Every moment was bringing on the dawn
more swiftly, and the eyes of Andy were growing more
accustomed to the gloom in the house. He found
the door of the girl’s room at once. When
he entered he had only to pause a moment before he
had all the details clearly in mind. Other senses
than that of sight informed him in her room.
There was in the gray gloom a touch of fragrance such
as blows out of gardens across a road; yet here the
air was perfectly quiet and chill. The dawn advanced.
But all that he could make out was a faint touch of
color againt the pillow—and that would
be her hair. Then with astonishing clearness he
saw her hand resting against her breast. Andy
stood for a moment with his eyes closed, a great tenderness
falling around him. The hush kept deepening,
and the sense of the girl drew out to him as if a light
were brightening about her.
He stepped back to the table against
the wall, took the chimney from the lamp, and flicked
a match along his trousers, for in that way a match
would make the least noise. Yet to the hair-trigger
nerves of Andy the spurt and flare of the match was
like the explosion of a gun. He lighted the lamp,
turned down the wick, and replaced the chimney.
Then he turned as though someone had shouted behind
him. He whirled as he had whirled in the hall,
crouching, and he found himself looking straight into
the eyes of the girl as she sat up in bed.
Truly he did not see her face at first,
but only the fear in it, parting her lips and widening
her eyes. She did not speak; her only movement
was to drag up the coverlet of the bed and hold it
against the base of her throat.
Andy drew off his hat and stepped
a little closer. “Do you know me?”
he asked.
He watched her as she strove to speak,
but if her lips stirred they made no sound. It
tortured him to see her terror, and yet he would not
have had her change. This crystal pallor or a
flushed joy—in one of the two she was most
beautiful.
“You saw me in Martindale,”
he continued. “I am the blacksmith.
Do you remember?”
She nodded, still watching him with those haunted
eyes.
“I saw you for the split part
of a second,” said Andy, “and you stopped
my heart. I’ve come to see you for two minutes;
I swear I mean you no harm. Will you let me have
those two minutes for talk?” Again she nodded.
But he could see that the terror was being tempered
a little in her face. She was beginning to think,
to wonder. It seemed a natural thing for Andy
to go forward a pace closer to the bed, but, lest that
should alarm her, it seemed also natural for him to
drop upon one knee. It brought the muzzle of
the revolver jarringly home against the floor.
The girl heard that sound of metal
and it shook her; but it requires a very vivid imagination
to fear a man upon his knees. And now that she
could look directly into his face, she saw that he
was only a boy, not more than two or three years older
than herself. For the first time she remembered
the sooty figure which had stood in the door of the
blacksmith shop. The white face against the tawny
smoke of the shop; that had attracted her eyes before.
It was the same white face now, but subtly changed.
A force exuded from him; indeed, he seemed neither
young nor old.
She heard him speaking in a voice
not louder than a whisper, rapid, distinct.
“When you came through the town
you waked me up like a whiplash,” he was saying.
“When you left I kept thinking about you.
Then along came a trouble. I killed a man.
A posse started after me. It’s on my heels,
but I had to see you again. Do you understand?”
A ghost of color was going up her
throat, staining her cheeks.
“I had to see you,” he
repeated. “It’s my last chance.
Tomorrow they may get me. Two hours from now
they may have me salted away with lead. But before
I kick out I had to have one more look at you.
So I swung out of my road and came straight to this
house. I came up the stairs. I went into
a room down the hall and made a man tell me where to
find you.”
There was a flash in the eyes of the
girl like the wink of sun on a bit of quartz on a
far-away hillside, but it cut into the speech of Andrew
Lanning. “He told you where to find me?”
she asked in a voice no louder than the swift, low
voice of Andy. But what a world of scorn!
“He had a gun shoved into the
hollow of his throat,” said Andy. “He
had to tell—two doors down the hall—”
“It was Charlie!” said
the girl softly. She seemed to forget her fear.
Her head raised as she looked at Andy. “The
other man—the one you—why—”
“The man I killed doesn’t
matter,” said Andy. “Nothing matters
except that I’ve got this minute here with you.”
“But where will you go? How will you escape?”
“I’ll go to death, I guess,”
said Andy quietly. “But I’ll have
a grin for Satan when he lets me in. I’ve
beat ’em, even if they catch me.”
The coverlet dropped from her breast;
her hand was suspended with stiff fingers. There
had been a sound as of someone stumbling on the stairway,
the unmistakable slip of a heel and the recovery; then
no more sound. Andy was on his feet. She
saw his face whiten, and then there was a glitter
in his eyes, and she knew that the danger was nothing
to him. But Anne Withero whipped out of her bed.
“Did you hear?”
“I tied and gagged him,”
said Andy, “but he’s broken loose, and
now he’s raising the house on the quiet.”
For an instant they stood listening,
staring at each other.
“They—they’re
coming up the hall,” whispered the girl.
“Listen!”
It was no louder than a whisper from
without—the creak of a board. Andrew
Lanning slipped to the door and turned the key in the
lock. When he rejoined her in the middle of the
room he gave her the key.
“Let ’em in if you want to,” he
said.
But the girl caught his arm, whispering:
“You can get out that window onto the top of
the roof below, then a drop to the ground. But
hurry before they think to guard that way!”
“Anne!” called a voice suddenly from the
hall.
Andy threw up the window, and, turning
toward the door, he laughed his defiance and his joy.
“Hurry!” she was demanding.
A great blow fell on the door of her room, and at
once there was shouting in the hall: “Pete,
run outside and watch the window!”
“Will you go?” cried the girl desperately.
He turned toward the window.
He turned back like a flash and swept her close to
him.
“Do you fear me?” he whispered.
“No,” said the girl.
“Will you remember me?”
“Forever!”
“God bless you,” said
Andy as he leaped through the window. She saw
him take the slope of the roof with one stride; she
heard the thud of his feet on the ground below.
Then a yell from without, shrill and high and sharp.
When the door fell with a crash, and
three men were flung into the room, Charles Merchant
saw her standing in her nightgown by the open window.
Her head was flung back against the wall, her eyes
closed, and one hand was pressed across her lips.
“He’s out the window.
Down around the other way,” cried Charles Merchant.
The stampede swept out of the room.
Charles was beside her.
She knew that vaguely, and that he
was speaking, but not until he touched her shoulder
did she hear the words: “Anne, are you
unhurt—has—for heaven’s
sake speak, Anne. What’s happened?”
She reached up and put his hand away.
“Charles,” she said, “call them
back. Don’t let them follow him!”
“Are you mad, dear?” he asked. “That
murdering—”
He found a tigress in front of him.
“If they hurt a hair of his head, Charlie, I’m
through with you. I’ll swear that!”
It stunned Charles Merchant. And then he went
stumbling from the room.
His cow-punchers were out from the
bunk house already; the guests and his father were
saddling or in the saddle.
“Come back!” shouted Charles
Merchant. “Don’t follow him.
Come back! No guns. He’s done no harm.”
Two men came around the corner of
the house, dragging a limp figure between them.
“Is this no harm?” they
asked. “Look at Pete, and then talk.”
They lowered the tall, limp figure
of the man in pajamas to the ground; his face was
a crimson smear.
“Is he dead?” asked Charles Merchant.
“No move out of him,” they answered.
Other people, most of them on horseback,
were pouring back to learn the meaning of the strange
call from Charles Merchant.
“I can’t tell you what
I mean,” he was saying in explanation. “But
you, dad, I’ll be able to tell you. All
I can say is that he mustn’t be followed—unless
Pete here—”
The eyes of Pete opportunely opened.
He looked hazily about him.
“Is he gone?” asked Pete.
“Yes.”
“Thank the Lord!”
“Did you see him? What’s he like?”
“About seven feet tall.
I saw him jump off the roof of the house. I was
right under him. Tried to get my gun on him, but
he came up like a wild cat and went straight at me.
Had his fist in my face before I could get my finger
on the trigger. And then the earth came up and
slapped me in the face.” “There he
goes!” cried some one.
The sky was now of a brightness not
far from day, and, turning east, in the direction
pointed out, Charles Merchant saw a horseman ride over
a hilltop, a black form against the coloring horizon.
He was moving leisurely, keeping his horse at the
cattle pony’s lope. Presently he dipped
away out of sight.
John Merchant dropped his hand on
the shoulder of his son. “What is it?”
he asked.
“Heaven knows! Not I!”
“Here are more people! What’s this?
A night of surprise parties?”
Six riders came through the trees,
rushing their horses, and John Merchant saw Bill Dozier’s
well-known, lanky form in the lead. He brought
his horse from a dead run to a halt in the space of
a single jump and a slide. The next moment he
was demanding fresh mounts.
“Can you give ’em to me, Merchant?
But what’s all this?”
“You make your little talk,” said Merchant,
“and then I’ll make mine.”
“I’m after Andy Lanning.
He’s left a gent more dead than alive back in
Martindale, and I want him. Can you give me fresh
horses for me and my boys, Merchant?”
“But the man wasn’t dead?
He wasn’t dead?” cried the voice of a girl.
The group opened; Bill Dozier found himself facing
a bright-haired girl wrapped to the throat in a long
coat, with slippers on her feet.
“Not dead and not alive,”
he answered. “Just betwixt and between.”
“Thank God!” whispered the girl.
“Thank God!”
There was only one man in the group
who should not have heard that whispered phrase, and
that man was Charles Merchant. He was standing
at her side.