BARBARA RELEASES A CONSPIRATOR
It was a week later, yet Grayson
still was growling about the loss of “that there
Brazos pony.” Grayson, the boss, and the
boss’s daughter were sitting upon the veranda
of the ranchhouse when the foreman reverted to the
subject.
“I knew I didn’t have
no business hirin’ a man thet can’t ride,”
he said. “Why thet there Brazos pony never
did stumble, an’ if he’d of stumbled he’d
a-stood aroun’ a year waitin’ to be caught
up agin. I jest cain’t figger it out no
ways how thet there tenderfoot bookkeeper lost him.
He must a-shooed him away with a stick. An’
saddle an’ bridle an’ all gone too.
Doggone it!”
“I’m the one who should
be peeved,” spoke up the girl with a wry smile.
“Brazos was my pony. He’s the one
you picked out for me to ride while I am here; but
I am sure poor Mr. Bridge feels as badly about it
as anyone, and I know that he couldn’t help
it. We shouldn’t be too hard on him.
We might just as well attempt to hold him responsible
for the looting of the bank and the loss of the pay-roll
money.”
“Well,” said Grayson,
“I give him thet horse ’cause I knew he
couldn’t ride, an’ thet was the safest
horse in the cavvy. I wisht I’d given
him Santa Anna instid—I wouldn’t a-minded
losin’ him. There won’t no one ride
him anyhow he’s thet ornery.”
“The thing that surprises me
most,” remarked the boss, “is that Brazos
doesn’t come back. He was foaled on this
range, and he’s never been ridden anywhere else,
has he?”
“He was foaled right here on
this ranch,” Grayson corrected him, “and
he ain’t never been more’n a hundred mile
from it. If he ain’t dead or stolen he’d
a-ben back afore the bookkeeper was. It’s
almighty queer.”
“What sort of bookkeeper is
Mr. Bridge?” asked the girl.
“Oh, he’s all right I
guess,” replied Grayson grudgingly. “A
feller’s got to be some good at something.
He’s probably one of these here paper-collar,
cracker-fed college dudes thet don’t know nothin’
else ‘cept writin’ in books.”
The girl rose, smiled, and moved away.
“I like Mr. Bridge, anyhow,”
she called back over her shoulder, “for whatever
he may not be he is certainly a well-bred gentleman,”
which speech did not tend to raise Mr. Bridge in the
estimation of the hard-fisted ranch foreman.
“Funny them greasers don’t
come in from the north range with thet bunch o’
steers. They ben gone all day now,” he
said to the boss, ignoring the girl’s parting
sally.
Bridge sat tip-tilted against the
front of the office building reading an ancient magazine
which he had found within. His day’s work
was done and he was but waiting for the gong that
would call him to the evening meal with the other
employees of the ranch. The magazine failed to
rouse his interest. He let it drop idly to his
knees and with eyes closed reverted to his never-failing
source of entertainment.
And then that slim, poetic guy he turned
and looked me in the eye,
“....It’s overland and overland
and overseas to—where?”
“Most anywhere that isn’t here,”
I says. His face went kind of queer.
“The place we’re in is always here.
The other place is there.”
Bridge stretched luxuriously. “‘There,’”
he repeated. “I’ve been searching
for there for many years; but for some reason
I can never get away from here. About two
weeks of any place on earth and that place is just
plain here to me, and I’m longing once
again for there.”
His musings were interrupted by a
sweet feminine voice close by. Bridge did not
open his eyes at once—he just sat there,
listening.
As I was hiking past the woods, the cool and
sleepy summer woods,
I saw a guy a-talking to the sunshine
in the air,
Thinks I, “He’s going to have a
fit—I’ll stick around and watch a
bit,”
But he paid no attention, hardly
knowing I was there.
Then the girl broke into a merry laugh
and Bridge opened his eyes and came to his feet.
“I didn’t know you cared
for that sort of stuff,” he said. “Knibbs
writes man-verse. I shouldn’t have imagined
that it would appeal to a young lady.”
“But it does, though,”
she replied; “at least to me. There’s
a swing to it and a freedom that ‘gets me in
the eye.’”
Again she laughed, and when this girl
laughed, harder-headed and much older men than Mr.
L. Bridge felt strange emotions move within their
breasts.
For a week Barbara had seen a great
deal of the new bookkeeper. Aside from her father
he was the only man of culture and refinement of which
the rancho could boast, or, as the rancho would have
put it, be ashamed of.
She had often sought the veranda of
the little office and lured the new bookkeeper from
his work, and on several occasions had had him at
the ranchhouse. Not only was he an interesting
talker; but there was an element of mystery about
him which appealed to the girl’s sense of romance.
She knew that he was a gentleman born
and reared, and she often found herself wondering
what tragic train of circumstances had set him adrift
among the flotsam of humanity’s wreckage.
Too, the same persistent conviction that she had
known him somewhere in the past that possessed her
father clung to her mind; but she could not place
him.
“I overheard your dissertation
on here and there,” said the
girl. “I could not very well help it—it
would have been rude to interrupt a conversation.”
Her eyes sparkled mischievously and her cheeks dimpled.
“You wouldn’t have been
interrupting a conversation,” objected Bridge,
smiling; “you would have been turning a monologue
into a conversation.”
“But it was a conversation,”
insisted the girl. “The wanderer was conversing
with the bookkeeper. You are a victim of wanderlust,
Mr. L. Bridge—don’t deny it.
You hate bookkeeping, or any other such prosaic vocation
as requires permanent residence in one place.”
“Come now,” expostulated
the man. “That is hardly fair.
Haven’t I been here a whole week?”
They both laughed.
“What in the world can have
induced you to remain so long?” cried Barbara.
“How very much like an old timer you must feel—one
of the oldest inhabitants.”
“I am a regular aborigine,”
declared Bridge; but his heart would have chosen another
reply. It would have been glad to tell the girl
that there was a very real and a very growing inducement
to remain at El Orobo Rancho. The man was too
self-controlled, however, to give way to the impulses
of his heart.
At first he had just liked the girl,
and been immensely glad of her companionship because
there was so much that was common to them both—a
love for good music, good pictures, and good literature—things
Bridge hadn’t had an opportunity to discuss
with another for a long, long time.
And slowly he had found delight in
just sitting and looking at her. He was experienced
enough to realize that this was a dangerous symptom,
and so from the moment he had been forced to acknowledge
it to himself he had been very careful to guard his
speech and his manner in the girl’s presence.
He found pleasure in dreaming of what
might have been as he sat watching the girl’s
changing expression as different moods possessed her;
but as for permitting a hope, even, of realization
of his dreams—ah, he was far too practical
for that, dreamer though he was.
As the two talked Grayson passed.
His rather stern face clouded as he saw the girl
and the new bookkeeper laughing there together.
“Ain’t you got nothin’ to do?”
he asked Bridge.
“Yes, indeed,” replied the latter.
“Then why don’t you do it?” snapped
Grayson.
“I am,” said Bridge.
“Mr. Bridge is entertaining
me,” interrupted the girl, before Grayson could
make any rejoinder. “It is my fault—I
took him from his work. You don’t mind,
do you, Mr. Grayson?”
Grayson mumbled an inarticulate reply and went his
way.
“Mr. Grayson does not seem particularly
enthusiastic about me,” laughed Bridge.
“No,” replied the girl,
candidly; “but I think it’s just because
you can’t ride.”
“Can’t ride!” ejaculated
Bridge. “Why, haven’t I been riding
ever since I came here?”
“Mr. Grayson doesn’t consider
anything in the way of equestrianism riding unless
the ridden is perpetually seeking the life of the
rider,” explained Barbara. “Just
at present he is terribly put out because you lost
Brazos. He says Brazos never stumbled in his
life, and even if you had fallen from his back he
would have stood beside you waiting for you to remount
him. You see he was the kindest horse on the
ranch— especially picked for me to ride.
However in the world did you lose him, Mr. Bridge?”
The girl was looking full at the man
as she propounded her query. Bridge was silent.
A faint flush overspread his face. He had not
before known that the horse was hers. He couldn’t
very well tell her the truth, and he wouldn’t
lie to her, so he made no reply.
Barbara saw the flush and noted the
man’s silence. For the first time her
suspicions were aroused, yet she would not believe
that this gentle, amiable drifter could be guilty of
any crime greater than negligence or carelessness.
But why his evident embarrassment now? The
girl was mystified. For a moment or two they
sat in silence, then Barbara rose.
“I must run along back now,”
she explained. “Papa will be wondering
what has become of me.”
“Yes,” said Bridge, and
let her go. He would have been glad to tell
her the truth; but he couldn’t do that without
betraying Billy. He had heard enough to know
that Francisco Villa had been so angered over the
bold looting of the bank in the face of a company
of his own soldiers that he would stop at nothing
to secure the person of the thief once his identity
was known. Bridge was perfectly satisfied with
the ethics of his own act on the night of the bank
robbery. He knew that the girl would have applauded
him, and that Grayson himself would have done what
Bridge did had a like emergency confronted the ranch
foreman; but to have admitted complicity in the escape
of the fugitive would have been to have exposed himself
to the wrath of Villa, and at the same time revealed
the identity of the thief. “Nor,”
thought Bridge, “would it get Brazos back for
Barbara.”
It was after dark when the vaqueros
Grayson had sent to the north range returned to the
ranch. They came empty-handed and slowly for
one of them supported a wounded comrade on the saddle
before him. They rode directly to the office
where Grayson and Bridge were going over some of the
business of the day, and when the former saw them his
brow clouded for he knew before he heard their story
what had happened.
“Who done it?” he asked,
as the men filed into the office, half carrying the
wounded man.
“Some of Pesita’s followers,” replied
Benito.
“Did they git the steers, too?” inquired
Grayson.
“Part of them—we
drove off most and scattered them. We saw the
Brazos pony, too,” and Benito looked from beneath
heavy lashes in the direction of the bookkeeper.
“Where?” asked Grayson.
“One of Pesita’s officers
rode him—an Americano. Tony and I
saw this same man in Cuivaca the night the bank was
robbed, and today he was riding the Brazos pony.”
Again the dark eyes turned toward Bridge.
Grayson was quick to catch the significance
of the Mexican’s meaning. The more so
as it was directly in line with suspicions which he
himself had been nursing since the robbery.
During the colloquy the boss entered
the office. He had heard the returning vaqueros
ride into the ranch and noting that they brought no
steers with them had come to the office to hear their
story. Barbara, spurred by curiosity, accompanied
her father.
“You heard what Benito says?”
asked Grayson, turning toward his employer.
The latter nodded. All eyes were upon Bridge.
“Well,” snapped Grayson,
“what you gotta say fer yourself? I ben
suspectin’ you right along. I knew derned
well that that there Brazos pony never run off by
hisself. You an’ that other crook from
the States framed this whole thing up pretty slick,
didn’tcha? Well, we’ll—”
“Wait a moment, wait a moment,
Grayson,” interrupted the boss. “Give
Mr. Bridge a chance to explain. You’re
making a rather serious charge against him without
any particularly strong proof to back your accusation.”
“Oh, that’s all right,”
exclaimed Bridge, with a smile. “I have
known that Mr. Grayson suspected me of implication
in the robbery; but who can blame him—a
man who can’t ride might be guilty of almost
anything.”
Grayson sniffed. Barbara took
a step nearer Bridge. She had been ready to
doubt him herself only an hour or so ago; but that
was before he had been accused. Now that she
found others arrayed against him her impulse was to
come to his defense.
“You didn’t do it, did
you, Mr. Bridge?” Her tone was almost pleading.
“If you mean robbing the bank,”
he replied; “I did not Miss Barbara. I
knew no more about it until after it was over than
Benito or Tony—in fact they were the ones
who discovered it while I was still asleep in my room
above the bank.”
“Well, how did the robber git
thet there Brazos pony then?” demanded Grayson
savagely. “Thet’s what I want to
know.”
“You’ll have to ask him,
Mr. Grayson,” replied Bridge.
“Villa’ll ask him, when
he gits holt of him,” snapped Grayson; “but
I reckon he’ll git all the information out of
you thet he wants first. He’ll be in Cuivaca
tomorrer, an’ so will you.”
“You mean that you are going
to turn me over to General Villa?” asked Bridge.
“You are going to turn an American over to
that butcher knowing that he’ll be shot inside
of twenty-four hours?”
“Shootin’s too damned
good fer a horse thief,” replied Grayson.
Barbara turned impulsively toward
her father. “You won’t let Mr. Grayson
do that?” she asked.
“Mr. Grayson knows best how
to handle such an affair as this, Barbara,”
replied her father. “He is my superintendent,
and I have made it a point never to interfere with
him.”
“You will let Mr. Bridge be
shot without making an effort to save him?”
she demanded.
“We do not know that he will
be shot,” replied the ranch owner. “If
he is innocent there is no reason why he should be
punished. If he is guilty of implication in the
Cuivaca bank robbery he deserves, according to the
rules of war, to die, for General Villa, I am told,
considers that a treasonable act. Some of the
funds upon which his government depends for munitions
of war were there—they were stolen and turned
over to the enemies of Mexico.”
“And if we interfere we’ll
turn Villa against us,” interposed Grayson.
“He ain’t any too keen for Americans as
it is. Why, if this fellow was my brother I’d
hev to turn him over to the authorities.”
“Well, I thank God,” exclaimed
Bridge fervently, “that in addition to being
shot by Villa I don’t have to endure the added
disgrace of being related to you, and I’m not
so sure that I shall be hanged by Villa,” and
with that he wiped the oil lamp from the table against
which he had been leaning, and leaped across the room
for the doorway.
Barbara and her father had been standing
nearest the exit, and as the girl realized the bold
break for liberty the man was making, she pushed her
father to one side and threw open the door.
Bridge was through it in an instant,
with a parting, “God bless you, little girl!”
as he passed her. Then the door was closed with
a bang. Barbara turned the key, withdrew it from
the lock and threw it across the darkened room.
Grayson and the unwounded Mexicans
leaped after the fugitive only to find their way barred
by the locked door. Outside Bridge ran to the
horses standing patiently with lowered heads awaiting
the return of their masters. In an instant he
was astride one of them, and lashing the others ahead
of him with a quirt he spurred away into the night.
By the time Grayson and the Mexicans
had wormed their way through one of the small windows
of the office the new bookkeeper was beyond sight
and earshot.
As the ranch foreman was saddling
up with several of his men in the corral to give chase
to the fugitive the boss strolled in and touched him
on the arm.
“Mr. Grayson,” he said,
“I have made it a point never to interfere with
you; but I am going to ask you now not to pursue Mr.
Bridge. I shall be glad if he makes good his
escape. Barbara was right—he is a
fellow-American. We cannot turn him over to
Villa, or any other Mexican to be murdered.”
Grumblingly Grayson unsaddled.
“Ef you’d seen what I’ve seen around
here,” he said, “I guess you wouldn’t
be so keen to save this feller’s hide.”
“What do you mean?” asked the boss.
“I mean that he’s ben tryin’ to
make love to your daughter.”
The older man laughed. “Don’t
be a fool, Grayson,” he said, and walked away.
An hour later Barbara was strolling
up and down before the ranchhouse in the cool and
refreshing air of the Chihuahua night. Her mind
was occupied with disquieting reflections of the past
few hours. Her pride was immeasurably hurt by
the part impulse had forced her to take in the affair
at the office. Not that she regretted that she
had connived in the escape of Bridge; but it was humiliating
that a girl of her position should have been compelled
to play so melodramatic a part before Grayson and
his Mexican vaqueros.
Then, too, was she disappointed in
Bridge. She had looked upon him as a gentleman
whom misfortune and wanderlust had reduced to the
lowest stratum of society. Now she feared that
he belonged to that substratum which lies below the
lowest which society recognizes as a part of itself,
and which is composed solely of the criminal class.
It was hard for Barbara to realize
that she had associated with a thief—just
for a moment it was hard, until recollection forced
upon her the unwelcome fact of the status of another
whom she had known—to whom she had given
her love. The girl did not wince at the thought—instead
she squared her shoulders and raised her chin.
“I am proud of him, whatever
he may have been,” she murmured; but she was
not thinking of the new bookkeeper. When she
did think again of Bridge it was to be glad that he
had escaped—“for he is an American,
like myself.”
“Well!” exclaimed a voice
behind her. “You played us a pretty trick,
Miss Barbara.”
The girl turned to see Grayson approaching.
To her surprise he seemed to hold no resentment whatsoever.
She greeted him courteously.
“I couldn’t let you turn
an American over to General Villa,” she said,
“no matter what he had done.”
“I liked your spirit,”
said the man. “You’re the kind o’
girl I ben lookin’ fer all my life—one
with nerve an’ grit, an’ you got ’em
both. You liked thet bookkeepin’ critter,
an’ he wasn’t half a man. I like
you an’ I am a man, ef I do say so myself.”
The girl drew back in astonishment.
“Mr. Grayson!” she exclaimed. “You
are forgetting yourself.”
“No I ain’t,” he
cried hoarsely. “I love you an’ I’m
goin’ to have you. You’d love me
too ef you knew me better.”
He took a step forward and grasped
her arm, trying to draw her to him. The girl
pushed him away with one hand, and with the other
struck him across the face.
Grayson dropped her arm, and as he
did so she drew herself to her full height and looked
him straight in the eyes.
“You may go now,” she
said, her voice like ice. “I shall never
speak of this to anyone—provided you never
attempt to repeat it.”
The man made no reply. The blow
in the face had cooled his ardor temporarily, but
had it not also served another purpose?—to
crystallize it into a firm and inexorable resolve.
When he had departed Barbara turned
and entered the house.