soundless step before she heard, and rose with a glad
cry: “Pierre!”
Meeting that calm blue eye, she checked
herself mightily.
“A hard ride?” she asked.
“Nothing much.”
He took the rock nearest the fire and then raised
a glance of inquiry.
“I got cold,” she said, “and rolled
it over.”
He considered her and then the rock,
not with suspicion, but as if he held the matter in
abeyance for further consideration; a hunted man and
a hunter must keep an eye for little things, must carry
an armed hand and an armed heart even among friends.
As for Jacqueline, her color had risen, and she leaned
hurriedly over a pan in which meat was frying.
“Any results?” she asked.
“Some.”
She waited, knowing that the story would come at length.
He added after a moment: “Strange how careless
some people get to be.”
“Yes?” she queried.
“Yes.”
Another pause, during which he casually
drummed his fingers on his knee. She saw that
he must receive more encouragement before he would
tell, and she gave it, smiling to herself. Women
are old in certain ways of understanding in which
men remain children forever.
“I suppose we’re still broke, Pierre?”
“Broke? Well, not entirely. I got
some results.”
“Good.”
“As a matter of fact, it was
a pretty fair haul. Watch that meat, Jack; I
think it’s burning.”
It was hardly beginning to cook, but
she turned it obediently and hid another slow smile.
Rising, she passed behind his chair, and pretended
to busy herself with something near the wall.
This was the environment and attitude which would
make him talk most freely, she knew.
“Speaking of careless men,”
said Pierre, “I could tell you a yarn, Jack.”
She stood close behind him and made
about his unconscious head a gesture of caress, the
overflow of an infinite tenderness.
“I’d sure like to hear it, Pierre.”
“Well, it was like this:
I knew a fellow who started on the range with a small
stock of cattle. He wasn’t a very good worker,
and he didn’t understand cattle any too well,
so he didn’t prosper for quite a while.
Then his affairs took a sudden turn for the better;
his herd began to increase. Nobody understood
the reason, though a good many suspected, but one
man fell onto the reason: our friend was simply
running in a few doggies on the side, and he’d
arranged a very ingenious way of changing the brands.”
“Pierre—”
“Well?”
“What does ‘ingenious’ mean?”
“Why, I should say it means
‘skillful, clever,’ and it carries with
it the connotation of ‘novel.’”
“It carries the con-conno—what’s
that word, Pierre?”
“I’m going to get some
books for you, Jack, and we’ll do a bit of reading
on the side, shall we?”
“I’d love that!”
He turned and looked up to her sharply.
He said: “Sometimes, Jack, you talk just
like a girl.”
“Do I? That’s queer, isn’t
it? But go on with the story.”
“He changed the brands very
skillfully, and no one got the dope on him except
this one man I mentioned; and that man kept his face
shut. He waited.
“So it went on for a good many
years. The herd of our friend grew very rapidly.
He sold just enough cattle to keep himself and his
wife alive; he was bent on making one big haul, you
see. So when his doggies got to the right age
and condition for the market, he’d trade them
off, one fat doggie for two or three skinny yearlings.
But finally he had a really big herd together, and
shipped it off to the market on a year when the price
was sky-high.”
“Like this year?”
“Don’t interrupt me, Jack!”
From the shadow behind him she smiled again.
“They went at a corking price,
and our friend cleared up a good many thousand—I
won’t say just how much. He sank part of
it in a ruby brooch for his wife, and shoved the rest
into a satchel.
“You see how careful he’d
been all those years while he was piling up his fortune?
Well, he began to get careless the moment he cashed
in, which was rather odd. He depended on his
fighting power to keep that money safe, but he forgot
that while he’d been making a business of rustling
doggies and watching cattle markets, other men had
been making a business of shooting fast and straight.
“Among others there was the
silent man who’d watched and waited for so long.
But this silent man hove alongside while our rich friend
was bound home in a buckboard.
“‘Good evening!’ he called.
“The rich chap turned and heard;
it all seemed all right, but he’d done a good
deal of shady business in his day, and that made him
suspicious of the silent man now. So he reached
for his gun and got it out just in time to be shot
cleanly through the hand.
“The silent man tied up that
hand and sympathized with the rich chap; then he took
that satchel and divided the paper money into two
bundles. One was twice the size of the other,
and the silent man took the smaller one. There
was only twelve thousand dollars in it. Also,
he took the ruby brooch for a friend—and
as a sort of keepsake, you know. And he delivered
a short lecture to the rich man on the subject of
carelessness and rode away. The rich man picked
up his gun with his left hand and opened fire, but
he’d never learned to shoot very well with that
hand, so the silent man came through safe.”
“That’s a bully story,”
said Jack. “Who was the silent man?”
“I think you’ve seen him a few times,
at that.”
She concealed another smile, and said
in the most businesslike manner: “Chow-time,
Pierre,” and set out the pans on the table.
“By the way,” he said easily, “I’ve
got a little present for you, Jack.”
And he took out a gold pin flaming
with three great rubies.