The entrance of the puppy, to liken
small things to great, was the coming of Blucher in
Kate’s life, for the battle turned, and all in
five minutes she had gone from defeat to victory.
She sat by the fire with Joan sleeping in her arms,
and the puppy in turn in the arms of Joan. It
was such a foolish trick of chance that had given
her all this, she was almost inclined to laugh, but
something of tragedy in the faces of Buck and Lee
Haines made her thoroughly serious. And she readily
saw the truth for after all a child’s brain
is a small affair; it holds so much and no more.
One instant the longing for Dan was all that Joan
could think of; the next she had no room for anything
more than the burned nose of the puppy—if
there were other phases to this matter—such
as Buck Daniels had pointed out—fear that
in some future crisis the blood of the father might
show in the child, Kate pushed such thoughts away.
She was too full of the present happiness.
Now, while she sat there in the firelight,
she sang softly into the dreams of Joan, and watched
the smile of sleep grow and wane faintly on the lips
of the child as the rhythm of her singing lifted and
fell. One half of her mind was empty, that part
where Dan should have been, and a dozen times she
checked an impulse to turn to him in the place where
he should be sitting and invite him with a smile to
share her happiness. When her eyes moved they
only fell on the gaunt, intent face of Buck or the
leonine head of Haines. Whistling Dan was gone
and if he ever came again her fear of him, her fear
for Joan, would be greater than her love. Yet
Dan being gone so finally, she knew that she would
never be truly happy again. Her spring of life
was ended, but even now she was grateful for the full
richness of those six years with Dan; and if she turned
from him now it was only because a mighty instinct
commanded her and a voice without words drove her—Joan
must go on to a normal, womanly happiness. Dan
Barry lived from day to day, glutting himself with
a ride in the wind, or the whistle of a far-off bird,
or the wail of a mountain-lion through the night.
Each instant was to him complete, but the eye of Kate
looked far away and saw the night when this daughter
of hers should sit holding an infant by such a fire,
and her heart was both empty and full.
It was no wonder, then, that she heard
the first sound long before either Haines or Buck
Daniels, for her mind was on guard against dangers
which might threaten her baby. It was a faint
slipping, scratching noise on the veranda; then a
breathing at the front door. Kate turned, and
the men followed the terror of her eyes in time to
see the door fall open, and a broad paw appear in
the interval. The snaky head of Black Bart thrust
into the room.
Without a word, Daniels drew his gun.
“Wait!” commanded Kate.
Joan awoke with a start at the sharpness of this voice.
“Don’t shoot, Buck. See that bit of
paper under his throat. He’s bringing a
message.”
“Bart!” cried Joan, slipping
to the floor from her mother’s lap, but when
she ran toward the wolf-dog, that tremendous snarl
of warning stopped her short. Bart slunk toward
Kate.
“Look out, Kate!” cried
Haines. “The black devil means murder.”
“Don’t move, or he’ll
go at your throat,” she answered. “There’s
no danger to me. He’s been ordered to go
to me and he won’t let even Joan touch him.
See!”
He had glided past the amazed, outstretched
arms of Joan and went straight to Kate and stopped
beside her, obviously expectant. She reached for
the slip of folded paper, and as her hand approached
he crouched a little, growling; but it was only to
caution her, apparently, and though he distrusted
the hand, he allowed it to unfasten the missive.
She untwisted the note, she read aloud:
“Kate, send Joan back to me or I come for her.
Send her with Bart.”
It seemed as though the wolf-dog understood
the written words, for now he moved toward Joan and
she, with a cry, dropped the squealing puppy and caught
the great head of Bart in her arms. The puppy
wailed, sitting down on his haunches, and quivering
with grief.
“Daddy Dan wants me,”
explained Joan with bright eyes. “He’s
sent for me. Go quick, Bart!”
The big animal lay down to facilitate her mounting.
“Joan!” called Kate.
The child hesitated and turned toward her. Her
mother had taken up that light revolver which Dan
had taught her to use so well, and now, as she leveled
it at the wolf-dog, Bart laid his fangs bare in silent
hate. The weapons of Buck and Lee Haines were
ready, and now Bart raised himself a little and commenced
to drag gradually forward to leaping distance.
“Drop your gun, Kate,”
cautioned Buck. “For God’s sake drop
your gun. Even if you hit him with a bullet,
he’ll be at your throat. Unless you kill
him with the first shot he’ll have you.
Drop your gun, and then he’ll go at us.”
But Joan knew perfectly well what
those gleaming bits of steel meant. She had seen
Daddy Dan shoot and kill, and now she ran screaming
between Bart and danger.
“Munner!” she cried.
“You bad, bad men. I won’t let you
hurt Bart.”
“They won’t hurt you,
Bart,” explained Joan, taming much mollified
to the great wolf-dog. “They’re just
playin’. Now we’ll go.”
And she started toward the door, with
Bart slinking in front and keeping a watchful lookout
from a corner of his eye.
“Are you going to leave the
poor little puppy, Joan?” said the mother, keeping
her voice steady, for all the force of the two men
could not help her now. It rested with her wit.
“I’ll take him with me,”
answered Joan, and caught up the howling puppy from
the floor. His wails died out against her breast.
“But you mustn’t do that,
honey. He’d die in this cold night wind
long before you got there.”
“Oh!” sighed Joan, and
considered her mother with great eyes. Black Bart
turned and uneasily tugged at her dress.
“Will you take good care of him, munner?
Till I come back?”
“But I don’t know how
to take care of him, dear. If you go he’ll
cry and cry and cry until he dies.”
Joan sighed.
“See how quiet he is when you hold him, Joan!”
“Oh,” muttered Joan again.
The distress of the problem made her wrinkle her forehead.
She turned to Kate for help.
“Munner, what’ll I do?”
“You’d best stay here until the puppy
is strong enough to go with you.”
She kept her voice well under control;
it would not do to show the slightest emotion, and
now she sat down and half turned away from the child.
With her eyes she flashed a signal at the two troubled
men and they followed her lead. Their center
of vision was now upon the fire. It left Joan,
to all appearances, quite out of notice.
“Oh, that’ll be a long, long time, munner.”
“Only a little while, Joan.”
“But Daddy Dan’ll be lonesome up there.”
“He has Satan and Bart to keep him company.”
“Don’t you think he wants Joan, munner?”
“Not as much as the poor little puppy wants
you, Joan.”
She added, with just the slightest
tremor: “You decide for yourself, Joan.
Go if you think it is best.”
“Bart, what’ll Joan do?”
queried the child, turning in dismay toward the wolf-dog,
but as soon as he saw the puppy in her arms, he greeted
her with a murderous snarl.
“You see,” suggested her
mother, “that Black Bart would eat up the poor
little puppy if you went now with him.”
At this alarming thought, Joan shrank
away from Bart and when he followed her, anxiously,
she cried: “Go away! Bad dog!
Bad Bart!”
He caught the edge of her dress and
drew back toward the door, and this threw Joan into
a sudden panic. She struck Bart across his wrinkled
forehead.
“Go away!” he slunk back, snarling at
the puppy.
“Go back to Daddy Dan.”
Then, as he pricked his ears, still growling like
distant thunder: “Go tell Daddy Dan that
Joan has to stay here a while. Munner, how long?”
“Maybe a week, dear.”
“A whole week?” she cried, dismayed.
“Perhaps only one or two or three days,”
said Kate.
Some of her tenseness was leaving
as she saw victory once more inclining to her standards.
“One, two, five days,”
counted Joan, “and then come for me again.
Tell Daddy Dan that, Bart.”
His eyes left her and wandered around
the room, lingering for a vicious instant on the face
of each, then he backed toward the door.
“He’s clear of Joan now,
Kate,” whispered Buck. “Let me shoot!”
“No, no! Don’t even look at him.”
Then, with a scratching of sudden
claws, Bart whirled at the door and was gone like
a bolt down the hall. Afterwards for a time there
was no sound in the room except the murmurings of
Joan to her puppy, and then they heard that most mournful
of sounds on the mountain-desert, the long howl of
a wolf which has missed its kill, and hunts hungry
on a new trail.