THE FALLING OF NIGHT
It had been hard to gauge the falling
of night on this day, and even the careful eyes of
the watchers on the Cumberland Ranch could not tell
when the greyness of the sky was being darkened by
the coming of the evening. All day there had
been swift alterations of light and shadow, comparatively
speaking, as the clouds grew thin or thick before the
wind. But at length, indubitably, the night was
there. Little by little the sky was overcast,
and even the lines of the falling rain were no longer
visible. Before the gloom of the darkness had
fully settled over the earth, moreover, there came
a change in the wind, and the watchers at the rain-beaten
windows of the ranch-house saw the clouds roll apart
and split into fragments that were driven from the
face of the sky; and from the clean washed face of
heaven the stars shone down bright and serene.
And still Dan Barry had not come.
After the tumult of that long day
the sudden silence of that windless night had more
ill omen in it than thunder and lightning. For
there is something watching and waiting in silence.
In the living room the three did not speak.
Now that the storm was gone they had
allowed the fire to fall away until the hearth showed
merely fragmentary dances of flame and a wide bed
of dull red coals growing dimmer from moment to moment.
Wung Lu had brought in a lamp—a large lamp
with a circular wick that cast a bright, white light—but
Kate had turned down the wick, and now it made only
a brief circle of yellow in one corner of the room.
The main illumination came from the fireplace and
struck on the faces of Kate and Buck Daniels, while
Joe Cumberland, on the couch at the end of the room,
was only plainly visible when there was an extraordinarily
high leap of the dying flames; but usually his face
was merely a glimmering hint in the darkness—his
face and the long hands which were folded upon his
breast. Often when the flames leapt there was
a crackling of the embers and the last of the log,
and then the two nearer the fire would start and flash
a glance, of one accord, towards the prostrate figure
on the couch.
That silence had lasted so long that
when at length the dull voice of Joe Cumberland broke
in, there was a ring of a most prophetic solemnity
about it.
“He ain’t come,” said the old man.
“Dan ain’t here.”
The others exchanged glances, but
the eyes of Kate dropped sadly and fastened again
upon the hearth.
Buck Daniels cleared his throat like an orator.
“Nobody but a fool,” he
said, “would have started out of Elkhead in a
storm like this.”
“Weather makes no difference
to Dan,” said Joe Cumberland.
“But he’d think of his hoss——”
“Weather makes no difference
to Satan,” answered the faint, oracular voice
of Joe Cumberland. “Kate!”
“Yes?”
“Is he comin’?”
She did not answer. Instead,
she got up slowly from her place by the fire and took
another chair, far away in the gloom, where hardly
a glimmer of light reached to her and there she let
her head rest, as if exhausted, against the back of
the seat.
“He promised,” said Buck
Daniels, striving desperately to keep his voice cheerful,
“and he never busts his promises.”
“Ay,” said the old man,
“he promised to be back—but he ain’t
here.”
“If he started after the storm,” said
Buck Daniels.
“He didn’t start after
the storm,” announced the oracle. “He
was out in it.”
“What was that,” cried Buck Daniels sharply.
“The wind,” said Kate,
“for it’s rising. It will be a cold
night, to-night.”
“And he ain’t here,” said the old
man monotonously.
“Ain’t there things that
might hold him up?” asked Buck, with a touch
of irritation.
“Ay,” said the old rancher,
“they’s things that’ll hold him up.
They’s things that’ll turn a dog wild,
too, and the taste of blood is one of ’em!”
The silence fell again.
There was an old clock standing against
the wall. It was one of those tall, wooden frames
in which, behind the glass, the heavy, polished disk
of the pendulum, alternated slowly back and forth with
wearisome precision. And with every stroke of
the seconds there was a faint, metallic clangor in
the clock—a falter like that which comes
in the voice of a very old man. And the sound
of this clock took possession of every silence until
it seemed like the voice of a doomsman counting off
the seconds. Ay, everyone in the room, again and
again, took up the tale of those seconds and would
count them slowly—fifty, fifty-one, fifty-two,
fifty-three—and on and on, waiting for the
next speech, or for the next popping of the wood upon
the hearth, or for the next wail of the wind that
would break upon the deadly expectancy of that count.
And while they counted each looked straight before
him with wide and widening eyes.
Into one of these pauses the voice
of Buck Daniels broke at length; and it was a cheerless
and lonely voice in that large room, in the dull darkness,
and the duller lights.
“D’you remember Shorty Martin, Kate?”
“I remember him.”
He turned in his chair and hitched
it a little closer to her until he could make put
her face, dimly, among the shadows. The flames
jumped on the hearth, and he saw a picture that knocked
at his heart.
“The little bow-legged feller, I mean.”
“Yes, I remember him very well.”
Once more the flames sputtered and
he saw how she looked wistfully before her and above.
She had never seemed so lovely to Buck Daniels.
She was pale, indeed, but there was no ugly pinching
of her face, and if there were shadows beneath her
eyes, they only served to make her eyes seem marvelously
large and bright. She was pallid, and the firelight
stained her skin with touches of tropic gold, and cast
a halo of the golden hair about her face. She
seemed like one of those statues wrought in the glory
and the rich days of Athens in ivory and in gold—some
goddess who has heard the tidings of the coming fall,
the change of the old order, and sits passive in her
throne waiting the doom from which there is no escape.
Something of this filtered through to the sad heart
of Buck Daniels. He, too, had no hope—nay,
he had not even her small hope, but somehow he was
able to pity her and cherish the picture of her in
that gloomy place. It seemed to Buck Daniels that
he would give ten years from the best of his life
to see her smile as he had once seen her in those
old, bright days. He went on with his tale.
“You would have busted laughin’
if you’d seen him at the Circle Y Bar roundup
the way I seen him. Shorty ain’t so bad
with a rope. He’s always talkin’
about what he can do and how he can daub a rope on
anything that’s got horns. He ain’t
so bad, but then he ain’t so good, either.
Specially, he ain’t so good at ridin’—you
know what bowed legs he’s got, Kate?”
“I remember, Buck.”
She was looking at him, at last, and
he talked eagerly to turn that look into a smile.
“Well, they was the three of
us got after one two year old—a bull and
a bad ’un. Shorty was on one side and me
and Cuttle was on the other side. Shorty daubed
his rope and made a fair catch, but when his hoss set
back the rope busted plumb in two. Now, Shorty,
he had an idea that he could ease the work of his
hoss a whole pile if he laid holts on the rope whenever
his hoss set down to flop a cow. So Shorty, he
had holt on this rope and was pulling back hard when
the rope busted, and Shorty, he spilled backwards
out’n that saddle like he’d been kicked
out.
“Whilst he was lyin’ there,
the bull, that had took a header when the rope busted,
come up on his feet agin, and I’ll tell a man
he was rarin’ mad! He seen Shorty lyin’
on the ground, and he took a run for Shorty.
Me and Cuttle was laughin’ so hard we couldn’t
barely swing our ropes, but I made a throw and managed
to get that bull around both horns. So my Betty
sits down and braces herself for the tug.
“In the meantime little Shorty,
he sits up and lays a hand to his head, and same time
he sees that bull come tarin’ for him. Up
he jumps. And jest then the bull come to the
end of the line and wonk!—down he goes,
head over heels, and hits the sand with a bang that
must of jostled his liver some, I’ll be sayin’!
“Well, Shorty, he seen that
bull fly up into the air and he lets out a yell like
the world was comin’ to an end, and starts runnin’.
If he’d run straight back the other way the
bull couldn’t of run a step, because I had him
fast with my rope, but Shorty seen me, and he come
tarin’ for my hoss to get behind him.
“That bull was like a cat gettin’
to his feet, and he sights Shorty tarin’ and
lights out after him. There they went lickety-split.
That bull was puffin’ on the seat of Shorty’s
trowsers and tossin’ his horns and jest missin’
Shorty by inches; and Shorty had his mouth so wide
open hollerin’ that you could have throwed a
side of beef down his throat; and his eyes was buggin’
out. Them bow-legs of his was stretchin’
ten yards at a clip, most like, and the boys says
they could hear him hollerin’ a mile away.
But that bull, stretch himself all he could, couldn’t
gain an inch on Shorty, and Shorty couldn’t gain
an inch on the bull, till the bull come to the other
end of the forty-foot rope, and then, whang! up goes
the heels of the bull and down goes his head, and
his heels comes over—wonk! and hits Shorty
right square on the head.
“Been an ordinary feller, and
he wouldn’t of lived to talk about it afterwards,
but seein’ it was Shorty, he jest goes up in
the air and lands about ten yards away, and rolls
over and hits his feet without once gettin’
off his stride—and then he did start
runnin’, and he didn’t stop runnin’
nor hollerin’ till he got plumb back to the house!”
Buck Daniels sat back in his chair
and guffawed at the memory. In the excitement
of the tale he had quite forgotten Kate, but when he
remembered her, she sat with her head craned a little
to one side, her hand raised for silence, and a smile,
indeed, upon her lips, but never a glance for Buck
Daniels. He knew at once.
“Is it him?” he whispered. “D’you
hear him?”
“Hush!” commanded two
voices, and then he saw that old Joe Cumberland also
was listening.
“No,” said the girl suddenly, “it
was only the wind.”
As if in answer, a far, faint whistling
broke upon them. She drew her hands slowly towards
her breast, as if, indeed, she drew the sound in with
them.
“He’s coming!” she
cried. “Oh, Dad, listen! Don’t
you hear?”
“I do,” answered the rancher,
“but what I’m hearin’ don’t
warm my blood none. Kate, if you’re wise
you’ll get up and go to your room and don’t
pay no heed to anything you might be hearin’
to-night.”