His Victim’s Trouble
Yet he could not help pondering on
the words of old Harding. Bill Gregg had been
a strange patient. He had never repeated his first
offer to tell his story. He remained sullen and
silent, with his brooding eyes fixed on the blank
wall before him, and nothing could permanently cheer
him. Some inward gloom seemed to possess the man.
The first day after the shooting he
had insisted on scrawling a painfully written letter,
while Ronicky propped a writing board in front of
him, as he lay flat on his back in the bed, but that
was his only act. Thereafter he remained silent
and brooding. Perhaps it was hatred for Ronicky
that was growing in him, as the sense of disappointment
increased, for Ronicky, after all, had kept him from
reaching that girl when the train passed through Stillwater.
Perhaps, for all Ronicky knew, his bullet had ruined
the happiness of two lives. He shrugged that
disagreeable thought away, and, reaching the hotel,
he went straight up to the room of the sick man.
“Bill,” he said gently,
“have you been spending all your time hating
me? Is that what keeps you thin and glum?
Is it because you sit here all day blaming me for
all the things that have happened to you?”
The dark flush and the uneasy flicker
of Gregg’s glance gave a sufficient answer.
Ronicky Doone sighed and shook his head, but not in
anger.
“You don’t have to talk,”
he said. “I see that I’m right.
And I don’t blame you, Bill, because, maybe,
I’ve spoiled things pretty generally for you.”
At first the silence of Bill Gregg
admitted that he felt the same way about the matter,
yet he finally said aloud: “I don’t
blame you. Maybe you thought I was a hoss thief.
But the thing is done, Ronicky, and it won’t
never be undone!”
“Gregg,” said Ronicky,
“d’you know what you’re going to
do now?”
“I dunno.”
“You’re going to sit there
and roll a cigarette and tell me the whole yarn.
You ain’t through with this little chase.
Not if I have to drag you along with me. But
first just figure that I’m your older brother
or something like that and get rid of the whole yarn.
Got to have the ore specimens before you can assay
’em. Besides, it’ll help you a pile
to get the poison out of your system. If you feel
like cussing me hearty when the time comes go ahead
and cuss, but I got to hear that story.”
“Maybe it would help,”
said Gregg, “but it’s a fool story to tell.”
“Leave that to me to say whether
it’s a fool story or not. You start the
talking.”
Gregg shifted himself to a more comfortable
position, as is the immemorial custom of story tellers,
and his glance misted a little with the flood of recollections.
“Started along back about a
year ago,” he said. “I was up to the
Sullivan Mountains working a claim. There wasn’t
much to it, just enough to keep me going sort of comfortable.
I pegged away at it pretty steady, leading a lonely
life and hoping every day that I’d cut my way
down to a good lead. Well, the fine ore never
showed up.
“Meantime I got pretty weary
of them same mountains, staring me in the face all
the time. I didn’t have even a dog with
me for conversation, so I got to thinking. Thinking
is a bad thing, mostly, don’t you agree, Ronicky?”
“It sure is,” replied
Ronicky Doone instantly. “Not a bit of a
doubt about it.”
“It starts you doubting things,”
went on Gregg bitterly, “and pretty soon you’re
even doubting yourself.” Here he cast an
envious glance at the smooth brow of his companion.
“But I guess that never happened to you, Ronicky?”
“You’d be surprised if I told you,”
said Ronicky.
“Well,” went on Bill Gregg,
“I got so darned tired of my own thoughts and
of myself that I decided something had ought to be
done; something to give me new things to think about.
So I sat down and went over the whole deal.
“I had to get new ideas.
Then I thought of what a gent had told me once.
He’d got pretty interested in mining and figured
he wanted to know all about how the fancy things was
done. So he sent off to some correspondence schools.
Well, they’re a great bunch. They say:
’Write us a lot of letters and ask us your questions.
Before you’re through you’ll know something
you want to know.’ See?”
“I see.”
“I didn’t have anything
special I wanted to learn except how to use myself
for company when I got tired of solitaire. So
I sat down and wrote to this here correspondence school
and says: ’I want to do something interesting.
How d’you figure that I had better begin?’
And what d’you think they answered back?”
“I dunno,” said Ronicky,
his interest steadily increasing.
“Well, sir, the first thing
they wrote back was: ’We have your letter
and think that in the first place you had better learn
how to write.’ That was a queer answer,
wasn’t it?”
“It sure was.” Ronicky swallowed
a smile.
“Every time I looked at that
letter it sure made me plumb mad. And I looked
at it a hundred times a day and come near tearing it
up every time. But I didn’t,” continued
Bill.
“Why not?”
“Because it was a woman that
wrote it. I told by the hand, after a while!”
“A woman? Go on, Bill.
This story sure sounds different from most.”
“It ain’t even started
to get different yet,” said Bill gloomily.
“Well, that letter made me so plumb mad that
I sat down and wrote everything I could think of that
a gent would say to a girl to let her know what I
thought about her. And what d’you think
happened?”
“She wrote you back the prettiest
letter you ever seen,” suggested Ronicky, “saying
as how she’d never meant to make you mad and
that if you—”
“Say,” broke in Bill Gregg,
“did I show that letter to you?”
“Nope; I just was guessing at
what a lot of women would do. You see?”
“No, I don’t. I could
never figure them as close as that. Anyway that’s
the thing she done, right enough. She writes me
a letter that was smooth as oil and suggests that
I go on with a composition course to learn how to
write.”
“Going to have you do books, Bill?”
“I ain’t a plumb fool,
Ronicky. But I thought it wouldn’t do me
no harm to unlimber my pen and fire out a few words
a day. So I done it. I started writing what
they told me to write about, the things that was around
me, with a lot of lessons about how you can’t
use the same word twice on one page, and how terrible
bad it is to use too many passive verbs.”
“What’s a passive verb, Bill?”
“I didn’t never figure
it out, exactly. However, it seems like they’re
something that slows you up the way a muddy road slows
up a hoss. And then she begun talking about the
mountains, and then she begun asking—
“About you!” suggested Ronicky with a
grin.
“Confound you,” said Bill Gregg.
“How come you guessed that?”
“I dunno. I just sort of scented what was
coming.”
“Well, anyways, that’s
what she done. And pretty soon she sent me a
snapshot of herself. Well—”
“Lemme see it,” said Ronicky Doone calmly.
“I dunno just where it is, maybe,” replied
Bill Gregg.
“Ill tell you. It’s
right around your neck, in that nugget locket you
wear there.”
For a moment Bill Gregg hated the
other with his eyes, and then he submitted with a
sheepish grin, took off the locket, which was made
of one big nugget rudely beaten into shape, and opened
it for the benefit of Ronicky Doone. It showed
the latter not a beautiful face, but a pretty one
with a touch of honesty and pride that made her charming.
“Well, as soon as I got that
picture,” said Bill Gregg, as he took back the
locket, “I sure got excited. Looked to me
like that girl was made for me. A lot finer than
I could ever be, you see, but simple; no fancy frills,
no raving beauty, maybe, but darned easy to look at.
“First thing I done I went in
and got a copy of my face made and rushed it right
back at her and then—” He stopped
dolefully. “What d’you think, Ronicky?”
“I dunno,” said Ronicky; “what happened
then?”
“Nothing, not a thing.
Not a word came back from her to answer that letter
I’d sent along.”
“Maybe you didn’t look rich enough to
suit her, Bill.”
“I thought that, and I thought
it was my ugly face that might of made her change
her mind. I thought of pretty near everything
else that was bad about me and that she might of read
in my face. Sure made me sick for a long time.
Somebody else was correcting my lessons, and that
made me sicker than ever.
“So I sat down and wrote a letter
to the head of the school and told him I’d like
to get the address of that first girl. You see,
I didn’t even know her name. But I didn’t
get no answer.”
Ronicky groaned. “It don’t
look like the best detective in the world could help
you to find a girl when you don’t know her name.”
He added gently: “But maybe she don’t
want you to find her?”
“I thought that for a long time.
Then, a while back, I got a letter from San Francisco,
saying that she was coming on a train through these
parts and could I be in Stillwater because the train
stopped there a couple of minutes. Most like
she thought Stillwater was just sort of across the
street from me. Matter of fact, I jumped on a
hoss, and it took me three days of breaking my neck
to get near Stillwater and then—”
He stopped and cast a gloomy look on his companion.
“I know,” said Ronicky.
“Then I come and spoiled the whole party.
Sure makes me sick to think about it.”
“And now she’s plumb gone,”
muttered Bill Gregg. “I thought maybe the
reason I didn’t have her correcting my lessons
any more was because she’d had to leave the
schools and go West. So, right after I got this
drilling through the leg, you remember, I wrote a letter?”
“Sure.”
“It was to her at the schools,
but I didn’t get no answer. I guess she
didn’t go back there after all. She’s
plumb gone, Ronicky.”
The other was silent for a moment.
“How much would you give to find her?”
he asked suddenly.
“Half my life,” said Bill Gregg solemnly.
“Then,” said Ronicky,
“we’ll make a try at it. I got an
idea how we can start on the trail. I’m
going to go with you, partner. I’ve messed
up considerable, this little game of yours; now I’m
going to do what I can to straighten it out.
Sometimes two are better than one. Anyway I’m
going to stick with you till you’ve found her
or lost her for good. You see?”
Bill Gregg sighed. “You’re
pretty straight, Ronicky,” he said, “but
what good does it do for two gents to look for a needle
in a haystack? How could we start to hit the
trail?”
“This way. We know the
train that she took. Maybe we could find the
Pullman conductor that was on it, and he might remember
her. They got good memories, some of those gents.
We’ll start to find him, which had ought to
be pretty easy.”
“Ronicky, I’d never of
thought of that in a million years!”
“It ain’t thinking that
we want now, it’s acting. When can you start
with me?”
“I’ll be fit tomorrow.”
“Then tomorrow we start.”