’TWIXT love and duty
For an hour Barbara Harding paced
the veranda of the ranchhouse, pride and love battling
for the ascendency within her breast. She could
not let him die, that she knew; but how might she
save him?
The strains of music and the laughter
from the bunkhouse had ceased. The ranch slept.
Over the brow of the low bluff upon the opposite
side of the river a little party of silent horsemen
filed downward to the ford. At the bluff’s
foot a barbed-wire fence marked the eastern boundary
of the ranch’s enclosed fields. The foremost
horseman dismounted and cut the strands of wire, carrying
them to one side from the path of the feet of the
horses which now passed through the opening he had
made.
Down into the river they rode following
the ford even in the darkness with an assurance which
indicated long familiarity. Then through a
fringe of willows out across a meadow toward the ranch
buildings the riders made their way. The manner
of their approach, their utter silence, the hour, all
contributed toward the sinister.
Upon the veranda of the ranchhouse
Barbara Harding came to a sudden halt. Her entire
manner indicated final decision, and determination.
A moment she stood in thought and then ran quickly
down the steps and in the direction of the office.
Here she found Eddie dozing at his post. She
did not disturb him. A glance through the window
satisfied her that he was alone with the prisoner.
From the office building Barbara passed on to the
corral. A few horses stood within the enclosure,
their heads drooping dejectedly. As she entered
they raised their muzzles and sniffed suspiciously,
ears a-cock, and as the girl approached closer to
them they moved warily away, snorting, and passed
around her to the opposite side of the corral.
As they moved by her she scrutinized them and her
heart dropped, for Brazos was not among them.
He must have been turned out into the pasture.
She passed over to the bars that closed
the opening from the corral into the pasture and wormed
her way between two of them. A hackamore with
a piece of halter rope attached to it hung across
the upper bar. Taking it down she moved off
across the pasture in the direction the saddle horses
most often took when liberated from the corral.
If they had not crossed the river
she felt that she might find and catch Brazos, for
lumps of sugar and bits of bread had inspired in his
equine soul a wondrous attachment for his temporary
mistress.
Down the beaten trail the animals
had made to the river the girl hurried, her eyes penetrating
the darkness ahead and to either hand for the looming
bulks that would be the horses she sought, and among
which she might hope to discover the gentle little
Brazos.
The nearer she came to the river the
lower dropped her spirits, for as yet no sign of the
animals was to be seen. To have attempted to
place a hackamore upon any of the wild creatures in
the corral would have been the height of foolishness—only
a well-sped riata in the hands of a strong man could
have captured one of these.
Closer and closer to the fringe of
willows along the river she came, until, at their
very edge, there broke upon her already taut nerves
the hideous and uncanny scream of a wildcat.
The girl stopped short in her tracks. She felt
the chill of fear creep through her skin, and a twitching
at the roots of her hair evidenced to her the extremity
of her terror. Should she turn back? The
horses might be between her and the river, but judgment
told her that they had crossed. Should she brave
the nervous fright of a passage through that dark,
forbidding labyrinth of gloom when she knew that she
should not find the horses within reach beyond?
She turned to retrace her steps.
She must find another way!
But was there another way? And
“Tomorrow they will shoot him!” She shuddered,
bit her lower lip in an effort to command her courage,
and then, wheeling, plunged into the thicket.
Again the cat screamed—close
by—but the girl never hesitated in her
advance, and a few moments later she broke through
the willows a dozen paces from the river bank.
Her eyes strained through the night; but no horses
were to be seen.
The trail, cut by the hoofs of many
animals, ran deep and straight down into the swirling
water. Upon the opposite side Brazos must be
feeding or resting, just beyond reach.
Barbara dug her nails into her palms
in the bitterness of her disappointment. She
followed down to the very edge of the water.
It was black and forbidding. Even in the daytime
she would not have been confident of following the
ford—by night it would be madness to attempt
it.
She choked down a sob. Her shoulders
drooped. Her head bent forward. She was
the picture of disappointment and despair.
“What can I do?” she moaned.
“Tomorrow they will shoot him!”
The thought seemed to electrify her.
“They shall not shoot him!”
she cried aloud. “They shall not shoot
him while I live to prevent it!”
Again her head was up and her shoulders
squared. Tying the hackamore about her waist,
she took a single deep breath of reassurance and stepped
out into the river. For a dozen paces she found
no difficulty in following the ford. It was
broad and straight; but toward the center of the river,
as she felt her way along a step at a time, she came
to a place where directly before her the ledge upon
which she crossed shelved off into deep water.
She turned upward, trying to locate the direction
of the new turn; but here too there was no footing.
Down river she felt solid rock beneath her feet.
Ah! this was the way, and boldly she stepped out,
the water already above her knees. Two, three
steps she took, and with each one her confidence and
hope arose, and then the fourth step—and
there was no footing. She felt herself lunging
into the stream, and tried to draw back and regain
the ledge; but the force of the current was too much
for her, and, so suddenly it seemed that she had thrown
herself in, she was in the channel swimming for her
life.
The trend of the current there was
back in the direction of the bank she had but just
quitted, yet so strong was her determination to succeed
for Billy Byrne’s sake that she turned her face
toward the opposite shore and fought to reach the
seemingly impossible goal which love had set for her.
Again and again she was swept under by the force
of the current. Again and again she rose and
battled, not for her own life; but for the life of
the man she once had loathed and whom she later had
come to love. Inch by inch she won toward the
shore of her desire, and inch by inch of her progress
she felt her strength failing. Could she win?
Ah! if she were but a man, and with the thought came
another: Thank God that I am a woman with a woman’s
love which gives strength to drive me into the clutches
of death for his sake!
Her heart thundered in tumultuous
protest against the strain of her panting lungs.
Her limbs felt cold and numb; but she could not give
up even though she was now convinced that she had
thrown her life away uselessly. They would find
her body; but no one would ever guess what had driven
her to her death. Not even he would know that
it was for his sake. And then she felt the tugging
of the channel current suddenly lessen, an eddy carried
her gently inshore, her feet touched the sand and
gravel of the bottom.
Gasping for breath, staggering, stumbling,
she reeled on a few paces and then slipped down clutching
at the river’s bank. Here the water was
shallow, and here she lay until her strength returned.
Then she urged herself up and onward, climbed to
the top of the bank with success at last within reach.
To find the horses now required but
a few minutes’ search. They stood huddled
in a black mass close to the barbed-wire fence at
the extremity of the pasture. As she approached
them they commenced to separate slowly, edging away
while they faced her in curiosity. Softly she
called: “Brazos! Come, Brazos!”
until a unit of the moving mass detached itself and
came toward her, nickering.
“Good Brazos!” she cooed.
“That’s a good pony,” and walked
forward to meet him.
The animal let her reach up and stroke
his forehead, while he muzzled about her for the expected
tidbit. Gently she worked the hackamore over
his nose and above his ears, and when it was safely
in place she breathed a deep sigh of relief and throwing
her arms about his neck pressed her cheek to his.
“You dear old Brazos,” she whispered.
The horse stood quietly while the
girl wriggled herself to his back, and then at a word
and a touch from her heels moved off at a walk in
the direction of the ford. The crossing this
time was one of infinite ease, for Barbara let the
rope lie loose and Brazos take his own way.
Through the willows upon the opposite
bank he shouldered his path, across the meadow still
at a walk, lest they arouse attention, and through
a gate which led directly from the meadow into the
ranchyard. Here she tied him to the outside
of the corral, while she went in search of saddle and
bridle. Whose she took she did not know, nor
care, but that the saddle was enormously heavy she
was perfectly aware long before she had dragged it
halfway to where Brazos stood.
Three times she essayed to lift it
to his back before she succeeded in accomplishing
the Herculean task, and had it been any other horse
upon the ranch than Brazos the thing could never have
been done; but the kindly little pony stood in statuesque
resignation while the heavy Mexican tree was banged
and thumped against his legs and ribs, until a lucky
swing carried it to his wethers.
Saddled and bridled Barbara led him
to the rear of the building and thus, by a roundabout
way, to the back of the office building. Here
she could see a light in the room in which Billy was
confined, and after dropping the bridle reins to the
ground she made her way to the front of the structure.
Creeping stealthily to the porch she
peered in at the window. Eddie was stretched
out in cramped though seeming luxury in an office
chair. His feet were cocked up on the desk before
him. In his lap lay his six-shooter ready for
any emergency. Another reposed in its holster
at his belt.
Barbara tiptoed to the door.
Holding her breath she turned the knob gently.
The door swung open without a sound, and an instant
later she stood within the room. Again her eyes
were fixed upon Eddie Shorter. She saw his nerveless
fingers relax their hold upon the grip of his revolver.
She saw the weapon slip farther down into his lap.
He did not move, other than to the deep and regular
breathing of profound slumber.
Barbara crossed the room to his side.
Behind the ranchhouse three figures
crept forward in the shadows. Behind them a
matter of a hundred yards stood a little clump of
horses and with them were the figures of more men.
These waited in silence. The other three crept
toward the house. It was such a ranchhouse as
you might find by the scores or hundreds throughout
Texas. Grayson, evidently, or some other Texan,
had designed it. There was nothing Mexican about
it, nor anything beautiful. It stood two storied,
verandaed and hideous, a blot upon the soil of picturesque
Mexico.
To the roof of the veranda clambered
the three prowlers, and across it to an open window.
The window belonged to the bedroom of Miss Barbara
Harding. Here they paused and listened, then
two of them entered the room. They were gone
for but a few minutes. When they emerged they
showed evidences, by their gestures to the third man
who had awaited outside, of disgust and disappointment.
Cautiously they descended as they
had come and made their way back to those other men
who had remained with the horses. Here there
ensued a low-toned conference, and while it progressed
Barbara Harding reached forth a steady hand which
belied the terror in her soul and plucked the revolver
from Eddie Shorter’s lap. Eddie slept on.
Again on tiptoe the girl recrossed
the office to the locked door leading into the back
room. The key was in the lock. Gingerly
she turned it, keeping a furtive eye upon the sleeping
guard, and the muzzle of his own revolver leveled menacingly
upon him. Eddie Shorter stirred in his sleep
and raised a hand to his face. The heart of
Barbara Harding ceased to beat while she stood waiting
for the man to open his eyes and discover her; but
he did nothing of the kind. Instead his hand
dropped limply at his side and he resumed his regular
breathing.
The key turned in the lock beneath
the gentle pressure of her fingers, the bolt slipped
quietly back and she pushed the door ajar. Within,
Billy Byrne turned inquiring eyes in the direction
of the opening door, and as he saw who it was who
entered surprise showed upon his face; but he spoke
no word for the girl held a silencing finger to her
lips.
Quickly she came to his side and motioned
him to rise while she tugged at the knots which held
the bonds in place about his arms. Once she
stopped long enough to recross the room and close
the door which she had left open when she entered.
It required fully five minutes—the
longest five minutes of Barbara Harding’s life,
she thought—before the knots gave to her
efforts; but at last the rope fell to the floor and
Billy Byrne was free.
He started to speak, to thank her,
and, perhaps, to scold her for the rash thing she
had undertaken for him; but she silenced him again,
and with a whispered, “Come!” turned toward
the door.
As she opened it a crack to reconnoiter
she kept the revolver pointed straight ahead of her
into the adjoining room. Eddie, however, still
slept on in peaceful ignorance of the trick which
was being played upon him.
Now the two started forward for the
door which opened from the office upon the porch,
and as they did so Barbara turned again toward Billy
to caution him to silence for his spurs had tinkled
as he moved. For a moment their eyes were not
upon Eddie Shorter and Fate had it that at that very
moment Eddie awoke and opened his own eyes.
The sight that met them was so astonishing
that for a second the Kansan could not move.
He saw Barbara Harding, a revolver in her hand, aiding
the outlaw to escape, and in the instant that surprise
kept him motionless Eddie saw, too, another picture—the
picture of a motherly woman in a little farmhouse
back in Kansas, and Eddie realized that this man,
this outlaw, had been the means of arousing within
him a desire and a determination to return again to
those loving arms. Too, the man had saved his
mother from injury, and possible death.
Eddie shut his eyes quickly and thought
hard and fast. Miss Barbara had always been
kind to him. In his boyish heart he had loved
her, hopelessly of course, in a boyish way. She
wanted the outlaw to escape. Eddie realized that
he would do anything that Miss Barbara wanted, even
if he had to risk his life at it.
The girl and the man were at the door.
She pushed him through ahead of her while she kept
the revolver leveled upon Eddie, then she passed out
after him and closed the door, while Eddie Shorter
kept his eyes tightly closed and prayed to his God
that Billy Byrne might get safely away.
Outside and in the rear of the office
building Barbara pressed the revolver upon Billy.
“You will need it,” she
said. “There is Brazos—take
him. God bless and guard you, Billy!”
and she was gone.
Billy swallowed bard. He wanted
to run after her and take her in his arms; but he
recalled Bridge, and with a sigh turned toward the
patient Brazos. Languidly he gathered up the
reins and mounted, and then unconcernedly as though
he were an honored guest departing by daylight he
rode out of the ranchyard and turned Brazos’
head north up the river road.
And as Billy disappeared in the darkness
toward the north Barbara Harding walked slowly toward
the ranchhouse, while from a little group of men and
horses a hundred yards away three men detached themselves
and crept toward her, for they had seen her in the
moonlight as she left Billy outside the office and
strolled slowly in the direction of the house.
They hid in the shadow at the side
of the house until the girl had turned the corner
and was approaching the veranda, then they ran quickly
forward and as she mounted the steps she was seized
from behind and dragged backward. A hand was
clapped over her mouth and a whispered threat warned
her to silence.
Half dragging and half carrying her
the three men bore her back to where their confederates
awaited them. A huge fellow mounted his pony
and Barbara was lifted to the horn of the saddle before
him. Then the others mounted and as silently
as they had come they rode away, following the same
path.
Barbara Harding had not cried out
nor attempted to, for she had seen very shortly after
her capture that she was in the hands of Indians and
she judged from what she had heard of the little band
of Pimans who held forth in the mountains to the east
that they would as gladly knife her as not.
Jose was a Piman, and she immediately
connected Jose with the perpetration, or at least
the planning of her abduction. Thus she felt
assured that no harm would come to her, since Jose
had been famous in his time for the number and size
of the ransoms he had collected.
Her father would pay what was demanded,
she would be returned and, aside from a few days of
discomfort and hardship, she would be none the worse
off for her experience. Reasoning thus it was
not difficult to maintain her composure and presence
of mind.
As Barbara was borne toward the east,
Billy Byrne rode steadily northward. It was
his intention to stop at Jose’s hut and deliver
the message which Pesita had given him for the old
Indian. Then he would disappear into the mountains
to the west, join Pesita and urge a new raid upon
some favored friend of General Francisco Villa, for
Billy had no love for Villa.
He should have been glad to pay his
respects to El Orobo Rancho and its foreman; but the
fact that Anthony Harding owned it and that he and
Barbara were there was sufficient effectually to banish
all thoughts of revenge along that line.
“Maybe I can get his goat later,”
he thought, “when he’s away from the ranch.
I don’t like that stiff, anyhow. He orter
been a harness bull.”
It was four o’clock in the morning
when Billy dismounted in front of Jose’s hut.
He pounded on the door until the man came and opened
it.
“Eh!” exclaimed Jose as
he saw who his early morning visitor was, “you
got away from them. Fine!” and the old
man chuckled. “I send word to Pesita two,
four hours ago that Villistas capture Capitan Byrne
and take him to Cuivaca.”
“Thanks,” said Billy.
“Pesita wants you to send Esteban to him.
I didn’t have no chance to tell you last night
while them pikers was stickin’ aroun’,
so I stops now on my way back to the hills.”
“I will send Esteban tonight
if I can get him; but I do not know. Esteban
is working for the pig, Grayson.”
“Wot’s he doin’
fer Grayson?” asked Billy. “And what
was the Grayson guy doin’ up here with you,
Jose? Ain’t you gettin’ pretty thick
with Pesita’s enemies?”
“Jose good friends everybody,”
and the old man grinned. “Grayson have
a job he want good men for. Jose furnish men.
Grayson pay well. Job got nothin’ do Pesita,
Villa, Carranza, revolution—just private
job. Grayson want senorita. He pay to
get her. That all.”
“Oh,” said Billy, and
yawned. He was not interested in Mr. Grayson’s
amours. “Why didn’t the poor boob
go get her himself?” he inquired disinterestedly.
“He must be a yap to hire a bunch o’
guys to go cop off a siwash girl fer him.”
“It is not a siwash girl, Senor
Capitan,” said Jose. “It is one
beautiful senorita—the daughter of the owner
of El Orobo Rancho.”
“What?” cried Billy Byrne. “What’s
that you say?”
“Yes, Senor Capitan, what of
it?” inquired Jose. “Grayson he
pay me furnish the men. Esteban he go with his
warriors. I get Esteban. They go tonight
take away the senorita; but not for Grayson,”
and the old fellow laughed. “I can no help
can I? Grayson pay me money get men. I
get them. I no help if they keep girl,”
and he shrugged.
“They’re comin’ for her tonight?”
cried Billy.
“Si, senor,” replied Jose. “Doubtless
they already take her.”
“Hell!” muttered Billy
Byrne, as he swung Brazos about so quickly that the
little pony pivoted upon his hind legs and dashed
away toward the south over the same trail he had just
traversed.