RED WRITING
He stirred.
“Dan—dear!”
“My head,” he muttered, “it sort
of aches, Kate, as if—”
He was silent and she knew that he remembered.
“You’re all right now,
honey. I’ve come here to take care of you—I
won’t leave you. Poor Dan!”
“How did you know?” he asked, the words
trailing.
“Black Bart came for me.”
“Good ol’ Bart!”
The great wolf slunk closer, and licked the outstretched
hand.
“Why, Kate, I’m on the
floor and it’s dark. Am I still in Morgan’s
place? Yes, I begin to see clearer.”
He made an effort to rise, but she pressed him back.
“If you try to move right away
you may get a fever. I’m going back to
the house, and I’ll bring you down some blankets.
Morgan says you shouldn’t attempt to move for
several hours. He says you’ve lost a great
deal of blood and that you mustn’t make any effort
or ride a horse till tomorrow.”
Dan relaxed with a sigh.
“Kate.”
“Yes, honey.”
Her hand travelled lightly as blown
snow across his forehead. He caught it and pressed
the coolness against his cheek.
“I feel as if I’d sort
of been through a fire. I seem to be still seein’
red.”
“Dan, it makes me feel as if
I never knew you! Now you must forget all that
has happened. Promise me you will!”
He was silent for a moment and then he sighed again.
“Maybe I can, Kate. Which
I feel, though, as if there was somethin’ inside
me writ—writ in red letters—I
got to try to read the writin’ before I can
talk much.”
She barely heard him. Her hand
was still against his face. A deep awe and content
was creeping through her, so that she began to smile
and was glad that the dark covered her face.
She felt abashed before him for the first time in
her life, and there was a singular sense of shame.
It was as if some door in her inner heart had opened
so that Dan was at liberty to look down into her soul.
There was terror in this feeling, but there was also
gladness.
“Kate.”
“Yes—honey!”
“What were you hummin’?”
She started.
“I didn’t know I was humming, Dan.”
“You were, all right. It
sounded sort of familiar, but I couldn’t figger
out where I heard it.”
“I know now. It’s one of your own
tunes.”
Now she felt a tremor so strong that she feared he
would notice it.
“I must go back to the house,
Dan. Maybe Dad has returned. If he has,
perhaps he can arrange to have you carried back tonight.”
“I don’t want to think
of movin’, Kate. I feel mighty comfortable.
I’m forgettin’ all about that ache in my
head. Ain’t that queer? Why, Kate,
what in the world are you laughin’ about?”
“I don’t know, Dan. I’m just
happy!”
“Kate.”
“Yes?”
“I like you pretty much.”
“I’m so glad!”
“You an’ Black Bart, an’ Satan—”
“Oh!” Her tone changed.
“Why are you tryin’ to take your hand
away, Kate?”
“Don’t you care for me any more than for
your horse—and your dog?”
He drew a long breath, puzzled.
“It’s some different, I figger.”
“Tell me!”
“If Black Bart died—”
The wolf-dog whined, hearing his name.
“Good ol’ Bart! Well,
if Black Bart died maybe I’d some day have another
dog I’d like almost as much.”
“Yes.”
“An’ if Satan died—even
Satan!—maybe I could sometime like another
hoss pretty well—if he was a pile like Satan!
But if you was to die—it’d be different,
a considerable pile different.”
“Why?”
His pauses to consider these questions were maddening.
“I don’t know,” he muttered at last.
Once more she was thankful for the dark to hide her
smile.
“Maybe you know the reason, Kate?”
Her laughter was rich music.
His hold on her hand relaxed. He was thinking
of a new theme. When he laughed in turn it startled
her. She had never heard that laugh before.
“What is it, Dan?”
“He was pretty big, Kate.
He was bigger’n almost any man I ever seen!
It was kind of funny. After he hit me I was almost
glad. I didn’t hate him—”
“Dear Dan!”
“I didn’t hate him—I
jest nacherally wanted to kill him—and wantin’
to do that made me glad. Isn’t that funny,
Kate?”
He spoke of it as a chance traveller
might point out a striking feature of the landscape
to a companion.
“Dan, if you really care for
me you must drop the thought of him.”
His hand slipped away.
“How can I do that? That writin’
I was tellin’ you about—”
“Yes?”
“It’s about him!”
“Ah!”
“When he hit me the first time—”
“I won’t hear you tell of it!”
“The blood come down my chin—jest
a little trickle of it. It was warm, Kate.
That was what made me hot all through.”
Her hands fell limp, cold, lifeless.
“It’s as clear as the
print in a book. I’ve got to finish him.
That’s the only way I can forget the taste of
my own blood.”
“Dan, listen to me!”
He laughed again, in the new way.
She remembered that her father had dreaded the very
thing that had come to Dan—this first taste
of his own powers—this first taste (she
shuddered) of blood!
“Dan, you’ve told me that
you like me. You have to make a choice now, between
pursuing this man, and me.”
“You don’t understand,”
he explained carefully. “I got to
follow him. I can’t help it no more’n
Black Bart can help howlin’ when he sees the
moon.”
He fell silent, listening. Far
across the hills came the plaintive wail of a coyote—that
shrill bodiless sound. Kate trembled.
“Dan!”
Outside, Satan whinnied softly like
a call. She leaned and her lips touched his.
He thrust her away almost roughly.
“They’s blood on my lips,
Kate! I can’t kiss you till they’re
clean.”
He turned his head.
“You must listen to me, Dan!”
“Kate, would you talk to the wind?”
“Yes, if I loved the wind!”
He turned his head.
She pleaded: “Here are
my hands to cover your eyes and shut out the thoughts
of this man you hate. Here are my lips, dear,
to tell you that I love you unless this thirst for
killing carries you away from me. Stay with me!
Give me your heart to keep gentle!”
He said nothing, but even through
the dark she was aware of a struggle in his face,
and then, through the gloom, she began to see his
eyes more clearly. They seemed to be illuminated
by a light from within—they changed—there
was a hint of yellow in the brown. And she spoke
again, blindly, passionately.
“Give me your promise!
It is so easy to do. One little word will make
you safe. It will save you from yourself.”
Still he answered nothing. Black
Bart came and crouched at his head and stared at her
fixedly.
“Speak to me!”
Only the yellow light answered her.
Cold fear fought in her heart, but love still struggled
against it.
“For the last time—for God’s
sake, Dan!”
Still that silence. She rose,
shaking and weak. The changeless eyes followed
her. Only fear remained now. She backed towards
the door, slowly, then faster, and faster. At
the threshold she whirled and plunged into the night.
Up the road she raced. Once she
stumbled and fell to her knees. She cried out
and glanced behind her, breathing again when she saw
that nothing followed. At the house she made
no pause, though she heard the voice of her father
singing. She could not tell him. He should
be the last in all the world to know. She went
to her room and huddled into bed.
Presently a knock came at her door,
and her father’s voice asked if she were ill.
She pleaded that she had a bad headache and wished
to be alone. He asked if she had seen Dan.
By a great effort she managed to reply that Dan had
ridden to a neighbouring ranch. Her father left
the door without further question. Afterwards
she heard him in the distance singing his favourite
mournful ballads. It doubled her sense of woe
and brought home the clinging fear. She felt that
if she could weep she might live, but otherwise her
heart would burst. And after hours and hours
of that torture which burns the name of “woman”
in the soul of a girl, the tears came. The roosters
announced the dawn before she slept.
Late the next morning old Joe Cumberland
knocked again at her door. He was beginning to
fear that this illness might be serious. Moreover,
he had a definite purpose in rousing her.
“Yes?” she called, after the second knock.
“Look out your window, honey,
down to Morgan’s place. You remember I
said I was goin’ to clean up the landscape?”
The mention of Morgan’s place
cleared the sleep from Kate’s mind and it brought
back the horror of the night before. Shivering
she slipped from her bed and went to the window.
Morgan’s place was a mass of towering flames!
She grasped the window-sill and stared
again. It could not be. It must be merely
another part of the nightmare, and no reality.
Her father’s voice, high with exultation, came
dimly to her ears, but what she saw was Dan as he
had laid there the night before, hurt, helpless, too
weak to move!
“There’s the end of it,”
Joe Cumberland was saying complacently outside her
door. “There ain’t goin’ to
be even a shadow of the saloon left nor nothin’
that’s in it. I jest travelled down there
this mornin’ and touched a match to it!”
Still she stared without moving, without
making a sound. She was seeing Dan as he must
have wakened from a swoonlike sleep with the smell
of smoke and the heat of rising flames around him.
She saw him struggle, and fail to reach his feet.
She almost heard him cry out—a sound drowned
easily by the roar of the fire, and the crackling of
the wood. She saw him drag himself with his hands
across the floor, only to be beaten back by a solid
wall of flame. Black Bart crouched beside him
and would not leave his doomed master. Fascinated
by the raging fire the black stallion Satan would
break from the shed and rush into the flames!—and
so the inseparable three must have perished together!
“Why don’t you speak, Kate?” called
her father.
“Dan!” she screamed, and pitched forward
to the floor.