If her soul had been capable of enthusiasm,
Marne could have made the trip on schedule time, but
she was a burro good for nothing except to carry a
pack well nigh half her own weight, live on forage
that might have starved a goat, and smell water fifteen
miles in time of drought. Speed was not in her
vocabulary, and accordingly it was late afternoon rather
than morning when Gregg, pointing his course between
the ears of Marne, steered her through Murphy’s
Pass and came out over Alder. There they paused
by mutual consent, and the burro flicked one long
ear forward to listen to the rushing of the Doane
River. It filled the valley with continual murmur,
and just below them, where the brown, white-flecked
current twisted around an elbow bend, lay Alder tossed
down without plan, here a boulder and there a house.
They seemed marvelously flimsy structures, and one
felt surprise that the weight the winter snow had
not crushed them, or that the Doane River had not
sent a strong current licking over bank and tossed
the whole village crashing down the ravine. One
building was very much like other, but Gregg’s
familiar eye pierced through the roofs and into Widow
Sullivan’s staggering shack, into Hezekiah Whittleby’s
hushed sitting-room, down to the moist, dark floor
of the Captain’s saloon into that amazing junkshop,
the General Merchandise store; but first and last
he looked to the little flag which gleamed and snapped
above the schoolhouse, and it spelled “my country”
to Vic.
Marne consented to break into a neat-footed
jog-trot going down the last slope, and so she went
up the single winding street of Alder, grunting at
every step, with Gregg’s whistle behind her.
In town, he lived with his friend, Dug Pym, who kept
their attic room reserved for his occupancy, so he
headed straight for that place. What human face
would he see first?
It was Mrs. Sweeney’s little
boy, Jack, who raced into the street whooping, and
Vic caught him under the armpits and swung him dizzily
into the air.
“By God,” muttered Vic,
as he strode on, “that’s a good kid, that
Jack.” And he straightway forgot all about
that knife which Jackie had purloined from him the
summer before. “Me and Betty,” he
thought, “we’ll have kids, like Jack;
tougher’n leather.”
Old Garrigan saw him next and cackled
from his truck garden in the backyard, but Vic went
on with a wave of his arm, and on past Gertie Vincent’s
inviting shout (Gertie had been his particular girl
before Betty Neal came to town), and on with the determination
of a soldier even past the veranda of Captain Lorrimier’s
saloon, though Lorrimer himself bellowed a greeting
and “Chick” Stewart crooked a significant
thumb over his shoulder towards the open door.
He only paused at the blacksmith shop and looked in
at Dug, who was struggling to make the print of a hot
shoe on a hind foot of Simpson’s sorrel Glencoe.
“Hey, Dug!”
Pym raised a grimy, sweating forehead.
“You, boy; easy, damn you!
Hello, Vic!” and he propped that restless hind
foot on his inner thigh and extended a hand.
“Go an workin’, Dug, because
I can’t stop; I just want a rope to catch Grey
Molly.”
“You red devil—take
that rope over there, Vic. You won’t have
no work catchin’ Molly. Which she’s
plumb tame. Stand still, damn you. I never
seen a Glencoe with any sense!—Where you
goin’, Vic? Up to the school?”
And his sweaty grin followed Vic as
the latter went out with the coil of rope over his
shoulder. When Gregg reached the house, Nelly
Pym hugged him, which is the privilege of fat and
forty, and then she sat at the foot of the stairs
and shouted up gossip while he shaved with frantic
haste and jumped into his best clothes. He answered
her with monosyllables and only half his mind.
“Finish up your work, Vic?”
“Nope.”
“You sure worked yourself all
thin. I hope somebody appreciates it.”
She chuckled. “Ain’t been sick, have
you?”
“Say, who d’you think’s in town?
Sheriff Glass!”
This information sank in on him while
he tugged at a boot at least a size and half too small.
“Pete Glass!” he echoed. Then:
“Who’s he after?”
“I dunno. Vic, he don’t look like
such a bad one.”
“He’s plenty bad enough,” Gregg
assured her. “Ah-h-h!”
His foot ground into place, torturing his toes.
’”Well,” considered Mrs.
Pym, in a philosophic rumble, “I s’pose
them quiet gents is the dangerous ones, mostly; but
looking at Glass you wouldn’t think he’d
ever killed all those men. Know about the dance?”
“Nope.”
“Down to Singer’s place. Betty goin’
with you?”
He jerked open the door and barked
down at her: “Who else would she be goin’
with?”
“Don’t start pullin’
leather before the horse bucks,” said Mrs. Pym.
“I don’t know who else she’d be
goin’ with. You sure look fine in that red
shirt, Vic!”
He grinned, half mollified, half shame-faced,
and ducked back into the room, but a moment later
he clumped stiffly down the stairs, frowning.
He wondered if he could dance in those boots.
“Feel kind of strange in these
clothes. How do I look, Nelly?” And he
turned in review at the foot of the stairs.
“Slick as a whistle, I’ll
tell a man.” She raised her voice to a shout
as he disappeared through the outer door. “Kiss
her once for me, Vic.”
In the center of the little pasture
he stood shaking out the noose, and the three horses
raced in a sweeping gallop around the fence, looking
for a place of escape, with Grey Molly in the lead.
Nothing up the Doane River, or even down the Asper,
for that matter, could head Molly when she was full
of running, and the eyes of Gregg gleamed as he watched
her. She was not a picture horse, for her color
was rather a dirty white than a dapple, and besides,
there were some who accused her of “tucked up
belly.” But she had the legs for speed
in spite of the sloping croup, and plenty of chest
at the girth, and a small, bony head that rejoiced
the heart of a horseman. He swung the noose,
and while the others darted ahead, stupidly straight
into the range of danger, Grey Molly whirled like
a doubling coyote and leaped away.
“Good girl!” cried Vic,
in involuntary approbation. He ran a few steps.
The noose slid up and out, opened in a shaky loop,
and swooped down. Too late the gray saw the flying
danger, for even as she swerved the riata fell over
her head, and she came to a snorting halt with all
fours planted, skidding through the grass. The
first thing a range horse learns is never to pull
against a rope.
A few minutes later she was getting
the “pitch” out of her system, as any
self-respecting cattle horse must do after a session
of pasture and no work. She bucked with enthusiasm
and intelligence, as she did all things. Sun-fishing,
sun-fishing is the most deadly form of bucking, for
it consists of a series of leaps apparently aimed
at the sun, and the horse comes down with a sickening
jar on stiff front legs. Educated “pitchers”
land on only one foot, so that the shock is accompanied
by a terrible sidewise, downward wrench that breaks
the hearts of the best riders in the world. Grey
Molly was educated, and Mrs. Pym stood in the doorway
with a broad grin of appreciation on her red face,
she knew riding when she saw it. Then, out of
the full frenzy, the mare lapsed into high-headed,
quivering attention, and Gregg cursed her softly, with
deep affection. He understood her from her fetlocks
to her teeth. She bucked like a fiend of revolt
one instant and cantered like an angel of grace the
next; in fact she was more or less of an equine counterpart
of her rider.
But now he heard shrill voices passing
down the street and he knew that school was out and
that he must hurry if he wanted to ride home with Betty,
so he waved to Mrs. Pym and cantered away. For
over two days he had been rushing towards this meeting;
all winter he had hungered for it, but now that the
moment loomed before him he weakened; he usually did
when he came close to the girl. Not that her
beauty overwhelmed him, for though she had a portion
of energetic good-health and freckled prettiness, he
had chosen her as an Indian chooses flint for his
steel; one could strike fire from Betty Neal.
When he was far away he loved her without doubt or
question and his trust ran towards her like a river
setting towards the ocean because he knew that her
heart was as big and as true as the heart of Grey Molly
herself. Only her ways were fickle, and when she
came near, she filled him with uneasiness, suspicion.