THE SONG OF THE UNTAMED
Buck and his father were learning
of a thousand crimes charged against Dan. Wherever
a man riding a black horse committed an outrage it
was laid to the account of this new and most terrible
of long riders. Two cowpunchers were found dead
on the plains. Their half-emptied revolvers lay
close to their hands, and their horses were not far
off. In ordinary times it would have been accepted
that they had killed each other, for they were known
enemies, but now men had room for one thought only.
And why should not a man with the courage to take an
outlaw from the centre of Elkhead be charged with every
crime on the range? Jim Silent had been a grim
plague, but at least he was human. This devil
defied death.
These were both sad and happy days
for Kate. The chief cause of her sadness, strangely
enough, was the rapidly returning strength of Dan.
While he was helpless he belonged to her. When
he was strong he belonged to his vengeance on Jim
Silent; and when she heard Dan whistling softly his
own wild, weird music, she knew its meaning as she
would have known the wail of a hungry wolf on a winter
night. It was the song of the untamed. She
never spoke of her knowledge. She took the happiness
of the moment to her heart and closed her eyes against
tomorrow.
Then came an evening when she watched
Dan play with Black Bart—a game of tag
in which they darted about the room with a violence
which threatened to wreck the furniture, but running
with such soft footfalls that there was no sound except
the rattle of Bart’s claws against the floor
and the rush of their breath. They came to an
abrupt stop and Dan dropped into a chair while Black
Bart sank upon his haunches and snapped at the hand
which Dan flicked across his face with lightning movements.
The master fell motionless and silent. His eyes
forgot the wolf. Rising, they rested on Kate’s
face. They rose again and looked past her.
She understood and waited.
“Kate,” he said at last, “I’ve
got to start on the trail.”
Her smile went out. She looked
where she knew his eyes were staring, through the
window and far out across the hills where the shadows
deepened and dropped slanting and black across the
hollows. Far away a coyote wailed. The wind
which swept the hills seemed to her like a refrain
of Dan’s whistling—the song and the
summons of the untamed.
“That trail will never bring you home,”
she said.
There was a long silence.
“You ain’t cryin’, honey?”
“I’m not crying, Dan.”
“I got to go.”
“Yes.”
“Kate, you got a dyin’ whisper in your
voice.”
“That will pass, dear.”
“Why, honey, you are cryin’!”
He took her face between his hands,
and stared into her misted eyes, but then his glance
wandered past her, through the window, out to the
shadowy hills.
“You won’t leave me now?” she pleaded.
“I must!”
“Give me one hour more!”
“Look!” he said, and pointed.
She saw Black Bart reared up with
his forepaws resting on the window-sill, while he
looked into the thickening night with the eyes of
the hunter which sees in the dark.
“The wolf knows, Kate,” he said, “but
I can’t explain.”
He kissed her forehead, but she strained
close to him and raised her lips.
She cried, “My whole soul is on them.”
“Not that!” he said huskily.
“There’s still blood on my lips an’
I’m goin’ out to get them clean.”
He was gone through the door with the wolf racing
before him.
She stumbled after him, her arms outspread,
blind with tears; and then, seeing that he was gone
indeed, she dropped into the chair, buried her face
against the place where his head had rested, and wept.
Far away the coyote wailed again, and this time nearer.