Beside the rear window of the blacksmith
shop Jasper Lanning held his withered arms folded
against his chest. With the dispassionate eye
and the aching heart of an artist he said to himself
that his life work was a failure. That life work
was the young fellow who swung the sledge at the forge,
and truly it was a strange product for this seventy-year-old
veteran with his slant Oriental eyes and his narrow
beard of white. Andrew Lanning was not even his
son, but it came about in this way that Andrew became
the life work of Jasper.
Fifteen years before, the father of
Andy died, and Jasper rode out of the mountain desert
like a hawk dropping out of the pale-blue sky.
He buried his brother without a tear, and then sat
down and looked at the slender child who bore his
name. Andy was a beautiful boy. He had the
black hair and eyes, the well-made jaw, and the bone
of the Lannings, and if his mouth was rather soft
and girlish he laid the failing to the weakness of
childhood. Jasper had no sympathy for tenderness
in men. His own life was as littered with hard
deeds as the side of a mountain with boulders.
But the black, bright eyes and the well-made jaw of
little Andy laid hold on him, and he said to himself:
“I’m fifty-five. I’m about
through with my saddle days. I’ll settle
down and turn out one piece of work that’ll
last after I’m gone, and last with my signature
on it!”
That was fifteen years ago. And
for fifteen years he had labored to make Andy a man
according to a grim pattern which was known in the
Lanning clan, and elsewhere in the mountain desert.
His program was as simple as the curriculum of a Persian
youth. On the whole, it was even simpler, for
Jasper concentrated on teaching the boy how to ride
and shoot, and was not at all particular that he should
learn to speak the truth. But on the first two
and greatest articles of his creed, how Jasper labored!
For fifteen years he poured his heart
without stint into his work! He taught Andy to
know a horse from hock to teeth, and to ride anything
that wore hair. He taught him to know a gun as
if it were a sentient thing. He taught him all
the draws of old and new pattern, and labored to give
him both precision and speed. That was the work
of fifteen years, and now at the end of this time
the old man knew that his life work was a failure,
for he had made the hand of Andrew Lanning cunning,
had given his muscles strength, but the heart beneath
was wrong.
It was hard to see Andy at the first
glance. A film of smoke shifted and eddied through
the shop, and Andy, working the bellows, was a black
form against the square of the door, a square filled
by the blinding white of the alkali dust in the road
outside and the blinding white of the sun above.
Andy turned from the forge, bearing in his tongs a
great bar of iron black at the ends but white in the
middle. The white place was surrounded by a sparkling
radiance. Andy caught up an eight-pound hammer,
and it rose and fell lightly in his hand. The
sparks rushed against the leather apron of the hammer
wielder, and as the blows fell rapid waves of light
were thrown against the face of Andrew.
Looking at that face one wondered
how the life work of Jasper was such a failure.
For Andy was a handsome fellow with his blue-black
hair and his black, rather slanting eyes, after the
Lanning manner. Yet Jasper saw, and his heart
was sick. The face was a little too full; the
square bone of the chin was rounded with flesh; and,
above all, the mouth had never changed. It was
the mouth of the child, soft—too womanly
soft. And Jasper blinked.
When he opened his eyes again the
white place on the iron had become a dull red, and
the face of the blacksmith was again in shadow.
All Jasper could see was the body of Andy, and that
was much better. Red light glinted on the sinewy
arms and the swaying shoulders, and the hammer swayed
and fell tirelessly. For fifteen years Jasper
had consoled himself with the strength of the boy,
smooth as silk and as durable; the light form which
would not tire a horse, but swelled above the waist
into those formidable shoulders.
Now the bar was lifted from the anvil
and plunged, hissing, into the bucket beside the forge;
above the bucket a cloud of steam rose and showed
clearly against the brilliant square of the door, and
the peculiar scent which came from the iron went sharply
to the nostrils of Jasper. He got up as a horseman
entered the shop. He came in a manner that pleased
Jasper. There was a rush of hoofbeats, a form
darting through the door, and in the midst of the
shop the rider leaped out of the saddle and the horse
came to a halt with braced legs.
“Hey, you!” called the
rider as he tossed the reins over the head of his
horse. “Here’s a hoss that needs iron
on his feet. Fix him up. And look here”—he
lifted a forefoot and showed the scales on the frog
and sole of the hoof—“last time you
shoed this hoss you done a sloppy job, son. You
left all this stuff hangin’ on here. I want
it trimmed off nice an’ neat. You hear?”
The blacksmith shrugged his shoulders.
“Spoils the hoof to put the
knife on the sole, Buck,” said the smith.
“That peels off natural.”
“H’m,” said Buck Heath. “How
old are you, son?”
“Oh, old enough,” answered
Andy cheerily. “Old enough to know that
this exfoliation is entirely natural.”
The big word stuck in the craw of
Buck Heath, who brought his thick eyebrows together.
“I’ve rid horses off and on come twenty-five
years,” he declared, “and I’ve rid
’em long enough to know how I want ’em
shod. This is my hoss, son, and you do it my
way. That straight?”
The eye of old Jasper in the rear
of the shop grew dim with wistfulness as he heard
this talk. He knew Buck Heath; he knew his kind;
in his day he would have eaten a dozen men of such
rough words and such mild deeds as Buck. But
searching the face of Andy, he saw no resentment.
Merely a quiet resignation.
“Another thing,” said
Buck Heath, who seemed determined to press the thing
to a disagreeable point. “I hear you don’t
fit your shoes on hot. Well?”
“I never touch a hoof with hot
iron,” replied Andy. “It’s a
rotten practice.”
“Is it?” said Buck Heath
coldly. “Well, son, you fit my hoss with
hot shoes or I’ll know the reason why.”
“I’ve got to do the work my own way,”
protested Andy.
A spark of hope burned in the slant eyes of Jasper.
“Otherwise I can go find another gent to do
my shoein’?” inquired Buck.
“It looks that way,” replied the blacksmith
with a nod.
“Well,” said Buck, whose
mildness of the last question had been merely the
cover for a bursting wrath that now sent his voice
booming, “maybe you know a whole pile, boy—I
hear Jasper has give you consid’able education—but
what you know is plumb wasted on me. Understand?
As for lookin’ up another blacksmith, you ought
to know they ain’t another shop in ten miles.
You’ll do this job, and you’ll do it my
way. Maybe you got another way of thinkin’?”
There was a little pause.
“It’s your horse,” repeated Andy.
“I suppose I can do him your own way.”
Old Jasper closed his eyes in silent
agony. Looking again, he saw Buck Heath grinning
with contempt, and for a single moment Jasper touched
his gun. Then he remembered that he was seventy
years old. “Well, Buck?” he said,
coming forward. For he felt that if this scene
continued he would go mad with shame.
There was a great change in Buck as
he heard this voice, a marked respect was in his manner
as he turned to Jasper. “Hello, Jas,”
he said. “I didn’t know you was here.”
“Come over to the saloon, Buck,
and have one on me,” said Jasper. “I
guess Andy’ll have your hoss ready when we come
back.”
“Speakin’ personal,”
said Buck Heath with much heartiness, “I don’t
pass up no chances with no man, and particular if
he’s Jasper Lanning.” He hooked his
arm through Jasper’s elbow. “Besides,
that boy of yours has got me all heated up. Where’d
he learn them man-sized words, Jas?”
All of which Andy heard, and he knew
that Buck Heath intended him to hear them. It
made Andy frown, and for an instant he thought of calling
Buck back. But he did not call. Instead he
imagined what would happen. Buck would turn on
his heel and stand, towering, in the door. He
would ask what Andy wanted. Andy chose the careful
insult which he would throw in Buck’s face.
He saw the blow given. He felt his own fist tingle
as he returned the effort with interest. He saw
Buck tumble back over the bucket of water.
By this time Andy was smiling gently
to himself. His wrath had dissolved, and he was
humming pleasantly to himself as he began to pull
off the worn shoes of Buck’s horse.