JOAN
“Them were the days when this
was a man’s country, which a man could climb
on his hoss with a gun and a rope and touch heaven
and hell in one day’s ridin’. Them
good old days ain’t no more. I’ve
heard the old man tell about ’em. Now they’ve
got everybody stamped and branded with law an’
order, herded together like cattle, ticketed, done
for. That’s the way the range is now.
The marshals have us by the throat. In the old
days a sheriff that outlived his term was probably
crooked and runnin’ hand in hand with the long-riders.”
“Long-riders?” queried Bard.
“Fellers that got tired of workin’
and took to ridin’ for their livin’.
Mostly they worked in little gangs of five and six.
They was called long-riders, I guess, partly because
they was in the saddle all the time, and partly because
they done their jobs so far apart. They’d
ride into Eldara and blow up the safe in the bank
one day, for instance, and five days later they’d
be two hundred and fifty miles away stoppin’
a train at Lewis Station.
“They never hung around no one
part of the country and that made it hard as hell
to run ’em down—that and because they
had the best hosses that money could buy. They
had friends, too, strung out all over—squatters
and the like of that. They’d drop in on
these little fellers and pass ’em a couple of
twenties and make themselves solid for life. Afterward
they used ’em for stoppin’ places.
“They’d pull off a couple
of hold-ups, then they’d ride off to one of
these squatter places and lay up for ten days, maybe,
drinkin’ and feedin’ up themselves and
their hosses. That was the only way they was
ever caught. They was killed off by each other,
fighting about the split-up, or something like that.
“But now and then a gang held
together long enough to raise so much hell that they
got known from one end of the range to the other.
Mostly they held together because they had a leader
who knew how to handle ’em and who kept ’em
under his thumb. That was the way with old Piotto.
“He had five men under him.
They was all hell-benders who had ridden the range
alone and had their share of fights and killings, which
there wasn’t one of ’em that wouldn’t
have been good enough to go leader in any other crew,
but they had to knuckle under to old Piotto. He
was a great gunman and he was pretty good in scheming
up ways of dodging the law and picking the best booty.
He had these five men, and then he had his daughter,
Joan. She was better’n two ordinary men
herself.
“Three years that gang held
together and got rich—fair rich. They
made it so fast they couldn’t even gamble the
stuff away. About a thousand times, I guess posses
went out after Piotto, but they never came back with
a trace of ’em; they never got within shootin’
distance. Finally Piotto got so confident that
he started raidin’ ranches and carryin’
off members of well-off ranchers to hold for ransom.
That was the easiest way of makin’ money; it
was also pretty damned dangerous.
“One time they held up a stage
and picked off of it two kids who was comin’
out from the East to try their hands in the cattle
business. They was young, they looked like gentlemen,
they was dressed nifty, and they packed big rolls.
So wise old Piotto took ’em off into the hills
and held ’em till their folks back East could
wire out the money to save ‘em. That was
easy money for Piotto, but that was the beginnin’
of the end for him; because while they was waitin’,
them two kids seen Joan and seen her good.
“I been telling you she was
better’n two common men. She was. Which
means she was equal to about ten ordinary girls.
There’s still a legend about how beautiful Joan
Piotto was—tall and straight and big black
eyes and terrible handy with her gun. She could
ride anything that walked and she didn’t know
what fear meant.
“These two kids seen her.
One of ’em was William Drew; one of ’em
was John Bard.”
He turned to Anthony and saw that
the latter was stern of face. He had surely scored
his point.
“Same name as yours, eh?”
he asked, to explain his turning.
“It’s a common enough name,” murmured
Bard.
“Well, them two had come out
to be partners, and there they was, fallin’
in love with the same girl. So when they got free
they put their heads together—bein’
uncommon wise kids—and figured it out this
way. Neither of ’em had a chance workin’
alone to get Joan way from her father’s gang,
but workin’ together they might have a ghost
of a show. So they decided to stay on the trail
of Piotto till they got Joan. Then they’d
give her a choice between the two of ’em and
the one that lost would simply back off the boards.
“They done what they agreed.
For six months they stuck on the trail of old Piotto
and never got in hailin’ distance of him.
Then they come on the gang while they were restin’
up in the house of a squatter.
“That was a pretty night.
Drew and Bard went through that gang. It sounds
like a nice fairy-story, all right, but I know old
fellers who’ll swear it’s true. They
killed three of the men with their guns; they knifed
another one, an’ they killed Riley with their
bare hands. It wasn’t no pretty sight to
see—the inside of that house. And last
of all they got Piotto, fightin’ like an old
wildcat, into a corner with his daughter; and William
Drew, he took Piotto into his arms and busted his
back. That don’t sound possible, but when
you see Drew you’ll know how it was done.
“The girl, she’d been
knocked cold before this happened. So while Bard
and Drew sat together bindin’ up each other’s
wounds—because they was shot pretty near
to pieces—they talked it over and they seen
pretty clear that the girl would never marry the man
that had killed her father. Of course, old Bill
Drew, he’d done the killing, but that wasn’t
any reason why he had to take the blame.
“They made up their minds that
right there and then with the dead men lyin’
all around ’em, they’d match coins to see
which one would take the blame of havin’ killed
Piotto—meanin’ that the other one
would get the girl—if he could.
“And Bard lost. So he had
to take the credit of havin’ killed old Piotto.
I’d of give something to have seen the two of
’em sittin’ there—oozin’
blood—after that marchin’ was decided.
Because they tell me that Bard was as big as Drew
and looked pretty much the same.
“Then Bard, he asked Drew to
let him have one chance at the girl, lettin’
her know first what he’d done, but jest trustin’
to his power of talk. Which, of course, didn’t
give him no show. While he was makin’ love
to the girl she outs with a knife and tries to stick
him—nice, pleasant sort she must have been—and
Drew, he had to pry the two of ’em apart.
“That made the girl look sort
of kind on Drew and she swore that sooner or later
she’d have the blood of Bard for what he’d
done—either have it herself or else send
someone after him to the end of the world. She
was a wild one, all right.
“She was so wild that Drew,
after they got married, took her over on the far side
of the range and built that old house that’s
rottin’ there now. Bard, he left the range
and wasn’t never seen again, far as I know.”
It was clear to Anthony, bitterly
clear. His father had had a grim scene in parting
with Drew and had placed the continent between them.
And in the Eastern states he had met that black-eyed
girl, his mother, and loved her because she was so
much like the wild daughter of Piotto. The girl
Joan in dying had probably extracted from Drew a promise
that he would kill Bard, and that promise he had lived
to fulfil.
“So Joan died?” he queried.
“Yep, and was buried under them
two trees in front of the house. I don’t
think she lived long after they was married, but about
that nobody knows. They was clear off by themselves
and there isn’t any one can tell about their
life after they was married. All we know is that
Drew didn’t get over her dyin’. He
ain’t over it yet, and goes out to the old place
every month or so to potter around the grave and keep
the grass and the weeds off of it and clean the head-stone.”
The candle guttered wildly on the
floor. It had burnt almost to the wood and now
the remnant of the wick stood in a little sprawling
pool of grease white at the outer edges.
Bard yawned, and patted idly the blanket
where it touched on the shape of the revolver beneath.
In another moment that candle would gutter out and
they would be left in darkness.
He said: “That’s
the best yarn I’ve heard in a good many days;
it’s enough to make any one sleepy—so
here goes.”
And he turned deliberately on his side.
Nash, his eyes staring with incredulity,
sat up slowly among his blankets and his hand stole
up toward the noose of the lariat. A light snore
reached him, hardly a snore so much as the heavy intake
of breath of a very weary, sleeping man; yet the hand
of Nash froze on the lariat.
“By God,” he whispered
faintly to himself, “he ain’t asleep!”
And the candle flared wildly, leaped, and shook out.