BARBARA IN MEXICO
The manager of El Orobo Rancho
was an American named Grayson. He was a tall,
wiry man whose education had been acquired principally
in the cow camps of Texas, where, among other things
one does not learn to love nor trust a greaser.
As a result of this early training Grayson was peculiarly
unfitted in some respects to manage an American ranch
in Mexico; but he was a just man, and so if his vaqueros
did not love him, they at least respected him, and
everyone who was or possessed the latent characteristics
of a wrongdoer feared him.
Perhaps it is not fair to say that
Grayson was in any way unfitted for the position he
held, since as a matter of fact he was an ideal ranch
foreman, and, if the truth be known, the simple fact
that he was a gringo would have been sufficient to
have won him the hatred of the Mexicans who worked
under him—not in the course of their everyday
relations; but when the fires of racial animosity
were fanned to flame by some untoward incident upon
either side of the border.
Today Grayson was particularly rabid.
The more so because he could not vent his anger upon
the cause of it, who was no less a person than his
boss.
It seemed incredible to Grayson that
any man of intelligence could have conceived and then
carried out the fool thing which the boss had just
done, which was to have come from the safety of New
York City to the hazards of warring Mexico, bringing—and
this was the worst feature of it—his daughter
with him. And at such a time! Scarce a
day passed without its rumors or reports of new affronts
and even atrocities being perpetrated upon American
residents of Mexico. Each day, too, the gravity
of these acts increased. From mere insult they
had run of late to assault and even to murder.
Nor was the end in sight.
Pesita had openly sworn to rid Mexico
of the gringo—to kill on sight every American
who fell into his hands. And what could Grayson
do in case of a determined attack upon the rancho?
It is true he had a hundred men—laborers
and vaqueros, but scarce a dozen of these were Americans,
and the rest would, almost without exception, follow
the inclinations of consanguinity in case of trouble.
To add to Grayson’s irritability
he had just lost his bookkeeper, and if there was
one thing more than any other that Grayson hated it
was pen and ink. The youth had been a “lunger”
from Iowa, a fairly nice little chap, and entirely
suited to his duties under any other circumstances
than those which prevailed in Mexico at that time.
He was in mortal terror of his life every moment
that he was awake, and at last had given in to the
urge of cowardice and resigned. The day previous
he had been bundled into a buckboard and driven over
to the Mexican Central which, at that time, still was
operating trains—occasionally—between
Chihuahua and Juarez.
His mind filled with these unpleasant
thoughts, Grayson sat at his desk in the office of
the ranch trying to unravel the riddle of a balance
sheet which would not balance. Mixed with the
blue of the smoke from his briar was the deeper azure
of a spirited monologue in which Grayson was engaged.
A girl was passing the building at
the moment. At her side walked a gray-haired
man—one of those men whom you just naturally
fit into a mental picture of a director’s meeting
somewhere along Wall Street.
“Sich langwidge!” cried
the girl, with a laugh, covering her ears with her
palms.
The man at her side smiled.
“I can’t say that I blame
him much, Barbara,” he replied. “It
was a very foolish thing for me to bring you down here
at this time. I can’t understand what
ever possessed me to do it.”
“Don’t blame yourself,
dear,” remonstrated the girl, “when it
was all my fault. I begged and begged and begged
until you had to consent, and I’m not sorry
either—if nothing happens to you because
of our coming. I couldn’t stay in New York
another minute. Everyone was so snoopy, and I
could just tell that they were dying to ask questions
about Billy and me.”
“I can’t get it through
my head yet, Barbara,” said the man, “why
in the world you broke with Billy Mallory. He’s
one of the finest young men in New York City today—just
my ideal of the sort of man I’d like my only
daughter to marry.”
“I tried, Papa,” said
the girl in a low voice; “but I couldn’t—I
just couldn’t.”
“Was it because—”
the man stopped abruptly. “Well, never
mind dear, I shan’t be snoopy too. Here
now, you run along and do some snooping yourself about
the ranch. I want to stop in and have a talk
with Grayson.”
Down by one of the corrals where three
men were busily engaged in attempting to persuade
an unbroken pony that a spade bit is a pleasant thing
to wear in one’s mouth, Barbara found a seat
upon a wagon box which commanded an excellent view
of the entertainment going on within the corral.
As she sat there experiencing a combination of admiration
for the agility and courage of the men and pity for
the horse the tones of a pleasant masculine voice
broke in upon her thoughts.
“Out there somewhere!”
says I to me. “By Gosh, I guess, thats
poetry!
“Out there somewhere—Penelope—with
kisses on her mouth!”
And then, thinks I, “O college
guy! your talk it gets me in the eye,
The north is creeping in the air, the
birds are flying south.”
Barbara swung around to view the poet.
She saw a slender man astride a fagged Mexican pony.
A ragged coat and ragged trousers covered the man’s
nakedness. Indian moccasins protected his feet,
while a torn and shapeless felt hat sat upon his well-shaped
head. American was written all over him.
No one could have imagined him anything else.
Apparently he was a tramp as well—his
apparel proclaimed him that; but there were two discordant
notes in the otherwise harmonious ensemble of your
typical bo. He was clean shaven and he rode
a pony. He rode erect, too, with the easy seat
of an army officer.
At sight of the girl he raised his
battered hat and swept it low to his pony’s
shoulder as he bent in a profound bow.
“I seek the majordomo, senorita,” he said.
“Mr. Grayson is up at the office,
that little building to the left of the ranchhouse,”
replied the girl, pointing.
The newcomer had addressed her in
Spanish, and as he heard her reply, in pure and liquid
English, his eyes widened a trifle; but the familiar
smile with which he had greeted her left his face,
and his parting bow was much more dignified though
no less profound than its predecessor.
And you, my sweet Penelope, out there
somewhere you wait for me,
With buds of roses in your hair and kisses
on your mouth.
Grayson and his employer both looked
up as the words of Knibbs’ poem floated in to
them through the open window.
“I wonder where that blew in
from,” remarked Grayson, as his eyes discovered
Bridge astride the tired pony, looking at him through
the window. A polite smile touched the stranger’s
lips as his eyes met Grayson’s, and then wandered
past him to the imposing figure of the Easterner.
“Good evening, gentlemen,” said Bridge.
“Evenin’,” snapped
Grayson. “Go over to the cookhouse and
the Chink’ll give you something to eat.
Turn your pony in the lower pasture. Smith’ll
show you where to bunk tonight, an’ you kin
hev your breakfast in the mornin’. S’long!”
The ranch superintendent turned back to the paper
in his hand which he had been discussing with his
employer at the moment of the interruption.
He had volleyed his instructions at Bridge as though
pouring a rain of lead from a machine gun, and now
that he had said what he had to say the incident was
closed in so far as he was concerned.
The hospitality of the Southwest permitted
no stranger to be turned away without food and a night’s
lodging. Grayson having arranged for these felt
that he had done all that might be expected of a host,
especially when the uninvited guest was so obviously
a hobo and doubtless a horse thief as well, for who
ever knew a hobo to own a horse?
Bridge continued to sit where he had
reined in his pony. He was looking at Grayson
with what the discerning boss judged to be politely
concealed enjoyment.
“Possibly,” suggested
the boss in a whisper to his aide, “the man
has business with you. You did not ask him, and
I am sure that he said nothing about wishing a meal
or a place to sleep.”
“Huh?” grunted Grayson,
and then to Bridge, “Well, what the devil do
you want?”
“A job,” replied Bridge,
“or, to be more explicit, I need a job—far
be it from me to wish one.”
The Easterner smiled. Grayson
looked a bit mystified—and irritated.
“Well, I hain’t got none,”
he snapped. “We don’t need nobody
now unless it might be a good puncher—one
who can rope and ride.”
“I can ride,” replied
Bridge, “as is evidenced by the fact that you
now see me astride a horse.”
“I said ride,” said
Grayson. “Any fool can sit on a horse.
No, I hain’t got nothin’, an’
I’m busy now. Hold on!” he exclaimed
as though seized by a sudden inspiration. He
looked sharply at Bridge for a moment and then shook
his head sadly. “No, I’m afraid
you couldn’t do it—a guy’s got
to be eddicated for the job I got in mind.”
“Washing dishes?” suggested Bridge.
Grayson ignored the playfulness of the other’s
question.
“Keepin’ books,”
he explained. There was a finality in his tone
which said: “As you, of course, cannot keep
books the interview is now over. Get out!”
“I could try,” said Bridge.
“I can read and write, you know. Let
me try.” Bridge wanted money for the trip
to Rio, and, too, he wanted to stay in the country
until Billy was ready to leave.
“Savvy Spanish?” asked Grayson.
“I read and write it better
than I speak it,” said Bridge, “though
I do the latter well enough to get along anywhere
that it is spoken.”
Grayson wanted a bookkeeper worse
than he could ever recall having wanted anything before
in all his life. His better judgment told him
that it was the height of idiocy to employ a ragged
bum as a bookkeeper; but the bum was at least as much
of a hope to him as is a straw to a drowning man, and
so Grayson clutched at him.
“Go an’ turn your cayuse
in an’ then come back here,” he directed,
“an’ I’ll give you a tryout.”
“Thanks,” said Bridge,
and rode off in the direction of the pasture gate.
“’Fraid he won’t
never do,” said Grayson, ruefully, after Bridge
had passed out of earshot.
“I rather imagine that he will,”
said the boss. “He is an educated man,
Grayson—you can tell that from his English,
which is excellent. He’s probably one of
the great army of down-and-outers. The world
is full of them—poor devils. Give
him a chance, Grayson, and anyway he adds another
American to our force, and each one counts.”
“Yes, that’s right; but
I hope you won’t need ’em before you an’
Miss Barbara go,” said Grayson.
“I hope not, Grayson; but one
can never tell with conditions here such as they are.
Have you any hope that you will be able to obtain
a safe conduct for us from General Villa?”
“Oh, Villa’ll give us
the paper all right,” said Grayson; “but
it won’t do us no good unless we don’t
meet nobody but Villa’s men on the way out.
This here Pesita’s the critter I’m leery
of. He’s got it in for all Americans, and
especially for El Orobo Rancho. You know we
beat off a raid of his about six months ago—killed
half a dozen of his men, an’ he won’t
never forgive that. Villa can’t spare a
big enough force to give us safe escort to the border
and he can’t assure the safety of the train
service. It looks mighty bad, sir—I
don’t see what in hell you came for.”
“Neither do I, Grayson,”
agreed the boss; “but I’m here and we’ve
got to make the best of it. All this may blow
over— it has before—and we’ll
laugh at our fears in a few weeks.”
“This thing that’s happenin’
now won’t never blow over ’til the stars
and stripes blow over Chihuahua,” said Grayson
with finality.
A few moments later Bridge returned
to the office, having unsaddled his pony and turned
it into the pasture.
“What’s your name?”
asked Grayson, preparing to enter it in his time book.
“Bridge,” replied the new bookkeeper.
“’Nitials,” snapped Grayson.
Bridge hesitated. “Oh, put me down as
L. Bridge,” he said.
“Where from?” asked the ranch foreman.
“El Orobo Rancho,” answered Bridge.
Grayson shot a quick glance at the
man. The answer confirmed his suspicions that
the stranger was probably a horse thief, which, in
Grayson’s estimation, was the worst thing a
man could be.
“Where did you get that pony
you come in on?” he demanded. “I
ain’t sayin’ nothin’ of course, but
I jest want to tell you that we ain’t got no
use for horse thieves here.”
The Easterner, who had been a listener,
was shocked by the brutality of Grayson’s speech;
but Bridge only laughed.
“If you must know,” he
said, “I never bought that horse, an’
the man he belonged to didn’t give him to me.
I just took him.”
“You got your nerve,”
growled Grayson. “I guess you better git
out. We don’t want no horse thieves here.”
“Wait,” interposed the
boss. “This man doesn’t act like
a horse thief. A horse thief, I should imagine,
would scarcely admit his guilt. Let’s
have his story before we judge him.”
“All right,” said Grayson;
“but he’s just admitted he stole the horse.”
Bridge turned to the boss. “Thanks,”
he said; “but really I did steal the horse.”
Grayson made a gesture which said:
“See, I told you so.”
“It was like this,” went
on Bridge. “The gentleman who owned the
horse, together with some of his friends, had been
shooting at me and my friends. When it was all
over there was no one left to inform us who were the
legal heirs of the late owners of this and several
other horses which were left upon our hands, so I
borrowed this one. The law would say, doubtless,
that I had stolen it; but I am perfectly willing to
return it to its rightful owners if someone will find
them for me.”
“You been in a scrap?” asked Grayson.
“Who with?”
“A party of Pesita’s men,” replied
Bridge.
“When?”
“Yesterday.”
“You see they are working pretty
close,” said Grayson, to his employer, and then
to Bridge: “Well, if you took that cayuse
from one of Pesita’s bunch you can’t call
that stealin’. Your room’s in there,
back of the office, an’ you’ll find some
clothes there that the last man forgot to take with
him. You ken have ’em, an’ from
the looks o’ yourn you need ’em.”
“Thank you,” replied Bridge.
“My clothes are a bit rusty. I shall
have to speak to James about them,” and he passed
through into the little bedroom off the office, and
closed the door behind him.
“James?” grunted Grayson.
“Who the devil does he mean by James?
I hain’t seen but one of ’em.”
The boss was laughing quietly.
“The man’s a character,”
he said. “He’ll be worth all you
pay him—if you can appreciate him, which
I doubt, Grayson.”
“I ken appreciate him if he
ken keep books,” replied Grayson. “That’s
all I ask of him.”
When Bridge emerged from the bedroom
he was clothed in white duck trousers, a soft shirt,
and a pair of tennis shoes, and such a change had
they wrought in his appearance that neither Grayson
nor his employer would have known him had they not
seen him come from the room into which they had sent
him to make the exchange of clothing.
“Feel better?” asked the boss, smiling.
“Clothes are but an incident
with me,” replied Bridge. “I wear
them because it is easier to do so than it would be
to dodge the weather and the police. Whatever
I may have upon my back affects in no way what I have
within my head. No, I cannot say that I feel
any better, since these clothes are not as comfortable
as my old ones. However if it pleases Mr. Grayson
that I should wear a pink kimono while working for
him I shall gladly wear a pink kimono. What
shall I do first, sir?” The question was directed
toward Grayson.
“Sit down here an’ see
what you ken make of this bunch of trouble,”
replied the foreman. “I’ll talk with
you again this evenin’.”
As Grayson and his employer quitted
the office and walked together toward the corrals
the latter’s brow was corrugated by thought
and his facial expression that of one who labors to
fasten upon a baffling and illusive recollection.
“It beats all, Grayson,”
he said presently; “but I am sure that I have
known this new bookkeeper of yours before. The
moment he came out of that room dressed like a human
being I knew that I had known him; but for the life
of me I can’t place him. I should be willing
to wager considerable, however, that his name is not
Bridge.”
“S’pect you’re right,”
assented Grayson. “He’s probably
one o’ them eastern dude bank clerks what’s
gone wrong and come down here to hide. Mighty
fine place to hide jest now, too.
“And say, speakin’ of
banks,” he went on, “what’ll I do
‘bout sendin’ over to Cuivaca fer the pay
tomorrow. Next day’s pay day. I
don’t like to send this here bum, I can’t
trust a greaser no better, an’ I can’t
spare none of my white men thet I ken trust.”
“Send him with a couple of the
most trustworthy Mexicans you have,” suggested
the boss.
“There ain’t no sich critter,”
replied Grayson; “but I guess that’s the
best I ken do. I’ll send him along with
Tony an’ Benito—they hate each other
too much to frame up anything together, an’
they both hate a gringo. I reckon they’ll
hev a lovely trip.”
“But they’ll get back
with the money, eh?” queried the boss.
“If Pesita don’t get ’em,”
replied Grayson.