“And so,” said Lee Haines,
when he joined Buck Daniels in the living-room, “there
goes our reinforcements. That whole crew will
scatter like dead leaves when Barry breezes in.
It looks to me—”
“Shut up!” cut in Daniels. “Shut
up!”
His dark, homely face turned to the
larger man with a singular expression of awe.
He whispered: “D’you hear? She’s
in the next room whippin’ Joan for runnin’
away, and never a yap out of the kid!”
He held up a lean finger for caution
and then Haines heard the sound of the willow switch.
It stopped.
“If you run away again,”
warned Kate, her voice pitched high and trembling,
“munner will whip harder, and put you in a dark
place for a long, long time.”
Still there was not a sound of the
child’s voice, not even the pulse of stifled
weeping. Presently the door opened and Kate stood
there.
“Go out in the kitchen and tell
Li to give you breakfast. Naughty girls can’t
eat with munner.”
Through the door came Joan, her little
round face perfectly white, perfectly expressionless.
She did not cringe, passing her mother; she walked
steadily across the room, rose on tip-toe to open the
kitchen door, and disappeared through it. Kate
dropped into a chair, shaking.
“Out!” whispered Buck
to Lee Haines. “Beat it. I got to talk
alone.” And as soon as Haines obeyed, Buck
sat down close to the girl. She was twisting
and untangling her fingers in a dumb agony.
“What has he done to her, Buck? What has
he done?”
It was a maxim with Buck that talk
is to woman what swearing is to man; it is a safety
valve, and therefore he waited in silence until the
first rush of her grief had passed.
“She only looked at me when
I whipped her. My heart turned in me. She
didn’t cry; she wasn’t even angry.
She just stood there—my baby!—and
looked at me!”
She threw herself back in the chair
with her eyes closed, and he saw where the trouble
had marked her face. He wanted to lean over and
take her in his arms.
“I’m going mad, Buck.
I can’t stand it. How could he have changed
her to this?”
“Listen to me, Kate. Joan
ain’t been changed. She’s only showin’
what she is.”
The mother stared wildly at him.
“Don’t look like I was
a murderer. God knows I’m sorry, Kate, but
if they’s Dan’s blood in your little girl
it ain’t my fault. It ain’t anything
he’s taught her. It’s just that bein’
alone with him has brought out what she really is.”
“I won’t believe you, Buck. I don’t
dare listen to you!”
“You got to listen, Kate, because
you know I’m right. D’you think that
any kind of teachin’ could make her learn how
to stand and keep from cryin’ when she was whipped?”
“I know.”
She spoke softly, as if some terrible
power might overhear them talk, and Buck lowered his
voice in turn.
“She’s wild, Kate, I knew
it when I seen the way she handled Bart. She’s
wild!”
“Then I’ll have her tame again.”
“You tried that once and failed.”
“Dan was a man when I tried,
and his nature was formed. Joan is only a baby—my
baby. She’s half mine. She has my hair
and my eyes.”
“I don’t care what the
color of her eyes is, I know what’s behind them.
Look at ’em, and then tell me who she takes after.”
“Buck, why do you talk like
this? What do you want me to do?”
“A hard thing. Send Joan back to Dan.”
“Never!”
“He’ll never give her up, I tell you.”
“Oh, God help me. What shall I do?
I’ll keep her! I’ll make her tame.”
“But you’ll never keep
her that way. Think of Dan. Think of the
yaller in his eyes, Kate.”
“Until I die,” she said with sudden quiet,
“I’ll fight to keep her.”
And he answered with equal solemnity:
“Until Dan dies he’ll fight to have her.
And he’s never been beat yet.”
Through a breathing space he stared
at her and she at him, and the eyes of Buck Daniels
were the first to turn. Everything that was womanly
and gentle had died from her face, and in its stead
was something which made Buck rise and wander from
the room.
He found Lee Haines and told him briefly
all that had passed. The great battle, they decided,
had begun between Kate and Barry for the sake of the
child, and that battle would go on until one of them
was dead or the prize for which they struggled lost.
Barry would come on the trail and find them at the
ranch, and then he would strike for Joan. And
they had no help for the struggle against him.
The cowpunchers would scatter at the first sign of
Barry, at the first shrill of his ill-omened whistling.
They might ride for Elkhead and raise a posse from
among the citizens, but it would take two days to
do that and gather a number of effective fighters for
the crisis, and in the meantime the chances were large
that Barry would strike the ranch while the messenger
was away. There was really nothing to do but
sit patiently and wait. They were both brave men,
very; and they were both not unpracticed fighters;
but they began to wait for the coming of Barry as
the prisoner waits for the day of his execution.
It spoke well for the quality of their
nerves that they would not speak to Kate of the time
to come; they sat back like spectators at a play and
watched the maneuvers of the mother to win back Joan.
There was not an idle moment from
breakfast to dark. They went out to gather wildflowers
on the western hill from the house; they sat on the
veranda where Kate told Joan stories of the ranch and
pointed out the distant mountains which were its boundaries,
and explained that all between them would one day
be her own land; that the men who rode yonder were
doing her work; that the cattle who ranged the hills
were marked with her brand. She said it all in
small words so that Joan could understand, but as far
as Buck and Lee could make out, there was never a
flicker of intelligence or interest in the eyes of
the child.
It was a hard battle every hour, and
after supper Kate sat in a big chair by the fire with
her eyes half closed, admitting defeat, perhaps.
For Joan was curled up on the couch at the farthest,
dimmest end of the room, and with her chin propped
in both small hands she stared in silence through the
window and over the darkening hills. Buck and
Lee were there, never speaking, but now and then their
eyes sought each other with a vague hope. For
Kate might see that her task was impossible, send Joan
back, and that would free them of the danger.
But where Kate left off, chance took
up the battle and turned the scales. Old Li,
the Chinese cook, had not seen Kate for six long years,
and now he celebrated the return by hanging about
her on a thousand pretexts. It was just after
he had brought in some delicacy from the kitchen, leaving
the door a little ajar, when a small ball of gray
fur nosed its way through the aperture and came straight
for the glare of the fire on the hearth. It was
a small shepherd puppy, and having observed the faces
of the men with bright, unafraid eyes, it went wobbling
on to the very hearth, sniffling. Even at that
age it knew enough to keep away from the bright coals
of wood, but how could it know that the dark, cold-looking
andirons had been heated to the danger point by the
fire? It thrust out a tentative nose, touched
the iron, and then its shrill yelp of pain went startlingly
through the room. It pulled the three grown-ups
out of their thoughts; it brought Joan scampering
across the room with a little happy cry.
The puppy would have escaped if it
could, for it had in mind the dark, warm, familiar
corner in Li’s kitchen where no harm ever came
near, but the agile hands of Joan caught him; he was
swept into her arms. That little wail of helpless
pain, the soft fluff of fur against her cheek, wiped
all other things from Joan’s mind. Out
the window and across the gloomy hills she had been
staring at the picture of the cave, and bright-eyed
Satan, and the shadowy form of Bart, and the swift,
gentle hand of Daddy Dan; but the cry of the puppy
blotted the picture out. She was no longer lonely,
having this small, soft body to protect. There
sat her mother, leaning a little toward her with a
glance at once misted and bright, and she forgot forthwith
all the agency of Kate in carrying her away from that
cave of delight.
“Look, munner! He’s burned his nose!”
The puppy was licking the injured
nose industriously and whimpering the while.
And Joan heard no answer from her mother except an
inarticulate little sound somewhere deep in Kate’s
throat. Over her child mind, vaguely, like all
baby memories, moved a recollection of the same sound,
coming deeply from the throat of the mother and marvelously
soothing, reassuring. It moved a fiber of trust
and sympathy in Joan, an emotion as real as the sound
of music, and with the puppy held idly in her arms
for a moment, she looked curiously into Kate’s
face. On her own, a faint smile began in the
eyes and spread to the lips.
“Poor little puppy, munner,” said Joan.
The hands of Kate trembled with desire
to bring Joan closer to her, but very wisely she merely
stroked the cringing head of the dog.
“Poor little puppy,” she echoed.