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+The Project Gutenberg eBook of Wyoming, a Story of the Outdoor West, by William MacLeod Raine
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
+of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
+www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
+will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
+using this eBook.
+
+Title: Wyoming, a Story of the Outdoor West
+
+Author: William MacLeod Raine
+
+Release Date: July, 1999 [eBook #1803]
+[Most recently updated: December 11, 2022]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+Produced by: Mary Starr
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WYOMING ***
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+Wyoming
+a Story of the Outdoor West
+
+By William MacLeod Raine
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ CHAPTER I. A DESERT MEETING
+ CHAPTER II. THE KING OF THE BIG HORN COUNTRY
+ CHAPTER III. AN INVITATION GIVEN AND ACCEPTED
+ CHAPTER IV. AT THE LAZY D RANCH
+ CHAPTER V. THE DANCE AT FRASER’S
+ CHAPTER VI. A PARTY CALL
+ CHAPTER VII. THE MAN FROM THE SHOSHONE FASTNESSES
+ CHAPTER VIII. IN THE LAZY D HOSPITAL
+ CHAPTER IX. MISS DARLING ARRIVES
+ CHAPTER X. A SHEPHERD OF THE DESERT
+ CHAPTER XI. A RESCUE
+ CHAPTER XII. MISTRESS AND MAID
+ CHAPTER XIII. THE TWO COUSINS
+ CHAPTER XIV. FOR THE WORLD’S CHAMPIONSHIP
+ CHAPTER XV. JUDD MORGAN PASSES
+ CHAPTER XVI. HUNTING BIG GAME
+ CHAPTER XVII. RUN TO EARTH
+ CHAPTER XVIII. PLAYING FOR TIME
+ CHAPTER XIX. WEST POINT TO THE RESCUE
+ CHAPTER XX. TWO CASES OF DISCIPLINE
+ CHAPTER XXI. THE SIGNAL LIGHTS
+ CHAPTER XXII. EXIT THE “KING”
+ CHAPTER XXIII. JOURNEYS END IN LOVERS’ MEETING
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+A DESERT MEETING
+
+
+An automobile shot out from a gash in the hills and slipped swiftly
+down to the butte. Here it came to a halt on the white, dusty road,
+while its occupant gazed with eager, unsated eyes on the great panorama
+that stretched before her. The earth rolled in waves like a mighty sea
+to the distant horizon line. From a wonderful blue sky poured down upon
+the land a bath of sunbeat. The air was like wine, pure and strong, and
+above the desert swam the rare, untempered light of Wyoming. Surely
+here was a peace primeval, a silence unbroken since the birth of
+creation.
+
+It was all new to her, and wonderfully exhilarating. The infinite roll
+of plain, the distant shining mountains, the multitudinous voices of
+the desert drowned in a sunlit sea of space—they were all details of
+the situation that ministered to a large serenity.
+
+And while she breathed deeply the satisfaction of it, an exploding
+rifle echo shattered the stillness. With excited sputtering came the
+prompt answer of a fusillade. She was new to the West; but some
+instinct stronger than reason told the girl that here was no playful
+puncher shooting up the scenery to ventilate his exuberance. Her
+imagination conceived something more deadly; a sinister picture of men
+pumping lead in a grim, close-lipped silence; a lusty plainsman, with
+murder in his heart, crumpling into a lifeless heap, while the thin
+smoke-spiral curled from his hot rifle.
+
+So the girl imagined the scene as she ran swiftly forward through the
+pines to the edge of the butte bluff whence she might look down upon
+the coulée that nestled against it. Nor had she greatly erred, for her
+first sweeping glance showed her the thing she had dreaded.
+
+In a semicircle, well back from the foot of the butte, half a dozen men
+crouched in the cover of the sage-brush and a scattered group of
+cottonwoods. They were perhaps fifty yards apart, and the attention of
+all of them was focused on a spot directly beneath her. Even as she
+looked, in that first swift moment of apprehension, a spurt of smoke
+came from one of the rifles and was flung back from the forked pine at
+the bottom of the mesa. She saw him then, kneeling behind his
+insufficient shelter, a trapped man making his last stand.
+
+From where she stood the girl distinguished him very clearly, and under
+the field-glasses that she turned on him the details leaped to life.
+Tall, strong, slender, with the lean, clean build of a greyhound, he
+seemed as wary and alert as a panther. The broad, soft hat, the scarlet
+handkerchief loosely knotted about his throat, the gray shirt, spurs
+and overalls, proclaimed him a stockman, just as his dead horse at the
+entrance to the coulée told of an accidental meeting in the desert and
+a hurried run for cover.
+
+That he had no chance was quite plain, but no plainer than the cool
+vigilance with which he proposed to make them pay. Even in the matter
+of defense he was worse off than they were, but he knew how to make the
+most of what he had; knew how to avail himself of every inch of
+sagebrush that helped to render him indistinct to their eyes.
+
+One of the attackers, eager for a clearer shot, exposed himself a
+trifle too far in taking aim. Without any loss of time in sighting,
+swift as a lightning-flash, the rifle behind the forked pine spoke.
+That the bullet reached its mark she saw with a gasp of dismay. For the
+man suddenly huddled down and rolled over on his side.
+
+His comrades appeared to take warning by this example. The men at both
+ends of the crescent fell back, and for a minute the girl’s heart
+leaped with the hope that they were about to abandon the siege.
+Apparently the man in the scarlet kerchief had no such expectation. He
+deserted his position behind the pine and ran back, crouching low in
+the brush, to another little clump of trees closer to the bluff. The
+reason for this was at first not apparent to her, but she understood
+presently when the men who had fallen back behind the rolling hillocks
+appeared again well in to the edge of the bluff. Only by his timely
+retreat had the man saved himself from being outflanked.
+
+It was very plain that the attackers meant to take their time to finish
+him in perfect safety. He was surrounded on every side by a cordon of
+rifles, except where the bare face of the butte hung down behind him.
+To attempt to scale it would have been to expose himself as a mark for
+every gun to certain death.
+
+It was now that she heard the man who seemed to be directing the attack
+call out to another on his right. She was too far to make out the
+words, but their effect was clear to her. He pointed to the brow of the
+butte above, and a puncher in white woolen chaps dropped back out of
+range and swung to the saddle upon one of the ponies bunched in the
+rear. He cantered round in a wide circle and made for the butte. His
+purpose was obviously to catch their victim in the unprotected rear,
+and fire down upon him from above.
+
+The young woman shouted a warning, but her voice failed to carry. For a
+moment she stood with her hands pressed together in despair, then
+turned and swiftly scudded to her machine. She sprang in, swept
+forward, reached the rim of the mesa, and plunged down. Never before
+had she attempted so precarious a descent in such wild haste. The car
+fairly leaped into space, and after it struck swayed dizzily as it shot
+down. The girl hung on, her face white and set, the pulse in her temple
+beating wildly. She could do nothing, as the machine rocked down, but
+hope against many chances that instant destruction might be averted.
+
+Utterly beyond her control, the motor-car thundered down, reached the
+foot of the butte, and swept over a little hill in its wild flight. She
+rushed by a mounted horseman in the thousandth part of a second. She
+was still speeding at a tremendous velocity, but a second hill reduced
+this somewhat. She had not yet recovered control of the machine, but,
+though her eyes instinctively followed the white road that flashed
+past, she again had photographed on her brain the scene of the turbid
+tragedy in which she was intervening.
+
+At the foot of the butte the road circled and dipped into the coulée.
+She braced herself for the shock, but, though the wheels skidded till
+her heart was in her throat, the automobile, hanging on the balance of
+disaster, swept round in safety.
+
+Her horn screamed an instant warning to the trapped man. She could not
+see him, and for an instant her heart sank with the fear that they had
+killed him. But she saw then that they were still firing, and she
+continued her honking invitation as the car leaped forward into the
+zone of spitting bullets.
+
+By this time she was recovering control of the motor, and she dared not
+let her attention wander, but out of the corner of her eye she
+appreciated the situation. Temporarily, out of sheer amaze at this
+apparition from the blue, the guns ceased their sniping. She became
+aware that a light curly head, crouched low in the sage-brush, was
+moving rapidly to meet her at right angles, and in doing so was
+approaching directly the line of fire. She could see him dodging to and
+fro as he moved forward, for the rifles were again barking.
+
+She was within two hundred yards of him, still going rapidly, but not
+with the same headlong rush as before, when the curly head disappeared
+in the sage-brush. It was up again presently, but she could see that
+the man came limping, and so uncertainly that twice he pitched forward
+to the ground. Incautiously one of his assailants ran forward with a
+shout the second time his head went down. Crack! The unerring rifle
+rang out, and the impetuous one dropped in his tracks.
+
+As she approached, the young woman slowed without stopping, and as the
+car swept past Curly Head flung himself in headlong. He picked himself
+up from her feet, crept past her to the seat beyond, and almost
+instantly whipped his rifle to his shoulder in prompt defiance of the
+fire that was now converged on them.
+
+Yet in a few moments the sound died away, for a voice midway in the
+crescent had shouted an amazed discovery:
+
+“By God, it’s a woman!”
+
+The car skimmed forward over the uneven ground toward the end of the
+semicircle, and passed within fifty yards of the second man from the
+end, the one she had picked out as the leader of the party. He was a
+black, swarthy fellow in plain leather chaps and blue shirt. As they
+passed he took a long, steady aim.
+
+“Duck!” shouted the man beside her, and dragged her down on the seat so
+that his body covered hers.
+
+A puff of wind fanned the girl’s cheek.
+
+“Near thing,” her companion said coolly. He looked back at the swarthy
+man and laughed softly. “Some day you’ll mebbe wish you had sent your
+pills straighter, Mr. Judd Morgan.”
+
+Yet a few wheel-turns and they had dipped forward out of range among
+the great land waves that seemed to stretch before them forever. The
+unexpected had happened, and she had achieved a rescue in the face of
+the impossible.
+
+“Hurt badly?” the girl inquired briefly, her dark-blue eyes meeting his
+as frankly as those of a boy.
+
+“No need for an undertaker. I reckon I’ll survive, ma’am.”
+
+“Where are you hit?”
+
+“I just got a telegram from my ankle saying there was a cargo of lead
+arrived there unexpected,” he drawled easily.
+
+“Hurts a good deal, doesn’t it?”
+
+“No more than is needful to keep my memory jogged up. It’s a sort of a
+forget-me-not souvenir. For a good boy; compliments of Mr. Jim Henson,”
+he explained.
+
+Her dark glance swept him searchingly. She disapproved the assurance of
+his manner even while the youth in her applauded his reckless
+sufficiency. His gay courage held her unconsenting admiration even
+while she resented it. He was a trifle too much at his ease for one who
+had just been snatched from dire peril. Yet even in his insouciance
+there was something engaging; something almost of distinction.
+
+“What was the trouble?”
+
+Mirth bubbled in his gray eyes. “I gathered, ma’am, that they wanted to
+collect my scalp.”
+
+“Do what?” she frowned.
+
+“Bump me off—send me across the divide.”
+
+“Oh, I know that. But why?”
+
+He seemed to reproach himself. “Now how could I be so neglectful? I
+clean forgot to ask.”
+
+“That’s ridiculous,” was her sharp verdict.
+
+“Yes, ma’am, plumb ridiculous. My only excuse is that they began
+scattering lead so sudden I didn’t have time to ask many ‘Whyfors.’ I
+reckon we’ll just have to call it a Wyoming difference of opinion,” he
+concluded pleasantly.
+
+“Which means, I suppose, that you are not going to tell me.”
+
+“I got so much else to tell y’u that’s a heap more important,” he
+laughed. “Y’u see, I’m enjoyin’ my first automobile ride. It was
+certainly thoughtful of y’u to ask me to go riding with y’u, Miss
+Messiter.”
+
+“So you know my name. May I ask how?” was her astonished question.
+
+He gave the low laugh that always seemed to suggest a private source of
+amusement of his own. “I suspicioned that might be your name when I say
+y’u come a-sailin’ down from heaven to gather me up like Enoch.”
+
+“Why?”
+
+“Well, ma’am, I happened to drift in to Gimlet Butte two or three days
+ago, and while I was up at the depot looking for some freight a train
+sashaid in and side tracked a flat car. There was an automobile on that
+car addressed to Miss Helen Messiter. Now, automobiles are awful seldom
+in this country. I don’t seem to remember having seen one before.”
+
+“I see. You’re quite a Sherlock Holmes. Do you know anything more about
+me?”
+
+“I know y’u have just fallen heir to the Lazy D. They say y’u are a
+schoolmarm, but I don’t believe it.”
+
+“Well, I am.” Then, “Why don’t you believe it?” she added.
+
+He surveyed her with his smile audacious, let his amused eyes wander
+down from the mobile face with the wild-rose bloom to the slim young
+figure so long and supple, then serenely met her frown.
+
+“Y’u don’t look it.”
+
+“No? Are you the owner of a composite photograph of the teachers of the
+country?”
+
+He enjoyed again his private mirth. “I should like right well to have
+the pictures of some of them.”
+
+She glanced at him sharply, but he was gazing so innocently at the
+purple Shoshones in the distance that she could not give him the snub
+she thought he needed.
+
+“You are right. My name is Helen Messiter,” she said, by way of
+stimulating a counter fund of information. For, though she was a young
+woman not much given to curiosity, she was aware of an interest in this
+spare, broad-shouldered youth who was such an incarnation of bronzed
+vigor.
+
+“Glad to meet y’u, Miss Messiter,” he responded, and offered his firm
+brown hand in Western fashion.
+
+But she observed resentfully that he did not mention his own name. It
+was impossible to suppose that he knew no better, and she was driven to
+conclude that he was silent of set purpose. Very well! If he did not
+want to introduce himself she was not going to urge it upon him. In a
+businesslike manner she gave her attention to eating up the dusty
+miles.
+
+“Yes, ma’am. I reckon I never was more glad to death to meet a lady
+than I was to meet up with y’u,” he continued, cheerily. “Y’u sure
+looked good to me as y’u come a-foggin’ down the road. I fair had been
+yearnin’ for company but was some discouraged for fear the invitation
+had miscarried.” He broke off his sardonic raillery and let his level
+gaze possess her for a long moment. “Miss Messiter, I’m certainly under
+an obligation to y’u I can’t repay. Y’u saved my life,” he finished
+gravely.
+
+“Nonsense.”
+
+“Fact.”
+
+“It isn’t a personal matter at all,” she assured him, with a touch of
+impatient hauteur.
+
+“It’s a heap personal to me.”
+
+In spite of her healthy young resentment she laughed at the way in
+which he drawled this out, and with a swift sweep her boyish eyes took
+in again his compelling devil-may-care charm. She was a tenderfoot, but
+intuition as well as experience taught her that he was unusual enough
+to be one of ten thousand. No young Greek god’s head could have risen
+more superbly above the brick-tanned column of the neck than this
+close-cropped curly one. Gray eyes, deep and unwavering and masterful,
+looked out of a face as brown as Wyoming. He was got up with no thought
+of effect, but the tigerish litheness, the picturesque competency of
+him, spake louder than costuming.
+
+“Aren’t you really hurt worse than you pretend? I’m sure your ankle
+ought to be attended to as soon as possible.”
+
+“Don’t tell me you’re a lady doctor, ma’am,” he burlesqued his alarm.
+
+“Can you tell me where the nearest ranch house is?” she asked, ignoring
+his diversion.
+
+“The Lazy D is the nearest, I reckon.”
+
+“Which direction?”
+
+“North by east, ma’am.”
+
+“Then I’ll take the most direct road to it.
+
+“In that case I’ll thank y’u for my ride and get out here.”
+
+“But—why?”
+
+He waved a jaunty hand toward the recent battlefield. “The Lazy D lies
+right back of that hill. I expect, mebbe, those wolves might howl again
+if we went back.”
+
+“Where, then, shall I take you?”
+
+“I hate to trouble y’u to go out of your way.
+
+“I dare say, but I’m going just the same,” she told him, dryly.
+
+“If you’re right determined—” He interrupted himself to point to the
+south. “Do y’u see that camel-back peak over there?”
+
+“The one with the sunshine on its lower edge?”
+
+“That’s it, Miss Messiter. They call those two humps the Antelope
+Peaks. If y’u can drop me somewhere near there I think I’ll manage all
+right.”
+
+“I’m not going to leave you till we reach a house,” she informed him
+promptly. “You’re not fit to walk fifty yards.”
+
+“That’s right kind of y’u, but I could not think of asking so much. My
+friends will find me if y’u leave me where I can work a heliograph.”
+
+“Or your enemies,” she cut in.
+
+“I hope not. I’d not likely have the luck to get another invitation
+right then to go riding with a friendly young lady.”
+
+She gave him direct, cool, black-blue eyes that met and searched his.
+“I’m not at all sure she is friendly. I shall want to find out the
+cause of the trouble you have just had before I make up my mind as to
+that.”
+
+“I judge people by their actions. Y’u didn’t wait to find out before
+bringing the ambulance into action,” he laughed.
+
+“I see you do not mean to tell me.”
+
+“You’re quite a lawyer, ma’am,” he evaded.
+
+“I find you a very slippery witness, then.”
+
+“Ask anything y’u like and I’ll tell you.”
+
+“Very well. Who were those men, and why were they trying to kill you?”
+
+“They turned their wolf loose on me because I shot up one of them
+yesterday.”
+
+“Dear me! Is it your business to go around shooting people? That’s
+three I happen to know that you have shot. How many more?”
+
+“No more, ma’am—not recently.”
+
+“Well, three is quite enough—recently,” she mimicked. “You seem to me a
+good deal of a desperado.”
+
+“Yes, ma’am.”
+
+“Don’t say ‘Yes, ma’am,’ like that, as if it didn’t matter in the least
+whether you are or not,” she ordered.
+
+“No, ma’am.”
+
+“Oh!” She broke off with a gesture of impatience at his burlesque of
+obedience. “You know what I mean—that you ought to deny it; ought to be
+furious at me for suggesting it.”
+
+“Ought I?”
+
+“Of course you ought.”
+
+“There’s a heap of ways I ain’t up to specifications,” he admitted,
+cheerfully.
+
+“And who are they—the men that were attacking you?”
+
+There was a gleam of irrepressible humor in the bold eyes. “Your
+cow-punchers, ma’am.”
+
+“My cow-punchers?”
+
+“They ce’tainly belong to the Lazy D outfit.”
+
+“And you say that you shot one of my men yesterday?” He could see her
+getting ready for a declaration of war.
+
+“Down by Willow Creek—Yes, ma’am,” he answered, comfortably.
+
+“And why, may I ask?” she flamed
+
+“That’s a long story, Miss Messiter. It wouldn’t be square for me to
+get my version in before your boys. Y’u ask them.” He permitted himself
+a genial smile, somewhat ironic. “I shouldn’t wonder but what they’ll
+give me a giltedged testimonial as an unhanged horse thief.”
+
+“Isn’t there such a thing as law in Wyoming?” the girl demanded.
+
+“Lots of it. Y’u can buy just as good law right here as in Kalamazoo.”
+
+“I wish I knew where to find it.”
+
+“Like to put me in the calaboose?”
+
+“In the penitentiary. Yes, sir!” A moment later the question that was
+in her thoughts leaped hotly from her lips. “Who are you, sir, that
+dare to commit murder and boast of it?”
+
+She had flicked him on the raw at last. Something that was near to pain
+rested for a second in his eyes. “Murder is a hard name, ma’am. And I
+didn’t say he was daid, or any of the three,” came his gentle answer.
+
+“You _meant_ to kill them, anyhow.”
+
+“Did I?” There was the ghost of a sad smile about his eyes.
+
+“The way you act, a person might think you one of Ned Bannister’s men,”
+she told him, scornfully.
+
+“I expect you’re right.”
+
+She repented her a little at a charge so unjust. “If you are not
+ashamed of your name why are you so loath to part with it?”
+
+“Y’u didn’t ask me my name,” he said, a dark flush sweeping his face.
+
+“I ask it now.”
+
+Like the light from a snuffed candle the boyish recklessness had gone
+out of his face. His jaws were set like a vise and he looked hard as
+hammered steel.
+
+“My name is Bannister,” he said, coldly.
+
+“Ned Bannister, the outlaw,” she let slip, and was aware of a strange
+sinking of the heart.
+
+It seemed to her that something sinister came to the surface in his
+handsome face. “I reckon we might as well let it go at that,” he
+returned, with bitter briefness.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+THE KING OF THE BIG HORN COUNTRY
+
+
+Two months before this time Helen Messiter had been serenely teaching a
+second grade at Kalamazoo, Michigan, notwithstanding the earnest
+efforts of several youths of that city to induce her to retire to
+domesticity “What’s the use of being a schoolmarm?” had been the burden
+of their plaint. “Any spinster can teach kids _C-a-t_, Cat, but only
+one in several thousand can be the prettiest bride in Kalamazoo.” None
+of them, however, had been able to drive the point sufficiently home,
+and it is probable that she would have continued to devote herself to
+Young America if an uncle she had never seen had not died without a
+will and left her a ranch in Wyoming yclept the Lazy D.
+
+When her lawyer proposed to put the ranch on the market Miss Helen had
+a word to say.
+
+“I think not. I’ll go out and see it first, anyhow,” she said.
+
+“But really, my dear young lady, it isn’t at all necessary. Fact is,
+I’ve already had an offer of a hundred thousand dollars for it. Now, I
+should judge that a fair price.”
+
+“Very likely,” his client interrupted, quietly. “But, you see, I don’t
+care to sell.”
+
+“Then what in the world are you going to do with it?”
+
+“Run it.”
+
+“But, my dear Miss Messiter, it isn’t an automobile or any other kind
+of toy. You must remember that it takes a business head and a great
+deal of experience to make such an investment pay. I really think—”
+
+“My school ends on the fourteenth of June. I’ll get a substitute for
+the last two months. I shall start for Wyoming on the eighteenth of
+April.”
+
+The man of law gasped, explained the difficulties again carefully as to
+a child, found that he was wasting his breath, and wisely gave it up.
+
+Miss Messiter had started on the eighteenth of April, as she had
+announced. When she reached Gimlet Butte, the nearest railroad point to
+the Lazy D, she found a group of curious, weatherbeaten individuals
+gathered round a machine foreign to their experience. It was on a flat
+car, and the general opinion ran the gamut from a newfangled sewing
+machine to a thresher. Into this guessing contest came its owner with
+so brisk and businesslike an energy that inside of two hours she was
+testing it up and down the wide street of Gimlet Butte, to the wonder
+and delight of an audience to which each one of the eleven saloons of
+the city had contributed its admiring quota.
+
+Meanwhile the young woman attended strictly to business. She had
+disappeared for half an hour with a suit case into the Elk House; and
+when she returned in a short-skirted corduroy suit, leggings and
+wide-brimmed gray Stetson hat, all Gimlet Butte took an absorbing
+interest in the details of this delightful adventure that had happened
+to the town. The population was out _en masse_ to watch her slip down
+the road on a trial trip.
+
+Presently “Soapy” Sothern, drifting in on his buckskin from the Hoodoo
+Peak country, where for private reasons of his own he had been for the
+past month a sojourner, reported that he had seen the prettiest sight
+in the State climbing under a gasoline bronc with a monkey-wrench in
+her hand. Where? Right over the hill on the edge of town. The immediate
+stampede for the cow ponies was averted by a warning chug-chug that
+sounded down the road, followed by the appearance of a flashing whir
+that made the ponies dance on their hind legs.
+
+“The gasoline bronc lady sure makes a hit with me,” announced “Texas,”
+gravely. “I allow I’ll rustle a job with the Lazy D outfit.”
+
+“She ce’tainly rides herd on that machine like a champeen,” admitted
+Soapy. “I reckon I’ll drift over to the Lazy D with you to look after
+yore remains, Tex, when the lightning hits you.”
+
+Miss Messiter swung the automobile round in a swift circle, came to an
+abrupt halt in front of the hotel, and alighted without delay. As she
+passed in through the half score of admirers she had won, her dark eyes
+swept smilingly over assembled Cattleland. She had already met most of
+them at the launching of the machine from the flat car, and had
+directed their perspiring energies as they labored to follow her
+orders. Now she nodded a recognition with a little ripple of gay
+laughter.
+
+“I’m delighted to be able to contribute to the entertainment of Gimlet
+Butte,” she said, as she swept in. For this young woman was possessed
+of Western adaptation. It gave her no conscientious qualms to exchange
+conversation fraternal with these genial savages.
+
+The Elk House did not rejoice in a private dining room, and competition
+strenuous ensued as to who should have the pleasure of sitting beside
+the guest of honor. To avoid ill feeling, the matter was determined by
+a game of freeze-out, in which Texas and a mature gentleman named, from
+his complexion, “Beet” Collins, were the lucky victors. Texas
+immediately repaired to the general store, where he purchased a new
+scarlet bandanna for the occasion; also a cake of soap with which to
+rout the alkali dust that had filtered into every pore of his hands and
+face from a long ride across the desert.
+
+Came supper and Texas simultaneously, the cow-puncher’s face scrubbed
+to an apple shine. At the last moment Collins defaulted, his nerve
+completely gone. Since, however, he was a thrifty soul, he sold his
+place to Soapy for ten dollars, and proceeded to invest the proceeds in
+an immediate drunk.
+
+During the first ten minutes of supper Miss Messiter did not appear,
+and the two guardians who flanked her chair solicitously were the
+object of much badinage.
+
+“She got one glimpse of that red haid of Tex and the pore lady’s took
+to the sage,” explained Yorky.
+
+“And him scrubbed so shiny fust time since Christmas before the big
+blizzard,” sighed Doc Rogers.
+
+“Shucks! She ain’t scared of no sawed-off, hammered-down runt like
+Texas, No, siree! Miss Messiter’s on the absent list ’cause she’s
+afraid she cayn’t resist the blandishments of Soapy. Did yo’ ever hear
+about Soapy and that Caspar hash slinger?”
+
+“Forget it, Slim,” advised Soapy, promptly. He had been engaged in
+lofty and oblivious conversation with Texas, but he did not intend to
+allow reminiscences to get under way just now.
+
+At this opportune juncture arrived the mistress of the “gasoline
+bronc,” neatly clad in a simple white lawn with blue trimmings. She
+looked like a gleam of sunshine in her fresh, sweet youth; and not even
+in her own school room had she ever found herself the focus of a
+cleaner, more unstinted admiration. For the outdoors West takes off its
+hat reverently to women worthy of respect, especially when they are
+young and friendly.
+
+Helen Messiter had come to Wyoming because the call of adventure, the
+desire for experience outside of rutted convention, were stirring her
+warm-blooded youth. She had seen enough of life lived in a parlor, and
+when there came knocking at her door a chance to know the big, untamed
+outdoors at first hand she had at once embraced it like a lover. She
+was eager for her new life, and she set out skillfully to make these
+men tell her what she wanted to know. To them, of course, it was an old
+story, and whatever of romance it held was unconscious. But since she
+wanted to talk of the West they were more than ready to please her.
+
+So she listened, and drew them out with adroit questions when it was
+necessary. She made them talk of life on the open range, of rustlers
+and those who lived outside the law in the upper Shoshone country, of
+the deadly war waging between the cattle and sheep industries.
+
+“Are there any sheep near the Lazy D ranch?” she asked, intensely
+interested in Soapy’s tale of how cattle and sheep could no more be got
+to mix than oil and water.
+
+For an instant nobody answered her question; then Soapy replied, with
+what seemed elaborate carelessness:
+
+“Ned Bannister runs a bunch of about twelve thousand not more’n fifteen
+or twenty miles from your place.”
+
+“And you say they are spoiling the range?”
+
+“They’re ce’tainly spoiling it for cows.”
+
+“But can’t something be done? If my cows were there first I don’t see
+what right he has to bring his sheep there,” the girl frowned.
+
+The assembled company attended strictly to supper. The girl, surprised
+at the stillness, looked round. “Well?”
+
+“Now you’re shouting, ma’am! That’s what we say,” enthused Texas,
+spurring to the rescue.
+
+“It doesn’t much matter what you say. What do you do?” asked Helen,
+impatiently. “Do you lie down and let Mr. Bannister and his kind drive
+their sheep over you?”
+
+“Do we, Soapy?” grinned Texas. Yet it seemed to her his smile was not
+quite carefree.
+
+“I’m not a cowman myself,” explained Soapy to the girl. “Nor do I run
+sheep. I—”
+
+“Tell Miss Messiter what yore business is, Soapy,” advised Yorky from
+the end of the table, with a mouthful of biscuit swelling his cheeks.
+
+Soapy crushed the irrepressible Yorky with a look, but that young man
+hit back smilingly.
+
+“Soapy, he sells soap, ma’am. He’s a sorter city salesman, I reckon.”
+
+“I should never have guessed it. Mr. Sothern does not _look_ like a
+salesman,” said the girl, with a glance at his shrewd, hard,
+expressionless face.
+
+“Yes, ma’am, he’s a first-class seller of soap, is Mr. Sothern,”
+chuckled the cow-puncher, kicking his friends gayly under the table.
+
+“You can see I never sold _him_ any, Miss Messiter,” came back Soapy,
+sorrowfully.
+
+All this was Greek to the young lady from Kalamazoo. How was she to
+know that Mr. Sothern had vended his soap in small cubes on street
+corners, and that he wrapped bank notes of various denominations in the
+bars, which same were retailed to eager customers for the small sum of
+fifty cents, after a guarantee that the soap was good? His customers
+rarely patronized him twice; and frequently they used bad language
+because the soap wrapping was not as valuable as they had expected.
+This was manifestly unfair, for Mr. Sothern, who made no claims to
+philanthropy, often warned them that the soap should be bought on its
+merits, and not with an eye single to the premium that might or might
+not accompany the package.
+
+“I started to tell you, ma’am, when that infant interrupted, that the
+cowmen don’t aim to quit business yet a while. They’ve drawn a
+dead-line, Miss Messiter.”
+
+“A dead-line?”
+
+“Yes, ma’am, beyond which no sheep herder is to run his bunch.”
+
+“And if he does?” the girl asked, open eyed.
+
+“He don’t do it twict, ma’am. Why don’t you pass the fritters to Miss
+Messiter, Slim?”
+
+“And about this Bannister. Who is he?”
+
+Her innocent question seemed to ring a bell for silence; seemed to
+carry with it some hidden portent that stopped idle conversation as a
+striking clock that marks the hour of an execution.
+
+The smile that had been gay grew grim, and men forgot the subject of
+their light, casual talk. It was Sothern that answered her, and she
+observed that his voice was grave, his face studiously without
+expression.
+
+“Mr. Bannister, ma’am, is a sheepman.”
+
+“So I understood, but—” Her eyes traveled swiftly round the table, and
+appraised the sudden sense of responsibility that had fallen on these
+reckless, careless frontiersmen. “I am wondering what else he is.
+Really, he seems to be the bogey man of Gimlet Butte.”
+
+There was another instant silence, and again it was Soapy that lifted
+it. “I expaict you’ll like Wyoming, Miss Messiter; leastways I hope you
+will. There’s a right smart of country here.” His gaze went out of the
+open door to the vast sea of space that swam in the fine sunset light.
+“Yes, most folks that ain’t plumb spoilt with city ways likes it.”
+
+“Sure she’ll like it. Y’u want to get a good, easy-riding hawss, Miss
+Messiter,” advised Slim.
+
+“And a rifle,” added Texas, promptly.
+
+It occurred to her that they were all working together to drift the
+conversation back to a safe topic. She followed the lead given her, but
+she made up her mind to know what it was about her neighbor, Mr.
+Bannister, the sheep herder, that needed to be handled with such
+wariness and circumspection of speech.
+
+Her chance came half an hour later, when she stood talking to the
+landlady on the hotel porch in the mellow twilight that seemed to rest
+on the land like a moonlit aura. For the moment they were alone.
+
+“What is it about this man Bannister that makes men afraid to speak of
+him?” she demanded, with swift impulse.
+
+Her landlady’s startled eyes went alertly round to see that they were
+alone. “Hush, child! You mustn’t speak of him like that,” warned the
+older woman.
+
+“Why mustn’t I? That’s what I want to know.”
+
+“Is isn’t healthy.”
+
+“What do you mean?”
+
+Again that anxious look flashed round in the dusk. “The Bannister
+outfit is the worst in the land. Ned Bannister is king of the whole Big
+Horn country and beyond that to the Tetons.”
+
+“And you mean to tell me that everybody is afraid of him—that men like
+Mr. Sothern dare not say their soul is their own?” the newcomer asked,
+contemptuously.
+
+“Not so loud, child. He has spies everywhere That’s the trouble. You
+don’t know who is in with him. He’s got the whole region terrified.”
+
+“Is he so bad?”
+
+“He is a devil. Last year he and his hell riders swept down on Topaz
+and killed two bartenders just to see them kick, Ned Bannister said.
+Folks allow they knew too much.”
+
+“But the law—the Government? Haven’t you a sheriff and officers?”
+
+“Bannister has. He elects the sheriff in this county.”
+
+“Aren’t there more honest people here than villains?”
+
+“Ten times as many, but the trouble is that the honest folks can’t
+trust each other. You see, if one of them made a mistake and confided
+in the wrong man—well, some fine day he would go riding herd and would
+not turn up at night. Next week, or next month, maybe, one of his
+partners might find a pile of bones in an arroyo.
+
+“Have you ever seen this Bannister?”
+
+“You _must_ speak lower when you talk of him, Miss Messiter,” the woman
+insisted. “Yes, I saw him once; at least I think I did. Mighty few
+folks know for sure that they have seen him. He is a mystery, and he
+travels under many names and disguises.”
+
+“When was it you think you saw him?”
+
+“Two years ago at Ayr. The bank was looted that night and robbed of
+thirty thousand dollars. They roused the cashier from his bed and made
+him give the combination. He didn’t want to, and Ned Bannister”—her
+voice sank to a tremulous whisper—“put red-hot running-irons between
+his fingers till he weakened. It was a moonlight night—much such a
+night as this—and after it was done I peeped through the blind of my
+room and saw them ride away. He rode in front of them and sang like an
+angel—did it out of daredeviltry to mock the people of the town that
+hadn’t nerve enough to shoot him. You see, he knew that nobody would
+dare hurt him ’count of the revenge of his men.”
+
+“What was he like?” the mistress of the Lazy D asked, strangely awed at
+this recital of transcendent villainy.
+
+“’Course he was masked, and I didn’t see his face. But I’d know him
+anywhere. He’s a long, slim fellow, built like a mountain lion. You
+couldn’t look at him and ever forget him. He’s one of these graceful,
+easy men that go so fur with fool women; one of the kind that half
+shuts his dark, devil eyes and masters them without seeming to try.”
+
+“So he’s a woman killer, too, is he? Any more outstanding
+inconsistencies in this versatile Jesse James?”
+
+“He’s plumb crazy about music, they say. Has a piano and plays Grigg
+and Chopping, and all that classical kind of music. He went clear down
+to Denver last year to hear Mrs. Shoeman sing.”
+
+Helen smiled, guessing at Schumann-Heink as the singer in question, and
+Grieg and Chopin as the composers named. Her interest was incredibly
+aroused. She had expected the West and its products to exhilarate her,
+but she had not looked to find so finished a Mephisto among its vaunted
+“bad men.” He was probably overrated; considered a wonder because his
+accomplishments outstepped those of the range. But Helen Messiter had
+quite determined on one thing. She was going to meet this redoubtable
+villain and make up her mind for herself. Already, before she had been
+in Wyoming six hours, this emancipated young woman had decided on that.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+AN INVITATION GIVEN AND ACCEPTED
+
+
+And already she had met him. Not only met him, but saved him from the
+just vengeance about to fall upon him. She had not yet seen her own
+ranch, had not spoken to a single one of her employés, for it had been
+a part of her plan to drop in unexpected and examine the situation
+before her foreman had a chance to put his best foot forward. So she
+had started alone from Gimlet Butte that morning in her machine, and
+had come almost in sight of the Lazy D ranch houses when the battle in
+the coulée invited her to take a hand.
+
+She had acted on generous impulse, and the unforeseen result had been
+to save this desperado from justice. But the worst of it was that she
+could not find it in her heart to regret it. Granted that he was a
+villain, double-dyed and beyond hope, yet he was the home of such
+courage, such virility, that her unconsenting admiration went out in
+spite of herself. He was, at any rate, a _man_, square-jawed, resolute,
+implacable. In the sinuous trail of his life might lie arson, robbery,
+murder, but he still held to that dynamic spark of self-respect that is
+akin to the divine. Nor was it possible to believe that those
+unblinking gray eyes, with the capability of a latent sadness of
+despair in them, expressed a soul entirely without nobility. He had a
+certain gallant ease, a certain attractive candor, that did not consist
+with villainy unadulterated.
+
+It was characteristic even of her impulsiveness that Helen Messiter
+curbed the swift condemnation that leaped to her lips when she knew
+that the man sitting beside her was the notorious bandit of the
+Shoshone fastnesses. She was not in the least afraid. A sure instinct
+told her he was not the kind of a man of whom a woman need have fear so
+long as her own anchor held fast. In good time she meant to let him
+have her unvarnished opinion of him, but she did not mean it to be an
+unconsidered one. Wherefore she drove the machine forward toward the
+camelbacked peak he had indicated, her eyes straight before her, a
+frown corrugating her forehead.
+
+For him, having made his dramatic announcement, he seemed content for
+the present with silence. He leaned back in the car and appreciated her
+with a coolness that just missed impudence. Certainly her appearance
+proclaimed her very much worth while. To dwell on the long lines of her
+supple young body, the exquisite throat and chin curve, was a pleasure
+with a thrill to it. As a physical creation, a mere innocent young
+animal, he thought her perfect; attuned to a fine harmony of grace and
+color. But it was the animating vitality of her, the lightness of
+motion, the fire and sparkle of expression that gave her the
+captivating charm she possessed.
+
+They were two miles nearer the camel-backed peak before he broke the
+silence.
+
+“Beats a bronco for getting over the ground. Think I’ll have to get
+one,” he mused aloud.
+
+“With the money you took from the Ayr bank?” she flashed.
+
+“I might drive off some of your cows and sell them,” he countered,
+promptly. “About how much will they hold me up for a machine like
+this?”
+
+“This is only a runabout. You can get one for twelve or fourteen
+hundred dollars of anybody’s money.”
+
+“Of yours?” he laughed.
+
+“I haven’t that much with me. If you’ll come over and hold up the ranch
+perhaps we might raise it among us,” she jeered.
+
+His mirth was genuine. “But right now I couldn’t get more than how much
+off y’u?”
+
+“Sixty-three dollars is all I have with me, and I couldn’t give you
+more—_not even if you put red hot irons between my fingers_.” She gave
+it to him straight, her blue eyes fixed steadily on him.
+
+Yet she was not prepared for the effect of her words. The last thing
+she had expected was to see the blood wash out of his bronzed face, to
+see his sensitive nostrils twitch with pain. He made her feel as if she
+had insulted him, as if she had been needlessly cruel. And because of
+it she hardened her heart. Why should she spare him the mention of it?
+He had not hesitated at the shameless deed itself. Why should she
+shrink before that wounded look that leaped to his fine eyes in that
+flash of time before he hardened them to steel?
+
+“You did it—didn’t you?” she demanded.
+
+“That’s what they say.” His gaze met her defiantly.
+
+“And it is true, isn’t it?”
+
+“Oh, anything is true of a man that herds sheep,” he returned,
+bitterly.
+
+“If that is true it would not be possible for you to understand how
+much I despise you.”
+
+“Thank you,” he retorted, ironically.
+
+“I don’t understand at all. I don’t see how you can be the man they say
+you are. Before I met you it was easy to understand. But somehow—I
+don’t know—you don’t _look_ like a villain.” She found herself
+strangely voicing the deep hope of her heart. It was surely impossible
+to look at him and believe him guilty of the things of which, he was
+accused. And yet he offered no denial, suggested no defense.
+
+Her troubled eyes went over his thin, sunbaked face with its touch, of
+bitterness, and she did not find it possible to dismiss the subject
+without giving him a chance to set himself right.
+
+“You can’t be as bad as they say. You are not, are you?” she asked,
+naively.
+
+“What do y’u think?” he responded, coolly.
+
+She flushed angrily at what she accepted as his insolence. “A man of
+any decency would have jumped at the chance to explain.”
+
+“But if there is nothing to explain?”
+
+“You are then guilty.”
+
+Their eyes met, and neither of them quailed.
+
+“If I pleaded not guilty would y’u believe me?”
+
+She hesitated. “I don’t know. How could I when it is known by
+everybody? And yet—”
+
+He smiled. “Why should I trouble y’u, then, with explanations? I reckon
+we’ll let it go at guilty.”
+
+“Is that all you can say for yourself?”
+
+He seemed to hang in doubt an instant, then shook his head and refused
+the opening.
+
+“I expect if we changed the subject I could say a good deal for y’u,”
+he drawled. “I never saw anything pluckier than the way y’u flew down
+from the mesa and conducted the cutting-out expedition. Y’u sure
+drilled through your punchers like a streak of lightning.”
+
+“I didn’t know who you were,” she explained, proudly.
+
+“Would it have made any difference if y’u had?”
+
+Again the angry flush touched her cheeks. “Not a bit. I would have
+saved you in order to have you properly hanged later,” she cut back
+promptly.
+
+He shook his head gayly. “I’m ce’tainly going to disappoint y’u some.
+Your enterprising punchers may collect me yet, but not alive, I
+reckon.”
+
+“I’ll give them strict orders to bring you in alive.”
+
+“Did you ever want the moon when y’u was a little kid?” he asked.
+
+“We’ll see, Mr. Outlaw Bannister.”
+
+He laughed softly, in the quiet, indolent fashion that would have been
+pleasant if it had not been at her. “It’s right kind of you to take so
+much interest in me. I’d most be willing to oblige by letting your boys
+rope me to renew this acquaintance, ma’am.” Then, “I get out here Miss
+Messiter,” he added.
+
+She stopped on the instant. Plainly she could not get rid of him too
+soon. “Haven’t you forgot one thing?” she asked, ironically.
+
+“Yes, ma’am. To thank you proper for what y’u did for me.” He limped
+gingerly down from the car and stood with his hand on one of the tires.
+“I have been trying to think how to say it right; but I guess I’ll have
+to give it up. All is that if I ever get a chance to even the score—”
+
+She waved his thanks aside impatiently “I didn’t mean that. You have
+forgotten to take my purse.”
+
+His gravity was broken on the instant, and his laughter was certainly
+delightfully fresh. “I clean forgot, but I expect I’ll drop over to the
+ranch for it some day.”
+
+“We’ll try to make to make you welcome, Mr. Bannister.”
+
+“Don’t put yourself out at all. I’ll take pot-luck when I come.”
+
+“How many of you may we expect?” she asked, defiantly.
+
+“Oh, I allow to come alone.”
+
+“You’ll very likely forget.”
+
+“No, ma’am, I don’t know so many ladies that I’m liable to such an
+oversight.
+
+“I have heard a different story. But if you do remember to come, and
+will let us know when you expect to honor the Lazy D, I’ll have
+messengers sent to meet you.”
+
+He perfectly understood her to mean leaden ones, and the humorous gleam
+in his eye sparkled in appreciation of her spirit. “I don’t want all
+that fuss made over me. I reckon I’ll drop in unexpected,” he said.
+
+She nodded curtly. “Good-bye. Hope your ankle won’t trouble you very
+much.”
+
+“Thank y’u, ma’am. I reckon it won’t. Good-bye, Miss Messiter.”
+
+Out of the tail of her eye she saw him bowing like an Italian opera
+singer, as impudently insouciant, as gracefully graceless as any stage
+villain in her memory. Once again she saw him, when her machine swept
+round a curve and she could look back without seeming to do so, limping
+across through the sage brush toward a little hillock near the road.
+And as she looked the bare, curly head was inclined toward her in
+another low, mocking bow. He was certainly the gallantest vagabond
+unhanged.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+AT THE LAZY D RANCH
+
+
+Helen Messiter was a young woman very much alive, which implies that
+she was given to emotions; and as her machine skimmed over the ground
+to the Lazy D she had them to spare. For from the first this young man
+had taken her eye, and it had come upon her with a distinct shock that
+he was the notorious scoundrel who was terrorizing the countryside. She
+told herself almost passionately that she would never have believed it
+if he had not said so himself. She knew quite well that the coldness
+that had clutched her heart when he gave his name had had nothing to do
+with fear. There had been chagrin, disappointment, but nothing in the
+least like the terror she might have expected. The simple truth was
+that he had seemed so much a man that it had hurt her to find him also
+a wild beast.
+
+Deep in her heart she resented the conviction forced upon her. Reckless
+he undoubtedly was, at odds with the law surely, but it was hard to
+admit that attractive personality to be the mask of fiendish cruelty
+and sinister malice. And yet—the facts spoke for themselves. He had not
+even attempted a denial. Still there was a mystery about him, else how
+was it possible for two so distinct personalities to dwell together in
+the same body.
+
+She hated him with all her lusty young will; not only for what he was,
+but also for what she had been disappointed in not finding him after
+her first instinctive liking. Yet it was with an odd little thrill that
+she ran down again into the coulée where her prosaic life had found its
+first real adventure. He might be all they said, but nothing could wipe
+out the facts that she had offered her life to save his, and that he
+had lent her his body as a living shield for one exhilarating moment of
+danger.
+
+As she reached the hill summit beyond the coulée, Helen Messiter was
+aware that a rider in ungainly chaps of white wool was rapidly
+approaching. He dipped down into the next depression without seeing
+her; and when they came face to face at the top of the rise the result
+was instantaneous. His pony did an animated two-step not on the
+programme. It took one glance at the diabolical machine, and went up on
+its hind legs, preliminary to giving an elaborate exhibition of
+pitching. The rider indulged in vivid profanity and plied his quirt
+vigorously. But the bronco, with the fear of this unknown evil on its
+soul, varied its bucking so effectively that the puncher astride its
+hurricane deck was forced, in the language of his kind, to “take the
+dust.”
+
+His red head sailed through the air and landed in the white sand at the
+girl’s feet. For a moment he sat in the road and gazed with chagrin
+after the vanishing heels of his mount. Then his wrathful eyes came
+round to the owner of the machine that had caused the eruption. His
+mouth had opened to give adequate expression to his feelings, when he
+discovered anew the forgotten fact that he was dealing with a woman.
+His jaw hung open for an instant in amaze; and when he remembered the
+unedited vocabulary he had turned loose on the world a flood of purple
+swept his tanned face.
+
+She wanted to laugh, but wisely refrained. “I’m very sorry,” was what
+she said.
+
+He stared in silence as he slowly picked himself from the ground. His
+red hair rose like the quills of a porcupine above a face that had the
+appearance of being unfinished. Neither nose nor mouth nor chin seemed
+to be quite definite enough.
+
+She choked down her gayety and offered renewed apologies.
+
+“I was going for a doc,” he explained, by way of opening his share of
+the conversation.
+
+“Then perhaps you had better jump in with me and ride back to the Lazy
+D. I suppose that’s where you came from?”
+
+He scratched his vivid head helplessly. “Yes, ma’am.”
+
+“Then jump in.”
+
+“I was going to Bear Creek, ma’am,” he added dubiously.
+
+“How far is it?”
+
+“’Bout twenty-five miles, and then some.”
+
+“You don’t expect to walk, do you?”
+
+“No; I allowed—”
+
+“I’ll take you back to the ranch, where you can get another horse.”
+
+“I reckon, ma’am, I’d ruther walk.”
+
+“Nonsense! Why?”
+
+“I ain’t used to them gas wagons.”
+
+“It’s quite safe. There is nothing to be afraid of.”
+
+Reluctantly he got in beside her, as happy as a calf in a branding pen.
+
+“Are you the lady that sashaid off with Ned Bannister?” he asked
+presently, after he had had time to smother successively some of his
+fear, wonder and delight at their smooth, swift progress.
+
+“Yes. Why?”
+
+“The boys allow you hadn’t oughter have done it.” Then, to place the
+responsibility properly on shoulders broader than his own, he added:
+“That’s what Judd says.”
+
+“And who is Judd?”
+
+“Judd, he’s the foreman of the Lazy D.”
+
+Below them appeared the corrals and houses of a ranch nestling in a
+little valley flanked by hills.
+
+“This yere’s the Lazy D,” announced the youth, with pride, and in the
+spirit of friendliness suggested a caution. “Judd, he’s some peppery.
+You wanter smooth him down some, seeing as he’s riled up to-day.”
+
+A flicker of steel came into the blue eyes. “Indeed! Well, here we
+are.”
+
+“If it ain’t Reddy, _and_ the lady with the flying machine,” murmured a
+freckled youth named McWilliams, emerging from the bunkhouse with a pan
+of water which had been used to bathe the wound of one of the punctured
+combatants.
+
+“What’s that?” snapped a voice from within; and immediately its owner
+appeared in the doorway and bored with narrowed black eyes the young
+woman in the machine.
+
+“Who are you?” he demanded, brusquely.
+
+“Your target,” she answered, quietly. “Would you like to take another
+shot at me?”
+
+The freckled lad broke out into a gurgle of laughter, at which the
+black, swarthy man beside him wheeled round in a rage. “What you
+cacklin’ at, Mac?” he demanded, in a low voice.
+
+“Oh, the things I notice,” returned that youth jauntily, meeting the
+other’s anger without the flicker of an eyelid.
+
+“It ain’t healthy to be so noticin’,” insinuated the other.
+
+“Y’u don’t say,” came the prompt, sarcastic retort. “If you’re such a
+darned good judge of health, y’u better be attending to some of your
+patients.” He jerked a casual thumb over his shoulder toward the bunks
+on which lay the wounded men.
+
+“I shouldn’t wonder but what there might be another patient for me to
+attend to,” snarled the foreman.
+
+“That so? Well, turn your wolf loose when y’u get to feelin’ real
+devilish,” jeered the undismayed one, strolling forward to assist Miss
+Messiter to alight.
+
+The mistress of the Lazy D had been aware of the byplay, but she had
+caught neither the words nor their import. She took the offered brown
+hand smilingly, for here again she looked into the frank eyes of the
+West, unafraid and steady. She judged him not more than twenty-two, but
+the school where he had learned of life had held open and strenuous
+session every day since he could remember.
+
+“Glad to meet y’u, ma’am,” he assured her, in the current phrase of the
+semi-arid lands.
+
+“I’m sure I am glad to meet _you_,” she answered, heartily. “Can you
+tell me where is the foreman of the Lazy D?”
+
+He introduced with a smile the swarthy man in the doorway. “This is him
+ma’am—Mr. Judd Morgan.”
+
+Now it happened that Mr. Judd Morgan was simmering with suppressed
+spleen.
+
+“All I’ve got to say is that you had no business mixing up in that
+shootin’ affair back there. Perhaps you don’t know that the man you
+saved is Ned Bannister, the outlaw,” was his surly greeting.
+
+“Oh, yes, I know that.”
+
+“Then what d’ye mean—Who are you, anyway?” His insolent eyes coasted
+malevolently over her.
+
+“Helen Messiter is my name.”
+
+It was ludicrous to see the change that came over the man. He had been
+prepared to bully her; and with a word she had pricked the bubble of
+his arrogance. He swallowed his anger and got a mechanical smile in
+working order.
+
+“Glad to see you here, Miss Messiter,” he said, his sinister gaze
+attempting to meet hers frankly “I been looking for you every day.”
+
+“But y’u managed to surprise him, after all ma’am,” chuckled Mac.
+
+“Where’s yo’ hawss, Reddy?” inquired a tall young man, who had appeared
+silently in the doorway of the bunkhouse.
+
+Reddy pinked violently. “I had an accident, Denver,” he explained.
+“This lady yere she—”
+
+“Scooped y’u right off yore hawss. Y’u _don’t_ say,” sympathized Mac so
+breathlessly that even Reddy joined in the chorus of laughter that went
+up at his expense.
+
+The young woman thought to make it easy for him, and suggested an
+explanation.
+
+“His horse isn’t used to automobiles, and so when it met this one—”
+
+“I got off,” interposed Reddy hastily, displaying a complexion like a
+boiled beet.
+
+“He got off,” Mac explained gravely to the increasing audience.
+
+Denver nodded with an imperturbable face. “He got off.”
+
+Mac introduced Miss Messiter to such of her employés as were on hand.
+“Shake hands with Miss Messiter, Missou,” was the formula, the name
+alone varying to suit the embarrassed gentlemen in leathers. Each of
+them in turn presented a huge hand, in which her little one disappeared
+for the time, and was sawed up and down in the air like a pump-handle.
+Yet if she was amused she did not show it; and her pleasure at meeting
+the simple, elemental products of the plains outweighed a great deal
+her sense of the ludicrous.
+
+“How are your patients getting along?” she presently asked of her
+foreman.
+
+“I reckon all right. I sent Reddy for a doc, but—”
+
+“He got off,” murmured Mac pensively.
+
+“I’ll go rope another hawss,” put in the man who had got off.
+
+“Get a jump on you, then. Miss Messiter, would you like to look over
+the place?”
+
+“Not now. I want to see the men that were hurt. Perhaps I can help
+them. Once I took a few weeks in nursing.”
+
+“Bully for you, ma’am,” whooped Mac. “I’ve a notion those boys are
+sufferin’ for a woman to put the diamond-hitch on them bandages.”
+
+“Bring that suit-case in,” she commanded Denver, in the gentlest voice
+he had ever heard, after she had made a hasty inspection of the first
+wounded man.
+
+From the suit-case she took a little leather medicine-case, the kind
+that can be bought already prepared for use. It held among other things
+a roll of medicated cotton, some antiseptic tablets, and a little steel
+instrument for probing.
+
+“Some warm water, please; and have some boiling on the range,” were her
+next commands.
+
+Mac flew to execute them.
+
+It was a pleasure to see her work, so deftly the skillful hands
+accomplished what her brain told them. In admiring awe the punchers
+stood awkwardly around while she washed and dressed the hurts. Two of
+the bullets had gone through the fleshy part of the arm and left clean
+wounds. In the case of the third man she had to probe for the lead, but
+fortunately found it with little difficulty. Meanwhile she soothed the
+victim with gentle womanly sympathy.
+
+“I know it hurts a good deal. Just a minute and I’ll be through.”
+
+His hands clutched tightly the edges of his bunk. “That’s all right,
+doc. You attend to roping that pill and I’ll endure the grief.”
+
+A long sigh of relief went up from the assembled cowboys when she drew
+the bullet out.
+
+The sinewy hands fastened on the wooden bunk relaxed suddenly.
+
+“’Frisco’s daid,” gasped the cook, who bore the title of Wun Hop for no
+reason except that he was an Irishman in a place formerly held by a
+Chinese.
+
+“He has only fainted,” she said quietly, and continued with the
+antiseptic dressing.
+
+When it was all over, the big, tanned men gathered at the entrance to
+the calf corral and expanded in admiration of their new boss.
+
+“She’s a pure for fair. She grades up any old way yuh take her to the
+best corn-fed article on the market,” pronounced Denver, with
+enthusiasm.
+
+“I got to ride the boundary,” sighed Missou. “I kinder hate to go right
+now.”
+
+“Here, too,” acquiesced another. “I got a round-up on Wind Creek to cut
+out them two-year-olds. If ’twas my say-so, I’d order Mac on that job.”
+
+“Right kind of y’u. Seems to me”—Mac’s sarcastic eye trailed around to
+include all those who had been singing her praises—“the new queen of
+this hacienda won’t have no trouble at all picking a prince consort
+when she gets round to it. Here’s Wun Hop, not what y’u might call
+anxious, but ce’tainly willing. Then Denver’s some in the turtle-dove
+business, according to that hash-slinger in Cheyenne. Missou might be
+induced to accept if it was offered him proper; and I allow Jim ain’t
+turned the color of Redtop’s hair jest for instance. I don’t want to
+leave out ’Frisco and the other boys carrying Bannister’s pills—”
+
+“Nor McWilliams. I’d admire to include him,” murmured Denver.
+
+That sunburned, nonchalant youth laughed musically. “Sure thing. I’d
+hate to be left out. The only difference is—”
+
+“Well?”
+
+His roving eye circled blandly round. “I stand about one show in a
+million. Y’u roughnecks are dead ones already.”
+
+With which cold comfort he sauntered away to join Miss Messiter and the
+foreman, who now appeared together at the door of the ranchhouse,
+prepared to make a tour of the buildings and the immediate corrals.
+
+“Isn’t there a woman on the place?” she was asking Morgan.
+
+“No’m, there ain’t. Henderson’s daughter would come and stay with y’u a
+while I reckon.”
+
+“Please send for her at once, then, and ask her to come to-day.”
+
+“All right. I’ll send one of the boys right away.”
+
+“How did y’u leave ’Frisco, ma’am?” asked Mac, by way of including
+himself easily.
+
+“He’s resting quietly. Unless blood-poisoning sets in they ought all to
+do well.”
+
+“It’s right lucky for them y’u happened along. This is the hawss
+corral, ma’am,” explained the young man just as Morgan opened his thin
+lips to tell her.
+
+Judd contrived to get rid of him promptly. “Slap on a saddle, Mac, and
+run up the remuda so Miss Messiter can see the hawsses for herself,” he
+ordered.
+
+“Mebbe she’d rather ride down and look at the bunch,” suggested the
+capable McWilliams.
+
+As it chanced, she did prefer to ride down the pasture and look over
+the place from on horseback. She was in love with her ranch already.
+Its spacious distances, the thousands of cattle and the horses, these
+picturesque retainers who served her even to the shedding of an enemy’s
+blood; they all struck an answering echo in her gallant young heart
+that nothing in Kalamazoo had been able to stir. She bubbled over with
+enthusiasm, the while Morgan covertly sneered and McWilliams warmed to
+the untamed youth in her.
+
+“What about this man Bannister?” she flung out suddenly, after they had
+cantered back to the house when the remuda had been inspected.
+
+Her abrupt question brought again the short, tense silence she had
+become used to expect.
+
+“He runs sheep about twenty or thirty miles southwest of here,”
+explained McWilliams, in a carefully casual tone.
+
+“So everybody tells me, but it seems to me he spills a good deal of
+lead on my men,” she answered impatiently. “What’s the trouble?”
+
+“Last week he crossed the dead-line with a bunch of five thousand
+sheep.”
+
+“Who draws this dead-line?”
+
+“The cattlemen got together and drew it. Your uncle was one of those
+that marked it off, ma’am.”
+
+“And Bannister crossed it?”
+
+“Yes, ma’am. Yesterday ’Frisco come on him and one of his herders with
+a big bunch of them less than fifteen miles from here. He didn’t know
+it was Bannister, and took a pot-shot at him. ’Course Bannister came
+back at him, and he got Frisco in the laig.”
+
+“Didn’t know it was Bannister? What difference WOULD that make?” she
+said impatiently.
+
+Mac laughed. “What difference would it make, Judd?”
+
+Morgan scowled, and the young man answered his own question. “We don’t
+any of us go out of our way more’n a mile to cross Bannister’s trail,”
+he drawled.
+
+“Do you wear this for an ornament? Are you upholstered with hardware to
+catch the eyes of some girl?” she asked, touching with the end of her
+whip the revolver in the holster strapped to his chaps.
+
+His serene, gay smile flashed at her. “Are y’u ordering me to go out
+and get Ned Bannister’s scalp?”
+
+“No, I am not,” she explained promptly. “What I am trying to discover
+is why you all seem to be afraid of one man. He is only a man, isn’t
+he?”
+
+A veil of ice seemed to fall over the boyish face and leave it chiseled
+marble. His unspeaking eyes rested on the swarthy foreman as he
+answered:
+
+“I don’t know what he is, ma’am. He may be one man, or he may be a
+hundred. What’s more, I ain’t particularly suffering to find out. Fact
+is, I haven’t lost any Bannisters.”
+
+The girl became aware that her foreman was looking at her with a wary
+silent vigilance sinister in its intensity.
+
+“In short, you’re like the rest of the people in this section. You’re
+afraid.”
+
+“Now y’u’re shoutin’, Miss Messiter. I sure am when it comes to
+shootin’ off my mouth about Bannister.”
+
+“And you, Mr. Morgan?”
+
+It struck her that the young puncher waited with a curious interest for
+the answer of the foreman.
+
+“Did it look like I was afraid this mawnin’, ma’am?” he asked, with
+narrowed eyes.
+
+“No, you all seemed brave enough then, when you had him eight to one.”
+
+“I wasn’t there,” hastily put in McWilliams. “I don’t go gunning for my
+man without giving him a show.”
+
+“I do,” retorted Morgan cruelly. “I’d go if we was fifty to one. We’d
+’a’ got him, too, if it hadn’t been for Miss Messiter. ’Twas a chance
+we ain’t likely to get again for a year.”
+
+“It wasn’t your fault you didn’t kill him, Mr. Morgan,” she said,
+looking hard at him. “You may be interested to know that your last shot
+missed him only about six inches, and me about four.”
+
+“I didn’t know who you were,” he sullenly defended.
+
+“I see. You only shoot at women when you don’t know who they are.” She
+turned her back on him pointedly and addressed herself to McWilliams.
+“You can tell the men working on this ranch that I won’t have any more
+such attacks on this man Bannister. I don’t care what or who he is. I
+don’t propose to have him murdered by my employés. Let the law take him
+and hang him. Do you hear?”
+
+“I ce’tainly do, and the boys will get the word straight,” he replied.
+
+“I take it since yuh are giving your orders through Mac, yuh don’t need
+me any longer for your foreman,” bullied Morgan.
+
+“You take it right, sir,” came her crisp reply. “McWilliams will be my
+foreman from to-day.”
+
+The man’s face, malignant and wolfish, suddenly lost its mask. That she
+would so promptly call his bluff was the last thing he had expected.
+“That’s all right. I reckon yuh think yuh know your own business, but
+I’ll put it to yuh straight. Long as yuh live you’ll be sorry for
+this.”
+
+And with that he wheeled away.
+
+She turned to her new foreman and found him less radiant than she could
+have desired. “I’m right sorry y’u did that. I’m afraid y’u’ll make
+trouble for yourself,” he said quietly.
+
+“Why?”
+
+“I don’t know myself just why.” He hesitated before adding: “They say
+him and Bannister is thicker than they’d ought to be. It’s a cinch that
+he’s in cahoots somehow with that Shoshone bunch of bad men.”
+
+“But—why, that’s ridiculous. Only this morning he was trying to kill
+Bannister himself.”
+
+“That’s what I don’t just savvy. There’s a whole lot about that
+business I don’t get next to. I guess Bannister is at the head of them.
+Everybody seems agreed about that. But the whole thing is a tangle of
+contradiction to me. I’ve milled it over a heap in my mind, too.”
+
+“What are some of the contradictions?”
+
+“Well, here’s one right off the bat, as we used to say back in the
+States. Bannister is a great musician, they claim; fine singer, and all
+that. Now I happen to know he can’t sing any more than a bellowing
+yearling.”
+
+“How do you know?” she asked, her eyes shining with interest.
+
+“Because I heard him try it. ’Twas one day last summer when I was out
+cutting trail of a bunch of strays down by Dead Cow Creek. The day was
+hot, and I lay down behind a cottonwood and dropped off to sleep. When
+I awakened it didn’t take me longer’n an hour to discover what had woke
+me. Somebody on the other side of the creek was trying to sing. It was
+ce’tainly the limit. Pretty soon he come out of the brush and I seen it
+was Bannister.”
+
+“You’re sure it was Bannister?”
+
+“If seeing is believing, I’m sure.”
+
+“And was his singing really so bad?”
+
+“I’d hate ever to hear worse.”
+
+“Was he singing when you saw him?”
+
+“No, he’d just quit. He caught sight of my pony grazing, and hunted
+cover real prompt.”
+
+“Then it might have been another man singing in the thicket.”
+
+“It might, but it wasn’t. Y’u see, I’d followed him through the bush by
+his song, and he showed up the moment I expected him.”
+
+“Still there might have been another man there singing.”
+
+“One chance in a million,” he conceded.
+
+A sudden hope flamed up like tow in her heart. Perhaps, after all, Ned
+Bannister was not the leader of the outlaws. Perhaps somebody else was
+masquerading in his name, using Bannister’s unpopularity as a shield to
+cover his iniquities. Still, this was an unlikely hypothesis, she had
+to admit. For why should he allow his good name to be dragged in the
+dust without any effort to save it? On a sudden impulse the girl
+confided her doubt to McWilliams.
+
+“You don’t suppose there can be any mistake, do you? Somehow I can’t
+think him as bad as they say. He looks awfully reckless, but one feels
+one could trust his face.”
+
+“Same here,” agreed the new foreman. “First off when I saw him my think
+was, ‘I’d like to have that man backing my play when I’m sitting in the
+game with Old Man Hard Luck reaching out for my blue chips.’”
+
+“You don’t think faces lie, do you?”
+
+“I’ve seen them that did, but, gen’rally speaking, tongues are a heap
+likelier to get tangled with the truth. But I reckon there ain’t any
+doubt about Bannister. He’s known over all this Western country.”
+
+The young woman sighed. “I’m afraid you’re right.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+THE DANCE AT FRASER’S
+
+
+“Heard tell yet of the dance over to Fraser’s?”
+
+He was a young man of a brick red countenance and he wore loosely round
+his neck the best polka dot silk handkerchief that could be bought in
+Gimlet Butte, also such gala attire as was usually reserved only for
+events of importance. Sitting his horse carelessly in the plainsman’s
+indolent fashion, he asked his question of McWilliams in front of the
+Lazy D bunkhouse.
+
+“Nope. When does the shindig come off?”
+
+“Friday night. Big thing. Y’u want to be there. All y’u lads.”
+
+“Mebbe some of us will ride over.”
+
+He of the polka dot kerchief did not appear quite satisfied. His glance
+wandered toward the house, as it had been doing occasionally since the
+moment of his arrival.
+
+“Y’u bet this dance is ace high, Mac. Fancy costumes and masks. Y’u can
+rent the costumes over to Slauson’s for three per. Texas, he’s going to
+call the dances. Music from Gimlet Butte. Y’u want to get it tucked
+away in your thinker that this dance ain’t on the order of culls. No,
+sirree, it’s cornfed.”
+
+“Glad to hear of it. I’ll cipher out somehow to be there, Slim.”
+
+Slim’s glance took in the ranchhouse again. He had ridden twenty-three
+miles out of his way to catch a glimpse of the newly arrived mistress
+of the Lazy D, the report of whose good looks and adventures had
+traveled hand in hand through many cañons even to the heart of the
+Tetons. It had been on Skunk Creek that he had heard of her three days
+before, and now he had come to verify the tongue of rumor, to see her
+quite casually, of course, and do his own appraising. It began to look
+as if he were going to have to ride off without a glimpse of her.
+
+He nodded toward the house, turning a shade more purple than his native
+choleric hue. “Y’u want to bring your boss with y’u, Mac. We been
+hearing a right smart lot about her and the boys would admire to have
+her present. It’s going to be strictly according to Hoyle—no
+rough-house plays go, y’understand.”
+
+“I’ll speak to her about it.” Mac’s deep amusement did not reach the
+surface. He was quite well aware that Slim was playing for time and
+that he was too bashful to plump out the desire that was in him. “Great
+the way cows are jumpin’, ain’t it?”
+
+“Sure. Well, I’ll be movin’ along to Slauson’s. I just drapped in on my
+way. Thought mebbe y’u hadn’t heard tell of the dance.”
+
+“Much obliged. Was it for old man Slauson y’u dug up all them togs,
+Slim? He’ll ce’tainly admire to see y’u in that silk tablecloth y’u got
+round your neck.”
+
+Slim’s purple deepened again. “Y’u go to grass, Mac. I don’t aim to ask
+y’u to be my valley yet awhile.”
+
+“C’rect. I was just wondering do all the Triangle Bar boys ride the
+range so handsome?”
+
+“Don’t y’u worry about the Triangle Bar boys,” advised the embarrassed
+Slim, gathering up his bridle reins.
+
+With one more reluctant glance in the direction of the house he rode
+away. When he reached the corral he looked back again. His gaze showed
+him the boyish foreman doubled up with laughter; also the sweep of a
+white skirt descending from the piazza.
+
+“Now, ain’t that hoodooed luck?” the aggrieved rider of the Triangle
+Bar outfit demanded of himself, “I made my getaway about three shakes
+too soon, by gum!”
+
+Her foreman was in the throes of mirth when Helen Messiter reached him.
+
+“Include me in the joke,” she suggested.
+
+“Oh, I was just thinkin’,” he explained inadequately.
+
+“Does it always take you that way?”
+
+“About these boys that drop in so frequent on business these days.
+Funny how fond they’re getting of the Lazy D. There was that stock
+detective happened in yesterday to show how anxious he was about your
+cows. Then the two Willow Creek riders that wanted a job punching for
+y’u, not to mention mention the Shoshone miner and the storekeeper from
+Gimlet Butte and Soapy Sothern and—”
+
+“Still I don’t quite see the joke.”
+
+“It ain’t any joke with them. Serious business, ma’am.”
+
+“What happened to start you on this line?”
+
+“The lad riding down the road on that piebald pinto. He come twenty
+miles out of his way, plumb dressed for a wedding, all to give me an
+invite to a dance at Fraser’s. Y’u would call that real thoughtful of
+him, I expect.”
+
+She gayly sparkled. “A real ranch dance—the kind you have been telling
+me about. Are Ida and I invited?”
+
+“Invited? Slim hinted at a lynching if I came without y’u.”
+
+She laughed softly, merry eyes flashing swiftly at him. “How gallant
+you Westerners are, even though you do turn it into burlesque.”
+
+His young laugh echoed hers. “Burlesque nothing. My life wouldn’t be
+worth a thing if I went alone. Honest, I wouldn’t dare.”
+
+“Since the ranch can’t afford to lose its foreman Ida and I will go
+along,” she promised. “That is, if it is considered proper here.”
+
+“Proper. Good gracious, ma’am! Every lady for thirty miles round will
+be there, from six months old to eighty odd years. It wouldn’t be
+_proper_ to stay at home.”
+
+The foreman drove her to Fraser’s in a surrey with Ida Henderson and
+one of the Lazy D punchers on the back seat. The drive was over
+twenty-five miles, but in that silent starry night every mile was a
+delight. Part of the way led through a beautiful cañon, along the rocky
+mountain road of which the young man guided the rig with unerring
+skill. Beyond the gorge the country debouched into a grassy park that
+fell away from their feet for miles. It was in this basin that the
+Fraser ranch lay.
+
+The strains of the fiddle and the thumping of feet could be heard as
+they drove up. Already the rooms seemed to be pretty well filled, as
+Helen noticed when they entered. Three sets were on the floor for a
+quadrille and the house shook with the energy of the dancers. On
+benches against the walls were seated the spectators, and on one of
+them stood Texas calling the dance.
+
+“Alemane left. Right hand t’yer pardner and grand right and left.
+Ev-v-rybody swing,” chanted the caller.
+
+A dozen rough young fellows were clustered near the front door,
+apparently afraid to venture farther lest their escape be cut off.
+Through these McWilliams pushed a way for his charges, the cowboys
+falling back respectfully at once when they discovered the presence of
+Miss Messiter.
+
+In the bedroom where she left her wraps the mistress of the Lazy D
+found a dozen or more infants and several of their mothers. In the
+kitchen were still other women and babies, some of the former very old
+and of the latter very young. A few of the babies were asleep, but most
+of them were still very much alive to this scene of unwonted hilarity
+in their young lives.
+
+As soon as she emerged into the general publicity of the dancing room
+her foreman pounced upon Helen and led her to a place in the head set
+that was making up. The floor was rough, the music jerky and uncertain,
+the quadrilling an exhibition of joyous and awkward abandon; but its
+picturesque lack of convention appealed to the girl from Michigan. It
+rather startled her to be swung so vigorously, but a glance about the
+room showed that these humorous-eyed Westerners were merely living up
+to the duty of the hour as they understood it.
+
+At the close of the quadrille Helen found herself being introduced to
+“Mr. Robins,” alias Slim, who drew one of his feet back in an
+embarrassed bow.
+
+“I enjoy to meet y’u, ma’am,” he assured her, and supplemented this
+with a request for the next dance, after which he fell into silence
+that was painful in its intensity.
+
+Nearly all the dances were squares, as few of those present understood
+the intricacies of the waltz and two-step. Hence it happened that the
+proficient McWilliams secured three round dances with his mistress.
+
+It was during the lunch of sandwiches, cake and coffee that Helen
+perceived an addition to the company. The affair had been advertised a
+costume ball, but most of those present had construed this very
+liberally. She herself, to be sure, had come as Mary Queen of Scots,
+Mac was arrayed in the scarlet tunic and tight-fitting breeches of the
+Northwest Mounted Police, and perhaps eight or ten others had made some
+attempt at representing some one other than they were. She now saw
+another, apparently a new arrival, standing in the doorway negligently.
+A glance told her that he was made up for a road agent and that his
+revolvers and mask were a part of the necessary costuming.
+
+Slowly his gaze circled the room and came round to her. His eyes were
+hard as diamonds and as flashing, so that the impact of their meeting
+looks seemed to shock her physically. He was a tall man, swarthy of
+hue, and he carried himself with a light ease that looked silken
+strong. Something in the bearing was familiar yet not quite familiar
+either. It seemed to suggest a resemblance to somebody she knew. And in
+the next thought she knew that the somebody was Ned Bannister.
+
+The man spoke to Fraser, just then passing with a cup of coffee, and
+Helen saw the two men approach. The stranger was coming to be formally
+introduced.
+
+“Shake hands with Mr. Holloway, Miss Messiter. He’s from up in the hill
+country and he rode to our frolic. Y’u’ve got three guesses to figure
+out what he’s made up as.”
+
+“One will be quite enough, I think,” she answered coldly.
+
+Fraser departed on his destination with the coffee and the newcomer sat
+down on the bench beside her.
+
+“One’s enough, is it?” he drawled smilingly.
+
+“Quite, but I’m surprised so few came in costume. Why didn’t you? But I
+suppose you had your reasons.”
+
+“Didn’t I? I’m supposed to be a bad man from the hills.”
+
+She swept him casually with an indifferent glance. “And isn’t that what
+you are in real life?”
+
+His sharp scrutiny chiseled into her. “What’s that?”
+
+“You won’t mind if I forget and call you Mr. Bannister instead of Mr.
+Holloway?”
+
+She thought his counterfeit astonishment perfect.
+
+“So I’m Ned Bannister, am I?”
+
+Their eyes clashed.
+
+“Aren’t you?”
+
+She felt sure of it, and yet there was a lurking doubt. For there was
+in his manner something indescribably more sinister than she had felt
+in him on that occasion when she had saved his life. Then a debonair
+recklessness had been the outstanding note, but now there was something
+ribald and wicked in him.
+
+“Since y’u put it as a question, common politeness demands an answer.
+Ned Bannister is my name.”
+
+“You are the terror of this country?”
+
+“I shan’t be a terror to y’u, ma’am, if I can help it,” he smiled.
+
+“But you are the man they call the king?”
+
+“I have that honor.”
+
+“_Honor?_”
+
+At the sharp scorn of her accent he laughed.
+
+“Do you mean that you are proud of your villainy?” she demanded.
+
+“Y’u’ve ce’tainly got the teacher habit of asking questions,” he
+replied with a laugh that was a sneer.
+
+A shadow fell across them and a voice said quietly, “She didn’t wait to
+ask any when she saved your life down in the coulée back of the Lazy
+D.”
+
+The shadow was Jim McWilliams’s, and its owner looked down at the man
+beside the girl with steady, hostile eyes.
+
+“Is this your put in, sir?” the other flashed back.
+
+“Yes, seh, it is. The boys don’t quite like seeing your hardware so
+prominent at a social gathering. In this community guns don’t come into
+the house at a ranch dance. I’m a committee to mention the subject and
+to collect your thirty-eights if y’u agree with us.”
+
+“And if I don’t agree with you?”
+
+“There’s all outdoors ready to receive y’u, seh. It would be a pity to
+stay in the one spot where your welcome’s wore thin.”
+
+“Still I may choose to stay.”
+
+“Ce’tainly, but if y’u decide that way y’u better step out on the porch
+and talk it over with us where there ain’t ladies present.”
+
+“Isn’t this a costume dance? What’s the matter with my guns? I’m an
+outlaw, ain’t I?”
+
+“I don’t know whether y’u are or not, seh. If y’u say y’u are we’re
+ready to take your word. The guns have to be shucked if y’u stay here.
+They might go off accidental and scare the ladies.”
+
+The man rose blackly. “I’ll remember this. If y’u knew who y’u were
+getting so gay with—”
+
+“I can guess, Mr. Holloway, the kind of an outfit y’u freight with, and
+I expect I could put a handle to another name for you.”
+
+“By God, if y’u dare to say—”
+
+“I don’t dare, especially among so many ladies,” came McWilliams’s
+jaunty answer.
+
+The eyes of the two men gripped, after which Holloway swung on his heel
+and swaggered defiantly out of the house.
+
+Presently there came the sound of a pony’s feet galloping down the
+road. It had not yet died away when Texas announced that the supper
+intermission was over.
+
+“Pardners for a quadrille. Ladies’ choice.”
+
+The dance was on again full swing. The fiddlers were tuning up and
+couples gathering for a quadrille. Denver came to claim Miss Messiter
+for a partner. Apparently even the existence of the vanished Holloway
+was forgotten. But Helen remembered it, and pondered over the affair
+long after daylight had come and brought with it an end to the
+festivities.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+A PARTY CALL
+
+
+The mistress of the Lazy D, just through with her morning visit to the
+hospital in the bunkhouse, stopped to read the gaudy poster tacked to
+the wall. It was embellished with the drawing of a placid rider astride
+the embodiment of fury incarnate, under which was the legend: “Stick to
+Your Saddle.”
+
+BIG FOURTH OF JULY CELEBRATION AT GIMLET BUTTE.
+ROPING AND BRONCO BUSTING CONTESTS FOR THE CHAMPIONSHIP OF THE WORLD
+AND BIG PRIZES,
+Including $1,000 for the Best Rider and the Same for Best Roper. Cow
+Pony Races, Ladies’ Races and Ladies’ Riding Contest, Fireworks,
+AND FREE BARBECUE!!!!
+EVERYBODY COME AND TURN YOUR WOLF LOOSE.
+
+
+A sudden thud of pounding hoofs, a snatch of ragtime, and her foreman
+swept up in a cloud of white dust. His pony came from a gallop to an
+instant halt, and simultaneously Mac landed beside her, one hand
+holding the wide-brimmed hat he had snatched off in his descent, the
+other hitched by a casual thumb to the belt of his chaps.
+
+She laughed. “You really did it very well.”
+
+Mac blushed. He was still young enough to take pride in his picturesque
+regalia, to prefer the dramatic way of doing a commonplace thing. But,
+though he liked this girl’s trick of laughing at him with a perfectly
+grave face out of those dark, long-lashed eyes, he would have liked it
+better if sometimes they had given back the applause he thought his
+little tricks merited.
+
+“Sho! That’s foolishness,” he deprecated.
+
+“I suppose they got you to sit for this picture;” and she indicated the
+poster with a wave of her hand.
+
+“That ain’t a real picture,” he explained, and when she smiled added,
+“as of course y’u know. No hawss ever pitched that way—and the saddle
+ain’t right. Fact is, it’s all wrong.”
+
+“How did it come here? It wasn’t here last night.”
+
+“I reckon Denver brought it from Slauson’s. He was ridin’ that country
+yesterday, and as the boys was out of smokin’ he come home that way.”
+
+“I suppose you’ll all go?”
+
+“I reckon.”
+
+“And you’ll ride?”
+
+“I aim to sit in.”
+
+“At the roping, too?”
+
+“No, m’m. I ain’t so much with the rope. It takes a Mexican to snake a
+rope.”
+
+“Then I’ll be able to borrow only a thousand dollars from you to help
+buy that bunch of young cows we were speaking about,” she mocked.
+
+“Only a thousand,” he grinned. “And it ain’t a cinch I’ll win. There
+are three or four straightup riders on this range. A fellow come from
+the Hole-in-the-Wall and won out last year.”
+
+“And where were you?”
+
+“Oh, I took second prize,” he explained, with obvious indifference.
+
+“Well, you had better get first this year. We’ll have to show them the
+Lazy D hasn’t gone to sleep.”
+
+“Sure thing,” he agreed.
+
+“Has that buyer from Cheyenne turned up yet?” she asked, reverting to
+business.
+
+“Not yet. Do y’u want I should make the cut soon as he comes?”
+
+“Don’t you think his price is a little low—twenty dollars from brand
+up?”
+
+“It’s a scrub bunch. We want to get rid of them, anyway. But you’re the
+doctor,” he concluded slangily.
+
+She thought a moment. “We’ll let him have them, but don’t make the cut
+till I come back. I’m going to ride over to the Twin Buttes.”
+
+His admiring eyes followed her as she went toward the pony that was
+waiting saddled with the rein thrown to the ground. She carried her
+slim, lithe figure with a grace, a lightness, that few women could have
+rivaled. When she had swung to the saddle, she half-turned in her seat
+to call an order to the foreman.
+
+“I think, Mac, you had better run up those horses from Eagle Creek.
+Have Denver and Missou look after them.”
+
+“Sure, ma’am,” he said aloud; and to himself: “She’s ce’tainly a
+thoroughbred. Does everything well she tackles. I never saw anything
+like it. I’m a Chink if she doesn’t run this ranch like she had been at
+it forty years. Same thing with her gasoline bronc. That pinto, too.
+He’s got a bad eye for fair, but she makes him eat out of her hand. I
+reckon the pinto is like the rest of us—clean mashed.” He put his arms
+on the corral fence and grew introspective. “Blamed if I know what it
+is about her. ’Course she’s a winner on looks, but that ain’t it alone.
+I guess it’s on account of her being such a game little gentleman. When
+she turns that smile loose on a fellow—well, there’s sure sunshine in
+the air. And game—why, Ned Bannister ain’t gamer himself.”
+
+McWilliams had climbed lazily to the top board of the fence. He was an
+energetic youth, but he liked to do his thinking at his ease. Now, as
+his gaze still followed its lodestar, he suddenly slipped from his seat
+and ran forward, pulling the revolver from its scabbard as he ran. Into
+his eyes had crept a tense alertness, the shining watchfulness of the
+tiger ready for its spring.
+
+The cause of the change in the foreman of the Lazy D was a simple one,
+and on its face innocent enough. It was merely that a stranger had
+swung in casually at the gate of the short stable lane, and was due to
+meet Miss Messiter in about ten seconds. So far good enough. A dozen
+travelers dropped in every day, but this particular one happened to be
+Ned Bannister.
+
+From the stable door a shot rang out. Bannister ducked and shouted
+genially: “Try again.”
+
+But Helen Messiter whirled her pony as on a half-dollar, and charged
+down on the stable.
+
+“Who fired that shot?” she demanded, her eyes blazing.
+
+The horse-wrangler showed embarrassment. He had found time only to lean
+the rifle against the wall.
+
+“I reckon I did, ma’am. Y’u see—”
+
+“Did you get my orders about this feud?” she interrupted crisply.
+
+“Yes, ma’am, but—”
+
+“Then you may call for your time. When I give my men orders I expect
+them to obey.”
+
+“I wouldn’t ’a’ shot if I’d knowed y’u was so near him. Y’u was behind
+that summer kitchen,” he explained lamely.
+
+“You only expect to obey orders when I’m in sight. Is that it?” she
+asked hotly, and without waiting for an answer delivered her ultimatum.
+“Well, I won’t have it. I run this ranch as long as I am its owner. Do
+you understand?”
+
+“Yes, ma’am. I hadn’t ought to have did it, but when I seen Bannister
+it come over me I owed him a pill for the one he sent me last week down
+in the coulée. So I up and grabbed the rifle and let him have it.”
+
+“Then you may up and grab your trunk for Medicine Hill. Shorty will
+drive you tomorrow.”
+
+When she returned to her unexpected guest, Helen found him in
+conversation with McWilliams. The latter’s gun had found again its
+holster, but his brown, graceful hand hovered close to its butt.
+
+“Seems like a long time since the Lazy D has been honored by a visit
+from Mr. Bannister,” he was saying, with gentle irony.
+
+“That’s right. So I have come to make up for lost time,” came
+Bannister’s quiet retort.
+
+Miss Messiter did not know much about Wyoming human nature in the raw,
+but she had learned enough to be sure that the soft courtesy of these
+two youths covered a stark courage that might leap to life any moment.
+Wherefore she interposed.
+
+“We’ll be pleased to show you over the place, Mr. Bannister. As it
+happens, we are close to the hospital. Shall we begin there?”
+
+Her cool, silken defiance earned a smile from the visitor. “All your
+cases doing well, ma’am?”
+
+“It’s very kind of you to ask. I suppose you take an interest because
+they are _your_ cases, too, in a way of speaking?”
+
+“Mine? Indeed!”
+
+“Yes. If it were not for you I’m afraid our hospital would be empty.”
+
+“It must be right pleasant to be nursed by Miss Messiter. I reckon the
+boys are grateful to me for scattering my lead so promiscuous.”
+
+“I heard one say he would like to lam your haid tenderly,” murmured
+McWilliams.
+
+“With a two-by-four, I suppose,” laughed Bannister.
+
+“Shouldn’t wonder. But, looking y’u over casual, it occurs to me he
+might get sick of his job befo’ he turned y’u loose,” McWilliams
+admitted, with a glance of admiration at the clean power showing in the
+other’s supple lines.
+
+Nor could either the foreman or his mistress deny the tribute of their
+respect to the bravado of this scamp who sat so jauntily his seat
+regardless of what the next moment might bring forth. Three wounded men
+were about the place, all presumably quite willing to get a clean shot
+at him in the open. One of them had taken his chance already, and
+missed. Their visitor had no warrant for knowing that a second might
+not any instant try his luck with better success. Yet he looked every
+inch the man on horseback, no whit disturbed, not the least conscious
+of any danger. Tall, spare, broad shouldered, this berry-brown young
+man, crowned with close-cropped curls, sat at the gates of the enemy
+very much at his insolent ease.
+
+“I came over to pay my party call,” he explained.
+
+“It really wasn’t necessary. A run in the machine is not a formal
+function.”
+
+“Maybe not in Kalamazoo.”
+
+“I thought perhaps you had come to get my purse and the sixty-three
+dollars,” she derided.
+
+“No, ma’am; nor yet to get that bunch of cows I was going to rustle
+from you to buy an auto. I came to ask you to go riding with me.”
+
+The audacity of it took her breath. Of all the outrageous things she
+had ever heard, this was the cream. An acknowledged outlaw, engaged in
+feud with her retainers over that deadly question of the run of the
+range, he had sauntered over to the ranch where lived a dozen of his
+enemies, three of them still scarred with his bullets, merely to ask
+her to go riding with him. The magnificence of his bravado almost
+obliterated its impudence. Of course she would not think of going. The
+idea! But her eyes glowed with appreciation of his courage, not the
+less because the consciousness of it was so conspicuously absent from
+his manner.
+
+“I think not, Mr. Bannister” and her face almost imperceptibly
+stiffened. “I don’t go riding with strangers, nor with men who shoot my
+boys. And I’ll give you a piece of advice, sir. That is, to burn the
+wind back to your home. Otherwise I won’t answer for your life. My
+punchers don’t love you, and I don’t know how long I can keep them from
+you. You’re not wanted here any more than you were at the dance the
+other evening.”
+
+McWilliams nodded. “That’s right. Y’u better roll your trail, seh; and
+if y’u take my advice, you’ll throw gravel lively. I seen two of the
+boys cutting acrost that pasture five minutes ago. They looked as if
+they might be haided to cut y’u off, and I allow it may be their night
+to howl. Miss Messiter don’t want to be responsible for y’u getting
+lead poisoning.”
+
+“Indeed!” Their visitor looked politely interested. “This solicitude
+for me is very touching. I observe that both of you are carefully
+blocking me from the bunkhouse in order to prevent another
+practice-shot. If I can’t persuade you to join me in a ride, Miss
+Messiter, I reckon I’ll go while I’m still unpunctured.” He bowed, and
+gathered the reins for departure.
+
+“One moment! Mr. McWilliams and I are going with you,” the girl
+announced.
+
+“Changed your mind? Think you’ll take a little _pasear_, after all?”
+
+“I don’t want to be responsible for your killing. We’ll see you safe
+off the place,” she answered curtly.
+
+The foreman fell in on one side of Bannister, his mistress on the
+other. They rode in close formation, to lessen the chance of an
+ambuscade. Bannister alone chatted at his debonair ease, ignoring the
+responsibility they felt for his safety.
+
+“I got my ride, after all,” he presently chuckled. “To be sure, I
+wasn’t expecting Mr. McWilliams to chaperon us. But that’s an added
+pleasure.”
+
+“Would it be an added pleasure to get bumped off to kingdom come?”
+drawled the foreman, giving a reluctant admiration to his aplomb.
+
+“Thinking of those willing boys of yours again, are you?” laughed
+Bannister. “They’re ce’tainly a heap prevalent with their hardware, but
+their hunting don’t seem to bring home any meat.”
+
+“By the way, how _is_ your ankle, Mr. Bannister? I forgot to ask.” This
+shot from the young woman.
+
+He enjoyed it with internal mirth. “They did happen on the target that
+time,” he admitted. “Oh, it’s getting along fine, but I aim to do most
+of my walking on horseback for a while.”
+
+They swept past the first dangerous grove of cottonwoods in safety, and
+rounded the boundary fence corner.
+
+“They’re in that bunch of pines over there,” said the foreman, after a
+single sweep of his eyes in that direction.
+
+“Yes, I see they are. You oughtn’t to let your boys wear red bandannas
+when they go gunning, Miss Messiter. It’s an awful careless habit.”
+
+Helen herself could see no sign of life in the group of pines, but she
+knew their keen, trained eyes had found what hers could not. Riding
+with one or another of her cowboys, she had often noticed how
+infallibly they could read the country for miles around. A scattered
+patch on a distant hillside, though it might be a half-hour’s ride from
+them, told them a great deal more than seemed possible. To her the dark
+spots sifted on that slope meant scrub underbrush, if there was any
+meaning at all in them. But her riders could tell not only whether they
+were alive, but could differentiate between sheep and cattle. Indeed,
+McWilliams could nearly always tell whether they were _her_ cattle or
+not. He was unable to explain to her how he did it. By a sort of
+instinct, she supposed.
+
+The pines were negotiated in safety, and on the part of the men with a
+carelessness she could not understand. For after they had passed there
+was a spot between her shoulder-blades that seemed to tingle in
+expectation of a possible bullet boring its way through. But she would
+have died rather than let them know how she felt.
+
+Perhaps Bannister understood, however, for he remarked casually: “I
+wouldn’t be ambling past so leisurely if I was riding alone. It makes a
+heap of difference who your company is, too. Those punchers wouldn’t
+take a chance at me now for a million dollars.”
+
+“No, they’re some haidstrong, but they ain’t plumb locoed,” agreed Mac.
+
+Fifteen minutes later Helen drew up at the line corner. “We’ll part
+company here, Mr. Bannister. I don’t think there is any more danger
+from my men.”
+
+“Before we part there is something I want to say. I hold that a man has
+as much right to run sheep on these hills as cows. It’s government
+land, and neither one of us owns it. It’s bound to be a case of the
+survival of the fittest. If sheep are hardier and more adapted to the
+country, then cows have got to _vamos_. That’s nature, as it looks to
+me. The buffalo and the antelope have gone, and I guess cows have got
+to take their turn.”
+
+Her scornful eyes burned him. “You came to tell me that, did you? Well,
+I don’t believe a word of it. I’ll not yield my rights without a fight.
+You may depend on that.”
+
+“Here, too,” nodded her foreman. “I’m with my boss clear down the line.
+And as soon as she lets me turn loose my six-gun, you’ll hear it pop,
+seh.”
+
+“I have not a doubt of it, Mr. McWilliams,” returned the sheepman
+blithely. “In the meantime I was going to say that though most of my
+interests are in sheep instead of cattle—”
+
+“I thought most of your interests were in other people’s property,”
+interrupted the young woman.
+
+“It goes into sheep ultimately,” he smiled. “Now, what I am trying to
+get at is this: I’m in debt to you a heap, Miss Messiter, and since I’m
+not all yellow cur, I intend to play fair with you. I have ordered my
+sheep back across the deadline. You can have this range to yourself for
+your cattle. The fight’s off so far as we personally are concerned.”
+
+A hint of deeper color touched her cheeks. Her manner had been cavalier
+at best; for the most part frankly hostile; and all the time the man
+was on an errand of good-will. Certainly he had scored at her expense,
+and she was ashamed of herself.
+
+“Y’u mean that you’re going to respect the deadline? asked Mac in
+surprise.
+
+“I didn’t say quite that,” explained the sheepman. “What I said was
+that I meant to keep on my side of it so far as the Lazy D cattle are
+concerned. I’ll let your range alone.”
+
+“But y’u mean to cross it down below where the Bar Double-E cows run?”
+
+Bannister’s gay smile touched the sardonic face. “Do you invite the
+public to examine your hand when you sit into a game of poker, Mr.
+McWilliams?”
+
+“You’re dead right. It’s none of my business what y’u do so long as y’u
+keep off our range,” admitted the foreman. “And next time the
+conversation happens on Mr. Bannister, I’ll put in my little say-so
+that he ain’t all black.”
+
+“That’s very good of you, sir,” was the other’s ironical retort.
+
+The girl’s gauntleted hand offered itself impulsively. “We can’t be
+friends under existing circumstances, Mr. Bannister. But that does not
+alter the fact that I owe you an apology. You came as a peace envoy,
+and one of my men shot at you. Of course, he did not understand the
+reason why you came, but that does not matter. I did not know your
+reason myself, and I know I have been very inhospitable.”
+
+“Are you shaking hands with Ned Bannister the sheepman or Ned Bannister
+the outlaw?” asked the owner of that name, with a queer little smile
+that seemed to mock himself.
+
+“With Ned Bannister the gentleman. If there is another side to him I
+don’t know it personally.”
+
+He flushed underneath the tan, but very plainly with pleasure. “Your
+opinions are right contrary to Hoyle, ma’am. Aren’t you aware that a
+sheepman is the lowest thing that walks? Ask Mr. McWilliams.”
+
+“I have known stockmen of that opinion, but—”
+
+The foreman’s sentence was never finished. From a clump of bushes a
+hundred yards away came the crack of a rifle. A bullet sang past,
+cutting a line that left on one side of it Bannister, on the other Miss
+Messiter and her foreman. Instantly the two men slid from their horses
+on the farther side, dragged down the young woman behind the cover of
+the broncos, and arranged the three ponies so as to give her the
+greatest protection available. Somehow the weapons that garnished them
+had leaped to their hands before their feet touched the ground.
+
+“That coyote isn’t one of our men. I’ll back that opinion high,” said
+McWilliams promptly.
+
+“Who is he?” the girl whispered.
+
+“That’s what we’re going to find out pretty soon,” returned Bannister
+grimly. “Chances are it’s me he is trying to gather. Now, I’m going to
+make a break for that cottonwood. When I go, you better run up a white
+handkerchief and move back from the firing-line. Turn Buck loose when
+you leave. He’ll stay around and come when I whistle.”
+
+He made a run for it, zigzagging through the sage-brush so swiftly as
+to offer the least certain mark possible for a sharpshooter. Yet twice
+the rifle spoke before he reached the cottonwood.
+
+Meanwhile Mac had fastened the handkerchief of his mistress on the end
+of a switch he had picked up and was edging out of range. His tense,
+narrowed gaze never left the bush-clump from which the shots were being
+pumped, and he was careful during their retreat to remain on the danger
+side of the road, in order to cover Helen.
+
+“I guess Bannister’s right. He don’t want us, whoever he is.”
+
+And even as he murmured it, the wind of a bullet lifted his hat from
+his head. He picked it up and examined it. The course of the bullet was
+marked by a hole in the wide brim, and two more in the side and crown.
+
+“He ce’tainly ventilated it proper. I reckon, ma’am, we’ll make a run
+for it. Lie low on the pinto’s neck, with your haid on the off side.
+That’s right. Let him out.”
+
+A mile and a half farther up the road Mac reined in, and made the
+Indian peace-sign. Two dejected figures came over the hill and resolved
+themselves into punchers of the Lazy D. Each of them trailed a rifle by
+his side.
+
+“You’re a fine pair of ring-tailed snorters, ain’t y’u?” jeered the
+foreman. “Got to get gay and go projectin’ round on the shoot after y’u
+got your orders to stay hitched. Anything to say for yo’selves?”
+
+If they had it was said very silently.
+
+“Now, Miss Messiter is going to pass it up this time, but from now on
+y’u don’t go off on any private massacrees while y’u punch at the Lazy
+D. Git that? This hyer is the last call for supper in the dining-cah.
+If y’u miss it, y’u’ll feed at some other chuckhouse.” Suddenly the
+drawl of his sarcasm vanished. His voice carried the ring of peremptory
+command. “Jim, y’u go back to the ranch with Miss Messiter, _and keep
+your eyes open_. Missou, I need y’u. We’re going back. I reckon y’u
+better hang on to the stirrup, for we got to travel some. _Adios,
+señorita!_”
+
+He was off at a slow lope on the road he had just come, the other man
+running beside the horse. Presently he stopped, as if the arrangement
+were not satisfactory; and the second man swung behind him on the pony.
+Later, when she turned in her saddle, she saw that they had left the
+road and were cutting across the plain, as if to take the sharpshooter
+in the rear.
+
+Her troubled thoughts stayed with her even after she had reached the
+ranch. She was nervously excited, keyed up to a high pitch; for she
+knew that out on the desert, within a mile or two of her, men were
+stalking each other with life or death in the balance as the price of
+vigilance, skill and an unflawed steel nerve. While she herself had
+been in danger, she had been mistress of her fear. But now she could do
+nothing but wait, after ordering out such reinforcements as she could
+recruit without delay; and the inaction told upon her swift, impulsive
+temperament. Once, twice, the wind brought to her a faint sound.
+
+She had been pacing the porch, but she stopped, white as a sheet.
+Behind those faint explosions might lie a sinister tragedy. Her mind
+projected itself into a score of imaginary possibilities. She listened,
+breathless in her tensity, but no further echo of that battlefield
+reached her. The sun still shone warmly on brown Wyoming. She looked
+down into a rolling plain that blurred in the distance from knobs and
+flat spaces into a single stretch that included a thousand rises and
+depressions. That roll of country teemed with life, but the steady,
+inexorable sun beat down on what seemed a shining, primeval waste of
+space. Yet somewhere in that space the tragedy was being
+determined—unless it had been already enacted.
+
+She wanted to scream. The very stillness mocked her. So, too, did the
+clicking windmill, with its monotonous regularity. Her pony still stood
+saddled in the yard. She knew that her place was at home, and she
+fought down a dozen times the tremendous impulse to mount and fly to
+the field of combat.
+
+She looked at her watch. How slowly the minutes dragged! It could not
+be only five minutes since she had looked last time. Again she fell to
+pacing the long west porch, and interrupted herself a dozen times to
+stop and listen.
+
+“I can bear it no longer,” she told herself at last, and in another
+moment was in the saddle plying her pinto with the quirt.
+
+But before she reached the first cottonwoods she saw them coming. Her
+glasses swept the distant group, and with a shiver she made out the
+dreadful truth. They were coming slowly, carrying something between
+them. The girl did not need to be told that the object they were
+bringing home was their dead or wounded.
+
+A figure on horseback detached itself from the huddle of men and
+galloped towards her. He was coming to break the news. But who was the
+victim? Bannister or McWilliams she felt sure, by reason of the sinking
+heart in her; and then it came home that she would be hard hit if it
+were either.
+
+The approaching rider began to take distinct form through her glasses.
+As he pounded forward she recognized him. It was the man nicknamed
+Denver. The wind was blowing strongly from her to him, and while he was
+still a hundred yards away she hurled her question.
+
+His answer was lost in the wind sweep, but one word of it she caught.
+That word was “Mac.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+THE MAN FROM THE SHOSHONE FASTNESSES
+
+
+Though the sharpshooter’s rifle cracked twice during his run for the
+cottonwood, the sheepman reached the tree in safety. He could dodge
+through the brush as elusively as any man in Wyoming. It was a trick he
+had learned on the whitewashed football gridiron. For in his buried
+past this man had been the noted half-back of a famous college, and one
+of his specialties had been running the ball back after a catch through
+a broken field of opponents. The lesson that experience had then
+thumped into him had since saved his life on more than one occasion.
+
+Having reached the tree, Bannister took immediate advantage of the lie
+of the ground to snake forward unobserved for another hundred feet.
+There was a dip from the foot of the tree, down which he rolled into
+the sage below. He wormed his way through the thick scrub brush to the
+edge of a dry creek, into the bed of which he slid. Then swiftly, his
+body bent beneath the level of the bank, he ran forward in the sand. He
+moved noiselessly, eyes and ears alert to aid him, and climbed the bank
+at a point where a live oak grew.
+
+Warily he peeped out from behind its trunk and swept the plain for his
+foe. Nothing was to be seen of him. Slowly and patiently his eyes again
+went over the semi-circle before him, for where death may lurk behind
+every foot of vegetation, every bump or hillock, the plainsman leaves
+as little as may be to chance. No faintest movement could escape the
+sheepman’s eyes, no least stir fail to apprise his ears. Yet for many
+minutes he waited in vain, and the delay told him that he had to do
+with a trained hunter rather than a mere reckless cow-puncher. For
+somewhere in the rough country before him his enemy lay motionless,
+every faculty alive to the least hint of his presence.
+
+It was the whirring flight of a startled dove that told Bannister the
+whereabouts of his foe. Two hundred yards from him the bird rose, and
+the direction it took showed that the man must have been trailing
+forward from the opposite quarter. The sheepman slipped back into the
+dry creek bed, retraced his steps for about a stone-throw, and again
+crawled up the bank.
+
+For a long time he lay face down in the grass, his gaze riveted to the
+spot where he knew his opponent to be hidden. A faint rustle not born
+of the wind stirred the sage. Still Bannister waited. A less
+experienced plainsman would have blazed away and exposed his own
+position. But not this young man with the steel-wire nerves. Silent as
+the coming of dusk, no breaking twig or displaced brush betrayed his
+self-contained presence.
+
+Something in the clump he watched wriggled forward and showed
+indistinctly through an opening in the underscrub. He whipped his rifle
+into position and fired twice. The huddled brown mass lurched forward
+and disappeared.
+
+“Wonder if I got him? Seems to me I couldn’t have missed clean,”
+thought Bannister.
+
+Silence as before, vast and unbroken.
+
+A scramble of running feet tearing a path through the brush, a
+crouching body showing darkly for an eyeflash, and then the pounding of
+a horse’s retreating feet.
+
+Bannister leaped up, ran lightly across the intervening space, and with
+his repeater took a potshot at the galloping horseman.
+
+“Missed!” he muttered, and at once gave a sharp whistle that brought
+his pony to him on the trot. He vaulted to the saddle and gave chase.
+It was rough going, but nothing in reason can stop a cow-pony. As sure
+footed as a mountain goat, as good a climber almost as a cat, Buck
+followed the flying horseman over perilous rock rims and across
+deep-cut creek beds. Pantherlike he climbed up the steep creek sides
+without hesitation, for the round-up had taught him never to falter at
+stiff going so long as his rider put him at it.
+
+It was while he was clambering out of the sheer sides of a wash that
+Bannister made a discovery. The man he pursued was wounded. Something
+in the manner of the fellow’s riding had suggested this to him, but a
+drop of blood splashed on a stone that happened to meet his eye made
+the surmise a certainty.
+
+He was gaining now—not fast, almost imperceptibly, but none the less
+surely. He could see the man looking over his shoulder, once, twice,
+and then again, with that hurried, fearful glance that measures the
+approach of retribution. Barring accidents, the man was his.
+
+But the unforeseen happened. Buck stepped in the hole of a prairie dog
+and went down. Over his head flew the rider like a stone from a
+catapult.
+
+How long Ned Bannister lay unconscious he never knew. But when he came
+to himself it was none too soon. He sat up dizzily and passed his hand
+over his head. Something had happened.
+
+What was it? Oh, yes, he had been thrown from his horse. A wave of
+recollection passed over him, and his mind was clear once more.
+Presently he got to his feet and moved rather uncertainly toward Buck,
+for the horse was grazing quietly a few yards from him.
+
+But half way to the pony he stopped. Voices, approaching by way of the
+bed of Dry Creek, drifted to him.
+
+“He must ’a’ turned and gone back. Mebbe he guessed we was there.”
+
+And a voice that Bannister knew, one that had a strangely penetrant,
+cruel ring of power through the drawl, made answer: “Judd said before
+he fainted he was sure the man was Ned Bannister. I’d ce’tainly like to
+meet up with my beloved cousin right now and even up a few old scores.
+By God, I’d make him sick before I finished with him!”
+
+“I’ll bet y’u would, Cap,” returned the other, admiringly. “Think we’d
+better deploy here and beat up the scenery a few as we go?”
+
+There are times when the mind works like lightning, flashes its
+messages on the wings of an electric current. For Bannister this was
+one of them. The whole situation lighted for him plainly as if it had
+been explained for an hour.
+
+His cousin had been out with a band of his cut-throats on some errand,
+and while returning to the fastnesses of the Shoshone Mountains had
+stopped to noon at a cow spring three or four miles from the Lazy D.
+Judd Morgan, whom he knew to be a lieutenant of the notorious bandit,
+had ridden toward the ranch in the hope of getting an opportunity to
+vent his anger against its mistress or some of her men. While pursuing
+the renegade Bannister had stumbled into a hornet’s nest, and was in
+imminent danger of being stung to death. Even now the last speaker was
+scrambling up the bank toward him.
+
+The sheepman had to choose between leaving his rifle and immediate
+flight. The latter was such a forlorn hope that he gave up Buck for the
+moment, and ran back to the place where his repeating Winchester had
+fallen. Without stopping he scooped the rifle up as he passed. In his
+day he had been a famous sprinter, and he scudded now for dear life. It
+was no longer a question of secrecy. The sound of men breaking their
+hurried way through the heavy brush of the creek bank came crisply to
+him. A voice behind shouted a warning, and from not a hundred yards in
+front of him came an answering shout. Hemmed in from the fore and the
+rear, he swung off at a right angle. An open stretch lay before him,
+but he had to take his desperate chance without cover. Anything was
+better than to be trapped like a wild beast driven by the beaters to
+the guns.
+
+Across the bare, brown mesa he plunged; and before he had taken a dozen
+steps the first rifle had located its prey and was sniping at him. He
+had perhaps a hundred yards to cover ere the mesa fell away into a
+hollow, where he might find temporary protection in the scrub pines.
+And now a second marksman joined himself to the first. But he was going
+fast, already had covered half the distance, and it is no easy thing to
+bring down a live, dodging target.
+
+Again the first gun spoke, and scored another miss, whereat a mocking,
+devilish laugh rang out in the sunshine.
+
+“Y’u boys splash a heap of useless lead around the horizon. I reckon
+Cousin Ned’s my meat. Y’u see, I get him in the flapper without
+spoiling him complete.” And at the word he flung the rifle to his
+shoulder and fired with no apparent aim.
+
+The running man doubled up like a cottontail, but found his feet again
+in an instant, though one arm hung limp by his side. He was within a
+dozen feet of the hilldrop and momentary safety.
+
+“Shall I take him, Cap?” cried one of the men.
+
+“No; he’s mine.” The rifle smoked once more and again the runner went
+down. But this time he plunged headlong down the slope and out of
+sight.
+
+The outlaw chief turned on his heel. “I reckon he’ll not run any more
+to-day. Bring him into camp and we’ll take him along with us,” he said
+carelessly, and walked away to his horse in the creek bed.
+
+Two of the men started forward, but they stopped half way, as if rooted
+to the ground. For a galloping horseman suddenly drew up at the very
+point for which they were starting. He leaped to the ground and warned
+them back with his rifle. While he covered them a second man rode up
+and lifted Bannister to his saddle.
+
+“Ready, Mac,” he gave the word, and both horses disappeared with their
+riders over the brow of the hill. When the surprised desperadoes
+recovered themselves and reached that point the rescuers had
+disappeared in the heavy brush.
+
+The alarm was at once given, and their captain, cursing them in a
+raucous bellow for their blunder, ordered immediate pursuit. It was
+some little time before the trail of the fugitives was picked up, but
+once discovered they were over hauled rapidly.
+
+“We’re not going to get out without swapping lead,” McWilliams admitted
+anxiously. “I wisht y’u wasn’t hampered with that load, but I reckon
+I’ll have to try to stand them off alone.”
+
+“We bucked into a slice of luck when I opened on his bronc mavericking
+around alone. Hadn’t been for that we could never have made it,” said
+Missou, who never crossed a bridge until he came to it.
+
+“We haven’t made it yet, old hoss, not by a long mile, and two more on
+top o’ that. They’re beginning to pump lead already. Huh! Got to drap
+your pills closer’n that ’fore y’u worry me.”
+
+“I believe he’s daid, anyway,” said Missou presently, peering down into
+the white face of the unconscious man.
+
+“Got to hang onto the remains, anyhow, for Miss Helen. Those coyotes
+are too much of the wolf breed to leave him with them.”
+
+“Looks like they’re gittin’ the aim some better,” equably remarked the
+other a minute later, when a spurt of sand flew up in front of him.
+
+“They’re ce’tainly crowding us. I expaict I better send them a
+‘How-de-do?’ so as to discourage them a few.” He took as careful aim as
+he could on the galloping horse, but his bullet went wide.
+
+“They’re gaining like sixty. It’s my offhand opinion we better stop at
+that bunch of trees and argue some with them. No use buck-jumpin’ along
+to burn the wind while they drill streaks of light through us.”
+
+“All right. Take the trees. Y’u’ll be able to get into the game some
+then.”
+
+They debouched from the road to the little grove and slipped from their
+horses.
+
+“Deader’n hell,” murmured Missou, as he lifted the limp body from his
+horse. “But I guess we’ll pack what’s left back to the little lady at
+the Lazy D.”
+
+The leader of the pursuers halted his men just out of range and came
+forward alone, holding his right hand up in the usual signal of peace.
+In appearance he was not unlike Ned Bannister. There was the same long,
+slim, tiger build, with the flowing muscles rippling easily beneath the
+loose shirt; the same effect of power and dominance, the same clean,
+springy stride. The pose of the head, too, even the sweep of salient
+jaw, bore a marked resemblance. But similarity ceased at the
+expression. For instead of frankness there lurked here that hint of the
+devil of strong passion uncontrolled. He was the victim of his own
+moods, and in the space of an hour one might, perhaps, read in that
+face cold cunning, cruel malignity, leering ribaldry, as well as the
+hard-bitten virtues of unflinching courage and implacable purpose.
+
+“I reckon you’re near enough,” suggested Mac, when the man had
+approached to within a hundred feet of the tree clump.
+
+“_Y’u’re_ drawing the dead-line,” the other acknowledged, indolently.
+“It won’t take ten words to tell y’u what I want and mean to have. I’m
+giving y’u two minutes to hand me over the body of Ned Bannister. If
+y’u don’t see it that way I’ll come and make a lead mine of your whole
+outfit.”
+
+“Y’u can’t come too quick, seh. We’re here a-shootin’, and don’t y’u
+forget it,” was McWilliams’s prompt answer.
+
+The sinister face of the man from the Shoshones darkened. “Y’u’ve
+signed your own death warrants,” he let out through set teeth, and at
+the word swung on his heel.
+
+“The ball’s about to open. Pardners for a waltz. Have a dust-cutter,
+Mac, before she grows warm.”
+
+The puncher handed over his flask, and the other held it before his eye
+and appraised the contents in approved fashion. “Don’t mind if I do.
+Here’s how!”
+
+“How!” echoed Missou, in turn, and tipped up the bottle till the liquor
+gurgled down his baked throat.
+
+“He’s fanning out his men so as to, get us both at the front and back
+door. Lucky there ain’t but four of them.”
+
+“I guess we better lie back to back,” proposed Missou. “If our luck’s
+good I reckon they’re going to have a gay time rushing this fort.”
+
+A few desultory shots had already been dropped among the cottonwoods,
+and returned by the defendants when Missou let out a yell of triumph.
+
+“Glory Hallelujah! Here comes the boys splittin’ down the road
+hell-for-leather. That lopsided, ring-tailed snorter of a hawss-thief
+is gathering his wolves for a hike back to the tall timber. Feed me a
+cigareet, Mac. I plumb want to celebrate.”
+
+It was as the cow-puncher had said. Down the road a cloud of dust was
+sweeping toward them, in the centre of which they made out three
+hardriding cowboys from the ranch. Farther back, in the distance, was
+another dust whirl. The outlaw chief’s hard, vigilant gaze swept over
+the reinforcements! and decided instantly that the game had gone
+against him for the present. He whistled shrilly twice, and began a
+slow retreat toward the hills. The miscreants flung a few defiant shots
+at the advancing cowmen, and disappeared, swallowed up in the earth
+swells.
+
+The homeward march was a slow one, for Bannister had begun to show
+signs of consciousness and it was necessary to carry him with extreme
+care. While they were still a mile from the ranch house the pinto and
+its rider could be seen loping toward them.
+
+“Ride forward, Denver, and tell Miss Helen we’re coming. Better have
+her get everything fixed to doctor him soon as we get there. Give him
+the best show in the world, and he’ll still be sailing awful close to
+the divide. I’ll bet a hundred plunks he’ll cash in, anyway.”
+
+“_Done!_”
+
+The voice came faintly from the improvised litter. Mac turned with a
+start, for he had not known that Bannister was awake to his
+surroundings. The man appeared the picture of helplessness, all the
+lusty power and vigor stricken out of him; but his indomitable spirit
+still triumphed over the physical collapse, for as the foreman looked a
+faint smile touched the ashen lips. It seemed to say: “Still in the
+ring, old man.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+IN THE LAZY D HOSPITAL
+
+
+Helen’s first swift glance showed that the wounded man was Bannister.
+She turned in crisp command to her foreman.
+
+“Have him taken to my room and put to bed there. We have no time to
+prepare another. And send one of the boys on your best horse for a
+doctor.”
+
+They carried the limp figure in with rough tenderness and laid him in
+the bed. McWilliams unbuckled the belt and drew off the chaps; then,
+with the help of Denver, undressed the wounded man and covered him with
+quilts. So Helen found him when she came in to attend his wounds,
+bringing with her such things as she needed for her task. Mrs. Winslow,
+the housekeeper, assisted her, and the foreman stayed to help, but it
+was on the mistress of the ranch that the responsibility of saving him
+fell. Missou was already galloping to Bear Creek for a doctor, but the
+girl knew that the battle must be fought and the issue decided before
+he could arrive.
+
+He had fallen again into insensibility and she rinsed and dressed his
+wounds, working with the quiet impersonal certainty of touch that did
+not betray the inner turmoil of her soul. But McWilliams, his eyes
+following her every motion and alert to anticipate her needs, saw that
+the color had washed from her face and that she was controlling herself
+only to meet the demands of the occasion.
+
+As she was finishing, the sheepman opened his eyes and looked at her.
+
+“You are not to speak or ask questions. You have been wounded and we
+are going to take care of you,” she ordered.
+
+“That’s right good of y’u. I ce’tainly feel mighty trifling.” His wide
+eyes traveled round till they fell on the foreman. “Y’u see I came back
+to help fill your hospital. Am I there now? Where am I?” His gaze
+returned to Helen with the sudden irritation of the irresponsible sick.
+
+“You are at the Lazy D, in my room. You are not to worry about
+anything. Everything’s all right.”
+
+He took her at her word and his eyes closed; but presently he began to
+mutter unconnected words and phrases. When his lids lifted again there
+was a wilder look in his eyes, and she knew that delirium was
+beginning. At intervals it lasted for long; indeed, until the doctor
+came next morning in the small hours. He talked of many things Helen
+Messiter did not understand, of incidents in his past life, some of
+them jerky with the excitement of a tense moment, others apparently
+snatches of talk with relatives. It was like the babbling of a child,
+irrelevant and yet often insistent. He would in one breath give orders
+connected with the lambing of his sheep, in the next break into
+football talk, calling out signals and imploring his men to hold them
+or to break through and get the ball. Once he broke into curses, but
+his very oaths seemed to come from a clean heart and missed the
+vulgarity they might have had. Again his talk rambled inconsequently
+over his youth, and he would urge himself or someone else of the same
+name to better life.
+
+“Ned, Ned, remember your mother,” he would beseech. “She asked me to
+look after you. Don’t go wrong.” Or else it would be, “Don’t disgrace
+the general, Ned. You’ll break his heart if you blacken the old name.”
+To this theme he recurred repeatedly, and she noticed that when he
+imagined himself in the East his language was correct and his
+intonation cultured, though still with a suggestion of a Southern
+softness.
+
+But when he spoke of her his speech lapsed into the familiar drawl of
+Cattleland. “I ain’t such a sweep as y’u think, girl. Some day I’ll
+sure tell y’u all about it, and how I have loved y’u ever since y’u
+scooped me up in your car. You’re the gamest little lady! To see y’u
+come a-sailin’ down after me, so steady and businesslike, not turning a
+hair when the bullets hummed—I sure do love y’u, Helen.” And then he
+fell upon her first name and called her by it a hundred times softly to
+himself.
+
+This happened when she was alone with him, just before the doctor came.
+She heard it with starry eyes and with a heart that flushed for joy a
+warmer color into her cheeks. Brushing back the short curls, she kissed
+his damp forehead. It was in the thick of the battle, before he had
+weathered that point where the issues of life and death pressed
+closely, and even in the midst of her great fears it brought her
+comfort. She was to think often of it later, and always the memory was
+to be music in her heart. Even when she denied her love for him,
+assured herself it was impossible she could care for so shameful a
+villain, even then it was a sweet torture to allow herself the luxury
+of recalling his broken delirious phrases. At the very worst he could
+not be as bad as they said; some instinct told her this was impossible.
+His fearless devil-may-care smile, his jaunty, gallant bearing, these
+pleaded against the evidence for him. And yet was it conceivable that a
+man of spirit, a gentleman by training at least, would let himself lie
+under the odium of such a charge if he were not guilty? Her tangled
+thoughts fought this profitless conflict for days. Nor could she
+dismiss it from her mind. Even after he began to mend she was still on
+the rack. For in some snatch of good talk, when the fine quality of the
+man seemed to glow in his face, poignant remembrance would stab her
+with recollection of the difference between what he was and what he
+seemed to be.
+
+One of the things that had been a continual surprise to Helen was the
+short time required by these deep-cheated and clean-blooded Westerners
+to recover from apparently serious wounds. It was scarce more than two
+weeks since Bannister had filled the bunkhouse with wounded men, and
+already two of them were back at work and the third almost fit for
+service. For perhaps three days the sheepman’s life hung in the
+balance, after which his splendid constitution and his outdoor life
+began to tell. The thermometer showed that the fever had slipped down a
+notch, and he was now sleeping wholesomely a good part of his time.
+Altogether, unless for some unseen contingency, the doctor prophesied
+that the sheepman was going to upset the probabilities and get well.
+
+“Which merely shows, ma’am, what is possible when you give a sound man
+twenty-four hours a day in our hills for a few years,” he added.
+“Thanks to your nursing he’s going to shave through by the narrowest
+margin possible. I told him to-day that he owed his life to you, Miss
+Messiter.”
+
+“I don’t think you need have told him that Doctor,” returned that young
+woman, not a little vexed at him, “especially since you have just been
+telling me that he owes it to Wyoming air and his own soundness of
+constitution.”
+
+When she returned to the sickroom to give her patient his medicine he
+wanted to tell her what the doctor had said, but she cut him off
+ruthlessly and told him not to talk.
+
+“Mayn’t I even say ‘Thank you?’” he wanted to know.
+
+“No; you talk far too much as it is.”
+
+He smiled “All right. Y’u sit there in that chair, where I can see y’u
+doing that fancywork and I’ll not say a word. It’ll keep, all right,
+what I want to say.”
+
+“I notice you keep talking,” she told him, dryly.
+
+“Yes, ma’am. Y’u had better have let me say what I wanted to, but I’ll
+be good now.”
+
+He fell asleep watching her, and when he awoke she was still sitting
+there, though it was beginning to grow dark. He spoke before she knew
+he was awake.
+
+“I’m going to get well, the doctor thinks.”
+
+“Yes, he told me,” she answered.
+
+“Did he tell y’u it was your nursing saved me?”
+
+“Please don’t think about that.”
+
+“What am I to think about? I owe y’u a heap, and it keeps piling up. I
+reckon y’u do it all because it’s your Christian duty?” he demanded.
+
+“It is my duty, isn’t it?”
+
+“I didn’t say it wasn’t, though I expaict Bighorn County will forget to
+give y’u a unanimous vote of thanks for doing it. I asked if y’u did it
+because it was your duty?”
+
+“The reason doesn’t matter so that I do it,” she answered, steadily.
+
+“Reasons matter some, too, though they ain’t as important as actions
+out in this country. Back in Boston they figure more, and since y’u
+used to go to school back there y’u hadn’t ought to throw down your
+professor of ethics.”
+
+“Don’t you think you have talked enough for the present?” she smiled,
+and added: “If I make you talk whenever I sit beside you I shall have
+to stay away.”
+
+“That’s where y’u’ve ce’tainly got the drop on me, ma’am. I’m a clam
+till y’u give the word.”
+
+Before a week he was able to sit up in a chair for an hour or two, and
+soon after could limp into the living room with the aid of a walking
+stick and his hostess. Under the tan he still wore an interesting
+pallor, but there could be no question that he was on the road to
+health.
+
+“A man doesn’t know what he’s missing until he gets shot up and is
+brought to the Lazy D hospital, so as to let Miss Messiter exercise her
+Christian duty on him,” he drawled, cheerfully, observing the sudden
+glow on her cheek brought by the reference to his unanswered question.
+
+He made the lounge in the big sunny window his headquarters. From it he
+could look out on some of the ranch activities when she was not with
+him, could watch the line riders as they passed to and fro and command
+a view of one of the corrals. There was always, too, the turquoise sky,
+out of which poured a flood of light on the roll of hilltops. Sometimes
+he read to himself, but he was still easily tired, and preferred
+usually to rest. More often she read aloud to him while he lay back
+with his leveled eyes gravely on her till the gentle, cool abstraction
+she affected was disturbed and her perplexed lashes rose to reproach
+the intensity of his gaze.
+
+She was of those women who have the heavenborn faculty of making home
+of such fortuitous elements as are to their hands. Except her piano and
+such knickknacks as she had brought in a single trunk she had had to
+depend upon the resources of the establishment to which she had come,
+but it is wonderful how much can be done with some Navajo rugs, a
+bearskin, a few bits of Indian pottery and woven baskets and a
+judicious arrangement of scenic photographs. In a few days she would
+have her pictures from Kalamazoo, pending which her touch had
+transformed the big living room from a cheerless barn into a spot that
+was a comfort to the eye and heart. To the wounded man who lay there
+slowly renewing the blood he had lost the room was the apotheosis of
+home, less, perhaps, by reason of what it was in itself than because it
+was the setting for her presence—for her grave, sympathetic eyes, the
+sound of her clear voice, the light grace of her motion. He rejoiced in
+the delightful intimacy the circumstances made necessary. To hear
+snatches of joyous song and gay laughter even from a distance, to watch
+her as she came in and out on her daily tasks, to contest her opinions
+of books and life and see how eagerly she defended them; he wondered
+himself at the strength of the appeal these simple things made to him.
+Already he was dreading the day when he must mount his horse and ride
+back into the turbulent life from which she had for a time, snatched
+him.
+
+“I’ll hate to go back to sheepherding,” he told her one day at lunch,
+looking at her across a snow-white tablecloth upon which were a service
+of shining silver, fragile china teacups and plates stamped Limoges.
+
+He was at the moment buttering a delicious French roll and she was
+daintily pouring tea from an old family heirloom. The contrast between
+this and the dust and the grease of a midday meal at the end of a
+“chuck wagon” lent accent to his smiling lamentation.
+
+“A lot of sheepherding _you_ do,” she derided.
+
+“A shepherd has to look after his sheep, y’u know.”
+
+“You herd sheep just about as much as I punch cows.”
+
+“I have to herd my herders, anyhow, and that keeps me on the move.”
+
+“I’m glad there isn’t going to be any more trouble between you and the
+Lazy D. And that reminds me of another thing. I’ve often wonered who
+those men could have been that attacked you the day you were hurt.”
+
+She had asked the question almost carelessly, without any thought that
+this might be something he wished to conceal, but she recognized her
+mistake by the wariness that filmed his eyes instantly.
+
+“Room there for a right interesting guessing contest,” he replied.
+
+“_You_ wouldn’t need to guess,” she charged, on swift impulse.
+
+“Meaning that I know?”
+
+“You do know. You can’t deny that you now.”
+
+“Well, say that I know?”
+
+“Aren’t you going to tell?”
+
+He shook his head. “Not just yet. I’ve got private reasons for keeping
+it quiet a while.”
+
+“I’m sure they are creditable to you,” came her swift ironic retort.
+
+“Sure,” he agreed, whimsically. “I must live up to the professional
+standard. Honor among thieves, y’u know.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+MISS DARLING ARRIVES
+
+
+Miss Messiter clung to civilization enough, at least, to prefer that
+her chambermaid should be a woman rather than a Chinese. It did not
+suit her preconceived idea of the proper thing that Lee Ming should
+sweep floors, dust bric-a-brac, and make the beds. To see him
+slosh-sloshing around in his felt slippers made her homesick for
+Kalamazoo. There were other reasons why the proprieties would be better
+served by having another woman about the place; reasons that had to do
+with the chaperone system that even in the uncombed West make its
+claims upon unmarried young women of respectability. She had with her
+for the present fourteen-year-old Ida Henderson, but this arrangement
+was merely temporary.
+
+Wherefore on the morning after her arrival Helen had sent two letters
+back to “the States.” One of these had been to Mrs. Winslow, a widow of
+fifty-five, inviting her to come out on a business basis as housekeeper
+of the Lazy D. The buxom widow had loved Helen since she had been a
+toddling baby, and her reply was immediate and enthusiastic. Eight days
+later she had reported in person. The second letter bore the
+affectionate address of Nora Darling, Detroit, Michigan. This also in
+time bore fruit at the ranch in a manner worthy of special mention.
+
+It was the fourth day after Ned Bannister had been carried back to the
+Lazy D that Helen Messiter came out to the porch of the house with a
+letter in her hand. She found her foreman sitting on the steps waiting
+for her, but he got up as soon as he heard the fall of her light
+footsteps behind him.
+
+“You sent for me, ma’am?” he asked, hat in hand.
+
+“Yes; I want you to drive into Gimlet Butte and bring back a person
+whom you’ll find at the Elk House waiting for you. I had rather you
+would go yourself, because I know you’re reliable.”
+
+“Thank you, ma’am. How will I know him?”
+
+“It’s a woman—a spinster. She’s coming to help Mrs. Winslow. Inquire
+for Miss Darling. She isn’t used to jolting two days in a rig, but I
+know you will be careful of her.”
+
+“I’ll surely be as careful of the old lady as if she was my own
+mother.”
+
+The mistress of the ranch smothered a desire to laugh.
+
+“I’m sure you will. At her age she may need a good deal of care. Be
+certain you take rug enough.”
+
+“I’ll take care of her the best I know how. Expect she’s likely
+rheumatic, but I’ll wrop her up till she looks like a Cheyenne squaw
+when tourist is trying to get a free shoot at her with camera.”
+
+“Please do. I want her to get a good impression of Wyoming so that she
+will stay. I don’ know about the rheumatism, but you might ask her.”
+
+There were pinpoints of merriment behind the guileless innocence of her
+eyes, but they came to the surface only after the foreman had departed.
+
+McWilliams ordered a team of young horse hitched, and presently set out
+on his two day journey to Gimlet Butte. He reached that town in good
+season, left the team at a corral and walked back to the Elk House. The
+white dust of the plains was heavy on him, from the bandanna that
+loosely embraced the brown throat above the flannel shirt to the
+encrusted boots but through it the good humor of his tanned face smiled
+fraternally on a young woman he passes at the entrance to the hotel.
+Her gay smile met his cordially, and she was still in his mind while he
+ran his eye down the register in search of the name he wanted. There it
+was—Miss Nora Darling, Detroit, Michigan—in the neatest of little round
+letters, under date of the previous day’s arrivals.
+
+“Is Miss Darling in?” asked McWilliams of the half-grown son of the
+landlady who served in lieu of clerk and porter.
+
+“Nope! Went out a little while ago. Said to tell anybody to wait that
+asked for her.”
+
+Mac nodded, relieved to find that duty had postponed itself long enough
+for him to pursue the friendly smile that had not been wasted on him a
+few seconds before. He strolled out to the porch and decided at once
+that he needed a cigar more than anything else on earth. He was helped
+to a realization of his need by seeing the owner of the smile disappear
+in an adjoining drug store.
+
+She was beginning on a nut sundae when the puncher drifted in. She
+continued to devote even her eyes to its consumption, while the foreman
+opened a casual conversation with the drug clerk and lit his cigar.
+
+“How are things coming in Gimlet Butte?” he asked, by way of prolonging
+his stay rather than out of desire for information.
+
+Yes, she certainly had the longest, softest lashes he had ever seen,
+and the ripest of cherry lips, behind the smiling depths of which
+sparkled two rows of tiny pearls. He wished she would look at _him_ and
+smile again. There wasn’t any use trying to melt a sundae with it,
+anyhow.
+
+“Sure, it’s a good year on the range and the price of cows jumping,” he
+heard his sub-conscious self make answer to the patronizing inquiries
+of him of the “boiled” shirt.
+
+“Funny how pretty hair of that color was especially when there was so
+much of it. You might call it a sort of coppery gold where the little
+curls escaped in tendrils and ran wild. A fellow—”
+
+“Yes, I reckon most of the boys will drop around to the Fourth of July
+celebration. Got to cut loose once in a while, y’u know.”
+
+A shy glance shot him and set him a-tingle with a queer delight.
+Gracious, what pretty dark velvety lashes she had!
+
+She was rising already, and as she paid for the ice cream that innocent
+gaze smote him again with the brightest of Irish eyes conceivable. It
+lingered for just a ponderable sunlit moment or him. She had smiled
+once more.
+
+After a decent interval Mac pursued his _petite_ charmer to the hotel.
+She was seated on the porch reading a magazine, and was absorbedly
+unconscious of him when he passed. For a few awkward moments he hung
+around the office, then returned to the porch and took the chair most
+distant from her. He had sat there a long ten minutes before she let
+her hands and the magazine fall into her lap and demurely gave him his
+chance.
+
+“Can you tell me how far it is to the Lazy D ranch?”
+
+“Seventy-two miles as the crow flies, ma’am.”
+
+“Thank you.”
+
+The conversation threatened to die before it was well born. Desperately
+McWilliams tried to think of something to say to keep it alive without
+being too bold.
+
+“If y’u were thinking of traveling out that way I could give y’u a
+lift. I just came in to get another lady—an old lady that has just come
+to this country.”
+
+“Thank you, but I’m expecting a conveyance to meet me here. You didn’t
+happen to pass one on the way, I suppose?”
+
+“No, I didn’t. What ranch were y’u going to, ma’am?
+
+“Miss Messiter’s—the Lazy D.”
+
+A suspicion began to penetrate the foreman’s brain. “Y’u ain’t Miss
+Darling?”
+
+“What makes you so sure I’m not?” she asked, tilting her dimpled chin
+toward him aggressively.
+
+“Y’u’re too young,” he protested, helplessly.
+
+“I’m no younger than you are,” came her quick, indignant retort.
+
+Thus boldly accused of his youth, the foreman blushed. “I didn’t mean
+that. Miss Messiter said she was an old lady—”
+
+“You needn’t tell fibs about it. She couldn’t have said anything of the
+kind. Who are _you_, anyhow?” the girl demanded, with spirit.
+
+“I’m the foreman of the Lazy D, come to get Miss Darling. My name is
+McWilliams—Jim McWilliams.”
+
+“I don’t need your first name, Mr. McWilliams,” she assured him,
+sweetly. “And will you please tell me why you have kept me waiting here
+more than thirty hours?”
+
+“Miss Messiter didn’t get your letter in time. Y’u see, we don’t get
+mail every day at the Lazy D,” he explained, the while he hopefully
+wondered just when she was going to need his last name.
+
+“I don’t see why you don’t go after your mail every day at least,
+especially when Miss Messiter was expecting me. To leave me waiting
+here thirty hours—I’ll not stand it. When does the next train leave for
+Detroit?” she asked, imperiously.
+
+The situation seemed to call for diplomacy, and Jim McWilliams moved to
+a nearer chair. “I’m right sorry it happened, ma’am, and I’ll bet Miss
+Messiter is, too. Y’u see, we been awful busy one way and ’nother, and
+I plumb neglected to send one of the boys to the post-office.”
+
+“Why didn’t one of them walk over after supper?” she demanded,
+severely.
+
+He curbed the smile that was twitching at his facial muscles.
+
+“Well, o’ course it ain’t so far,—only forty-three miles—still—”
+
+“Forty-three miles to the post-office?”
+
+“Yes, ma’am, only forty-three. If you’ll excuse me this time—”
+
+“Is it really forty-three?”
+
+He saw that her sudden smile had brought out the dimples in the oval
+face and that her petulance had been swept away by his astounding
+information.
+
+“Forty-three, sure as shootin’, except twict a week when it comes to
+Slauson’s, and that’s only twenty miles,” he assured her. “Used to be
+seventy-two, but the Government got busy with its rural free delivery,
+and now we get it right at our doors.”
+
+“You must have big doors,” she laughed.
+
+“All out o’ doors,” he punned. “Y’u see, our house is under our hat,
+and like as not that’s twenty miles from the ranchhouse when night
+falls.”
+
+“Dear me!” She swept his graceful figure sarcastically. “And, of
+course, twenty miles from a brush, too.”
+
+He laughed with deep delight at her thrust, for the warm youth in him
+did not ask for pointed wit on the part of a young woman so attractive
+and with a manner so delightfully provoking.
+
+“I expaict I have gathered up some scenery on the journey. I’ll go
+brush it off and get ready for supper. I’d admire to sit beside y’u and
+pass the butter and the hash if y’u don’t object. Y’u see, I don’t
+often meet up with ladies, and I’d ought to improve my table manners
+when I get a chanct with one so much older than I am and o’ course so
+much more experienced.”
+
+“I see you don’t intend to pass any honey with the hash,” she flashed,
+with a glimpse of the pearls.
+
+“_Didn’t_ y’u say y’u was older than me? I believe I’ve plumb forgot
+how old y’u said y’u was, Miss Darling.”
+
+“Your memory’s such a sieve it wouldn’t be worth while telling you.
+After you’ve been to school a while longer maybe I’ll try you again.”
+
+“Some ladies like ’em young,” he suggested, amiably.
+
+“But full grown,” she amended.
+
+“Do y’u judge by my looks or my ways?” he inquired, anxiously.
+
+“By both.”
+
+“That’s right strange,” he mused aloud. “For judging by some of your
+ways you’re the spinster Miss Messiter was telling me about, but
+judging by your looks y’u’re only the prettiest and sassiest
+twenty-year-old in Wyoming.”
+
+And with this shot he fled, to see what transformation he could effect
+with the aid of a whiskbroom, a tin pan of alkali water and a roller
+towel.
+
+When she met him at the supper table her first question was, “Did Miss
+Messiter say I was an old maid?”
+
+“Sho! I wouldn’t let that trouble me if I was y’u. A woman ain’t any
+older than she looks. Your age don’t show to speak of.”
+
+“But did she?”
+
+“I reckon she laid a trap for me and I shoved my paw in. She wanted to
+give me a pleasant surprise.”
+
+“Oh!”
+
+“Don’t y’u grow anxious about being an old maid. There ain’t any in
+Wyoming to speak of. If y’u like I’ll tell the boys you’re worried and
+some of them will be Johnnie-on-the-Spot. They’re awful gallant,
+cowpunchers are.”
+
+“Some of them may be,” she differed. “If you want to know I’m just
+twenty-one.”
+
+He sawed industriously at his steak. “Y’u don’t say! Just old enough to
+vote—like this steer was before they massacreed him.”
+
+She gave him one look, and thereafter punished him with silence.
+
+They left Gimlet Butte early next morning and reached the Lazy D
+shortly after noon on the succeeding day. McWilliams understood
+perfectly that strenuous competition would inevitably ensue as soon as
+the Lazy D beheld the attraction he had brought into their midst. Nor
+did he need a phrenologist to tell him that Nora was a born flirt and
+that her shy slant glances were meant to penetrate tough hides to
+tender hearts. But this did not discourage him, and he set about making
+his individual impression while he had her all to himself. He wasn’t at
+all sure how deep this went, but he had the satisfaction of hearing his
+first name, the one she had told him she had no need of, fall
+tentatively from her pretty lips before the other boys caught a glimpse
+of her.
+
+Shortly after his arrival at the ranch Mac went to make his report to
+his mistress of some business matters connected with the trip.
+
+“I see you got back safely with the old lady,” she laughed when she
+caught sight of him.
+
+His look reproached her. “Y’u said a spinster.”
+
+“But it was you that insisted on the rheumatism. By the way, did you
+ask her about it?”
+
+“We didn’t get that far,” he parried.
+
+“Oh! How far did you get?” She perched herself on the porch railing and
+mocked him with her friendly eyes. Her heart was light within her and
+she was ready for anything in the way of fun, for the doctor had just
+pronounced her patient out of danger if he took proper care of himself.
+
+“About as fur as I got with y’u, ma’am,” he audaciously retorted.
+
+“We might disagree as to how far that is,” she flung back gayly with
+heightened color.
+
+“No, ma’am, I don’t think we would.”
+
+“But, gracious! You’re not a Mormon. You don’t want us both, do you?”
+she demanded, her eyes sparkling with the exhilaration of the tilt.
+
+“Could I get either one of y’u, do y’u reckon? That’s what’s worrying
+me.”
+
+“I see, and so you intend to keep us both on the string.”
+
+His joyous laughter echoed hers. “I expaict y’u would call that
+presumption or some other dictionary word, wouldn’t y’u?”
+
+“In anybody else perhaps, but surely not in Mr. McWilliams.”
+
+“I’m awful glad to be trotting in a class by myself.”
+
+“And you’ll let us know when you have made your mind up which of us it
+is to be?”
+
+“Well, mine ain’t the only mind that has to be made up,” he drawled.
+
+She took this up gleefully. “I can’t answer for Nora, but I’ll jump at
+the chance—if you decide to give it to me.”
+
+He laughed delightedly into the hat he was momentarily expecting to put
+on. “I’ll mill it over a spell and let y’u know, ma’am.”
+
+“Yes, think it over from all points of view. Of course she is prettier,
+but then I’m not afflicted with rheumatism and probably wouldn’t flirt
+as much afterward. I have a good temper, too, as a rule, but then so
+has Nora.”
+
+“Oh, she’s prettier, is she?” With boyish audacity he grinned at her.
+
+“What do you think?”
+
+He shook his head. “I’ll have to go to the foot of the class on that,
+ma’am. Give me an easier one.”
+
+“I’ll have to choose another subject then. What did you do about that
+bunch of Circle 66 cows you looked at on your way in?”
+
+They discussed business for a few minutes, after which she went back to
+her patient and he to his work.
+
+“Ain’t she a straight-up little gentleman for fair?” the foreman asked
+himself in rhetorical and exuberant question, slapping his hat against
+his leg as he strode toward the corral. “Think of her coming at me like
+she did, the blamed little thoroughbred. Y’u bet she knows me down to
+the ground and how sudden I got over any fool notions I might a-started
+to get in my cocoanut. But the way she came back at me, quick as
+lightning and then some, pretendin’ all that foolishness and knowin’
+all the time I’d savez the game.”
+
+Both McWilliams and his mistress had guessed right in their surmise as
+to Nora Darling’s popularity in the cow country. She made an immediate
+and pronounced hit. It was astonishing how many errands the men found
+to take them to “the house,” as they called the building where the
+mistress of the ranch dwelt. Bannister served for a time as an
+excellent excuse. Judging from the number of the inquiries which the
+men found it necessary to make as to his progress, Helen would have
+guessed him exceedingly popular with her riders. Having a sense of
+humor, she mentioned this to McWilliams one day.
+
+He laughed, and tried to turn it into a compliment to his mistress. But
+she would have none of it.
+
+“I know better, sir. They don’t come here to see me. Nora is the
+attraction, and I have sense enough to know it. My nose is quite out of
+joint,” she laughed.
+
+Mac looked with gay earnestness at the feature she had mentioned.
+“There’s a heap of difference in noses,” he murmured, apparently
+apropos of nothing.
+
+“That’s another way of telling me that Nora’s pug is the sweetest thing
+you ever saw,” she charged.
+
+“I ain’t half such a bad actor as some of the boys,” he deprecated.
+
+“Meaning in what way?”
+
+“The Nora Darling way.”
+
+He pronounced her name so much as if it were a caress that his mistress
+laughed, and he joined in it.
+
+“It’s your fickleness that is breaking my heart, though I knew I was
+lost as soon as I saw your beatific look on the day you got back with
+Nora. The first week I came none of you could do enough for me. Now
+it’s all Nora, darling.” She mimicked gayly his intonation.
+
+“Well, ma’am, it’s this way,” explained the foreman with a grin.
+“Y’u’re right pleasant and friendly, but the boys have got a savvy way
+down deep that y’u’d shuck that friendliness awful sudden if any of
+them dropped around with ‘Object, Matrimony’ in their manner.
+Consequence is, they’re loaded down to the ground with admiration of
+their boss, but they ain’t presumptuous enough to expaict any more. I
+had notions, mebbe, I’d cut more ice, me being not afflicted with
+bashfulness. My notions faded, ma’am, in about a week.”
+
+“Then Nora came?” she laughed.
+
+“No, ma’am, they had gone glimmering long before she arrived. I was
+just convalescent enough to need being cheered up when she drapped in.”
+
+“And are you cheered up yet?” his mistress asked.
+
+He took off his dusty hat and scratched his head. “I ain’t right
+certain, yet, ma’am. Soon as I know I’m consoled, I’ll be round with an
+invite to the wedding.”
+
+“That is, if you are.”
+
+“If I am—yes. Y’u can’t most always tell when they have eyes like
+hers.”
+
+“You’re quite an authority on the sex considering your years.”
+
+“Yes, ma’am.” He looked aggrieved, thinking himself a man grown. “How
+did y’u say Mr. Bannister was?”
+
+“Wait, and I’ll send Nora out to tell you,” she flashed, and
+disappeared in the house.
+
+Conversation at the bunkhouse and the chucktent sometimes circled
+around the young women at the house, but its personality rarely grew
+pronounced. References to Helen Messiter and the housemaid were usually
+by way of repartee at each other. For a change had come over the spirit
+of the Lazy D men, and, though a cheerful profanity still flowed freely
+when they were alone together, vulgarity was largely banished.
+
+The morning after his conversation with Miss Messiter, McWilliams was
+washing in the foreman’s room when the triangle beat the call for
+breakfast, and he heard the cook’s raucous “Come and get it.” There was
+the usual stampede for the tent, and a minute later Mac flung back the
+flap and entered. He took the seat at the head of the table, along the
+benches on both sides of which the punchers were plying busy knives and
+forks.
+
+“A stack of chips,” ordered the foreman; and the cook’s “Coming up” was
+scarcely more prompt than the plate of hot cakes he set before the
+young man.
+
+“Hen fruit, sunny side up,” shouted Reddy, who was further advanced in
+his meal.
+
+“Tame that fog-horn, son,” advised Wun Hop; but presently he slid three
+fried eggs from a frying-pan into the plate of the hungry one.
+
+“I want y’u boys to finish flankin’ that bunch of hill calves to-day,”
+said the foreman, emptying half a jug of syrup over his cakes.
+
+“Redtop, he ain’t got no appetite these days,” grinned Denver, as the
+gentleman mentioned cleaned up a second loaded plate of ham, eggs and
+fried potatoes. “I see him studying a Wind River Bible* yesterday.
+Curious how in the spring a young man’s fancy gits to wandering on
+house furnishing. Red, he was taking the catalogue alphabetically.
+Carpets was absorbin’ his attention, chairs on deck, and chandeliers in
+the hole, as we used to say when we was baseball kids.”
+
+[* A Wind River Bible in the Northwest ranch country is a catalogue of
+one of the big Chicago department stores that does a large shipping
+business in the West.]
+
+
+“Ain’t a word of truth in it,” indignantly denied the assailed, his
+unfinished nose and chin giving him a pathetic, whipped puppy look.
+“Sho! I was just looking up saddles. Can’t a fellow buy a new saddle
+without asking leave of Denver?”
+
+“Cyarpets used to begin with a C in my spelling-book, but saddles got
+off right foot fust with a S,” suggested Mac amiably.
+
+“He was ce’tainly trying to tree his saddle among the C’s. He was
+looking awful loving at a Turkish rug. Reckon he thought it was a
+saddle-blanket,” derided Denver cheerfully.
+
+“Huh! Y’u’re awful smart, Denver,” retaliated Reddy, his complexion
+matching his hair. “Y’u talk a heap with your mouth. Nobody believes a
+word of what y’u say.”
+
+Denver relaxed into a range song by way of repartee:
+
+“I want mighty bad to be married,
+ To have a garden and a home;
+I ce’tainly aim to git married,
+ And have a gyurl for my own.”
+
+
+“Aw! Y’u fresh guys make me tired. Y’u don’t devil me a bit, not a bit.
+Whyfor should I care what y’u say? I guess this outfit ain’t got no
+surcingle on me.” Nevertheless, he made a hurried end of his breakfast
+and flung out of the tent.
+
+“Y’u boys hadn’t ought to wound Reddy’s tender feelings, and him so
+bent on matrimony!” said Denver innocently. “Get a move on them fried
+spuds and sashay them down this way, if there’s any left when y’u fill
+your plate, Missou.”
+
+Nor was Reddy the only young man who had dreams those days at the Lazy
+D. Cupid must have had his hands full, for his darts punctured more
+than one honest plainsman’s heart. The reputation of the young women at
+the Lazy D seemed to travel on the wings of the wind, and from far and
+near Cattleland sent devotees to this shrine of youth and beauty. So
+casually the victims drifted in, always with a good business excuse
+warranted to endure raillery and sarcasm, that it was impossible to say
+they had come of set purpose to sun themselves in feminine smiles.
+
+As for Nora, it is not too much to say that she was having the time of
+her life. Detroit, Michigan, could offer no such field for her
+expansive charms as the Bighorn country, Wyoming. Here she might have
+her pick of a hundred, and every one of them picturesquely begirt with
+flannel shirt, knotted scarf at neck, an arsenal that bristled, and a
+sun-tan that could be achieved only in the outdoors of the Rockies.
+Certainly these knights of the saddle radiated a romance with which
+even her floorwalker “gentleman friend” could not compete.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+A SHEPHERD OF THE DESERT
+
+
+It had been Helen Messiter’s daily custom either to take a ride on her
+pony or a spin in her motor car, but since Bannister had been quartered
+at the Lazy D her time had been so fully occupied that she had given
+this up for the present. The arrival of Nora Darling, however, took so
+much work off her hands that she began to continue her rides and
+drives.
+
+Her patient was by this time so far recovered that he did not need her
+constant attendance and there were reasons why she decided it best to
+spend only a minimum of her time with him. These had to do with her
+increasing interest in the man and the need she felt to discourage it.
+It had come to a pretty pass, she told herself scornfully, when she
+found herself inventing excuses to take her into the room where this
+most picturesque of unhanged scamps was lying. Most good women are at
+heart puritans, and if Helen was too liberal to judge others narrowly
+she could be none the less rigid with herself. She might talk to him of
+her duty, but it was her habit to be frank in thought and she knew that
+something nearer than that abstraction had moved her efforts in his
+behalf. She had fought for his life because she loved him. She could
+deny it no longer. Nor was the shame with which she confessed it
+unmingled with pride. He was a man to compel love, one of the mood
+imperative, chain-armored in the outdoor virtues of strength and
+endurance and stark courage. Her abasement began only where his
+superlation ended. That a being so godlike in equipment should have
+been fashioned without a soul, and that she should have given her heart
+to him. This was the fount of her degradation.
+
+It was of these things she thought as she drove in the late afternoon
+toward those Antelope Peaks he had first pointed out to her. She swept
+past the scene of the battle and dipped down into the plains for a run
+to that western horizon behind the jagged mountain line of which the
+sun was radiantly setting in a splash of glorious colors. Lost in
+thought, space slipped under her wheels unnoticed. Not till her car
+refused the spur and slowed to a despondent halt did she observe that
+velvet night was falling over the land.
+
+She prowled round the machine after the fashion of the motorist,
+examining details that might be the cause of the trouble. She
+discovered soon enough with instant dismay that the gasolene tank was
+empty. Reddy, always unreliable, must have forgotten to fill it when
+she told him to.
+
+By the road she must be thirty miles from home if she were a step;
+across country as the crow flies, perhaps twenty. She was a young woman
+of resolution, and she wasted no time in tears or regrets. The XIX
+ranch, owned by a small “nester” named Henderson, could not be more
+than five or six miles to the southeast. If she struck across the hills
+she would be sure to run into one of the barblines. At the XIX she
+could get a horse and reach the Lazy D by midnight. Without any
+hesitation she struck out. It was unfortunate that she did not have on
+her heavy laced high boots, but she realized that she must take things
+as she found them. Things might have been a good deal worse, she
+reflected philosophically.
+
+And before long they were worse, for the increasing darkness blotted
+out the landmarks she was using as guides and she was lost among the
+hill waves that rolled one after another across the range. Still she
+did not give way, telling herself that it would be better after the
+moon was up. She could then tell north from south, and so have a line
+by which to travel. But when at length the stars came out, thousands
+upon thousands of them, and looked down on a land magically flooded
+with chill moonlight, the girl found that the transformation of Wyoming
+into this sense of silvery loveliness had toned the distant mountain
+line to an indefinite haze that made it impossible for her to
+distinguish one peak from another.
+
+She wandered for hours, hungry and tired and frightened, though this
+last she would not confess.
+
+“There’s nothing to be afraid of,” she told herself over and over.
+“Even if I have to stay out all night it will do me no harm. There’s no
+need to be a baby about it.”
+
+But try to evade it as she would, there was something in the loneliness
+of this limitless stretch of hilltop that got on her nerves. The very
+shadows cast by the moonshine seemed too fantastic for reality.
+Something eerie and unearthly hovered over it all, and before she knew
+it a sob choked up her throat.
+
+Vague fancies filtered through her mind, weird imaginings born of the
+night in a mind that had been swept from the moorings of reason. So
+that with no sensible surprise there came to her in that moonlit sea of
+desert the sound of a voice a clear sweet tenor swelling bravely in
+song with the very ecstacy of pathos.
+
+It was the prison song from “Il Trovatore,” and the desolation of its
+lifted appeal went to the heart like water to the roots of flowers.
+
+Ah! I have sigh’d to rest me.
+Deep in the quiet grave.
+
+
+The girl’s sob caught in her breast, stilled with the awe of that
+heavenly music. So for an instant she waited before it was borne in on
+her that the voice was a human one, and that the heaven from which it
+descended was the hilltop above her.
+
+A wild laugh, followed by an oath, cut the dying echoes of the song.
+She could hear the swish of a quirt falling again and again, and the
+sound of trampling hoofs thudding on the hard, sun-cracked ground.
+Startled, she sprang to her feet, and saw silhouetted against the
+skyline a horse and his rider fighting for mastery.
+
+The battle was superb while it lasted. The horse had been a famous
+outlaw, broken to the saddle by its owner out of the sheer passion for
+victory, but there were times when its savage strength rebelled at
+abject submission, and this was one of them. It swung itself skyward,
+and came down like a pile-driver, camel-backed, and without joints in
+the legs. Swiftly it rose again lunging forward and whirling in the
+air, then jarred down at an angle. The brute did its malevolent best, a
+fury incarnate. But the ride, was a match, and more than a match, for
+it. He sat the saddle like a Centaur, with the perfect: unconscious
+grace of a born master, swaying in his seat as need was, and spurring
+the horse to a blinder fury.
+
+Sudden as had been the start, no less sudden was the finish of the
+battle. The bronco pounded to a stiff-legged standstill, trembled for a
+long minute like an aspen, and sank to a tame surrender, despite the
+sharp spurs roweling its bloody sides.
+
+“Ah, my beauty. You’ve had enough, have you?” demanded the cruel,
+triumphant voice of the rider. “You would try that game, would you?
+I’ll teach you.”
+
+“Stop spurring that horse, you bully.”
+
+The man stopped, in sheer amazement at this apparition which had leaped
+out of the ground almost at his feet. His wary glance circled the hills
+to make sure she was alone.
+
+“Ce’tainly, ma’am. We’re sure delighted to meet up with you. Ain’t we,
+Two-step?”
+
+For himself, he spoke the simple truth. He lived in his sensations,
+spurring himself to fresh ones as he had but just now been spurring his
+horse to sate the greed of conquest in him. And this high-spirited,
+gallant creature—he could feel her vital courage in the very ring of
+her voice—offered a rare fillip to his jaded appetite. The dusky,
+long-lashed eyes which always give a woman an effect of beauty, the
+splendid fling of head, and the piquant, finely cut features, with
+their unconscious tale of Brahmin caste, the long lines of the supple
+body, willowy and yet plump as a partridge—they went to his head like
+strong wine. Here was an adventure from the gods—a stubborn will to
+bend, the pride of a haughty young beauty to trail in the dust, her
+untamed heart to break if need be. The lust of the battle was on him
+already. She was a woman to dream about,
+
+“Sweeter than the lids of Juno’s eyes,
+Or Cytherea’s breath,”
+
+
+he told himself exultantly as he slid from his horse and stood bowing
+before her.
+
+And he, for his part, was a taking enough picture of devil-may-care
+gallantry gone to seed. The touch of jaunty impudence in his humility,
+not less than the daring admiration of his handsome eyes and the easy,
+sinuous grace of his flexed muscles, labeled him what he was—a man bold
+and capable to do what he willed, and a villain every inch of him.
+
+Said she, after that first clash of stormy eyes with bold, admiring
+ones:
+
+“I am lost—from the Lazy D ranch.”
+
+“Why, no, you’re found,” he corrected, white teeth flashing in a smile.
+
+“My motor ran out of gasolene this afternoon. I’ve been”—there was a
+catch in her voice—“wandering ever since.”
+
+“You’re played out, of course, and y’u’ve had no supper,” he said, his
+quiet close gaze on her.
+
+“Yes, I’m played out and my nerve’s gone.” She laughed a little
+hysterically. “I expect I’m hungry and thirsty, too, though I hadn’t
+noticed it before.”
+
+He whirled to his saddle, and had the canteen thongs unloosed in a
+moment. While she drank he rummaged from his saddle-bags some
+sandwiches of jerky and a flask of whiskey. She ate the sandwiches, he
+the while watching her with amused sympathy in his swarthy countenance.
+
+“You ain’t half-bad at the chuck-wagon, Miss Messiter,” he told her.
+
+She stopped, the sandwich part way to her mouth. “I don’t remember your
+face. I’ve met so many people since I came to the Lazy D. Still, I
+think I should remember you.”
+
+He immediately relieved of duty her quasi apology. “You haven’t seen
+_my face_ before,” he laughed, and, though she puzzled over the double
+meaning that seemed to lurk behind his words and amuse him, she could
+not find the key to it.
+
+It was too dark to make out his features at all clearly, but she was
+sure she had seen him before or somebody that looked very much like
+him.
+
+“Life on the range ain’t just what y’u can call exciting,” he
+continued, “and when a young lady fresh from back East drops among us
+while sixguns are popping, breaks up a likely feud and mends right
+neatly all the ventilated feudists it’s a corollary to her fun that’s
+she is going to become famous.”
+
+What he said was true enough. The unsolicited notoriety her exploit had
+brought upon her had been its chief penalty. Garbled versions of it had
+appeared with fake pictures in New York and Chicago Sunday supplements,
+and all Cattleland had heard and discussed it. No matter into what
+unfrequented cañon she rode, some silent cowpuncher would look at her
+as they met with admiring eyes behind which she read a knowledge of the
+story. It was a lonely desolate country, full of the wide deep silences
+of utter emptiness, yet there could be no footfall but the whisper of
+it was bruited on the wings of the wind.
+
+“Do you know where the Lazy D ranch is from here?” she asked.
+
+He nodded.
+
+“Can you take me home?”
+
+“I surely can. But not to-night. You’re more tired than y’u know. We’ll
+camp here, and in the mo’ning we’ll hit the trail bright and early.”
+
+This did not suit her at all. “Is it far to the Lazy D?” she inquired
+anxiously.
+
+“Every inch of forty miles. There’s a creek not more than two hundred
+yards from here. We’ll stay there till morning,” he made answer in a
+matter of course voice, leading the way to the place he had mentioned.
+
+She followed, protesting. Yet though it was not in accord with her
+civilized sense of fitness, she knew that what he proposed was the
+common sense solution. She was tired and worn out, and she could see
+that his broncho had traveled far.
+
+Having reached the bank of the creek, he unsaddled, watered his horse
+and picketed it, and started a fire. Uneasily she watched him.
+
+“I don’t like to sleep out. Isn’t there a ranchhouse near?”
+
+“Y’u wouldn’t call it near by the time we had reached it. What’s to
+hinder your sleeping here? Isn’t this room airy enough? And don’t y’u
+like the system of lighting? ’Twas patented I forget how many million
+years ago. Y’u ain’t going to play parlor girl now after getting the
+reputation y’u’ve got for gameness, are y’u?”
+
+But he knew well enough that it was no silly schoolgirl fear she had,
+but some deep instinct in her that distrusted him and warned her to
+beware. So, lightly he took up the burden of the talk while he gathered
+cottonwood branches for the fire.
+
+“Now if I’d only thought to bring a load of lumber and some
+carpenters—and a chaperon,” he chided himself in burlesque, his bold
+eyes closely on the girl’s face to gloat on the color that flew to her
+cheeks at his suggestion.
+
+She hastened to disclaim lightly the feeling he had unmasked in her.
+“It is a pity, but it can’t be helped now. I suppose I am cross and
+don’t seem very grateful. I’m tired out and nervous, but I am sure that
+I’ll enjoy sleeping out. If I don’t I shall not be so ungenerous as to
+blame you.”
+
+He soon had a cup of steaming coffee ready for her, and the heat of it
+made a new woman of her. She sat in the warm fire glow, and began to
+feel stealing over her a delightful reaction of languor. She told
+herself severely it was ridiculous to have been so foolishly prim about
+the inevitable.
+
+“Since you know my name, isn’t it fair that I should know yours?” she
+smilingly asked, more amiably than she had yet spoken to him.
+
+“Well, since I have found the lamb that was lost, y’u may call me a
+shepherd of the desert.”
+
+“Then, Mr. Shepherd, I’m very glad to meet you. I don’t remember when I
+ever was more glad to meet a stranger.” And she added with a little
+laugh: “It’s a pity I’m too sleepy to do my duty by you in a social
+way.”
+
+“We’ll let that wait till to-morrow. Y’u’ll entertain me plenty then.
+I’ll make your bunk up right away.”
+
+She was presently lying with her feet to the fire, snugly rolled in his
+saddle blankets. But though her eyes were heavy, her brain was still
+too active to permit her to sleep immediately. The excitement of her
+adventure was too near, the emotions of the day too poignantly vivid,
+to lose their hold on her at once. For the first time in her life she
+lay lapped in the illimitable velvet night, countless unwinking stars
+lighting the blue-black dream in which she floated. The enchantment of
+the night’s loveliness swept through her sensitive pulses and thrilled
+her with the mystery of the great life of which she was an atom. Awe
+held her a willing captive.
+
+She thought of many things, of her past life and its incongruity with
+the present, of the man who lay wounded at the Lazy D, of this other
+wide-shouldered vagabond who was just now in the shadows beyond the
+firelight, pacing up and down with long, light even strides as he
+looked to his horse and fed the fire. She watched him make an end of
+the things he found to do and then take his place opposite her. Who and
+what was he, this fascinating scamp who one moment flooded the moonlit
+desert with inspired snatches from the opera sung in the voice of an
+angel, and the next lashed at his horse like a devil incarnate? How
+reconcile the outstanding inconsistencies in him? For his every
+inflection, every motion, proclaimed the strain of good blood gone
+wrong and trampled under foot of set, sardonic purpose, indicated him a
+man of culture in a hell of his own choosing. Lounging on his elbow in
+the flickering shadows, so carelessly insouciant in every picturesque
+inch of him, he seemed to radiate the melodrama of the untamed
+frontier, just as her guest of tarnished reputation now at the ranch
+seemed to breathe forth its romance.
+
+“Sleep well, little partner. Don’t be afraid; nothing can harm you,”
+this man had told her.
+
+Promptly she had answered, “I’m not afraid, thank you, in the least”;
+and after a moment had added, not to seem hostile, “Good night, big
+partner.”
+
+But despite her calm assurance she knew she did not feel so entirely
+safe as if it had been one of her own ranch boys on the other side of
+the fire, or even that other vagabond who had made so direct an appeal
+to her heart. If she were not afraid, at least she knew some vague hint
+of anxiety.
+
+She was still thinking of him when she fell asleep, and when she
+awakened the first sound that fell on her ears was his tuneful whistle.
+Indeed she had an indistinct memory of him in the night, wrapping the
+blankets closer about her when the chill air had half stirred her from
+her slumber. The day was still very young, but the abundant desert
+light dismissed sleep summarily. She shook and brushed the wrinkles out
+of her clothes and went down to the creek to wash her face with the
+inadequate facilities at hand. After redressing her hair she returned
+to the fire, upon which a coffee pot was already simmering.
+
+She came up noiselessly behind him, but his trained senses were
+apprised of her approach.
+
+“Good mo’ning! How did y’u find your bedroom?” he asked, without
+turning from the bacon he was broiling on the end of a stick.
+
+“Quite up to the specifications. With all Wyoming for a floor and the
+sky for a ceiling, I never had a room I liked better. But have you eyes
+in the back of your head?”
+
+He laughed grimly. “I have to be all eyes and ears in my business.”
+
+“Is your business of a nature so sensitive?”
+
+“As much so as stocks on Wall Street. And we haven’t any ticker to warn
+us to get under cover. Do you take cream in your coffee, Miss
+Messiter?”
+
+She looked round in surprise. “Cream?”
+
+“We’re in tin-can land, you know, and live on air-tights. I milk my cow
+with a can-opener. Let me recommend this quail on toast.” He handed her
+a battered tin plate, and prepared to help her from the frying-pan.
+
+“I suppose that is another name for pork?”
+
+“No, really. I happened to bag a couple of hooters before you wakened.”
+
+“You’re a missionary of the good-foods movement. I shall name your
+mission St. Sherry’s-in-the-Wilderness.”
+
+“Ah, Sherry’s! That’s since my time. I don’t suppose I should know my
+way about in little old New York now.”
+
+She found him eager to pick up again the broken strands that had
+connected him with the big world from which he had once come. It had
+been long since she had enjoyed a talk more, for he expressed himself
+with wit and dexterity. But through her enjoyment ran a note of
+apprehension. He was for the moment a resurrected gentleman. But what
+would he be next? She had an insistent memory of a heavenly flood of
+music broken by a horrible discord of raucous oaths.
+
+It was he that lingered over their breakfast, loath to make the first
+move to bring him back into realities; and it was she that had to
+suggest the need of setting out. But once on his feet, he saddled and
+packed swiftly, with a deftness born of experience.
+
+“We’ll have to ask Two-step to carry double to-day,” he said, as he
+helped her to a place behind him.
+
+Two-step had evidently made an end of the bronco spree upon which he
+had been the evening before, for he submitted sedately to his unusual
+burden. The first hilltop they reached had its surprise to offer the
+girl. In a little valley below them, scarce a mile away, nestled a
+ranch with its corrals and buildings.
+
+“Look!” she exclaimed; and then swiftly, “Didn’t you know it was
+there?”
+
+“Yes, that’s the Hilke place,” he answered with composure. “It hasn’t
+been occupied for years.”
+
+“Isn’t that some one crossing to the corral now?”
+
+“No. A stray cow, I reckon.”
+
+They dropped into a hollow between the hills and left the ranch on
+their left. She was not satisfied, and yet she had not grounds enough
+upon which to base a suspicion. For surely the figure she had seen had
+been that of a man.
+
+He let his horse take it easy, except when some impulse of mischief
+stirred him to break into a canter so as to make the girl put her arm
+round his waist for support. They stopped about noon by a stream in a
+cañon defile to lunch and rest the pony.
+
+“I don’t remember this place at all. Are we near home?” she asked.
+
+“About five miles. I reckon you’re right tired. It’s an unhandy way to
+ride.”
+
+Every mile took them deeper into the mountains, through winding cañons
+and over unsuspected trails, and the girl’s uneasiness increased with
+the wildness of the country.
+
+“Are you _sure_ we’re going the right way? I Don’t think we can be,”
+she suggested more than once.
+
+“Dead sure,” he answered the last time, letting Two-step turn into a
+blind draw opening from sheer cañon walls.
+
+A hundred feet from the entrance they rode round a great slide of rock
+into a tiny valley containing a group of buildings.
+
+He swung from the horse and offered a hand to help her dismount.
+
+A reckless, unholy light burned in his daring eyes.
+
+“Home at last, Miss Messiter. Let me offer you a thousand welcomes.”
+
+An icy hand seemed to clutch at her heart. “Home! What do you mean?
+This isn’t the Lazy D.”
+
+“Not at all. The Lazy D is sixty miles from here. This is where I hang
+out—and you, for the present.”
+
+“But—I don’t understand. How dare you bring me here?”
+
+“The desire for your company, Miss Messiter, made of me a Lochinvar.”
+
+She saw, with a shiver, that the ribald eyes were mocking her.
+
+“Take me back this instant—this instant,” she commanded, but her
+imperious voice was not very sure of itself. “Take me home at once, you
+liar.”
+
+“I expect you don’t quite understand,” he exclaimed, with gentle
+derision. “You’re a prisoner of war, Miss Messiter.”
+
+“And who are you?” she faltered.
+
+But before he spoke she found an answer to her question, found it by a
+flash of divination she could never afterward explain.
+
+“You’re the man I met at Fraser’s dance—the man they call the King of
+the Bighorn country.”
+
+He accepted identification with an elaborate bow. “Correct, ma’am. I’m
+Ned Bannister the king.”
+
+An instant before she had been sitting rigid with a face of startled
+fear, but as he spoke a great wave of joy beat into her heart. For if
+this man were the terror of the country the one she had left wounded at
+her house could not be. She forgot that she was herself in peril,
+forgot everything in the swift conviction that the man she loved was an
+honest gentleman and worthy of her.
+
+The man standing by the horse could not understand the light that had
+so immediately leaped to her eyes. Even _his_ vanity hesitated at the
+obvious deduction that she had already succumbed to his attractions.
+
+“But I don’t understand-0that isn’t your real name, is it? I know
+another man who calls himself Ned Bannister.”
+
+He laughed scornfully. “My cousin, the sheepherder. Yes, that’s his
+name, too. We both have a right to it.”
+
+“Your cousin?”
+
+The familiarity in him that had been haunting her all day and that had
+deceived her at the dance was now explained. It was her lover of which
+this man reminded her. Now that she had been given the clue she could
+trace kinship in manner, gait and appearance.
+
+“I’m not proud of my mealy-mouthed namesake,” he replied.
+
+“Nor he of you, I am sure,” she quickly answered.
+
+“I dare say not. But won’t y’u ’light, Miss Messiter?”
+
+She slipped immediately to the ground beside him. Her eyes looked him
+over with quiet scorn.
+
+“From first to last you have done nothing but lie to me. When we were
+out last night you knew that ranch was close at hand. You lied to me
+again when you said it was deserted.”
+
+“Very well. We’ll say I lied, though it’s not a nice word in so pretty
+a mouth, as yours, Miss Messiter. Y’u ought to read up again the fable
+about the toads dropping from the beautiful lady’s lips.”
+
+“What’s your object? What do you expect to gain by it?”
+
+“Up to date I’ve gained a right interesting guest. Y’u will be
+diverting enough. With so charming a lady visiting me I’m not worrying
+about getting bored.”
+
+“So you war on women, you coward.”
+
+The change in him was instantaneous. It was as if a thousand years of
+civilization had been sponged out in an eyebeat. He stood before her a
+savage primeval, his tight-lipped smile cruel in its triumph.
+
+“Did I begin this fight? Didn’t y’u and your punchers try to balk me by
+taking that sheep-herder from me after I had bagged him? That was your
+hour. By God, this is mine! I’ll teach y’u it isn’t safe to interfere
+with me. What I want I get one way or another, and don’t y’u forget it,
+my girl.”
+
+She was afraid to the very marrow of her. But she would not show her
+fear, nor could he read it in the slim superb erectness with which she
+gave him defiance.
+
+“You coward!”
+
+“That’s twice you’ve called me that,” he cried, his face flushing
+darkly and his eyes glittering.
+
+“You’ll crawl on your knees to me and beg pardon before I’m through
+with y’u, my beauty. Y’u’ll learn to lick the hand that strikes y’u.
+You’re mine—mine to do with as I please. Don’t forget that for a
+moment. I’ll break your spirit or I’ll break your heart.”
+
+His ferocity appalled her, but her brave eyes held their own. With an
+oath he turned on his heel and struck the palms of his hands together.
+An Indian squaw came running from one of the cabins. He flung at her a
+sentence or two in the native tongue and pointed at his captive. She
+asked a question impassively and he jabbed out a threat. The squaw
+nodded her head, and motioned to the girl to follow her.
+
+When Helen Messiter was alone in the room that was to serve as her
+prison she sank into a chair and covered her face with her hands in a
+despair that was for the moment utter.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+A RESCUE
+
+
+Helen Messiter was left alone until darkness fell, when the Cheyenne
+squaw brought in a kerosene lamp and shortly afterward her supper. The
+woman either could not or would not speak English, and her only answer
+to her captive’s advances was by sullen grunts. At the expiration of
+half an hour she returned for the dishes, locking the door after her
+when she left.
+
+The room itself was comfortable enough. It was evidently Bannister’s
+own, judging from its contents. Two or three rifles hung in racks. On
+top of the bookcase was a half-filled tobacco pouch and several pipes,
+all of them lying carelessly on a pile of music which ran from Verdi to
+ragtime. In his books she found the same shallow catholicity. Side by
+side with Montaigne’s “Essays,” a well-worn Villon in thé original,
+Stevenson’s “Letters” and “Anna Karenina,” dozens of paper-covered
+novels, mostly the veriest trash, held their disreputable own. Some of
+them were French, others detective stories, still others melodramatic
+tales of love. The piano was an expensive one, but not in the best of
+tune. Everything in the room contributed to the effect of capacity
+untempered by discipline and discrimination. Plainly he was a man of
+taste who had outraged and deadened his power of differentiation by
+abuse.
+
+For Helen the silent night was alive with alarms. The moaning of the
+wind, the slightest rustle outside, the creaking of a board, were
+enough to set her heart wildly beating. She did not undress, but by the
+light of her dim, ragged wick sought for composure from the pages of
+Montaigne and Stevenson. When the first gray day streaks came she was
+still reading, but with their coming she blew out her light and lay
+down. She fell asleep at once, and it was five hours later that the
+knock of her attendant awakened her from heavy slumber.
+
+With the bright sunlit day she was again mistress of her nerves,
+prepared to meet resolutely whatever danger might confront her. But the
+morning passed quietly enough, and after lunch the Indian woman led her
+into the little valley promenade in front of the buildings and sat down
+on a rock while her captive enjoyed the sunshine.
+
+The course of Helen’s saunterings took her toward the rock slide that
+made the gateway of the valley. She was wondering if it could have been
+left unguarded, when a rough voice warned her back. Looking round, she
+caught sight of a man seated cross-legged on a great boulder. It took
+only a second glance to certify that the man was her former foreman,
+Judd Morgan.
+
+She had never seen anything more malevolent than his triumph.
+
+“Better stay in the valley, Miss Messiter. Y’u might right easily get
+lost outside,” he jeered.
+
+Without reply she turned her back on him and began to retrace her way
+to the house. Stung by her contempt, he sprang up and strode after her.
+
+“So y’u won’t speak to me, eh? Think yourself too good to speak to a
+common everyday God damned white man, do y’u?”
+
+Apparently she did not know he was on the map. In a fury he caught at
+her shoulder and whirled her round.
+
+“Now, by God, do y’u see me? I’m Judd Morgan, the man y’u kicked off
+the Lazy D. I told y’u then y’u were going to be sorry long as y’u
+lived.”
+
+“Don’t you dare touch me, you hound!” Her blazing eyes menaced him so
+fiercely that he hesitated.
+
+There was the sound of a quick, light step running toward them. Morgan
+half turned, was caught in a grip of steel and hurled headlong among a
+pile of broken rocks.
+
+“Y’u would dare, would y’u?” panted his assailant, passionately, ready
+to obliterate the offender if he showed fight.
+
+Morgan got up slowly, his head bleeding from contact with the sharp
+rocks. There was murder in his bloodshot eye, but he knew his master,
+and after trying vainly to face him down he swung away with an oath.
+
+“I’ll have to apologize for that coyote, Miss Messiter. These fellows
+need a hint occasionally as to how to behave,” said Bannister.
+
+“Your hints are rather forceful, are they not?”
+
+“I ain’t running a Sunday school,” he admitted.
+
+“So I have gathered. I wonder where he learned to bully women,” she
+mused aloud.
+
+“Putting it another way, you think there ought to be some one to
+apologize for his master.”
+
+He was smiling at her without the least rancor, and it came on her with
+a woman’s swift instinct that safety lay in humoring his volatile moods
+and diverting him from those that were dangerous.
+
+“Since I’m a prisoner of war I wouldn’t dare think that—not aloud, at
+least. You might starve me,” she told him, saucily.
+
+“Still, down in your heart y’u think—”
+
+“That there is a great deal of difference between master and man. One
+is a gentleman in his best moments; the other is always a ruffian.”
+
+She had touched his vanity. As he walked beside her she could almost
+see his complacency purr.
+
+“I’m a miscreant, I reckon, but I was a gentleman first.”
+
+Fortunately he did not see the flash of veiled scorn she shot at him
+under her long lashes.
+
+With her breakfast next morning the Cheyenne woman brought a note
+signed “Shepherd-of-the-Desert.” In it Bannister asked permission to
+pay his respects. The girl divined that he was in his better mood, and
+penciled on his note the favor she could scarce refuse.
+
+But she was scarcely prepared for the impudent air of jocund spring he
+brought into her prison, the gay assumption of _camaraderie_ so
+inconsistent with the facts. Yet since safety lay in an avoidance of
+the tragic, she set herself to match his mood.
+
+At sight of the open Tennyson on the table he laughed and quoted:
+
+She only said, “The day is dreary.”
+“He cometh not,” she said.
+
+
+“But, you see, he comes,” he added. “What say, Mariana of the Robbers’
+Roost, to making a picnic day of it? We’ll climb the Crags and lunch on
+the summit.”
+
+“The Crags?”
+
+“That Matterhorn-shaped peak that begins at our back door. Are you for
+it?”
+
+While this mood was uppermost in him she felt reasonably safe. It was a
+phase of him she certainly did not mean to discourage. Besides, she had
+a youthful confidence in her powers that she was loath to give up
+without an effort to find the accessible side of his ruthless heart.
+
+“I’ll try it; but you must help me when we come to the bad places,” she
+said.
+
+“Sure thing! It’s a deal. You’re a right good mountaineer, I’ll bet.”
+
+“Thank you ; but you had better save your compliments till I make
+good,” she told him, with the most piquant air of gayety in the world.
+
+They started on horseback, following a mountain trail that zigzagged
+across the foothills toward the Crags. He had unearthed somewhere a
+boy’s saddle that suited her very well, and the pony she rode was one
+of the easiest she had ever mounted. At the end of an hour’s ride they
+left the horses and began the ascent on foot. It was a stiff climb,
+growing steeper as they ascended, but Helen Messiter had not tramped
+over golf links for nothing. She might grow leg weary,’ but she would
+not cry “Enough!” And he, on his part, showed the tactful consideration
+for the resources of her strength he had already taught her to expect
+from that other day’s experience on the plains. It was a very rare hand
+of assistance that he offered her, but often he stopped to admire the
+beautiful view that stretched for many miles below them, in order that
+she might get a minute’s breathing space.
+
+Once he pointed out, far away on the horizon, a bright gleam that
+caught the sunlight like a heliograph.
+
+“That’s the big rock slide back of the Lazy, D,” he explained.
+
+She drew a long breath, and flashed a stealthy look at him.
+
+“It’s a long way from here, isn’t it?”
+
+“I didn’t find it so far last time I took the trip—not the last half of
+the journey, anyhow,” he answered.
+
+“You’re very complimentary. I was only wondering whether I could find
+it if I should manage to escape.”
+
+He stroked his black mustache and smiled gallantly at her. “I reckon I
+won’t let so pretty a prisoner escape.”
+
+“Do you expect me to burden your hospitality forever and a day?
+Wouldn’t that be a little too much of Mariana of the Robbers’ Roost?”
+she asked, lightly.
+
+“I’m willing to risk it.”
+
+He looked with half-shut smoldering eyes at her slender exquisiteness,
+so instinct with the vital charm of sex. There was veiled passion in
+his eyes, but there was in them, too, a desire to stand well with her.
+He meant to win her, but if possible he would win with her own
+reluctant consent. She must bring him with hesitant feet a heart
+surrendered in spite of her pride and flinty puritanism. The vanity of
+the man craved a victory that should be of the spirit as well as of the
+flesh.
+
+Deftly she guided the conversation back to less dangerous channels. In
+this the increasing difficulty of the climb assisted her, for after
+they reached the last ascent sustained talk became impossible.
+
+“See that trough above us near the summit?. Y’u’ll have to hang on by
+your eyelashes, pardner.” He always burlesqued the word of comradeship
+a little to soften its familiarity.
+
+“Dear me! Is it that bad?”
+
+“It is so bad that at the top y’u have to jump for a grip and draw
+yourself up by your arms.”
+
+“I’ll never be able to do it.”
+
+“I’m here to help.”
+
+“But if one should miss?”
+
+He shrugged. “Ah! That’s a theological question. If the sky pilots
+guess right, for y’u heaven and for me hell.”
+
+They negotiated the trough successfully to its uptilted end. She had a
+bad moment when he leaped for the rock rim above from the narrow ledge
+on which they stood. But he caught it, drew himself up without the
+least trouble and turned to assist her. He sat down on the rock edge
+facing the abyss beneath them, and told her to lock her hands together
+above his left foot. Then slowly, inch by inch, he drew her up till
+with one of his hands he could catch her wrist. A moment later she was
+standing on his rigid toes, from which position she warily edged to
+safety above.
+
+“Well done, little pardner. You’re the first woman ever climbed the
+Crags.” He offered a hand to celebrate the achievement.
+
+“If I am it is all due to you, big pardner. I could never have made
+that last bit alone.”
+
+They ate lunch merrily in the pleasant sunlight, and both of them
+seemed as free from care as a schoolboy on a holiday.
+
+“It’s good to be alive, isn’t it?” he asked her after they had eaten,
+as he lay on the warm ground at her feet. “And what a life it is here!
+To be riding free, with your knees pressing a saddle, in the wind and
+the sun. There’s something in a man to which the wide spaces call. I’d
+rather lie here in the sunbeat with you beside me than be a king. You
+remember the ‘Last Ride’ that fellow Browning tells about? I reckon
+he’s dead right. If a man could only capture his best moments and hold
+them forever it would be heaven to the _n_th degree.”
+
+She studied her sublimated villain with that fascination his vagaries
+always excited in her. Was ever a more impossible combination put
+together than this sentimental scamp with the long record of evil?
+
+“Say it,” he laughed.” Whang it out I ask, anything you like, pardner.”
+
+Pluckily daring, she took him at his word. “I was only wondering at the
+different men I find in you. Before I have known you a dozen hours I
+discover in you the poet and the man of action, the schoolboy and the
+philosopher, the sentimentalist and the cynic, and—may I say it?—the
+gentleman and the blackguard. One feels a sense of loss. You should
+have specialized. You would have made such a good soldier, for
+instance. Pity you didn’t go to West Point.”
+
+“Think so?” He was immensely flattered at her interest in him.
+
+“Yes. You surely missed your calling. You were born for a soldier;
+cavalry, I should say. What an ornament to society you would have been
+if your energies had found the right vent! But they didn’t find it—and
+you craved excitement, I suppose. Perhaps you had to go the way you
+did.”
+
+“Therefore I am what I am? Please particularize.”
+
+“I can’t, because I don’t understand you. But I think this much is
+true, that you have set yourself against all laws of God and man. Yet
+you are not consistent, since you are better than your creed. You tell
+yourself there shall be no law for you but your own will, and you find
+there is, something in you stronger than desire that makes you shrink
+at many things. You can kill in fair fight, but you can’t knife a man
+in the back, can you?”
+
+“I never have.”
+
+“You have a dreadfully perverted set of rules, but you play by them.
+That’s why I know I’m safe with you, even when you are at your worst.”
+
+She announced this boldly, just as if she had no doubts.
+
+“Oh, you know you’re safe, do you?”
+
+“Of course I do. You were once a gentleman and you can’t forget it
+entirely. That’s the weakness in your philosophy of total depravity.”
+“You speak with an assurance you don’t always feel, I reckon. And I
+expect I wouldn’t bank too much on those divinations of yours, if I
+were you.” He rolled over so that he could face her more directly.
+“You’ve been mighty frank, Miss Messiter, and I take off my hat to your
+sand. Now I’m going to be frank awhile. You interest me. I never met a
+woman that interested me so much. But you do a heap more than interest
+me. No, you sit right there and listen. Your cheeky pluck and that
+insolent, indifferent beauty of yours made a hit with me the first
+minute I saw you that night. I swore I’d tame you, and that’s why I
+brought you to the ranch. Your eye flashed a heap too haughty for me to
+give you the go-by. Mind you, I meant to be master. I meant to make you
+mine as much as that dog that licked my hand before we started. What I
+meant then I still mean, but in a different way.
+
+“That’s as far as it went with me then, but before we reached here next
+day I knew the thing cut deeper with me. I ain’t saying that I love
+you, because I’m a sweep and it’s just likely I don’t know passion from
+love. But I’ll tell you this—there hasn’t been a waking moment since
+then I haven’t been on fire to be with you. That’s why I stayed away
+until I knew I wasn’t so likely to slop over. But here, I’m doing it
+right this minute. I care more for you than I do for anything else on
+this earth. But that makes it worse for you. I never cared for anybody
+without bringing ruin on them. I broke my mother’s heart and spoiled
+the life of a girl I was going to marry. That’s the kind of scoundrel I
+am. Even if I can make you care for me—and I reckon I can if y’u are
+like other women—I’ll likely drag you through hell after me.”
+
+The simulation of despair in his beautiful eyes spoke more impressively
+than his self-scorning words. She was touched in spite of herself,
+despite, too, his colossal egotism. For there is an appeal about the
+engaging sinner that drums in a woman’s head and calls to her heart.
+All good women are missionaries in the last analysis, and Miss Messiter
+was not an exception to her sex. Even though she knew he was half a
+fraud and that his emotion was theatric, she could not let the moment
+pass.
+
+She leaned forward, a sweet, shy dignity in her manner. “Is it too late
+to change? Why not begin now? There is still a to-morrcw, and it need
+not be the slave of yesterday. Life for all of us is full of
+milestones.”
+
+“And how shall I begin my new career of saintliness?” he asked, with a
+swift return to blithe irony.
+
+“The nearest duty. Take me back to my ranch. Begin a life of rigid
+honesty.”
+
+“Give you up now that I have found you? That is just the last thing I
+would do,” he cried, with glancing eyes. “No—no. The clock can’t be
+turned back. I have sowed and I must reap.”
+
+He leaped to his feet. “Come! We must be going.”
+
+She rose sadly, for she knew the mood of sentimental regret for his
+wasted life had passed, and she had failed.
+
+They descended the trough and reached the boulder field that had marked
+the terminal of the glacier. At the farther edge of it the outlaw
+turned to point out to the girl a great bank of snow on a mountainside
+fifteen miles away.
+
+He changed his weight as he turned, when a rock slipped under his foot
+and he came down hard. He was up again in an instant, but Helen
+Messiter caught the sharp intake of his breath when he set foot to the
+ground.
+
+“You’ve sprained your ankle!” she cried.
+
+“Afraid so. It’s my own rotten carelessness.” He broke into a storm of
+curses and limped forward a dozen steps, but he had to set his teeth to
+stand the pain.
+
+“Lean on me,” she said, gently. “I reckon I’ll have to,” he grimly
+answered.
+
+They covered a quarter of a mile, with many stops to rest the swollen
+ankle. Only by the irregularity of his breathing and the damp moisture
+on his forehead could she tell the agony he was enduring.
+
+“It must be dreadful,” she told him once.
+
+“I’ve got to stand for it, I reckon.”
+
+Again she said, when they had reached a wooded grove where pines grew
+splendid on a carpet of grass: “Only two hundred yards more. I think I
+can bring your pony as far as the big cottonwood.”
+
+She noticed that he leaned heavier and heavier on her. However, when
+they reached the cottonwood he leaned no more, but pitched forward in a
+faint. The water bottle was empty, but she ran down to where the ponies
+had been left, and presently came back with his canteen. She had been
+away perhaps twenty minutes, and when she came back he waved a hand
+airily at her.
+
+“First time in my life that ever happened,” he apologized, gayly. “But
+why didn’t y’u get on Jim and cut loose for the Lazy D while you had
+the chance?”
+
+“I didn’t think of it. Perhaps I shall next time.”
+
+“I shouldn’t. Y’u see, I’d follow you and bring you back. And if I
+didn’t find you there would be a lamb lost again in these hills.”
+
+“The sporting thing would be to take a chance.”
+
+“And leave me here alone? Well, I’m going to give you a show to take
+it.” He handed her his revolver. “Y’u may need this if you’re going
+traveling.”
+
+“Are you telling me to go?” she asked, amazed.
+
+“I’m telling you to do as you think best. Y’u may take a hike or y’u
+may bring back Two-step to me. Suit yourself.”
+
+“I tell you plainly, I sha’n’t come back.”
+
+“And I’m sure y’u will.”
+
+“But I won’t. The thing’s absurd. Would you?”
+
+“No, I shouldn’t. But y’u will.”
+
+“I won’t. Good-bye.” She held out her hand.
+
+He shook his head, looking steadily at her. “What’s the use? You’ll be
+back in half an hour.”
+
+“Not I. Did you say I must keep the Antelope Peaks in a line to reach
+the Lazy D.
+
+“Yes, a little to the left. Don’t be long, little pardner.”
+
+“I hate to leave you here. Perhaps I’ll send a sheriff to take care of
+you.”
+
+“Better bring Two-step up to the south of that bunch of cottonwoods.
+It’s not so steep that way.”
+
+“I’ll mention it to the sheriff. I’m not coming myself.”
+
+She left him apparently obstinate in the conviction that she would
+return. In reality he was taking a gambler’s chance, but it was of a
+part with the reckless spirit of the man that the risk appealed to him.
+It was plain he could not drag himself farther. Since he must let her
+go for the horse alone, he chose that she should go with her eyes open
+to his knowledge of the opportunity of escape.
+
+But Helen Messiter had not the slightest intention of returning. She
+had found her chance, and she meant to make the most of it. As rapidly
+ias her unaccustomed fingers would permit she saddled and cinched her
+pony. She had not ridden a hundred yards before Two-step came crashing
+through the young cottonwood grove after her. Objecting to being left
+alone, he had broken the rein that tied him. The girl tried to
+recapture the horse in order that the outlaw might not be left entirely
+without means of reaching camp, but her efforts were unsuccessful. She
+had to give it up and resume her journey.
+
+Of course the men at his ranch would miss their chief and search for
+him. There could be no doubt but that they would find him. She
+bolstered up her assurance of this as she rode toward the Antelope
+Peaks, but her hope lacked buoyancy, because she doubted if they had
+any idea of where he had been going to spend the day.
+
+She rode slower and slower, and finally came to a long halt for
+consideration. Vividly there rose before her a picture of the miscreant
+waiting grimly for death or rescue. Well, she was not to blame. If she
+deserted him it was to save herself. But to leave him helpless——
+
+No, she could not leave a crippled man to die alone, even though he
+were her enemy. That was the goal to which her circling thoughts came
+always home, and with a sob she turned her horse’s head. It was a piece
+of soft-headed folly, she confessed, but she could not help it.
+
+So back she went and found him lying just where she had left him. His
+derisive smile offered
+
+her no thanks. She doubted, indeed, whether he felt any sense of
+gratitude.
+
+“Y’u didn’t break your neck hurrying,” he said.
+
+She made her confession with a palpable chagrin. “I meant to ride away.
+I rode a mile or two. But I had to come back. I couldn’t leave you here
+alone.”
+
+His eyes sparkled triumphantly. She saw that he had misunderstood the
+reason of her return, that he was pluming himself on a conquest of his
+fascinated victim.
+
+“One couldn’t leave even a broken-legged dog without help,” she added,
+quietly.
+
+“So how could we expect a woman to leave the man she’s getting ready to
+love?”
+
+She let her contemptuous eyes rest on him in silence.
+
+“That’s right. Look at me as if I were dirt under your feet. Hate me,
+if it makes y’u feel better. But y’u’ll have to come to loving me just
+the same.”
+
+“Can you get on without help?” she asked, ranging the pony alongside
+him.
+
+“Yes.” He dragged himself to the saddle and smiled down at her. “So y’u
+better make up your mind to that soon as convenient.”
+
+Disdaining answer, she walked in front of the pony down the trail. She
+was tired, but her elastic tread would not admit it to him. For she was
+dramatizing unconsciously, with firmly clenched fingers that bit into
+her palms, the march of the unconquerable.
+
+Evening had fallen before they reached the ranch. It was beautifully
+still, except for the call of the quails. The hazy violet outline of
+the mountains came to silhouette against the skyline with a fine edge.
+
+As they passed the pony corral he spoke again. “I’ll never forget
+to-day. I’ve got it fenced from all the yesterdays and to-morrows. I
+have surely enjoyed our little picnic.”
+
+“Nor will I forget it,” she flung back quickly, as she followed him
+into the house. “For I never before met a man wholly incapable of
+gratitude and entirely lacking in all the elements that go to
+distinguish a human being from a wolf.”
+
+He turned to speak to her, and as he did so a quiet voice cautioned
+him:
+
+“Don’t move, seh, except to throw up your hands.”
+
+At the sound of that pleasant drawl Helen’s heart jumped to her throat.
+Jim McWilliams, half seated on the edge of the table, was looking
+intently at Bannister, and there was a revolver in his hand. On the
+other side of the room sat Morgan and the Cheyenne woman, apparently in
+charge of the young giant Denver.
+
+Bannister’s hands went up, even as he whirled with a snarl toward the
+man Morgan.
+
+“I told y’u to watch out, y’u muttonhead!”
+
+“But y’u clean forgot to remember to watch out your own self,” spoke up
+McWilliams, unbuckling the belt from the waist of his new captive.
+
+“Oh, Mac, you blessed boy!” cried Helen, with an hysterical laugh that
+was half a sob.
+
+“How did you ever find me?”
+
+“Followed the track of the gas wagon to where it ran out of juice. We
+lost your trail after that, but Denver and me had the good luck to pick
+it up again where y’u’d camped that night. We mislaid it again up in
+the hills, and Denver he knew about this place. We dropped in just
+casual for information, but when we set our peepers on Judd we allowed
+we would stay awhile, him being so anxious to have us.”
+
+“You dear boys! I’m so glad! You don’t know,” she sobbed, dropping
+weakly into thes nearest chair.
+
+“We can guess, ma’am,” her foreman answered grimly, his eyes on
+Bannister.” And if either of these scoundrels have treated y’u so they
+need their light put out all y’u have got to do is to say so.”
+
+“No, no, Mac. Let us go away from here and leave them. Can’t we go
+now—this very minute?”
+
+The foreman’s eyes found those of Denver and the latter nodded. Neither
+of them had had a bite to eat since the previous evening, and they were
+naturally ravenous.
+
+“All right. We’ll go right now, ma’am. Denver, I’ll take care of these
+beauties while y’u step into the pantry with Mrs. Lo-the-poor-Indian
+and put up a lunch. Y’u don’t want to forget we’re hungry enough to eat
+the wool off a pair of chaps.”
+
+“I ain’t likely to forget it, am I?” grinned Denver, as he rose.
+
+“You poor boys! I know you are starved. I’ll see about the lunch if one
+of you will get the I horses round,” Helen broke in. “Only let us hurry
+and get away from here.”
+
+Ten minutes later they were in the saddle. For the sake of precaution
+Mac walked two of his captives with them for about a mile before
+releasing them. Bannister, unable to travel, they left behind.
+
+“We’ll get down out of the hills and then cut acrost to the Meeker
+ranch,” said McWilliams, after they had ridden forward a few miles.
+“I’ll telephone from there to Slauson’s and have the old man send a boy
+over to the Lazy D with the good word. We’ll get an early start from
+Meeker’s and make it home in the afternoon.”
+
+“How did you leave Mr. Bannister?” asked Helen, in a carefully careless
+voice.
+
+She had held back this question for nearly an hour till Denver, who was
+guiding the party, had passed out of earshot.
+
+“Left him with two of the boys holding him down. He was plumb anxious
+to commit suicide by joining the hunt for y’u, but I had other
+thoughts,” grinned Mac.
+
+She felt herself flushing in the darkness. “We’ve made a great mistake
+about him, Mac, It’s his cousin of the same name that is the
+desperado—the man we just left.”
+
+“Yes, that’s what Judd let out before y’u and the King arrived. It made
+me plumb glad to my gizzard to hear it.”
+
+“I was pleased, too.”
+
+“Somehow I suspicioned that,” he made answer, with banter in his dry
+tones.
+
+“Of course I would be glad to know that he is not a villain,” she
+defended.
+
+“Sure!”
+
+“Well, one doesn’t like to think that a friend——”
+
+“He’s your friend, is he?” chuckled Mac.
+
+“Why shouldn’t he be?”
+
+“I’m offering no objections, ma’am.”
+
+“You act as if——”
+
+“Sho! Don’t pay any attention to me. Sometimes I get these spells of
+laughing in to myself. They just come. Doctors never could find a
+reason.”
+
+“Oh, well!”
+
+“He was your enemy and now he’s your friend. Course since I’m your
+foreman I got to keep posted on how we stand with our neighbors. If
+your feelings change to him again y’u’ll let me know, I expect.”
+
+“Why should they change?” she asked in a cold voice that her rising
+color belied.
+
+“Search _me!_ I just thought mebbe——”
+
+“You think too much,” she cut in, shortly.
+
+“Yes, ma’am,” admitted the youth, meekly, but from time to time as they
+rode she could hear, faint sounds of mirth from his direction.
+
+McWilliams telephoned from the Meeker ranch to Slauson’s, and inside of
+two hours the Lazy D knew that its owner had been found. As one puncher
+after another reported there on jaded ponies to get the latest word
+they heard that all was well. Each one at once unsaddled, ate and
+turned in for the first night’s sleep he had had since his mistress had
+been missing. Next morning they rode in a body to meet her.
+
+She saw them galloping toward her in a cloud of dust, and presently she
+was the centre of a circle of her happy family. They were like
+boys—exuberant in their joy at her deliverance and eager to set out at
+once to avenge her wrongs.
+
+Ned Bannister, from his window, saw them coming. When the group
+separated at the corral and she rode from among them with McWilliams
+toward the house the sheepman could sit still no longer. He limped to
+the front door and waved the American flag which he had unearthed for
+the occasion.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+MISTRESS AND MAID
+
+
+Now that it was safely concluded, Helen thought the adventure almost
+worthwhile for the spontaneous expressions of good will it had drawn
+forth from her adherents. Mrs. Winslow and Nora had taken her to their
+arms and wept and laughed over her in turn, and in their silent
+undemonstrative way she had felt herself hedged in by unusual
+solicitude on the part of her riders. It was good—none but she knew how
+good—to be back among her own, to bask in a friendliness she could not
+doubt. It was best of all to sit opposite Ned Bannister again with no
+weight on her heart from the consciousness of his unworthiness.
+
+She could affect to disregard the gray eyes that followed her with such
+magnetized content about the living room, but beneath her cool
+self-containment she knew the joyous heart in her was strangely
+buoyant. He loved her, and she had a right to let herself love him.
+This was enough for the present.
+
+“They’re so plumb glad to see y’u they can’t let y’u alone,” laughed
+Bannister at the sound of a knock on the door that was about the fifth
+in as many minutes.
+
+This time it proved to be Nora, come to find out what her mistress
+would like for supper. Helen turned to the invalid.
+
+“What would you like, Mr. Bannister?”
+
+“I should like a porterhouse with mushrooms,” he announced promptly.
+
+“You can’t have it. You know what the doctor said.” Very peremptorily
+she smiled this at him.
+
+“He’s an old granny, Miss Messiter.”
+
+“You may have an egg on toast.”
+
+“Make it two,” he pleaded. “Excitement’s just like caviar to the
+appetite, and seeing y’u safe—”
+
+“Very well—two,” she conceded.
+
+They ate supper together in a renewal of the pleasant intimacy so
+delightful to both. He lay on the lounge, propped up with sofa
+cushions, the while he watched her deft fingers butter the toast and
+prepare his egg. It was surely worth while to be a convalescent, given
+so sweet a comrade for a nurse; and after he had moved over to the
+table he enjoyed immensely the gay firmness with which she denied him
+what was not good for him.
+
+“I’ll bet y’u didn’t have supper like this at Robbers’ Roost.” he told
+her, enthusiastically.
+
+“It wasn’t so bad, considering everything.” She was looking directly at
+him as she spoke. “Your cousin is rather a remarkable man in some ways.
+He manages to live on the best that can be got in tin-can land.”
+
+“Did he tell y’u he was my cousin?” he asked, slowly.
+
+“Yes, and that his name was Ned Bannister, too?”
+
+“Did that explain anything to y’u?”
+
+“It explained a great deal, but it left some things not clear yet.”
+
+“For instance?”
+
+“For one thing, the reason why you should bear the odium of his crimes.
+I suppose you don’t care for him, though I can see how you might in a
+way.”
+
+“I don’t care for him in the least, though I used to when we were boys.
+As to letting myself be blamed for his crimes. I did it because I
+couldn’t help myself. We look more or less alike, and he was cunning
+enough to manufacture evidence against me. We were never seen together,
+and so very few know that there are two Bannisters. At first I used to
+protest, but I gave it up. There wasn’t the least use. I could only
+wait for him to be captured or killed. In the meantime it didn’t make
+me any more popular to be a sheepman.”
+
+“Weren’t you taking a long chance of being killed first? Some one with
+a grudge against him might have shot you.”
+
+“They haven’t yet,” he smiled.
+
+“You might at least have told _me_ how it was,” she reproached.
+
+“I started to tell y’u that first day, but it looked so much of a fairy
+tale to unload that I passed it up.”
+
+“Then you ought not to blame me for thinking you what you were not.”
+
+“I don’t remember blaming y’u. The fact is I thought it awful white of
+y’u to do your Christian duty so thorough, me being such a miscreant,”
+he drawled.
+
+“You gave me no chance to think well of you.”
+
+“But yet y’u did your duty from A to Z.”
+
+“We’re not talking about my duty,” she flashed back. “My point is that
+you weren’t fair to me. If I thought ill of you how could I help it?”
+
+“I expaict your Kalamazoo conscience is worryin’ y’u because y’u
+misjudged me.”
+
+“It isn’t,” she denied instantly.
+
+“I ain’t of a revengeful disposition. I’ll forgive y’u for doing your
+duty and saving my life twice,” he said, with a smile of whimsical
+irony.
+
+“I don’t want your forgiveness.”
+
+“Well, then for thinking me a ‘bad man.’”
+
+“You ought to beg _my_ pardon. I was a friend, at least you say I acted
+like one—and you didn’t care enough to right yourself with me.”
+
+“Maybe I cared too much to risk trying it. I knew there would be proof
+some time, and I decided to lie under the suspicion until I could get
+it. I see now that wasn’t kind or fair to you. I am sorry I didn’t tell
+y’u all about it. May I tell y’u the story now?”
+
+“If you wish.”
+
+It was a long story, but the main points can be told in a paragraph.
+The grandfather of the two cousins, General Edward Bannister, had worn
+the Confederate gray for four years, and had lost an arm in the service
+of the flag with the stars and bars. After the war he returned to his
+home in Virginia to find it in ruins, his slaves freed and his fields
+mortgaged. He had pulled himself together for another start, and had
+practiced law in the little town where his family had lived for
+generations. Of his two sons, one was a ne’er-do-well. He was one of
+those brilliant fellows of whom much is expected that never develops.
+He had a taste for low company, married beneath him, and, after a
+career that was a continual mortification and humiliation to his
+father, was killed in a drunken brawl under disgraceful circumstances,
+leaving behind a son named for the general. The second son of General
+Bannister also died young, but not before he had proved his devotion to
+his father by an exemplary life. He, too, was married and left an only
+son, also named for the old soldier. The boys were about of an age and
+were well matched in physical and mental equipment. But the general,
+who had taken them both to live with him, soon discovered that their
+characters were as dissimilar as the poles. One grandson was frank,
+generous, open as the light; the other was of a nature almost
+degenerate. In fact, each had inherited the qualities of his father.
+Tales began to come to the old general’s ears that at first he refused
+to credit. But eventually it was made plain to him that one of the boys
+was a rake of the most objectionable type.
+
+There were many stormy scenes between the general and his grandson, but
+the boy continued to go from bad to worse. After a peculiarly flagrant
+case, involving the character of a respectable young girl, young Ned
+Bannister was forbidden his ancestral home. It had been by means of his
+cousin that this last iniquity of his had been unearthed, and the boy
+had taken it to his grandfather in hot indignation as the last hope of
+protecting the reputation of the injured girl. From that hour the evil
+hatred of his cousin, always dormant in the heart, flamed into active
+heat. The disowned youth swore to be revenged. A short time later the
+general died, leaving what little property he had entirely to the one
+grandson. This stirred again the bitter rage of the other. He set fire
+to the house that had been willed his cousin, and took a train that
+night for Wyoming. By a strange irony of fate they met again in the
+West years later, and the enmity between them was renewed, growing
+every month more bitter on the part of the one who called himself the
+King of the Bighorn Country.
+
+She broke the silence after his story with a gentle “Thank you. I can
+understand why you don’t like to tell the story.”
+
+“I am very glad of the chance to tell it to you,” he answered.
+
+“When you were delirious you sometimes begged some one you called Ned
+not to break his mother’s heart. I thought then you might be speaking
+to yourself as ill people do. Of course I see now it was your cousin
+that was on your mind.”
+
+“When I was out of my head I must have talked a lot of nonsense,” he
+suggested, in the voice of a question. “I expect I had opinions I
+wouldn’t have been scattering around so free if I’d known what I was
+saying.”
+
+He was hardly prepared for the tide of color that swept her cheeks at
+his words nor for the momentary confusion that shuttered the shy eyes
+with long lashes cast down.
+
+“Sick folks do talk foolishness, they say,” he added, his gaze trained
+on her suspiciously.
+
+“Do they?”
+
+“Mrs. Winslow says I did. But when I asked her what it was I said she
+only laughed and told me to ask y’u. Well, I’m askin’ now.”
+
+She became very busy over the teapot. “You talked about the work at
+your ranch—sheep dipping and such things.”
+
+“Was that all?”
+
+“No, about lots of other things—football and your early life. I don’t
+see what Mrs. Winslow meant. Will you have some more tea?”
+
+“No, thank y’u. I have finished. Yes, that ce’tainly seems harmless. I
+didn’t know but I had been telling secrets.” Still his unwavering eyes
+rested quietly on her.
+
+“Secrets?” She summoned her aplomb to let a question rest lightly in
+the face she turned toward him, though she was afraid she met his eyes
+hardly long enough for complete innocence “Why, yes, secrets.” He
+measured looks with her deliberately before he changed the subject, and
+he knew again the delightful excitement of victory. “Are y’u going to
+read to me this evening?”
+
+She took his opening so eagerly that he smiled, at which her color
+mounted again.
+
+“If y’u like. What shall I read?”
+
+“Some more of Barrie’s books, if y’u don’t mind. When a fellow is weak
+as a kitten he sorter takes to things that are about kids.”
+
+Nora came in and cleared away the supper things. She was just beginning
+to wash them when McWilliams and Denver dropped into the kitchen by
+different doors. Each seemed surprised and disappointed at the presence
+of the other. Nora gave each of them a smile and a dishcloth.
+
+“Reddy, he’s shavin’ and Frisco’s struggling with a biled shirt—I mean
+with a necktie,” Denver hastily amended. “They’ll be along right soon,
+I shouldn’t wonder.”
+
+“Y’u better go tell the boys Miss Nora don’t want her kitchen littered
+up with so many of them,” suggested his rival.
+
+“Y’u’re foreman here. I don’t aim to butt into your business, Mac,”
+grinned back the other, polishing a tea plate with the towel.
+
+“I want to get some table linen over to Lee Ming to-night,” said Nora,
+presently.
+
+“Denver, he’ll be glad to take it for y’u, Miss Nora. He’s real
+obliging,” offered Mac, generously.
+
+“I’ve been in the house all day, so I need a walk. I thought perhaps
+one of you gentlemen—” Miss Nora looked from one to the other of them
+with deep innocence.
+
+“Sure, I’ll go along and carry it. Just as Mac says, I’ll be real
+pleased to go,” said Denver, hastily.
+
+Mac felt he had been a trifle precipitate in his assumption that Nora
+did not intend to go herself. Lee Ming had established a laundry some
+half mile from the ranch, and the way thereto lay through most
+picturesque shadow and moonlight. The foreman had conscientious
+scruples against letting Denver escort her down such a veritable
+lovers’ lane of romantic scenery.
+
+“I don’t know as y’u ought to go out in the night air with that cold,
+Denver. I’d hate a heap to have y’u catch pneumony. It don’t seem to me
+I’d be justified in allowin’ y’u to,” said the foreman, anxiously.
+
+“You’re _that_ thoughtful, Mac. But I expect mebbe a little saunter
+with Miss Nora will do my throat good. We’ll walk real slow, so’s not
+to wear out my strength.”
+
+“Big, husky fellows like y’u are awful likely to drop off with
+pneumony. I been thinkin’ I got some awful good medicine that would be
+the right stuff for y’u. It’s in the drawer of my wash-stand. Help
+yourself liberal and it will surely do y’u good. Y’u’ll find it _in a
+bottle_.”
+
+“I’ll bet it’s good medicine, Mac. After we get home I’ll drop around.
+In the washstand, y’u said?”
+
+“I hate to have y’u take such a risk,” Mac tried again. “There ain’t a
+bit of use in y’u exposing yourself so careless. Y’u take a hot
+footbath and some of that medicine, Denver, then go right straight to
+bed, and in the mo’ning y’u’ll be good as new. Honest, y’u won’t know
+yourself.”
+
+“Y’u got the _best_ heart, Mac.”
+
+Nora giggled.
+
+“Since I’m foreman I got to be a mother to y’u boys, ain’t I?”
+
+“Y’u’re liable to be a grandmother to us if y’u keep on,” came back the
+young giant.
+
+“Y’u plumb discourage me, Denver,” sighed the foreman.
+
+“No, sir! The way I look at it, a fellow’s got to take some risk. Now,
+y’u cayn’t tell some things. I figure I ain’t half so likely to catch
+pneumony as y’u would be to get heart trouble if y’u went walking with
+Miss Nora,” returned Denver.
+
+A perfect gravity sat on both their faces during the progress of most
+of their repartee.
+
+“If your throat’s so bad, Mr. Halliday, I’ll put a kerosene rag round
+it for you when we get back,” Nora said, with a sweet little glance of
+sympathy that the foreman did not enjoy.
+
+Denver, otherwise “Mr. Halliday,” beamed. “Y’u’re real kind, ma’am.
+I’ll bet that will help it on the outside much as Mac’s medicine will
+inside.”
+
+“What’ll y’u do for my heart, ma’am, if it gits bad the way Denver
+figures it will?”
+
+“Y’u might try a mustard plaster,” she gurgled, with laughter.
+
+For once the debonair foreman’s ready tongue had brought him to defeat.
+He was about to retire from the field temporarily when Nora herself
+offered first aid to the wounded.
+
+“We would like to have you come along with us, Mr. McWilliams. I want
+you to come if you can spare the time.”
+
+The soft eyes telegraphed an invitation with such a subtle suggestion
+of a private understanding that Mac was instantly encouraged to accept.
+
+He knew, of course, that she was playing them against each other and
+sitting back to enjoy the result, but he was possessed of the hope
+common to youths in his case that he really was on a better footing
+with her than the other boys. This opinion, it may be added, was shared
+by Denver, Frisco and even Reddy as regards themselves. Which is merely
+another way of putting the regrettable fact that this very charming
+young woman was given to coquetting with the hearts of her admirers.
+
+“Any time y’u get oneasy about that cough y’u go right on home, Denver.
+Don’t stay jest out of politeness. We’ll never miss y’u, anyhow,” the
+foreman assured him.
+
+“Thank y’u, Mac. But y’u see I got to stay to keep Miss Nora from
+getting bored.”
+
+“Was it a phrenologist strung y’u with the notion y’u was a cure for
+lonesomeness?”
+
+“Shucks! I don’t make no such claims. The only thing is it’s a comfort
+when you’re bored to have company. Miss Nora, she’s so polite. But, y’u
+see, if I’m along I can take y’u for a walk when y’u get too bad.”
+
+They reached the little trail that ran up to Lee Ming’s place, and
+Denver suggested that Mac run in with the bundle so as to save Nora the
+climb.
+
+“I’d like to, honest I would. But since y’u thought of it first I won’t
+steal the credit of doing Miss Nora a good turn. We’ll wait right here
+for y’u till y’u come back.”
+
+“We’ll all go up together,” decided Nora, and honors were easy.
+
+In the pleasant moonlight they sauntered back, two of them still
+engaged in lively badinage, while the third played chorus with
+appreciative little giggles and murmurs of “Oh, Mr. Halliday!” and “You
+know you’re just flattering me, Mr. McWilliams.”
+
+If they had not been so absorbed in their gay foolishness the two men
+might not have walked so innocently into the trap waiting for them at
+their journey’s end. As it was, the first intimation they had of
+anything unusual was a stern command to surrender.
+
+“Throw up your hands. Quick, you blank fools!”
+
+A masked man covered them, in each hand a six-shooter, and at his
+summons the arms of the cow-punchers went instantly into the air.
+
+Nora gave an involuntary little scream of dismay.
+
+“Y’u don’t need to be afraid, lady. Ain’t nobody going to hurt you, I
+reckon,” the masked man growled.
+
+“Sure they won’t,” Mac reassured her, adding ironically: “This gun-play
+business is just neighborly frolic. Liable to happen any day in
+Wyoming.”
+
+A second masked man stepped up. He, too was garnished with an arsenal.
+
+“What’s all this talking about?” he demanded sharply.
+
+“We just been having a little conversation seh?” returned McWilliams,
+gently, his vigilant eyes searching through the disguise of the other
+“Just been telling the lady that your call is in friendly spirit. No
+objections, I suppose?”
+
+The swarthy newcomer, who seemed to be in command, swore sourly.
+
+“Y’u put a knot in your tongue, Mr. Foreman.”
+
+“Ce’tainly, if y’u prefer,” returned the indomitable McWilliams.
+
+“Shut up or I’ll pump lead into you!”
+
+“I’m padlocked, seh.”
+
+Nora Darling interrupted the dialogue by quietly fainting. The foreman
+caught her as she fell.
+
+“See what y’u done, y’u blamed chump!” he snapped.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+THE TWO COUSINS
+
+
+The sheepman lay at his ease, the strong supple lines of him stretched
+lazily on the lounge. Helen was sitting beside him in an easy chair,
+and he watched the play of her face in the lamplight as she read from
+“The Little White Bird.” She was very good to see, so vitally alive and
+full of a sweet charm that half revealed and half concealed her
+personality. The imagination with which she threw herself into a
+discussion of the child fancies portrayed by the Scotch writer captured
+his fancy. It delighted him to tempt her into discussions that told him
+by suggestion something of what she thought and was.
+
+They were in animated debate when the door opened to admit somebody
+else. He had stepped in so quietly that he stood there a little while
+without being observed, smiling down at them with triumphant malice
+behind the mask he wore. Perhaps it was the black visor that was
+responsible for the Mephisto effect, since it hid all the face but the
+leering eyes. These, narrowed to slits, swept the room and came back to
+its occupants. He was a tall man and well-knit, dressed incongruously
+in up-to-date riding breeches and boots, in combination with the usual
+gray shirt, knotted kerchief and wide-brimmed felt hat of the horseman
+of the plains. The dust of the desert lay thick on him, without in the
+least obscuring a certain ribald elegance, a distinction of wickedness
+that rested upon him as his due. To this result his debonair manner
+contributed, though it carried with it no suggestion of weakness. To
+the girl who looked up and found him there he looked indescribably
+sinister.
+
+She half rose to her feet, dilated eyes fixed on him.
+
+“Good evenin’. I came to make sure y’u got safe home, Miss Messiter,”
+he said.
+
+The eyes of the two men clashed, the sheepman’s stern and unyielding,
+his cousin’s lit with the devil of triumph. But out of the faces of
+both men looked the inevitable conflict, the declaration of war that
+never ends till death.
+
+“I’ve been a heap anxious about y’u—couldn’t sleep for worrying. So I
+saddled up and rode in to find out if y’u were all right and to inquire
+how Cousin Ned was getting along.”
+
+The sheepman, not deigning to move an inch from his position, looked in
+silence his steady contempt.
+
+“This conversation sounds a whole lot like a monologue up to date,” he
+continued. “Now, maybe y’u don’t know y’u have the honor of
+entertaining the King of the Bighorn.” The man’s brown hand brushed the
+mask from his eyes and he bowed with mocking deference. “Miss Messiter,
+allow me to introduce myself again—Ned Bannister, train robber,
+rustler, kidnapper and general bad man. But I ain’t told y’u the worst
+yet. I’m cousin to a sheepherder’ and that’s the lowest thing that
+walks.”
+
+He limped forward a few steps and sat down. “Thank you, I believe I
+will stay a while since y’u both ask me so urgent. It isn’t often I
+meet with a welcome so hearty and straight from the heart.”
+
+It was not hard to see how the likeness between them contributed to the
+mistake that had been current concerning them. Side by side, no man
+could have mistaken one for the other. The color of their eyes, the
+shade of hair, even the cut of their features, were different. But
+beneath all distinctions in detail ran a family resemblance not to be
+denied. This man looked like his cousin, the sheepman, as the latter
+might have done if all his life he had given a free rein to evil
+passions.
+
+The height, the build, the elastic tread of each, made further
+contributions to this effect of similarity.
+
+“What are you doing here?” They were the first words spoken by the man
+on the lounge and they rang with a curt challenge.
+
+“Come to inquire after the health of my dear cousin,” came the prompt
+silken answer.
+
+“You villain!”
+
+“My dear cousin, y’u speak with such conviction that y’u almost
+persuade me. But of course if I’m a villain I’ve got to live up to my
+reputation. Haven’t I, Miss Messiter?”
+
+“Wouldn’t it be better to live it down?” she asked with a quietness
+that belied her terror. For there had been in his manner a threat, not
+against her but against the man whom her heart acknowledged as her
+lover.
+
+He laughed. “Y’u’re still hoping to make a Sunday school superintendent
+out of me, I see. Y’u haven’t forgot all your schoolmarm ways yet, but
+I’ll teach y’u to forget them.”
+
+The other cousin watched him with a cool, quiet glance that never
+wavered. The outlaw was heavily armed, but his weapons were sheathed,
+and, though there was a wary glitter behind the vindictive exultation
+in his eyes, his capable hands betrayed no knowledge of the existence
+of his revolvers. It was, he knew, to be a moral victory, if one at
+all.
+
+“Hope I’m not disturbing any happy family circle,” he remarked, and,
+taking two limping steps forward, he lifted the book from the girl’s
+unresisting hands. “H’m! Barrie. I don’t go much on him. He’s too sissy
+for me. But I could have guessed the other Ned Bannister would be
+reading something like that,” he concluded, a flicker of sneering
+contempt crossing his face.
+
+“Perhaps y’u’ll learn some time to attend to your own business,” said
+the man on the couch quietly.
+
+Hatred gleamed in the narrowed slits from which the soul of the other
+cousin looked down at him. “I’m a philanthropist, and my business is
+attending to other people’s. They raise sheep, for instance, and I
+market them.”
+
+The girl hastily interrupted. She had not feared for herself, but she
+knew fear for the indomitable man she had nursed back to life. “Won’t
+you sit down, Mr. Bannister? Since you don’t approve our literature,
+perhaps we can find some other diversion more to your taste.” She
+smiled faintly.
+
+The man turned in smiling divination of her purpose, and sat down to
+play with her as a cat does with a mouse.
+
+“Thank y’u, Miss Messiter, I believe I will. I called to thank y’u for
+your kindness to my cousin as well as to inquire about you. The word
+goes that y’u pulled my dear cousin back when death was reaching mighty
+strong for him. Of course I feel grateful to y’u. How is he getting
+along now?”
+
+“He’s doing very well, I think.”
+
+“That’s ce’tainly good hearing,” was his ironical response. “How come
+he to get hurt, did y’u say?”
+
+His sleek smile was a thing hateful to see.
+
+“A hound bit me,” explained the sheepman.
+
+“Y’u don’t say! I reckon y’u oughtn’t to have got in its way. Did y’u
+kill it?”
+
+“Not yet.”
+
+“That was surely a mistake, for it’s liable to bite again.”
+
+The girl felt a sudden sickness at his honeyed cruelty, but immediately
+pulled herself together. For whatever fiendish intention might be in
+his mind she meant to frustrate it.
+
+“I hear you are of a musical turn, Mr. Bannister. Won’t you play for
+us?”
+
+She had by chance found his weak spot. Instantly his eyes lit up. He
+stepped across to the piano and began to look over the music, though
+not so intently that he forgot to keep under his eye the man on the
+lounge.
+
+“H’m! Mozart, Grieg, Chopin, Raff, Beethoven. Y’u ce’tainly have the
+music here; I wonder if y’u have the musician.” He looked her over with
+a bold, unscrupulous gaze. “It’s an old trick to have classical music
+on the rack and ragtime in your soul. Can y’u play these?”
+
+“You will have to be the judge of that,” she said.
+
+He selected two of Grieg’s songs and invited her to the piano. He knew
+instantly that the Norwegian’s delicate fancy and lyrical feeling had
+found in her no inadequate medium of expression. The peculiar emotional
+quality of the song “I Love Thee” seemed to fill the room as she
+played. When she swung round on the stool at its conclusion it was to
+meet a shining-eyed, musical enthusiast instead of the villain she had
+left five minutes earlier.
+
+“Y’u _can_ play,” was all he said, but the manner of it spoke volumes.
+
+For nearly an hour he kept her at the piano, and when at last he let
+her stop playing he seemed a man transformed.
+
+“You have given me a great pleasure, a very great pleasure, Miss
+Messiter,” he thanked her warmly, his Western idiom sloughed with his
+villainy for the moment. “It has been a good many months since I have
+heard any decent music. With your permission I shall come again.”
+
+Her hesitation was imperceptible. “Surely, if you wish.” She felt it
+would be worse than idle to deny the permission she might not be able
+to refuse.
+
+With perfect grace he bowed, and as he wheeled away met with a little
+shock of remembrance the gaze of his cousin. For a long moment their
+eyes bored into each other. Neither yielded the beat of an eyelid, but
+it was the outlaw that spoke.
+
+“I had forgotten y’u. That’s strange, too because it was for y’u I
+came. I’m going to take y’u home with me.
+
+“Alive or dead?” asked the other serenely.
+
+“Alive, dear Ned.”
+
+“Same old traits cropping out again. There was always something feline
+about y’u. I remember when y’u were a boy y’u liked to torment wild
+animals y’u had trapped.”
+
+“I play with larger game now—and find it more interesting.”
+
+“Just so. Miss Messiter, I shall have to borrow a pony from y’u,
+unless—” He broke off and turned indifferently to the bandit.
+
+“Yes, I brought a hawss along with me for y’u,” replied the other to
+the unvoiced question. “I thought maybe y’u might want to ride with
+us.”
+
+“But he can’t ride. He couldn’t possibly. It would kill him,” the girl
+broke out.
+
+“I reckon not.” The man from the Shoshones glanced at his victim as he
+drew on his gauntlets. “He’s a heap tougher than y’u think.”
+
+“But it will. If he should ride now, why—It would be the same as
+murder,” she gasped. “You wouldn’t make him ride now?”
+
+“Didn’t y’u hear him order his hawss, ma’am? He’s keen on this ride. Of
+course he don’t have to go unless he wants to.” The man turned his
+villainous smile on his cousin, and the latter interpreted it to mean
+that if he preferred, the point of attack might be shifted to the girl.
+He might go or he might stay. But if he stayed the mistress of the Lazy
+D would have to pay for his decision.
+
+“No, I’ll ride,” he said at once.
+
+Helen Messiter had missed the meaning of that Marconied message that
+flashed between them. She set her jaw with decision. “Well, you’ll not.
+It’s perfectly ridiculous. I won’t hear of such a thing.”
+
+“Y’u seem right welcome. Hadn’t y’u better stay, Ned?” murmured the
+outlaw, with smiling eyes that mocked.
+
+“Of course he had. He couldn’t ride a mile—not half a mile. The idea is
+utterly preposterous.”
+
+The sheepman got to his feet unsteadily. “I’ll do famously.”
+
+“I won’t have it. Why are you so foolish about going? He said you
+didn’t need to go. You can’t ride any more than a baby could chop down
+that pine in the yard.”
+
+“I’m a heap stronger than y’u think.”
+
+“Yes, you are!” she derided. “It’s nothing but obstinacy. Make him
+stay,” she appealed to the outlaw.
+
+“Am I my cousin’s keeper?” he drawled. “I can advise him to stay, but I
+can’t make him.”
+
+“Well, _I_ can. I’m his nurse, and I say he sha’n’t stir a foot out of
+this house—not a foot.”
+
+The wounded man smiled quietly, admiring the splendid energy of her.
+“I’m right sorry to leave y’u so unceremoniously.”
+
+“You’re not going.” She wheeled on the outlaw “I don’t understand this
+at all. But if you want him you can find him here when you come again.
+Put him on parole and leave him here. I’ll not be a party to murder by
+letting him go.”
+
+“Y’u think I’m going to murder him?” he smiled.
+
+“I think he cannot stand the riding. It would kill him.”
+
+“A haidstrong man is bound to have his way. He seems hell-bent on
+riding. All the docs say the outside of a hawss is good for the inside
+of a man. Mebbe it’ll be the making of him.”
+
+“I won’t have it. I’ll rouse the whole countryside against you. Why
+don’t you parole him till he is better?”
+
+“All right. We’ll leave it that way,” announced the man. “I’d hate to
+hurt your tender feelings after such a pleasant evening. Let him give
+his parole to come to me whenever I send for him, no matter where he
+may be, to quit whatever he is doing right that instant, and come on
+the jump. If he wants to leave it that way, we’ll call it a bargain.”
+
+Again the rapier-thrust of their eyes crossed. The sheepman was
+satisfied with what he saw in the face of his foe.
+
+“All right. It’s a deal,” he agreed, and sank weakly back to the couch.
+
+There are men whose looks are a profanation to any good woman. Ned
+Bannister, of the Shoshones, was one of them. He looked at his cousin,
+and his ribald eyes coasted back to bold scrutiny of this young woman’s
+charming, buoyant youth. There was Something in his face that sent a
+flush of shame coursing through her rich blood. No man had ever looked
+at her like that before.
+
+“Take awful good care of him,” he sneered, with so plain an implication
+of evil that her clean blood boiled. “But I know y’u will, and don’t
+let him go before he’s real strong.”
+
+“No,” she murmured, hating herself for the flush that bathed her.
+
+He bowed like a Chesterfield, and went out with elastic heels, spurs
+clicking.
+
+Helen turned fiercely on her guest. “Why did you make me insist on your
+staying? As if I want you here, as if—” She stopped, choking with
+anger; presently flamed out, “I hate you,” and ran from the room to
+hide herself alone with her tears and her shame.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+FOR THE WORLD’S CHAMPIONSHIP
+
+
+The scene on which Helen Messiter’s eyes rested that mellow Fourth of
+July was vivid enough to have interested a far more jaded mind than
+hers. Nowhere outside of Cattleland could it have been duplicated.
+Wyoming is sparsely populated, but the riders of the plains think
+nothing of traveling a hundred miles in the saddle to be present at a
+“broncobusting” contest. Large delegations, too, had come in by
+railroad from Caspar, Billings, Sheridan, Cheyenne and a score of other
+points, so that the amphitheatre that looked down on the arena was
+filled to its capacity.
+
+All night the little town had rioted with its guests. Everything was
+wide open at Gimlet Butte. Saloons were doing a land-office business
+and gambling-houses coining money. Great piles of gold had passed to
+and fro during the night at the roulette wheel and the faro table. But
+with the coming of day interest had centered on the rough-riding
+contest for the world’s championship. Saloons and dance halls were
+deserted, and the universal trend of travel had been toward the big
+grand stands, from which the sport could be best viewed.
+
+It was afternoon now. The preliminaries had been ridden, and half a
+dozen of the best riders had been chosen by the judges to ride again
+for the finals. Helen was wonderfully interested, because in the six
+who were to ride again were included the two Bannister cousins, her
+foreman, McWilliams, the young man “Texas,” whom she had met the day of
+her arrival at Gimlet Butte, and Tom Sanford, who had last year won the
+championship.
+
+She looked down on the arena, and her heart throbbed with the pure joy
+of life. Already she loved her West and its picturesque, chap-clad
+population. Their jingling spurs and their colored kerchiefs knotted
+round sunburned necks, their frank, whole-hearted abandon to the
+interest of the moment, led her to regard these youths as schoolboys.
+Yet they were a hard-bitten lot, as one could see, burned to a
+brick-red by the untempered sun of the Rockies; with muscles knit like
+steel, and hearts toughened to endure any blizzard they might meet.
+Only the humorous wrinkles about the corners of their eyes gave them
+away for the cheerful sons of mirth that they were.
+
+“Bob Austin on Two-Step,” announced the megaphone man, and a little
+stir eddied through the group gathered at the lane between the arena
+and the corral.
+
+A meek-looking buckskin was driven into the arena. The embodiment of
+listlessness, it apparently had not ambition enough to flick a fly from
+its flank with its tail. Suddenly the bronco’s ears pricked, its sharp
+eyes dilated. A man was riding forward, the loop of a lariat circling
+about his head. The rope fell true, but the wily pony side-stepped, and
+the loop slithered to the ground. Again the rope shot forward, dropped
+over the pony’s head and tightened. The roper’s mustang braced its
+forefeet, and brought the buckskin up short. Another rope swept over
+its head. It stood trembling, unable to move without strangling itself.
+
+A picturesque youth in flannel shirt and chaps came forward, dragging
+blanket, saddle and bridle. At sight of him the horse gave a spasmodic
+fling, then trembled again violently. A blind was coaxed over its eyes
+and the bridle slipped on. Quickly and warily, with deft fingers, the
+young man saddled and cinched. He waved a hand jauntily to the ropers.
+The lariats were thrown off as the puncher swung to the saddle. For an
+instant the buckskin stood bewildered, motionless as a statue. There
+was a sudden leap forward high in air, and Bob Austin, alias “Texas,”
+swung his sombrero with a joyous whoop.
+
+“Fan him! Fan him!” screamed the spectators, and the rider’s quirt went
+up and down like a piston-rod.
+
+Round and round went Two-Step in a vicious circle, “swapping ends” with
+dizzying rapidity. Suddenly he went forward as from a catapult, and
+came to sudden halt in about five seconds. But Texas’s knees still
+clung, viselike, to the sides of the pony. A series of quick bucks
+followed, the buckskin coming down with back humped, all four legs
+stiff as iron posts. The jar on the rider would have been like a
+pile-driver falling on his head had he not let himself grow limp. The
+buckskin plunged forward again in frenzied leaps, ending in an
+unexpected jump to one side. Alas for Texas! One moment he was
+jubilantly plying quirt and spurs, the next he found himself pitching
+sideways. To save himself he caught at the saddle-horn.
+
+“He’s hunting leather,” shouted a hundred voices.
+
+One of the judges rode out and waved a hand. Texas slipped to the
+ground disqualified, and made his dejected way back to his deriding
+comrades. Some of them had endured similar misfortunes earlier in the
+day. Therefore they found much pleasure in condoling with him.
+
+“If he’d only recollected to saw off the horn of his saddle, then he
+couldn’t ’a’ found it when he went to hunt leather,” mournfully
+commented one puncher in a shirt of robin’s egg blue.
+
+“’Twould have been most as good as to take the dust, wouldn’t it?”
+retorted Texas gently, and the laugh was on the gentleman in blue,
+because he had been thrown earlier in the day.
+
+“A fellow’s hands sure get in his way sometimes. I reckon if you’d tied
+your hands, Tex, you’d been riding that rocking-hawss yet,” suggested
+Denver amiably.
+
+“Sometimes it’s his foot he puts in it. There was onct a gent
+disqualified for riding on his spurs,” said Texas reminiscently.
+
+At which hit Denver retired, for not three hours before he had been
+detected digging his spurs into the cinch to help him stick to the
+saddle.
+
+“Jim McWilliams will ride Dead Easy,” came the announcement through the
+megaphone, and a burst of cheering passed along the grand stand, for
+the sunny smile of the foreman of the Lazy D made him a general
+favorite. Helen leaned forward and whispered something gaily to Nora,
+who sat in the seat in front of her. The Irish girl laughed and
+blushed, but when her mistress looked up it was her turn to feel the
+mounting color creep into her cheeks. For Ned Bannister, arrayed in all
+his riding finery, was making his way along the aisle to her.
+
+She had not seen him since he had ridden away from the Lazy D ten days
+before, quite sufficiently recovered from his wounds to take up the
+routine of life again. They had parted not the best of friends, for she
+had not yet forgiven him for his determination to leave with his cousin
+on the night that she had been forced to insist on his remaining. He
+had put her in a false position, and he had never explained to her why.
+Nor could she guess the reason—for he was not a man to harvest credit
+for himself by explaining his own chivalry.
+
+Since her heart told her how glad she was he had come to her box to see
+her, she greeted him with the coolest little nod in the world.
+
+“Good morning, Miss Messiter. May I sit beside y’u?” he asked.
+
+“Oh, certainly!” She swept her skirts aside carelessly and made room
+for him. “I thought you were going to ride soon.”
+
+“No, I ride last except for Sanford, the champion. My cousin rides just
+before me. He’s entered under the name of Jack Holloway.”
+
+She was thinking that he had no business to be riding, that his wounds
+were still too fresh, but she did not intend again to show interest
+enough in his affairs to interfere even by suggestion. Her heart had
+been in her mouth every moment of the time this morning while he had
+been tossed hither and thither on the back of his mount. In his
+delirium he had said he loved her. If he did, why should he torture her
+so? It was well enough for sound men to risk their lives, but—
+
+A cheer swelled in the grand stand and died breathlessly away.
+McWilliams was setting a pace it would take a rare expert to equal. He
+was a trick rider, and all the spectacular feats that appealed to the
+onlooker were his. While his horse was wildly pitching, he drank a
+bottle of pop and tossed the bottle away. With the reins in his teeth
+he slipped off his coat and vest, and concluded a splendid exhibition
+of skill by riding with his feet out of the stirrups. He had been
+smoking a cigar when he mounted. Except while he had been drinking the
+pop it had been in his mouth from beginning to end, and, after he had
+vaulted from the pony’s back, he deliberately puffed a long
+smoke-spiral into the air, to show that his cigar was still alight. No
+previous rider had earned so spontaneous a burst of applause. “He’s
+ce’tainly a pure when it comes to riding,” acknowledged Bannister. “I
+look to see him get either first or second.”
+
+“Whom do you think is his most dangerous rival?” Helen asked.
+
+“My cousin is a straight-up rider, too. He’s more graceful than Mac, I
+think, but not quite so good on tricks. It will be nip and tuck.”
+
+“How about your cousin’s cousin?” she asked, with bold irony.
+
+“He hopes he won’t have to take the dust,” was his laughing answer.
+
+The next rider suffered defeat irrevocably before he had been thirty
+seconds in the saddle. His mount was one of the most cunning of the
+outlaw ponies of the Northwest, and it brought him to grief by jamming
+his leg hard against the fence. He tried in vain to spur the bronco
+into the middle of the arena, but after it drove at a post for the
+third time and ground his limb against it, he gave up to the pain and
+slipped off.
+
+“That isn’t fair, is it?” Helen asked of the young man sitting beside
+her.
+
+He shrugged his lean, broad shoulders. “He should have known how to
+keep the horse in the open. Mac would never have been caught that way.”
+
+“Jack Holloway on Rocking Horse,” the announcer shouted.
+
+It took four men and two lariats to subdue this horse to a condition
+sufficiently tame to permit of a saddle being slipped on. Even then
+this could not be accomplished without throwing the bronco first. The
+result was that all the spirit was taken out of the animal by the
+preliminary ordeal, so that when the man from the Shoshone country
+mounted, his steed was too jaded to attempt resistance.
+
+“Thumb him! Thumb him!” the audience cried, referring to the cowboy
+trick of running the thumbs along a certain place in the shoulder to
+stir the anger of the bucker.
+
+But the rider slipped off with disgust. “Give me another horse,” he
+demanded, and after a minute’s consultation among the judges a second
+pony was driven out from the corral. This one proved to be a Tartar. It
+went off in a frenzy of pitching the moment its rider dropped into the
+saddle.
+
+“Y’u’ll go a long way before you see better ridin’ than his and Mac’s.
+Notice how he gives to its pitching,” said Bannister, as he watched his
+cousin’s perfect ease in the cyclone of which he was the center.
+
+“I expect it depends on the kind of a ‘hawss,’” she mocked. “He’s
+riding well, isn’t he?”
+
+“I don’t know any that ride better.”
+
+The horse put up a superb fight, trying everything it knew to unseat
+this demon clamped to its back. It possessed in combination all the
+worst vices, was a weaver, a sunfisher and a fence-rower, and never had
+it tried so desperately to maintain its record of never having been
+ridden. But the outlaw in the saddle was too much for the outlaw
+underneath. He was master, just as he was first among the ruffians whom
+he led, because there was in him a red-hot devil of wickedness that
+would brook no rival.
+
+The furious bronco surrendered without an instant’s warning, and its
+rider slipped at once to the ground. As he sauntered through the dust
+toward the grand stand, Helen could not fail to see how his vanity
+sunned itself in the applause that met his performance. His equipment
+was perfect to the least detail. The reflection from a lady’s
+looking-glass was no brighter than the silver spurs he jingled on his
+sprightly heels. Strikingly handsome in a dark, sinister way, one would
+say at first sight, and later would chafe at the justice of a verdict
+not to be denied.
+
+Ned Bannister rose from his seat beside Helen. “Wish me luck,” he said,
+with his gay smile.
+
+“I wish you all the luck you deserve,” she answered.
+
+“Oh, wish me more than that if y’u want me to win.”
+
+“I didn’t say I wanted you to win. You take the most unaccountable
+things for granted.”
+
+“I’ve a good mind to win, then, just to spite y’u,” he laughed.
+
+“As if you could,” she mocked; but her voice took a softer intonation
+as she called after him in a low murmur: “Be careful, please.”
+
+His white teeth flashed a smile of reassurance at her. “I’ve never been
+killed yet.”
+
+“Ned Bannister on Steamboat,” sang out the megaphone man.
+
+“I’m ce’tainly in luck. Steamboat’s the worst hawss on the range,” he
+told himself, as he strode down the grand stand to enter the arena.
+
+The announcement of his name created for the second time that day a
+stir of unusual interest. Everybody in that large audience had heard of
+Ned Bannister; knew of his record as a “bad man” and his prowess as the
+king of the Shoshone country; suspected him of being a train and bank
+robber as well as a rustler. That he should have the boldness to enter
+the contest in his own name seemed to show how defiant he was of the
+public sentiment against him, and how secure he counted himself in
+flaunting this contempt. As for the sheepman, the notoriety that his
+cousin’s odorous reputation had thrust upon him was extremely
+distasteful as well as dangerous, but he had done nothing to disgrace
+his name, and he meant to use it openly. He could almost catch the low
+whispers that passed from mouth to mouth about him.
+
+“Ain’t it a shame that a fellow like that, leader of all the criminals
+that hide in the mountains, can show himself openly before ten thousand
+honest folks?” That he knew to be the purport of their whispering, and
+along with it went a recital of the crimes he had committed. How he was
+a noted “waddy,” or cattle-rustler; how he and his gang had held up
+three trains in eighteen months; how he had killed Tom Mooney, Bob
+Carney and several others—these were the sorts of things that were
+being said about him, and from the bottom of his soul he resented his
+impotency to clear his name.
+
+There was something in Bannister’s riding that caught Helen’s fancy at
+once. It was the unconscious grace of the man, the ease with which he
+seemed to make himself a very part of the horse. He attempted no
+tricks, rode without any flourishes. But the perfect poise of his lithe
+body as it gave with the motions of the horse, proclaimed him a born
+rider; so finished, indeed, that his very ease seemed to discount the
+performance. Steamboat had a malevolent red eye that glared hatred at
+the oppressor man, and to-day it lived up to its reputation of being
+the most vicious and untamed animal on the frontier. But, though it did
+its best to unseat the rider and trample him underfoot, there was no
+moment when the issue seemed in doubt save once. The horse flung itself
+backward in a somersault, risking its own neck in order to break its
+master’s. But he was equal to the occasion; and when Steamboat
+staggered again to its feet Bannister was still in the saddle. It was a
+daring and magnificent piece of horsemanship, and, though he was
+supposed to be a desperado and a ruffian, his achievement met with a
+breathless gasp, followed by thunderous applause.
+
+The battle between horse and man was on again, for the animal was as
+strong almost in courage as the rider. But Steamboat’s confidence had
+been shaken as well as its strength. Its efforts grew less cyclonic.
+Foam covered its mouth and flecked its sides. The pitches were easy to
+foresee and meet. Presently they ceased altogether.
+
+Bannister slid from the saddle and swayed unsteadily across the arena.
+The emergency past, he had scarce an ounce of force left in him. Jim
+McWilliams ran out and slipped an arm around his shoulders, regardless
+of what his friends might think of him for it.
+
+“You’re all in, old man. Y’u hadn’t ought to have ridden, even though
+y’u did skin us all to a finish.”
+
+“Nonsense, Mac. First place goes to y’u or—or Jack Holloway.”
+
+“Not unless the judges are blind.”
+
+But Bannister’s prediction proved true. The champion, Sanford, had been
+traveling with a Wild West show, and was far too soft to compete with
+these lusty cowboys, who had kept hard from their daily life on the
+plains. Before he had ridden three minutes it was apparent that he
+stood no chance of retaining his title, so that the decision narrowed
+itself to an issue between the two Bannisters and McWilliams. First
+place was awarded to the latter, the second prize to Jack Holloway and
+the third to Ned Bannister.
+
+But nearly everybody in the grand stand knew that Bannister had been
+discriminated against because of his unpopularity. The judges were not
+local men, and had nothing to fear from the outlaw. Therefore they
+penalized him on account of his reputation. It would never do for the
+Associated Press dispatches to send word all over the East that a
+murderous desperado was permitted, unmolested, to walk away with the
+championship belt.
+
+“It ain’t a square deal,” declared McWilliams promptly.
+
+He was sitting beside Nora, and he turned round to express his opinion
+to the two sitting behind him in the box.
+
+“We’ll not go behind the returns. Y’u won fairly. I congratulate y’u,
+Mr. Champion-of-the-world,” replied the sheepman, shaking hands
+cordially.
+
+“I told you to bring that belt to the Lazy D,” smiled his mistress, as
+she shook hands.
+
+But in her heart she was crying out that it was an outrage.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+JUDD MORGAN PASSES
+
+
+Gimlet Butte devoted the night of the Fourth to a high old time. The
+roping and the other sports were to be on the morrow, and meanwhile the
+night hours were filled with exuberance. The cowboy’s spree comes only
+once in several months, but when it does come he enters into the
+occasion with such whole-hearted enthusiasm as to make up swiftly for
+lost time. A traveling midway had cast its tents in a vacant square in
+competition with the regular attractions of the town, and everywhere
+the hard-riding punchers were “night herding” in full regalia.
+
+There was a big masked ball in the street, and another in the Masonic
+Hall, while here and there flared the lights of the faker with
+something to sell. Among these last was “Soapy” Sothern, doing a
+thriving business in selling suckers and bars wrapped with greenbacks.
+Crowds tramped the streets blowing horns and throwing confetti, and
+everywhere was a large sprinkling of men in high-heeled boots, swinging
+along with the awkward, stiff-legged gait of the cowboy. Sometimes a
+girl was hanging on his arm, and again he was “whooping it up with the
+boys”; but in either case the range-rider’s savings were burning a hole
+through his pockets with extreme rapidity.
+
+Jim McWilliams and the sheepman Bannister had that day sealed a
+friendship that was to be as enduring as life. The owner of the sheep
+ranch was already under heavy obligation to the foreman of the Lazy D,
+but debt alone is not enough on which to found soul brotherhood. There
+must be qualities of kinship in the primeval elements of character.
+Both men had suspected that this kinship existed, but to-day they had
+proved it in the way that one had lost and the other had won the
+coveted championship. They had made no vows and no professions. The
+subject had not even been touched in words; a meeting of the eyes,
+followed by the handshake with which Bannister had congratulated the
+winner. That had been all. But it was enough.
+
+With the casual democracy of the frontier they had together escorted
+Helen Messiter and Nora Darling through a riotous three hours of
+carnival, taking care to get them back to their hotel before the night
+really began “to howl.”
+
+But after they had left the young women, neither of them cared to sleep
+yet. They were still in costume, Mac dressed as a monk, and his friend
+as a Stuart cavalier, and the spirit of frolic was yet strong in them.
+
+“I expaict, mebbe, we better hunt in couples if we’re going to help
+paint the town,” smiled Mac, and his friend had immediately agreed.
+
+It must have been well after midnight that they found themselves
+“bucking the tiger” in a combination saloon and gambling-house, whose
+patrons were decidedly cosmopolitan in character. Here white and red
+and yellow men played side by side, the Orient and the Occident and the
+aboriginal alike intent on the falling cards and the little rolling
+ball. A good many of them were still in their masks and dominos, though
+these, for the most part, removed their vizors before playing.
+
+Neither McWilliams nor his friend were betting high, and the luck had
+been so even that at the end of two hours’ play neither of them had at
+any time either won or lost more than fifteen dollars. In point of
+fact, they were playing not so much to win as just to keep in touch
+with the gay, youthful humor of the night.
+
+They were getting tired of the game when two men jingled in for a
+drink. They were talking loudly together, and it was impossible to miss
+the subject of their conversation.
+
+McWilliams gave a little jerk of his head toward one of them. “Judd
+Morgan,” his lips framed without making a sound.
+
+Bannister nodded.
+
+“Been tanking up all day,” Mac added. “Otherwise his tongue would not
+be shooting off so reckless.”
+
+A silence had fallen over the assembly save for the braggarts at the
+bar. Men looked at each other, and then furtively at Bannister. For
+Morgan, ignorant of who was sitting quietly with his back to him at the
+faro-table, was venting his hate of Bannister and McWilliams.
+
+“Both in the same boat. Did y’u see how Mac ran to help him to-day?
+Both waddies. Both rustlers. Both train robbers. Sho! I got through
+putting a padlock on me mouth. Man to man, I’m as good as either of
+them—damn sight better. I wisht they was here, one or both; I wisht
+they would step up here and fight it out. Bannister’s a false alarm,
+and that foreman of the Lazy D—” His tongue stumbled over a blur of
+vilification that ended with a foul mention of Miss Messiter.
+
+Instantly two chairs crashed to the floor. Two pair of gray eyes met
+quietly.
+
+“My quarrel, Bann,” said Jim, in a low, even voice.
+
+The other nodded. “I’ll see y’u have a clear field.”
+
+The man who was with Morgan suddenly whispered in his ear, and the
+latter slewed his head in startled fear. Almost instantly a bullet
+clipped past McWilliams’s shoulder. Morgan had fired without waiting
+for the challenge he felt sure was at hand. Once—twice the foreman’s
+revolver made answer. Morgan staggered, slipped down to the floor, a
+bullet crashing through the chandelier as he fell. For a moment his
+body jerked. Then he rolled over and lay still.
+
+The foreman’s weapon covered him unwaveringly, but no more steadily
+than Bannister’s gaze the man who had come in with him who lay lifeless
+on the floor. The man looked at the lifeless thing, shuddered, and
+backed out of the saloon.
+
+“I call y’u all to witness that my friend killed him in self-defense,”
+said Bannister evenly. “Y’u all saw him fire first. Mac did not even
+have his gun out.”
+
+“That’s right,” agreed one, and another added: “He got what was coming
+to him.”
+
+“He sure did,” was the barkeeper’s indorsement. “He came in hunting
+trouble, but I reckon he didn’t want to be accommodated so prompt.”
+
+“Y’u’ll find us at the Gimlet Butte House if we’re wanted for this,”
+said Bannister. “We’ll be there till morning.”
+
+But once out of the gambling-house McWilliams drew his friend to one
+side. “Do y’u know who that was I killed?”
+
+“Judd Morgan, foreman before y’u at the Lazy D.”
+
+“Yes, but what else?”
+
+“What do y’u mean?”
+
+“I mean that next to your cousin Judd was leader of that Shoshone-Teton
+bunch.”
+
+“How do y’u know?”
+
+“I suspected it a long time, but I knew for sure the day that your
+cousin held up the ranch. The man that was in charge of the crowd
+outside was Morgan. I could swear to it. I knew him soon as I clapped
+eyes to him, but I was awful careful to forget to tell him I recognized
+him.”
+
+“That means we are in more serious trouble than I had supposed.”
+
+“Y’u bet it does. We’re in a hell of a hole, figure it out any way y’u
+like. Instead of having shot up a casual idiot, I’ve killed Ned
+Bannister’s right-hand man. That will be the excuse—shooting Morgan.
+But the real trouble is that I won the championship belt from your
+cousin. He already hated y’u like poison, and he don’t love me any too
+hard. He will have us arrested by his sheriff here. Catch the point.
+_Y’u’re Ned Bannister, the outlaw, and I’m his right-bower_. That’s the
+play he’s going to make, and he’s going to make it right soon.”
+
+“I don’t care if he does. We’ll fight him on his own ground. We’ll
+prove that he’s the miscreant and not us.”
+
+“Prove nothing,” snarled McWilliams. “Do y’u reckon he’ll give us a
+chance to prove a thing? Not on your life. He’ll have us jailed first
+thing; then he’ll stir up a sentiment against us, and before morning
+there will be a lynchingbee, and y’u and I will wear the neckties. How
+do y’u like the looks of it?”
+
+“But y’u have a lot of friends. They won’t stand for anything like
+that.”
+
+“Not if they had time to stop it. Trouble is, fellow’s friends think
+awful slow. They’ll arrive in time to cut us down and be the mourners.
+No, sir! It’s a hike for Jimmie Mac on the back of the first bronc he
+can slap a saddle on.”
+
+Bannister frowned. “I don’t like to run before the scurvy scoundrels.”
+
+“Do y’u suppose I’m enjoying it? Not to any extent, I allow. But that
+sweet relative of yours holds every ace in the deck, and he’ll play
+them, too. He owns the law in this man’s town, and he owns the lawless.
+But the best card he holds is that he can get a thousand of the best
+people here to join him in hanging the ‘king’ of the Shoshone outlaws.
+Explanations nothing! Y’u _rode_ under the name of Bannister, didn’t
+y’u? He’s Jack Holloway.”
+
+“It does make a strong combination,” admitted the sheepman.
+
+“Strong! It’s invincible. I can see him playing it, laughing up his
+sleeve all the time at the honest fools he is working. No, sir! I draw
+out of a game like that. Y’u don’t get a run for your money.”
+
+“Of course he knows already what has happened,” mused Bannister.
+
+“Sure he knows. That fellow with Morgan made a bee-line for him. Just
+about now he’s routing the sheriff out of his bed. We got no time to
+lose. Thing is, to burn the wind out of this town while we have the
+chance.”
+
+“I see. It won’t help us any to be spilling lead into a sheriff’s
+posse. That would ce’tainly put us in the wrong.”
+
+“Now y’u’re shouting. If we’re honest men why don’t we surrender
+peaceable? That’s the play the ‘king’ is going to make in this town.
+Now if we should spoil a posse and bump off one or two of them, we
+couldn’t pile up evidence enough to get a jury to acquit. No, sir! We
+can’t surrender and we can’t fight. Consequence is, we got to roll our
+tails immediate.”
+
+“We have an appointment with Miss Messiter and Nora for to-morrow
+morning. We’ll have to leave word we can’t keep it.”
+
+“Sure. Denver and Missou are playing the wheel down at the Silver
+Dollar. I reckon we better make those boys jump and run errands for us
+while we lie low. I’ll drop in casual and give them the word. Meet y’u
+here in ten minutes. Whatever y’u do, keep that mask on your face.”
+
+“Better meet farther from the scene of trouble. Suppose we say the
+north gate of the grand stand?”
+
+“Good enough. So-long.”
+
+The first faint streaks of day were beginning to show on the horizon
+when Bannister reached the grand stand. He knew that inside of another
+half-hour the little frontier town would be blinking in the early
+morning sunlight that falls so brilliantly through the limpid
+atmosphere. If they were going to leave without fighting their way out
+there was no time to lose.
+
+Ten minutes slowly ticked away.
+
+He glanced at his watch. “Five minutes after four. I wish I had gone
+with Mac. He may have been recognized.”
+
+But even as the thought flitted through his mind, the semi-darkness
+opened to let a figure out of it.
+
+“All quiet along the Potomac, seh?” asked the foreman’s blithe voice.
+“Good. I found the boys and got them started.” He flung down a Mexican
+vaquero’s gaily trimmed costume.
+
+“Get into these, seh. Denver shucked them for me. That coyote must have
+noticed what we wore before he slid out. Y’u can bet the orders are to
+watch for us as we were dressed then.”
+
+“What are y u going to do?”
+
+“Me? I’m scheduled to be Aaron Burr, seh. Missou swaps with me when he
+gets back here. They’re going to rustle us some white men’s clothes,
+too, but we cayn’t wear them till we get out of town on account of
+showing our handsome faces.”
+
+“What about horses?”
+
+“Denver is rustling some for us. Y’u better be scribbling your
+billy-doo to the girl y’u leave behind y’u, seh.”
+
+“Haven’t y’u got one to scribble?” Bannister retorted. “Seems to me y’u
+better get busy, too.”
+
+So it happened that when Missou arrived a few minutes later he found
+this pair of gentlemen, who were about to flee for their lives, busily
+inditing what McWilliams had termed facetiously _billets-doux_. Each of
+them was trying to make his letter a little warmer than friendship
+allowed without committing himself to any chance of a rebuff. Mac got
+as far as Nora Darling, absentmindedly inserted a comma between the
+words, and there stuck hopelessly. He looked enviously across at
+Bannister, whose pencil was traveling rapidly down his note-book.
+
+“My, what a swift trail your pencil leaves on that paper. That’s going
+some. Mine’s bogged down before it got started. I wisht y’u would start
+me off.”
+
+“Well, if you ain’t up and started a business college already. I had
+ought to have brought a typewriter along with me,” murmured Missou
+ironically.
+
+“How are things stacking? Our friends the enemy getting busy yet?”
+asked Bannister, folding and addressing his note.
+
+“That’s what. Orders gone out to guard every road so as not to let you
+pass. What’s the matter with me rustling up the boys and us holding
+down a corner of this town ourselves?”
+
+The sheepman shook his head. “We’re not going to start a little private
+war of our own. We couldn’t do that without spilling a lot of blood.
+No, we’ll make a run for it.”
+
+“That y’u, Denver?” the foreman called softly, as the sound of
+approaching horses reached him.
+
+“Bet your life. Got your own broncs, too. Sheriff Burns called up
+Daniels not to let any horses go out from his corral to anybody without
+his O.K. I happened to be cinching at the time the ’phone message came,
+so I concluded that order wasn’t for me, and lit out kinder
+unceremonious.”
+
+Hastily the fugitives donned the new costumes and dominos, turned their
+notes over to Denver, and swung to their saddles.
+
+“Good luck!” the punchers called after them, and Denver added an
+ironical promise that the foreman had no doubt he would keep. “I’ll
+look out for Nora—Darling.” There was a drawling pause between the
+first and second names. “I’ll ce’tainly see that she don’t have any
+time to worry about y’u, Mac.”
+
+“Y’u go to Halifax,” returned Mac genially over his shoulder as he
+loped away.
+
+“I doubt if we can get out by the roads. Soon as we reach the end of
+the street we better cut across that hayfield,” suggested Ned.
+
+“That’s whatever. Then we’ll slip past the sentries without being seen.
+I’d hate to spoil any of them if we can help it. We’re liable to get
+ourselves disliked if our guns spatter too much.”
+
+They rode through the main street, still noisy with the shouts of late
+revelers returning to their quarters. Masked men were yet in evidence
+occasionally, so that their habits caused neither remark nor suspicion.
+A good many of the punchers, unable to stay longer, were slipping out
+of town after having made a night of it. In the general exodus the two
+friends hoped to escape unobserved.
+
+They dropped into a side street, galloped down it for two hundred
+yards, and dismounted at a barb-wire fence which ran parallel with the
+road. The foreman’s wire-clippers severed the strands one by one, and
+they led their horses through the gap. They crossed an alfalfa-field,
+jumped an irrigation ditch, used the clippers again, and found
+themselves in a large pasture. It was getting lighter every moment, and
+while they were still in the pasture a voice hailed them from the road
+in an unmistakable command to halt.
+
+They bent low over the backs of their ponies and gave them the spur.
+The shot they had expected rang out, passing harmlessly over them.
+Another followed, and still another.
+
+“That’s right. Shoot up the scenery. Y’u don’t hurt us none,” the
+foreman said, apostrophizing the man behind the gun.
+
+The next clipped fence brought them to the open country. For half an
+hour they rode swiftly without halt. Then McWilliams drew up.
+
+“Where are we making for?”
+
+“How about the Wind River country?”
+
+“Won’t do. First off, they’ll strike right down that way after us.
+What’s the matter with running up Sweetwater Creek and lying out in the
+bad lands around the Roubideaux?”
+
+“Good. I have a sheep-camp up that way. I can arrange to have grub sent
+there for us by a man I can trust.”
+
+“All right. The Roubideaux goes.”
+
+While they were nooning at a cow-spring, Bannister, lying on his back,
+with his face to the turquoise sky, became aware that a vagrant impulse
+had crystallized to a fixed determination. He broached it at once to
+his companion.
+
+“One thing is a cinch, Mac. Neither y’u nor I will be safe in this
+country now until we have broken up the gang of desperadoes that is
+terrorizing this country. If we don’t get them they will get us. There
+isn’t any doubt about that. I’m not willing to lie down before these
+miscreants. What do y’u say?”
+
+“I’m with y’u, old man. But put a name to it. What are y’u proposing?”
+
+“I’m proposing that y’u and I make it our business not to have any
+other business until we clean out this nest of wolves. Let’s go right
+after them, and see if we can’t wipe out the Shoshone-Teton outfit.”
+
+“How? They own the law, don’t they?”
+
+“They don’t own the United States Government. When they held up a
+mail-train they did a fool thing, for they bucked up against Uncle Sam.
+What I propose is that we get hold of one of the gang and make him
+weaken. Then, after we have got hold of some evidence that will
+convict, we’ll go out and run down my namesake Ned Bannister. If people
+once get the idea that his hold isn’t so strong there’s a hundred
+people that will testify against him. We’ll have him in a Government
+prison inside of six months.”
+
+“Or else he’ll have us in a hole in the ground,” added the foreman,
+dryly.
+
+“One or the other,” admitted Bannister. “Are y’u in on this thing?”
+
+“I surely am. Y’u’re the best man I’ve met up with in a month of
+Sundays, seh. Y’u ain’t got but one fault; and that is y’u don’t smoke
+cigareets. Feed yourself about a dozen a day and y’u won’t have a
+blamed trouble left. Match, seh?” The foreman of the Lazy D, already
+following his own advice, rolled deftly his smoke, moistened it and
+proceeded to blow away his troubles.
+
+Bannister looked at his debonair insouciance and laughed. “Water off a
+duck’s back,” he quoted. “I know some folks that would be sweating fear
+right now. It’s ce’tainly an aggravating situation, that of being an
+honest man hunted as a villain by a villain. But I expaict my cousin’s
+enjoying it.”
+
+“He ain’t enjoying it so much as he would if his plans had worked out a
+little smoother. He’s holding the sack right now and cussing right
+smaht over it being empty, I reckon.”
+
+“He _did_ lock the stable door a little too late,” chuckled the
+sheepman. But even as he spoke a shadow fell over his face. “My God! I
+had forgotten. Y’u don’t suppose he would take it out of Miss
+Messiter.”
+
+“Not unless he’s tired of living,” returned her foreman, darkly. “One
+thing, this country won’t stand for is that. He’s got to keep his hands
+off women or he loses out. He dassent lay a hand on them if they don’t
+want him to. That’s the law of the plains, isn’t it?”
+
+“That’s the unwritten law for the bad man, but I notice it doesn’t seem
+to satisfy y’u, my friend. Y’u and I know that my cousin, Ned
+Bannister, doesn’t acknowledge any law, written or unwritten. He’s a
+devil and he has no fear. Didn’t he kidnap her before?”
+
+“He surely would never dare touch those young ladies. But—I don’t know.
+Bann, I guess we better roll along toward the Lazy D country, after
+all.”
+
+“I think so.” Ned looked at his friend with smiling drollery. “I
+thought y’u smoked your troubles away, Jim. This one seems to worry
+y’u.”
+
+McWilliams grinned sheepishly. “There’s one trouble won’t be smoked
+away. It kinder dwells.” Then, apparently apropos of nothing, he added,
+irrelevantly: “Wonder what Denver’s doing right now?”
+
+“Probably keeping that appointment y’u ran away from,” bantered his
+friend.
+
+“I’ll bet he is. Funny how some men have all the luck,” murmured the
+despondent foreman.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+HUNTING BIG GAME
+
+
+In point of fact, Denver’s occupation at that moment was precisely what
+they had guessed it to be. He was sitting beside Nora Darling in the
+grand stand, explaining to her the fine points of “roping.” Mr. Bob
+Austin, commonly known as “Texas,” was meanwhile trying to make himself
+agreeable to Helen Messiter. Truth to tell, both young women listened
+with divided interest to their admirers. Both of them had heard the
+story of the night, and each of them had tucked away in her corsage a
+scribbled note she wanted to get back to her room and read again. That
+the pursuit was still on everybody knew, and those on the inside were
+aware that the “King,” masquerading under the name of Jack Holloway,
+was the active power behind the sheriff stimulating the chase.
+
+It was after the roping had begun, and Austin had been called away to
+take his turn, that the outlaw chief sauntered along the aisle of the
+grand stand to the box in which was seated the mistress of the Lazy D.
+
+“Beautiful mo’ning, isn’t it? Delightfully crisp and clear,” he said by
+way of introduction, stopping at her box.
+
+She understood the subtle jeer in his manner, and her fine courage rose
+to meet it. There was a daring light in her eye, a buoyant challenge in
+her voice as she answered:
+
+“It is a splendid morning. I’m not surprised you are enjoying it.”
+
+“Did I say I was enjoying it?” He laughed as he lifted the bar, came
+into her box and took a seat.
+
+“Of course not. How careless of me! I had forgotten you were in
+mourning for a deceased friend.”
+
+His dark eyes flashed. “I’ll not mourn for him long. He was a mighty
+trifling fellow, anyhow. Soon as I catch and hang his murderers I’ll
+quit wearing black.”
+
+“You may wear out several suits before then,” she hit back.
+
+“Don’t y’u believe it; when I want a thing I don’t quit till it’s
+done.”
+
+She met his gaze, and the impact of eyes seemed to shock her
+physically. The wickedness in him threatened, gloated, dominated. She
+shivered in the warm sunlight, and would not have had him know it for
+worlds.
+
+“Dear me! How confident you talk. Aren’t you sometimes disappointed?”
+
+“Temporarily. But when I want a thing I take it in the end.”
+
+She knew he was serving notice on her that he meant to win her; and
+again the little spinal shiver raced over her. She could not look at
+his sardonic, evil face without fear, and she could not look away
+without being aware of his eyes possessing her. What was the use of
+courage against such a creature as this?
+
+“Yes, I understand you take a good deal that isn’t yours,” she retorted
+carelessly, her eyes on the arena.
+
+“I make it mine when I take it,” he answered coolly, admiring the
+gameness which she wore as a suit of chain armor against his thrusts.
+
+“Isn’t it a little dangerous sometimes?” her even voice countered.
+“When you take what belongs to others you run a risk, don’t you?”
+
+“That’s part of the rules. Except for that I shouldn’t like it so well.
+I hunt big game, and the bigger the game the more risk. That’s why y’u
+guessed right when y’u said I was enjoying the mo’ning.”
+
+“Meaning—your cousin?”
+
+“Well, no. I wasn’t thinking of him, though he’s some sizable. But I’m
+hunting bigger game than he is, and I expect to bag it.”
+
+She let her scornful eyes drift slowly over him. “I might pretend to
+misunderstand you. But I won’t. You may have your answer now. I am not
+afraid of you, for since you are a bully you must be a coward. I saw a
+rattlesnake last week in the hills. It reminded me of some one I have
+seen. I’ll leave you to guess who.”
+
+Her answer drew blood. The black tide raced under the swarthy tan of
+his face. He leaned forward till his beady eyes were close to her
+defiant ones. “Y’u have forgotten one thing, Miss Messiter. A
+rattlesnake can sting. I ask nothing of you. Can’t I break your heart
+without your loving me? You’re only a woman—and not the first I have
+broken, by God—”
+
+His slim, lithe body was leaning forward so that it cut off others, and
+left them to all intents alone. At a touch of her fingers the handbag
+in her lap flew open and a little ivory-hilted revolver lay in her
+hand.
+
+“You may break me, but you’ll never bend me an inch.”
+
+He looked at the little gun and laughed ironically. “Sho! If y’u should
+hit me with that and I should find it out I might get mad at y’u.”
+
+“Did I say it was for you?” she said coldly; and again the shock of
+joined eyes ended in drawn battle.
+
+“Have y’u the nerve?” He looked her over, so dainty and so resolute, so
+silken strong; and he knew he had his answer.
+
+His smoldering eyes burned with desire to snatch her to him and ride
+away into the hills. For he was a man who lived in his sensations. He
+had won many women to their hurt, but it was the joy of conflict that
+made the pursuit worth while to him; and this young woman, who could so
+delightfully bubble with little laughs ready to spill over and was yet
+possessed of a spirit so finely superior to the tenderness of her soft,
+round, maidenly curves, allured him mightily to the attack.
+
+She dropped the revolver back into the bag and shut the clasp with a
+click, “And now I think, Mr. Bannister, that I’ll not detain you any
+longer. We understand each other sufficiently.”
+
+He rose with a laugh that mocked. “I expaict to spend quite a bit of
+time understanding y’u one of these days. In the meantime this is to
+our better acquaintance.”
+
+Deliberately, without the least haste, he stooped and kissed her before
+she could rally from the staggering surprise of the intention she read
+in his eyes too late to elude. Then, with the coolest bravado in the
+world, he turned on his heel and strolled away.
+
+Angry sapphires gleamed at him from under the long, brown lashes. She
+was furious, aghast, daunted. By the merest chance she was sitting in a
+corner of the box, so screened from observation that none could see.
+But the insolence of him, the reckless defiance of all standards of
+society, shook her even while it enraged her. He had put forth his
+claim like a braggart, but he had made good with an audacity superb in
+its effrontery. How she hated him! How she feared him! The thoughts
+were woven inseparably in her mind. Mephisto himself could not have
+impressed himself more imperatively than this strutting, heartless
+master artist in vice.
+
+She saw him again presently down in the arena, for it was his turn to
+show his skill at roping. Texas had done well; very well, indeed. He
+had made the throw and tie in thirty-seven seconds, which was two
+seconds faster than the record of the previous year. But she knew
+instinctively, as her fascinated eyes watched the outlaw preparing for
+the feat, that he was going to win. He would use his success as a
+weapon against her; as a means of showing her that he always succeeded
+in whatever he undertook. So she interpreted he look he flung her as he
+waited at the chute for the wild hill steer to be driven into the
+arena. It takes a good man physically to make a successful roper. He
+must be possessed of nerve, skill and endurance far out of the
+ordinary. He must be quick-eyed, strong-handed, nimble of foot, expert
+of hand and built like a wildcat. So Denver explained to the two young
+women in the box, and the one behind him admitted reluctantly that she
+long, lean, supple Centaur waiting impassively at the gateway fitted
+the specifications.
+
+Out flashed the rough-coated hill steer, wild and fleet as a hare, thin
+and leggy, with muscles of whipcord. Down went the flag, and the
+stopwatches began to tick off the seconds. Like an arrow the outlaw’s
+pony shot forward, a lariat circling round and round the rider’s head.
+At every leap the cow pony lessened the gap as it pounded forward on
+the heels of the flying steer.
+
+The loop swept forward and dropped over the horns of the animal. The
+pony, with the perfect craft of long practice, swerved to one side with
+a rush. The dragging rope swung up against the running steer’s legs,
+grew suddenly taut. Down went the steer’s head, and next moment its
+feet were swept from under it as it went heavily to the ground. Man and
+horse were perfect in their team work. As the supple rider slid from
+the back of the pony it ran to the end of the rope and braced itself to
+keep the animal from rising. Bannister leaped on the steer, tie-rope in
+hand. Swiftly his deft hands passed to and fro, making the necessary
+loops and knots. Then his hands went into the air. The steer was
+hog-tied.
+
+For a few seconds the judges consulted together. “Twenty-nine seconds,”
+announced their spokesman, and at the words a great cheer went up.
+Bannister had made his tie in record time.
+
+Impudently the scoundrel sauntered up to the grand stand, bowed
+elaborately to Miss Messiter, and perched himself on the fence, where
+he might be the observed of all observers. It was curious, she thought,
+how his vanity walked hand in hand with so much power and force. He was
+really extraordinarily strong, but no debutante’s self-sufficiency
+could have excelled his. He was so frankly an egotist that it ceased to
+be a weakness.
+
+Back in her room at the hotel an hour later Helen paced up and down
+under a nervous strain foreign to her temperament. She was afraid; for
+the first time in her life definitely afraid. This man pitted against
+her had deliberately divorced his life from morality. In him lay no
+appeal to any conscience court of last resort. But the terror of this
+was not for herself principally, but for her flying lover. With his
+indubitable power, backed by the unpopularity of the sheepman in this
+cattle country, the King of the Bighorn could destroy his cousin if he
+set himself to do so. Of this she was convinced, and her conviction
+carried a certainty that he had the will as well as the means. If he
+had lacked anything in motive she herself had supplied one. For she was
+afraid that this villain had read her heart.
+
+And as her hand went fluttering to her heart she found small comfort in
+the paper lying next it that only a few hours before had brought her
+joy. For at any moment a messenger might come in to tell her that the
+writer of it had been captured and was to be dealt with summarily in
+frontier fashion. At best her lover and her friend were but fugitives
+from justice. Against them were arrayed not only the ruffian followers
+of their enemy, but also the lawfully constituted authorities of the
+county. Even if they should escape to-day the net would tighten on
+them, and they would eventually be captured.
+
+For the third time since coming to Wyoming Helen found refuge in tears.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+RUN TO EARTH
+
+
+When word came to Denver and the other punchers of the Lazy D that
+Reddy had been pressed into service as a guide for the posse that was
+pursuing the fugitives they gave vent to their feelings in choice
+profanity.
+
+“Now, ain’t that like him? Had to run around like a locoed calf telling
+all he knowed and more till Burns ropes him in,” commented the
+disgusted Missou.
+
+“Trouble with Reddy is he sets his mouth to working and then goes away
+and leaves it,” mourned Jim Henson.
+
+“I’d hate to feel as sore as Reddy will when the boys get through
+playing with him after he gets back to the ranch,” Denver contributed,
+when he had exhausted his vocabulary.
+
+Meanwhile Reddy, unaware of being a cause of offense, was cheerfully
+happy in the unexpected honor that had been thrust upon him. His will
+was of putty, molded into the opinion of whomever he happened at the
+moment to be with. Just now, with the ironic eye of Sheriff Burns upon
+him, he was strong for law enforcement.
+
+“A feller hadn’t ought to be so promiscuous with his hardware. This
+here thing of shooting up citizens don’t do Wyoming no good these days.
+Capital ain’t a-going to come in when such goings-on occur,” he sagely
+opined, unconsciously parroting the sentiment Burns had just been
+instilling into him.
+
+“That’s right, sir. If that ain’t horse sense I don’t know any. You got
+a head on you, all right,” answered the admiring sheriff.
+
+The flattered Reddy pleaded guilty to being wiser than most men. “Jest
+because I punch cows ain’t any reason why I’m anybody’s fool. I’ll show
+them smart boys at the Lazy D I don’t have to take the dust of any of
+the bunch when it comes to using my think tank.”
+
+“I would,” sympathized Burns. “You bet they’ll all be almighty jealous
+when they learn how you was chosen out of the whole outfit on this
+job.”
+
+All day they rode, and that night camped a few miles from the Lazy D.
+Early next morning they hailed a solitary rider as he passed. The man
+turned out to be a cowman, with a small ranch not far from the one
+owned by Miss Messiter.
+
+“Hello, Henderson! y’u seen anything of Jim McWilliams and another
+fellow riding acrost this way?” asked Reddy.
+
+“Nope,” answered the cowman promptly. But immediately he modified his
+statement to add that he had seen two men riding toward Dry Creek a
+couple of hours ago. “They was going kinder slow. Looked to me sorter
+like one of them was hurt and the other was helping him out,” he
+volunteered.
+
+The sheriff looked significantly at one of his men and nodded.
+
+“You didn’t recognize the horses, I reckon?”
+
+“Come to think of it, one of the ponies did look like Jim’s roan.
+What’s up, boys? Anything doing?”
+
+“Nothing particular. We want to see Jim, that’s all. So long.”
+
+What Henderson had guessed was the truth. The continuous hard riding
+had been too much for Bannister and his wound had opened anew. They
+were at the time only a few miles from a shack on Dry Creek, where the
+Lazy D punchers sometimes put up. McWilliams had attended the wound as
+best he could, and after a few hours’ rest had headed for the cabin in
+the hills. They were compelled to travel very slowly, since the motion
+kept the sheepman’s wound continually bleeding. But about noon they
+reached the refuge they had been seeking and Bannister lay down on the
+bunk with their saddle blankets under him. He soon fell asleep, and Mac
+took advantage of this to set out on a foraging expedition to a ranch
+not far distant. Here he got some bread, bacon, milk and eggs from a
+man he could trust and returned to his friend.
+
+It was dark by the time he reached the cabin. He dismounted, and with
+his arms full of provisions pushed into the hut.
+
+“Awake, Bann?” he asked in a low voice.
+
+The answer was unexpected. Something heavy struck his chest and flung
+him back against the wall. Before he could recover his balance he was
+pinioned fast. Four men had hurled themselves upon him.
+
+“We’ve got you, Jim. Not a mite o’ use resisting,” counseled the
+sheriff.
+
+“Think I don’t savez that? I can take a hint when a whole Methodist
+church falls on me. Who are y’u, anyhow?”
+
+“Somebody light a lantern,” ordered Burns.
+
+By the dim light it cast Mac made them out, and saw Ned Bannister
+gagged and handcuffed on the bed. He knew a moment of surprise when his
+eyes fell on Reddy.
+
+“So it was y’u brought them here, Red?” he said quietly.
+
+Contrary to his own expectations, the gentleman named was embarrassed
+“The sheriff, he summoned me to serve,” was his lame defense.
+
+“And so y’u threw down your friends. Good boy!”
+
+“A man’s got to back the law up, ain’t he?”
+
+Mac turned his shoulder on him rather pointedly. “There isn’t any need
+of keeping that gag in my friend’s mouth any longer,” he suggested to
+Burns.
+
+“That’s right, too. Take it out, boys. I got to do my duty, but I don’t
+aim to make any gentleman more uncomfortable than I can help. I want
+everything to be pleasant all round.”
+
+“I’m right glad to hear that, Burns, because my friend isn’t fit to
+travel. Y’u can take me back and leave him out here with a guard,” the
+foreman replied quickly.
+
+“Sorry I can’t accommodate you, Jim, but I got to take y’u both with
+me.”
+
+“Those are the orders of the King, are they?”
+
+Burns flushed darkly. “It ain’t going to do you any good to talk that
+way. You know mighty well this here man with you is Bannister. I ain’t
+going to take no chances on losing him now I’ve got my hand on him.”
+
+“Y’u ce’tainly deserve a re-election, and I’ll bet y’u get it all
+right. Any man so given over to duty, so plumb loaded down to the hocks
+with conscience as y’u, will surely come back with a big majority next
+November.”
+
+“I ain’t askin’ for _your_ vote, Mac.”
+
+“Oh, y’u don’t need votes. Just get the King to O. K. your nomination
+and y’u’ll win in a walk.”
+
+“My friend, y’u better mind your own business. Far as I can make out
+y’u got troubles enough of your own,” retorted the nettled sheriff.
+
+“Y’u don’t need to tell me that, Tom Burns’ Y’u ain’t a man—nothing but
+a stuffed skin worked by a string. When that miscreant Bannister pulls
+the string y’u jump. He’s jerked it now, so y’u’re taking us back to
+him. I can prove that coyote Morgan shot at me first, but that doesn’t
+cut any ice with you.”
+
+“What made you light out so sudden, then?” demanded the aggrieved Burns
+triumphantly.
+
+“Because I knew _you_. That’s a plenty good reason. I’m not asking
+anything for myself. All I say is that my friend isn’t fit to travel
+yet. Let him stay here under a guard till he is.”
+
+“He was fit enough to get here. By thunder, he’s fit to go back!”
+
+“Y’u’ve said enough, Mac,” broke in Bannister. “It’s awfully good of
+y’u to speak for me, but I would rather see it out with you to a
+finish. I don’t want any favors from this yellow dog of my cousin.”
+
+The “yellow dog” set his teeth and swore vindictively behind them. He
+was already imagining an hour when these insolent prisoners of his
+would sing another tune.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+PLAYING FOR TIME
+
+
+“They’ve got ’em. Caught them on Dry Creek, just below Green Forks.”
+
+Helen Messiter, just finishing her breakfast at the hotel preparatory
+to leaving in her machine for the ranch, laid down her knife and fork
+and looked with dilated eyes at Denver, who had broken in with the
+news.
+
+“Are you sure?” The color had washed from her face and left her very
+white, but she fronted the situation quietly without hysterics or fuss
+of any kind.
+
+“Yes, ma’am. They’re bringing them in now to jail. Watch out and y’u’ll
+see them pass here in a few minutes. Seems that Bannister’s wound
+opened up on him and he couldn’t go any farther. Course Mac wouldn’t
+leave him. Sheriff Burns and his posse dropped in on them and had them
+covered before Mac could chirp.”
+
+“You are sure this man—this desperado Bannister—will do nothing till
+night?”
+
+“Not the way I figure it. He’ll have the jail watched all day. But he’s
+got to work the town up to a lynching. I expect the bars will be free
+for all to-day. By night the worst part of this town will be ready for
+anything. The rest of the citizens are going to sit down and do nothing
+just because it is Bannister.”
+
+“But it isn’t Bannister—not the Bannister they think it is.”
+
+He shook his head. “No use, ma’am. I’ve talked till my throat aches,
+but it don’t do a mite of good. Nobody believes a word of what I say.
+Y’u see, we ain’t got any proof.”
+
+“Proof! We have enough, God knows! didn’t this villain—this outlaw that
+calls himself Jack Holloway—attack and try to murder him?”
+
+“That’s what we believe, but the report out is that one of us punchers
+shot him up for crossing the dead-line.”
+
+“Didn’t this fellow hold up the ranch and try to take Ned Bannister
+away with him?”
+
+“Yes, ma’am. But that doesn’t look good to most people. They say he had
+his friends come to take him away so y’u wouldn’t hold him and let us
+boys get him. This cousin business is a fairy tale the way they size it
+up. How come this cousin to let him go if he held up the ranch to put
+the sick man out of business? No, miss. This country has made up its
+mind that your friend is the original Ned Bannister. My opinion is that
+nothing on earth can save him.”
+
+“I don’t want your opinion. I’m going to save him, I tell you; and you
+are going to help. Are his friends nothing but a bunch of quitters?”
+she cried, with sparkling eyes.
+
+“I didn’t know I was such a great friend of his,” answered the cowboy
+sulkily.
+
+“You’re a friend of Jim McWilliams, aren’t you? Are you going to sneak
+away and let these curs hang him?”
+
+Denver flushed. “Y’u’re dead right, Miss Helen. I guess I’ll see it out
+with you. What’s the orders?”
+
+“I want you to help me organize a defense. Get all Mac’s friends
+stirred up to make a fight for him. Bring as many of them in to see me
+during the day as you can. If you see any of the rest of the Lazy D
+boys send them in to me for instructions. Report yourself every hour to
+me. And make sure that at least three of your friends that you can
+trust are hanging round the jail all day so as to be ready in case any
+attempt is made to storm it before dark.”
+
+“I’ll see to it.” Denver hung on his heel a moment before leaving.
+“It’s only square to tell y’u, Miss Helen, that this means war here
+tonight. These streets are going to run with blood if we try to save
+them.”
+
+“I’m taking that responsibility,” she told him curtly; but a moment
+later she added gently: “I have a plan, my friend, that may stop this
+outrage yet. But you must do your best for me.” She smiled sadly at
+him. “You’re my foreman, to-day, you know.”
+
+“I’m going to do my level best, y’u may tie to that,” he told her
+earnestly.
+
+“I know you will.” And their fingers touched for an instant.
+
+Through a window the girl could see a crowd pouring down the street
+toward the hotel. She flew up the stairs and out upon the second-story
+piazza that looked down upon the road.
+
+From her point of vantage she easily picked them out—the two unarmed
+men riding with their hands tied behind their backs, encircled by a
+dozen riders armed to the teeth. Bannister’s hat had apparently fallen
+off farther down the street, for the man beside him was dusting it. The
+wounded prisoner looked about him without fear, but it was plain he was
+near the limit of endurance. He was pale as a sheet, and his fair curls
+clung moistly to his damp forehead.
+
+McWilliams caught sight of her first, and she could see him turn and
+say a word to his comrade. Bannister looked up, caught sight of her,
+and smiled. That smile, so pale and wan, went to her heart like a
+knife. But the message of her eyes was hope. They told the prisoners
+silently to be of good cheer, that at least they were not deserted to
+their fate.
+
+“What is it about—the crowd?” Nora asked of her mistress as the latter
+was returning to the head of the stairs.
+
+In as few words as she could Helen told her, repressing sharply the
+tears the girl began to shed. “This is not the time to weep—not yet. We
+must save them. You can do your part. Mr. Bannister is wounded. Get a
+doctor over the telephone and see that he attends him at the prison.
+Don’t leave the ’phone until you have got one to promise to go
+immediately.”
+
+“Yes, miss. Is there anything else?”
+
+“Ask the doctor to call you up from the prison and tell you how Mr.
+Bannister is. Make it plain to him that he is to give up his other
+practice, if necessary, and is to keep us informed through the day
+about his patient’s condition. I will be responsible for his bill.”
+
+Helen herself hurried to the telegraph office at the depot. She wrote
+out a long dispatch and handed it to the operator. “Send this at once
+please.”
+
+He was one of those supercilious young idiots that make the most of
+such small power as ever drifts down to them. Taking the message, he
+tossed it on the table. “I’ll send it when I get time.”
+
+“You’ll send it now.”
+
+“What—what’s that?”
+
+Her steady eyes caught and held his shifting ones. “I say you are going
+to send it now—this very minute.”
+
+“I guess not. The line’s busy,” he bluffed.
+
+“If you don’t begin sending that message this minute I’ll make it my
+business to see that you lose your position,” she told him calmly.
+
+He snatched up the paper from the place where he had tossed it. “Oh,
+well, if it’s so darned important,” he conceded ungraciously.
+
+She stood quietly above him while he sent the telegram, even though he
+contrived to make every moment of her stay an unvoiced insult. Her wire
+was to the wife of the Governor of the State. They had been close
+friends at school, and the latter had been urging Helen to pay a visit
+to Cheyenne. The message she sent was as follows:
+
+Battle imminent between outlaws and cattlemen here. Bloodshed certain
+to-night. My foreman last night killed in self-defense a desperado.
+Bannister’s gang, in league with town authorities, mean to lynch him
+and one of my other friends after dark this evening. Sheriff will do
+nothing. Can your husband send soldiers immediately? Wire answer.
+
+
+The operator looked up sullenly after his fingers had finished the last
+tap. “Well?”
+
+“Just one thing more,” Helen told him. “You understand the rules of the
+company about secrecy. Nobody but you knows I am sending this message.
+If by any chance it should leak out, I shall know through whom. If you
+want to hold your position, you will keep quiet.”
+
+“I know my business,” he growled. Nevertheless, she had spoken in
+season, for he had had it in his mind to give a tip where he knew it
+would be understood to hasten the jail delivery and accompanying
+lynching.
+
+When she returned to the hotel, Helen found Missou waiting for her. She
+immediately sent him back to the office, and told him to wait there
+until the answer was received. “I’ll send one of the boys up to relieve
+you so that you may come with the telegram as soon as it arrives. I
+want the operator watched all day. Oh, here’s Jim Henson! Denver has
+explained the situation to you, I presume. I want you to go up to the
+telegraph office and stay there all day. Go to lunch with the operator
+when he goes. Don’t let him talk privately to anybody, not even for a
+few seconds. I don’t want you to seem to have him under guard before
+outsiders, but let him know it very plainly. He is not to mention a
+wire I sent or the answer to it—not to anybody, Jim. Is that plain?”
+
+“Y’u bet! He’s a clam, all right, till the order is countermanded.” And
+the young man departed with a cheerful grin that assured Helen she had
+nothing to fear from official leaks.
+
+Nora, from answering a telephone call, came to report to the general in
+charge. “The doctor says that he has looked after Mr. Bannister, and
+there is no immediate danger. If he keeps quiet for a few days he ought
+to do well. Mr. McWilliams sent a message by him to say that we aren’t
+to worry about him. He said he would—would—rope a heap of cows on the
+Lazy D yet.”
+
+Nora, bursting into tears, flung herself into Helen’s arms. “They are
+going to kill him. I know they are, and—and ’twas only yesterday,
+ma’am, I told him not to—to get gay, the poor boy. When he tried
+to—to—” She broke down and sobbed.
+
+Her mistress smiled in spite of herself, though she was bitterly aware
+that even Nora’s grief was only superficially ludicrous.
+
+“We’re going to save him, Nora, if we can. There’s hope while there’s
+life. You see, Mac himself is full of courage. _He_ hasn’t given up. We
+must keep up our courage, too.”
+
+“Yes, ma’am, but this is the first gentleman friend I ever had hanged,
+and—” She broke off, sobbing, leaving the rest as a guess.
+
+Helen filled it out aloud. “And you were going to say that you care
+more for him than any of the others. Well, you must stop coquetting and
+tell him so when we have saved him.”
+
+“Yes, ma’am,” agreed Nora, very repentant for the moment of the fact
+that it was her nature to play with the hearts of those of the male
+persuasion. Immediately she added: “He was _that_ kind, ma’am,
+tender-hearted.”
+
+Helen, whose own heart was breaking, continued to soothe her. “Don’t
+say _was_, child. You are to be brave, and not think of him that way.”
+
+“Yes, ma’am. He told me he was going to buy cows with the thousand
+dollars he won yesterday. I knew he meant—”
+
+“Yes, of course. It’s a cowboy’s way of saying that he means to start
+housekeeping. Have you the telegram, Missou?” For that young man was
+standing in the doorway.
+
+He handed her the yellow slip. She ripped open the envelope and read:
+
+Company B en route. Railroad connections uncertain. Postpone crisis
+long as possible. May reach Gimlet Butte by ten-thirty.
+
+
+Her first thought was of unspeakable relief. The militia was going to
+take a hand. The boys in khaki would come marching down the street, and
+everything would be all right. But hard on the heels of her instinctive
+gladness trod the sober second thought. Ten-thirty at best, and perhaps
+later! Would they wait that long, or would they do their cowardly work
+as soon as night fell. She must contrive to delay them till the train
+drew in. She must play for those two lives with all her woman’s wit;
+must match the outlaw’s sinister cunning and fool him into delay. She
+knew he would come if she sent for him. But how long could she keep
+him? As long as he was amused at her agony, as long as his pleasure in
+tormenting her was greater than his impatience to be at his ruffianly
+work. Oh, if she ever needed all her power it would be to-night.
+
+Throughout the day she continued to receive hourly reports from Denver,
+who always brought with him four or five honest cowpunchers from
+up-country to listen to the strange tale she unfolded to them. It was,
+of course, in part, the spell of her sweet personality, of that shy
+appeal she made to the manhood in them; but of those who came, nearly
+all believed, for the time at least, and aligned themselves on her side
+in the struggle that was impending. Some of these were swayed from
+their allegiance in the course of the day, but a few she knew would
+remain true.
+
+Meanwhile, all through the day, the enemy was busily at work. As Denver
+had predicted, free liquor was served to all who would drink. The town
+and its guests were started on a grand debauch that was to end in
+violence that might shock their sober intelligence. Everywhere poisoned
+whispers were being flung broadcast against the two men waiting in the
+jail for what the night would bring forth.
+
+Dusk fell on a town crazed by bad whiskey and evil report. The deeds of
+Bannister were hashed and rehashed at every bar, and nobody related
+them with more ironic gusto than the man who called himself Jack
+Holloway. There were people in town who knew his real name and
+character, but of these the majority were either in alliance with him
+or dared not voice their knowledge. Only Miss Messiter and her punchers
+told the truth, and their words were blown away like chaff.
+
+From the first moment of darkness Helen had the outlaw leader dogged by
+two of her men. Since neither of these were her own riders this was
+done without suspicion. At intervals of every quarter of an hour they
+reported to her in turn. Bannister was beginning to drink heavily, and
+she did not want to cut short his dissipation by a single minute. Yet
+she had to make sure of getting his attention before he went too far.
+
+It was close to nine when she sent him a note, not daring to delay a
+minute longer. For the reports of her men were all to the same effect,
+that the crisis would not now be long postponed. Bannister, or
+Holloway, as he chose to call himself, was at the bar with his
+lieutenants in evil when the note reached him. He read it with a
+satisfaction he could not conceal. So! He had brought her already to
+her knees. Before he was through with her she should grovel in the dust
+before him.
+
+“I’ll be back in a few minutes. Do nothing till I return,” he ordered,
+and went jingling away to the Elk House.
+
+The young woman’s anxiety was pitiable, but she repressed it sternly
+when she went to meet the man she feared; and never had it been more in
+evidence than in this hour of her greatest torture. Blithely she came
+forward to meet him, eye challenging eye gayly. No hint of her anguish
+escaped into her manner. He read there only coquetry, the eternal sex
+conflict, the winsome defiance of a woman hitherto the virgin mistress
+of all assaults upon her heart’s citadel. It was the last thing he had
+expected to see, but it was infinitely more piquant, more intoxicating,
+than desperation. She seemed to give the lie to his impression of her
+love for his cousin; and that, too, delighted his pride.
+
+“You will sit down?”
+
+Carelessly, almost indolently, she put the question, her raised
+eyebrows indicating a chair with perfunctory hospitality. He had not
+meant to sit, had expected only to gloat a few minutes over her
+despair; but this situation called for more deliberation. He had yet to
+establish the mastery his vanity demanded. Therefore he took a chair.
+
+“This is ce’tainly an unexpected honor. Did y’u send for me to explain
+some more about that sufficient understanding between us?” he sneered.
+
+It was a great relief to her to see that, though he had been drinking,
+as she had heard, he was entirely master of himself. Her efforts might
+still be directed to Philip sober.
+
+“I sent for you to congratulate you,” she answered, with a smile. “You
+are a bigger man than I thought. You have done what you said you would
+do, and I presume you can very shortly go out of mourning.”
+
+He radiated vanity, seemed to visibly expand “Do y’u go in when I go
+out?” he asked brutally.
+
+She laughed lightly. “Hardly. But it does seem as if I’m unlucky in my
+foremen. They all seem to have engagements across the divide.”
+
+“I’ll get y u another.”
+
+“Thank you. I was going to ask as much of you. Can you suggest one
+now?”
+
+“I’m a right good cattle man myself.”
+
+“And—can you stay with me a reasonable time?”
+
+He laughed. “I have no engagements across the Styx, ma’am.”
+
+“My other foremen thought _they_ were permanent fixtures here, too.”
+
+“We’re all liable to mistakes.”
+
+“Even you, I suppose.”
+
+“I’ll sign a lease to give y’u possession of my skill for as long as
+y’u like.”
+
+She settled herself comfortably back in an easy chair, as alluring a
+picture of buoyant, radiant youth as he had seen in many a day. “But
+the terms. I am afraid I can’t offer you as much as you make at your
+present occupation.”
+
+“I could keep that up as a side-line.”
+
+“So you could. But if you use my time for your own profit, you ought to
+pay me a royalty on your intake.”
+
+His eyes lit with laughter. “I reckon that can be arranged. Any
+percentage you think fair It will all be in the family, anyway.”
+
+“I think that is one of the things about which we don’t agree,” she
+made answer softly, flashing him the proper look of inviting disdain
+from under her silken lashes.
+
+He leaned forward, elbow on the chair-arm and chin in hand. “We’ll
+agree about it one of these days.”
+
+“Think so?” she returned airily.
+
+“I don’t think. I know.”
+
+Just an eyebeat her gaze met his, with that hint of shy questioning, of
+puzzled doubt that showed a growing interest. “I wonder,” she murmured,
+and recovered herself with a hurried little laugh.
+
+How she hated her task, and him! She was a singularly honest woman, but
+she must play the siren; must allure this scoundrel to forgetfulness,
+and yet elude the very familiarity her manner invited. She knew her
+part, the heartless enticing coquette, compounded half of passion and
+half of selfishness. It was a hateful thing to do, this sacrifice of
+her personal reticence, of the individual abstraction in which she
+wrapped herself as a cloak, in order to hint at a possibility of some
+intimacy of feeling between them. She shrank from it with a repugnance
+hardly to be overcome, but she held herself with an iron will and
+consummate art to the role she had undertaken. Two lives hung on her
+success. She must not forget that. She would not let herself forget
+that—and one of them that of the man she loved.
+
+So, bravely she played her part, repelling always with a hint of
+invitation, denying with the promise in her fascinated eyes of ultimate
+surrender to his ardor. In the zest of the pursuit the minutes slipped
+away unnoticed. Never had a woman seemed to him more subtly elusive,
+and never had he felt more sure of himself. Her charm grew on him,
+stirred his pulses to a faster beat. For it was his favorite sport, and
+this warm, supple young creature, who was to be the victim of his bow
+and arrow, showed herself worthy of his mettle.
+
+The clock downstairs struck the half-hour, and Bannister, reminded of
+what lay before him outside, made a move to go. Her alert eyes had been
+expecting it, and she forestalled him by a change of tactics. Moved
+apparently by impulse, she seated herself on the piano-stool, swept the
+keys for an instant with her fingers, and plunged into the brilliant
+“Carmen” overture. Susceptible as this man was to the influence of
+music, he could not fail to be arrested by so perfect an interpretation
+of his mood. He stood rooted, was carried back again in imagination to
+a great artiste’s rendering of that story of fierce passion and aching
+desire so brilliantly enacted under the white sunbeat of a country of
+cloudless skies. Imperceptibly she drifted into other parts of the
+opera. Was it the wild, gypsy seductiveness of _Carmen_ that he felt,
+or, rather, this American girl’s allurement? From “Love will like a
+birdling fly” she slipped into the exquisitely graceful snatches of
+song with which _Carmen_ answers the officer’s questions. Their rare
+buoyancy marched with his mood, and from them she carried him into the
+song “Over the hill,” that is so perfect and romantic an expression of
+the _wanderlust._
+
+How long she could have held him she will never know, for at that
+inopportune time came blundering one of his men into the room with a
+call for his presence to take charge of the situation outside.
+
+“What do y’u want, Bostwick?” he demanded, with curt peremptoriness.
+
+The man whispered in his ear.
+
+“Can’t wait any longer, can’t they?” snapped his chief. “Y’u tell them
+they’ll wait till I give the word. Understand?”
+
+He almost flung the man out of the room, but Helen noticed that she had
+lost him. His interest was perfunctory, and, though he remained a
+little time longer, it was to establish his authority with the men
+rather than to listen to her. Twice he looked at his watch within five
+minutes.
+
+He rose to go. “There is a little piece of business I have to put
+through. So I’ll have to ask y’u to excuse me. I have had a delightful
+hour, and I hate to go.” He smiled, and quoted with mock
+sentimentality:
+
+“The hours I spent with thee, dear heart,
+ Are as a string of pearls to me;
+I count them over, every one apart,
+ My rosary! My rosary!”
+
+
+“Dear me! One certainly lives and learns. How could I have guessed
+that, with your reputation, you could afford to indulge in a rosary?”
+she mocked.
+
+“Good night.” He offered his hand.
+
+“Don’t go yet,” she coaxed.
+
+He shook his head. “Duty, y’u know.”
+
+“Stay only a little longer. Just ten minutes more.”
+
+His vanity purred, so softly she stroked it. “Can’t. Wish I could. Y’u
+hear how noisy things are getting. I’ve got to take charge. So-long.”
+
+She stood close, looking up at him with a face of seductive appeal.
+
+“Don’t go yet. Please!”
+
+The triumph of victory mounted to his head. “I’ll come back when I’ve
+done what I’ve got to do.”
+
+“No, no. Stay a little longer just a little.”
+
+“Not a minute, sweetheart.”
+
+He bent to kiss her, and a little clenched fist struck his face.
+
+“Don’t you dare!” she cried.
+
+The outraged woman in her, curbed all evening with an iron bit, escaped
+from control. Delightedly he laughed. The hot spirit in her pleased him
+mightily. He took her little hands and held them in one of his while he
+smiled down at her. “I guess that kiss will keep, my girl, till I come
+back.”
+
+“My God! Are you going to kill your own cousin?”
+
+All her terror, all her detestation and hatred of him, looked haggardly
+out of her unmasked face. His narrowed eyes searched her heart, and his
+countenance grew every second more sinister,
+
+“Y’u have been fooling me all evening, then?”
+
+“Yes, and hating you every minute of the time.”
+
+“Y’u dared?” His face was black with rage.
+
+“You would like to kill me. Why don’t you?”
+
+“Because I know a better revenge. I’m going out to take it now. After
+your lover is dead, I’ll come back and make love to y’u again,” he
+sneered.
+
+“Never!” She stood before him like a queen in her lissom, brave,
+defiant youth. “And as for your cousin, you may kill him, but you can’t
+destroy his contempt for you. He will die despising you for a coward
+and a scoundrel.”
+
+It was true, and he knew it. In his heart he cursed her, while he
+vainly sought some weapon that would strike home through her impervious
+armor.
+
+“Y’u love him. I’ll remember that when I see him kick,” he taunted.
+
+“I make you a present of the information. I love him, and I despise
+you. Nothing can change those facts,” she retorted whitely.
+
+“Mebbe, but some day y’u’ll crawl on your knees to beg my pardon for
+having told me so.”
+
+“There is your overweening vanity again,” she commented.
+
+“I’m going to break y’u, my beauty, so that y’u’ll come running when I
+snap my fingers.”
+
+“We’ll see.”
+
+“And in the meantime I’ll go hang your lover.” He bowed ironically,
+swung on his jingling heel, and strode out of the room.
+
+She stood there listening to his dying footfalls, then covered her face
+with her hands, as if to press back the dreadful vision her mind
+conjured.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+WEST POINT TO THE RESCUE
+
+
+It was understood that the sheriff should make a perfunctory defense
+against the mob in order to “square” him with the voters at the
+election soon to be held. But the word had been quietly passed that the
+bullets of the prison guards would be fired over the heads of the
+attackers. This assurance lent an added braggadocio to the Dutch
+courage of the lynchers. Many of them who would otherwise have hung
+back distinguished themselves by the enthusiasm which they displayed.
+
+Bannister himself generaled the affair, detailing squads to batter down
+the outer door, to guard every side of the prison, and to overpower the
+sheriff’s guard. That official, according to programme, appeared at a
+window and made a little speech, declaring his intention of performing
+his duty at whatever cost. He was hooted down with jeers and laughter,
+and immediately the attack commenced.
+
+The yells of the attackers mingled with the sound of the axe-blows and
+the report of revolvers from inside the building. Among those nearest
+to the door being battered down were Denver and the few men he had with
+him. His plan offered merely a forlorn hope. It was that in the first
+scramble to get in after the way was opened he and his friends might
+push up the stairs in the van, and hold the corridor for as long as
+they could against the furious mob.
+
+It took less than a quarter of an hour to batter down the door, and
+among the first of those who sprang across the threshold were Denver,
+Missou, Frisco and their allies. While others stopped to overpower the
+struggling deputies according to the arranged farce, they hurried
+upstairs and discovered the cell in which their friends were fastened.
+
+Frisco passed a revolver through the grating to McWilliams, and another
+to Bannister. “Haven’t got the keys, so I can’t let y’u out, old hoss,”
+he told the foreman. “But mebbe y’u won’t feel so lonesome with these
+little toys to play with.”
+
+Meanwhile Denver, a young giant of seventy-six inches, held the head of
+the stairs, with four stalwart plainsmen back of him. The rush of many
+feet came up pell-mell, and he flung the leaders back on those behind.
+
+“Hold on there. This isn’t a free-lunch counter. Don’t you see we’re
+crowded up here already?”
+
+“What’s eating you? Whyfor, can’t we come?” growled one of the foremost
+nursing an injured nose.
+
+“I’ve just explained to you, son, that it’s crowded. Folks are
+prevalent enough up here right now. Send up that bunch of keys and
+we’ll bring your meat to you fast enough.”
+
+“What’s that? What’s that?” The outlaw chief pushed his way through the
+dense mob at the door and reached the stairway.
+
+“He won’t let us up,” growled one of them.
+
+“Who won’t?” demanded Bannister sharply, and at once came leaping up
+the stairs.
+
+“Nothing doing,” drawled Frisco, and tossed him over the railing on to
+the heads of his followers below.
+
+They carried Bannister into the open air, for his head had struck the
+newel-post in his descent. This gave the defense a few minutes respite.
+
+“They’re going to come a-shooting next time,” remarked Denver. “Just as
+soon as he comes back from bye-low land you’ll see things hum.”
+
+“Y’u bet,” agreed Missou. “We’ll last about three minutes when the
+stampede begins.”
+
+The scream of an engine pierced the night.
+
+Denver’s face lit. “Make it five minutes, Missou, and Mac is safe. At
+least, I’m hoping so awful hard. Miss Helen wired for the militia from
+Sheridan this mo’ning. Chances are they’re on that train. I couldn’t
+tell you earlier because she made me promise not to. She was afraid it
+might leak out and get things started sooner.”
+
+Weak but furious, the miscreant from the Shoshones returned to the
+attack. “Break in the back door and sneak up behind on those fellows.
+We’ll have the men we want inside of fifteen minutes,” he promised the
+mob.
+
+“We’ll rush them from both sides, and show those guys on the landing
+whether they can stop us,” added Bostwick.
+
+Suddenly some one raised the cry, “The soldiers!” Bannister looked up
+the street and swore a vicious oath. Swinging down the road at double
+time came a company of militia in khaki. He was mad with baffled fury,
+but he made good his retreat at once and disappeared promptly into the
+nearest dark alley.
+
+The mob scattered by universal impulse; disintegrated so promptly that
+within five minutes the soldiers held the ground alone, save for the
+officials of the prison and Denver’s little band.
+
+A boyish lieutenant lately out of the Point, and just come in to a
+lieutenancy in the militia, was in command. “In time?” he asked
+anxiously, for this was his first independent expedition.
+
+“Y’u bet,” chuckled Denver. “We’re right glad to see you, and I’ll bet
+those boys in the cage ain’t regretting your arrival any. Fifteen
+minutes later and you would have been in time to hold the funeral
+services, I reckon.”
+
+“Where is Miss Messiter?” asked the young officer.
+
+“She’s at the Elk House, colonel. I expect some of us better drift over
+there and tell her it’s all right. She’s the gamest little woman that
+ever crossed the Wyoming line. Hadn’t been for her these boys would
+have been across the divide hours ago. She’s a plumb thoroughbred.
+Wouldn’t give up an inch. All day she has generaled this thing; played
+a mighty weak hand for a heap more than it was worth. Sand? Seh: she’s
+grit clear through, if anybody asks you.” And Denver told the story of
+the day, making much of her unflinching courage and nothing of her
+men’s readiness to back whatever steps she decided upon.
+
+It was ten minutes past eleven when a smooth young, apple-cheeked lad
+in khaki presented himself before Helen Messiter with a bow never
+invented outside of West Point.
+
+“I am Lieutenant Beecher. Governor Raleigh presents his compliments by
+me, Miss Messiter, and is very glad to be able to put at your service
+such forces as are needed to quiet the town.”
+
+“You were in time?” she breathed.
+
+“With about five minutes to spare. I am having the prisoners brought
+here for the night if you do not object. In the morning I shall
+investigate the affair, and take such steps as are necessary. In the
+meantime you may rest assured that there will be no further
+disturbance.”
+
+“Thank you I am sure that with you in command everything will now be
+all right, and I am quite of your opinion that the prisoners had better
+stay here for the night. One of them is wounded, and ought to be given
+the best attention. But, of course, you will see to that, lieutenant.”
+
+The young man blushed. This was the right kind of appreciation. He
+wished his old classmates at the Point could hear how implicitly this
+sweet girl relied on him.
+
+“Certainly. And now, Miss Messiter, if there is nothing you wish, I
+shall retire for the night. You may sleep with perfect confidence.”
+
+“I am sure I may, lieutenant.” She gave him a broadside of trusting
+eyes full of admiration. “But perhaps you would like me to see my
+foreman first, just to relieve my mind. And, as you were about to say,
+his friend might be brought in, too, since they are together.”
+
+The young man promptly assented, though he had not been aware that he
+was about to say anything of the kind.
+
+They came in together, Bannister supported by McWilliams’s arm. The
+eyes of both mistress and maid brimmed over with tears when they saw
+them. Helen dragged forward a chair for the sheepman, and he sank into
+it. From its depths he looked up with his rare, sweet smile.
+
+“I’ve heard about it,” he told her, in a low voice. “I’ve heard how y’u
+fought for my life all day. There’s nothing I can say. I owed y’u
+everything already twice, and now I owe it all over again. Give me a
+lifetime and I couldn’t get even.”
+
+Helen’s swift glance swept over Nora and the foreman. They were in a
+dark alcove, oblivious of anybody else. Also they were in each other’s
+arms frankly. For some reason wine flowed into the cream of Helen’s
+cheeks.
+
+“Do you have to ‘get even’? Among friends is that necessary?” she asked
+shyly.
+
+“I hope not. If it is, I’m sure bankrupt. Even my thanks seem to stay
+at home. If y’u hadn’t done so much for me, perhaps I could tell y’u
+how much y’u had done. But I have no words to say it.”
+
+“Then don’t,” she advised.
+
+“Y’u’re the best friend a man ever had. That’s all I can say.”
+
+“It’s enough, since you mean it, even though it isn’t true,” she
+answered gently.
+
+Their eyes met, fastened for an instant, and by common consent looked
+away.
+
+As it chanced they were close to the window, their shadows reflected on
+the blind. A man, slipping past in the street on horseback, stopped at
+sight of that lighted window, with the moving shadows, in an
+uncontrollable white fury. He slid from the saddle, threw the reins
+over the horse’s head to the ground, and slipped his revolver from its
+holster and back to make sure that he could draw it easily. Then he
+passed springily across the road to the hotel and up the stairs. He
+trod lightly, stealthily, and by his very wariness defeated his purpose
+of eluding observation. For a pair of keen eyes from the hotel office
+glimpsed the figure stealing past so noiselessly, and promptly followed
+up the stairway.
+
+“Hope I don’t intrude at this happy family gathering.”
+
+Helen, who had been pouring a glass of cordial for the spent and
+wounded sheepman, put the glass down on the table and turned at sound
+of the silken, sinister voice. After one glance at the vindictive face,
+from the cold eyes of which hate seemed to smolder, she took an
+instinctive step toward her lover. The cold wave that drenched her
+heart accompanied an assurance that the man in the doorway meant
+trouble.
+
+His sleek smile arrested her. He was standing with his feet apart, his
+hands clasped lightly behind his back, as natty and as well groomed as
+was his wont.
+
+“Ah, make the most of what ye yet may spend,
+Before ye, too, into the Dust descend;
+ Dust into Dust, and under Dust to lie,
+Sans Wine, sans Song, sans Singer, and—sans End!”
+
+
+he misquoted, with a sneer; and immediately interrupted his irony to
+give way to one of his sudden blind rages.
+
+With incredible swiftness his right hand moved forward and up, catching
+revolver from scabbard as it rose. But by a fraction of a second his
+purpose had been anticipated. A closed fist shot forward to the salient
+jaw in time to fling the bullets into the ceiling. An arm encircled the
+outlaw’s neck, and flung him backward down the stairs. The railing
+broke his fall, and on it his body slid downward, the weapon falling
+from his hand. He pulled himself together at the foot of the stairs,
+crouched for an upward rush, but changed his mind instantly. The young
+officer who had flung him down had him covered with his own
+six-shooter. He could hear footsteps running toward him, and he knew
+that in a few seconds he would be in the hands of the soldiers.
+Plunging out of the doorway, the desperado vaulted to the saddle and
+drove his spurs home. For a minute hoofs pounded on the hard, white
+road. Then the night swallowed him and the echo of his disappearance.
+
+“That was Bannister of the Shoshones and the Tetons,” the girl’s white
+lips pronounced to Lieutenant Beecher.
+
+“And I let him get away from me,” the disappointed lad groaned. “Why, I
+had him right in my hands. I could have throttled him as easy. But how
+was I to know he would have nerve enough to come rushing into a hotel
+full of soldiers hunting him?”
+
+“Y’u have a very persistent cousin, Mr. Bannister,” said McWilliams,
+coming forward from the alcove with shining eyes. “And I must say he’s
+game. Did y’u ever hear the like? Come butting in here as cool as if he
+hadn’t a thing to do but sing out orders like he was in his own home.
+He was that easy.”
+
+“It seems to me that a little of the praise is due Lieutenant Beecher.
+If he hadn’t dealt so competently with the situation murder would have
+been done. Did you learn your boxing at the Academy, Lieutenant?” Helen
+asked, trying to treat the situation lightly in spite of her hammering
+heart.
+
+“I was the champion middleweight of our class,” Beecher could not help
+saying boyishly, with another of his blushes.
+
+“I can easily believe it,” returned Helen.
+
+“I wish y’u would teach me how to double up a man so prompt and
+immediate,” said the admiring foreman.
+
+“I expect I’m under particular obligations to that straight right to
+the chin, Lieutenant,” chimed in the sheepman. “The fact is that I
+don’t seem to be able to get out anything except thanks these days. I
+ought to send my cousin a letter thanking _him_ for giving me a chance
+to owe so much kindness to so many people.”
+
+“Your cousin?” repeated the uncomprehending officer.
+
+“This desperado, Bannister, is my cousin,” answered the sheepman
+gravely.
+
+“But if he was your cousin, why should he want—to kill you?”
+
+“That’s a long story, Lieutenant. Will y’u hear it now?”
+
+“If you feel strong enough to tell it.”
+
+“Oh, I’m strong enough.” He glanced at Helen. “Perhaps we had better
+not tire Miss Messiter with it. If y’u’ll come to my room—”
+
+“I should like, above all things, to hear it again,” interrupted that
+young woman promptly.
+
+For the man she loved had just come back to her from the brink of the
+grave and she was still reluctant to let him out of her sight.
+
+So Ned Bannister told his story once more, and out of the alcove came
+the happy foreman and Nora to listen to the tale. While he told it his
+sweetheart’s contented eyes were on him. The excitement of the night
+burnt pleasantly in her veins, for out of the nettle danger she had
+plucked safety for her sheepman.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+TWO CASES OF DISCIPLINE
+
+
+The Fourth of July celebration at Gimlet Butte had been a thing of the
+past for four days and the Lazy D had fallen back into the routine of
+ranch life. The riders were discussing supper and the continued absence
+of Reddy when that young man drew back the flap and joined them.
+
+He stood near the doorway and grinned with embarrassed guilt at the
+assembled company.
+
+“I reckon I got too much Fourth of July at Gimlet Butte, boys. That’s
+how come I to be onpunctual getting back.”
+
+There was a long silence, during which those at the table looked at him
+with an expressionless gravity that did not seem to veil an unduly warm
+welcome.
+
+“Hello, Mac! Hello, boys! I just got back,” he further contributed.
+
+Without comment the Lazy D resumed supper. Apparently it had not missed
+Reddy or noticed his return. Casual conversation was picked up
+cheerfully. The return of the prodigal was quite ignored.
+
+“Then that blamed cow gits its back up and makes a bee-line for Rogers.
+The old man hikes for his pony and—”
+
+“Seems good to git my legs under the old table again,” interrupted
+Reddy with cheerful unease.
+
+“—loses by about half a second,” continued Missou. “If Doc hadn’t roped
+its hind laig—”
+
+“Have some cigars, boys. I brought a box back with me.” Reddy tossed a
+handful on the table, where they continued to lie unnoticed.
+
+“—there’s no telling what would have happened. As ’twas the old man got
+off with a—”
+
+“Y’u bet, they’re good cigars all right,” broke in the propitiatory
+Reddy.
+
+The interrupted anecdote went on to a finish and the men trooped out
+and left the prodigal alone with his hash. When that young man reached
+the bunkhouse Frisco was indulging in a reminiscence. Reddy got only
+the last of it, but that did not contribute to his serenity.
+
+“Yep! When I was working on the Silver Dollar. Must a-been three years
+ago, I reckon, when Jerry Miller got that chapping.”
+
+“Threw down the outfit in a row they had with the Lafferty crowd,
+didn’t he?” asked Denver.
+
+Frisco nodded.
+
+Mac got up, glanced round, and reached for his hat. “I reckon I’ll have
+to be going,” he said, and forthright departed.
+
+Reddy reached for _his_ hat and rose. “I got to go and have a talk with
+Mac,” he explained.
+
+Denver got to the door first and his big frame filled it.
+
+“Don’t hurry, Reddy. It ain’t polite to rush away right after dinner.
+Besides, Mac will be here all day. He ain’t starting for New York.”
+
+“Y’u’re gittin’ blamed particular. Mac he went right out.”
+
+“But Mac didn’t have a most particular engagement with the boys.
+There’s a difference.”
+
+“Why, I ain’t got—” Reddy paused and looked around helplessly.
+
+“Gents, I move y’u that it be the horse sense of the Lazy D that our
+friend Mr. Reddy Reeves be given gratis one chapping immediately if not
+sooner. The reason for which same being that he played a lowdown trick
+on the outfit whose bread he was eating.”
+
+“Oh, quit your foolin’, boys,” besought the victim anxiously.
+
+“And that Denver, being some able-bodied and having a good reach, be
+requested to deliver same to the gent needing it,” concluded Missou.
+
+Reddy backed in alarm to the wall. “Y’u boys don’t want to get gay with
+me. Y’u can’t monkey with—”
+
+Motion carried unanimously.
+
+Just as Reddy whipped out his revolver Denver’s long leg shot out and
+his foot caught the wrist behind the weapon. When Reddy next took
+cognizance of his surroundings he was serving as a mattress for the
+anatomy of three stalwart riders. He was gently deposited face down on
+his bunk with a one-hundred-eighty-pound live peg at the end of each
+arm and leg.
+
+“All ready, Denver,” announced Frisco from the end of the left foot.
+
+Denver selected a pair of plain leather chaps with care and proceeded
+to business. What he had to do he did with energy. It is safe to say
+that at least one of those present can still vividly remember this and
+testify to his thoroughness.
+
+Mac drifted in after the disciplining. As foreman it was fitting that
+he should be discreetly ignorant of what had occurred, but he could not
+help saying:
+
+“That y’u I heard singing, Reddy? Seems to me y’u had ought to take
+that voice into grand opera. The way y’u straddle them high notes is a
+caution for fair. What was it y’u was singing? Sounded like ‘Would I
+were far from here, love.’”
+
+“Y’u go to hell,” choked Reddy, rushing past him from the bunkhouse.
+
+McWilliams looked round innocently. “I judge some of y’u boys must
+a-been teasing Reddy from his manner. Seemed like he didn’t want to sit
+down and talk.”
+
+“I shouldn’t wonder but he’ll hold his conversations standing for a day
+or two,” returned Missou gravely.
+
+At the end of the laugh that greeted this Mac replied:
+
+“Well, y’u boys want to be gentle with him.” “He’s so plumb tender now
+that I reckon he’ll get along without any more treatment in that line
+from us,” drawled Frisco.
+
+Mac departed laughing. He had an engagement that recurred daily in the
+dusk of the evening, and he was always careful to be on time. The other
+party to the engagement met him at the kitchen door and fell with him
+into the trail that led to Lee Ming’s laundry.
+
+“What made you late?” she asked.
+
+“I’m not late, honey. I seem late because you’re so anxious,” he
+explained.
+
+“I’m not,” protested Nora indignantly. “If you think you’re the only
+man on the place, Jim McWilliams.”
+
+“Sho! Hold your hawsses a minute, Nora, darling. A spinster like y’u—”
+
+“You think you’re awful funny—writing in my autograph album that a
+spinster’s best friend is her powder box. I like Mr. Halliday’s ways
+better. He’s a perfect gentleman.”
+
+“I ain’t got a word to say against Denver, even if he did write in your
+book,
+
+“‘Sugar is sweet,
+ The sky is blue,
+Grass is green
+ And so are you.’
+
+
+I reckon, being a perfect gentleman, he meant—”
+
+“You know very well you wrote that in yourself and pretended it was Mr.
+Halliday, signing his name and everything. It wasn’t a bit nice of
+you.”
+
+“Now do I look like a forger?” he wanted to know with innocence on his
+cherubic face.
+
+“Anyway you know it was mean. Mr. Halliday wouldn’t do such a thing.
+You take your arm down and keep it where it belongs, Mr. McWilliams.”
+
+“That ain’t my name, Nora, darling, and I’d like to know where my arm
+belongs if it isn’t round the prettiest girl in Wyoming. What’s the use
+of being engaged if—”
+
+“I’m not sure I’m going to stay engaged to you,” announced the young
+woman coolly, walking at the opposite edge of the path from him.
+
+“Now that ain’t any way to talk.”
+
+“You needn’t lecture me. I’m not your wife and I don’t think I’m going
+to be,” cut in Nora, whose temper was ruffled on account of having had
+to wait for him as well as for other reasons.
+
+“Y’u surely wouldn’t make me sue y’u for breach of promise, would y’u?”
+he demanded, with a burlesque of anxiety that was the final straw.
+
+Nora turned on her heel and headed for the house.
+
+“Now don’t y’u get mad at me, honey. I was only joking,” he explained
+as he pursued her.
+
+“You think you can laugh at me all you please. I’ll show you that you
+can’t,” she informed him icily.
+
+“Sho! I wasn’t laughing at y’u. What tickled me—”
+
+“I’m not interested in your amusement, Mr. McWilliams.”
+
+“What’s the use of flying out about a little thing like that? Honest, I
+don’t even know what you’re mad at me for,” the perplexed foreman
+averred.
+
+“I’m not mad at you, as you call it. I’m simply disgusted.”
+
+And with a final “Good night” flung haughtily over her shoulder Miss
+Nora Darling disappeared into the house.
+
+Mac took off his hat and gazed at the door that had been closed in his
+face. He scratched his puzzled poll in vain.
+
+“I ce’tainly got mine good and straight just like Reddy got his. But
+what in time was it all about? And me thinkin’ I was a graduate in the
+study of the ladies. I reckon I never did get jarred up so. It’s plumb
+discouraging.”
+
+If he could have caught a glimpse of Nora at that moment, lying on her
+bed and crying as if her heart would break, Mac might have found the
+situation less hopeless.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+THE SIGNAL LIGHTS
+
+
+In a little hill-rift about a mile back of the Lazy D Ranch was a
+deserted miner’s cabin.
+
+The hut sat on the edge of a bluff that commanded a view of the
+buildings below, while at the same time the pines that surrounded it
+screened the shack from any casual observation. A thin curl of smoke
+was rising from the mud chimney, and inside the cabin two men lounged
+before the open fire.
+
+“It’s his move, and he is going to make it soon. Every night I look for
+him to drop down on the ranch. His hate’s kind of volcanic, Mr. Ned
+Bannister’s is, and it’s bound to bubble over mighty sudden one of
+these days,” said the younger of the two, rising and stretching
+himself.
+
+“It did bubble over some when he drove two thousand of my sheep over
+the bluff and killed the whole outfit,” suggested the namesake of the
+man mentioned.
+
+“Yes, I reckon that’s some irritating,” agreed McWilliams. “But if I
+know him, he isn’t going to be content with sheep so long as he can
+take it out of a real live man.”
+
+“Or woman,” suggested the sheepman.
+
+“Or woman,” agreed the other. “Especially when he thinks he can cut y’u
+deeper by striking at her. If he doesn’t raid the Lazy D one of these
+nights, I’m a blamed poor prophet.”
+
+Bannister nodded agreement. “He’s near the end of his rope. He could
+see that if he were blind. When we captured Bostwick and they got a
+confession out of him, that started the landslide against him. It began
+to be noised abroad that the government was going to wipe him out.
+Folks began to lose their terror of him, and after that his whole
+outfit began to want to turn State’s evidence. He isn’t sure of one of
+them now; can’t tell when he will be shot in the back by one of his own
+scoundrels for that two thousand dollars reward.”
+
+The foreman strolled negligently to the door. His eyes drifted
+indolently down into the valley, and immediately sparkled with
+excitement.
+
+“The signal’s out, Bann,” he exclaimed. “It’s in your window.”
+
+The sheepman leaped to his feet and strode to the door. Down in the
+valley a light was gleaming in a window. Even while he looked another
+light appeared in a second window.
+
+“She wants us both,” cried the foreman, running to the little corral
+back of the house.
+
+He presently reappeared with two horses, both saddled, and they took
+the downward trail at once.
+
+“If Miss Helen can keep him in play till we arrive,” murmured Mac
+anxiously.
+
+“She can if he gives her a chance, and I think he will. There’s a kind
+of cat instinct in him to play with his prey.”
+
+“Yes, but he missed his kill last time by letting her fool him. That’s
+what I’m afraid of’ that he won’t wait.”
+
+They had reached lower ground now, and could put their ponies at a
+pounding gallop that ate up the trail fast. As they approached the
+houses, both men drew rein and looked carefully to their weapons. Then
+they slid from the saddles and slipped noiselessly forward.
+
+What the foreman had said was exactly true. Helen Messiter did want
+them both, and she wanted them very much indeed.
+
+After supper she had been dreamily playing over to herself one of
+Chopin’s waltzes, when she became aware, by some instinct, that she was
+not alone in the room. There had been no least sound, no slightest stir
+to betray an alien presence. Yet that some one was in the room she
+knew, and by some subtle sixth sense could even put a name to the
+intruder.
+
+Without turning she called over her shoulder: “Shall I finish the
+waltz?” No faintest tremor in the clear, sweet voice betrayed the
+racing heart.
+
+“Y’u’re a cool hand, my friend,” came his ready answer. “But I think
+we’ll dispense with the music. I had enough last time to serve me for
+twice.”
+
+She laughed as she swung on the stool, with that musical scorn which
+both allured and maddened. “I did rather do you that time,” she
+allowed.
+
+“This is the return match. You won then. I win now,” he told her, with
+a look that chilled.
+
+“Indeed! But isn’t that rather discounting the future?”
+
+“Only the immediate future. Y’u’re mine, my beauty, and I mean to take
+y’u with me.”
+
+Just a disdainful sweep of her eyes she gave him as she rose from the
+piano-stool and rearranged the lamps. “You mean so much that never
+comes to pass, Mr. Bannister. The road to the nether regions is paved
+with good intentions, we are given to understand. Not that yours can by
+any stretch of imagination be called ‘good intentions.’”
+
+“Contrariwise, then, perhaps the road to heaven may be paved with evil
+intentions. Since y’u travel the road with me, wherever it may lead, it
+were but gallant to hope so.”
+
+He took three sharp steps toward her and stood looking down in her
+face, her sweet slenderness so close to him that the perfume mounted to
+his brain. Surely no maiden had ever been more desirable than this one,
+who held him in such contemptuous estimation that only her steady eyes
+moved at his approach. These held to his and defied him, while she
+stood leaning motionless against the table with such strong and supple
+grace. She knew what he meant to do, hated him for it, and would not
+give him the satisfaction of flying an inch from him or struggling with
+him.
+
+“Your eyes are pools of splendor. That’s right. Make them flash fire. I
+love to see such spirit, since it offers a more enticing pleasure in
+breaking,” he told her, with an admiration half ironic but wholly
+genuine. “Pools of splendor, my beauty! Therefore I salute them.”
+
+At the touch of his lips upon her eyelids a shiver ran through her, but
+still she made no movement, was cold to him as marble. “You coward!”
+she said softly, with an infinite contempt.
+
+“Your lips,” he continued to catalogue, “are ripe as fresh flesh of
+Southern fruit. No cupid ever possessed so adorable a mouth. A
+worshiper of Eros I, as now I prove.”
+
+This time it was the mouth he kissed, the while her unconquered spirit
+looked out of the brave eyes, and fain would have murdered him. In turn
+he kissed her cold cheeks, the tip of one of her little ears, the
+small, clenched fist with which she longed to strike him.
+
+“Are you quite through?”
+
+“For the present, and now, having put the seal of my ownership on her
+more obvious charms, I’ll take my bride home.”
+
+“I would die first.”
+
+“Nay, you’ll die later, Madam Bannister, but not for many years, I
+hope,” he told her, with a theatrical bow.
+
+“Do you think me so weak a thing as your words imply?”
+
+“Rather so strong that the glory of overcoming y’u fills me with joy.
+Believe me, madam, though your master I am not less your slave,” he
+mocked.
+
+“You are neither my master nor my slave, but a thing I detest,” she
+said, in a low voice that carried extraordinary intensity.
+
+“And obey,” he added, suavely. “Come, madam, to horse, for our
+honeymoon.”
+
+“I tell you I shall not go.”
+
+“Then, in faith, we’ll re-enact a modern edition of ‘The Taming of the
+Shrew.’ Y’u’ll find me, sweet, as apt at the part as old _Petruchio_.”
+He paced complacently up the room and back, and quoted glibly:
+
+“And thus I’ll curb her mad and headstrong humor.
+He that knows better how to tame a shrew,
+Now let him, speak; ’tis charity to show.”
+
+
+“Would you take me against my will?”
+
+“Y’u have said it. What’s your will to me? What I want I take. And I
+sure want my beautiful shrew.” His half-shuttered eyes gloated on her
+as he rattled off a couple more lines from the play he had mentioned.
+
+“Kate, like the hazel-twig,
+Is straight and slender, and as brown in hue
+As hazel-nuts, and sweeter than the kernels.”
+
+
+She let a swift glance travel anxiously to the door. “You are in a very
+poetical mood to-day.”
+
+“As befits a bridegroom, my own.” He stepped lightly to the window and
+tapped twice on the pane. “A signal to bring the horses round. If y’u
+have any preparations to make, any trousseau to prepare, y’u better set
+that girl of yours to work.”
+
+“I have no preparations to make.”
+
+“Coming to me simply as y’u are? Good! We’ll lead the simple life.”
+
+Nora, as it chanced, knocked and entered at his moment. The sight of
+her vivid good looks struck him for the first time. At sight of him she
+stopped, gazing with parted lips, a double row of pearls shining
+through.
+
+He turned swiftly to the mistress. “Y’u ought not to be alone there
+among so many men. It wouldn’t be proper. We’ll take the girl along
+with us.”
+
+“Where?” Nora’s parted lips emitted.
+
+“To Arden, my dear.” He interrupted himself to look at his watch. “I
+wonder why that fellow doesn’t come with the horses. They should pass
+this window.”
+
+Bannister, standing jauntily with his feet astride as he looked out of
+the window, heard someone enter the room. “Did y’u bring round the
+horses?” he snapped, without looking round.
+
+“_No, we allowed they wouldn’t be needed_.”
+
+At sound of the slow drawl the outlaw wheeled like a flash, his hand
+traveling to the hilt of the revolver that hung on his hip. But he was
+too late. Already two revolvers covered him, and he knew that both his
+cousin and McWilliams were dead shots. He flashed one venomous look at
+the mistress of the ranch.
+
+“Y’u fooled me again. That lamp business was a signal, and I was too
+thick-haided to see it. My compliments to y’u, Miss Messiter.”
+
+“Y’u are under arrest,” announced his cousin.
+
+“Y’u don’t say.” His voice was full of sarcastic admiration. “And you
+done it with your little gun! My, what a wonder y’u are!”
+
+“Take your hand from the butt of that gun. Y’u better relieve him of
+it, Mac. He’s got such a restless disposition he might commit suicide
+by reaching for it.”
+
+“What do y’u think you’re going to do with me now y’u have got me,
+Cousin Ned?”
+
+“We’re going to turn y’u over to the United States Government.”
+
+“Guess again. I have a thing, or two to say to that.”
+
+“You’re going to Gimlet Butte with us, alive or dead.”
+
+The outlaw intentionally misunderstood. “If I’ve got to take y’u, then
+we’ll say y’u go dead rather than alive.”
+
+“He was going to take Nora and me with him,” Helen explained to her
+friends.
+
+Instantly the man swung round on her. “But now I’ve changed my mind,
+ma’am. I’m going to take my cousin with me instead of y’u ladies.”
+
+Helen caught his meaning first, and flashed it whitely to her lover. It
+dawned on him more slowly.
+
+“I see y’u remember, Miss Messiter,” he continued, with a cruel, silken
+laugh. “He gave me his parole to go with me whenever I said the word.
+I’m saying it now.” He sat down astride a chair, put his chin on the
+back cross-bar, and grinned malevolently from one to another.
+
+“What’s come over this happy family? It don’t look so joyous all of a
+sudden. Y’u don’t need to worry, ma’am, I’ll send him back to y’u all
+right—alive or dead. With his shield or on it, y’u know. Ha! ha!”
+
+“You will not go with him?” It was wrung from Helen as a low cry, and
+struck her lover’s heart.
+
+“I must,” he answered. “I gave him my word, y’u remember.”
+
+“But why keep it? You know what he is, how absolutely devoid of honor.”
+
+“That is not quite the question, is it?” he smiled.
+
+“Would he keep his word to you?”
+
+“Not if a lie would do as well. But that isn’t the point, either.”
+
+“It’s quixotic—foolish—worse than that—ridiculous,” she implored.
+
+“Perhaps, but the fact remains that I am pledged.”
+
+“‘I could not love thee, dear, so much
+Loved I not honor more,’”
+
+
+murmured the villain in the chair, apparently to the ceiling. “Dear
+Ned, he always was the soul of honor. I’ll have those lines carved on
+his tombstone.”
+
+“You see! He is already bragging that he means to kill you,” said the
+girl.
+
+“I shall go armed,” the sheepman answered.
+
+“Yes, but he will take you into the mountain fastnesses, where the men
+that serve him will do his bidding. What is one man among so many?”
+
+“Two men, ma’am,” corrected the foreman.
+
+“What’s that?” The outlaw broke off the snatch of opera he was singing
+to slew his head round at McWilliams.
+
+“I said two. Any objections, seh?”
+
+“Yes. That wasn’t in the contract.”
+
+“We’re giving y’u surplusage, that’s all. Y’u wanted one of us, and y’u
+get two. We don’t charge anything for the extra weight,” grinned Mac.
+
+“Oh, Mac, will you go with him?” cried Helen, with shining eyes.
+
+“Those are my present intentions, Miss Helen,” laughed her foreman.
+
+Whereat Nora emerged from the background and flung herself on him. “Y’u
+can’t go, Jim! I won’t have you go!” she cried.
+
+The young man blushed a beautiful pink, and accepted gladly this overt
+evidence of a reconciliation. “It’s all right, honey. Don’t y’u think
+two big, grown-up men are good to handle that scalawag? Sho! Don’t y’u
+worry.”
+
+“Miss Nora can come, too, if she likes,” suggested he of the Shoshones.
+“Looks like we would have quite a party. Won’t y’u join us, too, Miss
+Messiter, according to the original plan?” he said, extending an
+ironical invitation.
+
+“I think we had better cut it down to me alone. We’ll not burden your
+hospitality, sir,” said the sheepman.
+
+“No, sir, I’m in on this. Whyfor can’t I go?” demanded Jim.
+
+Bannister, the outlaw, eyed him unpleasantly. “Y’u certainly can so far
+as I am concerned. I owe y’u one, too, Mr. McWilliams. Only if y’u come
+of your own free will, as y’u are surely welcome to do, don’t holler if
+y’u’re not so welcome to leave whenever y’u take a notion.”
+
+“I’ll try and look out for that. It’s settled, then, that we ride
+together. When do y’u want to start?”
+
+“We can’t go any sooner than right now. I hate to take these young men
+from y’u, lady, but, as I said, I’ll send them back in good shape.
+_Adios, señorita_. Don’t forget to whom y’u belong.” He swaggered to
+the door and turned, leaning against the jamb with one hand again it.
+“I expect y’u can say those lovey-dov good-byes without my help. I’m
+going into the yard. If y’u want to y’u can plug me in the back through
+the window,” he suggested, with a sneer.
+
+“As y’u would us under similar circumstances,” retorted his cousin.
+
+“Be with y’u in five minutes,” said the foreman.
+
+“Don’t hurry. It’s a long good-bye y’u’re saying,” returned his enemy
+placidly.
+
+Nora and the young man who belonged to her followed him from the room,
+leaving Bannister and his hostess alone.
+
+“Shall I ever see you again?” Helen murmured.
+
+“I think so,” the sheepman answered. “The truth is that this
+opportunity falls pat. Jim and have been wanting to meet those men who
+are under my cousin’s influence and have a talk with them. There is no
+question but that the gang is disintegrating, and I believe that if we
+offer to mediate between its members and the Government something might
+be done to stop the outrages that have been terrorizing this country.
+My cousin can’t be reached, but I believe the rest of them, or, at
+least a part, can be induced either to surrender or to flee the
+country. Anyhow, we want to try it.”
+
+“But the danger?” she breathed.
+
+“Is less than y’u think. Their leader has not anywhere nearly the
+absolute power he had a few months ago. They would hardly dare do
+violence to a peace envoy.”
+
+“Your cousin would. I don’t believe he has any scruples.”
+
+“We shall keep an eye on him. Both of us will not sleep at the same
+time. Y’u may depend on me to bring your foreman safely back to y’u,”
+he smiled.
+
+“Oh, my foreman!”
+
+“And your foreman’s friend,” he added. “I have the best of reasons for
+wanting to return alive. I think y’u know them. They have to do with
+y’u, Miss Helen.”
+
+It had come at last, but, womanlike, she evaded the issue her heart had
+sought. “Yes, I know. You think it would not be fair to throw away your
+life in this foolish manner after I have saved it for you—how many
+times was it you said?” The blue eyes lifted with deceptive frankness
+to the gray ones.
+
+“No, that isn’t my reason. I have a better one than that. I love y’u,
+girl, more than anything in this world.”
+
+“And so you try to prove it to me by running into a trap set for you to
+take your life. That’s a selfish kind of love, isn’t it? Or it would be
+if I loved you.”
+
+“_Do_ y’u love me, Helen?”
+
+“Why should I tell you, since you don’t love me enough to give up this
+quixotic madness?”
+
+“Don’t y’u see, dear, I _can’t_ give it up?”
+
+“I see you won’t. You care more for your pride than for me.”
+
+“No, it isn’t that. I’ve _got_ to go. It isn’t that I want to leave
+y’u, God knows. But I’ve given my word, and I must keep it. Do y’u want
+me to be a quitter, and y’u so game yourself? Do y’u want it to go all
+over this cattle country that I gave my word and took it back because I
+lost my nerve?”
+
+“The boy that takes a dare isn’t a hero, is he! There’s a higher
+courage that refuses to be drawn into such foolishness, that doesn’t
+give way to the jeers of the empty headed.”
+
+“I don’t think that is a parallel case. I’m sorry, we can’t see this
+alike, but I’ve got to go ahead the way that seems to me right.”
+
+“You’re going to leave me, then, to go with that man?”
+
+“Yes, if that’s the way y’u have to put it.” He looked at her
+sorrowfully, and added gently: “I thought you would see it. I thought
+sure you would.”
+
+But she could not bear that he should leave her so, and she cried out
+after him. “Oh, I see it. I know you must go; but I can’t bear it.” Her
+head buried itself in his coat. “It isn’t right—it isn’t a—a square
+deal that you should go away now, the very minute you belong to me.”
+
+A happy smile shone in his eyes. “I belong to you, do I? That’s good
+hearing, girl o’ mine.” His arm went round her and he stroked the black
+head softly. “I’ll not be gone long, dear. Don’t y’u worry about me.
+I’ll be back with y’u soon; just as soon as I have finished this piece
+of work I have to do.”
+
+“But if you should get—if anything should happen to you?”
+
+“Nothing is going to happen to me. There is a special providence looks
+after lovers, y’u know.”
+
+“Be careful, Ned, of yourself. For my sake, dear.”
+
+“I’ll dry my socks every time I get my feet wet for fear of taking
+cold,” he laughed.
+
+“But you will, won’t you?”
+
+“I’ll be very careful, Helen,” he promised more gravely.
+
+Even then she could hardly let him go, clinging to him with a
+reluctance to separate that was a new experience to her independent,
+vigorous youth. In the end he unloosened her arm, kissed her once, and
+hurried out of the room. In the hallway he met McWilliams, also hurryin
+out from a tearful farewell on the part of Nora.
+
+Bannister, the outlaw, already mounted, was waiting for them. “Y’u
+_did_ get through at last,” he drawled insolently. “Well, if y’u’ll
+kindly give orders to your seven-foot dwarf to point the Winchester
+another way I’ll collect my men an we’ll be moving.”
+
+For, though the outlaw had left his men in command of the ranch when he
+went into the house, he found the situation reversed on his return.
+With the arrival of reinforcements, in the persons of McWilliams and
+his friend, it had been the turn of the raiders to turn over their
+weapons.
+
+“All right, Denver,” nodded the foreman.
+
+The outlaw chief whistled for his men, and with their guests they rode
+into the silent, desert night.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+EXIT THE “KING”
+
+
+They bedded that night under the great vault-roof where twinkle a
+million stars.
+
+There were three of the outlaw’s men with him, and both Mcwilliams and
+his friend noticed that they slept a little apart from their chief.
+There were other indications among the rustlers of a camp divided
+against itself. Bannister’s orders to them he contrived to make an
+insult, and their obedience was as surly as possible compatible with
+safety. For all of the men knew that he would not hesitate to shoot
+them down in one of his violent rages should they anger him
+sufficiently.
+
+Throughout the night there was no time that at least two men were not
+awake in the camp. The foreman and the sheepman took turns keeping
+vigil; and on the other side of the fire sat one of the rustlers in
+silent watchfulness. To the man opposite him each of the sentinels were
+outposts of the enemy, but they fraternized after the manner of army
+sentries, exchanging tobacco and occasional casual conversation.
+
+The foreman took the first turn, and opposite him sat a one-eyed old
+scoundrel who had rustled calves from big outfits ever since Wyoming
+was a territory and long before. Chalkeye Dave, he was called, and
+sometimes merely Chalkeye. What his real name was no man knew. Nor was
+his past a subject for conversation in his presence. It was known that
+he had been in the Nevada penitentiary, and that he had killed a man in
+Arizona, but these details of an active life were rarely resurrected.
+For Chalkeye was deadly on the shoot, and was ready for it at the drop
+of the hat, though he had his good points too. One of these was a
+remarkable fondness for another member of the party, a mere lad, called
+by his companions Hughie. Generally surly and morose, to such a degree
+that even his chief was careful to humor him as a rule, when with
+Hughie all the softer elements of his character came to the surface. In
+his rough way he was ever humorous and genial.
+
+Jim McWilliams found him neither, however. He declined to engage in
+conversation, accepted a proffer of tobacco with a silent, hostile
+grunt and relapsed into a long silence that lasted till his shift was
+ended.
+
+“Hate to have y’u leave, old man. Y’u’re so darned good company I’ll
+ce’tainly pine for you,” the foreman suggested, with sarcasm, when the
+old man rolled up in his blankets preparatory to falling asleep
+immediately.
+
+Chalkeye’s successor was a blatant youth much impressed with his own
+importance. He was both foul-mouthed and foul-minded, so that Jim was
+constrained to interrupt his evil boastings by pretending to fall
+asleep.
+
+It was nearly two o’clock when the foreman aroused his friend to take
+his turn. Shortly after this the lad Hughie relieved the bragging,
+would-be bad man.
+
+Hughie was a flaxen-haired, rather good-looking boy of nineteen. In his
+small, wistful face was not a line of wickedness, though it was plain
+that he was weak. He seemed so unfit for the life he was leading that
+the sheepman’s interest was aroused. For on the frontier it takes a
+strong, competent miscreant to be a bad man and survive. Ineffectives
+and weaklings are quickly weeded out to their graves or the
+penitentiaries.
+
+The boy was manifestly under great fear of his chief, but the curly
+haired young Hermes who kept watch with him had a very winning smile
+and a charming manner when he cared to exert it. Almost in spite of
+himself the youngster was led to talk. It seemed that he had but lately
+joined the Teton-Shoshones outfit of desperadoes, and between the lines
+Bannister easily read that his cousin’s masterful compulsion had
+coerced the young fellow. All he wanted was an opportunity to withdraw
+in safety, but he knew he could never do this so long as the “King” was
+alive and at liberty.
+
+Under the star-roof in the chill, breaking day Ned Bannister talked to
+him long and gently. It was easy to bring the boy to tears, but it was
+harder thing to stiffen a will that was of putty and to hearten a soul
+in mortal fear. But he set himself with all the power in him to combat
+the influence of his cousin over this boy; and before the camp stirred
+to life again he knew that he had measurably succeeded.
+
+They ate breakfast in the gray dawn under the stars, and after they had
+finished their coffee and bacon horses were saddled and the trail taken
+up again. It led in and out among the foot-hills sloping upward
+gradually toward the first long blue line of the Shoshones that
+stretched before them in the distance. Their nooning was at a running
+stream called Smith’s Creek, and by nightfall the party was well up in
+the higher foot hills.
+
+In the course of the day and the second night both the sheepman and his
+friend made attempt to establish a more cordial relationship with
+Chalkeye, but so far as any apparent results went their efforts were
+vain. He refused grimly to meet their overtures half way, even though
+it was plain from his manner that a break between him and his chief
+could not long be avoided.
+
+All day by crooked trails they pushed forward, and as the party
+advanced into the mountains the gloom of the mournful pines and
+frowning peaks invaded its spirits. Suspicion and distrust went with
+it, camped at night by the rushing mountain stream, lay down to sleep
+in the shadows at every man’s shoulder. For each man looked with an
+ominous eye on his neighbor, watchful of every sudden move, of every
+careless word that might convey a sudden meaning.
+
+Along a narrow rock-rim trail far above a steep cañon, whose walls shot
+precipitously down, they were riding in single file, when the outlaw
+chief pushed his horse forward between the road wall and his cousin’s
+bronco. The sheepman immediately fell back.
+
+“I reckon this trail isn’t wide enough for two—unless y’u take the
+outside,” he explained quietly.
+
+The outlaw, who had been drinking steadily ever since leaving the Lazy
+D, laughed his low, sinister cackle. “Afraid of me, are y’u? Afraid
+I’ll push y’u off?”
+
+“Not when I’m inside and you don’t have chance.”
+
+“’Twas a place about like this I drove four thousand of your sheep over
+last week. With sheep worth what they are I’m afraid it must have cost
+y’u quite a bit. Not that y’u’ll miss it where you are going,” he
+hastened to add.
+
+“It was very like you to revenge yourself on dumb animals.”
+
+“Think so?” The “King’s” black gaze rested on him. “Y’u’ll sing a
+different song soon Mr. Bannister. It’s humans I’ll drive next time and
+don’t y’u forget it.”
+
+“If you get the chance,” amended his cousin gently.
+
+“I’ll get the chance. I’m not worrying about that. And about those
+sheep—any man that hasn’t got more sense than to run sheep in a cow
+country ought to lose them for his pig-headedness.
+
+“Those sheep were on the right side of the dead-line. You had to cross
+it to reach them.” Their owner’s steady eyes challenged a denial.
+
+“Is that so? Now how do y’u know that? We didn’t leave the herder alive
+to explain that to y’u, did we?”
+
+“You admit murdering him?”
+
+“To y’u, dear cousin. Y’u see, I have a hunch that maybe y’u’ll go join
+your herder right soon. Y’u’ll not do much talking.”
+
+The sheepman fell back. “I think I’ll ride alone.”
+
+Rage flared in the other’s eye. “Too good for me, are y’u, my
+mealy-mouthed cousin? Y’u always thought yourself better than me. When
+y’u were a boy you used to go sneaking to that old hypocrite, your
+grandfather—”
+
+“You have said enough,” interrupted the other sternly. “I’ll not hear
+another word. Keep your foul tongue off him.”
+
+Their eyes silently measured strength.
+
+“Y’u’ll not hear a word!” sneered the chief of the rustlers. “What will
+y’u do, dear cousin?
+
+“Stand up and fight like a man and settle this thing once for all.”
+
+Still their steely eyes crossed as with the thrust of rapiers. The
+challenged man crouched tensely with a mighty longing for the test, but
+he had planned a more elaborate revenge and a surer one than this.
+Reluctantly he shook his head.
+
+“Why should I? Y’u’re mine. We’re four to two, and soon we’ll be a
+dozen to two. I’d like a heap to oblige y’u, but I reckon I can’t
+afford to just now. Y’u will have to wait a little for that bumping off
+that’s coming to y’u.”
+
+“In that event I’ll trouble you not to inflict your society on me any
+more than is necessary.”
+
+“That’s all right, too. If y’u think I enjoy your conversation y’u have
+got another guess coming.”
+
+So by mutual consent the sheepman fell in behind the blatant youth who
+had wearied McWilliams so and rode in silence.
+
+It was again getting close to nightfall. The slant sun was throwing its
+rays on less and less of the trail. They could see the shadows grow and
+the coolness of night sift into the air. They were pushing on to pass
+the rim of a great valley basin that lay like a saucer in the mountains
+in order that they might camp in the valley by a stream all of them
+knew. Dusk was beginning to fall when they at last reached the saucer
+edge and only the opposite peaks were still tipped with the sun rays.
+This, too, disappeared before they had descended far, and the gloom of
+the great mountains that girt the valley was on all their spirits, even
+McWilliams being affected by it.
+
+They were tired with travel, and the long night watches did not improve
+tempers already overstrained with the expectation of a crisis too long
+dragged out. Rain fell during the night, and continued gently in a
+misty drizzle after day broke. It was a situation and an atmosphere
+ripe for tragedy, and it fell on them like a clap of thunder out of a
+sodden sky.
+
+Hughie was cook for the day, and he came chill and stiff-fingered to
+his task. Summer as it was, there lay a thin coating of ice round the
+edges of the stream, for they had camped in an altitude of about nine
+thousand feet. The “King” had wakened in a vile humor. He had a
+splitting headache, as was natural under the circumstances and he had
+not left in his bottle a single drink to tide him over it. He came
+cursing to the struggling fire, which was making only fitful headway
+against the rain which beat down upon it.
+
+“Why didn’t y’u build your fire on the side of the tree?” he growled at
+Hughie.
+
+Now, Hughie was a tenderfoot, and in his knowledge of outdoor life he
+was still an infant. “I didn’t know—” he was beginning, when his master
+cut him short with a furious tongue lashing out of all proportion to
+the offense.
+
+The lad’s face blanched with fear, and his terror was so manifest that
+the bully, who was threatening him with all manner of evils, began to
+enjoy himself. Chalkeye, returning from watering the horses, got back
+in time to hear the intemperate fag-end of the scolding. He glanced at
+Hughie, whose hands were trembling in spite of him, and then darkly at
+the brute who was attacking him. But he said not a word.
+
+The meal proceeded in silence except for jeers and taunts of the
+“King.” For nobody cared to venture conversation which might prove a
+match to a powder magazine. Whatever thoughts might be each man kept
+them to himself.
+
+“Coffee,” snapped the single talker, toward end of breakfast.
+
+Hughie jumped up, filled the cup that was handed him and set the coffee
+pot back on fire. As he handed the tin cup with the coffee to the
+outlaw the lad’s foot slipped on a piece wet wood, and the hot liquid
+splashed over his chief’s leg. The man jumped to his feet in a rage and
+struck the boy across the face with his whip once, and then again.
+
+“By God, that’ll do for you!” cried Chalkeye from the other side of the
+fire, springing revolver in hand. “Draw, you coyote! I come
+a-shooting.”
+
+The “King” wheeled, finding his weapon he turned. Two shots rang out
+almost simultaneously, and Chalkeye pitched forward. The outlaw chief
+sank to his knees, and, with one hand resting on the ground to steady
+himself fired two more shots into the twitching body on the other side
+of the fire. Then he, too, lurched forward and rolled over.
+
+It had come to climax so swiftly that not one of them had moved except
+the combatants. Bannister rose and walked over to the place where the
+body of his cousin lay. He knelt down and examined him. When he rose it
+was with a very grave face.
+
+“He is dead,” he said quietly.
+
+McWilliams, who had been bending over Chalkeye, looked up. “Here, too.
+Any one of the shots would have finished him.”
+
+Bannister nodded. “Yes. That first exchange killed them both.” He
+looked down at the limp body of his cousin, but a minute before so full
+of supple, virile life. “But his hate had to reach out and make sure,
+even though he was as good as dead himself. He was game.” Then sharply
+to the young braggart, who had risen and was edging away with a face of
+chalk: “Sit down, y’u! What do y’u take us for? Think this is to be a
+massacre?”
+
+The man came back with palpable hesitancy. “I was aiming to go and get
+the boys to bury them. My God, did you ever see anything so quick? They
+drilled through each other like lightning.”
+
+Mac looked him over with dry contempt. “My friend, y’u’re too tender
+for a genuwine A1 bad man. If I was handing y’u a bunch of advice it
+would be to get back to the prosaic paths of peace right prompt. And
+while we’re on the subject I’ll borrow your guns. Y’u’re scared stiff
+and it might get into your fool coconut to plug one of us and light
+out. I’d hate to see y’u commit suicide right before us, so I’ll just
+natcherally unload y’u.”
+
+He was talking to lift the strain, and it was for the same purpose that
+Bannister moved over to Hughie, who sat with his face in his hands,
+trying to shut out the horror of what he had seen.
+
+The sheepman dropped a hand on his shoulder gently. “Brace up, boy!
+Don’t you see that the very best thing that could have happened is
+this. It’s best for y’u, best for the rest of the gang and best for the
+whole cattle country. We’ll have peace here at last. Now he’s gone,
+honest men are going to breathe easy. I’ll take y’u in hand and set y’u
+at work on one of my stations, if y’u like. Anyhow, you’ll have a
+chance to begin life again in a better way.”
+
+“That’s right,” agreed the blatant youth. “I’m sick of rustling the
+mails and other folks’ calves. I’m glad he got what was coming to him,”
+he concluded vindictively, with a glance at his dead chief and a sudden
+raucous oath.
+
+McWilliams’s cold blue eye transfixed him “Hadn’t you better be a
+little careful how your mouth goes off? For one thing, he’s daid now;
+and for another, he happens to be Mr. Bannister’s cousin.”
+
+“But—weren’t they enemies?”
+
+“That’s how I understand it. But this man’s passed over the range. A
+_man_ doesn’t unload his hatred on dead folks—and I expect if y’u’ll
+study him, even y’u will be able to figure out that my friend measures
+up to the size of a real man.”
+
+“I don’t see why if—”
+
+“No, I don’t suppose y’u do,” interrupted the foreman, turning on his
+heel. Then to Bannister, who was looking down at his cousin with a
+stony face: “I reckon, Bann, we better make arrangements to have the
+bodies buried right here in the valley,” he said gently.
+
+Bannister was thinking of early days, of the time when this miscreant,
+whose light had just been put out so instantaneously, had played with
+him day in and day out. They had attended their first school together,
+had played marbles and prisoners’ base a hundred times against each
+other. He could remember how they used to get up early in the morning
+to go fishing with each other. And later, when each began,
+unconsciously, to choose the path he would follow in already beginning
+to settle into an established fact. He could see now, by looking back
+on trifles of their childhood, that his cousin had been badly
+handicapped in his fight with himself against the evil in him. He had
+inherited depraved instincts and tastes, and with them somewhere in him
+a strand of weakness that prevented him from slaying the giants he had
+to oppose in the making of a good character. From bad to worse he had
+gone, and here he lay with the drizzling rain on his white face, a
+warning and a lesson to wayward youths just setting their feet in the
+wrong direction. Surely it was kismet.
+
+Ned Bannister untied the handkerchief from his neck and laid it across
+the face of his kinsman. A moment longer he looked down, then passed
+his hands across his eyes and seemed to brush away the memories that
+thronged him. He stepped forward to the fire and warmed his hands.
+
+“We’ll go on, Mac, to the rendezvous he had appointed with his outfit.
+We ought to reach there by noon, and the boys can send a wagon back to
+get the bodies.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+JOURNEYS END IN LOVERS’ MEETING
+
+
+It had been six days since the two Ned Bannisters had ridden away
+together into the mountains, and every waking hour since that time had
+been for Helen one of harassing anxiety. No word had yet reached her of
+the issue of that dubious undertaking, and she both longed and dreaded
+to hear. He had promised to send a messenger as soon as he had anything
+definite to tell, but she knew it would be like his cousin, too, to
+send her some triumphant word should he prove the victor in the
+struggle between them. So that every stranger she glimpsed brought to
+her a sudden beating of the heart.
+
+But it was not the nature of Helen Messiter to sit down and give
+herself up a prey to foreboding. Her active nature cried out for work
+to occupy her and distract her attention. Fortunately this was to be
+had in abundance just now. For the autumn round-up was on, and since
+her foreman was away the mistress of the Lazy D found plenty of work
+ready to her hand.
+
+The meeting place for the round-up riders was at Boom Creek, five miles
+from the ranch, and Helen rode out there to take charge of her own
+interests in person. With her were six riders, and for the use of each
+of them in addition to his present mount three extra ponies were
+brought in the remuda. For the riding is so hard during the round-up
+that a horse can stand only one day in four of it. At the appointed
+rendezvous a score of other cowboys and owners met them. Without any
+delay they proceeded to business. Mr. Bob Austin, better known as
+“Texas,” was elected boss of the round-up, and he immediately assigned
+the men to their places and announced that they would work Squaw Creek.
+They moved camp at once, Helen returning to the ranch.
+
+It was three o’clock in the morning when the men were roused by the
+cook’s triangle calling them to the “chuck wagon” for breakfast. It was
+still cold and dark as the boys crawled from under their blankets and
+squatted round the fire to eat jerky, biscuits and gravy, and to drink
+cupfuls of hot, black coffee. Before sun rose every man was at his post
+far up on the Squaw Creek ridges ready to begin the drive.
+
+Later in the day Helen rode to the _parada_ grounds, toward which a
+stream of cattle was pouring down the cañon of the creek. Every gulch
+tributary to the creek contributed its quota of wild cows and calves.
+These came romping down the cañon mouth, where four picked men, with a
+bunch of tame cows in front of them, stopped the rush of flying cattle.
+Lunch was omitted, and branding began at once. Every calf belonging to
+a Lazy D cow, after being roped and tied, was flanked with the great D
+which indicated its ownership by Miss Messiter, and on account of the
+recumbent position of which letter the ranch had its name.
+
+It was during the branding that a boyish young fellow rode up and
+handed Helen a note. Her heart pumped rapidly with relief, for one
+glance told her that it was in the handwriting of the Ned Bannister she
+loved. She tore it open and glanced swiftly through it.
+
+
+DEAR FRIEND: Two hours ago my cousin was killed by one of his own men.
+I am sending back to you a boy who had been led astray by him, and it
+would be a great service to me if you would give him something to do
+till I return. His name is Hugh Rogers. I think if you trust him he
+will prove worthy of it.
+
+Jim and I are going to stay here a few days longer to finish the work
+that is begun. We hope to meet and talk with as many of the men
+implicated in my cousin’s lawlessness as is possible. What the result
+will be I cannot say. We do not consider ourselves in any danger
+whatever, though we are not taking chances. If all goes well we shall
+be back within a few days.
+
+I hope you are not missing Jim too much at the roundup. Sincerely,
+
+
+NED BANNISTER
+
+
+She liked the letter because there was not a hint of the relationship
+between them to be read in it. He had guarded her against the chance of
+its falling into the wrong hands and creating talk about them.
+
+She turned to Hughie. “Can you ride?”
+
+“In a way, ma’am. I can’t ride like these men.” His glance indicated a
+cow-puncher pounding past after a wild steer that had broken through
+the cordon of riders and was trying to get away.
+
+“Do you want to learn?”
+
+“I’d like to if I had a chance,” he answered wistfully.
+
+“All right. You have your chance. I’ll see that Mr. Austin finds
+something for you to do. From to-day you are in my employ.”
+
+She rode back to the ranch in the late afternoon, while the sun was
+setting in a great splash of crimson. The round-up boss had hinted that
+if she were nervous about riding alone he could find it convenient to
+accompany her. But the girl wanted to be alone with her own thoughts,
+and she had slipped away while he was busy cutting out calves from the
+herd. It had been a wonderful relief to her to find that _her_ Ned
+Bannister was the one that had survived in the conflict, and her heart
+sang a paean of joy as she rode into the golden glow of the westering
+sun. He was alive—to love and be loved. The unlived years of her future
+seemed to unroll before her as a vision. She glowed with a resurgent
+happiness that was almost an ecstasy. The words of a bit of verse she
+had once seen—a mere scrap from a magazine that had stuck in an obscure
+corner of her memory—sang again and again in her heart:
+
+Life and love
+ And a bright sky o’er us,
+And—God take care
+ Of the way before us!
+
+
+Ah, the way before them, before her and her romance-radiating hero! It
+might be rough and hilly, but if they trod it together—Her tangled
+thoughts were off again in another glad leap of imagination.
+
+The days passed somehow. She busied herself with the affairs of the
+ranch, rode out often to the scenes of the cattle drives and watched
+the round-up, and every twenty-four hours brought her one day nearer to
+his return, she told herself. Nora, too, was on the lookout under her
+longlashed, roguish eyelids; and the two young women discussed the
+subject of their lovers’ return in that elusive, elliptical way common
+to their sex.
+
+No doubt each of these young women had conjectured as to the manner of
+that homecoming and the meeting that would accompany it; but it is safe
+to say that neither of them guessed in her day-dreams how it actually
+was to occur.
+
+Nora had been eager to see something of the round-up, and as she was no
+horsewoman her mistress took her out one day in her motor. The drive
+had been that day on Bronco Mesa, and had finished in the natural
+corral made by Bear Cañon, fenced with a cordon of riders at the end
+opening to the plains below. After watching for two hours the busy
+scenes of cutting out, roping and branding, Helen wheeled her car and
+started down the cañon on their return.
+
+Now, a herd of wild cattle is uncertain as an April day’s behavior.
+Under the influence of the tame valley cattle among which they are
+driven, after a little milling around, the whole bunch may gentle
+almost immediately, or, on the other hand, it may break through and go
+crashing away on a wild stampede at a moment’s notice. Every
+experienced cowman knows enough to expect the unexpected.
+
+At Bronco Mesa the round-up had proceeded with unusual facility. Scores
+of wiry, long-legged steers had drifted down the ridges or gulches that
+led to the cañon; and many a cow, followed by its calf, had stumbled
+forward to the herd and apparently accepted the inevitable. But before
+Helen Messiter had well started out of the cañon’s mouth the situation
+changed absolutely.
+
+A big hill steer, which had not seen a man for a year, broke through
+the human corral with a bellow near a point where Reddy kept guard. The
+puncher wheeled and gave chase, Before the other men could close the
+opening a couple of two-year-olds seized the opportunity and followed
+its lead. A second rider gave chase, and at once, as if some imp of
+mischief had stirred them, fifty tails went up in wild flight. Another
+minute and the whole herd was in stampede.
+
+Down the gulch the five hundred cattle thundered toward the motor car,
+which lay directly in their path. Helen turned, appreciated the danger,
+and put the machine at its full speed. The road branched for a space of
+about fifty yards, and in her excitement she made the mistake of
+choosing the lower, more level, one. Into a deep sand bed they plowed,
+the wheels sinking at every turn. Slower and slower went the car;
+finally came to a full stop.
+
+Nora glanced back in affright at the two hundred and fifty tons of beef
+that was charging wildly toward them. “What shall we do?” she gasped,
+and clambered to the ground.
+
+“Run!” cried Helen, following her example and scudding for the sides of
+the cañon, which here sloped down less precipitately than at other
+points. But before they had run a dozen steps each of them was aware
+that they could not reach safety in time to escape the hoofs rushing
+toward them so heavily that the ground quaked.
+
+“Look out!” A resonant cry rang out above the dull thud of the
+stampeding cattle that were almost upon them. Down the steep sides of
+the gorge two riders were galloping recklessly. It was a race for life
+between them and the first of the herd, and they won by scarce more
+than a length. Across the sand the horses plowed, and as they swept
+past the two trembling young women each rider bent from the saddle
+without slackening speed, and snatched one almost from under the very
+hoofs of the leaders.
+
+The danger was not past. As the horses swerved and went forward with
+the rush Helen knew that a stumble would fling not only her and the man
+who had saved her, but also the horse down to death. They must contrive
+to hold their own in that deadly rush until a way could be found of
+escaping from the path of the living cyclone that trod at their heels,
+galloped beside them, in front, behind.
+
+For it came to her that the horse was tiring in that rush through the
+sand with double weight upon its back.
+
+“Courage!” cried the man behind her as her fearful eyes met his.
+
+As he spoke they reached the end of the cañon and firm ground
+simultaneously. Helen saw that her rescuer had now a revolver in his
+hand, and that he was firing in such a way as to deflect the leaders to
+the left. At first the change in course was hardly perceptible, but
+presently she noticed that they were getting closer to the outskirts of
+the herd, working gradually to the extreme right, edging inch by inch,
+ever so warily, toward safety. Going parallel to their course, running
+neck and neck with the cow pony, lumbered a great dun steer.
+Unconsciously it blocked every effort of the horseman to escape. He had
+one shot left in his revolver, and this time he did not fire into the
+air. It was a mighty risk, for the animal in falling might stagger
+against the horse and hunt them all down to death. But the man took it
+without apparent hesitation. Into the ear of the bullock he sent the
+lead crashing. The brute stumbled and went down head over heels. Its
+flying hoofs struck the flanks of the pony, but the bronco stuck to its
+feet, and next moment staggered out from among the herd stragglers and
+came to halt.
+
+The man slid from its back and lifted down the half-fainting girl. She
+clung to him, white a trembling. “Oh, it was horrible, Ned!” She could
+still look down in imagination upon the sea of dun backs that swayed
+and surged about them like storm-tossed waves.
+
+“It was a near thing, but we made it, girl. So did Jim. He got out
+before we did. It’s all past now. You can remember it as the most
+exciting experience of your life.”
+
+She shuddered. “I don’t want to remember it at all.” And so shaken was
+she that she did not realize that his arm was about her the while she
+sobbed on his shoulder.
+
+“A cattle stampede _is_ a nasty thing to get in front of. Never mind.
+It’s done with now and everybody’s safe.”
+
+She drew a long breath. “Yes, everybody’s safe and you are back home.
+Why didn’t you come after your cousin was killed?”
+
+“I had to finish my work.”
+
+“And _did_ you finish it?”
+
+“I think we did. There will be no more Shoshone gang. It’s members have
+scatted in all directions.”
+
+“I’m glad you stayed, then. We can live at peace now.” And presently
+she added: “I knew you would not come back until you had done what you
+set out to do. You’re very obstinate, sir. Do you know that?”
+
+“Perseverance, I call it,” he smiled, glad to see that she was
+recovering her lightness of tone.
+
+“You don’t always insist on putting your actions in the most favorable
+light. Do you remember the first day I ever saw you?”
+
+“Am I likely ever to forget it?” he smiled fondly.
+
+“I didn’t mean _that_. What I was getting at was that you let me go
+away from you thinking you were ‘the king.’ I haven’t forgiven you
+entirely for that.”
+
+“I expect y’u’ll always have to be forgiving me things.”
+
+“If you valued my good opinion I don’t see how you could let me go
+without telling me. Was it fair or kind?”
+
+“If y’u come to that, was it so fair and kind to convict me so promptly
+on suspicion?” he retaliated with a smile.
+
+“No, it wasn’t. But—” She flushed with a divine shyness. “But I loved
+you all the time, even when they said you were a villain.”
+
+“Even while y’u believed me one?”
+
+“I didn’t. I never would believe you one—not deep in my heart. I
+wouldn’t let myself. I made excuses for you—explained everything to
+myself.”
+
+“Yet your reason told y’u I was guilty.”
+
+“Yes, I think my mind hated you and my heart loved you.”
+
+He adored her for the frank simplicity of her confession, that out of
+the greatness of her love she dared to make no secret of it to him.
+Direct as a boy, she was yet as wholly sweet as the most retiring girl
+could be.
+
+“Y’u always swamp my vocabulary, sweetheart. I can’t ever tell y’u—life
+wouldn’t be long enough—how much I care for you.”
+
+“I’m glad,” she said simply.
+
+They stood looking at each other, palms pressed to palms in meeting
+hands, supremely happy in this miracle of love that had befallen them.
+They were alone—for Nora and Jim had gone into temporary eclipse behind
+a hill and seemed in no hurry to emerge—alone in the sunshine with this
+wonder that flowed from one to another by shining eyes, by finger
+touch, and then by meeting lips. He held her close, knew the sweet
+delight of contact with the supple, surrendered figure, then released
+her as she drew away in maidenly reserve.
+
+“When shall we be married, Helen? Is the early part of next week too
+late?” he asked.
+
+Still blushing, she straightened her hat. “That’s ridiculous, sir. I
+haven’t got used to the thought of you yet.”
+
+“Plenty of time for that afterward. Then we’ll say next week if that
+suits y’u.”
+
+“But it doesn’t. Don’t you know that it is the lady’s privilege to name
+the day? Besides, I want time to change my mind if I should decide to.”
+
+“That’s what I’m afraid of,” he laughed joyfully. “So I have to insist
+on an early marriage.”
+
+“Insist?” she demurred.
+
+“I’ve been told on the best of authority that I’m very obstinate,” he
+gayly answered.
+
+“I have a mind of my own myself. If I ever marry you be sure I shall
+name the day, sir.”
+
+“Will y’u marry me the day Nora does Jim?”
+
+“We’ll see.” The eyes slanted at him under the curved lashes, teased
+him delightfully. “Did Nora tell you she was going to marry Jim?”
+
+Bannister looked mildly hurt. “My common sense has been telling it to
+me a month.”
+
+“How long has your common sense been telling you about us?”
+
+“I didn’t use it when I fell in love with y’u,” he boldly laughed.
+
+“Of all things to say!”
+
+“Because it would have told me y’u couldn’t possibly care for me.”
+
+“Oh, that’s different!”
+
+“Not being able to help myself, I just went ahead.”
+
+“Isn’t it good? Isn’t it too good to be true—Ned?”
+
+Tears brimmed in her happy eyes, and unconsciously she leaned toward
+him. In an instant she was in his arms again, both of them compelled by
+the imperative impulse of true lovers.
+
+Out of the hollow presently appeared Nora and McWilliams, very much
+oblivious of the outside world. Presently they condescended to
+recognize the existence of Bannister and Helen.
+
+“We’re allowin’ to be married in September,” said Mac sheepishly, by
+way of explanation.
+
+The two girls flew into each other’s arms. Over Nora’s shoulder Ned
+caught his sweetheart’s eye and read there a blushing consent to a
+public announcement.
+
+“That’s ce’tainly a strange coincidence, Jim. So are we,” he answered
+immediately.
+
+The two friends shook hands.
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
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+<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Wyoming, a Story of the Outdoor West, by William MacLeod Raine</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
+of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
+at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
+are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
+country where you are located before using this eBook.
+</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Wyoming, a Story of the Outdoor West</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: William MacLeod Raine</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: July, 1999 [eBook #1803]<br />
+[Most recently updated: December 11, 2022]</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Mary Starr</div>
+<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WYOMING ***</div>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:55%;">
+<img src="images/cover.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="[Illustration]" />
+</div>
+
+<h1>Wyoming</h1>
+
+<h3>a Story of the Outdoor West</h3>
+
+<h2 class="no-break">By William MacLeod Raine</h2>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<table summary="" style="">
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap01">CHAPTER I. A DESERT MEETING</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap02">CHAPTER II. THE KING OF THE BIG HORN COUNTRY</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap03">CHAPTER III. AN INVITATION GIVEN AND ACCEPTED</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap04">CHAPTER IV. AT THE LAZY D RANCH</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap05">CHAPTER V. THE DANCE AT FRASER’S</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap06">CHAPTER VI. A PARTY CALL</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap07">CHAPTER VII. THE MAN FROM THE SHOSHONE FASTNESSES</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap08">CHAPTER VIII. IN THE LAZY D HOSPITAL</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap09">CHAPTER IX. MISS DARLING ARRIVES</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap10">CHAPTER X. A SHEPHERD OF THE DESERT</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap11">CHAPTER XI. A RESCUE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap12">CHAPTER XII. MISTRESS AND MAID</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap13">CHAPTER XIII. THE TWO COUSINS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap14">CHAPTER XIV. FOR THE WORLD’S CHAMPIONSHIP</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap15">CHAPTER XV. JUDD MORGAN PASSES</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap16">CHAPTER XVI. HUNTING BIG GAME</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap17">CHAPTER XVII. RUN TO EARTH</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap18">CHAPTER XVIII. PLAYING FOR TIME</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap19">CHAPTER XIX. WEST POINT TO THE RESCUE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap20">CHAPTER XX. TWO CASES OF DISCIPLINE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap21">CHAPTER XXI. THE SIGNAL LIGHTS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap22">CHAPTER XXII. EXIT THE “KING”</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap23">CHAPTER XXIII. JOURNEYS END IN LOVERS’ MEETING</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<hr />
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap01"></a>CHAPTER I.<br/>
+A DESERT MEETING</h2>
+
+<p>
+An automobile shot out from a gash in the hills and slipped swiftly down to the
+butte. Here it came to a halt on the white, dusty road, while its occupant
+gazed with eager, unsated eyes on the great panorama that stretched before her.
+The earth rolled in waves like a mighty sea to the distant horizon line. From a
+wonderful blue sky poured down upon the land a bath of sunbeat. The air was
+like wine, pure and strong, and above the desert swam the rare, untempered
+light of Wyoming. Surely here was a peace primeval, a silence unbroken since
+the birth of creation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was all new to her, and wonderfully exhilarating. The infinite roll of
+plain, the distant shining mountains, the multitudinous voices of the desert
+drowned in a sunlit sea of space&mdash;they were all details of the situation
+that ministered to a large serenity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And while she breathed deeply the satisfaction of it, an exploding rifle echo
+shattered the stillness. With excited sputtering came the prompt answer of a
+fusillade. She was new to the West; but some instinct stronger than reason told
+the girl that here was no playful puncher shooting up the scenery to ventilate
+his exuberance. Her imagination conceived something more deadly; a sinister
+picture of men pumping lead in a grim, close-lipped silence; a lusty plainsman,
+with murder in his heart, crumpling into a lifeless heap, while the thin
+smoke-spiral curled from his hot rifle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So the girl imagined the scene as she ran swiftly forward through the pines to
+the edge of the butte bluff whence she might look down upon the coulée that
+nestled against it. Nor had she greatly erred, for her first sweeping glance
+showed her the thing she had dreaded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a semicircle, well back from the foot of the butte, half a dozen men
+crouched in the cover of the sage-brush and a scattered group of cottonwoods.
+They were perhaps fifty yards apart, and the attention of all of them was
+focused on a spot directly beneath her. Even as she looked, in that first swift
+moment of apprehension, a spurt of smoke came from one of the rifles and was
+flung back from the forked pine at the bottom of the mesa. She saw him then,
+kneeling behind his insufficient shelter, a trapped man making his last stand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From where she stood the girl distinguished him very clearly, and under the
+field-glasses that she turned on him the details leaped to life. Tall, strong,
+slender, with the lean, clean build of a greyhound, he seemed as wary and alert
+as a panther. The broad, soft hat, the scarlet handkerchief loosely knotted
+about his throat, the gray shirt, spurs and overalls, proclaimed him a
+stockman, just as his dead horse at the entrance to the coulée told of an
+accidental meeting in the desert and a hurried run for cover.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That he had no chance was quite plain, but no plainer than the cool vigilance
+with which he proposed to make them pay. Even in the matter of defense he was
+worse off than they were, but he knew how to make the most of what he had; knew
+how to avail himself of every inch of sagebrush that helped to render him
+indistinct to their eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One of the attackers, eager for a clearer shot, exposed himself a trifle too
+far in taking aim. Without any loss of time in sighting, swift as a
+lightning-flash, the rifle behind the forked pine spoke. That the bullet
+reached its mark she saw with a gasp of dismay. For the man suddenly huddled
+down and rolled over on his side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His comrades appeared to take warning by this example. The men at both ends of
+the crescent fell back, and for a minute the girl’s heart leaped with the hope
+that they were about to abandon the siege. Apparently the man in the scarlet
+kerchief had no such expectation. He deserted his position behind the pine and
+ran back, crouching low in the brush, to another little clump of trees closer
+to the bluff. The reason for this was at first not apparent to her, but she
+understood presently when the men who had fallen back behind the rolling
+hillocks appeared again well in to the edge of the bluff. Only by his timely
+retreat had the man saved himself from being outflanked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was very plain that the attackers meant to take their time to finish him in
+perfect safety. He was surrounded on every side by a cordon of rifles, except
+where the bare face of the butte hung down behind him. To attempt to scale it
+would have been to expose himself as a mark for every gun to certain death.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was now that she heard the man who seemed to be directing the attack call
+out to another on his right. She was too far to make out the words, but their
+effect was clear to her. He pointed to the brow of the butte above, and a
+puncher in white woolen chaps dropped back out of range and swung to the saddle
+upon one of the ponies bunched in the rear. He cantered round in a wide circle
+and made for the butte. His purpose was obviously to catch their victim in the
+unprotected rear, and fire down upon him from above.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The young woman shouted a warning, but her voice failed to carry. For a moment
+she stood with her hands pressed together in despair, then turned and swiftly
+scudded to her machine. She sprang in, swept forward, reached the rim of the
+mesa, and plunged down. Never before had she attempted so precarious a descent
+in such wild haste. The car fairly leaped into space, and after it struck
+swayed dizzily as it shot down. The girl hung on, her face white and set, the
+pulse in her temple beating wildly. She could do nothing, as the machine rocked
+down, but hope against many chances that instant destruction might be averted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Utterly beyond her control, the motor-car thundered down, reached the foot of
+the butte, and swept over a little hill in its wild flight. She rushed by a
+mounted horseman in the thousandth part of a second. She was still speeding at
+a tremendous velocity, but a second hill reduced this somewhat. She had not yet
+recovered control of the machine, but, though her eyes instinctively followed
+the white road that flashed past, she again had photographed on her brain the
+scene of the turbid tragedy in which she was intervening.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the foot of the butte the road circled and dipped into the coulée. She
+braced herself for the shock, but, though the wheels skidded till her heart was
+in her throat, the automobile, hanging on the balance of disaster, swept round
+in safety.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her horn screamed an instant warning to the trapped man. She could not see him,
+and for an instant her heart sank with the fear that they had killed him. But
+she saw then that they were still firing, and she continued her honking
+invitation as the car leaped forward into the zone of spitting bullets.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By this time she was recovering control of the motor, and she dared not let her
+attention wander, but out of the corner of her eye she appreciated the
+situation. Temporarily, out of sheer amaze at this apparition from the blue,
+the guns ceased their sniping. She became aware that a light curly head,
+crouched low in the sage-brush, was moving rapidly to meet her at right angles,
+and in doing so was approaching directly the line of fire. She could see him
+dodging to and fro as he moved forward, for the rifles were again barking.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was within two hundred yards of him, still going rapidly, but not with the
+same headlong rush as before, when the curly head disappeared in the
+sage-brush. It was up again presently, but she could see that the man came
+limping, and so uncertainly that twice he pitched forward to the ground.
+Incautiously one of his assailants ran forward with a shout the second time his
+head went down. Crack! The unerring rifle rang out, and the impetuous one
+dropped in his tracks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As she approached, the young woman slowed without stopping, and as the car
+swept past Curly Head flung himself in headlong. He picked himself up from her
+feet, crept past her to the seat beyond, and almost instantly whipped his rifle
+to his shoulder in prompt defiance of the fire that was now converged on them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet in a few moments the sound died away, for a voice midway in the crescent
+had shouted an amazed discovery:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“By God, it’s a woman!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The car skimmed forward over the uneven ground toward the end of the
+semicircle, and passed within fifty yards of the second man from the end, the
+one she had picked out as the leader of the party. He was a black, swarthy
+fellow in plain leather chaps and blue shirt. As they passed he took a long,
+steady aim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Duck!” shouted the man beside her, and dragged her down on the seat so that
+his body covered hers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A puff of wind fanned the girl’s cheek.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Near thing,” her companion said coolly. He looked back at the swarthy man and
+laughed softly. “Some day you’ll mebbe wish you had sent your pills straighter,
+Mr. Judd Morgan.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet a few wheel-turns and they had dipped forward out of range among the great
+land waves that seemed to stretch before them forever. The unexpected had
+happened, and she had achieved a rescue in the face of the impossible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hurt badly?” the girl inquired briefly, her dark-blue eyes meeting his as
+frankly as those of a boy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No need for an undertaker. I reckon I’ll survive, ma’am.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Where are you hit?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I just got a telegram from my ankle saying there was a cargo of lead arrived
+there unexpected,” he drawled easily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hurts a good deal, doesn’t it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No more than is needful to keep my memory jogged up. It’s a sort of a
+forget-me-not souvenir. For a good boy; compliments of Mr. Jim Henson,” he
+explained.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her dark glance swept him searchingly. She disapproved the assurance of his
+manner even while the youth in her applauded his reckless sufficiency. His gay
+courage held her unconsenting admiration even while she resented it. He was a
+trifle too much at his ease for one who had just been snatched from dire peril.
+Yet even in his insouciance there was something engaging; something almost of
+distinction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What was the trouble?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mirth bubbled in his gray eyes. “I gathered, ma’am, that they wanted to collect
+my scalp.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do what?” she frowned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Bump me off&mdash;send me across the divide.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, I know that. But why?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He seemed to reproach himself. “Now how could I be so neglectful? I clean
+forgot to ask.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s ridiculous,” was her sharp verdict.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, ma’am, plumb ridiculous. My only excuse is that they began scattering
+lead so sudden I didn’t have time to ask many ‘Whyfors.’ I reckon we’ll just
+have to call it a Wyoming difference of opinion,” he concluded pleasantly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Which means, I suppose, that you are not going to tell me.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I got so much else to tell y’u that’s a heap more important,” he laughed. “Y’u
+see, I’m enjoyin’ my first automobile ride. It was certainly thoughtful of y’u
+to ask me to go riding with y’u, Miss Messiter.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“So you know my name. May I ask how?” was her astonished question.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He gave the low laugh that always seemed to suggest a private source of
+amusement of his own. “I suspicioned that might be your name when I say y’u
+come a-sailin’ down from heaven to gather me up like Enoch.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, ma’am, I happened to drift in to Gimlet Butte two or three days ago, and
+while I was up at the depot looking for some freight a train sashaid in and
+side tracked a flat car. There was an automobile on that car addressed to Miss
+Helen Messiter. Now, automobiles are awful seldom in this country. I don’t seem
+to remember having seen one before.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I see. You’re quite a Sherlock Holmes. Do you know anything more about me?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I know y’u have just fallen heir to the Lazy D. They say y’u are a schoolmarm,
+but I don’t believe it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, I am.” Then, “Why don’t you believe it?” she added.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He surveyed her with his smile audacious, let his amused eyes wander down from
+the mobile face with the wild-rose bloom to the slim young figure so long and
+supple, then serenely met her frown.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u don’t look it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No? Are you the owner of a composite photograph of the teachers of the
+country?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He enjoyed again his private mirth. “I should like right well to have the
+pictures of some of them.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She glanced at him sharply, but he was gazing so innocently at the purple
+Shoshones in the distance that she could not give him the snub she thought he
+needed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You are right. My name is Helen Messiter,” she said, by way of stimulating a
+counter fund of information. For, though she was a young woman not much given
+to curiosity, she was aware of an interest in this spare, broad-shouldered
+youth who was such an incarnation of bronzed vigor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Glad to meet y’u, Miss Messiter,” he responded, and offered his firm brown
+hand in Western fashion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But she observed resentfully that he did not mention his own name. It was
+impossible to suppose that he knew no better, and she was driven to conclude
+that he was silent of set purpose. Very well! If he did not want to introduce
+himself she was not going to urge it upon him. In a businesslike manner she
+gave her attention to eating up the dusty miles.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, ma’am. I reckon I never was more glad to death to meet a lady than I was
+to meet up with y’u,” he continued, cheerily. “Y’u sure looked good to me as
+y’u come a-foggin’ down the road. I fair had been yearnin’ for company but was
+some discouraged for fear the invitation had miscarried.” He broke off his
+sardonic raillery and let his level gaze possess her for a long moment. “Miss
+Messiter, I’m certainly under an obligation to y’u I can’t repay. Y’u saved my
+life,” he finished gravely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nonsense.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Fact.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It isn’t a personal matter at all,” she assured him, with a touch of impatient
+hauteur.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s a heap personal to me.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In spite of her healthy young resentment she laughed at the way in which he
+drawled this out, and with a swift sweep her boyish eyes took in again his
+compelling devil-may-care charm. She was a tenderfoot, but intuition as well as
+experience taught her that he was unusual enough to be one of ten thousand. No
+young Greek god’s head could have risen more superbly above the brick-tanned
+column of the neck than this close-cropped curly one. Gray eyes, deep and
+unwavering and masterful, looked out of a face as brown as Wyoming. He was got
+up with no thought of effect, but the tigerish litheness, the picturesque
+competency of him, spake louder than costuming.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Aren’t you really hurt worse than you pretend? I’m sure your ankle ought to be
+attended to as soon as possible.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t tell me you’re a lady doctor, ma’am,” he burlesqued his alarm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Can you tell me where the nearest ranch house is?” she asked, ignoring his
+diversion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The Lazy D is the nearest, I reckon.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Which direction?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“North by east, ma’am.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then I’ll take the most direct road to it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“In that case I’ll thank y’u for my ride and get out here.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But&mdash;why?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He waved a jaunty hand toward the recent battlefield. “The Lazy D lies right
+back of that hill. I expect, mebbe, those wolves might howl again if we went
+back.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Where, then, shall I take you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I hate to trouble y’u to go out of your way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I dare say, but I’m going just the same,” she told him, dryly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If you’re right determined&mdash;” He interrupted himself to point to the
+south. “Do y’u see that camel-back peak over there?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The one with the sunshine on its lower edge?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s it, Miss Messiter. They call those two humps the Antelope Peaks. If y’u
+can drop me somewhere near there I think I’ll manage all right.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m not going to leave you till we reach a house,” she informed him promptly.
+“You’re not fit to walk fifty yards.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s right kind of y’u, but I could not think of asking so much. My friends
+will find me if y’u leave me where I can work a heliograph.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Or your enemies,” she cut in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I hope not. I’d not likely have the luck to get another invitation right then
+to go riding with a friendly young lady.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She gave him direct, cool, black-blue eyes that met and searched his. “I’m not
+at all sure she is friendly. I shall want to find out the cause of the trouble
+you have just had before I make up my mind as to that.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I judge people by their actions. Y’u didn’t wait to find out before bringing
+the ambulance into action,” he laughed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I see you do not mean to tell me.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’re quite a lawyer, ma’am,” he evaded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I find you a very slippery witness, then.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ask anything y’u like and I’ll tell you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Very well. Who were those men, and why were they trying to kill you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They turned their wolf loose on me because I shot up one of them yesterday.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Dear me! Is it your business to go around shooting people? That’s three I
+happen to know that you have shot. How many more?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No more, ma’am&mdash;not recently.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, three is quite enough&mdash;recently,” she mimicked. “You seem to me a
+good deal of a desperado.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, ma’am.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t say ‘Yes, ma’am,’ like that, as if it didn’t matter in the least whether
+you are or not,” she ordered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, ma’am.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh!” She broke off with a gesture of impatience at his burlesque of obedience.
+“You know what I mean&mdash;that you ought to deny it; ought to be furious at
+me for suggesting it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ought I?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Of course you ought.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There’s a heap of ways I ain’t up to specifications,” he admitted, cheerfully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And who are they&mdash;the men that were attacking you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a gleam of irrepressible humor in the bold eyes. “Your cow-punchers,
+ma’am.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My cow-punchers?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They ce’tainly belong to the Lazy D outfit.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And you say that you shot one of my men yesterday?” He could see her getting
+ready for a declaration of war.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Down by Willow Creek&mdash;Yes, ma’am,” he answered, comfortably.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And why, may I ask?” she flamed
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s a long story, Miss Messiter. It wouldn’t be square for me to get my
+version in before your boys. Y’u ask them.” He permitted himself a genial
+smile, somewhat ironic. “I shouldn’t wonder but what they’ll give me a
+giltedged testimonial as an unhanged horse thief.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Isn’t there such a thing as law in Wyoming?” the girl demanded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Lots of it. Y’u can buy just as good law right here as in Kalamazoo.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I wish I knew where to find it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Like to put me in the calaboose?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“In the penitentiary. Yes, sir!” A moment later the question that was in her
+thoughts leaped hotly from her lips. “Who are you, sir, that dare to commit
+murder and boast of it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had flicked him on the raw at last. Something that was near to pain rested
+for a second in his eyes. “Murder is a hard name, ma’am. And I didn’t say he
+was daid, or any of the three,” came his gentle answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You <i>meant</i> to kill them, anyhow.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Did I?” There was the ghost of a sad smile about his eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The way you act, a person might think you one of Ned Bannister’s men,” she
+told him, scornfully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I expect you’re right.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She repented her a little at a charge so unjust. “If you are not ashamed of
+your name why are you so loath to part with it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u didn’t ask me my name,” he said, a dark flush sweeping his face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I ask it now.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Like the light from a snuffed candle the boyish recklessness had gone out of
+his face. His jaws were set like a vise and he looked hard as hammered steel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My name is Bannister,” he said, coldly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ned Bannister, the outlaw,” she let slip, and was aware of a strange sinking
+of the heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It seemed to her that something sinister came to the surface in his handsome
+face. “I reckon we might as well let it go at that,” he returned, with bitter
+briefness.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap02"></a>CHAPTER II.<br/>
+THE KING OF THE BIG HORN COUNTRY</h2>
+
+<p>
+Two months before this time Helen Messiter had been serenely teaching a second
+grade at Kalamazoo, Michigan, notwithstanding the earnest efforts of several
+youths of that city to induce her to retire to domesticity “What’s the use of
+being a schoolmarm?” had been the burden of their plaint. “Any spinster can
+teach kids <i>C-a-t</i>, Cat, but only one in several thousand can be the
+prettiest bride in Kalamazoo.” None of them, however, had been able to drive
+the point sufficiently home, and it is probable that she would have continued
+to devote herself to Young America if an uncle she had never seen had not died
+without a will and left her a ranch in Wyoming yclept the Lazy D.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When her lawyer proposed to put the ranch on the market Miss Helen had a word
+to say.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I think not. I’ll go out and see it first, anyhow,” she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But really, my dear young lady, it isn’t at all necessary. Fact is, I’ve
+already had an offer of a hundred thousand dollars for it. Now, I should judge
+that a fair price.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Very likely,” his client interrupted, quietly. “But, you see, I don’t care to
+sell.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then what in the world are you going to do with it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Run it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But, my dear Miss Messiter, it isn’t an automobile or any other kind of toy.
+You must remember that it takes a business head and a great deal of experience
+to make such an investment pay. I really think&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My school ends on the fourteenth of June. I’ll get a substitute for the last
+two months. I shall start for Wyoming on the eighteenth of April.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man of law gasped, explained the difficulties again carefully as to a
+child, found that he was wasting his breath, and wisely gave it up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Miss Messiter had started on the eighteenth of April, as she had announced.
+When she reached Gimlet Butte, the nearest railroad point to the Lazy D, she
+found a group of curious, weatherbeaten individuals gathered round a machine
+foreign to their experience. It was on a flat car, and the general opinion ran
+the gamut from a newfangled sewing machine to a thresher. Into this guessing
+contest came its owner with so brisk and businesslike an energy that inside of
+two hours she was testing it up and down the wide street of Gimlet Butte, to
+the wonder and delight of an audience to which each one of the eleven saloons
+of the city had contributed its admiring quota.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile the young woman attended strictly to business. She had disappeared
+for half an hour with a suit case into the Elk House; and when she returned in
+a short-skirted corduroy suit, leggings and wide-brimmed gray Stetson hat, all
+Gimlet Butte took an absorbing interest in the details of this delightful
+adventure that had happened to the town. The population was out <i>en masse</i>
+to watch her slip down the road on a trial trip.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently “Soapy” Sothern, drifting in on his buckskin from the Hoodoo Peak
+country, where for private reasons of his own he had been for the past month a
+sojourner, reported that he had seen the prettiest sight in the State climbing
+under a gasoline bronc with a monkey-wrench in her hand. Where? Right over the
+hill on the edge of town. The immediate stampede for the cow ponies was averted
+by a warning chug-chug that sounded down the road, followed by the appearance
+of a flashing whir that made the ponies dance on their hind legs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The gasoline bronc lady sure makes a hit with me,” announced “Texas,” gravely.
+“I allow I’ll rustle a job with the Lazy D outfit.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“She ce’tainly rides herd on that machine like a champeen,” admitted Soapy. “I
+reckon I’ll drift over to the Lazy D with you to look after yore remains, Tex,
+when the lightning hits you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Miss Messiter swung the automobile round in a swift circle, came to an abrupt
+halt in front of the hotel, and alighted without delay. As she passed in
+through the half score of admirers she had won, her dark eyes swept smilingly
+over assembled Cattleland. She had already met most of them at the launching of
+the machine from the flat car, and had directed their perspiring energies as
+they labored to follow her orders. Now she nodded a recognition with a little
+ripple of gay laughter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m delighted to be able to contribute to the entertainment of Gimlet Butte,”
+she said, as she swept in. For this young woman was possessed of Western
+adaptation. It gave her no conscientious qualms to exchange conversation
+fraternal with these genial savages.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Elk House did not rejoice in a private dining room, and competition
+strenuous ensued as to who should have the pleasure of sitting beside the guest
+of honor. To avoid ill feeling, the matter was determined by a game of
+freeze-out, in which Texas and a mature gentleman named, from his complexion,
+“Beet” Collins, were the lucky victors. Texas immediately repaired to the
+general store, where he purchased a new scarlet bandanna for the occasion; also
+a cake of soap with which to rout the alkali dust that had filtered into every
+pore of his hands and face from a long ride across the desert.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Came supper and Texas simultaneously, the cow-puncher’s face scrubbed to an
+apple shine. At the last moment Collins defaulted, his nerve completely gone.
+Since, however, he was a thrifty soul, he sold his place to Soapy for ten
+dollars, and proceeded to invest the proceeds in an immediate drunk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During the first ten minutes of supper Miss Messiter did not appear, and the
+two guardians who flanked her chair solicitously were the object of much
+badinage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“She got one glimpse of that red haid of Tex and the pore lady’s took to the
+sage,” explained Yorky.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And him scrubbed so shiny fust time since Christmas before the big blizzard,”
+sighed Doc Rogers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Shucks! She ain’t scared of no sawed-off, hammered-down runt like Texas, No,
+siree! Miss Messiter’s on the absent list ’cause she’s afraid she cayn’t resist
+the blandishments of Soapy. Did yo’ ever hear about Soapy and that Caspar hash
+slinger?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Forget it, Slim,” advised Soapy, promptly. He had been engaged in lofty and
+oblivious conversation with Texas, but he did not intend to allow reminiscences
+to get under way just now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At this opportune juncture arrived the mistress of the “gasoline bronc,” neatly
+clad in a simple white lawn with blue trimmings. She looked like a gleam of
+sunshine in her fresh, sweet youth; and not even in her own school room had she
+ever found herself the focus of a cleaner, more unstinted admiration. For the
+outdoors West takes off its hat reverently to women worthy of respect,
+especially when they are young and friendly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Helen Messiter had come to Wyoming because the call of adventure, the desire
+for experience outside of rutted convention, were stirring her warm-blooded
+youth. She had seen enough of life lived in a parlor, and when there came
+knocking at her door a chance to know the big, untamed outdoors at first hand
+she had at once embraced it like a lover. She was eager for her new life, and
+she set out skillfully to make these men tell her what she wanted to know. To
+them, of course, it was an old story, and whatever of romance it held was
+unconscious. But since she wanted to talk of the West they were more than ready
+to please her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So she listened, and drew them out with adroit questions when it was necessary.
+She made them talk of life on the open range, of rustlers and those who lived
+outside the law in the upper Shoshone country, of the deadly war waging between
+the cattle and sheep industries.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Are there any sheep near the Lazy D ranch?” she asked, intensely interested in
+Soapy’s tale of how cattle and sheep could no more be got to mix than oil and
+water.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For an instant nobody answered her question; then Soapy replied, with what
+seemed elaborate carelessness:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ned Bannister runs a bunch of about twelve thousand not more’n fifteen or
+twenty miles from your place.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And you say they are spoiling the range?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They’re ce’tainly spoiling it for cows.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But can’t something be done? If my cows were there first I don’t see what
+right he has to bring his sheep there,” the girl frowned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The assembled company attended strictly to supper. The girl, surprised at the
+stillness, looked round. “Well?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Now you’re shouting, ma’am! That’s what we say,” enthused Texas, spurring to
+the rescue.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It doesn’t much matter what you say. What do you do?” asked Helen,
+impatiently. “Do you lie down and let Mr. Bannister and his kind drive their
+sheep over you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do we, Soapy?” grinned Texas. Yet it seemed to her his smile was not quite
+carefree.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m not a cowman myself,” explained Soapy to the girl. “Nor do I run sheep.
+I&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Tell Miss Messiter what yore business is, Soapy,” advised Yorky from the end
+of the table, with a mouthful of biscuit swelling his cheeks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Soapy crushed the irrepressible Yorky with a look, but that young man hit back
+smilingly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Soapy, he sells soap, ma’am. He’s a sorter city salesman, I reckon.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I should never have guessed it. Mr. Sothern does not <i>look</i> like a
+salesman,” said the girl, with a glance at his shrewd, hard, expressionless
+face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, ma’am, he’s a first-class seller of soap, is Mr. Sothern,” chuckled the
+cow-puncher, kicking his friends gayly under the table.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You can see I never sold <i>him</i> any, Miss Messiter,” came back Soapy,
+sorrowfully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All this was Greek to the young lady from Kalamazoo. How was she to know that
+Mr. Sothern had vended his soap in small cubes on street corners, and that he
+wrapped bank notes of various denominations in the bars, which same were
+retailed to eager customers for the small sum of fifty cents, after a guarantee
+that the soap was good? His customers rarely patronized him twice; and
+frequently they used bad language because the soap wrapping was not as valuable
+as they had expected. This was manifestly unfair, for Mr. Sothern, who made no
+claims to philanthropy, often warned them that the soap should be bought on its
+merits, and not with an eye single to the premium that might or might not
+accompany the package.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I started to tell you, ma’am, when that infant interrupted, that the cowmen
+don’t aim to quit business yet a while. They’ve drawn a dead-line, Miss
+Messiter.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A dead-line?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, ma’am, beyond which no sheep herder is to run his bunch.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And if he does?” the girl asked, open eyed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He don’t do it twict, ma’am. Why don’t you pass the fritters to Miss Messiter,
+Slim?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And about this Bannister. Who is he?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her innocent question seemed to ring a bell for silence; seemed to carry with
+it some hidden portent that stopped idle conversation as a striking clock that
+marks the hour of an execution.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The smile that had been gay grew grim, and men forgot the subject of their
+light, casual talk. It was Sothern that answered her, and she observed that his
+voice was grave, his face studiously without expression.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Bannister, ma’am, is a sheepman.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“So I understood, but&mdash;” Her eyes traveled swiftly round the table, and
+appraised the sudden sense of responsibility that had fallen on these reckless,
+careless frontiersmen. “I am wondering what else he is. Really, he seems to be
+the bogey man of Gimlet Butte.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was another instant silence, and again it was Soapy that lifted it. “I
+expaict you’ll like Wyoming, Miss Messiter; leastways I hope you will. There’s
+a right smart of country here.” His gaze went out of the open door to the vast
+sea of space that swam in the fine sunset light. “Yes, most folks that ain’t
+plumb spoilt with city ways likes it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Sure she’ll like it. Y’u want to get a good, easy-riding hawss, Miss
+Messiter,” advised Slim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And a rifle,” added Texas, promptly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It occurred to her that they were all working together to drift the
+conversation back to a safe topic. She followed the lead given her, but she
+made up her mind to know what it was about her neighbor, Mr. Bannister, the
+sheep herder, that needed to be handled with such wariness and circumspection
+of speech.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her chance came half an hour later, when she stood talking to the landlady on
+the hotel porch in the mellow twilight that seemed to rest on the land like a
+moonlit aura. For the moment they were alone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What is it about this man Bannister that makes men afraid to speak of him?”
+she demanded, with swift impulse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her landlady’s startled eyes went alertly round to see that they were alone.
+“Hush, child! You mustn’t speak of him like that,” warned the older woman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why mustn’t I? That’s what I want to know.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Is isn’t healthy.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What do you mean?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again that anxious look flashed round in the dusk. “The Bannister outfit is the
+worst in the land. Ned Bannister is king of the whole Big Horn country and
+beyond that to the Tetons.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And you mean to tell me that everybody is afraid of him&mdash;that men like
+Mr. Sothern dare not say their soul is their own?” the newcomer asked,
+contemptuously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Not so loud, child. He has spies everywhere That’s the trouble. You don’t know
+who is in with him. He’s got the whole region terrified.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Is he so bad?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He is a devil. Last year he and his hell riders swept down on Topaz and killed
+two bartenders just to see them kick, Ned Bannister said. Folks allow they knew
+too much.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But the law&mdash;the Government? Haven’t you a sheriff and officers?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Bannister has. He elects the sheriff in this county.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Aren’t there more honest people here than villains?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ten times as many, but the trouble is that the honest folks can’t trust each
+other. You see, if one of them made a mistake and confided in the wrong
+man&mdash;well, some fine day he would go riding herd and would not turn up at
+night. Next week, or next month, maybe, one of his partners might find a pile
+of bones in an arroyo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Have you ever seen this Bannister?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You <i>must</i> speak lower when you talk of him, Miss Messiter,” the woman
+insisted. “Yes, I saw him once; at least I think I did. Mighty few folks know
+for sure that they have seen him. He is a mystery, and he travels under many
+names and disguises.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“When was it you think you saw him?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Two years ago at Ayr. The bank was looted that night and robbed of thirty
+thousand dollars. They roused the cashier from his bed and made him give the
+combination. He didn’t want to, and Ned Bannister”&mdash;her voice sank to a
+tremulous whisper&mdash;“put red-hot running-irons between his fingers till he
+weakened. It was a moonlight night&mdash;much such a night as this&mdash;and
+after it was done I peeped through the blind of my room and saw them ride away.
+He rode in front of them and sang like an angel&mdash;did it out of
+daredeviltry to mock the people of the town that hadn’t nerve enough to shoot
+him. You see, he knew that nobody would dare hurt him ’count of the revenge of
+his men.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What was he like?” the mistress of the Lazy D asked, strangely awed at this
+recital of transcendent villainy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“’Course he was masked, and I didn’t see his face. But I’d know him anywhere.
+He’s a long, slim fellow, built like a mountain lion. You couldn’t look at him
+and ever forget him. He’s one of these graceful, easy men that go so fur with
+fool women; one of the kind that half shuts his dark, devil eyes and masters
+them without seeming to try.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“So he’s a woman killer, too, is he? Any more outstanding inconsistencies in
+this versatile Jesse James?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He’s plumb crazy about music, they say. Has a piano and plays Grigg and
+Chopping, and all that classical kind of music. He went clear down to Denver
+last year to hear Mrs. Shoeman sing.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Helen smiled, guessing at Schumann-Heink as the singer in question, and Grieg
+and Chopin as the composers named. Her interest was incredibly aroused. She had
+expected the West and its products to exhilarate her, but she had not looked to
+find so finished a Mephisto among its vaunted “bad men.” He was probably
+overrated; considered a wonder because his accomplishments outstepped those of
+the range. But Helen Messiter had quite determined on one thing. She was going
+to meet this redoubtable villain and make up her mind for herself. Already,
+before she had been in Wyoming six hours, this emancipated young woman had
+decided on that.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap03"></a>CHAPTER III.<br/>
+AN INVITATION GIVEN AND ACCEPTED</h2>
+
+<p>
+And already she had met him. Not only met him, but saved him from the just
+vengeance about to fall upon him. She had not yet seen her own ranch, had not
+spoken to a single one of her employés, for it had been a part of her plan to
+drop in unexpected and examine the situation before her foreman had a chance to
+put his best foot forward. So she had started alone from Gimlet Butte that
+morning in her machine, and had come almost in sight of the Lazy D ranch houses
+when the battle in the coulée invited her to take a hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had acted on generous impulse, and the unforeseen result had been to save
+this desperado from justice. But the worst of it was that she could not find it
+in her heart to regret it. Granted that he was a villain, double-dyed and
+beyond hope, yet he was the home of such courage, such virility, that her
+unconsenting admiration went out in spite of herself. He was, at any rate, a
+<i>man</i>, square-jawed, resolute, implacable. In the sinuous trail of his
+life might lie arson, robbery, murder, but he still held to that dynamic spark
+of self-respect that is akin to the divine. Nor was it possible to believe that
+those unblinking gray eyes, with the capability of a latent sadness of despair
+in them, expressed a soul entirely without nobility. He had a certain gallant
+ease, a certain attractive candor, that did not consist with villainy
+unadulterated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was characteristic even of her impulsiveness that Helen Messiter curbed the
+swift condemnation that leaped to her lips when she knew that the man sitting
+beside her was the notorious bandit of the Shoshone fastnesses. She was not in
+the least afraid. A sure instinct told her he was not the kind of a man of whom
+a woman need have fear so long as her own anchor held fast. In good time she
+meant to let him have her unvarnished opinion of him, but she did not mean it
+to be an unconsidered one. Wherefore she drove the machine forward toward the
+camelbacked peak he had indicated, her eyes straight before her, a frown
+corrugating her forehead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For him, having made his dramatic announcement, he seemed content for the
+present with silence. He leaned back in the car and appreciated her with a
+coolness that just missed impudence. Certainly her appearance proclaimed her
+very much worth while. To dwell on the long lines of her supple young body, the
+exquisite throat and chin curve, was a pleasure with a thrill to it. As a
+physical creation, a mere innocent young animal, he thought her perfect;
+attuned to a fine harmony of grace and color. But it was the animating vitality
+of her, the lightness of motion, the fire and sparkle of expression that gave
+her the captivating charm she possessed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were two miles nearer the camel-backed peak before he broke the silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Beats a bronco for getting over the ground. Think I’ll have to get one,” he
+mused aloud.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“With the money you took from the Ayr bank?” she flashed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I might drive off some of your cows and sell them,” he countered, promptly.
+“About how much will they hold me up for a machine like this?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“This is only a runabout. You can get one for twelve or fourteen hundred
+dollars of anybody’s money.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Of yours?” he laughed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I haven’t that much with me. If you’ll come over and hold up the ranch perhaps
+we might raise it among us,” she jeered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His mirth was genuine. “But right now I couldn’t get more than how much off
+y’u?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Sixty-three dollars is all I have with me, and I couldn’t give you
+more&mdash;<i>not even if you put red hot irons between my fingers</i>.” She
+gave it to him straight, her blue eyes fixed steadily on him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet she was not prepared for the effect of her words. The last thing she had
+expected was to see the blood wash out of his bronzed face, to see his
+sensitive nostrils twitch with pain. He made her feel as if she had insulted
+him, as if she had been needlessly cruel. And because of it she hardened her
+heart. Why should she spare him the mention of it? He had not hesitated at the
+shameless deed itself. Why should she shrink before that wounded look that
+leaped to his fine eyes in that flash of time before he hardened them to steel?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You did it&mdash;didn’t you?” she demanded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s what they say.” His gaze met her defiantly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And it is true, isn’t it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, anything is true of a man that herds sheep,” he returned, bitterly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If that is true it would not be possible for you to understand how much I
+despise you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Thank you,” he retorted, ironically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t understand at all. I don’t see how you can be the man they say you
+are. Before I met you it was easy to understand. But somehow&mdash;I don’t
+know&mdash;you don’t <i>look</i> like a villain.” She found herself strangely
+voicing the deep hope of her heart. It was surely impossible to look at him and
+believe him guilty of the things of which, he was accused. And yet he offered
+no denial, suggested no defense.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her troubled eyes went over his thin, sunbaked face with its touch, of
+bitterness, and she did not find it possible to dismiss the subject without
+giving him a chance to set himself right.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You can’t be as bad as they say. You are not, are you?” she asked, naively.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What do y’u think?” he responded, coolly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She flushed angrily at what she accepted as his insolence. “A man of any
+decency would have jumped at the chance to explain.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But if there is nothing to explain?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You are then guilty.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Their eyes met, and neither of them quailed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If I pleaded not guilty would y’u believe me?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She hesitated. “I don’t know. How could I when it is known by everybody? And
+yet&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He smiled. “Why should I trouble y’u, then, with explanations? I reckon we’ll
+let it go at guilty.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Is that all you can say for yourself?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He seemed to hang in doubt an instant, then shook his head and refused the
+opening.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I expect if we changed the subject I could say a good deal for y’u,” he
+drawled. “I never saw anything pluckier than the way y’u flew down from the
+mesa and conducted the cutting-out expedition. Y’u sure drilled through your
+punchers like a streak of lightning.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I didn’t know who you were,” she explained, proudly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Would it have made any difference if y’u had?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again the angry flush touched her cheeks. “Not a bit. I would have saved you in
+order to have you properly hanged later,” she cut back promptly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He shook his head gayly. “I’m ce’tainly going to disappoint y’u some. Your
+enterprising punchers may collect me yet, but not alive, I reckon.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll give them strict orders to bring you in alive.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Did you ever want the moon when y’u was a little kid?” he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We’ll see, Mr. Outlaw Bannister.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He laughed softly, in the quiet, indolent fashion that would have been pleasant
+if it had not been at her. “It’s right kind of you to take so much interest in
+me. I’d most be willing to oblige by letting your boys rope me to renew this
+acquaintance, ma’am.” Then, “I get out here Miss Messiter,” he added.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stopped on the instant. Plainly she could not get rid of him too soon.
+“Haven’t you forgot one thing?” she asked, ironically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, ma’am. To thank you proper for what y’u did for me.” He limped gingerly
+down from the car and stood with his hand on one of the tires. “I have been
+trying to think how to say it right; but I guess I’ll have to give it up. All
+is that if I ever get a chance to even the score&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She waved his thanks aside impatiently “I didn’t mean that. You have forgotten
+to take my purse.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His gravity was broken on the instant, and his laughter was certainly
+delightfully fresh. “I clean forgot, but I expect I’ll drop over to the ranch
+for it some day.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We’ll try to make to make you welcome, Mr. Bannister.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t put yourself out at all. I’ll take pot-luck when I come.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How many of you may we expect?” she asked, defiantly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, I allow to come alone.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’ll very likely forget.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, ma’am, I don’t know so many ladies that I’m liable to such an oversight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I have heard a different story. But if you do remember to come, and will let
+us know when you expect to honor the Lazy D, I’ll have messengers sent to meet
+you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He perfectly understood her to mean leaden ones, and the humorous gleam in his
+eye sparkled in appreciation of her spirit. “I don’t want all that fuss made
+over me. I reckon I’ll drop in unexpected,” he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She nodded curtly. “Good-bye. Hope your ankle won’t trouble you very much.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Thank y’u, ma’am. I reckon it won’t. Good-bye, Miss Messiter.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Out of the tail of her eye she saw him bowing like an Italian opera singer, as
+impudently insouciant, as gracefully graceless as any stage villain in her
+memory. Once again she saw him, when her machine swept round a curve and she
+could look back without seeming to do so, limping across through the sage brush
+toward a little hillock near the road. And as she looked the bare, curly head
+was inclined toward her in another low, mocking bow. He was certainly the
+gallantest vagabond unhanged.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap04"></a>CHAPTER IV.<br/>
+AT THE LAZY D RANCH</h2>
+
+<p>
+Helen Messiter was a young woman very much alive, which implies that she was
+given to emotions; and as her machine skimmed over the ground to the Lazy D she
+had them to spare. For from the first this young man had taken her eye, and it
+had come upon her with a distinct shock that he was the notorious scoundrel who
+was terrorizing the countryside. She told herself almost passionately that she
+would never have believed it if he had not said so himself. She knew quite well
+that the coldness that had clutched her heart when he gave his name had had
+nothing to do with fear. There had been chagrin, disappointment, but nothing in
+the least like the terror she might have expected. The simple truth was that he
+had seemed so much a man that it had hurt her to find him also a wild beast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Deep in her heart she resented the conviction forced upon her. Reckless he
+undoubtedly was, at odds with the law surely, but it was hard to admit that
+attractive personality to be the mask of fiendish cruelty and sinister malice.
+And yet&mdash;the facts spoke for themselves. He had not even attempted a
+denial. Still there was a mystery about him, else how was it possible for two
+so distinct personalities to dwell together in the same body.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She hated him with all her lusty young will; not only for what he was, but also
+for what she had been disappointed in not finding him after her first
+instinctive liking. Yet it was with an odd little thrill that she ran down
+again into the coulée where her prosaic life had found its first real
+adventure. He might be all they said, but nothing could wipe out the facts that
+she had offered her life to save his, and that he had lent her his body as a
+living shield for one exhilarating moment of danger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As she reached the hill summit beyond the coulée, Helen Messiter was aware that
+a rider in ungainly chaps of white wool was rapidly approaching. He dipped down
+into the next depression without seeing her; and when they came face to face at
+the top of the rise the result was instantaneous. His pony did an animated
+two-step not on the programme. It took one glance at the diabolical machine,
+and went up on its hind legs, preliminary to giving an elaborate exhibition of
+pitching. The rider indulged in vivid profanity and plied his quirt vigorously.
+But the bronco, with the fear of this unknown evil on its soul, varied its
+bucking so effectively that the puncher astride its hurricane deck was forced,
+in the language of his kind, to “take the dust.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His red head sailed through the air and landed in the white sand at the girl’s
+feet. For a moment he sat in the road and gazed with chagrin after the
+vanishing heels of his mount. Then his wrathful eyes came round to the owner of
+the machine that had caused the eruption. His mouth had opened to give adequate
+expression to his feelings, when he discovered anew the forgotten fact that he
+was dealing with a woman. His jaw hung open for an instant in amaze; and when
+he remembered the unedited vocabulary he had turned loose on the world a flood
+of purple swept his tanned face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She wanted to laugh, but wisely refrained. “I’m very sorry,” was what she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stared in silence as he slowly picked himself from the ground. His red hair
+rose like the quills of a porcupine above a face that had the appearance of
+being unfinished. Neither nose nor mouth nor chin seemed to be quite definite
+enough.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She choked down her gayety and offered renewed apologies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I was going for a doc,” he explained, by way of opening his share of the
+conversation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then perhaps you had better jump in with me and ride back to the Lazy D. I
+suppose that’s where you came from?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He scratched his vivid head helplessly. “Yes, ma’am.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then jump in.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I was going to Bear Creek, ma’am,” he added dubiously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How far is it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“’Bout twenty-five miles, and then some.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You don’t expect to walk, do you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No; I allowed&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll take you back to the ranch, where you can get another horse.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I reckon, ma’am, I’d ruther walk.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nonsense! Why?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I ain’t used to them gas wagons.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s quite safe. There is nothing to be afraid of.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Reluctantly he got in beside her, as happy as a calf in a branding pen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Are you the lady that sashaid off with Ned Bannister?” he asked presently,
+after he had had time to smother successively some of his fear, wonder and
+delight at their smooth, swift progress.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes. Why?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The boys allow you hadn’t oughter have done it.” Then, to place the
+responsibility properly on shoulders broader than his own, he added: “That’s
+what Judd says.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And who is Judd?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Judd, he’s the foreman of the Lazy D.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Below them appeared the corrals and houses of a ranch nestling in a little
+valley flanked by hills.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“This yere’s the Lazy D,” announced the youth, with pride, and in the spirit of
+friendliness suggested a caution. “Judd, he’s some peppery. You wanter smooth
+him down some, seeing as he’s riled up to-day.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A flicker of steel came into the blue eyes. “Indeed! Well, here we are.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If it ain’t Reddy, <i>and</i> the lady with the flying machine,” murmured a
+freckled youth named McWilliams, emerging from the bunkhouse with a pan of
+water which had been used to bathe the wound of one of the punctured
+combatants.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What’s that?” snapped a voice from within; and immediately its owner appeared
+in the doorway and bored with narrowed black eyes the young woman in the
+machine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Who are you?” he demanded, brusquely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Your target,” she answered, quietly. “Would you like to take another shot at
+me?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The freckled lad broke out into a gurgle of laughter, at which the black,
+swarthy man beside him wheeled round in a rage. “What you cacklin’ at, Mac?” he
+demanded, in a low voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, the things I notice,” returned that youth jauntily, meeting the other’s
+anger without the flicker of an eyelid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It ain’t healthy to be so noticin’,” insinuated the other.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u don’t say,” came the prompt, sarcastic retort. “If you’re such a darned
+good judge of health, y’u better be attending to some of your patients.” He
+jerked a casual thumb over his shoulder toward the bunks on which lay the
+wounded men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I shouldn’t wonder but what there might be another patient for me to attend
+to,” snarled the foreman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That so? Well, turn your wolf loose when y’u get to feelin’ real devilish,”
+jeered the undismayed one, strolling forward to assist Miss Messiter to alight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The mistress of the Lazy D had been aware of the byplay, but she had caught
+neither the words nor their import. She took the offered brown hand smilingly,
+for here again she looked into the frank eyes of the West, unafraid and steady.
+She judged him not more than twenty-two, but the school where he had learned of
+life had held open and strenuous session every day since he could remember.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Glad to meet y’u, ma’am,” he assured her, in the current phrase of the
+semi-arid lands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m sure I am glad to meet <i>you</i>,” she answered, heartily. “Can you tell
+me where is the foreman of the Lazy D?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He introduced with a smile the swarthy man in the doorway. “This is him
+ma’am&mdash;Mr. Judd Morgan.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now it happened that Mr. Judd Morgan was simmering with suppressed spleen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“All I’ve got to say is that you had no business mixing up in that shootin’
+affair back there. Perhaps you don’t know that the man you saved is Ned
+Bannister, the outlaw,” was his surly greeting.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, yes, I know that.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then what d’ye mean&mdash;Who are you, anyway?” His insolent eyes coasted
+malevolently over her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Helen Messiter is my name.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was ludicrous to see the change that came over the man. He had been prepared
+to bully her; and with a word she had pricked the bubble of his arrogance. He
+swallowed his anger and got a mechanical smile in working order.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Glad to see you here, Miss Messiter,” he said, his sinister gaze attempting to
+meet hers frankly “I been looking for you every day.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But y’u managed to surprise him, after all ma’am,” chuckled Mac.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Where’s yo’ hawss, Reddy?” inquired a tall young man, who had appeared
+silently in the doorway of the bunkhouse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Reddy pinked violently. “I had an accident, Denver,” he explained. “This lady
+yere she&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Scooped y’u right off yore hawss. Y’u <i>don’t</i> say,” sympathized Mac so
+breathlessly that even Reddy joined in the chorus of laughter that went up at
+his expense.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The young woman thought to make it easy for him, and suggested an explanation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“His horse isn’t used to automobiles, and so when it met this one&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I got off,” interposed Reddy hastily, displaying a complexion like a boiled
+beet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He got off,” Mac explained gravely to the increasing audience.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Denver nodded with an imperturbable face. “He got off.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mac introduced Miss Messiter to such of her employés as were on hand. “Shake
+hands with Miss Messiter, Missou,” was the formula, the name alone varying to
+suit the embarrassed gentlemen in leathers. Each of them in turn presented a
+huge hand, in which her little one disappeared for the time, and was sawed up
+and down in the air like a pump-handle. Yet if she was amused she did not show
+it; and her pleasure at meeting the simple, elemental products of the plains
+outweighed a great deal her sense of the ludicrous.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How are your patients getting along?” she presently asked of her foreman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I reckon all right. I sent Reddy for a doc, but&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He got off,” murmured Mac pensively.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll go rope another hawss,” put in the man who had got off.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Get a jump on you, then. Miss Messiter, would you like to look over the
+place?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Not now. I want to see the men that were hurt. Perhaps I can help them. Once I
+took a few weeks in nursing.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Bully for you, ma’am,” whooped Mac. “I’ve a notion those boys are sufferin’
+for a woman to put the diamond-hitch on them bandages.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Bring that suit-case in,” she commanded Denver, in the gentlest voice he had
+ever heard, after she had made a hasty inspection of the first wounded man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the suit-case she took a little leather medicine-case, the kind that can
+be bought already prepared for use. It held among other things a roll of
+medicated cotton, some antiseptic tablets, and a little steel instrument for
+probing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Some warm water, please; and have some boiling on the range,” were her next
+commands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mac flew to execute them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a pleasure to see her work, so deftly the skillful hands accomplished
+what her brain told them. In admiring awe the punchers stood awkwardly around
+while she washed and dressed the hurts. Two of the bullets had gone through the
+fleshy part of the arm and left clean wounds. In the case of the third man she
+had to probe for the lead, but fortunately found it with little difficulty.
+Meanwhile she soothed the victim with gentle womanly sympathy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I know it hurts a good deal. Just a minute and I’ll be through.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His hands clutched tightly the edges of his bunk. “That’s all right, doc. You
+attend to roping that pill and I’ll endure the grief.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A long sigh of relief went up from the assembled cowboys when she drew the
+bullet out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sinewy hands fastened on the wooden bunk relaxed suddenly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“’Frisco’s daid,” gasped the cook, who bore the title of Wun Hop for no reason
+except that he was an Irishman in a place formerly held by a Chinese.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He has only fainted,” she said quietly, and continued with the antiseptic
+dressing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When it was all over, the big, tanned men gathered at the entrance to the calf
+corral and expanded in admiration of their new boss.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“She’s a pure for fair. She grades up any old way yuh take her to the best
+corn-fed article on the market,” pronounced Denver, with enthusiasm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I got to ride the boundary,” sighed Missou. “I kinder hate to go right now.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Here, too,” acquiesced another. “I got a round-up on Wind Creek to cut out
+them two-year-olds. If ’twas my say-so, I’d order Mac on that job.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Right kind of y’u. Seems to me”&mdash;Mac’s sarcastic eye trailed around to
+include all those who had been singing her praises&mdash;“the new queen of this
+hacienda won’t have no trouble at all picking a prince consort when she gets
+round to it. Here’s Wun Hop, not what y’u might call anxious, but ce’tainly
+willing. Then Denver’s some in the turtle-dove business, according to that
+hash-slinger in Cheyenne. Missou might be induced to accept if it was offered
+him proper; and I allow Jim ain’t turned the color of Redtop’s hair jest for
+instance. I don’t want to leave out ’Frisco and the other boys carrying
+Bannister’s pills&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nor McWilliams. I’d admire to include him,” murmured Denver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That sunburned, nonchalant youth laughed musically. “Sure thing. I’d hate to be
+left out. The only difference is&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His roving eye circled blandly round. “I stand about one show in a million. Y’u
+roughnecks are dead ones already.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With which cold comfort he sauntered away to join Miss Messiter and the
+foreman, who now appeared together at the door of the ranchhouse, prepared to
+make a tour of the buildings and the immediate corrals.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Isn’t there a woman on the place?” she was asking Morgan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No’m, there ain’t. Henderson’s daughter would come and stay with y’u a while I
+reckon.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Please send for her at once, then, and ask her to come to-day.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“All right. I’ll send one of the boys right away.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How did y’u leave ’Frisco, ma’am?” asked Mac, by way of including himself
+easily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He’s resting quietly. Unless blood-poisoning sets in they ought all to do
+well.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s right lucky for them y’u happened along. This is the hawss corral,
+ma’am,” explained the young man just as Morgan opened his thin lips to tell
+her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Judd contrived to get rid of him promptly. “Slap on a saddle, Mac, and run up
+the remuda so Miss Messiter can see the hawsses for herself,” he ordered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mebbe she’d rather ride down and look at the bunch,” suggested the capable
+McWilliams.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As it chanced, she did prefer to ride down the pasture and look over the place
+from on horseback. She was in love with her ranch already. Its spacious
+distances, the thousands of cattle and the horses, these picturesque retainers
+who served her even to the shedding of an enemy’s blood; they all struck an
+answering echo in her gallant young heart that nothing in Kalamazoo had been
+able to stir. She bubbled over with enthusiasm, the while Morgan covertly
+sneered and McWilliams warmed to the untamed youth in her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What about this man Bannister?” she flung out suddenly, after they had
+cantered back to the house when the remuda had been inspected.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her abrupt question brought again the short, tense silence she had become used
+to expect.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He runs sheep about twenty or thirty miles southwest of here,” explained
+McWilliams, in a carefully casual tone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“So everybody tells me, but it seems to me he spills a good deal of lead on my
+men,” she answered impatiently. “What’s the trouble?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Last week he crossed the dead-line with a bunch of five thousand sheep.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Who draws this dead-line?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The cattlemen got together and drew it. Your uncle was one of those that
+marked it off, ma’am.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And Bannister crossed it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, ma’am. Yesterday ’Frisco come on him and one of his herders with a big
+bunch of them less than fifteen miles from here. He didn’t know it was
+Bannister, and took a pot-shot at him. ’Course Bannister came back at him, and
+he got Frisco in the laig.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Didn’t know it was Bannister? What difference WOULD that make?” she said
+impatiently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mac laughed. “What difference would it make, Judd?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Morgan scowled, and the young man answered his own question. “We don’t any of
+us go out of our way more’n a mile to cross Bannister’s trail,” he drawled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do you wear this for an ornament? Are you upholstered with hardware to catch
+the eyes of some girl?” she asked, touching with the end of her whip the
+revolver in the holster strapped to his chaps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His serene, gay smile flashed at her. “Are y’u ordering me to go out and get
+Ned Bannister’s scalp?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, I am not,” she explained promptly. “What I am trying to discover is why
+you all seem to be afraid of one man. He is only a man, isn’t he?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A veil of ice seemed to fall over the boyish face and leave it chiseled marble.
+His unspeaking eyes rested on the swarthy foreman as he answered:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t know what he is, ma’am. He may be one man, or he may be a hundred.
+What’s more, I ain’t particularly suffering to find out. Fact is, I haven’t
+lost any Bannisters.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girl became aware that her foreman was looking at her with a wary silent
+vigilance sinister in its intensity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“In short, you’re like the rest of the people in this section. You’re afraid.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Now y’u’re shoutin’, Miss Messiter. I sure am when it comes to shootin’ off my
+mouth about Bannister.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And you, Mr. Morgan?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It struck her that the young puncher waited with a curious interest for the
+answer of the foreman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Did it look like I was afraid this mawnin’, ma’am?” he asked, with narrowed
+eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, you all seemed brave enough then, when you had him eight to one.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I wasn’t there,” hastily put in McWilliams. “I don’t go gunning for my man
+without giving him a show.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I do,” retorted Morgan cruelly. “I’d go if we was fifty to one. We’d ’a’ got
+him, too, if it hadn’t been for Miss Messiter. ’Twas a chance we ain’t likely
+to get again for a year.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It wasn’t your fault you didn’t kill him, Mr. Morgan,” she said, looking hard
+at him. “You may be interested to know that your last shot missed him only
+about six inches, and me about four.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I didn’t know who you were,” he sullenly defended.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I see. You only shoot at women when you don’t know who they are.” She turned
+her back on him pointedly and addressed herself to McWilliams. “You can tell
+the men working on this ranch that I won’t have any more such attacks on this
+man Bannister. I don’t care what or who he is. I don’t propose to have him
+murdered by my employés. Let the law take him and hang him. Do you hear?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I ce’tainly do, and the boys will get the word straight,” he replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I take it since yuh are giving your orders through Mac, yuh don’t need me any
+longer for your foreman,” bullied Morgan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You take it right, sir,” came her crisp reply. “McWilliams will be my foreman
+from to-day.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man’s face, malignant and wolfish, suddenly lost its mask. That she would
+so promptly call his bluff was the last thing he had expected. “That’s all
+right. I reckon yuh think yuh know your own business, but I’ll put it to yuh
+straight. Long as yuh live you’ll be sorry for this.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And with that he wheeled away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She turned to her new foreman and found him less radiant than she could have
+desired. “I’m right sorry y’u did that. I’m afraid y’u’ll make trouble for
+yourself,” he said quietly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t know myself just why.” He hesitated before adding: “They say him and
+Bannister is thicker than they’d ought to be. It’s a cinch that he’s in cahoots
+somehow with that Shoshone bunch of bad men.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But&mdash;why, that’s ridiculous. Only this morning he was trying to kill
+Bannister himself.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s what I don’t just savvy. There’s a whole lot about that business I
+don’t get next to. I guess Bannister is at the head of them. Everybody seems
+agreed about that. But the whole thing is a tangle of contradiction to me. I’ve
+milled it over a heap in my mind, too.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What are some of the contradictions?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, here’s one right off the bat, as we used to say back in the States.
+Bannister is a great musician, they claim; fine singer, and all that. Now I
+happen to know he can’t sing any more than a bellowing yearling.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How do you know?” she asked, her eyes shining with interest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Because I heard him try it. ’Twas one day last summer when I was out cutting
+trail of a bunch of strays down by Dead Cow Creek. The day was hot, and I lay
+down behind a cottonwood and dropped off to sleep. When I awakened it didn’t
+take me longer’n an hour to discover what had woke me. Somebody on the other
+side of the creek was trying to sing. It was ce’tainly the limit. Pretty soon
+he come out of the brush and I seen it was Bannister.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’re sure it was Bannister?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If seeing is believing, I’m sure.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And was his singing really so bad?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’d hate ever to hear worse.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Was he singing when you saw him?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, he’d just quit. He caught sight of my pony grazing, and hunted cover real
+prompt.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then it might have been another man singing in the thicket.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It might, but it wasn’t. Y’u see, I’d followed him through the bush by his
+song, and he showed up the moment I expected him.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Still there might have been another man there singing.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“One chance in a million,” he conceded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A sudden hope flamed up like tow in her heart. Perhaps, after all, Ned
+Bannister was not the leader of the outlaws. Perhaps somebody else was
+masquerading in his name, using Bannister’s unpopularity as a shield to cover
+his iniquities. Still, this was an unlikely hypothesis, she had to admit. For
+why should he allow his good name to be dragged in the dust without any effort
+to save it? On a sudden impulse the girl confided her doubt to McWilliams.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You don’t suppose there can be any mistake, do you? Somehow I can’t think him
+as bad as they say. He looks awfully reckless, but one feels one could trust
+his face.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Same here,” agreed the new foreman. “First off when I saw him my think was,
+‘I’d like to have that man backing my play when I’m sitting in the game with
+Old Man Hard Luck reaching out for my blue chips.’”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You don’t think faces lie, do you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ve seen them that did, but, gen’rally speaking, tongues are a heap likelier
+to get tangled with the truth. But I reckon there ain’t any doubt about
+Bannister. He’s known over all this Western country.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The young woman sighed. “I’m afraid you’re right.”
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap05"></a>CHAPTER V.<br/>
+THE DANCE AT FRASER’S</h2>
+
+<p>
+“Heard tell yet of the dance over to Fraser’s?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was a young man of a brick red countenance and he wore loosely round his
+neck the best polka dot silk handkerchief that could be bought in Gimlet Butte,
+also such gala attire as was usually reserved only for events of importance.
+Sitting his horse carelessly in the plainsman’s indolent fashion, he asked his
+question of McWilliams in front of the Lazy D bunkhouse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nope. When does the shindig come off?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Friday night. Big thing. Y’u want to be there. All y’u lads.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mebbe some of us will ride over.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He of the polka dot kerchief did not appear quite satisfied. His glance
+wandered toward the house, as it had been doing occasionally since the moment
+of his arrival.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u bet this dance is ace high, Mac. Fancy costumes and masks. Y’u can rent
+the costumes over to Slauson’s for three per. Texas, he’s going to call the
+dances. Music from Gimlet Butte. Y’u want to get it tucked away in your thinker
+that this dance ain’t on the order of culls. No, sirree, it’s cornfed.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Glad to hear of it. I’ll cipher out somehow to be there, Slim.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Slim’s glance took in the ranchhouse again. He had ridden twenty-three miles
+out of his way to catch a glimpse of the newly arrived mistress of the Lazy D,
+the report of whose good looks and adventures had traveled hand in hand through
+many cañons even to the heart of the Tetons. It had been on Skunk Creek that he
+had heard of her three days before, and now he had come to verify the tongue of
+rumor, to see her quite casually, of course, and do his own appraising. It
+began to look as if he were going to have to ride off without a glimpse of her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He nodded toward the house, turning a shade more purple than his native
+choleric hue. “Y’u want to bring your boss with y’u, Mac. We been hearing a
+right smart lot about her and the boys would admire to have her present. It’s
+going to be strictly according to Hoyle&mdash;no rough-house plays go,
+y’understand.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll speak to her about it.” Mac’s deep amusement did not reach the surface.
+He was quite well aware that Slim was playing for time and that he was too
+bashful to plump out the desire that was in him. “Great the way cows are
+jumpin’, ain’t it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Sure. Well, I’ll be movin’ along to Slauson’s. I just drapped in on my way.
+Thought mebbe y’u hadn’t heard tell of the dance.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Much obliged. Was it for old man Slauson y’u dug up all them togs, Slim? He’ll
+ce’tainly admire to see y’u in that silk tablecloth y’u got round your neck.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Slim’s purple deepened again. “Y’u go to grass, Mac. I don’t aim to ask y’u to
+be my valley yet awhile.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“C’rect. I was just wondering do all the Triangle Bar boys ride the range so
+handsome?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t y’u worry about the Triangle Bar boys,” advised the embarrassed Slim,
+gathering up his bridle reins.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With one more reluctant glance in the direction of the house he rode away. When
+he reached the corral he looked back again. His gaze showed him the boyish
+foreman doubled up with laughter; also the sweep of a white skirt descending
+from the piazza.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Now, ain’t that hoodooed luck?” the aggrieved rider of the Triangle Bar outfit
+demanded of himself, “I made my getaway about three shakes too soon, by gum!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her foreman was in the throes of mirth when Helen Messiter reached him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Include me in the joke,” she suggested.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, I was just thinkin’,” he explained inadequately.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Does it always take you that way?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“About these boys that drop in so frequent on business these days. Funny how
+fond they’re getting of the Lazy D. There was that stock detective happened in
+yesterday to show how anxious he was about your cows. Then the two Willow Creek
+riders that wanted a job punching for y’u, not to mention mention the Shoshone
+miner and the storekeeper from Gimlet Butte and Soapy Sothern and&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Still I don’t quite see the joke.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It ain’t any joke with them. Serious business, ma’am.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What happened to start you on this line?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The lad riding down the road on that piebald pinto. He come twenty miles out
+of his way, plumb dressed for a wedding, all to give me an invite to a dance at
+Fraser’s. Y’u would call that real thoughtful of him, I expect.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She gayly sparkled. “A real ranch dance&mdash;the kind you have been telling me
+about. Are Ida and I invited?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Invited? Slim hinted at a lynching if I came without y’u.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She laughed softly, merry eyes flashing swiftly at him. “How gallant you
+Westerners are, even though you do turn it into burlesque.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His young laugh echoed hers. “Burlesque nothing. My life wouldn’t be worth a
+thing if I went alone. Honest, I wouldn’t dare.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Since the ranch can’t afford to lose its foreman Ida and I will go along,” she
+promised. “That is, if it is considered proper here.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Proper. Good gracious, ma’am! Every lady for thirty miles round will be there,
+from six months old to eighty odd years. It wouldn’t be <i>proper</i> to stay
+at home.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The foreman drove her to Fraser’s in a surrey with Ida Henderson and one of the
+Lazy D punchers on the back seat. The drive was over twenty-five miles, but in
+that silent starry night every mile was a delight. Part of the way led through
+a beautiful cañon, along the rocky mountain road of which the young man guided
+the rig with unerring skill. Beyond the gorge the country debouched into a
+grassy park that fell away from their feet for miles. It was in this basin that
+the Fraser ranch lay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The strains of the fiddle and the thumping of feet could be heard as they drove
+up. Already the rooms seemed to be pretty well filled, as Helen noticed when
+they entered. Three sets were on the floor for a quadrille and the house shook
+with the energy of the dancers. On benches against the walls were seated the
+spectators, and on one of them stood Texas calling the dance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Alemane left. Right hand t’yer pardner and grand right and left. Ev-v-rybody
+swing,” chanted the caller.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A dozen rough young fellows were clustered near the front door, apparently
+afraid to venture farther lest their escape be cut off. Through these
+McWilliams pushed a way for his charges, the cowboys falling back respectfully
+at once when they discovered the presence of Miss Messiter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the bedroom where she left her wraps the mistress of the Lazy D found a
+dozen or more infants and several of their mothers. In the kitchen were still
+other women and babies, some of the former very old and of the latter very
+young. A few of the babies were asleep, but most of them were still very much
+alive to this scene of unwonted hilarity in their young lives.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As soon as she emerged into the general publicity of the dancing room her
+foreman pounced upon Helen and led her to a place in the head set that was
+making up. The floor was rough, the music jerky and uncertain, the quadrilling
+an exhibition of joyous and awkward abandon; but its picturesque lack of
+convention appealed to the girl from Michigan. It rather startled her to be
+swung so vigorously, but a glance about the room showed that these
+humorous-eyed Westerners were merely living up to the duty of the hour as they
+understood it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the close of the quadrille Helen found herself being introduced to “Mr.
+Robins,” alias Slim, who drew one of his feet back in an embarrassed bow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I enjoy to meet y’u, ma’am,” he assured her, and supplemented this with a
+request for the next dance, after which he fell into silence that was painful
+in its intensity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nearly all the dances were squares, as few of those present understood the
+intricacies of the waltz and two-step. Hence it happened that the proficient
+McWilliams secured three round dances with his mistress.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was during the lunch of sandwiches, cake and coffee that Helen perceived an
+addition to the company. The affair had been advertised a costume ball, but
+most of those present had construed this very liberally. She herself, to be
+sure, had come as Mary Queen of Scots, Mac was arrayed in the scarlet tunic and
+tight-fitting breeches of the Northwest Mounted Police, and perhaps eight or
+ten others had made some attempt at representing some one other than they were.
+She now saw another, apparently a new arrival, standing in the doorway
+negligently. A glance told her that he was made up for a road agent and that
+his revolvers and mask were a part of the necessary costuming.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Slowly his gaze circled the room and came round to her. His eyes were hard as
+diamonds and as flashing, so that the impact of their meeting looks seemed to
+shock her physically. He was a tall man, swarthy of hue, and he carried himself
+with a light ease that looked silken strong. Something in the bearing was
+familiar yet not quite familiar either. It seemed to suggest a resemblance to
+somebody she knew. And in the next thought she knew that the somebody was Ned
+Bannister.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man spoke to Fraser, just then passing with a cup of coffee, and Helen saw
+the two men approach. The stranger was coming to be formally introduced.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Shake hands with Mr. Holloway, Miss Messiter. He’s from up in the hill country
+and he rode to our frolic. Y’u’ve got three guesses to figure out what he’s
+made up as.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“One will be quite enough, I think,” she answered coldly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fraser departed on his destination with the coffee and the newcomer sat down on
+the bench beside her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“One’s enough, is it?” he drawled smilingly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Quite, but I’m surprised so few came in costume. Why didn’t you? But I suppose
+you had your reasons.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Didn’t I? I’m supposed to be a bad man from the hills.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She swept him casually with an indifferent glance. “And isn’t that what you are
+in real life?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His sharp scrutiny chiseled into her. “What’s that?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You won’t mind if I forget and call you Mr. Bannister instead of Mr.
+Holloway?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She thought his counterfeit astonishment perfect.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“So I’m Ned Bannister, am I?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Their eyes clashed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Aren’t you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She felt sure of it, and yet there was a lurking doubt. For there was in his
+manner something indescribably more sinister than she had felt in him on that
+occasion when she had saved his life. Then a debonair recklessness had been the
+outstanding note, but now there was something ribald and wicked in him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Since y’u put it as a question, common politeness demands an answer. Ned
+Bannister is my name.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You are the terror of this country?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I shan’t be a terror to y’u, ma’am, if I can help it,” he smiled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But you are the man they call the king?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I have that honor.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>Honor?</i>”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the sharp scorn of her accent he laughed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do you mean that you are proud of your villainy?” she demanded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u’ve ce’tainly got the teacher habit of asking questions,” he replied with a
+laugh that was a sneer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A shadow fell across them and a voice said quietly, “She didn’t wait to ask any
+when she saved your life down in the coulée back of the Lazy D.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The shadow was Jim McWilliams’s, and its owner looked down at the man beside
+the girl with steady, hostile eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Is this your put in, sir?” the other flashed back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, seh, it is. The boys don’t quite like seeing your hardware so prominent
+at a social gathering. In this community guns don’t come into the house at a
+ranch dance. I’m a committee to mention the subject and to collect your
+thirty-eights if y’u agree with us.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And if I don’t agree with you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There’s all outdoors ready to receive y’u, seh. It would be a pity to stay in
+the one spot where your welcome’s wore thin.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Still I may choose to stay.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ce’tainly, but if y’u decide that way y’u better step out on the porch and
+talk it over with us where there ain’t ladies present.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Isn’t this a costume dance? What’s the matter with my guns? I’m an outlaw,
+ain’t I?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t know whether y’u are or not, seh. If y’u say y’u are we’re ready to
+take your word. The guns have to be shucked if y’u stay here. They might go off
+accidental and scare the ladies.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man rose blackly. “I’ll remember this. If y’u knew who y’u were getting so
+gay with&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I can guess, Mr. Holloway, the kind of an outfit y’u freight with, and I
+expect I could put a handle to another name for you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“By God, if y’u dare to say&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t dare, especially among so many ladies,” came McWilliams’s jaunty
+answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The eyes of the two men gripped, after which Holloway swung on his heel and
+swaggered defiantly out of the house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently there came the sound of a pony’s feet galloping down the road. It had
+not yet died away when Texas announced that the supper intermission was over.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Pardners for a quadrille. Ladies’ choice.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The dance was on again full swing. The fiddlers were tuning up and couples
+gathering for a quadrille. Denver came to claim Miss Messiter for a partner.
+Apparently even the existence of the vanished Holloway was forgotten. But Helen
+remembered it, and pondered over the affair long after daylight had come and
+brought with it an end to the festivities.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap06"></a>CHAPTER VI.<br/>
+A PARTY CALL</h2>
+
+<p>
+The mistress of the Lazy D, just through with her morning visit to the hospital
+in the bunkhouse, stopped to read the gaudy poster tacked to the wall. It was
+embellished with the drawing of a placid rider astride the embodiment of fury
+incarnate, under which was the legend: “Stick to Your Saddle.”
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+<big>BIG FOURTH OF JULY CELEBRATION AT GIMLET BUTTE.</big><br/>
+ROPING AND BRONCO BUSTING CONTESTS FOR THE CHAMPIONSHIP OF THE WORLD AND BIG
+PRIZES,<br/>
+Including $1,000 for the Best Rider and the Same for Best Roper. Cow Pony
+Races, Ladies’ Races and Ladies’ Riding Contest, Fireworks,<br/>
+AND FREE BARBECUE!!!!<br/>
+<big>EVERYBODY COME AND TURN YOUR WOLF LOOSE.</big>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A sudden thud of pounding hoofs, a snatch of ragtime, and her foreman swept up
+in a cloud of white dust. His pony came from a gallop to an instant halt, and
+simultaneously Mac landed beside her, one hand holding the wide-brimmed hat he
+had snatched off in his descent, the other hitched by a casual thumb to the
+belt of his chaps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She laughed. “You really did it very well.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mac blushed. He was still young enough to take pride in his picturesque
+regalia, to prefer the dramatic way of doing a commonplace thing. But, though
+he liked this girl’s trick of laughing at him with a perfectly grave face out
+of those dark, long-lashed eyes, he would have liked it better if sometimes
+they had given back the applause he thought his little tricks merited.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Sho! That’s foolishness,” he deprecated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I suppose they got you to sit for this picture;” and she indicated the poster
+with a wave of her hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That ain’t a real picture,” he explained, and when she smiled added, “as of
+course y’u know. No hawss ever pitched that way&mdash;and the saddle ain’t
+right. Fact is, it’s all wrong.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How did it come here? It wasn’t here last night.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I reckon Denver brought it from Slauson’s. He was ridin’ that country
+yesterday, and as the boys was out of smokin’ he come home that way.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I suppose you’ll all go?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I reckon.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And you’ll ride?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I aim to sit in.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“At the roping, too?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, m’m. I ain’t so much with the rope. It takes a Mexican to snake a rope.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then I’ll be able to borrow only a thousand dollars from you to help buy that
+bunch of young cows we were speaking about,” she mocked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Only a thousand,” he grinned. “And it ain’t a cinch I’ll win. There are three
+or four straightup riders on this range. A fellow come from the
+Hole-in-the-Wall and won out last year.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And where were you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, I took second prize,” he explained, with obvious indifference.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, you had better get first this year. We’ll have to show them the Lazy D
+hasn’t gone to sleep.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Sure thing,” he agreed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Has that buyer from Cheyenne turned up yet?” she asked, reverting to business.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Not yet. Do y’u want I should make the cut soon as he comes?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t you think his price is a little low&mdash;twenty dollars from brand up?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s a scrub bunch. We want to get rid of them, anyway. But you’re the
+doctor,” he concluded slangily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She thought a moment. “We’ll let him have them, but don’t make the cut till I
+come back. I’m going to ride over to the Twin Buttes.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His admiring eyes followed her as she went toward the pony that was waiting
+saddled with the rein thrown to the ground. She carried her slim, lithe figure
+with a grace, a lightness, that few women could have rivaled. When she had
+swung to the saddle, she half-turned in her seat to call an order to the
+foreman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I think, Mac, you had better run up those horses from Eagle Creek. Have Denver
+and Missou look after them.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Sure, ma’am,” he said aloud; and to himself: “She’s ce’tainly a thoroughbred.
+Does everything well she tackles. I never saw anything like it. I’m a Chink if
+she doesn’t run this ranch like she had been at it forty years. Same thing with
+her gasoline bronc. That pinto, too. He’s got a bad eye for fair, but she makes
+him eat out of her hand. I reckon the pinto is like the rest of us&mdash;clean
+mashed.” He put his arms on the corral fence and grew introspective. “Blamed if
+I know what it is about her. ’Course she’s a winner on looks, but that ain’t it
+alone. I guess it’s on account of her being such a game little gentleman. When
+she turns that smile loose on a fellow&mdash;well, there’s sure sunshine in the
+air. And game&mdash;why, Ned Bannister ain’t gamer himself.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+McWilliams had climbed lazily to the top board of the fence. He was an
+energetic youth, but he liked to do his thinking at his ease. Now, as his gaze
+still followed its lodestar, he suddenly slipped from his seat and ran forward,
+pulling the revolver from its scabbard as he ran. Into his eyes had crept a
+tense alertness, the shining watchfulness of the tiger ready for its spring.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The cause of the change in the foreman of the Lazy D was a simple one, and on
+its face innocent enough. It was merely that a stranger had swung in casually
+at the gate of the short stable lane, and was due to meet Miss Messiter in
+about ten seconds. So far good enough. A dozen travelers dropped in every day,
+but this particular one happened to be Ned Bannister.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the stable door a shot rang out. Bannister ducked and shouted genially:
+“Try again.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Helen Messiter whirled her pony as on a half-dollar, and charged down on
+the stable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Who fired that shot?” she demanded, her eyes blazing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The horse-wrangler showed embarrassment. He had found time only to lean the
+rifle against the wall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I reckon I did, ma’am. Y’u see&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Did you get my orders about this feud?” she interrupted crisply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, ma’am, but&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then you may call for your time. When I give my men orders I expect them to
+obey.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I wouldn’t ’a’ shot if I’d knowed y’u was so near him. Y’u was behind that
+summer kitchen,” he explained lamely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You only expect to obey orders when I’m in sight. Is that it?” she asked
+hotly, and without waiting for an answer delivered her ultimatum. “Well, I
+won’t have it. I run this ranch as long as I am its owner. Do you understand?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, ma’am. I hadn’t ought to have did it, but when I seen Bannister it come
+over me I owed him a pill for the one he sent me last week down in the coulée.
+So I up and grabbed the rifle and let him have it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then you may up and grab your trunk for Medicine Hill. Shorty will drive you
+tomorrow.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When she returned to her unexpected guest, Helen found him in conversation with
+McWilliams. The latter’s gun had found again its holster, but his brown,
+graceful hand hovered close to its butt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Seems like a long time since the Lazy D has been honored by a visit from Mr.
+Bannister,” he was saying, with gentle irony.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s right. So I have come to make up for lost time,” came Bannister’s quiet
+retort.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Miss Messiter did not know much about Wyoming human nature in the raw, but she
+had learned enough to be sure that the soft courtesy of these two youths
+covered a stark courage that might leap to life any moment. Wherefore she
+interposed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We’ll be pleased to show you over the place, Mr. Bannister. As it happens, we
+are close to the hospital. Shall we begin there?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her cool, silken defiance earned a smile from the visitor. “All your cases
+doing well, ma’am?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s very kind of you to ask. I suppose you take an interest because they are
+<i>your</i> cases, too, in a way of speaking?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mine? Indeed!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes. If it were not for you I’m afraid our hospital would be empty.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It must be right pleasant to be nursed by Miss Messiter. I reckon the boys are
+grateful to me for scattering my lead so promiscuous.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I heard one say he would like to lam your haid tenderly,” murmured McWilliams.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“With a two-by-four, I suppose,” laughed Bannister.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Shouldn’t wonder. But, looking y’u over casual, it occurs to me he might get
+sick of his job befo’ he turned y’u loose,” McWilliams admitted, with a glance
+of admiration at the clean power showing in the other’s supple lines.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nor could either the foreman or his mistress deny the tribute of their respect
+to the bravado of this scamp who sat so jauntily his seat regardless of what
+the next moment might bring forth. Three wounded men were about the place, all
+presumably quite willing to get a clean shot at him in the open. One of them
+had taken his chance already, and missed. Their visitor had no warrant for
+knowing that a second might not any instant try his luck with better success.
+Yet he looked every inch the man on horseback, no whit disturbed, not the least
+conscious of any danger. Tall, spare, broad shouldered, this berry-brown young
+man, crowned with close-cropped curls, sat at the gates of the enemy very much
+at his insolent ease.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I came over to pay my party call,” he explained.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It really wasn’t necessary. A run in the machine is not a formal function.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Maybe not in Kalamazoo.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I thought perhaps you had come to get my purse and the sixty-three dollars,”
+she derided.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, ma’am; nor yet to get that bunch of cows I was going to rustle from you to
+buy an auto. I came to ask you to go riding with me.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The audacity of it took her breath. Of all the outrageous things she had ever
+heard, this was the cream. An acknowledged outlaw, engaged in feud with her
+retainers over that deadly question of the run of the range, he had sauntered
+over to the ranch where lived a dozen of his enemies, three of them still
+scarred with his bullets, merely to ask her to go riding with him. The
+magnificence of his bravado almost obliterated its impudence. Of course she
+would not think of going. The idea! But her eyes glowed with appreciation of
+his courage, not the less because the consciousness of it was so conspicuously
+absent from his manner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I think not, Mr. Bannister” and her face almost imperceptibly stiffened. “I
+don’t go riding with strangers, nor with men who shoot my boys. And I’ll give
+you a piece of advice, sir. That is, to burn the wind back to your home.
+Otherwise I won’t answer for your life. My punchers don’t love you, and I don’t
+know how long I can keep them from you. You’re not wanted here any more than
+you were at the dance the other evening.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+McWilliams nodded. “That’s right. Y’u better roll your trail, seh; and if y’u
+take my advice, you’ll throw gravel lively. I seen two of the boys cutting
+acrost that pasture five minutes ago. They looked as if they might be haided to
+cut y’u off, and I allow it may be their night to howl. Miss Messiter don’t
+want to be responsible for y’u getting lead poisoning.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Indeed!” Their visitor looked politely interested. “This solicitude for me is
+very touching. I observe that both of you are carefully blocking me from the
+bunkhouse in order to prevent another practice-shot. If I can’t persuade you to
+join me in a ride, Miss Messiter, I reckon I’ll go while I’m still
+unpunctured.” He bowed, and gathered the reins for departure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“One moment! Mr. McWilliams and I are going with you,” the girl announced.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Changed your mind? Think you’ll take a little <i>pasear</i>, after all?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t want to be responsible for your killing. We’ll see you safe off the
+place,” she answered curtly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The foreman fell in on one side of Bannister, his mistress on the other. They
+rode in close formation, to lessen the chance of an ambuscade. Bannister alone
+chatted at his debonair ease, ignoring the responsibility they felt for his
+safety.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I got my ride, after all,” he presently chuckled. “To be sure, I wasn’t
+expecting Mr. McWilliams to chaperon us. But that’s an added pleasure.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Would it be an added pleasure to get bumped off to kingdom come?” drawled the
+foreman, giving a reluctant admiration to his aplomb.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Thinking of those willing boys of yours again, are you?” laughed Bannister.
+“They’re ce’tainly a heap prevalent with their hardware, but their hunting
+don’t seem to bring home any meat.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“By the way, how <i>is</i> your ankle, Mr. Bannister? I forgot to ask.” This
+shot from the young woman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He enjoyed it with internal mirth. “They did happen on the target that time,”
+he admitted. “Oh, it’s getting along fine, but I aim to do most of my walking
+on horseback for a while.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They swept past the first dangerous grove of cottonwoods in safety, and rounded
+the boundary fence corner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They’re in that bunch of pines over there,” said the foreman, after a single
+sweep of his eyes in that direction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, I see they are. You oughtn’t to let your boys wear red bandannas when
+they go gunning, Miss Messiter. It’s an awful careless habit.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Helen herself could see no sign of life in the group of pines, but she knew
+their keen, trained eyes had found what hers could not. Riding with one or
+another of her cowboys, she had often noticed how infallibly they could read
+the country for miles around. A scattered patch on a distant hillside, though
+it might be a half-hour’s ride from them, told them a great deal more than
+seemed possible. To her the dark spots sifted on that slope meant scrub
+underbrush, if there was any meaning at all in them. But her riders could tell
+not only whether they were alive, but could differentiate between sheep and
+cattle. Indeed, McWilliams could nearly always tell whether they were
+<i>her</i> cattle or not. He was unable to explain to her how he did it. By a
+sort of instinct, she supposed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The pines were negotiated in safety, and on the part of the men with a
+carelessness she could not understand. For after they had passed there was a
+spot between her shoulder-blades that seemed to tingle in expectation of a
+possible bullet boring its way through. But she would have died rather than let
+them know how she felt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Perhaps Bannister understood, however, for he remarked casually: “I wouldn’t be
+ambling past so leisurely if I was riding alone. It makes a heap of difference
+who your company is, too. Those punchers wouldn’t take a chance at me now for a
+million dollars.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, they’re some haidstrong, but they ain’t plumb locoed,” agreed Mac.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fifteen minutes later Helen drew up at the line corner. “We’ll part company
+here, Mr. Bannister. I don’t think there is any more danger from my men.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Before we part there is something I want to say. I hold that a man has as much
+right to run sheep on these hills as cows. It’s government land, and neither
+one of us owns it. It’s bound to be a case of the survival of the fittest. If
+sheep are hardier and more adapted to the country, then cows have got to
+<i>vamos</i>. That’s nature, as it looks to me. The buffalo and the antelope
+have gone, and I guess cows have got to take their turn.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her scornful eyes burned him. “You came to tell me that, did you? Well, I don’t
+believe a word of it. I’ll not yield my rights without a fight. You may depend
+on that.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Here, too,” nodded her foreman. “I’m with my boss clear down the line. And as
+soon as she lets me turn loose my six-gun, you’ll hear it pop, seh.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I have not a doubt of it, Mr. McWilliams,” returned the sheepman blithely. “In
+the meantime I was going to say that though most of my interests are in sheep
+instead of cattle&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I thought most of your interests were in other people’s property,” interrupted
+the young woman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It goes into sheep ultimately,” he smiled. “Now, what I am trying to get at is
+this: I’m in debt to you a heap, Miss Messiter, and since I’m not all yellow
+cur, I intend to play fair with you. I have ordered my sheep back across the
+deadline. You can have this range to yourself for your cattle. The fight’s off
+so far as we personally are concerned.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A hint of deeper color touched her cheeks. Her manner had been cavalier at
+best; for the most part frankly hostile; and all the time the man was on an
+errand of good-will. Certainly he had scored at her expense, and she was
+ashamed of herself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u mean that you’re going to respect the deadline? asked Mac in surprise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I didn’t say quite that,” explained the sheepman. “What I said was that I
+meant to keep on my side of it so far as the Lazy D cattle are concerned. I’ll
+let your range alone.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But y’u mean to cross it down below where the Bar Double-E cows run?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bannister’s gay smile touched the sardonic face. “Do you invite the public to
+examine your hand when you sit into a game of poker, Mr. McWilliams?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’re dead right. It’s none of my business what y’u do so long as y’u keep
+off our range,” admitted the foreman. “And next time the conversation happens
+on Mr. Bannister, I’ll put in my little say-so that he ain’t all black.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s very good of you, sir,” was the other’s ironical retort.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girl’s gauntleted hand offered itself impulsively. “We can’t be friends
+under existing circumstances, Mr. Bannister. But that does not alter the fact
+that I owe you an apology. You came as a peace envoy, and one of my men shot at
+you. Of course, he did not understand the reason why you came, but that does
+not matter. I did not know your reason myself, and I know I have been very
+inhospitable.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Are you shaking hands with Ned Bannister the sheepman or Ned Bannister the
+outlaw?” asked the owner of that name, with a queer little smile that seemed to
+mock himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“With Ned Bannister the gentleman. If there is another side to him I don’t know
+it personally.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He flushed underneath the tan, but very plainly with pleasure. “Your opinions
+are right contrary to Hoyle, ma’am. Aren’t you aware that a sheepman is the
+lowest thing that walks? Ask Mr. McWilliams.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I have known stockmen of that opinion, but&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The foreman’s sentence was never finished. From a clump of bushes a hundred
+yards away came the crack of a rifle. A bullet sang past, cutting a line that
+left on one side of it Bannister, on the other Miss Messiter and her foreman.
+Instantly the two men slid from their horses on the farther side, dragged down
+the young woman behind the cover of the broncos, and arranged the three ponies
+so as to give her the greatest protection available. Somehow the weapons that
+garnished them had leaped to their hands before their feet touched the ground.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That coyote isn’t one of our men. I’ll back that opinion high,” said
+McWilliams promptly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Who is he?” the girl whispered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s what we’re going to find out pretty soon,” returned Bannister grimly.
+“Chances are it’s me he is trying to gather. Now, I’m going to make a break for
+that cottonwood. When I go, you better run up a white handkerchief and move
+back from the firing-line. Turn Buck loose when you leave. He’ll stay around
+and come when I whistle.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He made a run for it, zigzagging through the sage-brush so swiftly as to offer
+the least certain mark possible for a sharpshooter. Yet twice the rifle spoke
+before he reached the cottonwood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile Mac had fastened the handkerchief of his mistress on the end of a
+switch he had picked up and was edging out of range. His tense, narrowed gaze
+never left the bush-clump from which the shots were being pumped, and he was
+careful during their retreat to remain on the danger side of the road, in order
+to cover Helen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I guess Bannister’s right. He don’t want us, whoever he is.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And even as he murmured it, the wind of a bullet lifted his hat from his head.
+He picked it up and examined it. The course of the bullet was marked by a hole
+in the wide brim, and two more in the side and crown.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He ce’tainly ventilated it proper. I reckon, ma’am, we’ll make a run for it.
+Lie low on the pinto’s neck, with your haid on the off side. That’s right. Let
+him out.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A mile and a half farther up the road Mac reined in, and made the Indian
+peace-sign. Two dejected figures came over the hill and resolved themselves
+into punchers of the Lazy D. Each of them trailed a rifle by his side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’re a fine pair of ring-tailed snorters, ain’t y’u?” jeered the foreman.
+“Got to get gay and go projectin’ round on the shoot after y’u got your orders
+to stay hitched. Anything to say for yo’selves?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If they had it was said very silently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Now, Miss Messiter is going to pass it up this time, but from now on y’u don’t
+go off on any private massacrees while y’u punch at the Lazy D. Git that? This
+hyer is the last call for supper in the dining-cah. If y’u miss it, y’u’ll feed
+at some other chuckhouse.” Suddenly the drawl of his sarcasm vanished. His
+voice carried the ring of peremptory command. “Jim, y’u go back to the ranch
+with Miss Messiter, <i>and keep your eyes open</i>. Missou, I need y’u. We’re
+going back. I reckon y’u better hang on to the stirrup, for we got to travel
+some. <i>Adios, señorita!</i>”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was off at a slow lope on the road he had just come, the other man running
+beside the horse. Presently he stopped, as if the arrangement were not
+satisfactory; and the second man swung behind him on the pony. Later, when she
+turned in her saddle, she saw that they had left the road and were cutting
+across the plain, as if to take the sharpshooter in the rear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her troubled thoughts stayed with her even after she had reached the ranch. She
+was nervously excited, keyed up to a high pitch; for she knew that out on the
+desert, within a mile or two of her, men were stalking each other with life or
+death in the balance as the price of vigilance, skill and an unflawed steel
+nerve. While she herself had been in danger, she had been mistress of her fear.
+But now she could do nothing but wait, after ordering out such reinforcements
+as she could recruit without delay; and the inaction told upon her swift,
+impulsive temperament. Once, twice, the wind brought to her a faint sound.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had been pacing the porch, but she stopped, white as a sheet. Behind those
+faint explosions might lie a sinister tragedy. Her mind projected itself into a
+score of imaginary possibilities. She listened, breathless in her tensity, but
+no further echo of that battlefield reached her. The sun still shone warmly on
+brown Wyoming. She looked down into a rolling plain that blurred in the
+distance from knobs and flat spaces into a single stretch that included a
+thousand rises and depressions. That roll of country teemed with life, but the
+steady, inexorable sun beat down on what seemed a shining, primeval waste of
+space. Yet somewhere in that space the tragedy was being
+determined&mdash;unless it had been already enacted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She wanted to scream. The very stillness mocked her. So, too, did the clicking
+windmill, with its monotonous regularity. Her pony still stood saddled in the
+yard. She knew that her place was at home, and she fought down a dozen times
+the tremendous impulse to mount and fly to the field of combat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked at her watch. How slowly the minutes dragged! It could not be only
+five minutes since she had looked last time. Again she fell to pacing the long
+west porch, and interrupted herself a dozen times to stop and listen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I can bear it no longer,” she told herself at last, and in another moment was
+in the saddle plying her pinto with the quirt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But before she reached the first cottonwoods she saw them coming. Her glasses
+swept the distant group, and with a shiver she made out the dreadful truth.
+They were coming slowly, carrying something between them. The girl did not need
+to be told that the object they were bringing home was their dead or wounded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A figure on horseback detached itself from the huddle of men and galloped
+towards her. He was coming to break the news. But who was the victim? Bannister
+or McWilliams she felt sure, by reason of the sinking heart in her; and then it
+came home that she would be hard hit if it were either.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The approaching rider began to take distinct form through her glasses. As he
+pounded forward she recognized him. It was the man nicknamed Denver. The wind
+was blowing strongly from her to him, and while he was still a hundred yards
+away she hurled her question.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His answer was lost in the wind sweep, but one word of it she caught. That word
+was “Mac.”
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap07"></a>CHAPTER VII.<br/>
+THE MAN FROM THE SHOSHONE FASTNESSES</h2>
+
+<p>
+Though the sharpshooter’s rifle cracked twice during his run for the
+cottonwood, the sheepman reached the tree in safety. He could dodge through the
+brush as elusively as any man in Wyoming. It was a trick he had learned on the
+whitewashed football gridiron. For in his buried past this man had been the
+noted half-back of a famous college, and one of his specialties had been
+running the ball back after a catch through a broken field of opponents. The
+lesson that experience had then thumped into him had since saved his life on
+more than one occasion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Having reached the tree, Bannister took immediate advantage of the lie of the
+ground to snake forward unobserved for another hundred feet. There was a dip
+from the foot of the tree, down which he rolled into the sage below. He wormed
+his way through the thick scrub brush to the edge of a dry creek, into the bed
+of which he slid. Then swiftly, his body bent beneath the level of the bank, he
+ran forward in the sand. He moved noiselessly, eyes and ears alert to aid him,
+and climbed the bank at a point where a live oak grew.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Warily he peeped out from behind its trunk and swept the plain for his foe.
+Nothing was to be seen of him. Slowly and patiently his eyes again went over
+the semi-circle before him, for where death may lurk behind every foot of
+vegetation, every bump or hillock, the plainsman leaves as little as may be to
+chance. No faintest movement could escape the sheepman’s eyes, no least stir
+fail to apprise his ears. Yet for many minutes he waited in vain, and the delay
+told him that he had to do with a trained hunter rather than a mere reckless
+cow-puncher. For somewhere in the rough country before him his enemy lay
+motionless, every faculty alive to the least hint of his presence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the whirring flight of a startled dove that told Bannister the
+whereabouts of his foe. Two hundred yards from him the bird rose, and the
+direction it took showed that the man must have been trailing forward from the
+opposite quarter. The sheepman slipped back into the dry creek bed, retraced
+his steps for about a stone-throw, and again crawled up the bank.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a long time he lay face down in the grass, his gaze riveted to the spot
+where he knew his opponent to be hidden. A faint rustle not born of the wind
+stirred the sage. Still Bannister waited. A less experienced plainsman would
+have blazed away and exposed his own position. But not this young man with the
+steel-wire nerves. Silent as the coming of dusk, no breaking twig or displaced
+brush betrayed his self-contained presence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Something in the clump he watched wriggled forward and showed indistinctly
+through an opening in the underscrub. He whipped his rifle into position and
+fired twice. The huddled brown mass lurched forward and disappeared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Wonder if I got him? Seems to me I couldn’t have missed clean,” thought
+Bannister.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Silence as before, vast and unbroken.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A scramble of running feet tearing a path through the brush, a crouching body
+showing darkly for an eyeflash, and then the pounding of a horse’s retreating
+feet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bannister leaped up, ran lightly across the intervening space, and with his
+repeater took a potshot at the galloping horseman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Missed!” he muttered, and at once gave a sharp whistle that brought his pony
+to him on the trot. He vaulted to the saddle and gave chase. It was rough
+going, but nothing in reason can stop a cow-pony. As sure footed as a mountain
+goat, as good a climber almost as a cat, Buck followed the flying horseman over
+perilous rock rims and across deep-cut creek beds. Pantherlike he climbed up
+the steep creek sides without hesitation, for the round-up had taught him never
+to falter at stiff going so long as his rider put him at it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was while he was clambering out of the sheer sides of a wash that Bannister
+made a discovery. The man he pursued was wounded. Something in the manner of
+the fellow’s riding had suggested this to him, but a drop of blood splashed on
+a stone that happened to meet his eye made the surmise a certainty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was gaining now&mdash;not fast, almost imperceptibly, but none the less
+surely. He could see the man looking over his shoulder, once, twice, and then
+again, with that hurried, fearful glance that measures the approach of
+retribution. Barring accidents, the man was his.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the unforeseen happened. Buck stepped in the hole of a prairie dog and went
+down. Over his head flew the rider like a stone from a catapult.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How long Ned Bannister lay unconscious he never knew. But when he came to
+himself it was none too soon. He sat up dizzily and passed his hand over his
+head. Something had happened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What was it? Oh, yes, he had been thrown from his horse. A wave of recollection
+passed over him, and his mind was clear once more. Presently he got to his feet
+and moved rather uncertainly toward Buck, for the horse was grazing quietly a
+few yards from him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But half way to the pony he stopped. Voices, approaching by way of the bed of
+Dry Creek, drifted to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He must ’a’ turned and gone back. Mebbe he guessed we was there.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And a voice that Bannister knew, one that had a strangely penetrant, cruel ring
+of power through the drawl, made answer: “Judd said before he fainted he was
+sure the man was Ned Bannister. I’d ce’tainly like to meet up with my beloved
+cousin right now and even up a few old scores. By God, I’d make him sick before
+I finished with him!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll bet y’u would, Cap,” returned the other, admiringly. “Think we’d better
+deploy here and beat up the scenery a few as we go?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There are times when the mind works like lightning, flashes its messages on the
+wings of an electric current. For Bannister this was one of them. The whole
+situation lighted for him plainly as if it had been explained for an hour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His cousin had been out with a band of his cut-throats on some errand, and
+while returning to the fastnesses of the Shoshone Mountains had stopped to noon
+at a cow spring three or four miles from the Lazy D. Judd Morgan, whom he knew
+to be a lieutenant of the notorious bandit, had ridden toward the ranch in the
+hope of getting an opportunity to vent his anger against its mistress or some
+of her men. While pursuing the renegade Bannister had stumbled into a hornet’s
+nest, and was in imminent danger of being stung to death. Even now the last
+speaker was scrambling up the bank toward him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sheepman had to choose between leaving his rifle and immediate flight. The
+latter was such a forlorn hope that he gave up Buck for the moment, and ran
+back to the place where his repeating Winchester had fallen. Without stopping
+he scooped the rifle up as he passed. In his day he had been a famous sprinter,
+and he scudded now for dear life. It was no longer a question of secrecy. The
+sound of men breaking their hurried way through the heavy brush of the creek
+bank came crisply to him. A voice behind shouted a warning, and from not a
+hundred yards in front of him came an answering shout. Hemmed in from the fore
+and the rear, he swung off at a right angle. An open stretch lay before him,
+but he had to take his desperate chance without cover. Anything was better than
+to be trapped like a wild beast driven by the beaters to the guns.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Across the bare, brown mesa he plunged; and before he had taken a dozen steps
+the first rifle had located its prey and was sniping at him. He had perhaps a
+hundred yards to cover ere the mesa fell away into a hollow, where he might
+find temporary protection in the scrub pines. And now a second marksman joined
+himself to the first. But he was going fast, already had covered half the
+distance, and it is no easy thing to bring down a live, dodging target.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again the first gun spoke, and scored another miss, whereat a mocking, devilish
+laugh rang out in the sunshine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u boys splash a heap of useless lead around the horizon. I reckon Cousin
+Ned’s my meat. Y’u see, I get him in the flapper without spoiling him
+complete.” And at the word he flung the rifle to his shoulder and fired with no
+apparent aim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The running man doubled up like a cottontail, but found his feet again in an
+instant, though one arm hung limp by his side. He was within a dozen feet of
+the hilldrop and momentary safety.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Shall I take him, Cap?” cried one of the men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No; he’s mine.” The rifle smoked once more and again the runner went down. But
+this time he plunged headlong down the slope and out of sight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The outlaw chief turned on his heel. “I reckon he’ll not run any more to-day.
+Bring him into camp and we’ll take him along with us,” he said carelessly, and
+walked away to his horse in the creek bed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Two of the men started forward, but they stopped half way, as if rooted to the
+ground. For a galloping horseman suddenly drew up at the very point for which
+they were starting. He leaped to the ground and warned them back with his
+rifle. While he covered them a second man rode up and lifted Bannister to his
+saddle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ready, Mac,” he gave the word, and both horses disappeared with their riders
+over the brow of the hill. When the surprised desperadoes recovered themselves
+and reached that point the rescuers had disappeared in the heavy brush.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The alarm was at once given, and their captain, cursing them in a raucous
+bellow for their blunder, ordered immediate pursuit. It was some little time
+before the trail of the fugitives was picked up, but once discovered they were
+over hauled rapidly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We’re not going to get out without swapping lead,” McWilliams admitted
+anxiously. “I wisht y’u wasn’t hampered with that load, but I reckon I’ll have
+to try to stand them off alone.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We bucked into a slice of luck when I opened on his bronc mavericking around
+alone. Hadn’t been for that we could never have made it,” said Missou, who
+never crossed a bridge until he came to it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We haven’t made it yet, old hoss, not by a long mile, and two more on top o’
+that. They’re beginning to pump lead already. Huh! Got to drap your pills
+closer’n that ’fore y’u worry me.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I believe he’s daid, anyway,” said Missou presently, peering down into the
+white face of the unconscious man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Got to hang onto the remains, anyhow, for Miss Helen. Those coyotes are too
+much of the wolf breed to leave him with them.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Looks like they’re gittin’ the aim some better,” equably remarked the other a
+minute later, when a spurt of sand flew up in front of him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They’re ce’tainly crowding us. I expaict I better send them a ‘How-de-do?’ so
+as to discourage them a few.” He took as careful aim as he could on the
+galloping horse, but his bullet went wide.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They’re gaining like sixty. It’s my offhand opinion we better stop at that
+bunch of trees and argue some with them. No use buck-jumpin’ along to burn the
+wind while they drill streaks of light through us.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“All right. Take the trees. Y’u’ll be able to get into the game some then.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They debouched from the road to the little grove and slipped from their horses.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Deader’n hell,” murmured Missou, as he lifted the limp body from his horse.
+“But I guess we’ll pack what’s left back to the little lady at the Lazy D.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The leader of the pursuers halted his men just out of range and came forward
+alone, holding his right hand up in the usual signal of peace. In appearance he
+was not unlike Ned Bannister. There was the same long, slim, tiger build, with
+the flowing muscles rippling easily beneath the loose shirt; the same effect of
+power and dominance, the same clean, springy stride. The pose of the head, too,
+even the sweep of salient jaw, bore a marked resemblance. But similarity ceased
+at the expression. For instead of frankness there lurked here that hint of the
+devil of strong passion uncontrolled. He was the victim of his own moods, and
+in the space of an hour one might, perhaps, read in that face cold cunning,
+cruel malignity, leering ribaldry, as well as the hard-bitten virtues of
+unflinching courage and implacable purpose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I reckon you’re near enough,” suggested Mac, when the man had approached to
+within a hundred feet of the tree clump.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>Y’u’re</i> drawing the dead-line,” the other acknowledged, indolently. “It
+won’t take ten words to tell y’u what I want and mean to have. I’m giving y’u
+two minutes to hand me over the body of Ned Bannister. If y’u don’t see it that
+way I’ll come and make a lead mine of your whole outfit.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u can’t come too quick, seh. We’re here a-shootin’, and don’t y’u forget
+it,” was McWilliams’s prompt answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sinister face of the man from the Shoshones darkened. “Y’u’ve signed your
+own death warrants,” he let out through set teeth, and at the word swung on his
+heel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The ball’s about to open. Pardners for a waltz. Have a dust-cutter, Mac,
+before she grows warm.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The puncher handed over his flask, and the other held it before his eye and
+appraised the contents in approved fashion. “Don’t mind if I do. Here’s how!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How!” echoed Missou, in turn, and tipped up the bottle till the liquor gurgled
+down his baked throat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He’s fanning out his men so as to, get us both at the front and back door.
+Lucky there ain’t but four of them.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I guess we better lie back to back,” proposed Missou. “If our luck’s good I
+reckon they’re going to have a gay time rushing this fort.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A few desultory shots had already been dropped among the cottonwoods, and
+returned by the defendants when Missou let out a yell of triumph.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Glory Hallelujah! Here comes the boys splittin’ down the road
+hell-for-leather. That lopsided, ring-tailed snorter of a hawss-thief is
+gathering his wolves for a hike back to the tall timber. Feed me a cigareet,
+Mac. I plumb want to celebrate.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was as the cow-puncher had said. Down the road a cloud of dust was sweeping
+toward them, in the centre of which they made out three hardriding cowboys from
+the ranch. Farther back, in the distance, was another dust whirl. The outlaw
+chief’s hard, vigilant gaze swept over the reinforcements! and decided
+instantly that the game had gone against him for the present. He whistled
+shrilly twice, and began a slow retreat toward the hills. The miscreants flung
+a few defiant shots at the advancing cowmen, and disappeared, swallowed up in
+the earth swells.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The homeward march was a slow one, for Bannister had begun to show signs of
+consciousness and it was necessary to carry him with extreme care. While they
+were still a mile from the ranch house the pinto and its rider could be seen
+loping toward them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ride forward, Denver, and tell Miss Helen we’re coming. Better have her get
+everything fixed to doctor him soon as we get there. Give him the best show in
+the world, and he’ll still be sailing awful close to the divide. I’ll bet a
+hundred plunks he’ll cash in, anyway.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>Done!</i>”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The voice came faintly from the improvised litter. Mac turned with a start, for
+he had not known that Bannister was awake to his surroundings. The man appeared
+the picture of helplessness, all the lusty power and vigor stricken out of him;
+but his indomitable spirit still triumphed over the physical collapse, for as
+the foreman looked a faint smile touched the ashen lips. It seemed to say:
+“Still in the ring, old man.”
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap08"></a>CHAPTER VIII.<br/>
+IN THE LAZY D HOSPITAL</h2>
+
+<p>
+Helen’s first swift glance showed that the wounded man was Bannister. She
+turned in crisp command to her foreman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Have him taken to my room and put to bed there. We have no time to prepare
+another. And send one of the boys on your best horse for a doctor.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They carried the limp figure in with rough tenderness and laid him in the bed.
+McWilliams unbuckled the belt and drew off the chaps; then, with the help of
+Denver, undressed the wounded man and covered him with quilts. So Helen found
+him when she came in to attend his wounds, bringing with her such things as she
+needed for her task. Mrs. Winslow, the housekeeper, assisted her, and the
+foreman stayed to help, but it was on the mistress of the ranch that the
+responsibility of saving him fell. Missou was already galloping to Bear Creek
+for a doctor, but the girl knew that the battle must be fought and the issue
+decided before he could arrive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had fallen again into insensibility and she rinsed and dressed his wounds,
+working with the quiet impersonal certainty of touch that did not betray the
+inner turmoil of her soul. But McWilliams, his eyes following her every motion
+and alert to anticipate her needs, saw that the color had washed from her face
+and that she was controlling herself only to meet the demands of the occasion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As she was finishing, the sheepman opened his eyes and looked at her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You are not to speak or ask questions. You have been wounded and we are going
+to take care of you,” she ordered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s right good of y’u. I ce’tainly feel mighty trifling.” His wide eyes
+traveled round till they fell on the foreman. “Y’u see I came back to help fill
+your hospital. Am I there now? Where am I?” His gaze returned to Helen with the
+sudden irritation of the irresponsible sick.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You are at the Lazy D, in my room. You are not to worry about anything.
+Everything’s all right.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He took her at her word and his eyes closed; but presently he began to mutter
+unconnected words and phrases. When his lids lifted again there was a wilder
+look in his eyes, and she knew that delirium was beginning. At intervals it
+lasted for long; indeed, until the doctor came next morning in the small hours.
+He talked of many things Helen Messiter did not understand, of incidents in his
+past life, some of them jerky with the excitement of a tense moment, others
+apparently snatches of talk with relatives. It was like the babbling of a
+child, irrelevant and yet often insistent. He would in one breath give orders
+connected with the lambing of his sheep, in the next break into football talk,
+calling out signals and imploring his men to hold them or to break through and
+get the ball. Once he broke into curses, but his very oaths seemed to come from
+a clean heart and missed the vulgarity they might have had. Again his talk
+rambled inconsequently over his youth, and he would urge himself or someone
+else of the same name to better life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ned, Ned, remember your mother,” he would beseech. “She asked me to look after
+you. Don’t go wrong.” Or else it would be, “Don’t disgrace the general, Ned.
+You’ll break his heart if you blacken the old name.” To this theme he recurred
+repeatedly, and she noticed that when he imagined himself in the East his
+language was correct and his intonation cultured, though still with a
+suggestion of a Southern softness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But when he spoke of her his speech lapsed into the familiar drawl of
+Cattleland. “I ain’t such a sweep as y’u think, girl. Some day I’ll sure tell
+y’u all about it, and how I have loved y’u ever since y’u scooped me up in your
+car. You’re the gamest little lady! To see y’u come a-sailin’ down after me, so
+steady and businesslike, not turning a hair when the bullets hummed&mdash;I
+sure do love y’u, Helen.” And then he fell upon her first name and called her
+by it a hundred times softly to himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This happened when she was alone with him, just before the doctor came. She
+heard it with starry eyes and with a heart that flushed for joy a warmer color
+into her cheeks. Brushing back the short curls, she kissed his damp forehead.
+It was in the thick of the battle, before he had weathered that point where the
+issues of life and death pressed closely, and even in the midst of her great
+fears it brought her comfort. She was to think often of it later, and always
+the memory was to be music in her heart. Even when she denied her love for him,
+assured herself it was impossible she could care for so shameful a villain,
+even then it was a sweet torture to allow herself the luxury of recalling his
+broken delirious phrases. At the very worst he could not be as bad as they
+said; some instinct told her this was impossible. His fearless devil-may-care
+smile, his jaunty, gallant bearing, these pleaded against the evidence for him.
+And yet was it conceivable that a man of spirit, a gentleman by training at
+least, would let himself lie under the odium of such a charge if he were not
+guilty? Her tangled thoughts fought this profitless conflict for days. Nor
+could she dismiss it from her mind. Even after he began to mend she was still
+on the rack. For in some snatch of good talk, when the fine quality of the man
+seemed to glow in his face, poignant remembrance would stab her with
+recollection of the difference between what he was and what he seemed to be.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One of the things that had been a continual surprise to Helen was the short
+time required by these deep-cheated and clean-blooded Westerners to recover
+from apparently serious wounds. It was scarce more than two weeks since
+Bannister had filled the bunkhouse with wounded men, and already two of them
+were back at work and the third almost fit for service. For perhaps three days
+the sheepman’s life hung in the balance, after which his splendid constitution
+and his outdoor life began to tell. The thermometer showed that the fever had
+slipped down a notch, and he was now sleeping wholesomely a good part of his
+time. Altogether, unless for some unseen contingency, the doctor prophesied
+that the sheepman was going to upset the probabilities and get well.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Which merely shows, ma’am, what is possible when you give a sound man
+twenty-four hours a day in our hills for a few years,” he added. “Thanks to
+your nursing he’s going to shave through by the narrowest margin possible. I
+told him to-day that he owed his life to you, Miss Messiter.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t think you need have told him that Doctor,” returned that young woman,
+not a little vexed at him, “especially since you have just been telling me that
+he owes it to Wyoming air and his own soundness of constitution.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When she returned to the sickroom to give her patient his medicine he wanted to
+tell her what the doctor had said, but she cut him off ruthlessly and told him
+not to talk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mayn’t I even say ‘Thank you?’” he wanted to know.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No; you talk far too much as it is.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He smiled “All right. Y’u sit there in that chair, where I can see y’u doing
+that fancywork and I’ll not say a word. It’ll keep, all right, what I want to
+say.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I notice you keep talking,” she told him, dryly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, ma’am. Y’u had better have let me say what I wanted to, but I’ll be good
+now.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He fell asleep watching her, and when he awoke she was still sitting there,
+though it was beginning to grow dark. He spoke before she knew he was awake.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m going to get well, the doctor thinks.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, he told me,” she answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Did he tell y’u it was your nursing saved me?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Please don’t think about that.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What am I to think about? I owe y’u a heap, and it keeps piling up. I reckon
+y’u do it all because it’s your Christian duty?” he demanded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It is my duty, isn’t it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I didn’t say it wasn’t, though I expaict Bighorn County will forget to give
+y’u a unanimous vote of thanks for doing it. I asked if y’u did it because it
+was your duty?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The reason doesn’t matter so that I do it,” she answered, steadily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Reasons matter some, too, though they ain’t as important as actions out in
+this country. Back in Boston they figure more, and since y’u used to go to
+school back there y’u hadn’t ought to throw down your professor of ethics.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t you think you have talked enough for the present?” she smiled, and
+added: “If I make you talk whenever I sit beside you I shall have to stay
+away.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s where y’u’ve ce’tainly got the drop on me, ma’am. I’m a clam till y’u
+give the word.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Before a week he was able to sit up in a chair for an hour or two, and soon
+after could limp into the living room with the aid of a walking stick and his
+hostess. Under the tan he still wore an interesting pallor, but there could be
+no question that he was on the road to health.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A man doesn’t know what he’s missing until he gets shot up and is brought to
+the Lazy D hospital, so as to let Miss Messiter exercise her Christian duty on
+him,” he drawled, cheerfully, observing the sudden glow on her cheek brought by
+the reference to his unanswered question.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He made the lounge in the big sunny window his headquarters. From it he could
+look out on some of the ranch activities when she was not with him, could watch
+the line riders as they passed to and fro and command a view of one of the
+corrals. There was always, too, the turquoise sky, out of which poured a flood
+of light on the roll of hilltops. Sometimes he read to himself, but he was
+still easily tired, and preferred usually to rest. More often she read aloud to
+him while he lay back with his leveled eyes gravely on her till the gentle,
+cool abstraction she affected was disturbed and her perplexed lashes rose to
+reproach the intensity of his gaze.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was of those women who have the heavenborn faculty of making home of such
+fortuitous elements as are to their hands. Except her piano and such
+knickknacks as she had brought in a single trunk she had had to depend upon the
+resources of the establishment to which she had come, but it is wonderful how
+much can be done with some Navajo rugs, a bearskin, a few bits of Indian
+pottery and woven baskets and a judicious arrangement of scenic photographs. In
+a few days she would have her pictures from Kalamazoo, pending which her touch
+had transformed the big living room from a cheerless barn into a spot that was
+a comfort to the eye and heart. To the wounded man who lay there slowly
+renewing the blood he had lost the room was the apotheosis of home, less,
+perhaps, by reason of what it was in itself than because it was the setting for
+her presence&mdash;for her grave, sympathetic eyes, the sound of her clear
+voice, the light grace of her motion. He rejoiced in the delightful intimacy
+the circumstances made necessary. To hear snatches of joyous song and gay
+laughter even from a distance, to watch her as she came in and out on her daily
+tasks, to contest her opinions of books and life and see how eagerly she
+defended them; he wondered himself at the strength of the appeal these simple
+things made to him. Already he was dreading the day when he must mount his
+horse and ride back into the turbulent life from which she had for a time,
+snatched him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll hate to go back to sheepherding,” he told her one day at lunch, looking
+at her across a snow-white tablecloth upon which were a service of shining
+silver, fragile china teacups and plates stamped Limoges.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was at the moment buttering a delicious French roll and she was daintily
+pouring tea from an old family heirloom. The contrast between this and the dust
+and the grease of a midday meal at the end of a “chuck wagon” lent accent to
+his smiling lamentation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A lot of sheepherding <i>you</i> do,” she derided.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A shepherd has to look after his sheep, y’u know.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You herd sheep just about as much as I punch cows.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I have to herd my herders, anyhow, and that keeps me on the move.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m glad there isn’t going to be any more trouble between you and the Lazy D.
+And that reminds me of another thing. I’ve often wonered who those men could
+have been that attacked you the day you were hurt.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had asked the question almost carelessly, without any thought that this
+might be something he wished to conceal, but she recognized her mistake by the
+wariness that filmed his eyes instantly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Room there for a right interesting guessing contest,” he replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>You</i> wouldn’t need to guess,” she charged, on swift impulse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Meaning that I know?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You do know. You can’t deny that you now.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, say that I know?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Aren’t you going to tell?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He shook his head. “Not just yet. I’ve got private reasons for keeping it quiet
+a while.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m sure they are creditable to you,” came her swift ironic retort.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Sure,” he agreed, whimsically. “I must live up to the professional standard.
+Honor among thieves, y’u know.”
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap09"></a>CHAPTER IX.<br/>
+MISS DARLING ARRIVES</h2>
+
+<p>
+Miss Messiter clung to civilization enough, at least, to prefer that her
+chambermaid should be a woman rather than a Chinese. It did not suit her
+preconceived idea of the proper thing that Lee Ming should sweep floors, dust
+bric-a-brac, and make the beds. To see him slosh-sloshing around in his felt
+slippers made her homesick for Kalamazoo. There were other reasons why the
+proprieties would be better served by having another woman about the place;
+reasons that had to do with the chaperone system that even in the uncombed West
+make its claims upon unmarried young women of respectability. She had with her
+for the present fourteen-year-old Ida Henderson, but this arrangement was
+merely temporary.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wherefore on the morning after her arrival Helen had sent two letters back to
+“the States.” One of these had been to Mrs. Winslow, a widow of fifty-five,
+inviting her to come out on a business basis as housekeeper of the Lazy D. The
+buxom widow had loved Helen since she had been a toddling baby, and her reply
+was immediate and enthusiastic. Eight days later she had reported in person.
+The second letter bore the affectionate address of Nora Darling, Detroit,
+Michigan. This also in time bore fruit at the ranch in a manner worthy of
+special mention.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the fourth day after Ned Bannister had been carried back to the Lazy D
+that Helen Messiter came out to the porch of the house with a letter in her
+hand. She found her foreman sitting on the steps waiting for her, but he got up
+as soon as he heard the fall of her light footsteps behind him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You sent for me, ma’am?” he asked, hat in hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes; I want you to drive into Gimlet Butte and bring back a person whom you’ll
+find at the Elk House waiting for you. I had rather you would go yourself,
+because I know you’re reliable.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Thank you, ma’am. How will I know him?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s a woman&mdash;a spinster. She’s coming to help Mrs. Winslow. Inquire for
+Miss Darling. She isn’t used to jolting two days in a rig, but I know you will
+be careful of her.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll surely be as careful of the old lady as if she was my own mother.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The mistress of the ranch smothered a desire to laugh.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m sure you will. At her age she may need a good deal of care. Be certain you
+take rug enough.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll take care of her the best I know how. Expect she’s likely rheumatic, but
+I’ll wrop her up till she looks like a Cheyenne squaw when tourist is trying to
+get a free shoot at her with camera.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Please do. I want her to get a good impression of Wyoming so that she will
+stay. I don’ know about the rheumatism, but you might ask her.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There were pinpoints of merriment behind the guileless innocence of her eyes,
+but they came to the surface only after the foreman had departed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+McWilliams ordered a team of young horse hitched, and presently set out on his
+two day journey to Gimlet Butte. He reached that town in good season, left the
+team at a corral and walked back to the Elk House. The white dust of the plains
+was heavy on him, from the bandanna that loosely embraced the brown throat
+above the flannel shirt to the encrusted boots but through it the good humor of
+his tanned face smiled fraternally on a young woman he passes at the entrance
+to the hotel. Her gay smile met his cordially, and she was still in his mind
+while he ran his eye down the register in search of the name he wanted. There
+it was&mdash;Miss Nora Darling, Detroit, Michigan&mdash;in the neatest of
+little round letters, under date of the previous day’s arrivals.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Is Miss Darling in?” asked McWilliams of the half-grown son of the landlady
+who served in lieu of clerk and porter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nope! Went out a little while ago. Said to tell anybody to wait that asked for
+her.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mac nodded, relieved to find that duty had postponed itself long enough for him
+to pursue the friendly smile that had not been wasted on him a few seconds
+before. He strolled out to the porch and decided at once that he needed a cigar
+more than anything else on earth. He was helped to a realization of his need by
+seeing the owner of the smile disappear in an adjoining drug store.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was beginning on a nut sundae when the puncher drifted in. She continued to
+devote even her eyes to its consumption, while the foreman opened a casual
+conversation with the drug clerk and lit his cigar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How are things coming in Gimlet Butte?” he asked, by way of prolonging his
+stay rather than out of desire for information.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yes, she certainly had the longest, softest lashes he had ever seen, and the
+ripest of cherry lips, behind the smiling depths of which sparkled two rows of
+tiny pearls. He wished she would look at <i>him</i> and smile again. There
+wasn’t any use trying to melt a sundae with it, anyhow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Sure, it’s a good year on the range and the price of cows jumping,” he heard
+his sub-conscious self make answer to the patronizing inquiries of him of the
+“boiled” shirt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Funny how pretty hair of that color was especially when there was so much of
+it. You might call it a sort of coppery gold where the little curls escaped in
+tendrils and ran wild. A fellow&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, I reckon most of the boys will drop around to the Fourth of July
+celebration. Got to cut loose once in a while, y’u know.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A shy glance shot him and set him a-tingle with a queer delight. Gracious, what
+pretty dark velvety lashes she had!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was rising already, and as she paid for the ice cream that innocent gaze
+smote him again with the brightest of Irish eyes conceivable. It lingered for
+just a ponderable sunlit moment or him. She had smiled once more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After a decent interval Mac pursued his <i>petite</i> charmer to the hotel. She
+was seated on the porch reading a magazine, and was absorbedly unconscious of
+him when he passed. For a few awkward moments he hung around the office, then
+returned to the porch and took the chair most distant from her. He had sat
+there a long ten minutes before she let her hands and the magazine fall into
+her lap and demurely gave him his chance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Can you tell me how far it is to the Lazy D ranch?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Seventy-two miles as the crow flies, ma’am.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Thank you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The conversation threatened to die before it was well born. Desperately
+McWilliams tried to think of something to say to keep it alive without being
+too bold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If y’u were thinking of traveling out that way I could give y’u a lift. I just
+came in to get another lady&mdash;an old lady that has just come to this
+country.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Thank you, but I’m expecting a conveyance to meet me here. You didn’t happen
+to pass one on the way, I suppose?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, I didn’t. What ranch were y’u going to, ma’am?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Miss Messiter’s&mdash;the Lazy D.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A suspicion began to penetrate the foreman’s brain. “Y’u ain’t Miss Darling?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What makes you so sure I’m not?” she asked, tilting her dimpled chin toward
+him aggressively.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u’re too young,” he protested, helplessly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m no younger than you are,” came her quick, indignant retort.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus boldly accused of his youth, the foreman blushed. “I didn’t mean that.
+Miss Messiter said she was an old lady&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You needn’t tell fibs about it. She couldn’t have said anything of the kind.
+Who are <i>you</i>, anyhow?” the girl demanded, with spirit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m the foreman of the Lazy D, come to get Miss Darling. My name is
+McWilliams&mdash;Jim McWilliams.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t need your first name, Mr. McWilliams,” she assured him, sweetly. “And
+will you please tell me why you have kept me waiting here more than thirty
+hours?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Miss Messiter didn’t get your letter in time. Y’u see, we don’t get mail every
+day at the Lazy D,” he explained, the while he hopefully wondered just when she
+was going to need his last name.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t see why you don’t go after your mail every day at least, especially
+when Miss Messiter was expecting me. To leave me waiting here thirty
+hours&mdash;I’ll not stand it. When does the next train leave for Detroit?” she
+asked, imperiously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The situation seemed to call for diplomacy, and Jim McWilliams moved to a
+nearer chair. “I’m right sorry it happened, ma’am, and I’ll bet Miss Messiter
+is, too. Y’u see, we been awful busy one way and ’nother, and I plumb neglected
+to send one of the boys to the post-office.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why didn’t one of them walk over after supper?” she demanded, severely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He curbed the smile that was twitching at his facial muscles.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, o’ course it ain’t so far,&mdash;only forty-three
+miles&mdash;still&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Forty-three miles to the post-office?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, ma’am, only forty-three. If you’ll excuse me this time&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Is it really forty-three?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He saw that her sudden smile had brought out the dimples in the oval face and
+that her petulance had been swept away by his astounding information.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Forty-three, sure as shootin’, except twict a week when it comes to Slauson’s,
+and that’s only twenty miles,” he assured her. “Used to be seventy-two, but the
+Government got busy with its rural free delivery, and now we get it right at
+our doors.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You must have big doors,” she laughed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“All out o’ doors,” he punned. “Y’u see, our house is under our hat, and like
+as not that’s twenty miles from the ranchhouse when night falls.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Dear me!” She swept his graceful figure sarcastically. “And, of course, twenty
+miles from a brush, too.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He laughed with deep delight at her thrust, for the warm youth in him did not
+ask for pointed wit on the part of a young woman so attractive and with a
+manner so delightfully provoking.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I expaict I have gathered up some scenery on the journey. I’ll go brush it off
+and get ready for supper. I’d admire to sit beside y’u and pass the butter and
+the hash if y’u don’t object. Y’u see, I don’t often meet up with ladies, and
+I’d ought to improve my table manners when I get a chanct with one so much
+older than I am and o’ course so much more experienced.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I see you don’t intend to pass any honey with the hash,” she flashed, with a
+glimpse of the pearls.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>Didn’t</i> y’u say y’u was older than me? I believe I’ve plumb forgot how
+old y’u said y’u was, Miss Darling.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Your memory’s such a sieve it wouldn’t be worth while telling you. After
+you’ve been to school a while longer maybe I’ll try you again.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Some ladies like ’em young,” he suggested, amiably.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But full grown,” she amended.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do y’u judge by my looks or my ways?” he inquired, anxiously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“By both.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s right strange,” he mused aloud. “For judging by some of your ways
+you’re the spinster Miss Messiter was telling me about, but judging by your
+looks y’u’re only the prettiest and sassiest twenty-year-old in Wyoming.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And with this shot he fled, to see what transformation he could effect with the
+aid of a whiskbroom, a tin pan of alkali water and a roller towel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When she met him at the supper table her first question was, “Did Miss Messiter
+say I was an old maid?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Sho! I wouldn’t let that trouble me if I was y’u. A woman ain’t any older than
+she looks. Your age don’t show to speak of.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But did she?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I reckon she laid a trap for me and I shoved my paw in. She wanted to give me
+a pleasant surprise.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t y’u grow anxious about being an old maid. There ain’t any in Wyoming to
+speak of. If y’u like I’ll tell the boys you’re worried and some of them will
+be Johnnie-on-the-Spot. They’re awful gallant, cowpunchers are.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Some of them may be,” she differed. “If you want to know I’m just twenty-one.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He sawed industriously at his steak. “Y’u don’t say! Just old enough to
+vote&mdash;like this steer was before they massacreed him.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She gave him one look, and thereafter punished him with silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They left Gimlet Butte early next morning and reached the Lazy D shortly after
+noon on the succeeding day. McWilliams understood perfectly that strenuous
+competition would inevitably ensue as soon as the Lazy D beheld the attraction
+he had brought into their midst. Nor did he need a phrenologist to tell him
+that Nora was a born flirt and that her shy slant glances were meant to
+penetrate tough hides to tender hearts. But this did not discourage him, and he
+set about making his individual impression while he had her all to himself. He
+wasn’t at all sure how deep this went, but he had the satisfaction of hearing
+his first name, the one she had told him she had no need of, fall tentatively
+from her pretty lips before the other boys caught a glimpse of her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Shortly after his arrival at the ranch Mac went to make his report to his
+mistress of some business matters connected with the trip.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I see you got back safely with the old lady,” she laughed when she caught
+sight of him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His look reproached her. “Y’u said a spinster.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But it was you that insisted on the rheumatism. By the way, did you ask her
+about it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We didn’t get that far,” he parried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh! How far did you get?” She perched herself on the porch railing and mocked
+him with her friendly eyes. Her heart was light within her and she was ready
+for anything in the way of fun, for the doctor had just pronounced her patient
+out of danger if he took proper care of himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“About as fur as I got with y’u, ma’am,” he audaciously retorted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We might disagree as to how far that is,” she flung back gayly with heightened
+color.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, ma’am, I don’t think we would.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But, gracious! You’re not a Mormon. You don’t want us both, do you?” she
+demanded, her eyes sparkling with the exhilaration of the tilt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Could I get either one of y’u, do y’u reckon? That’s what’s worrying me.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I see, and so you intend to keep us both on the string.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His joyous laughter echoed hers. “I expaict y’u would call that presumption or
+some other dictionary word, wouldn’t y’u?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“In anybody else perhaps, but surely not in Mr. McWilliams.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m awful glad to be trotting in a class by myself.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And you’ll let us know when you have made your mind up which of us it is to
+be?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, mine ain’t the only mind that has to be made up,” he drawled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She took this up gleefully. “I can’t answer for Nora, but I’ll jump at the
+chance&mdash;if you decide to give it to me.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He laughed delightedly into the hat he was momentarily expecting to put on.
+“I’ll mill it over a spell and let y’u know, ma’am.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, think it over from all points of view. Of course she is prettier, but
+then I’m not afflicted with rheumatism and probably wouldn’t flirt as much
+afterward. I have a good temper, too, as a rule, but then so has Nora.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, she’s prettier, is she?” With boyish audacity he grinned at her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What do you think?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He shook his head. “I’ll have to go to the foot of the class on that, ma’am.
+Give me an easier one.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll have to choose another subject then. What did you do about that bunch of
+Circle 66 cows you looked at on your way in?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They discussed business for a few minutes, after which she went back to her
+patient and he to his work.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ain’t she a straight-up little gentleman for fair?” the foreman asked himself
+in rhetorical and exuberant question, slapping his hat against his leg as he
+strode toward the corral. “Think of her coming at me like she did, the blamed
+little thoroughbred. Y’u bet she knows me down to the ground and how sudden I
+got over any fool notions I might a-started to get in my cocoanut. But the way
+she came back at me, quick as lightning and then some, pretendin’ all that
+foolishness and knowin’ all the time I’d savez the game.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Both McWilliams and his mistress had guessed right in their surmise as to Nora
+Darling’s popularity in the cow country. She made an immediate and pronounced
+hit. It was astonishing how many errands the men found to take them to “the
+house,” as they called the building where the mistress of the ranch dwelt.
+Bannister served for a time as an excellent excuse. Judging from the number of
+the inquiries which the men found it necessary to make as to his progress,
+Helen would have guessed him exceedingly popular with her riders. Having a
+sense of humor, she mentioned this to McWilliams one day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He laughed, and tried to turn it into a compliment to his mistress. But she
+would have none of it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I know better, sir. They don’t come here to see me. Nora is the attraction,
+and I have sense enough to know it. My nose is quite out of joint,” she
+laughed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mac looked with gay earnestness at the feature she had mentioned. “There’s a
+heap of difference in noses,” he murmured, apparently apropos of nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s another way of telling me that Nora’s pug is the sweetest thing you
+ever saw,” she charged.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I ain’t half such a bad actor as some of the boys,” he deprecated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Meaning in what way?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The Nora Darling way.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He pronounced her name so much as if it were a caress that his mistress
+laughed, and he joined in it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s your fickleness that is breaking my heart, though I knew I was lost as
+soon as I saw your beatific look on the day you got back with Nora. The first
+week I came none of you could do enough for me. Now it’s all Nora, darling.”
+She mimicked gayly his intonation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, ma’am, it’s this way,” explained the foreman with a grin. “Y’u’re right
+pleasant and friendly, but the boys have got a savvy way down deep that y’u’d
+shuck that friendliness awful sudden if any of them dropped around with
+‘Object, Matrimony’ in their manner. Consequence is, they’re loaded down to the
+ground with admiration of their boss, but they ain’t presumptuous enough to
+expaict any more. I had notions, mebbe, I’d cut more ice, me being not
+afflicted with bashfulness. My notions faded, ma’am, in about a week.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then Nora came?” she laughed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, ma’am, they had gone glimmering long before she arrived. I was just
+convalescent enough to need being cheered up when she drapped in.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And are you cheered up yet?” his mistress asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He took off his dusty hat and scratched his head. “I ain’t right certain, yet,
+ma’am. Soon as I know I’m consoled, I’ll be round with an invite to the
+wedding.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That is, if you are.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If I am&mdash;yes. Y’u can’t most always tell when they have eyes like hers.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’re quite an authority on the sex considering your years.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, ma’am.” He looked aggrieved, thinking himself a man grown. “How did y’u
+say Mr. Bannister was?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Wait, and I’ll send Nora out to tell you,” she flashed, and disappeared in the
+house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Conversation at the bunkhouse and the chucktent sometimes circled around the
+young women at the house, but its personality rarely grew pronounced.
+References to Helen Messiter and the housemaid were usually by way of repartee
+at each other. For a change had come over the spirit of the Lazy D men, and,
+though a cheerful profanity still flowed freely when they were alone together,
+vulgarity was largely banished.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The morning after his conversation with Miss Messiter, McWilliams was washing
+in the foreman’s room when the triangle beat the call for breakfast, and he
+heard the cook’s raucous “Come and get it.” There was the usual stampede for
+the tent, and a minute later Mac flung back the flap and entered. He took the
+seat at the head of the table, along the benches on both sides of which the
+punchers were plying busy knives and forks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A stack of chips,” ordered the foreman; and the cook’s “Coming up” was
+scarcely more prompt than the plate of hot cakes he set before the young man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hen fruit, sunny side up,” shouted Reddy, who was further advanced in his
+meal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Tame that fog-horn, son,” advised Wun Hop; but presently he slid three fried
+eggs from a frying-pan into the plate of the hungry one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I want y’u boys to finish flankin’ that bunch of hill calves to-day,” said the
+foreman, emptying half a jug of syrup over his cakes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Redtop, he ain’t got no appetite these days,” grinned Denver, as the gentleman
+mentioned cleaned up a second loaded plate of ham, eggs and fried potatoes. “I
+see him studying a Wind River Bible* yesterday. Curious how in the spring a
+young man’s fancy gits to wandering on house furnishing. Red, he was taking the
+catalogue alphabetically. Carpets was absorbin’ his attention, chairs on deck,
+and chandeliers in the hole, as we used to say when we was baseball kids.”
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[* A Wind River Bible in the Northwest ranch country is a catalogue of one of
+the big Chicago department stores that does a large shipping business in the
+West.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ain’t a word of truth in it,” indignantly denied the assailed, his unfinished
+nose and chin giving him a pathetic, whipped puppy look. “Sho! I was just
+looking up saddles. Can’t a fellow buy a new saddle without asking leave of
+Denver?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Cyarpets used to begin with a C in my spelling-book, but saddles got off right
+foot fust with a S,” suggested Mac amiably.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He was ce’tainly trying to tree his saddle among the C’s. He was looking awful
+loving at a Turkish rug. Reckon he thought it was a saddle-blanket,” derided
+Denver cheerfully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Huh! Y’u’re awful smart, Denver,” retaliated Reddy, his complexion matching
+his hair. “Y’u talk a heap with your mouth. Nobody believes a word of what y’u
+say.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Denver relaxed into a range song by way of repartee:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+“I want mighty bad to be married,<br/>
+    To have a garden and a home;<br/>
+I ce’tainly aim to git married,<br/>
+    And have a gyurl for my own.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Aw! Y’u fresh guys make me tired. Y’u don’t devil me a bit, not a bit. Whyfor
+should I care what y’u say? I guess this outfit ain’t got no surcingle on me.”
+Nevertheless, he made a hurried end of his breakfast and flung out of the tent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u boys hadn’t ought to wound Reddy’s tender feelings, and him so bent on
+matrimony!” said Denver innocently. “Get a move on them fried spuds and sashay
+them down this way, if there’s any left when y’u fill your plate, Missou.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nor was Reddy the only young man who had dreams those days at the Lazy D. Cupid
+must have had his hands full, for his darts punctured more than one honest
+plainsman’s heart. The reputation of the young women at the Lazy D seemed to
+travel on the wings of the wind, and from far and near Cattleland sent devotees
+to this shrine of youth and beauty. So casually the victims drifted in, always
+with a good business excuse warranted to endure raillery and sarcasm, that it
+was impossible to say they had come of set purpose to sun themselves in
+feminine smiles.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As for Nora, it is not too much to say that she was having the time of her
+life. Detroit, Michigan, could offer no such field for her expansive charms as
+the Bighorn country, Wyoming. Here she might have her pick of a hundred, and
+every one of them picturesquely begirt with flannel shirt, knotted scarf at
+neck, an arsenal that bristled, and a sun-tan that could be achieved only in
+the outdoors of the Rockies. Certainly these knights of the saddle radiated a
+romance with which even her floorwalker “gentleman friend” could not compete.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap10"></a>CHAPTER X.<br/>
+A SHEPHERD OF THE DESERT</h2>
+
+<p>
+It had been Helen Messiter’s daily custom either to take a ride on her pony or
+a spin in her motor car, but since Bannister had been quartered at the Lazy D
+her time had been so fully occupied that she had given this up for the present.
+The arrival of Nora Darling, however, took so much work off her hands that she
+began to continue her rides and drives.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her patient was by this time so far recovered that he did not need her constant
+attendance and there were reasons why she decided it best to spend only a
+minimum of her time with him. These had to do with her increasing interest in
+the man and the need she felt to discourage it. It had come to a pretty pass,
+she told herself scornfully, when she found herself inventing excuses to take
+her into the room where this most picturesque of unhanged scamps was lying.
+Most good women are at heart puritans, and if Helen was too liberal to judge
+others narrowly she could be none the less rigid with herself. She might talk
+to him of her duty, but it was her habit to be frank in thought and she knew
+that something nearer than that abstraction had moved her efforts in his
+behalf. She had fought for his life because she loved him. She could deny it no
+longer. Nor was the shame with which she confessed it unmingled with pride. He
+was a man to compel love, one of the mood imperative, chain-armored in the
+outdoor virtues of strength and endurance and stark courage. Her abasement
+began only where his superlation ended. That a being so godlike in equipment
+should have been fashioned without a soul, and that she should have given her
+heart to him. This was the fount of her degradation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was of these things she thought as she drove in the late afternoon toward
+those Antelope Peaks he had first pointed out to her. She swept past the scene
+of the battle and dipped down into the plains for a run to that western horizon
+behind the jagged mountain line of which the sun was radiantly setting in a
+splash of glorious colors. Lost in thought, space slipped under her wheels
+unnoticed. Not till her car refused the spur and slowed to a despondent halt
+did she observe that velvet night was falling over the land.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She prowled round the machine after the fashion of the motorist, examining
+details that might be the cause of the trouble. She discovered soon enough with
+instant dismay that the gasolene tank was empty. Reddy, always unreliable, must
+have forgotten to fill it when she told him to.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By the road she must be thirty miles from home if she were a step; across
+country as the crow flies, perhaps twenty. She was a young woman of resolution,
+and she wasted no time in tears or regrets. The XIX ranch, owned by a small
+“nester” named Henderson, could not be more than five or six miles to the
+southeast. If she struck across the hills she would be sure to run into one of
+the barblines. At the XIX she could get a horse and reach the Lazy D by
+midnight. Without any hesitation she struck out. It was unfortunate that she
+did not have on her heavy laced high boots, but she realized that she must take
+things as she found them. Things might have been a good deal worse, she
+reflected philosophically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And before long they were worse, for the increasing darkness blotted out the
+landmarks she was using as guides and she was lost among the hill waves that
+rolled one after another across the range. Still she did not give way, telling
+herself that it would be better after the moon was up. She could then tell
+north from south, and so have a line by which to travel. But when at length the
+stars came out, thousands upon thousands of them, and looked down on a land
+magically flooded with chill moonlight, the girl found that the transformation
+of Wyoming into this sense of silvery loveliness had toned the distant mountain
+line to an indefinite haze that made it impossible for her to distinguish one
+peak from another.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She wandered for hours, hungry and tired and frightened, though this last she
+would not confess.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There’s nothing to be afraid of,” she told herself over and over. “Even if I
+have to stay out all night it will do me no harm. There’s no need to be a baby
+about it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But try to evade it as she would, there was something in the loneliness of this
+limitless stretch of hilltop that got on her nerves. The very shadows cast by
+the moonshine seemed too fantastic for reality. Something eerie and unearthly
+hovered over it all, and before she knew it a sob choked up her throat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vague fancies filtered through her mind, weird imaginings born of the night in
+a mind that had been swept from the moorings of reason. So that with no
+sensible surprise there came to her in that moonlit sea of desert the sound of
+a voice a clear sweet tenor swelling bravely in song with the very ecstacy of
+pathos.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the prison song from “Il Trovatore,” and the desolation of its lifted
+appeal went to the heart like water to the roots of flowers.
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+Ah! I have sigh’d to rest me.<br/>
+Deep in the quiet grave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girl’s sob caught in her breast, stilled with the awe of that heavenly
+music. So for an instant she waited before it was borne in on her that the
+voice was a human one, and that the heaven from which it descended was the
+hilltop above her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A wild laugh, followed by an oath, cut the dying echoes of the song. She could
+hear the swish of a quirt falling again and again, and the sound of trampling
+hoofs thudding on the hard, sun-cracked ground. Startled, she sprang to her
+feet, and saw silhouetted against the skyline a horse and his rider fighting
+for mastery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The battle was superb while it lasted. The horse had been a famous outlaw,
+broken to the saddle by its owner out of the sheer passion for victory, but
+there were times when its savage strength rebelled at abject submission, and
+this was one of them. It swung itself skyward, and came down like a
+pile-driver, camel-backed, and without joints in the legs. Swiftly it rose
+again lunging forward and whirling in the air, then jarred down at an angle.
+The brute did its malevolent best, a fury incarnate. But the ride, was a match,
+and more than a match, for it. He sat the saddle like a Centaur, with the
+perfect: unconscious grace of a born master, swaying in his seat as need was,
+and spurring the horse to a blinder fury.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sudden as had been the start, no less sudden was the finish of the battle. The
+bronco pounded to a stiff-legged standstill, trembled for a long minute like an
+aspen, and sank to a tame surrender, despite the sharp spurs roweling its
+bloody sides.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ah, my beauty. You’ve had enough, have you?” demanded the cruel, triumphant
+voice of the rider. “You would try that game, would you? I’ll teach you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Stop spurring that horse, you bully.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man stopped, in sheer amazement at this apparition which had leaped out of
+the ground almost at his feet. His wary glance circled the hills to make sure
+she was alone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ce’tainly, ma’am. We’re sure delighted to meet up with you. Ain’t we,
+Two-step?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For himself, he spoke the simple truth. He lived in his sensations, spurring
+himself to fresh ones as he had but just now been spurring his horse to sate
+the greed of conquest in him. And this high-spirited, gallant creature&mdash;he
+could feel her vital courage in the very ring of her voice&mdash;offered a rare
+fillip to his jaded appetite. The dusky, long-lashed eyes which always give a
+woman an effect of beauty, the splendid fling of head, and the piquant, finely
+cut features, with their unconscious tale of Brahmin caste, the long lines of
+the supple body, willowy and yet plump as a partridge&mdash;they went to his
+head like strong wine. Here was an adventure from the gods&mdash;a stubborn
+will to bend, the pride of a haughty young beauty to trail in the dust, her
+untamed heart to break if need be. The lust of the battle was on him already.
+She was a woman to dream about,
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+“Sweeter than the lids of Juno’s eyes,<br/>
+Or Cytherea’s breath,”
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+he told himself exultantly as he slid from his horse and stood bowing before
+her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And he, for his part, was a taking enough picture of devil-may-care gallantry
+gone to seed. The touch of jaunty impudence in his humility, not less than the
+daring admiration of his handsome eyes and the easy, sinuous grace of his
+flexed muscles, labeled him what he was&mdash;a man bold and capable to do what
+he willed, and a villain every inch of him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Said she, after that first clash of stormy eyes with bold, admiring ones:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I am lost&mdash;from the Lazy D ranch.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why, no, you’re found,” he corrected, white teeth flashing in a smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My motor ran out of gasolene this afternoon. I’ve been”&mdash;there was a
+catch in her voice&mdash;“wandering ever since.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’re played out, of course, and y’u’ve had no supper,” he said, his quiet
+close gaze on her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, I’m played out and my nerve’s gone.” She laughed a little hysterically.
+“I expect I’m hungry and thirsty, too, though I hadn’t noticed it before.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He whirled to his saddle, and had the canteen thongs unloosed in a moment.
+While she drank he rummaged from his saddle-bags some sandwiches of jerky and a
+flask of whiskey. She ate the sandwiches, he the while watching her with amused
+sympathy in his swarthy countenance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You ain’t half-bad at the chuck-wagon, Miss Messiter,” he told her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stopped, the sandwich part way to her mouth. “I don’t remember your face.
+I’ve met so many people since I came to the Lazy D. Still, I think I should
+remember you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He immediately relieved of duty her quasi apology. “You haven’t seen <i>my
+face</i> before,” he laughed, and, though she puzzled over the double meaning
+that seemed to lurk behind his words and amuse him, she could not find the key
+to it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was too dark to make out his features at all clearly, but she was sure she
+had seen him before or somebody that looked very much like him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Life on the range ain’t just what y’u can call exciting,” he continued, “and
+when a young lady fresh from back East drops among us while sixguns are
+popping, breaks up a likely feud and mends right neatly all the ventilated
+feudists it’s a corollary to her fun that’s she is going to become famous.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What he said was true enough. The unsolicited notoriety her exploit had brought
+upon her had been its chief penalty. Garbled versions of it had appeared with
+fake pictures in New York and Chicago Sunday supplements, and all Cattleland
+had heard and discussed it. No matter into what unfrequented cañon she rode,
+some silent cowpuncher would look at her as they met with admiring eyes behind
+which she read a knowledge of the story. It was a lonely desolate country, full
+of the wide deep silences of utter emptiness, yet there could be no footfall
+but the whisper of it was bruited on the wings of the wind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do you know where the Lazy D ranch is from here?” she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He nodded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Can you take me home?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I surely can. But not to-night. You’re more tired than y’u know. We’ll camp
+here, and in the mo’ning we’ll hit the trail bright and early.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This did not suit her at all. “Is it far to the Lazy D?” she inquired
+anxiously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Every inch of forty miles. There’s a creek not more than two hundred yards
+from here. We’ll stay there till morning,” he made answer in a matter of course
+voice, leading the way to the place he had mentioned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She followed, protesting. Yet though it was not in accord with her civilized
+sense of fitness, she knew that what he proposed was the common sense solution.
+She was tired and worn out, and she could see that his broncho had traveled
+far.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Having reached the bank of the creek, he unsaddled, watered his horse and
+picketed it, and started a fire. Uneasily she watched him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t like to sleep out. Isn’t there a ranchhouse near?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u wouldn’t call it near by the time we had reached it. What’s to hinder your
+sleeping here? Isn’t this room airy enough? And don’t y’u like the system of
+lighting? ’Twas patented I forget how many million years ago. Y’u ain’t going
+to play parlor girl now after getting the reputation y’u’ve got for gameness,
+are y’u?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he knew well enough that it was no silly schoolgirl fear she had, but some
+deep instinct in her that distrusted him and warned her to beware. So, lightly
+he took up the burden of the talk while he gathered cottonwood branches for the
+fire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Now if I’d only thought to bring a load of lumber and some
+carpenters&mdash;and a chaperon,” he chided himself in burlesque, his bold eyes
+closely on the girl’s face to gloat on the color that flew to her cheeks at his
+suggestion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She hastened to disclaim lightly the feeling he had unmasked in her. “It is a
+pity, but it can’t be helped now. I suppose I am cross and don’t seem very
+grateful. I’m tired out and nervous, but I am sure that I’ll enjoy sleeping
+out. If I don’t I shall not be so ungenerous as to blame you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He soon had a cup of steaming coffee ready for her, and the heat of it made a
+new woman of her. She sat in the warm fire glow, and began to feel stealing
+over her a delightful reaction of languor. She told herself severely it was
+ridiculous to have been so foolishly prim about the inevitable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Since you know my name, isn’t it fair that I should know yours?” she smilingly
+asked, more amiably than she had yet spoken to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, since I have found the lamb that was lost, y’u may call me a shepherd of
+the desert.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then, Mr. Shepherd, I’m very glad to meet you. I don’t remember when I ever
+was more glad to meet a stranger.” And she added with a little laugh: “It’s a
+pity I’m too sleepy to do my duty by you in a social way.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We’ll let that wait till to-morrow. Y’u’ll entertain me plenty then. I’ll make
+your bunk up right away.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was presently lying with her feet to the fire, snugly rolled in his saddle
+blankets. But though her eyes were heavy, her brain was still too active to
+permit her to sleep immediately. The excitement of her adventure was too near,
+the emotions of the day too poignantly vivid, to lose their hold on her at
+once. For the first time in her life she lay lapped in the illimitable velvet
+night, countless unwinking stars lighting the blue-black dream in which she
+floated. The enchantment of the night’s loveliness swept through her sensitive
+pulses and thrilled her with the mystery of the great life of which she was an
+atom. Awe held her a willing captive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She thought of many things, of her past life and its incongruity with the
+present, of the man who lay wounded at the Lazy D, of this other
+wide-shouldered vagabond who was just now in the shadows beyond the firelight,
+pacing up and down with long, light even strides as he looked to his horse and
+fed the fire. She watched him make an end of the things he found to do and then
+take his place opposite her. Who and what was he, this fascinating scamp who
+one moment flooded the moonlit desert with inspired snatches from the opera
+sung in the voice of an angel, and the next lashed at his horse like a devil
+incarnate? How reconcile the outstanding inconsistencies in him? For his every
+inflection, every motion, proclaimed the strain of good blood gone wrong and
+trampled under foot of set, sardonic purpose, indicated him a man of culture in
+a hell of his own choosing. Lounging on his elbow in the flickering shadows, so
+carelessly insouciant in every picturesque inch of him, he seemed to radiate
+the melodrama of the untamed frontier, just as her guest of tarnished
+reputation now at the ranch seemed to breathe forth its romance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Sleep well, little partner. Don’t be afraid; nothing can harm you,” this man
+had told her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Promptly she had answered, “I’m not afraid, thank you, in the least”; and after
+a moment had added, not to seem hostile, “Good night, big partner.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But despite her calm assurance she knew she did not feel so entirely safe as if
+it had been one of her own ranch boys on the other side of the fire, or even
+that other vagabond who had made so direct an appeal to her heart. If she were
+not afraid, at least she knew some vague hint of anxiety.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was still thinking of him when she fell asleep, and when she awakened the
+first sound that fell on her ears was his tuneful whistle. Indeed she had an
+indistinct memory of him in the night, wrapping the blankets closer about her
+when the chill air had half stirred her from her slumber. The day was still
+very young, but the abundant desert light dismissed sleep summarily. She shook
+and brushed the wrinkles out of her clothes and went down to the creek to wash
+her face with the inadequate facilities at hand. After redressing her hair she
+returned to the fire, upon which a coffee pot was already simmering.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She came up noiselessly behind him, but his trained senses were apprised of her
+approach.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Good mo’ning! How did y’u find your bedroom?” he asked, without turning from
+the bacon he was broiling on the end of a stick.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Quite up to the specifications. With all Wyoming for a floor and the sky for a
+ceiling, I never had a room I liked better. But have you eyes in the back of
+your head?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He laughed grimly. “I have to be all eyes and ears in my business.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Is your business of a nature so sensitive?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“As much so as stocks on Wall Street. And we haven’t any ticker to warn us to
+get under cover. Do you take cream in your coffee, Miss Messiter?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked round in surprise. “Cream?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We’re in tin-can land, you know, and live on air-tights. I milk my cow with a
+can-opener. Let me recommend this quail on toast.” He handed her a battered tin
+plate, and prepared to help her from the frying-pan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I suppose that is another name for pork?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, really. I happened to bag a couple of hooters before you wakened.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’re a missionary of the good-foods movement. I shall name your mission St.
+Sherry’s-in-the-Wilderness.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ah, Sherry’s! That’s since my time. I don’t suppose I should know my way about
+in little old New York now.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She found him eager to pick up again the broken strands that had connected him
+with the big world from which he had once come. It had been long since she had
+enjoyed a talk more, for he expressed himself with wit and dexterity. But
+through her enjoyment ran a note of apprehension. He was for the moment a
+resurrected gentleman. But what would he be next? She had an insistent memory
+of a heavenly flood of music broken by a horrible discord of raucous oaths.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was he that lingered over their breakfast, loath to make the first move to
+bring him back into realities; and it was she that had to suggest the need of
+setting out. But once on his feet, he saddled and packed swiftly, with a
+deftness born of experience.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We’ll have to ask Two-step to carry double to-day,” he said, as he helped her
+to a place behind him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Two-step had evidently made an end of the bronco spree upon which he had been
+the evening before, for he submitted sedately to his unusual burden. The first
+hilltop they reached had its surprise to offer the girl. In a little valley
+below them, scarce a mile away, nestled a ranch with its corrals and buildings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Look!” she exclaimed; and then swiftly, “Didn’t you know it was there?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, that’s the Hilke place,” he answered with composure. “It hasn’t been
+occupied for years.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Isn’t that some one crossing to the corral now?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No. A stray cow, I reckon.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They dropped into a hollow between the hills and left the ranch on their left.
+She was not satisfied, and yet she had not grounds enough upon which to base a
+suspicion. For surely the figure she had seen had been that of a man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He let his horse take it easy, except when some impulse of mischief stirred him
+to break into a canter so as to make the girl put her arm round his waist for
+support. They stopped about noon by a stream in a cañon defile to lunch and
+rest the pony.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t remember this place at all. Are we near home?” she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“About five miles. I reckon you’re right tired. It’s an unhandy way to ride.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Every mile took them deeper into the mountains, through winding cañons and over
+unsuspected trails, and the girl’s uneasiness increased with the wildness of
+the country.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Are you <i>sure</i> we’re going the right way? I Don’t think we can be,” she
+suggested more than once.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Dead sure,” he answered the last time, letting Two-step turn into a blind draw
+opening from sheer cañon walls.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A hundred feet from the entrance they rode round a great slide of rock into a
+tiny valley containing a group of buildings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He swung from the horse and offered a hand to help her dismount.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A reckless, unholy light burned in his daring eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Home at last, Miss Messiter. Let me offer you a thousand welcomes.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An icy hand seemed to clutch at her heart. “Home! What do you mean? This isn’t
+the Lazy D.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Not at all. The Lazy D is sixty miles from here. This is where I hang
+out&mdash;and you, for the present.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But&mdash;I don’t understand. How dare you bring me here?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The desire for your company, Miss Messiter, made of me a Lochinvar.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She saw, with a shiver, that the ribald eyes were mocking her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Take me back this instant&mdash;this instant,” she commanded, but her
+imperious voice was not very sure of itself. “Take me home at once, you liar.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I expect you don’t quite understand,” he exclaimed, with gentle derision.
+“You’re a prisoner of war, Miss Messiter.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And who are you?” she faltered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But before he spoke she found an answer to her question, found it by a flash of
+divination she could never afterward explain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’re the man I met at Fraser’s dance&mdash;the man they call the King of the
+Bighorn country.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He accepted identification with an elaborate bow. “Correct, ma’am. I’m Ned
+Bannister the king.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An instant before she had been sitting rigid with a face of startled fear, but
+as he spoke a great wave of joy beat into her heart. For if this man were the
+terror of the country the one she had left wounded at her house could not be.
+She forgot that she was herself in peril, forgot everything in the swift
+conviction that the man she loved was an honest gentleman and worthy of her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man standing by the horse could not understand the light that had so
+immediately leaped to her eyes. Even <i>his</i> vanity hesitated at the obvious
+deduction that she had already succumbed to his attractions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But I don’t understand-0that isn’t your real name, is it? I know another man
+who calls himself Ned Bannister.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He laughed scornfully. “My cousin, the sheepherder. Yes, that’s his name, too.
+We both have a right to it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Your cousin?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The familiarity in him that had been haunting her all day and that had deceived
+her at the dance was now explained. It was her lover of which this man reminded
+her. Now that she had been given the clue she could trace kinship in manner,
+gait and appearance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m not proud of my mealy-mouthed namesake,” he replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nor he of you, I am sure,” she quickly answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I dare say not. But won’t y’u ’light, Miss Messiter?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She slipped immediately to the ground beside him. Her eyes looked him over with
+quiet scorn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“From first to last you have done nothing but lie to me. When we were out last
+night you knew that ranch was close at hand. You lied to me again when you said
+it was deserted.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Very well. We’ll say I lied, though it’s not a nice word in so pretty a mouth,
+as yours, Miss Messiter. Y’u ought to read up again the fable about the toads
+dropping from the beautiful lady’s lips.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What’s your object? What do you expect to gain by it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Up to date I’ve gained a right interesting guest. Y’u will be diverting
+enough. With so charming a lady visiting me I’m not worrying about getting
+bored.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“So you war on women, you coward.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The change in him was instantaneous. It was as if a thousand years of
+civilization had been sponged out in an eyebeat. He stood before her a savage
+primeval, his tight-lipped smile cruel in its triumph.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Did I begin this fight? Didn’t y’u and your punchers try to balk me by taking
+that sheep-herder from me after I had bagged him? That was your hour. By God,
+this is mine! I’ll teach y’u it isn’t safe to interfere with me. What I want I
+get one way or another, and don’t y’u forget it, my girl.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was afraid to the very marrow of her. But she would not show her fear, nor
+could he read it in the slim superb erectness with which she gave him defiance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You coward!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s twice you’ve called me that,” he cried, his face flushing darkly and
+his eyes glittering.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’ll crawl on your knees to me and beg pardon before I’m through with y’u,
+my beauty. Y’u’ll learn to lick the hand that strikes y’u. You’re
+mine&mdash;mine to do with as I please. Don’t forget that for a moment. I’ll
+break your spirit or I’ll break your heart.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His ferocity appalled her, but her brave eyes held their own. With an oath he
+turned on his heel and struck the palms of his hands together. An Indian squaw
+came running from one of the cabins. He flung at her a sentence or two in the
+native tongue and pointed at his captive. She asked a question impassively and
+he jabbed out a threat. The squaw nodded her head, and motioned to the girl to
+follow her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Helen Messiter was alone in the room that was to serve as her prison she
+sank into a chair and covered her face with her hands in a despair that was for
+the moment utter.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap11"></a>CHAPTER XI.<br/>
+A RESCUE</h2>
+
+<p>
+Helen Messiter was left alone until darkness fell, when the Cheyenne squaw
+brought in a kerosene lamp and shortly afterward her supper. The woman either
+could not or would not speak English, and her only answer to her captive’s
+advances was by sullen grunts. At the expiration of half an hour she returned
+for the dishes, locking the door after her when she left.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The room itself was comfortable enough. It was evidently Bannister’s own,
+judging from its contents. Two or three rifles hung in racks. On top of the
+bookcase was a half-filled tobacco pouch and several pipes, all of them lying
+carelessly on a pile of music which ran from Verdi to ragtime. In his books she
+found the same shallow catholicity. Side by side with Montaigne’s “Essays,” a
+well-worn Villon in thé original, Stevenson’s “Letters” and “Anna Karenina,”
+dozens of paper-covered novels, mostly the veriest trash, held their
+disreputable own. Some of them were French, others detective stories, still
+others melodramatic tales of love. The piano was an expensive one, but not in
+the best of tune. Everything in the room contributed to the effect of capacity
+untempered by discipline and discrimination. Plainly he was a man of taste who
+had outraged and deadened his power of differentiation by abuse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For Helen the silent night was alive with alarms. The moaning of the wind, the
+slightest rustle outside, the creaking of a board, were enough to set her heart
+wildly beating. She did not undress, but by the light of her dim, ragged wick
+sought for composure from the pages of Montaigne and Stevenson. When the first
+gray day streaks came she was still reading, but with their coming she blew out
+her light and lay down. She fell asleep at once, and it was five hours later
+that the knock of her attendant awakened her from heavy slumber.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With the bright sunlit day she was again mistress of her nerves, prepared to
+meet resolutely whatever danger might confront her. But the morning passed
+quietly enough, and after lunch the Indian woman led her into the little valley
+promenade in front of the buildings and sat down on a rock while her captive
+enjoyed the sunshine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The course of Helen’s saunterings took her toward the rock slide that made the
+gateway of the valley. She was wondering if it could have been left unguarded,
+when a rough voice warned her back. Looking round, she caught sight of a man
+seated cross-legged on a great boulder. It took only a second glance to certify
+that the man was her former foreman, Judd Morgan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had never seen anything more malevolent than his triumph.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Better stay in the valley, Miss Messiter. Y’u might right easily get lost
+outside,” he jeered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Without reply she turned her back on him and began to retrace her way to the
+house. Stung by her contempt, he sprang up and strode after her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“So y’u won’t speak to me, eh? Think yourself too good to speak to a common
+everyday God damned white man, do y’u?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Apparently she did not know he was on the map. In a fury he caught at her
+shoulder and whirled her round.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Now, by God, do y’u see me? I’m Judd Morgan, the man y’u kicked off the Lazy
+D. I told y’u then y’u were going to be sorry long as y’u lived.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t you dare touch me, you hound!” Her blazing eyes menaced him so fiercely
+that he hesitated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was the sound of a quick, light step running toward them. Morgan half
+turned, was caught in a grip of steel and hurled headlong among a pile of
+broken rocks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u would dare, would y’u?” panted his assailant, passionately, ready to
+obliterate the offender if he showed fight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Morgan got up slowly, his head bleeding from contact with the sharp rocks.
+There was murder in his bloodshot eye, but he knew his master, and after trying
+vainly to face him down he swung away with an oath.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll have to apologize for that coyote, Miss Messiter. These fellows need a
+hint occasionally as to how to behave,” said Bannister.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Your hints are rather forceful, are they not?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I ain’t running a Sunday school,” he admitted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“So I have gathered. I wonder where he learned to bully women,” she mused
+aloud.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Putting it another way, you think there ought to be some one to apologize for
+his master.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was smiling at her without the least rancor, and it came on her with a
+woman’s swift instinct that safety lay in humoring his volatile moods and
+diverting him from those that were dangerous.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Since I’m a prisoner of war I wouldn’t dare think that&mdash;not aloud, at
+least. You might starve me,” she told him, saucily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Still, down in your heart y’u think&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That there is a great deal of difference between master and man. One is a
+gentleman in his best moments; the other is always a ruffian.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had touched his vanity. As he walked beside her she could almost see his
+complacency purr.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m a miscreant, I reckon, but I was a gentleman first.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fortunately he did not see the flash of veiled scorn she shot at him under her
+long lashes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With her breakfast next morning the Cheyenne woman brought a note signed
+“Shepherd-of-the-Desert.” In it Bannister asked permission to pay his respects.
+The girl divined that he was in his better mood, and penciled on his note the
+favor she could scarce refuse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But she was scarcely prepared for the impudent air of jocund spring he brought
+into her prison, the gay assumption of <i>camaraderie</i> so inconsistent with
+the facts. Yet since safety lay in an avoidance of the tragic, she set herself
+to match his mood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At sight of the open Tennyson on the table he laughed and quoted:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+She only said, “The day is dreary.”<br/>
+“He cometh not,” she said.
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+“But, you see, he comes,” he added. “What say, Mariana of the Robbers’ Roost,
+to making a picnic day of it? We’ll climb the Crags and lunch on the summit.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The Crags?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That Matterhorn-shaped peak that begins at our back door. Are you for it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While this mood was uppermost in him she felt reasonably safe. It was a phase
+of him she certainly did not mean to discourage. Besides, she had a youthful
+confidence in her powers that she was loath to give up without an effort to
+find the accessible side of his ruthless heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll try it; but you must help me when we come to the bad places,” she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Sure thing! It’s a deal. You’re a right good mountaineer, I’ll bet.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Thank you ; but you had better save your compliments till I make good,” she
+told him, with the most piquant air of gayety in the world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They started on horseback, following a mountain trail that zigzagged across the
+foothills toward the Crags. He had unearthed somewhere a boy’s saddle that
+suited her very well, and the pony she rode was one of the easiest she had ever
+mounted. At the end of an hour’s ride they left the horses and began the ascent
+on foot. It was a stiff climb, growing steeper as they ascended, but Helen
+Messiter had not tramped over golf links for nothing. She might grow leg
+weary,’ but she would not cry “Enough!” And he, on his part, showed the tactful
+consideration for the resources of her strength he had already taught her to
+expect from that other day’s experience on the plains. It was a very rare hand
+of assistance that he offered her, but often he stopped to admire the beautiful
+view that stretched for many miles below them, in order that she might get a
+minute’s breathing space.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Once he pointed out, far away on the horizon, a bright gleam that caught the
+sunlight like a heliograph.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s the big rock slide back of the Lazy, D,” he explained.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She drew a long breath, and flashed a stealthy look at him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s a long way from here, isn’t it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I didn’t find it so far last time I took the trip&mdash;not the last half of
+the journey, anyhow,” he answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’re very complimentary. I was only wondering whether I could find it if I
+should manage to escape.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stroked his black mustache and smiled gallantly at her. “I reckon I won’t
+let so pretty a prisoner escape.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do you expect me to burden your hospitality forever and a day? Wouldn’t that
+be a little too much of Mariana of the Robbers’ Roost?” she asked, lightly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m willing to risk it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked with half-shut smoldering eyes at her slender exquisiteness, so
+instinct with the vital charm of sex. There was veiled passion in his eyes, but
+there was in them, too, a desire to stand well with her. He meant to win her,
+but if possible he would win with her own reluctant consent. She must bring him
+with hesitant feet a heart surrendered in spite of her pride and flinty
+puritanism. The vanity of the man craved a victory that should be of the spirit
+as well as of the flesh.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Deftly she guided the conversation back to less dangerous channels. In this the
+increasing difficulty of the climb assisted her, for after they reached the
+last ascent sustained talk became impossible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“See that trough above us near the summit?. Y’u’ll have to hang on by your
+eyelashes, pardner.” He always burlesqued the word of comradeship a little to
+soften its familiarity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Dear me! Is it that bad?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It is so bad that at the top y’u have to jump for a grip and draw yourself up
+by your arms.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll never be able to do it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m here to help.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But if one should miss?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He shrugged. “Ah! That’s a theological question. If the sky pilots guess
+right, for y’u heaven and for me hell.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They negotiated the trough successfully to its uptilted end. She had a bad
+moment when he leaped for the rock rim above from the narrow ledge on which
+they stood. But he caught it, drew himself up without the least trouble and
+turned to assist her. He sat down on the rock edge facing the abyss beneath
+them, and told her to lock her hands together above his left foot. Then slowly,
+inch by inch, he drew her up till with one of his hands he could catch her
+wrist. A moment later she was standing on his rigid toes, from which position
+she warily edged to safety above.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well done, little pardner. You’re the first woman ever climbed the Crags.” He
+offered a hand to celebrate the achievement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If I am it is all due to you, big pardner. I could never have made that last
+bit alone.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They ate lunch merrily in the pleasant sunlight, and both of them seemed as
+free from care as a schoolboy on a holiday.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s good to be alive, isn’t it?” he asked her after they had eaten, as he
+lay on the warm ground at her feet. “And what a life it is here! To be riding
+free, with your knees pressing a saddle, in the wind and the sun. There’s
+something in a man to which the wide spaces call. I’d rather lie here in the
+sunbeat with you beside me than be a king. You remember the ‘Last Ride’ that
+fellow Browning tells about? I reckon he’s dead right. If a man could only
+capture his best moments and hold them forever it would be heaven to the
+<i>n</i>th degree.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She studied her sublimated villain with that fascination his vagaries always
+excited in her. Was ever a more impossible combination put together than this
+sentimental scamp with the long record of evil?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Say it,” he laughed.” Whang it out I ask, anything you like, pardner.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pluckily daring, she took him at his word. “I was only wondering at the
+different men I find in you. Before I have known you a dozen hours I discover
+in you the poet and the man of action, the schoolboy and the philosopher, the
+sentimentalist and the cynic, and&mdash;may I say it?&mdash;the gentleman and
+the blackguard. One feels a sense of loss. You should have specialized. You
+would have made such a good soldier, for instance. Pity you didn’t go to West
+Point.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Think so?” He was immensely flattered at her interest in him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes. You surely missed your calling. You were born for a soldier; cavalry, I
+should say. What an ornament to society you would have been if your energies
+had found the right vent! But they didn’t find it&mdash;and you craved
+excitement, I suppose. Perhaps you had to go the way you did.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Therefore I am what I am? Please particularize.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I can’t, because I don’t understand you. But I think this much is true, that
+you have set yourself against all laws of God and man. Yet you are not
+consistent, since you are better than your creed. You tell yourself there shall
+be no law for you but your own will, and you find there is, something in you
+stronger than desire that makes you shrink at many things. You can kill in fair
+fight, but you can’t knife a man in the back, can you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I never have.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You have a dreadfully perverted set of rules, but you play by them. That’s why
+I know I’m safe with you, even when you are at your worst.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She announced this boldly, just as if she had no doubts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, you know you’re safe, do you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Of course I do. You were once a gentleman and you can’t forget it entirely.
+That’s the weakness in your philosophy of total depravity.” “You speak with an
+assurance you don’t always feel, I reckon. And I expect I wouldn’t bank too
+much on those divinations of yours, if I were you.” He rolled over so that he
+could face her more directly. “You’ve been mighty frank, Miss Messiter, and I
+take off my hat to your sand. Now I’m going to be frank awhile. You interest
+me. I never met a woman that interested me so much. But you do a heap more than
+interest me. No, you sit right there and listen. Your cheeky pluck and that
+insolent, indifferent beauty of yours made a hit with me the first minute I saw
+you that night. I swore I’d tame you, and that’s why I brought you to the
+ranch. Your eye flashed a heap too haughty for me to give you the go-by. Mind
+you, I meant to be master. I meant to make you mine as much as that dog that
+licked my hand before we started. What I meant then I still mean, but in a
+different way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s as far as it went with me then, but before we reached here next day I
+knew the thing cut deeper with me. I ain’t saying that I love you, because I’m
+a sweep and it’s just likely I don’t know passion from love. But I’ll tell you
+this&mdash;there hasn’t been a waking moment since then I haven’t been on fire
+to be with you. That’s why I stayed away until I knew I wasn’t so likely to
+slop over. But here, I’m doing it right this minute. I care more for you than I
+do for anything else on this earth. But that makes it worse for you. I never
+cared for anybody without bringing ruin on them. I broke my mother’s heart and
+spoiled the life of a girl I was going to marry. That’s the kind of scoundrel I
+am. Even if I can make you care for me&mdash;and I reckon I can if y’u are like
+other women&mdash;I’ll likely drag you through hell after me.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The simulation of despair in his beautiful eyes spoke more impressively than
+his self-scorning words. She was touched in spite of herself, despite, too, his
+colossal egotism. For there is an appeal about the engaging sinner that drums
+in a woman’s head and calls to her heart. All good women are missionaries in
+the last analysis, and Miss Messiter was not an exception to her sex. Even
+though she knew he was half a fraud and that his emotion was theatric, she
+could not let the moment pass.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She leaned forward, a sweet, shy dignity in her manner. “Is it too late to
+change? Why not begin now? There is still a to-morrcw, and it need not be the
+slave of yesterday. Life for all of us is full of milestones.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And how shall I begin my new career of saintliness?” he asked, with a swift
+return to blithe irony.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The nearest duty. Take me back to my ranch. Begin a life of rigid honesty.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Give you up now that I have found you? That is just the last thing I would
+do,” he cried, with glancing eyes. “No&mdash;no. The clock can’t be turned
+back. I have sowed and I must reap.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He leaped to his feet. “Come! We must be going.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She rose sadly, for she knew the mood of sentimental regret for his wasted life
+had passed, and she had failed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They descended the trough and reached the boulder field that had marked the
+terminal of the glacier. At the farther edge of it the outlaw turned to point
+out to the girl a great bank of snow on a mountainside fifteen miles away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He changed his weight as he turned, when a rock slipped under his foot and he
+came down hard. He was up again in an instant, but Helen Messiter caught the
+sharp intake of his breath when he set foot to the ground.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’ve sprained your ankle!” she cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Afraid so. It’s my own rotten carelessness.” He broke into a storm of curses
+and limped forward a dozen steps, but he had to set his teeth to stand the
+pain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Lean on me,” she said, gently. “I reckon I’ll have to,” he grimly answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They covered a quarter of a mile, with many stops to rest the swollen ankle.
+Only by the irregularity of his breathing and the damp moisture on his forehead
+could she tell the agony he was enduring.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It must be dreadful,” she told him once.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ve got to stand for it, I reckon.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again she said, when they had reached a wooded grove where pines grew splendid
+on a carpet of grass: “Only two hundred yards more. I think I can bring your
+pony as far as the big cottonwood.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She noticed that he leaned heavier and heavier on her. However, when they
+reached the cottonwood he leaned no more, but pitched forward in a faint. The
+water bottle was empty, but she ran down to where the ponies had been left, and
+presently came back with his canteen. She had been away perhaps twenty minutes,
+and when she came back he waved a hand airily at her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“First time in my life that ever happened,” he apologized, gayly. “But why
+didn’t y’u get on Jim and cut loose for the Lazy D while you had the chance?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I didn’t think of it. Perhaps I shall next time.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I shouldn’t. Y’u see, I’d follow you and bring you back. And if I didn’t find
+you there would be a lamb lost again in these hills.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The sporting thing would be to take a chance.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And leave me here alone? Well, I’m going to give you a show to take it.” He
+handed her his revolver. “Y’u may need this if you’re going traveling.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Are you telling me to go?” she asked, amazed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m telling you to do as you think best. Y’u may take a hike or y’u may bring
+back Two-step to me. Suit yourself.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I tell you plainly, I sha’n’t come back.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And I’m sure y’u will.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But I won’t. The thing’s absurd. Would you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, I shouldn’t. But y’u will.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I won’t. Good-bye.” She held out her hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He shook his head, looking steadily at her. “What’s the use? You’ll be back in
+half an hour.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Not I. Did you say I must keep the Antelope Peaks in a line to reach the Lazy
+D.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, a little to the left. Don’t be long, little pardner.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I hate to leave you here. Perhaps I’ll send a sheriff to take care of you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Better bring Two-step up to the south of that bunch of cottonwoods. It’s not
+so steep that way.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll mention it to the sheriff. I’m not coming myself.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She left him apparently obstinate in the conviction that she would return. In
+reality he was taking a gambler’s chance, but it was of a part with the
+reckless spirit of the man that the risk appealed to him. It was plain he could
+not drag himself farther. Since he must let her go for the horse alone, he
+chose that she should go with her eyes open to his knowledge of the opportunity
+of escape.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Helen Messiter had not the slightest intention of returning. She had found
+her chance, and she meant to make the most of it. As rapidly ias her
+unaccustomed fingers would permit she saddled and cinched her pony. She had not
+ridden a hundred yards before Two-step came crashing through the young
+cottonwood grove after her. Objecting to being left alone, he had broken the
+rein that tied him. The girl tried to recapture the horse in order that the
+outlaw might not be left entirely without means of reaching camp, but her
+efforts were unsuccessful. She had to give it up and resume her journey.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of course the men at his ranch would miss their chief and search for him. There
+could be no doubt but that they would find him. She bolstered up her assurance
+of this as she rode toward the Antelope Peaks, but her hope lacked buoyancy,
+because she doubted if they had any idea of where he had been going to spend
+the day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She rode slower and slower, and finally came to a long halt for consideration.
+Vividly there rose before her a picture of the miscreant waiting grimly for
+death or rescue. Well, she was not to blame. If she deserted him it was to save
+herself. But to leave him helpless&mdash;&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No, she could not leave a crippled man to die alone, even though he were her
+enemy. That was the goal to which her circling thoughts came always home, and
+with a sob she turned her horse’s head. It was a piece of soft-headed folly,
+she confessed, but she could not help it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So back she went and found him lying just where she had left him. His derisive
+smile offered
+</p>
+
+<p>
+her no thanks. She doubted, indeed, whether he felt any sense of gratitude.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u didn’t break your neck hurrying,” he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She made her confession with a palpable chagrin. “I meant to ride away. I rode
+a mile or two. But I had to come back. I couldn’t leave you here alone.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His eyes sparkled triumphantly. She saw that he had misunderstood the reason of
+her return, that he was pluming himself on a conquest of his fascinated victim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“One couldn’t leave even a broken-legged dog without help,” she added, quietly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“So how could we expect a woman to leave the man she’s getting ready to love?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She let her contemptuous eyes rest on him in silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s right. Look at me as if I were dirt under your feet. Hate me, if it
+makes y’u feel better. But y’u’ll have to come to loving me just the same.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Can you get on without help?” she asked, ranging the pony alongside him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes.” He dragged himself to the saddle and smiled down at her. “So y’u better
+make up your mind to that soon as convenient.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Disdaining answer, she walked in front of the pony down the trail. She was
+tired, but her elastic tread would not admit it to him. For she was dramatizing
+unconsciously, with firmly clenched fingers that bit into her palms, the march
+of the unconquerable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Evening had fallen before they reached the ranch. It was beautifully still,
+except for the call of the quails. The hazy violet outline of the mountains
+came to silhouette against the skyline with a fine edge.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As they passed the pony corral he spoke again. “I’ll never forget to-day. I’ve
+got it fenced from all the yesterdays and to-morrows. I have surely enjoyed our
+little picnic.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nor will I forget it,” she flung back quickly, as she followed him into the
+house. “For I never before met a man wholly incapable of gratitude and entirely
+lacking in all the elements that go to distinguish a human being from a wolf.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned to speak to her, and as he did so a quiet voice cautioned him:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t move, seh, except to throw up your hands.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the sound of that pleasant drawl Helen’s heart jumped to her throat. Jim
+McWilliams, half seated on the edge of the table, was looking intently at
+Bannister, and there was a revolver in his hand. On the other side of the room
+sat Morgan and the Cheyenne woman, apparently in charge of the young giant
+Denver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bannister’s hands went up, even as he whirled with a snarl toward the man
+Morgan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I told y’u to watch out, y’u muttonhead!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But y’u clean forgot to remember to watch out your own self,” spoke up
+McWilliams, unbuckling the belt from the waist of his new captive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, Mac, you blessed boy!” cried Helen, with an hysterical laugh that was half
+a sob.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How did you ever find me?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Followed the track of the gas wagon to where it ran out of juice. We lost your
+trail after that, but Denver and me had the good luck to pick it up again where
+y’u’d camped that night. We mislaid it again up in the hills, and Denver he
+knew about this place. We dropped in just casual for information, but when we
+set our peepers on Judd we allowed we would stay awhile, him being so anxious
+to have us.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You dear boys! I’m so glad! You don’t know,” she sobbed, dropping weakly into
+thes nearest chair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We can guess, ma’am,” her foreman answered grimly, his eyes on Bannister.” And
+if either of these scoundrels have treated y’u so they need their light put out
+all y’u have got to do is to say so.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, no, Mac. Let us go away from here and leave them. Can’t we go
+now&mdash;this very minute?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The foreman’s eyes found those of Denver and the latter nodded. Neither of them
+had had a bite to eat since the previous evening, and they were naturally
+ravenous.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“All right. We’ll go right now, ma’am. Denver, I’ll take care of these beauties
+while y’u step into the pantry with Mrs. Lo-the-poor-Indian and put up a lunch.
+Y’u don’t want to forget we’re hungry enough to eat the wool off a pair of
+chaps.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I ain’t likely to forget it, am I?” grinned Denver, as he rose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You poor boys! I know you are starved. I’ll see about the lunch if one of you
+will get the I horses round,” Helen broke in. “Only let us hurry and get away
+from here.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ten minutes later they were in the saddle. For the sake of precaution Mac
+walked two of his captives with them for about a mile before releasing them.
+Bannister, unable to travel, they left behind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We’ll get down out of the hills and then cut acrost to the Meeker ranch,” said
+McWilliams, after they had ridden forward a few miles. “I’ll telephone from
+there to Slauson’s and have the old man send a boy over to the Lazy D with the
+good word. We’ll get an early start from Meeker’s and make it home in the
+afternoon.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How did you leave Mr. Bannister?” asked Helen, in a carefully careless voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had held back this question for nearly an hour till Denver, who was guiding
+the party, had passed out of earshot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Left him with two of the boys holding him down. He was plumb anxious to commit
+suicide by joining the hunt for y’u, but I had other thoughts,” grinned Mac.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She felt herself flushing in the darkness. “We’ve made a great mistake about
+him, Mac, It’s his cousin of the same name that is the desperado&mdash;the man
+we just left.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, that’s what Judd let out before y’u and the King arrived. It made me
+plumb glad to my gizzard to hear it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I was pleased, too.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Somehow I suspicioned that,” he made answer, with banter in his dry tones.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Of course I would be glad to know that he is not a villain,” she defended.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Sure!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, one doesn’t like to think that a friend&mdash;&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He’s your friend, is he?” chuckled Mac.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why shouldn’t he be?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m offering no objections, ma’am.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You act as if&mdash;&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Sho! Don’t pay any attention to me. Sometimes I get these spells of laughing
+in to myself. They just come. Doctors never could find a reason.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, well!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He was your enemy and now he’s your friend. Course since I’m your foreman I
+got to keep posted on how we stand with our neighbors. If your feelings change
+to him again y’u’ll let me know, I expect.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why should they change?” she asked in a cold voice that her rising color
+belied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Search <i>me!</i> I just thought mebbe&mdash;&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You think too much,” she cut in, shortly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, ma’am,” admitted the youth, meekly, but from time to time as they rode
+she could hear, faint sounds of mirth from his direction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+McWilliams telephoned from the Meeker ranch to Slauson’s, and inside of two
+hours the Lazy D knew that its owner had been found. As one puncher after
+another reported there on jaded ponies to get the latest word they heard that
+all was well. Each one at once unsaddled, ate and turned in for the first
+night’s sleep he had had since his mistress had been missing. Next morning they
+rode in a body to meet her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She saw them galloping toward her in a cloud of dust, and presently she was the
+centre of a circle of her happy family. They were like boys&mdash;exuberant in
+their joy at her deliverance and eager to set out at once to avenge her wrongs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ned Bannister, from his window, saw them coming. When the group separated at
+the corral and she rode from among them with McWilliams toward the house the
+sheepman could sit still no longer. He limped to the front door and waved the
+American flag which he had unearthed for the occasion.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap12"></a>CHAPTER XII.<br/>
+MISTRESS AND MAID</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now that it was safely concluded, Helen thought the adventure almost worthwhile
+for the spontaneous expressions of good will it had drawn forth from her
+adherents. Mrs. Winslow and Nora had taken her to their arms and wept and
+laughed over her in turn, and in their silent undemonstrative way she had felt
+herself hedged in by unusual solicitude on the part of her riders. It was
+good&mdash;none but she knew how good&mdash;to be back among her own, to bask
+in a friendliness she could not doubt. It was best of all to sit opposite Ned
+Bannister again with no weight on her heart from the consciousness of his
+unworthiness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She could affect to disregard the gray eyes that followed her with such
+magnetized content about the living room, but beneath her cool self-containment
+she knew the joyous heart in her was strangely buoyant. He loved her, and she
+had a right to let herself love him. This was enough for the present.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They’re so plumb glad to see y’u they can’t let y’u alone,” laughed Bannister
+at the sound of a knock on the door that was about the fifth in as many
+minutes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This time it proved to be Nora, come to find out what her mistress would like
+for supper. Helen turned to the invalid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What would you like, Mr. Bannister?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I should like a porterhouse with mushrooms,” he announced promptly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You can’t have it. You know what the doctor said.” Very peremptorily she
+smiled this at him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He’s an old granny, Miss Messiter.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You may have an egg on toast.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Make it two,” he pleaded. “Excitement’s just like caviar to the appetite, and
+seeing y’u safe&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Very well&mdash;two,” she conceded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They ate supper together in a renewal of the pleasant intimacy so delightful to
+both. He lay on the lounge, propped up with sofa cushions, the while he watched
+her deft fingers butter the toast and prepare his egg. It was surely worth
+while to be a convalescent, given so sweet a comrade for a nurse; and after he
+had moved over to the table he enjoyed immensely the gay firmness with which
+she denied him what was not good for him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll bet y’u didn’t have supper like this at Robbers’ Roost.” he told her,
+enthusiastically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It wasn’t so bad, considering everything.” She was looking directly at him as
+she spoke. “Your cousin is rather a remarkable man in some ways. He manages to
+live on the best that can be got in tin-can land.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Did he tell y’u he was my cousin?” he asked, slowly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, and that his name was Ned Bannister, too?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Did that explain anything to y’u?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It explained a great deal, but it left some things not clear yet.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“For instance?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“For one thing, the reason why you should bear the odium of his crimes. I
+suppose you don’t care for him, though I can see how you might in a way.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t care for him in the least, though I used to when we were boys. As to
+letting myself be blamed for his crimes. I did it because I couldn’t help
+myself. We look more or less alike, and he was cunning enough to manufacture
+evidence against me. We were never seen together, and so very few know that
+there are two Bannisters. At first I used to protest, but I gave it up. There
+wasn’t the least use. I could only wait for him to be captured or killed. In
+the meantime it didn’t make me any more popular to be a sheepman.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Weren’t you taking a long chance of being killed first? Some one with a grudge
+against him might have shot you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They haven’t yet,” he smiled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You might at least have told <i>me</i> how it was,” she reproached.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I started to tell y’u that first day, but it looked so much of a fairy tale to
+unload that I passed it up.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then you ought not to blame me for thinking you what you were not.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t remember blaming y’u. The fact is I thought it awful white of y’u to
+do your Christian duty so thorough, me being such a miscreant,” he drawled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You gave me no chance to think well of you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But yet y’u did your duty from A to Z.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We’re not talking about my duty,” she flashed back. “My point is that you
+weren’t fair to me. If I thought ill of you how could I help it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I expaict your Kalamazoo conscience is worryin’ y’u because y’u misjudged me.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It isn’t,” she denied instantly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I ain’t of a revengeful disposition. I’ll forgive y’u for doing your duty and
+saving my life twice,” he said, with a smile of whimsical irony.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t want your forgiveness.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, then for thinking me a ‘bad man.’”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You ought to beg <i>my</i> pardon. I was a friend, at least you say I acted
+like one&mdash;and you didn’t care enough to right yourself with me.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Maybe I cared too much to risk trying it. I knew there would be proof some
+time, and I decided to lie under the suspicion until I could get it. I see now
+that wasn’t kind or fair to you. I am sorry I didn’t tell y’u all about it. May
+I tell y’u the story now?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If you wish.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a long story, but the main points can be told in a paragraph. The
+grandfather of the two cousins, General Edward Bannister, had worn the
+Confederate gray for four years, and had lost an arm in the service of the flag
+with the stars and bars. After the war he returned to his home in Virginia to
+find it in ruins, his slaves freed and his fields mortgaged. He had pulled
+himself together for another start, and had practiced law in the little town
+where his family had lived for generations. Of his two sons, one was a
+ne’er-do-well. He was one of those brilliant fellows of whom much is expected
+that never develops. He had a taste for low company, married beneath him, and,
+after a career that was a continual mortification and humiliation to his
+father, was killed in a drunken brawl under disgraceful circumstances, leaving
+behind a son named for the general. The second son of General Bannister also
+died young, but not before he had proved his devotion to his father by an
+exemplary life. He, too, was married and left an only son, also named for the
+old soldier. The boys were about of an age and were well matched in physical
+and mental equipment. But the general, who had taken them both to live with
+him, soon discovered that their characters were as dissimilar as the poles. One
+grandson was frank, generous, open as the light; the other was of a nature
+almost degenerate. In fact, each had inherited the qualities of his father.
+Tales began to come to the old general’s ears that at first he refused to
+credit. But eventually it was made plain to him that one of the boys was a rake
+of the most objectionable type.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There were many stormy scenes between the general and his grandson, but the boy
+continued to go from bad to worse. After a peculiarly flagrant case, involving
+the character of a respectable young girl, young Ned Bannister was forbidden
+his ancestral home. It had been by means of his cousin that this last iniquity
+of his had been unearthed, and the boy had taken it to his grandfather in hot
+indignation as the last hope of protecting the reputation of the injured girl.
+From that hour the evil hatred of his cousin, always dormant in the heart,
+flamed into active heat. The disowned youth swore to be revenged. A short time
+later the general died, leaving what little property he had entirely to the one
+grandson. This stirred again the bitter rage of the other. He set fire to the
+house that had been willed his cousin, and took a train that night for Wyoming.
+By a strange irony of fate they met again in the West years later, and the
+enmity between them was renewed, growing every month more bitter on the part of
+the one who called himself the King of the Bighorn Country.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She broke the silence after his story with a gentle “Thank you. I can
+understand why you don’t like to tell the story.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I am very glad of the chance to tell it to you,” he answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“When you were delirious you sometimes begged some one you called Ned not to
+break his mother’s heart. I thought then you might be speaking to yourself as
+ill people do. Of course I see now it was your cousin that was on your mind.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“When I was out of my head I must have talked a lot of nonsense,” he suggested,
+in the voice of a question. “I expect I had opinions I wouldn’t have been
+scattering around so free if I’d known what I was saying.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was hardly prepared for the tide of color that swept her cheeks at his words
+nor for the momentary confusion that shuttered the shy eyes with long lashes
+cast down.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Sick folks do talk foolishness, they say,” he added, his gaze trained on her
+suspiciously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do they?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mrs. Winslow says I did. But when I asked her what it was I said she only
+laughed and told me to ask y’u. Well, I’m askin’ now.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She became very busy over the teapot. “You talked about the work at your
+ranch&mdash;sheep dipping and such things.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Was that all?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, about lots of other things&mdash;football and your early life. I don’t see
+what Mrs. Winslow meant. Will you have some more tea?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, thank y’u. I have finished. Yes, that ce’tainly seems harmless. I didn’t
+know but I had been telling secrets.” Still his unwavering eyes rested quietly
+on her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Secrets?” She summoned her aplomb to let a question rest lightly in the face
+she turned toward him, though she was afraid she met his eyes hardly long
+enough for complete innocence “Why, yes, secrets.” He measured looks with her
+deliberately before he changed the subject, and he knew again the delightful
+excitement of victory. “Are y’u going to read to me this evening?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She took his opening so eagerly that he smiled, at which her color mounted
+again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If y’u like. What shall I read?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Some more of Barrie’s books, if y’u don’t mind. When a fellow is weak as a
+kitten he sorter takes to things that are about kids.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nora came in and cleared away the supper things. She was just beginning to wash
+them when McWilliams and Denver dropped into the kitchen by different doors.
+Each seemed surprised and disappointed at the presence of the other. Nora gave
+each of them a smile and a dishcloth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Reddy, he’s shavin’ and Frisco’s struggling with a biled shirt&mdash;I mean
+with a necktie,” Denver hastily amended. “They’ll be along right soon, I
+shouldn’t wonder.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u better go tell the boys Miss Nora don’t want her kitchen littered up with
+so many of them,” suggested his rival.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u’re foreman here. I don’t aim to butt into your business, Mac,” grinned
+back the other, polishing a tea plate with the towel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I want to get some table linen over to Lee Ming to-night,” said Nora,
+presently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Denver, he’ll be glad to take it for y’u, Miss Nora. He’s real obliging,”
+offered Mac, generously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ve been in the house all day, so I need a walk. I thought perhaps one of you
+gentlemen&mdash;” Miss Nora looked from one to the other of them with deep
+innocence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Sure, I’ll go along and carry it. Just as Mac says, I’ll be real pleased to
+go,” said Denver, hastily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mac felt he had been a trifle precipitate in his assumption that Nora did not
+intend to go herself. Lee Ming had established a laundry some half mile from
+the ranch, and the way thereto lay through most picturesque shadow and
+moonlight. The foreman had conscientious scruples against letting Denver escort
+her down such a veritable lovers’ lane of romantic scenery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t know as y’u ought to go out in the night air with that cold, Denver.
+I’d hate a heap to have y’u catch pneumony. It don’t seem to me I’d be
+justified in allowin’ y’u to,” said the foreman, anxiously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’re <i>that</i> thoughtful, Mac. But I expect mebbe a little saunter with
+Miss Nora will do my throat good. We’ll walk real slow, so’s not to wear out my
+strength.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Big, husky fellows like y’u are awful likely to drop off with pneumony. I been
+thinkin’ I got some awful good medicine that would be the right stuff for y’u.
+It’s in the drawer of my wash-stand. Help yourself liberal and it will surely
+do y’u good. Y’u’ll find it <i>in a bottle</i>.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll bet it’s good medicine, Mac. After we get home I’ll drop around. In the
+washstand, y’u said?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I hate to have y’u take such a risk,” Mac tried again. “There ain’t a bit of
+use in y’u exposing yourself so careless. Y’u take a hot footbath and some of
+that medicine, Denver, then go right straight to bed, and in the mo’ning y’u’ll
+be good as new. Honest, y’u won’t know yourself.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u got the <i>best</i> heart, Mac.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nora giggled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Since I’m foreman I got to be a mother to y’u boys, ain’t I?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u’re liable to be a grandmother to us if y’u keep on,” came back the young
+giant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u plumb discourage me, Denver,” sighed the foreman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, sir! The way I look at it, a fellow’s got to take some risk. Now, y’u
+cayn’t tell some things. I figure I ain’t half so likely to catch pneumony as
+y’u would be to get heart trouble if y’u went walking with Miss Nora,” returned
+Denver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A perfect gravity sat on both their faces during the progress of most of their
+repartee.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If your throat’s so bad, Mr. Halliday, I’ll put a kerosene rag round it for
+you when we get back,” Nora said, with a sweet little glance of sympathy that
+the foreman did not enjoy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Denver, otherwise “Mr. Halliday,” beamed. “Y’u’re real kind, ma’am. I’ll bet
+that will help it on the outside much as Mac’s medicine will inside.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What’ll y’u do for my heart, ma’am, if it gits bad the way Denver figures it
+will?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u might try a mustard plaster,” she gurgled, with laughter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For once the debonair foreman’s ready tongue had brought him to defeat. He was
+about to retire from the field temporarily when Nora herself offered first aid
+to the wounded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We would like to have you come along with us, Mr. McWilliams. I want you to
+come if you can spare the time.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The soft eyes telegraphed an invitation with such a subtle suggestion of a
+private understanding that Mac was instantly encouraged to accept.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He knew, of course, that she was playing them against each other and sitting
+back to enjoy the result, but he was possessed of the hope common to youths in
+his case that he really was on a better footing with her than the other boys.
+This opinion, it may be added, was shared by Denver, Frisco and even Reddy as
+regards themselves. Which is merely another way of putting the regrettable fact
+that this very charming young woman was given to coquetting with the hearts of
+her admirers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Any time y’u get oneasy about that cough y’u go right on home, Denver. Don’t
+stay jest out of politeness. We’ll never miss y’u, anyhow,” the foreman assured
+him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Thank y’u, Mac. But y’u see I got to stay to keep Miss Nora from getting
+bored.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Was it a phrenologist strung y’u with the notion y’u was a cure for
+lonesomeness?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Shucks! I don’t make no such claims. The only thing is it’s a comfort when
+you’re bored to have company. Miss Nora, she’s so polite. But, y’u see, if I’m
+along I can take y’u for a walk when y’u get too bad.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They reached the little trail that ran up to Lee Ming’s place, and Denver
+suggested that Mac run in with the bundle so as to save Nora the climb.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’d like to, honest I would. But since y’u thought of it first I won’t steal
+the credit of doing Miss Nora a good turn. We’ll wait right here for y’u till
+y’u come back.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We’ll all go up together,” decided Nora, and honors were easy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the pleasant moonlight they sauntered back, two of them still engaged in
+lively badinage, while the third played chorus with appreciative little giggles
+and murmurs of “Oh, Mr. Halliday!” and “You know you’re just flattering me, Mr.
+McWilliams.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If they had not been so absorbed in their gay foolishness the two men might not
+have walked so innocently into the trap waiting for them at their journey’s
+end. As it was, the first intimation they had of anything unusual was a stern
+command to surrender.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Throw up your hands. Quick, you blank fools!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A masked man covered them, in each hand a six-shooter, and at his summons the
+arms of the cow-punchers went instantly into the air.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nora gave an involuntary little scream of dismay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u don’t need to be afraid, lady. Ain’t nobody going to hurt you, I reckon,”
+the masked man growled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Sure they won’t,” Mac reassured her, adding ironically: “This gun-play
+business is just neighborly frolic. Liable to happen any day in Wyoming.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A second masked man stepped up. He, too was garnished with an arsenal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What’s all this talking about?” he demanded sharply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We just been having a little conversation seh?” returned McWilliams, gently,
+his vigilant eyes searching through the disguise of the other “Just been
+telling the lady that your call is in friendly spirit. No objections, I
+suppose?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The swarthy newcomer, who seemed to be in command, swore sourly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u put a knot in your tongue, Mr. Foreman.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ce’tainly, if y’u prefer,” returned the indomitable McWilliams.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Shut up or I’ll pump lead into you!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m padlocked, seh.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nora Darling interrupted the dialogue by quietly fainting. The foreman caught
+her as she fell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“See what y’u done, y’u blamed chump!” he snapped.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap13"></a>CHAPTER XIII.<br/>
+THE TWO COUSINS</h2>
+
+<p>
+The sheepman lay at his ease, the strong supple lines of him stretched lazily
+on the lounge. Helen was sitting beside him in an easy chair, and he watched
+the play of her face in the lamplight as she read from “The Little White Bird.”
+She was very good to see, so vitally alive and full of a sweet charm that half
+revealed and half concealed her personality. The imagination with which she
+threw herself into a discussion of the child fancies portrayed by the Scotch
+writer captured his fancy. It delighted him to tempt her into discussions that
+told him by suggestion something of what she thought and was.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were in animated debate when the door opened to admit somebody else. He
+had stepped in so quietly that he stood there a little while without being
+observed, smiling down at them with triumphant malice behind the mask he wore.
+Perhaps it was the black visor that was responsible for the Mephisto effect,
+since it hid all the face but the leering eyes. These, narrowed to slits, swept
+the room and came back to its occupants. He was a tall man and well-knit,
+dressed incongruously in up-to-date riding breeches and boots, in combination
+with the usual gray shirt, knotted kerchief and wide-brimmed felt hat of the
+horseman of the plains. The dust of the desert lay thick on him, without in the
+least obscuring a certain ribald elegance, a distinction of wickedness that
+rested upon him as his due. To this result his debonair manner contributed,
+though it carried with it no suggestion of weakness. To the girl who looked up
+and found him there he looked indescribably sinister.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She half rose to her feet, dilated eyes fixed on him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Good evenin’. I came to make sure y’u got safe home, Miss Messiter,” he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The eyes of the two men clashed, the sheepman’s stern and unyielding, his
+cousin’s lit with the devil of triumph. But out of the faces of both men looked
+the inevitable conflict, the declaration of war that never ends till death.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ve been a heap anxious about y’u&mdash;couldn’t sleep for worrying. So I
+saddled up and rode in to find out if y’u were all right and to inquire how
+Cousin Ned was getting along.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sheepman, not deigning to move an inch from his position, looked in silence
+his steady contempt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“This conversation sounds a whole lot like a monologue up to date,” he
+continued. “Now, maybe y’u don’t know y’u have the honor of entertaining the
+King of the Bighorn.” The man’s brown hand brushed the mask from his eyes and
+he bowed with mocking deference. “Miss Messiter, allow me to introduce myself
+again&mdash;Ned Bannister, train robber, rustler, kidnapper and general bad
+man. But I ain’t told y’u the worst yet. I’m cousin to a sheepherder’ and
+that’s the lowest thing that walks.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He limped forward a few steps and sat down. “Thank you, I believe I will stay a
+while since y’u both ask me so urgent. It isn’t often I meet with a welcome so
+hearty and straight from the heart.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was not hard to see how the likeness between them contributed to the mistake
+that had been current concerning them. Side by side, no man could have mistaken
+one for the other. The color of their eyes, the shade of hair, even the cut of
+their features, were different. But beneath all distinctions in detail ran a
+family resemblance not to be denied. This man looked like his cousin, the
+sheepman, as the latter might have done if all his life he had given a free
+rein to evil passions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The height, the build, the elastic tread of each, made further contributions to
+this effect of similarity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What are you doing here?” They were the first words spoken by the man on the
+lounge and they rang with a curt challenge.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Come to inquire after the health of my dear cousin,” came the prompt silken
+answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You villain!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My dear cousin, y’u speak with such conviction that y’u almost persuade me.
+But of course if I’m a villain I’ve got to live up to my reputation. Haven’t I,
+Miss Messiter?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Wouldn’t it be better to live it down?” she asked with a quietness that belied
+her terror. For there had been in his manner a threat, not against her but
+against the man whom her heart acknowledged as her lover.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He laughed. “Y’u’re still hoping to make a Sunday school superintendent out of
+me, I see. Y’u haven’t forgot all your schoolmarm ways yet, but I’ll teach y’u
+to forget them.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The other cousin watched him with a cool, quiet glance that never wavered. The
+outlaw was heavily armed, but his weapons were sheathed, and, though there was
+a wary glitter behind the vindictive exultation in his eyes, his capable hands
+betrayed no knowledge of the existence of his revolvers. It was, he knew, to be
+a moral victory, if one at all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hope I’m not disturbing any happy family circle,” he remarked, and, taking two
+limping steps forward, he lifted the book from the girl’s unresisting hands.
+“H’m! Barrie. I don’t go much on him. He’s too sissy for me. But I could have
+guessed the other Ned Bannister would be reading something like that,” he
+concluded, a flicker of sneering contempt crossing his face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Perhaps y’u’ll learn some time to attend to your own business,” said the man
+on the couch quietly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hatred gleamed in the narrowed slits from which the soul of the other cousin
+looked down at him. “I’m a philanthropist, and my business is attending to
+other people’s. They raise sheep, for instance, and I market them.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girl hastily interrupted. She had not feared for herself, but she knew fear
+for the indomitable man she had nursed back to life. “Won’t you sit down, Mr.
+Bannister? Since you don’t approve our literature, perhaps we can find some
+other diversion more to your taste.” She smiled faintly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man turned in smiling divination of her purpose, and sat down to play with
+her as a cat does with a mouse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Thank y’u, Miss Messiter, I believe I will. I called to thank y’u for your
+kindness to my cousin as well as to inquire about you. The word goes that y’u
+pulled my dear cousin back when death was reaching mighty strong for him. Of
+course I feel grateful to y’u. How is he getting along now?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He’s doing very well, I think.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s ce’tainly good hearing,” was his ironical response. “How come he to get
+hurt, did y’u say?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His sleek smile was a thing hateful to see.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A hound bit me,” explained the sheepman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u don’t say! I reckon y’u oughtn’t to have got in its way. Did y’u kill it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Not yet.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That was surely a mistake, for it’s liable to bite again.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girl felt a sudden sickness at his honeyed cruelty, but immediately pulled
+herself together. For whatever fiendish intention might be in his mind she
+meant to frustrate it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I hear you are of a musical turn, Mr. Bannister. Won’t you play for us?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had by chance found his weak spot. Instantly his eyes lit up. He stepped
+across to the piano and began to look over the music, though not so intently
+that he forgot to keep under his eye the man on the lounge.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“H’m! Mozart, Grieg, Chopin, Raff, Beethoven. Y’u ce’tainly have the music
+here; I wonder if y’u have the musician.” He looked her over with a bold,
+unscrupulous gaze. “It’s an old trick to have classical music on the rack and
+ragtime in your soul. Can y’u play these?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You will have to be the judge of that,” she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He selected two of Grieg’s songs and invited her to the piano. He knew
+instantly that the Norwegian’s delicate fancy and lyrical feeling had found in
+her no inadequate medium of expression. The peculiar emotional quality of the
+song “I Love Thee” seemed to fill the room as she played. When she swung round
+on the stool at its conclusion it was to meet a shining-eyed, musical
+enthusiast instead of the villain she had left five minutes earlier.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u <i>can</i> play,” was all he said, but the manner of it spoke volumes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For nearly an hour he kept her at the piano, and when at last he let her stop
+playing he seemed a man transformed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You have given me a great pleasure, a very great pleasure, Miss Messiter,” he
+thanked her warmly, his Western idiom sloughed with his villainy for the
+moment. “It has been a good many months since I have heard any decent music.
+With your permission I shall come again.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her hesitation was imperceptible. “Surely, if you wish.” She felt it would be
+worse than idle to deny the permission she might not be able to refuse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With perfect grace he bowed, and as he wheeled away met with a little shock of
+remembrance the gaze of his cousin. For a long moment their eyes bored into
+each other. Neither yielded the beat of an eyelid, but it was the outlaw that
+spoke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I had forgotten y’u. That’s strange, too because it was for y’u I came. I’m
+going to take y’u home with me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Alive or dead?” asked the other serenely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Alive, dear Ned.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Same old traits cropping out again. There was always something feline about
+y’u. I remember when y’u were a boy y’u liked to torment wild animals y’u had
+trapped.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I play with larger game now&mdash;and find it more interesting.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Just so. Miss Messiter, I shall have to borrow a pony from y’u, unless&mdash;”
+He broke off and turned indifferently to the bandit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, I brought a hawss along with me for y’u,” replied the other to the
+unvoiced question. “I thought maybe y’u might want to ride with us.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But he can’t ride. He couldn’t possibly. It would kill him,” the girl broke
+out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I reckon not.” The man from the Shoshones glanced at his victim as he drew on
+his gauntlets. “He’s a heap tougher than y’u think.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But it will. If he should ride now, why&mdash;It would be the same as murder,”
+she gasped. “You wouldn’t make him ride now?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Didn’t y’u hear him order his hawss, ma’am? He’s keen on this ride. Of course
+he don’t have to go unless he wants to.” The man turned his villainous smile on
+his cousin, and the latter interpreted it to mean that if he preferred, the
+point of attack might be shifted to the girl. He might go or he might stay. But
+if he stayed the mistress of the Lazy D would have to pay for his decision.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, I’ll ride,” he said at once.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Helen Messiter had missed the meaning of that Marconied message that flashed
+between them. She set her jaw with decision. “Well, you’ll not. It’s perfectly
+ridiculous. I won’t hear of such a thing.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u seem right welcome. Hadn’t y’u better stay, Ned?” murmured the outlaw,
+with smiling eyes that mocked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Of course he had. He couldn’t ride a mile&mdash;not half a mile. The idea is
+utterly preposterous.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sheepman got to his feet unsteadily. “I’ll do famously.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I won’t have it. Why are you so foolish about going? He said you didn’t need
+to go. You can’t ride any more than a baby could chop down that pine in the
+yard.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m a heap stronger than y’u think.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, you are!” she derided. “It’s nothing but obstinacy. Make him stay,” she
+appealed to the outlaw.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Am I my cousin’s keeper?” he drawled. “I can advise him to stay, but I can’t
+make him.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, <i>I</i> can. I’m his nurse, and I say he sha’n’t stir a foot out of
+this house&mdash;not a foot.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The wounded man smiled quietly, admiring the splendid energy of her. “I’m right
+sorry to leave y’u so unceremoniously.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’re not going.” She wheeled on the outlaw “I don’t understand this at all.
+But if you want him you can find him here when you come again. Put him on
+parole and leave him here. I’ll not be a party to murder by letting him go.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u think I’m going to murder him?” he smiled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I think he cannot stand the riding. It would kill him.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A haidstrong man is bound to have his way. He seems hell-bent on riding. All
+the docs say the outside of a hawss is good for the inside of a man. Mebbe
+it’ll be the making of him.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I won’t have it. I’ll rouse the whole countryside against you. Why don’t you
+parole him till he is better?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“All right. We’ll leave it that way,” announced the man. “I’d hate to hurt your
+tender feelings after such a pleasant evening. Let him give his parole to come
+to me whenever I send for him, no matter where he may be, to quit whatever he
+is doing right that instant, and come on the jump. If he wants to leave it that
+way, we’ll call it a bargain.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again the rapier-thrust of their eyes crossed. The sheepman was satisfied with
+what he saw in the face of his foe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“All right. It’s a deal,” he agreed, and sank weakly back to the couch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There are men whose looks are a profanation to any good woman. Ned Bannister,
+of the Shoshones, was one of them. He looked at his cousin, and his ribald eyes
+coasted back to bold scrutiny of this young woman’s charming, buoyant youth.
+There was Something in his face that sent a flush of shame coursing through her
+rich blood. No man had ever looked at her like that before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Take awful good care of him,” he sneered, with so plain an implication of evil
+that her clean blood boiled. “But I know y’u will, and don’t let him go before
+he’s real strong.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No,” she murmured, hating herself for the flush that bathed her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He bowed like a Chesterfield, and went out with elastic heels, spurs clicking.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Helen turned fiercely on her guest. “Why did you make me insist on your
+staying? As if I want you here, as if&mdash;” She stopped, choking with anger;
+presently flamed out, “I hate you,” and ran from the room to hide herself alone
+with her tears and her shame.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap14"></a>CHAPTER XIV.<br/>
+FOR THE WORLD’S CHAMPIONSHIP</h2>
+
+<p>
+The scene on which Helen Messiter’s eyes rested that mellow Fourth of July was
+vivid enough to have interested a far more jaded mind than hers. Nowhere
+outside of Cattleland could it have been duplicated. Wyoming is sparsely
+populated, but the riders of the plains think nothing of traveling a hundred
+miles in the saddle to be present at a “broncobusting” contest. Large
+delegations, too, had come in by railroad from Caspar, Billings, Sheridan,
+Cheyenne and a score of other points, so that the amphitheatre that looked down
+on the arena was filled to its capacity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All night the little town had rioted with its guests. Everything was wide open
+at Gimlet Butte. Saloons were doing a land-office business and gambling-houses
+coining money. Great piles of gold had passed to and fro during the night at
+the roulette wheel and the faro table. But with the coming of day interest had
+centered on the rough-riding contest for the world’s championship. Saloons and
+dance halls were deserted, and the universal trend of travel had been toward
+the big grand stands, from which the sport could be best viewed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was afternoon now. The preliminaries had been ridden, and half a dozen of
+the best riders had been chosen by the judges to ride again for the finals.
+Helen was wonderfully interested, because in the six who were to ride again
+were included the two Bannister cousins, her foreman, McWilliams, the young man
+“Texas,” whom she had met the day of her arrival at Gimlet Butte, and Tom
+Sanford, who had last year won the championship.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked down on the arena, and her heart throbbed with the pure joy of life.
+Already she loved her West and its picturesque, chap-clad population. Their
+jingling spurs and their colored kerchiefs knotted round sunburned necks, their
+frank, whole-hearted abandon to the interest of the moment, led her to regard
+these youths as schoolboys. Yet they were a hard-bitten lot, as one could see,
+burned to a brick-red by the untempered sun of the Rockies; with muscles knit
+like steel, and hearts toughened to endure any blizzard they might meet. Only
+the humorous wrinkles about the corners of their eyes gave them away for the
+cheerful sons of mirth that they were.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Bob Austin on Two-Step,” announced the megaphone man, and a little stir eddied
+through the group gathered at the lane between the arena and the corral.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A meek-looking buckskin was driven into the arena. The embodiment of
+listlessness, it apparently had not ambition enough to flick a fly from its
+flank with its tail. Suddenly the bronco’s ears pricked, its sharp eyes
+dilated. A man was riding forward, the loop of a lariat circling about his
+head. The rope fell true, but the wily pony side-stepped, and the loop
+slithered to the ground. Again the rope shot forward, dropped over the pony’s
+head and tightened. The roper’s mustang braced its forefeet, and brought the
+buckskin up short. Another rope swept over its head. It stood trembling, unable
+to move without strangling itself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A picturesque youth in flannel shirt and chaps came forward, dragging blanket,
+saddle and bridle. At sight of him the horse gave a spasmodic fling, then
+trembled again violently. A blind was coaxed over its eyes and the bridle
+slipped on. Quickly and warily, with deft fingers, the young man saddled and
+cinched. He waved a hand jauntily to the ropers. The lariats were thrown off as
+the puncher swung to the saddle. For an instant the buckskin stood bewildered,
+motionless as a statue. There was a sudden leap forward high in air, and Bob
+Austin, alias “Texas,” swung his sombrero with a joyous whoop.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Fan him! Fan him!” screamed the spectators, and the rider’s quirt went up and
+down like a piston-rod.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Round and round went Two-Step in a vicious circle, “swapping ends” with
+dizzying rapidity. Suddenly he went forward as from a catapult, and came to
+sudden halt in about five seconds. But Texas’s knees still clung, viselike, to
+the sides of the pony. A series of quick bucks followed, the buckskin coming
+down with back humped, all four legs stiff as iron posts. The jar on the rider
+would have been like a pile-driver falling on his head had he not let himself
+grow limp. The buckskin plunged forward again in frenzied leaps, ending in an
+unexpected jump to one side. Alas for Texas! One moment he was jubilantly
+plying quirt and spurs, the next he found himself pitching sideways. To save
+himself he caught at the saddle-horn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He’s hunting leather,” shouted a hundred voices.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One of the judges rode out and waved a hand. Texas slipped to the ground
+disqualified, and made his dejected way back to his deriding comrades. Some of
+them had endured similar misfortunes earlier in the day. Therefore they found
+much pleasure in condoling with him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If he’d only recollected to saw off the horn of his saddle, then he couldn’t
+’a’ found it when he went to hunt leather,” mournfully commented one puncher in
+a shirt of robin’s egg blue.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“’Twould have been most as good as to take the dust, wouldn’t it?” retorted
+Texas gently, and the laugh was on the gentleman in blue, because he had been
+thrown earlier in the day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A fellow’s hands sure get in his way sometimes. I reckon if you’d tied your
+hands, Tex, you’d been riding that rocking-hawss yet,” suggested Denver
+amiably.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Sometimes it’s his foot he puts in it. There was onct a gent disqualified for
+riding on his spurs,” said Texas reminiscently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At which hit Denver retired, for not three hours before he had been detected
+digging his spurs into the cinch to help him stick to the saddle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Jim McWilliams will ride Dead Easy,” came the announcement through the
+megaphone, and a burst of cheering passed along the grand stand, for the sunny
+smile of the foreman of the Lazy D made him a general favorite. Helen leaned
+forward and whispered something gaily to Nora, who sat in the seat in front of
+her. The Irish girl laughed and blushed, but when her mistress looked up it was
+her turn to feel the mounting color creep into her cheeks. For Ned Bannister,
+arrayed in all his riding finery, was making his way along the aisle to her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had not seen him since he had ridden away from the Lazy D ten days before,
+quite sufficiently recovered from his wounds to take up the routine of life
+again. They had parted not the best of friends, for she had not yet forgiven
+him for his determination to leave with his cousin on the night that she had
+been forced to insist on his remaining. He had put her in a false position, and
+he had never explained to her why. Nor could she guess the reason&mdash;for he
+was not a man to harvest credit for himself by explaining his own chivalry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Since her heart told her how glad she was he had come to her box to see her,
+she greeted him with the coolest little nod in the world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Good morning, Miss Messiter. May I sit beside y’u?” he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, certainly!” She swept her skirts aside carelessly and made room for him.
+“I thought you were going to ride soon.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, I ride last except for Sanford, the champion. My cousin rides just before
+me. He’s entered under the name of Jack Holloway.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was thinking that he had no business to be riding, that his wounds were
+still too fresh, but she did not intend again to show interest enough in his
+affairs to interfere even by suggestion. Her heart had been in her mouth every
+moment of the time this morning while he had been tossed hither and thither on
+the back of his mount. In his delirium he had said he loved her. If he did, why
+should he torture her so? It was well enough for sound men to risk their lives,
+but&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A cheer swelled in the grand stand and died breathlessly away. McWilliams was
+setting a pace it would take a rare expert to equal. He was a trick rider, and
+all the spectacular feats that appealed to the onlooker were his. While his
+horse was wildly pitching, he drank a bottle of pop and tossed the bottle away.
+With the reins in his teeth he slipped off his coat and vest, and concluded a
+splendid exhibition of skill by riding with his feet out of the stirrups. He
+had been smoking a cigar when he mounted. Except while he had been drinking the
+pop it had been in his mouth from beginning to end, and, after he had vaulted
+from the pony’s back, he deliberately puffed a long smoke-spiral into the air,
+to show that his cigar was still alight. No previous rider had earned so
+spontaneous a burst of applause. “He’s ce’tainly a pure when it comes to
+riding,” acknowledged Bannister. “I look to see him get either first or
+second.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Whom do you think is his most dangerous rival?” Helen asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My cousin is a straight-up rider, too. He’s more graceful than Mac, I think,
+but not quite so good on tricks. It will be nip and tuck.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How about your cousin’s cousin?” she asked, with bold irony.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He hopes he won’t have to take the dust,” was his laughing answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next rider suffered defeat irrevocably before he had been thirty seconds in
+the saddle. His mount was one of the most cunning of the outlaw ponies of the
+Northwest, and it brought him to grief by jamming his leg hard against the
+fence. He tried in vain to spur the bronco into the middle of the arena, but
+after it drove at a post for the third time and ground his limb against it, he
+gave up to the pain and slipped off.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That isn’t fair, is it?” Helen asked of the young man sitting beside her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He shrugged his lean, broad shoulders. “He should have known how to keep the
+horse in the open. Mac would never have been caught that way.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Jack Holloway on Rocking Horse,” the announcer shouted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It took four men and two lariats to subdue this horse to a condition
+sufficiently tame to permit of a saddle being slipped on. Even then this could
+not be accomplished without throwing the bronco first. The result was that all
+the spirit was taken out of the animal by the preliminary ordeal, so that when
+the man from the Shoshone country mounted, his steed was too jaded to attempt
+resistance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Thumb him! Thumb him!” the audience cried, referring to the cowboy trick of
+running the thumbs along a certain place in the shoulder to stir the anger of
+the bucker.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the rider slipped off with disgust. “Give me another horse,” he demanded,
+and after a minute’s consultation among the judges a second pony was driven out
+from the corral. This one proved to be a Tartar. It went off in a frenzy of
+pitching the moment its rider dropped into the saddle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u’ll go a long way before you see better ridin’ than his and Mac’s. Notice
+how he gives to its pitching,” said Bannister, as he watched his cousin’s
+perfect ease in the cyclone of which he was the center.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I expect it depends on the kind of a ‘hawss,’” she mocked. “He’s riding well,
+isn’t he?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t know any that ride better.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The horse put up a superb fight, trying everything it knew to unseat this demon
+clamped to its back. It possessed in combination all the worst vices, was a
+weaver, a sunfisher and a fence-rower, and never had it tried so desperately to
+maintain its record of never having been ridden. But the outlaw in the saddle
+was too much for the outlaw underneath. He was master, just as he was first
+among the ruffians whom he led, because there was in him a red-hot devil of
+wickedness that would brook no rival.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The furious bronco surrendered without an instant’s warning, and its rider
+slipped at once to the ground. As he sauntered through the dust toward the
+grand stand, Helen could not fail to see how his vanity sunned itself in the
+applause that met his performance. His equipment was perfect to the least
+detail. The reflection from a lady’s looking-glass was no brighter than the
+silver spurs he jingled on his sprightly heels. Strikingly handsome in a dark,
+sinister way, one would say at first sight, and later would chafe at the
+justice of a verdict not to be denied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ned Bannister rose from his seat beside Helen. “Wish me luck,” he said, with
+his gay smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I wish you all the luck you deserve,” she answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, wish me more than that if y’u want me to win.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I didn’t say I wanted you to win. You take the most unaccountable things for
+granted.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ve a good mind to win, then, just to spite y’u,” he laughed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“As if you could,” she mocked; but her voice took a softer intonation as she
+called after him in a low murmur: “Be careful, please.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His white teeth flashed a smile of reassurance at her. “I’ve never been killed
+yet.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ned Bannister on Steamboat,” sang out the megaphone man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m ce’tainly in luck. Steamboat’s the worst hawss on the range,” he told
+himself, as he strode down the grand stand to enter the arena.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The announcement of his name created for the second time that day a stir of
+unusual interest. Everybody in that large audience had heard of Ned Bannister;
+knew of his record as a “bad man” and his prowess as the king of the Shoshone
+country; suspected him of being a train and bank robber as well as a rustler.
+That he should have the boldness to enter the contest in his own name seemed to
+show how defiant he was of the public sentiment against him, and how secure he
+counted himself in flaunting this contempt. As for the sheepman, the notoriety
+that his cousin’s odorous reputation had thrust upon him was extremely
+distasteful as well as dangerous, but he had done nothing to disgrace his name,
+and he meant to use it openly. He could almost catch the low whispers that
+passed from mouth to mouth about him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ain’t it a shame that a fellow like that, leader of all the criminals that
+hide in the mountains, can show himself openly before ten thousand honest
+folks?” That he knew to be the purport of their whispering, and along with it
+went a recital of the crimes he had committed. How he was a noted “waddy,” or
+cattle-rustler; how he and his gang had held up three trains in eighteen
+months; how he had killed Tom Mooney, Bob Carney and several others&mdash;these
+were the sorts of things that were being said about him, and from the bottom of
+his soul he resented his impotency to clear his name.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was something in Bannister’s riding that caught Helen’s fancy at once. It
+was the unconscious grace of the man, the ease with which he seemed to make
+himself a very part of the horse. He attempted no tricks, rode without any
+flourishes. But the perfect poise of his lithe body as it gave with the motions
+of the horse, proclaimed him a born rider; so finished, indeed, that his very
+ease seemed to discount the performance. Steamboat had a malevolent red eye
+that glared hatred at the oppressor man, and to-day it lived up to its
+reputation of being the most vicious and untamed animal on the frontier. But,
+though it did its best to unseat the rider and trample him underfoot, there was
+no moment when the issue seemed in doubt save once. The horse flung itself
+backward in a somersault, risking its own neck in order to break its master’s.
+But he was equal to the occasion; and when Steamboat staggered again to its
+feet Bannister was still in the saddle. It was a daring and magnificent piece
+of horsemanship, and, though he was supposed to be a desperado and a ruffian,
+his achievement met with a breathless gasp, followed by thunderous applause.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The battle between horse and man was on again, for the animal was as strong
+almost in courage as the rider. But Steamboat’s confidence had been shaken as
+well as its strength. Its efforts grew less cyclonic. Foam covered its mouth
+and flecked its sides. The pitches were easy to foresee and meet. Presently
+they ceased altogether.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bannister slid from the saddle and swayed unsteadily across the arena. The
+emergency past, he had scarce an ounce of force left in him. Jim McWilliams ran
+out and slipped an arm around his shoulders, regardless of what his friends
+might think of him for it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’re all in, old man. Y’u hadn’t ought to have ridden, even though y’u did
+skin us all to a finish.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nonsense, Mac. First place goes to y’u or&mdash;or Jack Holloway.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Not unless the judges are blind.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Bannister’s prediction proved true. The champion, Sanford, had been
+traveling with a Wild West show, and was far too soft to compete with these
+lusty cowboys, who had kept hard from their daily life on the plains. Before he
+had ridden three minutes it was apparent that he stood no chance of retaining
+his title, so that the decision narrowed itself to an issue between the two
+Bannisters and McWilliams. First place was awarded to the latter, the second
+prize to Jack Holloway and the third to Ned Bannister.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But nearly everybody in the grand stand knew that Bannister had been
+discriminated against because of his unpopularity. The judges were not local
+men, and had nothing to fear from the outlaw. Therefore they penalized him on
+account of his reputation. It would never do for the Associated Press
+dispatches to send word all over the East that a murderous desperado was
+permitted, unmolested, to walk away with the championship belt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It ain’t a square deal,” declared McWilliams promptly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was sitting beside Nora, and he turned round to express his opinion to the
+two sitting behind him in the box.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We’ll not go behind the returns. Y’u won fairly. I congratulate y’u, Mr.
+Champion-of-the-world,” replied the sheepman, shaking hands cordially.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I told you to bring that belt to the Lazy D,” smiled his mistress, as she
+shook hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But in her heart she was crying out that it was an outrage.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap15"></a>CHAPTER XV.<br/>
+JUDD MORGAN PASSES</h2>
+
+<p>
+Gimlet Butte devoted the night of the Fourth to a high old time. The roping and
+the other sports were to be on the morrow, and meanwhile the night hours were
+filled with exuberance. The cowboy’s spree comes only once in several months,
+but when it does come he enters into the occasion with such whole-hearted
+enthusiasm as to make up swiftly for lost time. A traveling midway had cast its
+tents in a vacant square in competition with the regular attractions of the
+town, and everywhere the hard-riding punchers were “night herding” in full
+regalia.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a big masked ball in the street, and another in the Masonic Hall,
+while here and there flared the lights of the faker with something to sell.
+Among these last was “Soapy” Sothern, doing a thriving business in selling
+suckers and bars wrapped with greenbacks. Crowds tramped the streets blowing
+horns and throwing confetti, and everywhere was a large sprinkling of men in
+high-heeled boots, swinging along with the awkward, stiff-legged gait of the
+cowboy. Sometimes a girl was hanging on his arm, and again he was “whooping it
+up with the boys”; but in either case the range-rider’s savings were burning a
+hole through his pockets with extreme rapidity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jim McWilliams and the sheepman Bannister had that day sealed a friendship that
+was to be as enduring as life. The owner of the sheep ranch was already under
+heavy obligation to the foreman of the Lazy D, but debt alone is not enough on
+which to found soul brotherhood. There must be qualities of kinship in the
+primeval elements of character. Both men had suspected that this kinship
+existed, but to-day they had proved it in the way that one had lost and the
+other had won the coveted championship. They had made no vows and no
+professions. The subject had not even been touched in words; a meeting of the
+eyes, followed by the handshake with which Bannister had congratulated the
+winner. That had been all. But it was enough.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With the casual democracy of the frontier they had together escorted Helen
+Messiter and Nora Darling through a riotous three hours of carnival, taking
+care to get them back to their hotel before the night really began “to howl.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But after they had left the young women, neither of them cared to sleep yet.
+They were still in costume, Mac dressed as a monk, and his friend as a Stuart
+cavalier, and the spirit of frolic was yet strong in them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I expaict, mebbe, we better hunt in couples if we’re going to help paint the
+town,” smiled Mac, and his friend had immediately agreed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It must have been well after midnight that they found themselves “bucking the
+tiger” in a combination saloon and gambling-house, whose patrons were decidedly
+cosmopolitan in character. Here white and red and yellow men played side by
+side, the Orient and the Occident and the aboriginal alike intent on the
+falling cards and the little rolling ball. A good many of them were still in
+their masks and dominos, though these, for the most part, removed their vizors
+before playing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Neither McWilliams nor his friend were betting high, and the luck had been so
+even that at the end of two hours’ play neither of them had at any time either
+won or lost more than fifteen dollars. In point of fact, they were playing not
+so much to win as just to keep in touch with the gay, youthful humor of the
+night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were getting tired of the game when two men jingled in for a drink. They
+were talking loudly together, and it was impossible to miss the subject of
+their conversation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+McWilliams gave a little jerk of his head toward one of them. “Judd Morgan,”
+his lips framed without making a sound.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bannister nodded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Been tanking up all day,” Mac added. “Otherwise his tongue would not be
+shooting off so reckless.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A silence had fallen over the assembly save for the braggarts at the bar. Men
+looked at each other, and then furtively at Bannister. For Morgan, ignorant of
+who was sitting quietly with his back to him at the faro-table, was venting his
+hate of Bannister and McWilliams.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Both in the same boat. Did y’u see how Mac ran to help him to-day? Both
+waddies. Both rustlers. Both train robbers. Sho! I got through putting a
+padlock on me mouth. Man to man, I’m as good as either of them&mdash;damn sight
+better. I wisht they was here, one or both; I wisht they would step up here and
+fight it out. Bannister’s a false alarm, and that foreman of the Lazy D&mdash;”
+His tongue stumbled over a blur of vilification that ended with a foul mention
+of Miss Messiter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Instantly two chairs crashed to the floor. Two pair of gray eyes met quietly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My quarrel, Bann,” said Jim, in a low, even voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The other nodded. “I’ll see y’u have a clear field.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man who was with Morgan suddenly whispered in his ear, and the latter
+slewed his head in startled fear. Almost instantly a bullet clipped past
+McWilliams’s shoulder. Morgan had fired without waiting for the challenge he
+felt sure was at hand. Once&mdash;twice the foreman’s revolver made answer.
+Morgan staggered, slipped down to the floor, a bullet crashing through the
+chandelier as he fell. For a moment his body jerked. Then he rolled over and
+lay still.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The foreman’s weapon covered him unwaveringly, but no more steadily than
+Bannister’s gaze the man who had come in with him who lay lifeless on the
+floor. The man looked at the lifeless thing, shuddered, and backed out of the
+saloon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I call y’u all to witness that my friend killed him in self-defense,” said
+Bannister evenly. “Y’u all saw him fire first. Mac did not even have his gun
+out.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s right,” agreed one, and another added: “He got what was coming to him.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He sure did,” was the barkeeper’s indorsement. “He came in hunting trouble,
+but I reckon he didn’t want to be accommodated so prompt.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u’ll find us at the Gimlet Butte House if we’re wanted for this,” said
+Bannister. “We’ll be there till morning.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But once out of the gambling-house McWilliams drew his friend to one side. “Do
+y’u know who that was I killed?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Judd Morgan, foreman before y’u at the Lazy D.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, but what else?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What do y’u mean?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I mean that next to your cousin Judd was leader of that Shoshone-Teton bunch.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How do y’u know?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I suspected it a long time, but I knew for sure the day that your cousin held
+up the ranch. The man that was in charge of the crowd outside was Morgan. I
+could swear to it. I knew him soon as I clapped eyes to him, but I was awful
+careful to forget to tell him I recognized him.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That means we are in more serious trouble than I had supposed.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u bet it does. We’re in a hell of a hole, figure it out any way y’u like.
+Instead of having shot up a casual idiot, I’ve killed Ned Bannister’s
+right-hand man. That will be the excuse&mdash;shooting Morgan. But the real
+trouble is that I won the championship belt from your cousin. He already hated
+y’u like poison, and he don’t love me any too hard. He will have us arrested by
+his sheriff here. Catch the point. <i>Y’u’re Ned Bannister, the outlaw, and I’m
+his right-bower</i>. That’s the play he’s going to make, and he’s going to make
+it right soon.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t care if he does. We’ll fight him on his own ground. We’ll prove that
+he’s the miscreant and not us.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Prove nothing,” snarled McWilliams. “Do y’u reckon he’ll give us a chance to
+prove a thing? Not on your life. He’ll have us jailed first thing; then he’ll
+stir up a sentiment against us, and before morning there will be a lynchingbee,
+and y’u and I will wear the neckties. How do y’u like the looks of it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But y’u have a lot of friends. They won’t stand for anything like that.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Not if they had time to stop it. Trouble is, fellow’s friends think awful
+slow. They’ll arrive in time to cut us down and be the mourners. No, sir! It’s
+a hike for Jimmie Mac on the back of the first bronc he can slap a saddle on.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bannister frowned. “I don’t like to run before the scurvy scoundrels.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do y’u suppose I’m enjoying it? Not to any extent, I allow. But that sweet
+relative of yours holds every ace in the deck, and he’ll play them, too. He
+owns the law in this man’s town, and he owns the lawless. But the best card he
+holds is that he can get a thousand of the best people here to join him in
+hanging the ‘king’ of the Shoshone outlaws. Explanations nothing! Y’u
+<i>rode</i> under the name of Bannister, didn’t y’u? He’s Jack Holloway.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It does make a strong combination,” admitted the sheepman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Strong! It’s invincible. I can see him playing it, laughing up his sleeve all
+the time at the honest fools he is working. No, sir! I draw out of a game like
+that. Y’u don’t get a run for your money.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Of course he knows already what has happened,” mused Bannister.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Sure he knows. That fellow with Morgan made a bee-line for him. Just about now
+he’s routing the sheriff out of his bed. We got no time to lose. Thing is, to
+burn the wind out of this town while we have the chance.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I see. It won’t help us any to be spilling lead into a sheriff’s posse. That
+would ce’tainly put us in the wrong.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Now y’u’re shouting. If we’re honest men why don’t we surrender peaceable?
+That’s the play the ‘king’ is going to make in this town. Now if we should
+spoil a posse and bump off one or two of them, we couldn’t pile up evidence
+enough to get a jury to acquit. No, sir! We can’t surrender and we can’t fight.
+Consequence is, we got to roll our tails immediate.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We have an appointment with Miss Messiter and Nora for to-morrow morning.
+We’ll have to leave word we can’t keep it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Sure. Denver and Missou are playing the wheel down at the Silver Dollar. I
+reckon we better make those boys jump and run errands for us while we lie low.
+I’ll drop in casual and give them the word. Meet y’u here in ten minutes.
+Whatever y’u do, keep that mask on your face.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Better meet farther from the scene of trouble. Suppose we say the north gate
+of the grand stand?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Good enough. So-long.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The first faint streaks of day were beginning to show on the horizon when
+Bannister reached the grand stand. He knew that inside of another half-hour the
+little frontier town would be blinking in the early morning sunlight that falls
+so brilliantly through the limpid atmosphere. If they were going to leave
+without fighting their way out there was no time to lose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ten minutes slowly ticked away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He glanced at his watch. “Five minutes after four. I wish I had gone with Mac.
+He may have been recognized.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But even as the thought flitted through his mind, the semi-darkness opened to
+let a figure out of it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“All quiet along the Potomac, seh?” asked the foreman’s blithe voice. “Good. I
+found the boys and got them started.” He flung down a Mexican vaquero’s gaily
+trimmed costume.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Get into these, seh. Denver shucked them for me. That coyote must have noticed
+what we wore before he slid out. Y’u can bet the orders are to watch for us as
+we were dressed then.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What are y u going to do?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Me? I’m scheduled to be Aaron Burr, seh. Missou swaps with me when he gets
+back here. They’re going to rustle us some white men’s clothes, too, but we
+cayn’t wear them till we get out of town on account of showing our handsome
+faces.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What about horses?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Denver is rustling some for us. Y’u better be scribbling your billy-doo to the
+girl y’u leave behind y’u, seh.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Haven’t y’u got one to scribble?” Bannister retorted. “Seems to me y’u better
+get busy, too.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So it happened that when Missou arrived a few minutes later he found this pair
+of gentlemen, who were about to flee for their lives, busily inditing what
+McWilliams had termed facetiously <i>billets-doux</i>. Each of them was trying
+to make his letter a little warmer than friendship allowed without committing
+himself to any chance of a rebuff. Mac got as far as Nora Darling,
+absentmindedly inserted a comma between the words, and there stuck hopelessly.
+He looked enviously across at Bannister, whose pencil was traveling rapidly
+down his note-book.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My, what a swift trail your pencil leaves on that paper. That’s going some.
+Mine’s bogged down before it got started. I wisht y’u would start me off.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, if you ain’t up and started a business college already. I had ought to
+have brought a typewriter along with me,” murmured Missou ironically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How are things stacking? Our friends the enemy getting busy yet?” asked
+Bannister, folding and addressing his note.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s what. Orders gone out to guard every road so as not to let you pass.
+What’s the matter with me rustling up the boys and us holding down a corner of
+this town ourselves?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sheepman shook his head. “We’re not going to start a little private war of
+our own. We couldn’t do that without spilling a lot of blood. No, we’ll make a
+run for it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That y’u, Denver?” the foreman called softly, as the sound of approaching
+horses reached him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Bet your life. Got your own broncs, too. Sheriff Burns called up Daniels not
+to let any horses go out from his corral to anybody without his O.K. I happened
+to be cinching at the time the ’phone message came, so I concluded that order
+wasn’t for me, and lit out kinder unceremonious.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hastily the fugitives donned the new costumes and dominos, turned their notes
+over to Denver, and swung to their saddles.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Good luck!” the punchers called after them, and Denver added an ironical
+promise that the foreman had no doubt he would keep. “I’ll look out for
+Nora&mdash;Darling.” There was a drawling pause between the first and second
+names. “I’ll ce’tainly see that she don’t have any time to worry about y’u,
+Mac.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u go to Halifax,” returned Mac genially over his shoulder as he loped away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I doubt if we can get out by the roads. Soon as we reach the end of the street
+we better cut across that hayfield,” suggested Ned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s whatever. Then we’ll slip past the sentries without being seen. I’d
+hate to spoil any of them if we can help it. We’re liable to get ourselves
+disliked if our guns spatter too much.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They rode through the main street, still noisy with the shouts of late revelers
+returning to their quarters. Masked men were yet in evidence occasionally, so
+that their habits caused neither remark nor suspicion. A good many of the
+punchers, unable to stay longer, were slipping out of town after having made a
+night of it. In the general exodus the two friends hoped to escape unobserved.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They dropped into a side street, galloped down it for two hundred yards, and
+dismounted at a barb-wire fence which ran parallel with the road. The foreman’s
+wire-clippers severed the strands one by one, and they led their horses through
+the gap. They crossed an alfalfa-field, jumped an irrigation ditch, used the
+clippers again, and found themselves in a large pasture. It was getting lighter
+every moment, and while they were still in the pasture a voice hailed them from
+the road in an unmistakable command to halt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They bent low over the backs of their ponies and gave them the spur. The shot
+they had expected rang out, passing harmlessly over them. Another followed, and
+still another.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s right. Shoot up the scenery. Y’u don’t hurt us none,” the foreman said,
+apostrophizing the man behind the gun.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next clipped fence brought them to the open country. For half an hour they
+rode swiftly without halt. Then McWilliams drew up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Where are we making for?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How about the Wind River country?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Won’t do. First off, they’ll strike right down that way after us. What’s the
+matter with running up Sweetwater Creek and lying out in the bad lands around
+the Roubideaux?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Good. I have a sheep-camp up that way. I can arrange to have grub sent there
+for us by a man I can trust.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“All right. The Roubideaux goes.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While they were nooning at a cow-spring, Bannister, lying on his back, with his
+face to the turquoise sky, became aware that a vagrant impulse had crystallized
+to a fixed determination. He broached it at once to his companion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“One thing is a cinch, Mac. Neither y’u nor I will be safe in this country now
+until we have broken up the gang of desperadoes that is terrorizing this
+country. If we don’t get them they will get us. There isn’t any doubt about
+that. I’m not willing to lie down before these miscreants. What do y’u say?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m with y’u, old man. But put a name to it. What are y’u proposing?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m proposing that y’u and I make it our business not to have any other
+business until we clean out this nest of wolves. Let’s go right after them, and
+see if we can’t wipe out the Shoshone-Teton outfit.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How? They own the law, don’t they?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They don’t own the United States Government. When they held up a mail-train
+they did a fool thing, for they bucked up against Uncle Sam. What I propose is
+that we get hold of one of the gang and make him weaken. Then, after we have
+got hold of some evidence that will convict, we’ll go out and run down my
+namesake Ned Bannister. If people once get the idea that his hold isn’t so
+strong there’s a hundred people that will testify against him. We’ll have him
+in a Government prison inside of six months.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Or else he’ll have us in a hole in the ground,” added the foreman, dryly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“One or the other,” admitted Bannister. “Are y’u in on this thing?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I surely am. Y’u’re the best man I’ve met up with in a month of Sundays, seh.
+Y’u ain’t got but one fault; and that is y’u don’t smoke cigareets. Feed
+yourself about a dozen a day and y’u won’t have a blamed trouble left. Match,
+seh?” The foreman of the Lazy D, already following his own advice, rolled
+deftly his smoke, moistened it and proceeded to blow away his troubles.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bannister looked at his debonair insouciance and laughed. “Water off a duck’s
+back,” he quoted. “I know some folks that would be sweating fear right now.
+It’s ce’tainly an aggravating situation, that of being an honest man hunted as
+a villain by a villain. But I expaict my cousin’s enjoying it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He ain’t enjoying it so much as he would if his plans had worked out a little
+smoother. He’s holding the sack right now and cussing right smaht over it being
+empty, I reckon.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He <i>did</i> lock the stable door a little too late,” chuckled the sheepman.
+But even as he spoke a shadow fell over his face. “My God! I had forgotten. Y’u
+don’t suppose he would take it out of Miss Messiter.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Not unless he’s tired of living,” returned her foreman, darkly. “One thing,
+this country won’t stand for is that. He’s got to keep his hands off women or
+he loses out. He dassent lay a hand on them if they don’t want him to. That’s
+the law of the plains, isn’t it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s the unwritten law for the bad man, but I notice it doesn’t seem to
+satisfy y’u, my friend. Y’u and I know that my cousin, Ned Bannister, doesn’t
+acknowledge any law, written or unwritten. He’s a devil and he has no fear.
+Didn’t he kidnap her before?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He surely would never dare touch those young ladies. But&mdash;I don’t know.
+Bann, I guess we better roll along toward the Lazy D country, after all.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I think so.” Ned looked at his friend with smiling drollery. “I thought y’u
+smoked your troubles away, Jim. This one seems to worry y’u.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+McWilliams grinned sheepishly. “There’s one trouble won’t be smoked away. It
+kinder dwells.” Then, apparently apropos of nothing, he added, irrelevantly:
+“Wonder what Denver’s doing right now?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Probably keeping that appointment y’u ran away from,” bantered his friend.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll bet he is. Funny how some men have all the luck,” murmured the despondent
+foreman.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap16"></a>CHAPTER XVI.<br/>
+HUNTING BIG GAME</h2>
+
+<p>
+In point of fact, Denver’s occupation at that moment was precisely what they
+had guessed it to be. He was sitting beside Nora Darling in the grand stand,
+explaining to her the fine points of “roping.” Mr. Bob Austin, commonly known
+as “Texas,” was meanwhile trying to make himself agreeable to Helen Messiter.
+Truth to tell, both young women listened with divided interest to their
+admirers. Both of them had heard the story of the night, and each of them had
+tucked away in her corsage a scribbled note she wanted to get back to her room
+and read again. That the pursuit was still on everybody knew, and those on the
+inside were aware that the “King,” masquerading under the name of Jack
+Holloway, was the active power behind the sheriff stimulating the chase.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was after the roping had begun, and Austin had been called away to take his
+turn, that the outlaw chief sauntered along the aisle of the grand stand to the
+box in which was seated the mistress of the Lazy D.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Beautiful mo’ning, isn’t it? Delightfully crisp and clear,” he said by way of
+introduction, stopping at her box.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She understood the subtle jeer in his manner, and her fine courage rose to meet
+it. There was a daring light in her eye, a buoyant challenge in her voice as
+she answered:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It is a splendid morning. I’m not surprised you are enjoying it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Did I say I was enjoying it?” He laughed as he lifted the bar, came into her
+box and took a seat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Of course not. How careless of me! I had forgotten you were in mourning for a
+deceased friend.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His dark eyes flashed. “I’ll not mourn for him long. He was a mighty trifling
+fellow, anyhow. Soon as I catch and hang his murderers I’ll quit wearing
+black.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You may wear out several suits before then,” she hit back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t y’u believe it; when I want a thing I don’t quit till it’s done.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She met his gaze, and the impact of eyes seemed to shock her physically. The
+wickedness in him threatened, gloated, dominated. She shivered in the warm
+sunlight, and would not have had him know it for worlds.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Dear me! How confident you talk. Aren’t you sometimes disappointed?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Temporarily. But when I want a thing I take it in the end.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She knew he was serving notice on her that he meant to win her; and again the
+little spinal shiver raced over her. She could not look at his sardonic, evil
+face without fear, and she could not look away without being aware of his eyes
+possessing her. What was the use of courage against such a creature as this?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, I understand you take a good deal that isn’t yours,” she retorted
+carelessly, her eyes on the arena.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I make it mine when I take it,” he answered coolly, admiring the gameness
+which she wore as a suit of chain armor against his thrusts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Isn’t it a little dangerous sometimes?” her even voice countered. “When you
+take what belongs to others you run a risk, don’t you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s part of the rules. Except for that I shouldn’t like it so well. I hunt
+big game, and the bigger the game the more risk. That’s why y’u guessed right
+when y’u said I was enjoying the mo’ning.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Meaning&mdash;your cousin?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, no. I wasn’t thinking of him, though he’s some sizable. But I’m hunting
+bigger game than he is, and I expect to bag it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She let her scornful eyes drift slowly over him. “I might pretend to
+misunderstand you. But I won’t. You may have your answer now. I am not afraid
+of you, for since you are a bully you must be a coward. I saw a rattlesnake
+last week in the hills. It reminded me of some one I have seen. I’ll leave you
+to guess who.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her answer drew blood. The black tide raced under the swarthy tan of his face.
+He leaned forward till his beady eyes were close to her defiant ones. “Y’u have
+forgotten one thing, Miss Messiter. A rattlesnake can sting. I ask nothing of
+you. Can’t I break your heart without your loving me? You’re only a
+woman&mdash;and not the first I have broken, by God&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His slim, lithe body was leaning forward so that it cut off others, and left
+them to all intents alone. At a touch of her fingers the handbag in her lap
+flew open and a little ivory-hilted revolver lay in her hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You may break me, but you’ll never bend me an inch.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked at the little gun and laughed ironically. “Sho! If y’u should hit me
+with that and I should find it out I might get mad at y’u.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Did I say it was for you?” she said coldly; and again the shock of joined eyes
+ended in drawn battle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Have y’u the nerve?” He looked her over, so dainty and so resolute, so silken
+strong; and he knew he had his answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His smoldering eyes burned with desire to snatch her to him and ride away into
+the hills. For he was a man who lived in his sensations. He had won many women
+to their hurt, but it was the joy of conflict that made the pursuit worth while
+to him; and this young woman, who could so delightfully bubble with little
+laughs ready to spill over and was yet possessed of a spirit so finely superior
+to the tenderness of her soft, round, maidenly curves, allured him mightily to
+the attack.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She dropped the revolver back into the bag and shut the clasp with a click,
+“And now I think, Mr. Bannister, that I’ll not detain you any longer. We
+understand each other sufficiently.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He rose with a laugh that mocked. “I expaict to spend quite a bit of time
+understanding y’u one of these days. In the meantime this is to our better
+acquaintance.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Deliberately, without the least haste, he stooped and kissed her before she
+could rally from the staggering surprise of the intention she read in his eyes
+too late to elude. Then, with the coolest bravado in the world, he turned on
+his heel and strolled away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Angry sapphires gleamed at him from under the long, brown lashes. She was
+furious, aghast, daunted. By the merest chance she was sitting in a corner of
+the box, so screened from observation that none could see. But the insolence of
+him, the reckless defiance of all standards of society, shook her even while it
+enraged her. He had put forth his claim like a braggart, but he had made good
+with an audacity superb in its effrontery. How she hated him! How she feared
+him! The thoughts were woven inseparably in her mind. Mephisto himself could
+not have impressed himself more imperatively than this strutting, heartless
+master artist in vice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She saw him again presently down in the arena, for it was his turn to show his
+skill at roping. Texas had done well; very well, indeed. He had made the throw
+and tie in thirty-seven seconds, which was two seconds faster than the record
+of the previous year. But she knew instinctively, as her fascinated eyes
+watched the outlaw preparing for the feat, that he was going to win. He would
+use his success as a weapon against her; as a means of showing her that he
+always succeeded in whatever he undertook. So she interpreted he look he flung
+her as he waited at the chute for the wild hill steer to be driven into the
+arena. It takes a good man physically to make a successful roper. He must be
+possessed of nerve, skill and endurance far out of the ordinary. He must be
+quick-eyed, strong-handed, nimble of foot, expert of hand and built like a
+wildcat. So Denver explained to the two young women in the box, and the one
+behind him admitted reluctantly that she long, lean, supple Centaur waiting
+impassively at the gateway fitted the specifications.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Out flashed the rough-coated hill steer, wild and fleet as a hare, thin and
+leggy, with muscles of whipcord. Down went the flag, and the stopwatches began
+to tick off the seconds. Like an arrow the outlaw’s pony shot forward, a lariat
+circling round and round the rider’s head. At every leap the cow pony lessened
+the gap as it pounded forward on the heels of the flying steer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The loop swept forward and dropped over the horns of the animal. The pony, with
+the perfect craft of long practice, swerved to one side with a rush. The
+dragging rope swung up against the running steer’s legs, grew suddenly taut.
+Down went the steer’s head, and next moment its feet were swept from under it
+as it went heavily to the ground. Man and horse were perfect in their team
+work. As the supple rider slid from the back of the pony it ran to the end of
+the rope and braced itself to keep the animal from rising. Bannister leaped on
+the steer, tie-rope in hand. Swiftly his deft hands passed to and fro, making
+the necessary loops and knots. Then his hands went into the air. The steer was
+hog-tied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a few seconds the judges consulted together. “Twenty-nine seconds,”
+announced their spokesman, and at the words a great cheer went up. Bannister
+had made his tie in record time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Impudently the scoundrel sauntered up to the grand stand, bowed elaborately to
+Miss Messiter, and perched himself on the fence, where he might be the observed
+of all observers. It was curious, she thought, how his vanity walked hand in
+hand with so much power and force. He was really extraordinarily strong, but no
+debutante’s self-sufficiency could have excelled his. He was so frankly an
+egotist that it ceased to be a weakness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Back in her room at the hotel an hour later Helen paced up and down under a
+nervous strain foreign to her temperament. She was afraid; for the first time
+in her life definitely afraid. This man pitted against her had deliberately
+divorced his life from morality. In him lay no appeal to any conscience court
+of last resort. But the terror of this was not for herself principally, but for
+her flying lover. With his indubitable power, backed by the unpopularity of the
+sheepman in this cattle country, the King of the Bighorn could destroy his
+cousin if he set himself to do so. Of this she was convinced, and her
+conviction carried a certainty that he had the will as well as the means. If he
+had lacked anything in motive she herself had supplied one. For she was afraid
+that this villain had read her heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And as her hand went fluttering to her heart she found small comfort in the
+paper lying next it that only a few hours before had brought her joy. For at
+any moment a messenger might come in to tell her that the writer of it had been
+captured and was to be dealt with summarily in frontier fashion. At best her
+lover and her friend were but fugitives from justice. Against them were arrayed
+not only the ruffian followers of their enemy, but also the lawfully
+constituted authorities of the county. Even if they should escape to-day the
+net would tighten on them, and they would eventually be captured.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For the third time since coming to Wyoming Helen found refuge in tears.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap17"></a>CHAPTER XVII.<br/>
+RUN TO EARTH</h2>
+
+<p>
+When word came to Denver and the other punchers of the Lazy D that Reddy had
+been pressed into service as a guide for the posse that was pursuing the
+fugitives they gave vent to their feelings in choice profanity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Now, ain’t that like him? Had to run around like a locoed calf telling all he
+knowed and more till Burns ropes him in,” commented the disgusted Missou.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Trouble with Reddy is he sets his mouth to working and then goes away and
+leaves it,” mourned Jim Henson.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’d hate to feel as sore as Reddy will when the boys get through playing with
+him after he gets back to the ranch,” Denver contributed, when he had exhausted
+his vocabulary.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile Reddy, unaware of being a cause of offense, was cheerfully happy in
+the unexpected honor that had been thrust upon him. His will was of putty,
+molded into the opinion of whomever he happened at the moment to be with. Just
+now, with the ironic eye of Sheriff Burns upon him, he was strong for law
+enforcement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A feller hadn’t ought to be so promiscuous with his hardware. This here thing
+of shooting up citizens don’t do Wyoming no good these days. Capital ain’t
+a-going to come in when such goings-on occur,” he sagely opined, unconsciously
+parroting the sentiment Burns had just been instilling into him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s right, sir. If that ain’t horse sense I don’t know any. You got a head
+on you, all right,” answered the admiring sheriff.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The flattered Reddy pleaded guilty to being wiser than most men. “Jest because
+I punch cows ain’t any reason why I’m anybody’s fool. I’ll show them smart boys
+at the Lazy D I don’t have to take the dust of any of the bunch when it comes
+to using my think tank.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I would,” sympathized Burns. “You bet they’ll all be almighty jealous when
+they learn how you was chosen out of the whole outfit on this job.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All day they rode, and that night camped a few miles from the Lazy D. Early
+next morning they hailed a solitary rider as he passed. The man turned out to
+be a cowman, with a small ranch not far from the one owned by Miss Messiter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hello, Henderson! y’u seen anything of Jim McWilliams and another fellow
+riding acrost this way?” asked Reddy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nope,” answered the cowman promptly. But immediately he modified his statement
+to add that he had seen two men riding toward Dry Creek a couple of hours ago.
+“They was going kinder slow. Looked to me sorter like one of them was hurt and
+the other was helping him out,” he volunteered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sheriff looked significantly at one of his men and nodded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You didn’t recognize the horses, I reckon?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Come to think of it, one of the ponies did look like Jim’s roan. What’s up,
+boys? Anything doing?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nothing particular. We want to see Jim, that’s all. So long.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What Henderson had guessed was the truth. The continuous hard riding had been
+too much for Bannister and his wound had opened anew. They were at the time
+only a few miles from a shack on Dry Creek, where the Lazy D punchers sometimes
+put up. McWilliams had attended the wound as best he could, and after a few
+hours’ rest had headed for the cabin in the hills. They were compelled to
+travel very slowly, since the motion kept the sheepman’s wound continually
+bleeding. But about noon they reached the refuge they had been seeking and
+Bannister lay down on the bunk with their saddle blankets under him. He soon
+fell asleep, and Mac took advantage of this to set out on a foraging expedition
+to a ranch not far distant. Here he got some bread, bacon, milk and eggs from a
+man he could trust and returned to his friend.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was dark by the time he reached the cabin. He dismounted, and with his arms
+full of provisions pushed into the hut.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Awake, Bann?” he asked in a low voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The answer was unexpected. Something heavy struck his chest and flung him back
+against the wall. Before he could recover his balance he was pinioned fast.
+Four men had hurled themselves upon him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We’ve got you, Jim. Not a mite o’ use resisting,” counseled the sheriff.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Think I don’t savez that? I can take a hint when a whole Methodist church
+falls on me. Who are y’u, anyhow?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Somebody light a lantern,” ordered Burns.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By the dim light it cast Mac made them out, and saw Ned Bannister gagged and
+handcuffed on the bed. He knew a moment of surprise when his eyes fell on
+Reddy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“So it was y’u brought them here, Red?” he said quietly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Contrary to his own expectations, the gentleman named was embarrassed “The
+sheriff, he summoned me to serve,” was his lame defense.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And so y’u threw down your friends. Good boy!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A man’s got to back the law up, ain’t he?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mac turned his shoulder on him rather pointedly. “There isn’t any need of
+keeping that gag in my friend’s mouth any longer,” he suggested to Burns.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s right, too. Take it out, boys. I got to do my duty, but I don’t aim to
+make any gentleman more uncomfortable than I can help. I want everything to be
+pleasant all round.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m right glad to hear that, Burns, because my friend isn’t fit to travel. Y’u
+can take me back and leave him out here with a guard,” the foreman replied
+quickly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Sorry I can’t accommodate you, Jim, but I got to take y’u both with me.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Those are the orders of the King, are they?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Burns flushed darkly. “It ain’t going to do you any good to talk that way. You
+know mighty well this here man with you is Bannister. I ain’t going to take no
+chances on losing him now I’ve got my hand on him.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u ce’tainly deserve a re-election, and I’ll bet y’u get it all right. Any
+man so given over to duty, so plumb loaded down to the hocks with conscience as
+y’u, will surely come back with a big majority next November.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I ain’t askin’ for <i>your</i> vote, Mac.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, y’u don’t need votes. Just get the King to O. K. your nomination and
+y’u’ll win in a walk.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My friend, y’u better mind your own business. Far as I can make out y’u got
+troubles enough of your own,” retorted the nettled sheriff.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u don’t need to tell me that, Tom Burns’ Y’u ain’t a man&mdash;nothing but a
+stuffed skin worked by a string. When that miscreant Bannister pulls the string
+y’u jump. He’s jerked it now, so y’u’re taking us back to him. I can prove that
+coyote Morgan shot at me first, but that doesn’t cut any ice with you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What made you light out so sudden, then?” demanded the aggrieved Burns
+triumphantly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Because I knew <i>you</i>. That’s a plenty good reason. I’m not asking
+anything for myself. All I say is that my friend isn’t fit to travel yet. Let
+him stay here under a guard till he is.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He was fit enough to get here. By thunder, he’s fit to go back!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u’ve said enough, Mac,” broke in Bannister. “It’s awfully good of y’u to
+speak for me, but I would rather see it out with you to a finish. I don’t want
+any favors from this yellow dog of my cousin.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The “yellow dog” set his teeth and swore vindictively behind them. He was
+already imagining an hour when these insolent prisoners of his would sing
+another tune.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap18"></a>CHAPTER XVIII.<br/>
+PLAYING FOR TIME</h2>
+
+<p>
+“They’ve got ’em. Caught them on Dry Creek, just below Green Forks.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Helen Messiter, just finishing her breakfast at the hotel preparatory to
+leaving in her machine for the ranch, laid down her knife and fork and looked
+with dilated eyes at Denver, who had broken in with the news.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Are you sure?” The color had washed from her face and left her very white, but
+she fronted the situation quietly without hysterics or fuss of any kind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, ma’am. They’re bringing them in now to jail. Watch out and y’u’ll see
+them pass here in a few minutes. Seems that Bannister’s wound opened up on him
+and he couldn’t go any farther. Course Mac wouldn’t leave him. Sheriff Burns
+and his posse dropped in on them and had them covered before Mac could chirp.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You are sure this man&mdash;this desperado Bannister&mdash;will do nothing
+till night?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Not the way I figure it. He’ll have the jail watched all day. But he’s got to
+work the town up to a lynching. I expect the bars will be free for all to-day.
+By night the worst part of this town will be ready for anything. The rest of
+the citizens are going to sit down and do nothing just because it is
+Bannister.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But it isn’t Bannister&mdash;not the Bannister they think it is.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He shook his head. “No use, ma’am. I’ve talked till my throat aches, but it
+don’t do a mite of good. Nobody believes a word of what I say. Y’u see, we
+ain’t got any proof.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Proof! We have enough, God knows! didn’t this villain&mdash;this outlaw that
+calls himself Jack Holloway&mdash;attack and try to murder him?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s what we believe, but the report out is that one of us punchers shot him
+up for crossing the dead-line.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Didn’t this fellow hold up the ranch and try to take Ned Bannister away with
+him?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, ma’am. But that doesn’t look good to most people. They say he had his
+friends come to take him away so y’u wouldn’t hold him and let us boys get him.
+This cousin business is a fairy tale the way they size it up. How come this
+cousin to let him go if he held up the ranch to put the sick man out of
+business? No, miss. This country has made up its mind that your friend is the
+original Ned Bannister. My opinion is that nothing on earth can save him.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t want your opinion. I’m going to save him, I tell you; and you are
+going to help. Are his friends nothing but a bunch of quitters?” she cried,
+with sparkling eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I didn’t know I was such a great friend of his,” answered the cowboy sulkily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’re a friend of Jim McWilliams, aren’t you? Are you going to sneak away and
+let these curs hang him?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Denver flushed. “Y’u’re dead right, Miss Helen. I guess I’ll see it out with
+you. What’s the orders?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I want you to help me organize a defense. Get all Mac’s friends stirred up to
+make a fight for him. Bring as many of them in to see me during the day as you
+can. If you see any of the rest of the Lazy D boys send them in to me for
+instructions. Report yourself every hour to me. And make sure that at least
+three of your friends that you can trust are hanging round the jail all day so
+as to be ready in case any attempt is made to storm it before dark.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll see to it.” Denver hung on his heel a moment before leaving. “It’s only
+square to tell y’u, Miss Helen, that this means war here tonight. These streets
+are going to run with blood if we try to save them.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m taking that responsibility,” she told him curtly; but a moment later she
+added gently: “I have a plan, my friend, that may stop this outrage yet. But
+you must do your best for me.” She smiled sadly at him. “You’re my foreman,
+to-day, you know.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m going to do my level best, y’u may tie to that,” he told her earnestly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I know you will.” And their fingers touched for an instant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Through a window the girl could see a crowd pouring down the street toward the
+hotel. She flew up the stairs and out upon the second-story piazza that looked
+down upon the road.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From her point of vantage she easily picked them out&mdash;the two unarmed men
+riding with their hands tied behind their backs, encircled by a dozen riders
+armed to the teeth. Bannister’s hat had apparently fallen off farther down the
+street, for the man beside him was dusting it. The wounded prisoner looked
+about him without fear, but it was plain he was near the limit of endurance. He
+was pale as a sheet, and his fair curls clung moistly to his damp forehead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+McWilliams caught sight of her first, and she could see him turn and say a word
+to his comrade. Bannister looked up, caught sight of her, and smiled. That
+smile, so pale and wan, went to her heart like a knife. But the message of her
+eyes was hope. They told the prisoners silently to be of good cheer, that at
+least they were not deserted to their fate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What is it about&mdash;the crowd?” Nora asked of her mistress as the latter
+was returning to the head of the stairs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In as few words as she could Helen told her, repressing sharply the tears the
+girl began to shed. “This is not the time to weep&mdash;not yet. We must save
+them. You can do your part. Mr. Bannister is wounded. Get a doctor over the
+telephone and see that he attends him at the prison. Don’t leave the ’phone
+until you have got one to promise to go immediately.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, miss. Is there anything else?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ask the doctor to call you up from the prison and tell you how Mr. Bannister
+is. Make it plain to him that he is to give up his other practice, if
+necessary, and is to keep us informed through the day about his patient’s
+condition. I will be responsible for his bill.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Helen herself hurried to the telegraph office at the depot. She wrote out a
+long dispatch and handed it to the operator. “Send this at once please.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was one of those supercilious young idiots that make the most of such small
+power as ever drifts down to them. Taking the message, he tossed it on the
+table. “I’ll send it when I get time.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’ll send it now.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What&mdash;what’s that?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her steady eyes caught and held his shifting ones. “I say you are going to send
+it now&mdash;this very minute.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I guess not. The line’s busy,” he bluffed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If you don’t begin sending that message this minute I’ll make it my business
+to see that you lose your position,” she told him calmly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He snatched up the paper from the place where he had tossed it. “Oh, well, if
+it’s so darned important,” he conceded ungraciously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stood quietly above him while he sent the telegram, even though he
+contrived to make every moment of her stay an unvoiced insult. Her wire was to
+the wife of the Governor of the State. They had been close friends at school,
+and the latter had been urging Helen to pay a visit to Cheyenne. The message
+she sent was as follows:
+</p>
+
+<p class="letter">
+Battle imminent between outlaws and cattlemen here. Bloodshed certain to-night.
+My foreman last night killed in self-defense a desperado. Bannister’s gang, in
+league with town authorities, mean to lynch him and one of my other friends
+after dark this evening. Sheriff will do nothing. Can your husband send
+soldiers immediately? Wire answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The operator looked up sullenly after his fingers had finished the last tap.
+“Well?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Just one thing more,” Helen told him. “You understand the rules of the company
+about secrecy. Nobody but you knows I am sending this message. If by any chance
+it should leak out, I shall know through whom. If you want to hold your
+position, you will keep quiet.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I know my business,” he growled. Nevertheless, she had spoken in season, for
+he had had it in his mind to give a tip where he knew it would be understood to
+hasten the jail delivery and accompanying lynching.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When she returned to the hotel, Helen found Missou waiting for her. She
+immediately sent him back to the office, and told him to wait there until the
+answer was received. “I’ll send one of the boys up to relieve you so that you
+may come with the telegram as soon as it arrives. I want the operator watched
+all day. Oh, here’s Jim Henson! Denver has explained the situation to you, I
+presume. I want you to go up to the telegraph office and stay there all day. Go
+to lunch with the operator when he goes. Don’t let him talk privately to
+anybody, not even for a few seconds. I don’t want you to seem to have him under
+guard before outsiders, but let him know it very plainly. He is not to mention
+a wire I sent or the answer to it&mdash;not to anybody, Jim. Is that plain?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u bet! He’s a clam, all right, till the order is countermanded.” And the
+young man departed with a cheerful grin that assured Helen she had nothing to
+fear from official leaks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nora, from answering a telephone call, came to report to the general in charge.
+“The doctor says that he has looked after Mr. Bannister, and there is no
+immediate danger. If he keeps quiet for a few days he ought to do well. Mr.
+McWilliams sent a message by him to say that we aren’t to worry about him. He
+said he would&mdash;would&mdash;rope a heap of cows on the Lazy D yet.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nora, bursting into tears, flung herself into Helen’s arms. “They are going to
+kill him. I know they are, and&mdash;and ’twas only yesterday, ma’am, I told
+him not to&mdash;to get gay, the poor boy. When he tried to&mdash;to&mdash;”
+She broke down and sobbed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her mistress smiled in spite of herself, though she was bitterly aware that
+even Nora’s grief was only superficially ludicrous.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We’re going to save him, Nora, if we can. There’s hope while there’s life. You
+see, Mac himself is full of courage. <i>He</i> hasn’t given up. We must keep up
+our courage, too.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, ma’am, but this is the first gentleman friend I ever had hanged,
+and&mdash;” She broke off, sobbing, leaving the rest as a guess.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Helen filled it out aloud. “And you were going to say that you care more for
+him than any of the others. Well, you must stop coquetting and tell him so when
+we have saved him.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, ma’am,” agreed Nora, very repentant for the moment of the fact that it
+was her nature to play with the hearts of those of the male persuasion.
+Immediately she added: “He was <i>that</i> kind, ma’am, tender-hearted.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Helen, whose own heart was breaking, continued to soothe her. “Don’t say
+<i>was</i>, child. You are to be brave, and not think of him that way.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, ma’am. He told me he was going to buy cows with the thousand dollars he
+won yesterday. I knew he meant&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, of course. It’s a cowboy’s way of saying that he means to start
+housekeeping. Have you the telegram, Missou?” For that young man was standing
+in the doorway.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He handed her the yellow slip. She ripped open the envelope and read:
+</p>
+
+<p class="letter">
+Company B en route. Railroad connections uncertain. Postpone crisis long as
+possible. May reach Gimlet Butte by ten-thirty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her first thought was of unspeakable relief. The militia was going to take a
+hand. The boys in khaki would come marching down the street, and everything
+would be all right. But hard on the heels of her instinctive gladness trod the
+sober second thought. Ten-thirty at best, and perhaps later! Would they wait
+that long, or would they do their cowardly work as soon as night fell. She must
+contrive to delay them till the train drew in. She must play for those two
+lives with all her woman’s wit; must match the outlaw’s sinister cunning and
+fool him into delay. She knew he would come if she sent for him. But how long
+could she keep him? As long as he was amused at her agony, as long as his
+pleasure in tormenting her was greater than his impatience to be at his
+ruffianly work. Oh, if she ever needed all her power it would be to-night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Throughout the day she continued to receive hourly reports from Denver, who
+always brought with him four or five honest cowpunchers from up-country to
+listen to the strange tale she unfolded to them. It was, of course, in part,
+the spell of her sweet personality, of that shy appeal she made to the manhood
+in them; but of those who came, nearly all believed, for the time at least, and
+aligned themselves on her side in the struggle that was impending. Some of
+these were swayed from their allegiance in the course of the day, but a few she
+knew would remain true.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile, all through the day, the enemy was busily at work. As Denver had
+predicted, free liquor was served to all who would drink. The town and its
+guests were started on a grand debauch that was to end in violence that might
+shock their sober intelligence. Everywhere poisoned whispers were being flung
+broadcast against the two men waiting in the jail for what the night would
+bring forth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dusk fell on a town crazed by bad whiskey and evil report. The deeds of
+Bannister were hashed and rehashed at every bar, and nobody related them with
+more ironic gusto than the man who called himself Jack Holloway. There were
+people in town who knew his real name and character, but of these the majority
+were either in alliance with him or dared not voice their knowledge. Only Miss
+Messiter and her punchers told the truth, and their words were blown away like
+chaff.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the first moment of darkness Helen had the outlaw leader dogged by two of
+her men. Since neither of these were her own riders this was done without
+suspicion. At intervals of every quarter of an hour they reported to her in
+turn. Bannister was beginning to drink heavily, and she did not want to cut
+short his dissipation by a single minute. Yet she had to make sure of getting
+his attention before he went too far.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was close to nine when she sent him a note, not daring to delay a minute
+longer. For the reports of her men were all to the same effect, that the crisis
+would not now be long postponed. Bannister, or Holloway, as he chose to call
+himself, was at the bar with his lieutenants in evil when the note reached him.
+He read it with a satisfaction he could not conceal. So! He had brought her
+already to her knees. Before he was through with her she should grovel in the
+dust before him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll be back in a few minutes. Do nothing till I return,” he ordered, and went
+jingling away to the Elk House.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The young woman’s anxiety was pitiable, but she repressed it sternly when she
+went to meet the man she feared; and never had it been more in evidence than in
+this hour of her greatest torture. Blithely she came forward to meet him, eye
+challenging eye gayly. No hint of her anguish escaped into her manner. He read
+there only coquetry, the eternal sex conflict, the winsome defiance of a woman
+hitherto the virgin mistress of all assaults upon her heart’s citadel. It was
+the last thing he had expected to see, but it was infinitely more piquant, more
+intoxicating, than desperation. She seemed to give the lie to his impression of
+her love for his cousin; and that, too, delighted his pride.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You will sit down?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Carelessly, almost indolently, she put the question, her raised eyebrows
+indicating a chair with perfunctory hospitality. He had not meant to sit, had
+expected only to gloat a few minutes over her despair; but this situation
+called for more deliberation. He had yet to establish the mastery his vanity
+demanded. Therefore he took a chair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“This is ce’tainly an unexpected honor. Did y’u send for me to explain some
+more about that sufficient understanding between us?” he sneered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a great relief to her to see that, though he had been drinking, as she
+had heard, he was entirely master of himself. Her efforts might still be
+directed to Philip sober.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I sent for you to congratulate you,” she answered, with a smile. “You are a
+bigger man than I thought. You have done what you said you would do, and I
+presume you can very shortly go out of mourning.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He radiated vanity, seemed to visibly expand “Do y’u go in when I go out?” he
+asked brutally.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She laughed lightly. “Hardly. But it does seem as if I’m unlucky in my foremen.
+They all seem to have engagements across the divide.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll get y u another.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Thank you. I was going to ask as much of you. Can you suggest one now?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m a right good cattle man myself.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And&mdash;can you stay with me a reasonable time?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He laughed. “I have no engagements across the Styx, ma’am.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My other foremen thought <i>they</i> were permanent fixtures here, too.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We’re all liable to mistakes.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Even you, I suppose.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll sign a lease to give y’u possession of my skill for as long as y’u like.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She settled herself comfortably back in an easy chair, as alluring a picture of
+buoyant, radiant youth as he had seen in many a day. “But the terms. I am
+afraid I can’t offer you as much as you make at your present occupation.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I could keep that up as a side-line.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“So you could. But if you use my time for your own profit, you ought to pay me
+a royalty on your intake.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His eyes lit with laughter. “I reckon that can be arranged. Any percentage you
+think fair It will all be in the family, anyway.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I think that is one of the things about which we don’t agree,” she made answer
+softly, flashing him the proper look of inviting disdain from under her silken
+lashes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He leaned forward, elbow on the chair-arm and chin in hand. “We’ll agree about
+it one of these days.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Think so?” she returned airily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t think. I know.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Just an eyebeat her gaze met his, with that hint of shy questioning, of puzzled
+doubt that showed a growing interest. “I wonder,” she murmured, and recovered
+herself with a hurried little laugh.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How she hated her task, and him! She was a singularly honest woman, but she
+must play the siren; must allure this scoundrel to forgetfulness, and yet elude
+the very familiarity her manner invited. She knew her part, the heartless
+enticing coquette, compounded half of passion and half of selfishness. It was a
+hateful thing to do, this sacrifice of her personal reticence, of the
+individual abstraction in which she wrapped herself as a cloak, in order to
+hint at a possibility of some intimacy of feeling between them. She shrank from
+it with a repugnance hardly to be overcome, but she held herself with an iron
+will and consummate art to the role she had undertaken. Two lives hung on her
+success. She must not forget that. She would not let herself forget
+that&mdash;and one of them that of the man she loved.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So, bravely she played her part, repelling always with a hint of invitation,
+denying with the promise in her fascinated eyes of ultimate surrender to his
+ardor. In the zest of the pursuit the minutes slipped away unnoticed. Never had
+a woman seemed to him more subtly elusive, and never had he felt more sure of
+himself. Her charm grew on him, stirred his pulses to a faster beat. For it was
+his favorite sport, and this warm, supple young creature, who was to be the
+victim of his bow and arrow, showed herself worthy of his mettle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The clock downstairs struck the half-hour, and Bannister, reminded of what lay
+before him outside, made a move to go. Her alert eyes had been expecting it,
+and she forestalled him by a change of tactics. Moved apparently by impulse,
+she seated herself on the piano-stool, swept the keys for an instant with her
+fingers, and plunged into the brilliant “Carmen” overture. Susceptible as this
+man was to the influence of music, he could not fail to be arrested by so
+perfect an interpretation of his mood. He stood rooted, was carried back again
+in imagination to a great artiste’s rendering of that story of fierce passion
+and aching desire so brilliantly enacted under the white sunbeat of a country
+of cloudless skies. Imperceptibly she drifted into other parts of the opera.
+Was it the wild, gypsy seductiveness of <i>Carmen</i> that he felt, or, rather,
+this American girl’s allurement? From “Love will like a birdling fly” she
+slipped into the exquisitely graceful snatches of song with which <i>Carmen</i>
+answers the officer’s questions. Their rare buoyancy marched with his mood, and
+from them she carried him into the song “Over the hill,” that is so perfect and
+romantic an expression of the <i>wanderlust.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How long she could have held him she will never know, for at that inopportune
+time came blundering one of his men into the room with a call for his presence
+to take charge of the situation outside.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What do y’u want, Bostwick?” he demanded, with curt peremptoriness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man whispered in his ear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Can’t wait any longer, can’t they?” snapped his chief. “Y’u tell them they’ll
+wait till I give the word. Understand?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He almost flung the man out of the room, but Helen noticed that she had lost
+him. His interest was perfunctory, and, though he remained a little time
+longer, it was to establish his authority with the men rather than to listen to
+her. Twice he looked at his watch within five minutes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He rose to go. “There is a little piece of business I have to put through. So
+I’ll have to ask y’u to excuse me. I have had a delightful hour, and I hate to
+go.” He smiled, and quoted with mock sentimentality:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+“The hours I spent with thee, dear heart,<br/>
+    Are as a string of pearls to me;<br/>
+I count them over, every one apart,<br/>
+    My rosary! My rosary!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Dear me! One certainly lives and learns. How could I have guessed that, with
+your reputation, you could afford to indulge in a rosary?” she mocked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Good night.” He offered his hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t go yet,” she coaxed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He shook his head. “Duty, y’u know.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Stay only a little longer. Just ten minutes more.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His vanity purred, so softly she stroked it. “Can’t. Wish I could. Y’u hear how
+noisy things are getting. I’ve got to take charge. So-long.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stood close, looking up at him with a face of seductive appeal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t go yet. Please!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The triumph of victory mounted to his head. “I’ll come back when I’ve done what
+I’ve got to do.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, no. Stay a little longer just a little.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Not a minute, sweetheart.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He bent to kiss her, and a little clenched fist struck his face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t you dare!” she cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The outraged woman in her, curbed all evening with an iron bit, escaped from
+control. Delightedly he laughed. The hot spirit in her pleased him mightily. He
+took her little hands and held them in one of his while he smiled down at her.
+“I guess that kiss will keep, my girl, till I come back.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My God! Are you going to kill your own cousin?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All her terror, all her detestation and hatred of him, looked haggardly out of
+her unmasked face. His narrowed eyes searched her heart, and his countenance
+grew every second more sinister,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u have been fooling me all evening, then?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, and hating you every minute of the time.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u dared?” His face was black with rage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You would like to kill me. Why don’t you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Because I know a better revenge. I’m going out to take it now. After your
+lover is dead, I’ll come back and make love to y’u again,” he sneered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Never!” She stood before him like a queen in her lissom, brave, defiant youth.
+“And as for your cousin, you may kill him, but you can’t destroy his contempt
+for you. He will die despising you for a coward and a scoundrel.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was true, and he knew it. In his heart he cursed her, while he vainly sought
+some weapon that would strike home through her impervious armor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u love him. I’ll remember that when I see him kick,” he taunted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I make you a present of the information. I love him, and I despise you.
+Nothing can change those facts,” she retorted whitely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mebbe, but some day y’u’ll crawl on your knees to beg my pardon for having
+told me so.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There is your overweening vanity again,” she commented.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m going to break y’u, my beauty, so that y’u’ll come running when I snap my
+fingers.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We’ll see.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And in the meantime I’ll go hang your lover.” He bowed ironically, swung on
+his jingling heel, and strode out of the room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stood there listening to his dying footfalls, then covered her face with
+her hands, as if to press back the dreadful vision her mind conjured.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap19"></a>CHAPTER XIX.<br/>
+WEST POINT TO THE RESCUE</h2>
+
+<p>
+It was understood that the sheriff should make a perfunctory defense against
+the mob in order to “square” him with the voters at the election soon to be
+held. But the word had been quietly passed that the bullets of the prison
+guards would be fired over the heads of the attackers. This assurance lent an
+added braggadocio to the Dutch courage of the lynchers. Many of them who would
+otherwise have hung back distinguished themselves by the enthusiasm which they
+displayed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bannister himself generaled the affair, detailing squads to batter down the
+outer door, to guard every side of the prison, and to overpower the sheriff’s
+guard. That official, according to programme, appeared at a window and made a
+little speech, declaring his intention of performing his duty at whatever cost.
+He was hooted down with jeers and laughter, and immediately the attack
+commenced.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The yells of the attackers mingled with the sound of the axe-blows and the
+report of revolvers from inside the building. Among those nearest to the door
+being battered down were Denver and the few men he had with him. His plan
+offered merely a forlorn hope. It was that in the first scramble to get in
+after the way was opened he and his friends might push up the stairs in the
+van, and hold the corridor for as long as they could against the furious mob.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It took less than a quarter of an hour to batter down the door, and among the
+first of those who sprang across the threshold were Denver, Missou, Frisco and
+their allies. While others stopped to overpower the struggling deputies
+according to the arranged farce, they hurried upstairs and discovered the cell
+in which their friends were fastened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Frisco passed a revolver through the grating to McWilliams, and another to
+Bannister. “Haven’t got the keys, so I can’t let y’u out, old hoss,” he told
+the foreman. “But mebbe y’u won’t feel so lonesome with these little toys to
+play with.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile Denver, a young giant of seventy-six inches, held the head of the
+stairs, with four stalwart plainsmen back of him. The rush of many feet came up
+pell-mell, and he flung the leaders back on those behind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hold on there. This isn’t a free-lunch counter. Don’t you see we’re crowded up
+here already?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What’s eating you? Whyfor, can’t we come?” growled one of the foremost nursing
+an injured nose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ve just explained to you, son, that it’s crowded. Folks are prevalent enough
+up here right now. Send up that bunch of keys and we’ll bring your meat to you
+fast enough.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What’s that? What’s that?” The outlaw chief pushed his way through the dense
+mob at the door and reached the stairway.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He won’t let us up,” growled one of them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Who won’t?” demanded Bannister sharply, and at once came leaping up the
+stairs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nothing doing,” drawled Frisco, and tossed him over the railing on to the
+heads of his followers below.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They carried Bannister into the open air, for his head had struck the
+newel-post in his descent. This gave the defense a few minutes respite.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They’re going to come a-shooting next time,” remarked Denver. “Just as soon as
+he comes back from bye-low land you’ll see things hum.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u bet,” agreed Missou. “We’ll last about three minutes when the stampede
+begins.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The scream of an engine pierced the night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Denver’s face lit. “Make it five minutes, Missou, and Mac is safe. At least,
+I’m hoping so awful hard. Miss Helen wired for the militia from Sheridan this
+mo’ning. Chances are they’re on that train. I couldn’t tell you earlier because
+she made me promise not to. She was afraid it might leak out and get things
+started sooner.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Weak but furious, the miscreant from the Shoshones returned to the attack.
+“Break in the back door and sneak up behind on those fellows. We’ll have the
+men we want inside of fifteen minutes,” he promised the mob.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We’ll rush them from both sides, and show those guys on the landing whether
+they can stop us,” added Bostwick.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly some one raised the cry, “The soldiers!” Bannister looked up the
+street and swore a vicious oath. Swinging down the road at double time came a
+company of militia in khaki. He was mad with baffled fury, but he made good his
+retreat at once and disappeared promptly into the nearest dark alley.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The mob scattered by universal impulse; disintegrated so promptly that within
+five minutes the soldiers held the ground alone, save for the officials of the
+prison and Denver’s little band.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A boyish lieutenant lately out of the Point, and just come in to a lieutenancy
+in the militia, was in command. “In time?” he asked anxiously, for this was his
+first independent expedition.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u bet,” chuckled Denver. “We’re right glad to see you, and I’ll bet those
+boys in the cage ain’t regretting your arrival any. Fifteen minutes later and
+you would have been in time to hold the funeral services, I reckon.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Where is Miss Messiter?” asked the young officer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“She’s at the Elk House, colonel. I expect some of us better drift over there
+and tell her it’s all right. She’s the gamest little woman that ever crossed
+the Wyoming line. Hadn’t been for her these boys would have been across the
+divide hours ago. She’s a plumb thoroughbred. Wouldn’t give up an inch. All day
+she has generaled this thing; played a mighty weak hand for a heap more than it
+was worth. Sand? Seh: she’s grit clear through, if anybody asks you.” And
+Denver told the story of the day, making much of her unflinching courage and
+nothing of her men’s readiness to back whatever steps she decided upon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was ten minutes past eleven when a smooth young, apple-cheeked lad in khaki
+presented himself before Helen Messiter with a bow never invented outside of
+West Point.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I am Lieutenant Beecher. Governor Raleigh presents his compliments by me, Miss
+Messiter, and is very glad to be able to put at your service such forces as are
+needed to quiet the town.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You were in time?” she breathed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“With about five minutes to spare. I am having the prisoners brought here for
+the night if you do not object. In the morning I shall investigate the affair,
+and take such steps as are necessary. In the meantime you may rest assured that
+there will be no further disturbance.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Thank you I am sure that with you in command everything will now be all right,
+and I am quite of your opinion that the prisoners had better stay here for the
+night. One of them is wounded, and ought to be given the best attention. But,
+of course, you will see to that, lieutenant.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The young man blushed. This was the right kind of appreciation. He wished his
+old classmates at the Point could hear how implicitly this sweet girl relied on
+him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Certainly. And now, Miss Messiter, if there is nothing you wish, I shall
+retire for the night. You may sleep with perfect confidence.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I am sure I may, lieutenant.” She gave him a broadside of trusting eyes full
+of admiration. “But perhaps you would like me to see my foreman first, just to
+relieve my mind. And, as you were about to say, his friend might be brought in,
+too, since they are together.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The young man promptly assented, though he had not been aware that he was about
+to say anything of the kind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They came in together, Bannister supported by McWilliams’s arm. The eyes of
+both mistress and maid brimmed over with tears when they saw them. Helen
+dragged forward a chair for the sheepman, and he sank into it. From its depths
+he looked up with his rare, sweet smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ve heard about it,” he told her, in a low voice. “I’ve heard how y’u fought
+for my life all day. There’s nothing I can say. I owed y’u everything already
+twice, and now I owe it all over again. Give me a lifetime and I couldn’t get
+even.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Helen’s swift glance swept over Nora and the foreman. They were in a dark
+alcove, oblivious of anybody else. Also they were in each other’s arms frankly.
+For some reason wine flowed into the cream of Helen’s cheeks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do you have to ‘get even’? Among friends is that necessary?” she asked shyly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I hope not. If it is, I’m sure bankrupt. Even my thanks seem to stay at home.
+If y’u hadn’t done so much for me, perhaps I could tell y’u how much y’u had
+done. But I have no words to say it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then don’t,” she advised.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u’re the best friend a man ever had. That’s all I can say.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s enough, since you mean it, even though it isn’t true,” she answered
+gently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Their eyes met, fastened for an instant, and by common consent looked away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As it chanced they were close to the window, their shadows reflected on the
+blind. A man, slipping past in the street on horseback, stopped at sight of
+that lighted window, with the moving shadows, in an uncontrollable white fury.
+He slid from the saddle, threw the reins over the horse’s head to the ground,
+and slipped his revolver from its holster and back to make sure that he could
+draw it easily. Then he passed springily across the road to the hotel and up
+the stairs. He trod lightly, stealthily, and by his very wariness defeated his
+purpose of eluding observation. For a pair of keen eyes from the hotel office
+glimpsed the figure stealing past so noiselessly, and promptly followed up the
+stairway.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hope I don’t intrude at this happy family gathering.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Helen, who had been pouring a glass of cordial for the spent and wounded
+sheepman, put the glass down on the table and turned at sound of the silken,
+sinister voice. After one glance at the vindictive face, from the cold eyes of
+which hate seemed to smolder, she took an instinctive step toward her lover.
+The cold wave that drenched her heart accompanied an assurance that the man in
+the doorway meant trouble.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His sleek smile arrested her. He was standing with his feet apart, his hands
+clasped lightly behind his back, as natty and as well groomed as was his wont.
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+“Ah, make the most of what ye yet may spend,<br/>
+Before ye, too, into the Dust descend;<br/>
+    Dust into Dust, and under Dust to lie,<br/>
+Sans Wine, sans Song, sans Singer, and&mdash;sans End!”
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+he misquoted, with a sneer; and immediately interrupted his irony to give way
+to one of his sudden blind rages.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With incredible swiftness his right hand moved forward and up, catching
+revolver from scabbard as it rose. But by a fraction of a second his purpose
+had been anticipated. A closed fist shot forward to the salient jaw in time to
+fling the bullets into the ceiling. An arm encircled the outlaw’s neck, and
+flung him backward down the stairs. The railing broke his fall, and on it his
+body slid downward, the weapon falling from his hand. He pulled himself
+together at the foot of the stairs, crouched for an upward rush, but changed
+his mind instantly. The young officer who had flung him down had him covered
+with his own six-shooter. He could hear footsteps running toward him, and he
+knew that in a few seconds he would be in the hands of the soldiers. Plunging
+out of the doorway, the desperado vaulted to the saddle and drove his spurs
+home. For a minute hoofs pounded on the hard, white road. Then the night
+swallowed him and the echo of his disappearance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That was Bannister of the Shoshones and the Tetons,” the girl’s white lips
+pronounced to Lieutenant Beecher.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And I let him get away from me,” the disappointed lad groaned. “Why, I had him
+right in my hands. I could have throttled him as easy. But how was I to know he
+would have nerve enough to come rushing into a hotel full of soldiers hunting
+him?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u have a very persistent cousin, Mr. Bannister,” said McWilliams, coming
+forward from the alcove with shining eyes. “And I must say he’s game. Did y’u
+ever hear the like? Come butting in here as cool as if he hadn’t a thing to do
+but sing out orders like he was in his own home. He was that easy.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It seems to me that a little of the praise is due Lieutenant Beecher. If he
+hadn’t dealt so competently with the situation murder would have been done. Did
+you learn your boxing at the Academy, Lieutenant?” Helen asked, trying to treat
+the situation lightly in spite of her hammering heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I was the champion middleweight of our class,” Beecher could not help saying
+boyishly, with another of his blushes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I can easily believe it,” returned Helen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I wish y’u would teach me how to double up a man so prompt and immediate,”
+said the admiring foreman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I expect I’m under particular obligations to that straight right to the chin,
+Lieutenant,” chimed in the sheepman. “The fact is that I don’t seem to be able
+to get out anything except thanks these days. I ought to send my cousin a
+letter thanking <i>him</i> for giving me a chance to owe so much kindness to so
+many people.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Your cousin?” repeated the uncomprehending officer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“This desperado, Bannister, is my cousin,” answered the sheepman gravely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But if he was your cousin, why should he want&mdash;to kill you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s a long story, Lieutenant. Will y’u hear it now?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If you feel strong enough to tell it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, I’m strong enough.” He glanced at Helen. “Perhaps we had better not tire
+Miss Messiter with it. If y’u’ll come to my room&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I should like, above all things, to hear it again,” interrupted that young
+woman promptly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For the man she loved had just come back to her from the brink of the grave and
+she was still reluctant to let him out of her sight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Ned Bannister told his story once more, and out of the alcove came the happy
+foreman and Nora to listen to the tale. While he told it his sweetheart’s
+contented eyes were on him. The excitement of the night burnt pleasantly in her
+veins, for out of the nettle danger she had plucked safety for her sheepman.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap20"></a>CHAPTER XX.<br/>
+TWO CASES OF DISCIPLINE</h2>
+
+<p>
+The Fourth of July celebration at Gimlet Butte had been a thing of the past for
+four days and the Lazy D had fallen back into the routine of ranch life. The
+riders were discussing supper and the continued absence of Reddy when that
+young man drew back the flap and joined them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stood near the doorway and grinned with embarrassed guilt at the assembled
+company.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I reckon I got too much Fourth of July at Gimlet Butte, boys. That’s how come
+I to be onpunctual getting back.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a long silence, during which those at the table looked at him with an
+expressionless gravity that did not seem to veil an unduly warm welcome.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hello, Mac! Hello, boys! I just got back,” he further contributed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Without comment the Lazy D resumed supper. Apparently it had not missed Reddy
+or noticed his return. Casual conversation was picked up cheerfully. The return
+of the prodigal was quite ignored.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then that blamed cow gits its back up and makes a bee-line for Rogers. The old
+man hikes for his pony and&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Seems good to git my legs under the old table again,” interrupted Reddy with
+cheerful unease.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“&mdash;loses by about half a second,” continued Missou. “If Doc hadn’t roped
+its hind laig&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Have some cigars, boys. I brought a box back with me.” Reddy tossed a handful
+on the table, where they continued to lie unnoticed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“&mdash;there’s no telling what would have happened. As ’twas the old man got
+off with a&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u bet, they’re good cigars all right,” broke in the propitiatory Reddy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The interrupted anecdote went on to a finish and the men trooped out and left
+the prodigal alone with his hash. When that young man reached the bunkhouse
+Frisco was indulging in a reminiscence. Reddy got only the last of it, but that
+did not contribute to his serenity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yep! When I was working on the Silver Dollar. Must a-been three years ago, I
+reckon, when Jerry Miller got that chapping.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Threw down the outfit in a row they had with the Lafferty crowd, didn’t he?”
+asked Denver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Frisco nodded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mac got up, glanced round, and reached for his hat. “I reckon I’ll have to be
+going,” he said, and forthright departed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Reddy reached for <i>his</i> hat and rose. “I got to go and have a talk with
+Mac,” he explained.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Denver got to the door first and his big frame filled it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t hurry, Reddy. It ain’t polite to rush away right after dinner. Besides,
+Mac will be here all day. He ain’t starting for New York.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u’re gittin’ blamed particular. Mac he went right out.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But Mac didn’t have a most particular engagement with the boys. There’s a
+difference.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why, I ain’t got&mdash;” Reddy paused and looked around helplessly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Gents, I move y’u that it be the horse sense of the Lazy D that our friend Mr.
+Reddy Reeves be given gratis one chapping immediately if not sooner. The reason
+for which same being that he played a lowdown trick on the outfit whose bread
+he was eating.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, quit your foolin’, boys,” besought the victim anxiously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And that Denver, being some able-bodied and having a good reach, be requested
+to deliver same to the gent needing it,” concluded Missou.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Reddy backed in alarm to the wall. “Y’u boys don’t want to get gay with me. Y’u
+can’t monkey with&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Motion carried unanimously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Just as Reddy whipped out his revolver Denver’s long leg shot out and his foot
+caught the wrist behind the weapon. When Reddy next took cognizance of his
+surroundings he was serving as a mattress for the anatomy of three stalwart
+riders. He was gently deposited face down on his bunk with a
+one-hundred-eighty-pound live peg at the end of each arm and leg.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“All ready, Denver,” announced Frisco from the end of the left foot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Denver selected a pair of plain leather chaps with care and proceeded to
+business. What he had to do he did with energy. It is safe to say that at least
+one of those present can still vividly remember this and testify to his
+thoroughness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mac drifted in after the disciplining. As foreman it was fitting that he should
+be discreetly ignorant of what had occurred, but he could not help saying:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That y’u I heard singing, Reddy? Seems to me y’u had ought to take that voice
+into grand opera. The way y’u straddle them high notes is a caution for fair.
+What was it y’u was singing? Sounded like ‘Would I were far from here, love.’”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u go to hell,” choked Reddy, rushing past him from the bunkhouse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+McWilliams looked round innocently. “I judge some of y’u boys must a-been
+teasing Reddy from his manner. Seemed like he didn’t want to sit down and
+talk.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I shouldn’t wonder but he’ll hold his conversations standing for a day or
+two,” returned Missou gravely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the end of the laugh that greeted this Mac replied:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, y’u boys want to be gentle with him.” “He’s so plumb tender now that I
+reckon he’ll get along without any more treatment in that line from us,”
+drawled Frisco.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mac departed laughing. He had an engagement that recurred daily in the dusk of
+the evening, and he was always careful to be on time. The other party to the
+engagement met him at the kitchen door and fell with him into the trail that
+led to Lee Ming’s laundry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What made you late?” she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m not late, honey. I seem late because you’re so anxious,” he explained.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m not,” protested Nora indignantly. “If you think you’re the only man on the
+place, Jim McWilliams.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Sho! Hold your hawsses a minute, Nora, darling. A spinster like y’u&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You think you’re awful funny&mdash;writing in my autograph album that a
+spinster’s best friend is her powder box. I like Mr. Halliday’s ways better.
+He’s a perfect gentleman.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I ain’t got a word to say against Denver, even if he did write in your book,
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+“‘Sugar is sweet,<br/>
+    The sky is blue,<br/>
+Grass is green<br/>
+    And so are you.’
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+I reckon, being a perfect gentleman, he meant&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You know very well you wrote that in yourself and pretended it was Mr.
+Halliday, signing his name and everything. It wasn’t a bit nice of you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Now do I look like a forger?” he wanted to know with innocence on his cherubic
+face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Anyway you know it was mean. Mr. Halliday wouldn’t do such a thing. You take
+your arm down and keep it where it belongs, Mr. McWilliams.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That ain’t my name, Nora, darling, and I’d like to know where my arm belongs
+if it isn’t round the prettiest girl in Wyoming. What’s the use of being
+engaged if&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m not sure I’m going to stay engaged to you,” announced the young woman
+coolly, walking at the opposite edge of the path from him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Now that ain’t any way to talk.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You needn’t lecture me. I’m not your wife and I don’t think I’m going to be,”
+cut in Nora, whose temper was ruffled on account of having had to wait for him
+as well as for other reasons.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u surely wouldn’t make me sue y’u for breach of promise, would y’u?” he
+demanded, with a burlesque of anxiety that was the final straw.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nora turned on her heel and headed for the house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Now don’t y’u get mad at me, honey. I was only joking,” he explained as he
+pursued her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You think you can laugh at me all you please. I’ll show you that you can’t,”
+she informed him icily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Sho! I wasn’t laughing at y’u. What tickled me&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m not interested in your amusement, Mr. McWilliams.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What’s the use of flying out about a little thing like that? Honest, I don’t
+even know what you’re mad at me for,” the perplexed foreman averred.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m not mad at you, as you call it. I’m simply disgusted.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And with a final “Good night” flung haughtily over her shoulder Miss Nora
+Darling disappeared into the house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mac took off his hat and gazed at the door that had been closed in his face. He
+scratched his puzzled poll in vain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I ce’tainly got mine good and straight just like Reddy got his. But what in
+time was it all about? And me thinkin’ I was a graduate in the study of the
+ladies. I reckon I never did get jarred up so. It’s plumb discouraging.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If he could have caught a glimpse of Nora at that moment, lying on her bed and
+crying as if her heart would break, Mac might have found the situation less
+hopeless.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap21"></a>CHAPTER XXI.<br/>
+THE SIGNAL LIGHTS</h2>
+
+<p>
+In a little hill-rift about a mile back of the Lazy D Ranch was a deserted
+miner’s cabin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The hut sat on the edge of a bluff that commanded a view of the buildings
+below, while at the same time the pines that surrounded it screened the shack
+from any casual observation. A thin curl of smoke was rising from the mud
+chimney, and inside the cabin two men lounged before the open fire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s his move, and he is going to make it soon. Every night I look for him to
+drop down on the ranch. His hate’s kind of volcanic, Mr. Ned Bannister’s is,
+and it’s bound to bubble over mighty sudden one of these days,” said the
+younger of the two, rising and stretching himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It did bubble over some when he drove two thousand of my sheep over the bluff
+and killed the whole outfit,” suggested the namesake of the man mentioned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, I reckon that’s some irritating,” agreed McWilliams. “But if I know him,
+he isn’t going to be content with sheep so long as he can take it out of a real
+live man.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Or woman,” suggested the sheepman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Or woman,” agreed the other. “Especially when he thinks he can cut y’u deeper
+by striking at her. If he doesn’t raid the Lazy D one of these nights, I’m a
+blamed poor prophet.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bannister nodded agreement. “He’s near the end of his rope. He could see that
+if he were blind. When we captured Bostwick and they got a confession out of
+him, that started the landslide against him. It began to be noised abroad that
+the government was going to wipe him out. Folks began to lose their terror of
+him, and after that his whole outfit began to want to turn State’s evidence. He
+isn’t sure of one of them now; can’t tell when he will be shot in the back by
+one of his own scoundrels for that two thousand dollars reward.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The foreman strolled negligently to the door. His eyes drifted indolently down
+into the valley, and immediately sparkled with excitement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The signal’s out, Bann,” he exclaimed. “It’s in your window.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sheepman leaped to his feet and strode to the door. Down in the valley a
+light was gleaming in a window. Even while he looked another light appeared in
+a second window.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“She wants us both,” cried the foreman, running to the little corral back of
+the house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He presently reappeared with two horses, both saddled, and they took the
+downward trail at once.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If Miss Helen can keep him in play till we arrive,” murmured Mac anxiously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“She can if he gives her a chance, and I think he will. There’s a kind of cat
+instinct in him to play with his prey.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, but he missed his kill last time by letting her fool him. That’s what I’m
+afraid of’ that he won’t wait.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They had reached lower ground now, and could put their ponies at a pounding
+gallop that ate up the trail fast. As they approached the houses, both men drew
+rein and looked carefully to their weapons. Then they slid from the saddles and
+slipped noiselessly forward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What the foreman had said was exactly true. Helen Messiter did want them both,
+and she wanted them very much indeed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After supper she had been dreamily playing over to herself one of Chopin’s
+waltzes, when she became aware, by some instinct, that she was not alone in the
+room. There had been no least sound, no slightest stir to betray an alien
+presence. Yet that some one was in the room she knew, and by some subtle sixth
+sense could even put a name to the intruder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Without turning she called over her shoulder: “Shall I finish the waltz?” No
+faintest tremor in the clear, sweet voice betrayed the racing heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u’re a cool hand, my friend,” came his ready answer. “But I think we’ll
+dispense with the music. I had enough last time to serve me for twice.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She laughed as she swung on the stool, with that musical scorn which both
+allured and maddened. “I did rather do you that time,” she allowed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“This is the return match. You won then. I win now,” he told her, with a look
+that chilled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Indeed! But isn’t that rather discounting the future?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Only the immediate future. Y’u’re mine, my beauty, and I mean to take y’u with
+me.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Just a disdainful sweep of her eyes she gave him as she rose from the
+piano-stool and rearranged the lamps. “You mean so much that never comes to
+pass, Mr. Bannister. The road to the nether regions is paved with good
+intentions, we are given to understand. Not that yours can by any stretch of
+imagination be called ‘good intentions.’”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Contrariwise, then, perhaps the road to heaven may be paved with evil
+intentions. Since y’u travel the road with me, wherever it may lead, it were
+but gallant to hope so.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He took three sharp steps toward her and stood looking down in her face, her
+sweet slenderness so close to him that the perfume mounted to his brain. Surely
+no maiden had ever been more desirable than this one, who held him in such
+contemptuous estimation that only her steady eyes moved at his approach. These
+held to his and defied him, while she stood leaning motionless against the
+table with such strong and supple grace. She knew what he meant to do, hated
+him for it, and would not give him the satisfaction of flying an inch from him
+or struggling with him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Your eyes are pools of splendor. That’s right. Make them flash fire. I love to
+see such spirit, since it offers a more enticing pleasure in breaking,” he told
+her, with an admiration half ironic but wholly genuine. “Pools of splendor, my
+beauty! Therefore I salute them.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the touch of his lips upon her eyelids a shiver ran through her, but still
+she made no movement, was cold to him as marble. “You coward!” she said softly,
+with an infinite contempt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Your lips,” he continued to catalogue, “are ripe as fresh flesh of Southern
+fruit. No cupid ever possessed so adorable a mouth. A worshiper of Eros I, as
+now I prove.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This time it was the mouth he kissed, the while her unconquered spirit looked
+out of the brave eyes, and fain would have murdered him. In turn he kissed her
+cold cheeks, the tip of one of her little ears, the small, clenched fist with
+which she longed to strike him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Are you quite through?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“For the present, and now, having put the seal of my ownership on her more
+obvious charms, I’ll take my bride home.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I would die first.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nay, you’ll die later, Madam Bannister, but not for many years, I hope,” he
+told her, with a theatrical bow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do you think me so weak a thing as your words imply?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Rather so strong that the glory of overcoming y’u fills me with joy. Believe
+me, madam, though your master I am not less your slave,” he mocked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You are neither my master nor my slave, but a thing I detest,” she said, in a
+low voice that carried extraordinary intensity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And obey,” he added, suavely. “Come, madam, to horse, for our honeymoon.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I tell you I shall not go.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then, in faith, we’ll re-enact a modern edition of ‘The Taming of the Shrew.’
+Y’u’ll find me, sweet, as apt at the part as old <i>Petruchio</i>.” He paced
+complacently up the room and back, and quoted glibly:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+“And thus I’ll curb her mad and headstrong humor.<br/>
+He that knows better how to tame a shrew,<br/>
+Now let him, speak; ’tis charity to show.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Would you take me against my will?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u have said it. What’s your will to me? What I want I take. And I sure want
+my beautiful shrew.” His half-shuttered eyes gloated on her as he rattled off a
+couple more lines from the play he had mentioned.
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+“Kate, like the hazel-twig,<br/>
+Is straight and slender, and as brown in hue<br/>
+As hazel-nuts, and sweeter than the kernels.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She let a swift glance travel anxiously to the door. “You are in a very
+poetical mood to-day.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“As befits a bridegroom, my own.” He stepped lightly to the window and tapped
+twice on the pane. “A signal to bring the horses round. If y’u have any
+preparations to make, any trousseau to prepare, y’u better set that girl of
+yours to work.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I have no preparations to make.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Coming to me simply as y’u are? Good! We’ll lead the simple life.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nora, as it chanced, knocked and entered at his moment. The sight of her vivid
+good looks struck him for the first time. At sight of him she stopped, gazing
+with parted lips, a double row of pearls shining through.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned swiftly to the mistress. “Y’u ought not to be alone there among so
+many men. It wouldn’t be proper. We’ll take the girl along with us.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Where?” Nora’s parted lips emitted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“To Arden, my dear.” He interrupted himself to look at his watch. “I wonder why
+that fellow doesn’t come with the horses. They should pass this window.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bannister, standing jauntily with his feet astride as he looked out of the
+window, heard someone enter the room. “Did y’u bring round the horses?” he
+snapped, without looking round.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>No, we allowed they wouldn’t be needed</i>.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At sound of the slow drawl the outlaw wheeled like a flash, his hand traveling
+to the hilt of the revolver that hung on his hip. But he was too late. Already
+two revolvers covered him, and he knew that both his cousin and McWilliams were
+dead shots. He flashed one venomous look at the mistress of the ranch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u fooled me again. That lamp business was a signal, and I was too
+thick-haided to see it. My compliments to y’u, Miss Messiter.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u are under arrest,” announced his cousin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u don’t say.” His voice was full of sarcastic admiration. “And you done it
+with your little gun! My, what a wonder y’u are!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Take your hand from the butt of that gun. Y’u better relieve him of it, Mac.
+He’s got such a restless disposition he might commit suicide by reaching for
+it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What do y’u think you’re going to do with me now y’u have got me, Cousin Ned?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We’re going to turn y’u over to the United States Government.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Guess again. I have a thing, or two to say to that.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’re going to Gimlet Butte with us, alive or dead.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The outlaw intentionally misunderstood. “If I’ve got to take y’u, then we’ll
+say y’u go dead rather than alive.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He was going to take Nora and me with him,” Helen explained to her friends.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Instantly the man swung round on her. “But now I’ve changed my mind, ma’am. I’m
+going to take my cousin with me instead of y’u ladies.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Helen caught his meaning first, and flashed it whitely to her lover. It dawned
+on him more slowly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I see y’u remember, Miss Messiter,” he continued, with a cruel, silken laugh.
+“He gave me his parole to go with me whenever I said the word. I’m saying it
+now.” He sat down astride a chair, put his chin on the back cross-bar, and
+grinned malevolently from one to another.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What’s come over this happy family? It don’t look so joyous all of a sudden.
+Y’u don’t need to worry, ma’am, I’ll send him back to y’u all right&mdash;alive
+or dead. With his shield or on it, y’u know. Ha! ha!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You will not go with him?” It was wrung from Helen as a low cry, and struck
+her lover’s heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I must,” he answered. “I gave him my word, y’u remember.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But why keep it? You know what he is, how absolutely devoid of honor.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That is not quite the question, is it?” he smiled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Would he keep his word to you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Not if a lie would do as well. But that isn’t the point, either.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s quixotic&mdash;foolish&mdash;worse than that&mdash;ridiculous,” she
+implored.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Perhaps, but the fact remains that I am pledged.”
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+“‘I could not love thee, dear, so much<br/>
+Loved I not honor more,’”
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+murmured the villain in the chair, apparently to the ceiling. “Dear Ned, he
+always was the soul of honor. I’ll have those lines carved on his tombstone.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You see! He is already bragging that he means to kill you,” said the girl.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I shall go armed,” the sheepman answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, but he will take you into the mountain fastnesses, where the men that
+serve him will do his bidding. What is one man among so many?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Two men, ma’am,” corrected the foreman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What’s that?” The outlaw broke off the snatch of opera he was singing to slew
+his head round at McWilliams.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I said two. Any objections, seh?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes. That wasn’t in the contract.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We’re giving y’u surplusage, that’s all. Y’u wanted one of us, and y’u get
+two. We don’t charge anything for the extra weight,” grinned Mac.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, Mac, will you go with him?” cried Helen, with shining eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Those are my present intentions, Miss Helen,” laughed her foreman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whereat Nora emerged from the background and flung herself on him. “Y’u can’t
+go, Jim! I won’t have you go!” she cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The young man blushed a beautiful pink, and accepted gladly this overt evidence
+of a reconciliation. “It’s all right, honey. Don’t y’u think two big, grown-up
+men are good to handle that scalawag? Sho! Don’t y’u worry.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Miss Nora can come, too, if she likes,” suggested he of the Shoshones. “Looks
+like we would have quite a party. Won’t y’u join us, too, Miss Messiter,
+according to the original plan?” he said, extending an ironical invitation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I think we had better cut it down to me alone. We’ll not burden your
+hospitality, sir,” said the sheepman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, sir, I’m in on this. Whyfor can’t I go?” demanded Jim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bannister, the outlaw, eyed him unpleasantly. “Y’u certainly can so far as I am
+concerned. I owe y’u one, too, Mr. McWilliams. Only if y’u come of your own
+free will, as y’u are surely welcome to do, don’t holler if y’u’re not so
+welcome to leave whenever y’u take a notion.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll try and look out for that. It’s settled, then, that we ride together.
+When do y’u want to start?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We can’t go any sooner than right now. I hate to take these young men from
+y’u, lady, but, as I said, I’ll send them back in good shape. <i>Adios,
+señorita</i>. Don’t forget to whom y’u belong.” He swaggered to the door and
+turned, leaning against the jamb with one hand again it. “I expect y’u can say
+those lovey-dov good-byes without my help. I’m going into the yard. If y’u want
+to y’u can plug me in the back through the window,” he suggested, with a sneer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“As y’u would us under similar circumstances,” retorted his cousin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Be with y’u in five minutes,” said the foreman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t hurry. It’s a long good-bye y’u’re saying,” returned his enemy placidly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nora and the young man who belonged to her followed him from the room, leaving
+Bannister and his hostess alone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Shall I ever see you again?” Helen murmured.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I think so,” the sheepman answered. “The truth is that this opportunity falls
+pat. Jim and have been wanting to meet those men who are under my cousin’s
+influence and have a talk with them. There is no question but that the gang is
+disintegrating, and I believe that if we offer to mediate between its members
+and the Government something might be done to stop the outrages that have been
+terrorizing this country. My cousin can’t be reached, but I believe the rest of
+them, or, at least a part, can be induced either to surrender or to flee the
+country. Anyhow, we want to try it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But the danger?” she breathed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Is less than y’u think. Their leader has not anywhere nearly the absolute
+power he had a few months ago. They would hardly dare do violence to a peace
+envoy.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Your cousin would. I don’t believe he has any scruples.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We shall keep an eye on him. Both of us will not sleep at the same time. Y’u
+may depend on me to bring your foreman safely back to y’u,” he smiled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, my foreman!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And your foreman’s friend,” he added. “I have the best of reasons for wanting
+to return alive. I think y’u know them. They have to do with y’u, Miss Helen.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It had come at last, but, womanlike, she evaded the issue her heart had sought.
+“Yes, I know. You think it would not be fair to throw away your life in this
+foolish manner after I have saved it for you&mdash;how many times was it you
+said?” The blue eyes lifted with deceptive frankness to the gray ones.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, that isn’t my reason. I have a better one than that. I love y’u, girl,
+more than anything in this world.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And so you try to prove it to me by running into a trap set for you to take
+your life. That’s a selfish kind of love, isn’t it? Or it would be if I loved
+you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>Do</i> y’u love me, Helen?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why should I tell you, since you don’t love me enough to give up this quixotic
+madness?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t y’u see, dear, I <i>can’t</i> give it up?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I see you won’t. You care more for your pride than for me.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, it isn’t that. I’ve <i>got</i> to go. It isn’t that I want to leave y’u,
+God knows. But I’ve given my word, and I must keep it. Do y’u want me to be a
+quitter, and y’u so game yourself? Do y’u want it to go all over this cattle
+country that I gave my word and took it back because I lost my nerve?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The boy that takes a dare isn’t a hero, is he! There’s a higher courage that
+refuses to be drawn into such foolishness, that doesn’t give way to the jeers
+of the empty headed.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t think that is a parallel case. I’m sorry, we can’t see this alike, but
+I’ve got to go ahead the way that seems to me right.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’re going to leave me, then, to go with that man?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, if that’s the way y’u have to put it.” He looked at her sorrowfully, and
+added gently: “I thought you would see it. I thought sure you would.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But she could not bear that he should leave her so, and she cried out after
+him. “Oh, I see it. I know you must go; but I can’t bear it.” Her head buried
+itself in his coat. “It isn’t right&mdash;it isn’t a&mdash;a square deal that
+you should go away now, the very minute you belong to me.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A happy smile shone in his eyes. “I belong to you, do I? That’s good hearing,
+girl o’ mine.” His arm went round her and he stroked the black head softly.
+“I’ll not be gone long, dear. Don’t y’u worry about me. I’ll be back with y’u
+soon; just as soon as I have finished this piece of work I have to do.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But if you should get&mdash;if anything should happen to you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nothing is going to happen to me. There is a special providence looks after
+lovers, y’u know.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Be careful, Ned, of yourself. For my sake, dear.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll dry my socks every time I get my feet wet for fear of taking cold,” he
+laughed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But you will, won’t you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll be very careful, Helen,” he promised more gravely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Even then she could hardly let him go, clinging to him with a reluctance to
+separate that was a new experience to her independent, vigorous youth. In the
+end he unloosened her arm, kissed her once, and hurried out of the room. In the
+hallway he met McWilliams, also hurryin out from a tearful farewell on the part
+of Nora.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bannister, the outlaw, already mounted, was waiting for them. “Y’u <i>did</i>
+get through at last,” he drawled insolently. “Well, if y’u’ll kindly give
+orders to your seven-foot dwarf to point the Winchester another way I’ll
+collect my men an we’ll be moving.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For, though the outlaw had left his men in command of the ranch when he went
+into the house, he found the situation reversed on his return. With the arrival
+of reinforcements, in the persons of McWilliams and his friend, it had been the
+turn of the raiders to turn over their weapons.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“All right, Denver,” nodded the foreman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The outlaw chief whistled for his men, and with their guests they rode into the
+silent, desert night.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap22"></a>CHAPTER XXII.<br/>
+EXIT THE “KING”</h2>
+
+<p>
+They bedded that night under the great vault-roof where twinkle a million
+stars.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There were three of the outlaw’s men with him, and both Mcwilliams and his
+friend noticed that they slept a little apart from their chief. There were
+other indications among the rustlers of a camp divided against itself.
+Bannister’s orders to them he contrived to make an insult, and their obedience
+was as surly as possible compatible with safety. For all of the men knew that
+he would not hesitate to shoot them down in one of his violent rages should
+they anger him sufficiently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Throughout the night there was no time that at least two men were not awake in
+the camp. The foreman and the sheepman took turns keeping vigil; and on the
+other side of the fire sat one of the rustlers in silent watchfulness. To the
+man opposite him each of the sentinels were outposts of the enemy, but they
+fraternized after the manner of army sentries, exchanging tobacco and
+occasional casual conversation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The foreman took the first turn, and opposite him sat a one-eyed old scoundrel
+who had rustled calves from big outfits ever since Wyoming was a territory and
+long before. Chalkeye Dave, he was called, and sometimes merely Chalkeye. What
+his real name was no man knew. Nor was his past a subject for conversation in
+his presence. It was known that he had been in the Nevada penitentiary, and
+that he had killed a man in Arizona, but these details of an active life were
+rarely resurrected. For Chalkeye was deadly on the shoot, and was ready for it
+at the drop of the hat, though he had his good points too. One of these was a
+remarkable fondness for another member of the party, a mere lad, called by his
+companions Hughie. Generally surly and morose, to such a degree that even his
+chief was careful to humor him as a rule, when with Hughie all the softer
+elements of his character came to the surface. In his rough way he was ever
+humorous and genial.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jim McWilliams found him neither, however. He declined to engage in
+conversation, accepted a proffer of tobacco with a silent, hostile grunt and
+relapsed into a long silence that lasted till his shift was ended.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hate to have y’u leave, old man. Y’u’re so darned good company I’ll ce’tainly
+pine for you,” the foreman suggested, with sarcasm, when the old man rolled up
+in his blankets preparatory to falling asleep immediately.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Chalkeye’s successor was a blatant youth much impressed with his own
+importance. He was both foul-mouthed and foul-minded, so that Jim was
+constrained to interrupt his evil boastings by pretending to fall asleep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was nearly two o’clock when the foreman aroused his friend to take his turn.
+Shortly after this the lad Hughie relieved the bragging, would-be bad man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hughie was a flaxen-haired, rather good-looking boy of nineteen. In his small,
+wistful face was not a line of wickedness, though it was plain that he was
+weak. He seemed so unfit for the life he was leading that the sheepman’s
+interest was aroused. For on the frontier it takes a strong, competent
+miscreant to be a bad man and survive. Ineffectives and weaklings are quickly
+weeded out to their graves or the penitentiaries.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The boy was manifestly under great fear of his chief, but the curly haired
+young Hermes who kept watch with him had a very winning smile and a charming
+manner when he cared to exert it. Almost in spite of himself the youngster was
+led to talk. It seemed that he had but lately joined the Teton-Shoshones outfit
+of desperadoes, and between the lines Bannister easily read that his cousin’s
+masterful compulsion had coerced the young fellow. All he wanted was an
+opportunity to withdraw in safety, but he knew he could never do this so long
+as the “King” was alive and at liberty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Under the star-roof in the chill, breaking day Ned Bannister talked to him long
+and gently. It was easy to bring the boy to tears, but it was harder thing to
+stiffen a will that was of putty and to hearten a soul in mortal fear. But he
+set himself with all the power in him to combat the influence of his cousin
+over this boy; and before the camp stirred to life again he knew that he had
+measurably succeeded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They ate breakfast in the gray dawn under the stars, and after they had
+finished their coffee and bacon horses were saddled and the trail taken up
+again. It led in and out among the foot-hills sloping upward gradually toward
+the first long blue line of the Shoshones that stretched before them in the
+distance. Their nooning was at a running stream called Smith’s Creek, and by
+nightfall the party was well up in the higher foot hills.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the course of the day and the second night both the sheepman and his friend
+made attempt to establish a more cordial relationship with Chalkeye, but so far
+as any apparent results went their efforts were vain. He refused grimly to meet
+their overtures half way, even though it was plain from his manner that a break
+between him and his chief could not long be avoided.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All day by crooked trails they pushed forward, and as the party advanced into
+the mountains the gloom of the mournful pines and frowning peaks invaded its
+spirits. Suspicion and distrust went with it, camped at night by the rushing
+mountain stream, lay down to sleep in the shadows at every man’s shoulder. For
+each man looked with an ominous eye on his neighbor, watchful of every sudden
+move, of every careless word that might convey a sudden meaning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Along a narrow rock-rim trail far above a steep cañon, whose walls shot
+precipitously down, they were riding in single file, when the outlaw chief
+pushed his horse forward between the road wall and his cousin’s bronco. The
+sheepman immediately fell back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I reckon this trail isn’t wide enough for two&mdash;unless y’u take the
+outside,” he explained quietly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The outlaw, who had been drinking steadily ever since leaving the Lazy D,
+laughed his low, sinister cackle. “Afraid of me, are y’u? Afraid I’ll push y’u
+off?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Not when I’m inside and you don’t have chance.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“’Twas a place about like this I drove four thousand of your sheep over last
+week. With sheep worth what they are I’m afraid it must have cost y’u quite a
+bit. Not that y’u’ll miss it where you are going,” he hastened to add.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It was very like you to revenge yourself on dumb animals.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Think so?” The “King’s” black gaze rested on him. “Y’u’ll sing a different
+song soon Mr. Bannister. It’s humans I’ll drive next time and don’t y’u forget
+it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If you get the chance,” amended his cousin gently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll get the chance. I’m not worrying about that. And about those
+sheep&mdash;any man that hasn’t got more sense than to run sheep in a cow
+country ought to lose them for his pig-headedness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Those sheep were on the right side of the dead-line. You had to cross it to
+reach them.” Their owner’s steady eyes challenged a denial.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Is that so? Now how do y’u know that? We didn’t leave the herder alive to
+explain that to y’u, did we?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You admit murdering him?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“To y’u, dear cousin. Y’u see, I have a hunch that maybe y’u’ll go join your
+herder right soon. Y’u’ll not do much talking.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sheepman fell back. “I think I’ll ride alone.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rage flared in the other’s eye. “Too good for me, are y’u, my mealy-mouthed
+cousin? Y’u always thought yourself better than me. When y’u were a boy you
+used to go sneaking to that old hypocrite, your grandfather&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You have said enough,” interrupted the other sternly. “I’ll not hear another
+word. Keep your foul tongue off him.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Their eyes silently measured strength.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u’ll not hear a word!” sneered the chief of the rustlers. “What will y’u do,
+dear cousin?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Stand up and fight like a man and settle this thing once for all.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Still their steely eyes crossed as with the thrust of rapiers. The challenged
+man crouched tensely with a mighty longing for the test, but he had planned a
+more elaborate revenge and a surer one than this. Reluctantly he shook his
+head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why should I? Y’u’re mine. We’re four to two, and soon we’ll be a dozen to
+two. I’d like a heap to oblige y’u, but I reckon I can’t afford to just now.
+Y’u will have to wait a little for that bumping off that’s coming to y’u.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“In that event I’ll trouble you not to inflict your society on me any more than
+is necessary.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s all right, too. If y’u think I enjoy your conversation y’u have got
+another guess coming.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So by mutual consent the sheepman fell in behind the blatant youth who had
+wearied McWilliams so and rode in silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was again getting close to nightfall. The slant sun was throwing its rays on
+less and less of the trail. They could see the shadows grow and the coolness of
+night sift into the air. They were pushing on to pass the rim of a great valley
+basin that lay like a saucer in the mountains in order that they might camp in
+the valley by a stream all of them knew. Dusk was beginning to fall when they
+at last reached the saucer edge and only the opposite peaks were still tipped
+with the sun rays. This, too, disappeared before they had descended far, and
+the gloom of the great mountains that girt the valley was on all their spirits,
+even McWilliams being affected by it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were tired with travel, and the long night watches did not improve tempers
+already overstrained with the expectation of a crisis too long dragged out.
+Rain fell during the night, and continued gently in a misty drizzle after day
+broke. It was a situation and an atmosphere ripe for tragedy, and it fell on
+them like a clap of thunder out of a sodden sky.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hughie was cook for the day, and he came chill and stiff-fingered to his task.
+Summer as it was, there lay a thin coating of ice round the edges of the
+stream, for they had camped in an altitude of about nine thousand feet. The
+“King” had wakened in a vile humor. He had a splitting headache, as was natural
+under the circumstances and he had not left in his bottle a single drink to
+tide him over it. He came cursing to the struggling fire, which was making only
+fitful headway against the rain which beat down upon it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why didn’t y’u build your fire on the side of the tree?” he growled at Hughie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, Hughie was a tenderfoot, and in his knowledge of outdoor life he was still
+an infant. “I didn’t know&mdash;” he was beginning, when his master cut him
+short with a furious tongue lashing out of all proportion to the offense.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lad’s face blanched with fear, and his terror was so manifest that the
+bully, who was threatening him with all manner of evils, began to enjoy
+himself. Chalkeye, returning from watering the horses, got back in time to hear
+the intemperate fag-end of the scolding. He glanced at Hughie, whose hands were
+trembling in spite of him, and then darkly at the brute who was attacking him.
+But he said not a word.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The meal proceeded in silence except for jeers and taunts of the “King.” For
+nobody cared to venture conversation which might prove a match to a powder
+magazine. Whatever thoughts might be each man kept them to himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Coffee,” snapped the single talker, toward end of breakfast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hughie jumped up, filled the cup that was handed him and set the coffee pot
+back on fire. As he handed the tin cup with the coffee to the outlaw the lad’s
+foot slipped on a piece wet wood, and the hot liquid splashed over his chief’s
+leg. The man jumped to his feet in a rage and struck the boy across the face
+with his whip once, and then again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“By God, that’ll do for you!” cried Chalkeye from the other side of the fire,
+springing revolver in hand. “Draw, you coyote! I come a-shooting.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The “King” wheeled, finding his weapon he turned. Two shots rang out almost
+simultaneously, and Chalkeye pitched forward. The outlaw chief sank to his
+knees, and, with one hand resting on the ground to steady himself fired two
+more shots into the twitching body on the other side of the fire. Then he, too,
+lurched forward and rolled over.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It had come to climax so swiftly that not one of them had moved except the
+combatants. Bannister rose and walked over to the place where the body of his
+cousin lay. He knelt down and examined him. When he rose it was with a very
+grave face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He is dead,” he said quietly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+McWilliams, who had been bending over Chalkeye, looked up. “Here, too. Any one
+of the shots would have finished him.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bannister nodded. “Yes. That first exchange killed them both.” He looked down
+at the limp body of his cousin, but a minute before so full of supple, virile
+life. “But his hate had to reach out and make sure, even though he was as good
+as dead himself. He was game.” Then sharply to the young braggart, who had
+risen and was edging away with a face of chalk: “Sit down, y’u! What do y’u
+take us for? Think this is to be a massacre?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man came back with palpable hesitancy. “I was aiming to go and get the boys
+to bury them. My God, did you ever see anything so quick? They drilled through
+each other like lightning.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mac looked him over with dry contempt. “My friend, y’u’re too tender for a
+genuwine A1 bad man. If I was handing y’u a bunch of advice it would be to get
+back to the prosaic paths of peace right prompt. And while we’re on the subject
+I’ll borrow your guns. Y’u’re scared stiff and it might get into your fool
+coconut to plug one of us and light out. I’d hate to see y’u commit suicide
+right before us, so I’ll just natcherally unload y’u.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was talking to lift the strain, and it was for the same purpose that
+Bannister moved over to Hughie, who sat with his face in his hands, trying to
+shut out the horror of what he had seen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sheepman dropped a hand on his shoulder gently. “Brace up, boy! Don’t you
+see that the very best thing that could have happened is this. It’s best for
+y’u, best for the rest of the gang and best for the whole cattle country. We’ll
+have peace here at last. Now he’s gone, honest men are going to breathe easy.
+I’ll take y’u in hand and set y’u at work on one of my stations, if y’u like.
+Anyhow, you’ll have a chance to begin life again in a better way.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s right,” agreed the blatant youth. “I’m sick of rustling the mails and
+other folks’ calves. I’m glad he got what was coming to him,” he concluded
+vindictively, with a glance at his dead chief and a sudden raucous oath.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+McWilliams’s cold blue eye transfixed him “Hadn’t you better be a little
+careful how your mouth goes off? For one thing, he’s daid now; and for another,
+he happens to be Mr. Bannister’s cousin.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But&mdash;weren’t they enemies?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s how I understand it. But this man’s passed over the range. A <i>man</i>
+doesn’t unload his hatred on dead folks&mdash;and I expect if y’u’ll study him,
+even y’u will be able to figure out that my friend measures up to the size of a
+real man.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t see why if&mdash;”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, I don’t suppose y’u do,” interrupted the foreman, turning on his heel.
+Then to Bannister, who was looking down at his cousin with a stony face: “I
+reckon, Bann, we better make arrangements to have the bodies buried right here
+in the valley,” he said gently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bannister was thinking of early days, of the time when this miscreant, whose
+light had just been put out so instantaneously, had played with him day in and
+day out. They had attended their first school together, had played marbles and
+prisoners’ base a hundred times against each other. He could remember how they
+used to get up early in the morning to go fishing with each other. And later,
+when each began, unconsciously, to choose the path he would follow in already
+beginning to settle into an established fact. He could see now, by looking back
+on trifles of their childhood, that his cousin had been badly handicapped in
+his fight with himself against the evil in him. He had inherited depraved
+instincts and tastes, and with them somewhere in him a strand of weakness that
+prevented him from slaying the giants he had to oppose in the making of a good
+character. From bad to worse he had gone, and here he lay with the drizzling
+rain on his white face, a warning and a lesson to wayward youths just setting
+their feet in the wrong direction. Surely it was kismet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ned Bannister untied the handkerchief from his neck and laid it across the face
+of his kinsman. A moment longer he looked down, then passed his hands across
+his eyes and seemed to brush away the memories that thronged him. He stepped
+forward to the fire and warmed his hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We’ll go on, Mac, to the rendezvous he had appointed with his outfit. We ought
+to reach there by noon, and the boys can send a wagon back to get the bodies.”
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap23"></a>CHAPTER XXIII.<br/>
+JOURNEYS END IN LOVERS’ MEETING</h2>
+
+<p>
+It had been six days since the two Ned Bannisters had ridden away together into
+the mountains, and every waking hour since that time had been for Helen one of
+harassing anxiety. No word had yet reached her of the issue of that dubious
+undertaking, and she both longed and dreaded to hear. He had promised to send a
+messenger as soon as he had anything definite to tell, but she knew it would be
+like his cousin, too, to send her some triumphant word should he prove the
+victor in the struggle between them. So that every stranger she glimpsed
+brought to her a sudden beating of the heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But it was not the nature of Helen Messiter to sit down and give herself up a
+prey to foreboding. Her active nature cried out for work to occupy her and
+distract her attention. Fortunately this was to be had in abundance just now.
+For the autumn round-up was on, and since her foreman was away the mistress of
+the Lazy D found plenty of work ready to her hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The meeting place for the round-up riders was at Boom Creek, five miles from
+the ranch, and Helen rode out there to take charge of her own interests in
+person. With her were six riders, and for the use of each of them in addition
+to his present mount three extra ponies were brought in the remuda. For the
+riding is so hard during the round-up that a horse can stand only one day in
+four of it. At the appointed rendezvous a score of other cowboys and owners met
+them. Without any delay they proceeded to business. Mr. Bob Austin, better
+known as “Texas,” was elected boss of the round-up, and he immediately assigned
+the men to their places and announced that they would work Squaw Creek. They
+moved camp at once, Helen returning to the ranch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was three o’clock in the morning when the men were roused by the cook’s
+triangle calling them to the “chuck wagon” for breakfast. It was still cold and
+dark as the boys crawled from under their blankets and squatted round the fire
+to eat jerky, biscuits and gravy, and to drink cupfuls of hot, black coffee.
+Before sun rose every man was at his post far up on the Squaw Creek ridges
+ready to begin the drive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Later in the day Helen rode to the <i>parada</i> grounds, toward which a stream
+of cattle was pouring down the cañon of the creek. Every gulch tributary to the
+creek contributed its quota of wild cows and calves. These came romping down
+the cañon mouth, where four picked men, with a bunch of tame cows in front of
+them, stopped the rush of flying cattle. Lunch was omitted, and branding began
+at once. Every calf belonging to a Lazy D cow, after being roped and tied, was
+flanked with the great D which indicated its ownership by Miss Messiter, and on
+account of the recumbent position of which letter the ranch had its name.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was during the branding that a boyish young fellow rode up and handed Helen
+a note. Her heart pumped rapidly with relief, for one glance told her that it
+was in the handwriting of the Ned Bannister she loved. She tore it open and
+glanced swiftly through it.
+</p>
+
+<div class="letter">
+<p>
+D<small>EAR</small> F<small>RIEND</small>: Two hours ago my cousin was killed
+by one of his own men. I am sending back to you a boy who had been led astray
+by him, and it would be a great service to me if you would give him something
+to do till I return. His name is Hugh Rogers. I think if you trust him he will
+prove worthy of it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jim and I are going to stay here a few days longer to finish the work that is
+begun. We hope to meet and talk with as many of the men implicated in my
+cousin’s lawlessness as is possible. What the result will be I cannot say. We
+do not consider ourselves in any danger whatever, though we are not taking
+chances. If all goes well we shall be back within a few days.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I hope you are not missing Jim too much at the roundup. Sincerely,
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="right">
+N<small>ED</small> B<small>ANNISTER</small>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She liked the letter because there was not a hint of the relationship between
+them to be read in it. He had guarded her against the chance of its falling
+into the wrong hands and creating talk about them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She turned to Hughie. “Can you ride?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“In a way, ma’am. I can’t ride like these men.” His glance indicated a
+cow-puncher pounding past after a wild steer that had broken through the cordon
+of riders and was trying to get away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do you want to learn?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’d like to if I had a chance,” he answered wistfully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“All right. You have your chance. I’ll see that Mr. Austin finds something for
+you to do. From to-day you are in my employ.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She rode back to the ranch in the late afternoon, while the sun was setting in
+a great splash of crimson. The round-up boss had hinted that if she were
+nervous about riding alone he could find it convenient to accompany her. But
+the girl wanted to be alone with her own thoughts, and she had slipped away
+while he was busy cutting out calves from the herd. It had been a wonderful
+relief to her to find that <i>her</i> Ned Bannister was the one that had
+survived in the conflict, and her heart sang a paean of joy as she rode into
+the golden glow of the westering sun. He was alive&mdash;to love and be loved.
+The unlived years of her future seemed to unroll before her as a vision. She
+glowed with a resurgent happiness that was almost an ecstasy. The words of a
+bit of verse she had once seen&mdash;a mere scrap from a magazine that had
+stuck in an obscure corner of her memory&mdash;sang again and again in her
+heart:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+Life and love<br/>
+    And a bright sky o’er us,<br/>
+And&mdash;God take care<br/>
+    Of the way before us!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ah, the way before them, before her and her romance-radiating hero! It might be
+rough and hilly, but if they trod it together&mdash;Her tangled thoughts were
+off again in another glad leap of imagination.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The days passed somehow. She busied herself with the affairs of the ranch, rode
+out often to the scenes of the cattle drives and watched the round-up, and
+every twenty-four hours brought her one day nearer to his return, she told
+herself. Nora, too, was on the lookout under her longlashed, roguish eyelids;
+and the two young women discussed the subject of their lovers’ return in that
+elusive, elliptical way common to their sex.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No doubt each of these young women had conjectured as to the manner of that
+homecoming and the meeting that would accompany it; but it is safe to say that
+neither of them guessed in her day-dreams how it actually was to occur.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nora had been eager to see something of the round-up, and as she was no
+horsewoman her mistress took her out one day in her motor. The drive had been
+that day on Bronco Mesa, and had finished in the natural corral made by Bear
+Cañon, fenced with a cordon of riders at the end opening to the plains below.
+After watching for two hours the busy scenes of cutting out, roping and
+branding, Helen wheeled her car and started down the cañon on their return.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, a herd of wild cattle is uncertain as an April day’s behavior. Under the
+influence of the tame valley cattle among which they are driven, after a little
+milling around, the whole bunch may gentle almost immediately, or, on the other
+hand, it may break through and go crashing away on a wild stampede at a
+moment’s notice. Every experienced cowman knows enough to expect the
+unexpected.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At Bronco Mesa the round-up had proceeded with unusual facility. Scores of
+wiry, long-legged steers had drifted down the ridges or gulches that led to the
+cañon; and many a cow, followed by its calf, had stumbled forward to the herd
+and apparently accepted the inevitable. But before Helen Messiter had well
+started out of the cañon’s mouth the situation changed absolutely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A big hill steer, which had not seen a man for a year, broke through the human
+corral with a bellow near a point where Reddy kept guard. The puncher wheeled
+and gave chase, Before the other men could close the opening a couple of
+two-year-olds seized the opportunity and followed its lead. A second rider gave
+chase, and at once, as if some imp of mischief had stirred them, fifty tails
+went up in wild flight. Another minute and the whole herd was in stampede.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Down the gulch the five hundred cattle thundered toward the motor car, which
+lay directly in their path. Helen turned, appreciated the danger, and put the
+machine at its full speed. The road branched for a space of about fifty yards,
+and in her excitement she made the mistake of choosing the lower, more level,
+one. Into a deep sand bed they plowed, the wheels sinking at every turn. Slower
+and slower went the car; finally came to a full stop.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nora glanced back in affright at the two hundred and fifty tons of beef that
+was charging wildly toward them. “What shall we do?” she gasped, and clambered
+to the ground.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Run!” cried Helen, following her example and scudding for the sides of the
+cañon, which here sloped down less precipitately than at other points. But
+before they had run a dozen steps each of them was aware that they could not
+reach safety in time to escape the hoofs rushing toward them so heavily that
+the ground quaked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Look out!” A resonant cry rang out above the dull thud of the stampeding
+cattle that were almost upon them. Down the steep sides of the gorge two riders
+were galloping recklessly. It was a race for life between them and the first of
+the herd, and they won by scarce more than a length. Across the sand the horses
+plowed, and as they swept past the two trembling young women each rider bent
+from the saddle without slackening speed, and snatched one almost from under
+the very hoofs of the leaders.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The danger was not past. As the horses swerved and went forward with the rush
+Helen knew that a stumble would fling not only her and the man who had saved
+her, but also the horse down to death. They must contrive to hold their own in
+that deadly rush until a way could be found of escaping from the path of the
+living cyclone that trod at their heels, galloped beside them, in front,
+behind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For it came to her that the horse was tiring in that rush through the sand with
+double weight upon its back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Courage!” cried the man behind her as her fearful eyes met his.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As he spoke they reached the end of the cañon and firm ground simultaneously.
+Helen saw that her rescuer had now a revolver in his hand, and that he was
+firing in such a way as to deflect the leaders to the left. At first the change
+in course was hardly perceptible, but presently she noticed that they were
+getting closer to the outskirts of the herd, working gradually to the extreme
+right, edging inch by inch, ever so warily, toward safety. Going parallel to
+their course, running neck and neck with the cow pony, lumbered a great dun
+steer. Unconsciously it blocked every effort of the horseman to escape. He had
+one shot left in his revolver, and this time he did not fire into the air. It
+was a mighty risk, for the animal in falling might stagger against the horse
+and hunt them all down to death. But the man took it without apparent
+hesitation. Into the ear of the bullock he sent the lead crashing. The brute
+stumbled and went down head over heels. Its flying hoofs struck the flanks of
+the pony, but the bronco stuck to its feet, and next moment staggered out from
+among the herd stragglers and came to halt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man slid from its back and lifted down the half-fainting girl. She clung to
+him, white a trembling. “Oh, it was horrible, Ned!” She could still look down
+in imagination upon the sea of dun backs that swayed and surged about them like
+storm-tossed waves.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It was a near thing, but we made it, girl. So did Jim. He got out before we
+did. It’s all past now. You can remember it as the most exciting experience of
+your life.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She shuddered. “I don’t want to remember it at all.” And so shaken was she that
+she did not realize that his arm was about her the while she sobbed on his
+shoulder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A cattle stampede <i>is</i> a nasty thing to get in front of. Never mind. It’s
+done with now and everybody’s safe.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She drew a long breath. “Yes, everybody’s safe and you are back home. Why
+didn’t you come after your cousin was killed?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I had to finish my work.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And <i>did</i> you finish it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I think we did. There will be no more Shoshone gang. It’s members have scatted
+in all directions.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m glad you stayed, then. We can live at peace now.” And presently she added:
+“I knew you would not come back until you had done what you set out to do.
+You’re very obstinate, sir. Do you know that?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Perseverance, I call it,” he smiled, glad to see that she was recovering her
+lightness of tone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You don’t always insist on putting your actions in the most favorable light.
+Do you remember the first day I ever saw you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Am I likely ever to forget it?” he smiled fondly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I didn’t mean <i>that</i>. What I was getting at was that you let me go away
+from you thinking you were ‘the king.’ I haven’t forgiven you entirely for
+that.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I expect y’u’ll always have to be forgiving me things.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If you valued my good opinion I don’t see how you could let me go without
+telling me. Was it fair or kind?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If y’u come to that, was it so fair and kind to convict me so promptly on
+suspicion?” he retaliated with a smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, it wasn’t. But&mdash;” She flushed with a divine shyness. “But I loved you
+all the time, even when they said you were a villain.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Even while y’u believed me one?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I didn’t. I never would believe you one&mdash;not deep in my heart. I wouldn’t
+let myself. I made excuses for you&mdash;explained everything to myself.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yet your reason told y’u I was guilty.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, I think my mind hated you and my heart loved you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He adored her for the frank simplicity of her confession, that out of the
+greatness of her love she dared to make no secret of it to him. Direct as a
+boy, she was yet as wholly sweet as the most retiring girl could be.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Y’u always swamp my vocabulary, sweetheart. I can’t ever tell y’u&mdash;life
+wouldn’t be long enough&mdash;how much I care for you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m glad,” she said simply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They stood looking at each other, palms pressed to palms in meeting hands,
+supremely happy in this miracle of love that had befallen them. They were
+alone&mdash;for Nora and Jim had gone into temporary eclipse behind a hill and
+seemed in no hurry to emerge&mdash;alone in the sunshine with this wonder that
+flowed from one to another by shining eyes, by finger touch, and then by
+meeting lips. He held her close, knew the sweet delight of contact with the
+supple, surrendered figure, then released her as she drew away in maidenly
+reserve.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“When shall we be married, Helen? Is the early part of next week too late?” he
+asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Still blushing, she straightened her hat. “That’s ridiculous, sir. I haven’t
+got used to the thought of you yet.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Plenty of time for that afterward. Then we’ll say next week if that suits
+y’u.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But it doesn’t. Don’t you know that it is the lady’s privilege to name the
+day? Besides, I want time to change my mind if I should decide to.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s what I’m afraid of,” he laughed joyfully. “So I have to insist on an
+early marriage.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Insist?” she demurred.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ve been told on the best of authority that I’m very obstinate,” he gayly
+answered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I have a mind of my own myself. If I ever marry you be sure I shall name the
+day, sir.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Will y’u marry me the day Nora does Jim?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We’ll see.” The eyes slanted at him under the curved lashes, teased him
+delightfully. “Did Nora tell you she was going to marry Jim?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bannister looked mildly hurt. “My common sense has been telling it to me a
+month.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How long has your common sense been telling you about us?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I didn’t use it when I fell in love with y’u,” he boldly laughed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Of all things to say!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Because it would have told me y’u couldn’t possibly care for me.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, that’s different!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Not being able to help myself, I just went ahead.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Isn’t it good? Isn’t it too good to be true&mdash;Ned?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tears brimmed in her happy eyes, and unconsciously she leaned toward him. In an
+instant she was in his arms again, both of them compelled by the imperative
+impulse of true lovers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Out of the hollow presently appeared Nora and McWilliams, very much oblivious
+of the outside world. Presently they condescended to recognize the existence of
+Bannister and Helen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We’re allowin’ to be married in September,” said Mac sheepishly, by way of
+explanation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The two girls flew into each other’s arms. Over Nora’s shoulder Ned caught his
+sweetheart’s eye and read there a blushing consent to a public announcement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s ce’tainly a strange coincidence, Jim. So are we,” he answered
+immediately.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The two friends shook hands.
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+THE END.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #1803 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/1803)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Wyoming, a Story of the Outdoor West, by
+William MacLeod Raine
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Wyoming, a Story of the Outdoor West
+
+Author: William MacLeod Raine
+
+Posting Date: November 23, 2008 [EBook #1803]
+Release Date: July, 1999
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WYOMING ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Mary Starr
+
+
+
+
+
+WYOMING
+
+A STORY OF THE OUTDOOR WEST
+
+By William MacLeod Raine
+
+
+TABLE OF CONTENTS
+
+ 1. A DESERT MEETING
+ 2. THE KING OF THE BIG HORN COUNTRY
+ 3. AN INVITATION GIVEN AND ACCEPTED
+ 4. AT THE LAZY D RANCH
+ 5. THE DANCE AT FRASER'S
+ 6. A PARTY CALL
+ 7. THE MAN FROM THE SHOSHONE FASTNESSES
+ 8. IN THE LAZY D HOSPITAL
+ 9. A RESCUE
+ 12. MISTRESS AND MAID
+ 13. THE TWO COUSINS
+ 14. FOR THE WORLD'S CHAMPIONSHIP
+ 15. JUDD MORGAN PASSES
+ 16. HUNTING BIG GAME
+ 17. RUN TO EARTH
+ 18. PLAYING FOR TIME
+ 19. WEST POINT TO THE RESCUE
+ 20. TWO CASES OF DISCIPLINE
+ 21. THE SIGNAL LIGHTS
+ 22. EXIT THE KING
+ 23. JOURNEYS END IN LOVERS' MEETING.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 1. A DESERT MEETING
+
+An automobile shot out from a gash in the hills and slipped swiftly down
+to the butte. Here it came to a halt on the white, dusty road, while
+its occupant gazed with eager, unsated eyes on the great panorama that
+stretched before her. The earth rolled in waves like a mighty sea to
+the distant horizon line. From a wonderful blue sky poured down upon
+the land a bath of sunbeat. The air was like wine, pure and strong, and
+above the desert swam the rare, untempered light of Wyoming. Surely here
+was a peace primeval, a silence unbroken since the birth of creation.
+
+It was all new to her, and wonderfully exhilarating. The infinite roll
+of plain, the distant shining mountains, the multitudinous voices of the
+desert drowned in a sunlit sea of space--they were all details of the
+situation that ministered to a large serenity.
+
+And while she breathed deeply the satisfaction of it, an exploding rifle
+echo shattered the stillness. With excited sputtering came the prompt
+answer of a fusillade. She was new to the West; but some instinct
+stronger than reason told the girl that here was no playful puncher
+shooting up the scenery to ventilate his exuberance. Her imagination
+conceived something more deadly; a sinister picture of men pumping lead
+in a grim, close-lipped silence; a lusty plainsman, with murder in
+his heart, crumpling into a lifeless heap, while the thin smoke-spiral
+curled from his hot rifle.
+
+So the girl imagined the scene as she ran swiftly forward through the
+pines to the edge of the butte bluff whence she might look down upon the
+coulee that nestled against it. Nor had she greatly erred, for her first
+sweeping glance showed her the thing she had dreaded.
+
+In a semicircle, well back from the foot of the butte, half a dozen
+men crouched in the cover of the sage-brush and a scattered group of
+cottonwoods. They were perhaps fifty yards apart, and the attention
+of all of them was focused on a spot directly beneath her. Even as she
+looked, in that first swift moment of apprehension, a spurt of smoke
+came from one of the rifles and was flung back from the forked pine
+at the bottom of the mesa. She saw him then, kneeling behind his
+insufficient shelter, a trapped man making his last stand.
+
+From where she stood the girl distinguished him very clearly, and under
+the field-glasses that she turned on him the details leaped to life.
+Tall, strong, slender, with the lean, clean build of a greyhound, he
+seemed as wary and alert as a panther. The broad, soft hat, the scarlet
+handkerchief loosely knotted about his throat, the gray shirt, spurs
+and overalls, proclaimed him a stockman, just as his dead horse at the
+entrance to the coulee told of an accidental meeting in the desert and a
+hurried run for cover.
+
+That he had no chance was quite plain, but no plainer than the cool
+vigilance with which he proposed to make them pay. Even in the matter
+of defense he was worse off than they were, but he knew how to make
+the most of what he had; knew how to avail himself of every inch of
+sagebrush that helped to render him indistinct to their eyes.
+
+One of the attackers, eager for a clearer shot, exposed himself a trifle
+too far in taking aim. Without any loss of time in sighting, swift as a
+lightning-flash, the rifle behind the forked pine spoke. That the bullet
+reached its mark she saw with a gasp of dismay. For the man suddenly
+huddled down and rolled over on his side.
+
+His comrades appeared to take warning by this example. The men at both
+ends of the crescent fell back, and for a minute the girl's heart leaped
+with the hope that they were about to abandon the siege. Apparently the
+man in the scarlet kerchief had no such expectation. He deserted his
+position behind the pine and ran back, crouching low in the brush, to
+another little clump of trees closer to the bluff. The reason for this
+was at first not apparent to her, but she understood presently when the
+men who had fallen back behind the rolling hillocks appeared again well
+in to the edge of the bluff. Only by his timely retreat had the man
+saved himself from being outflanked.
+
+It was very plain that the attackers meant to take their time to finish
+him in perfect safety. He was surrounded on every side by a cordon of
+rifles, except where the bare face of the butte hung down behind him.
+To attempt to scale it would have been to expose himself as a mark for
+every gun to certain death.
+
+It was now that she heard the man who seemed to be directing the attack
+call out to another on his right. She was too far to make out the words,
+but their effect was clear to her. He pointed to the brow of the butte
+above, and a puncher in white woolen chaps dropped back out of range
+and swung to the saddle upon one of the ponies bunched in the rear. He
+cantered round in a wide circle and made for the butte. His purpose was
+obviously to catch their victim in the unprotected rear, and fire down
+upon him from above.
+
+The young woman shouted a warning, but her voice failed to carry. For a
+moment she stood with her hands pressed together in despair, then
+turned and swiftly scudded to her machine. She sprang in, swept forward,
+reached the rim of the mesa, and plunged down. Never before had she
+attempted so precarious a descent in such wild haste. The car fairly
+leaped into space, and after it struck swayed dizzily as it shot down.
+The girl hung on, her face white and set, the pulse in her temple
+beating wildly. She could do nothing, as the machine rocked down, but
+hope against many chances that instant destruction might be averted.
+
+Utterly beyond her control, the motor-car thundered down, reached the
+foot of the butte, and swept over a little hill in its wild flight. She
+rushed by a mounted horseman in the thousandth part of a second. She was
+still speeding at a tremendous velocity, but a second hill reduced this
+somewhat. She had not yet recovered control of the machine, but, though
+her eyes instinctively followed the white road that flashed past, she
+again had photographed on her brain the scene of the turbid tragedy in
+which she was intervening.
+
+At the foot of the butte the road circled and dipped into the coulee.
+She braced herself for the shock, but, though the wheels skidded till
+her heart was in her throat, the automobile, hanging on the balance of
+disaster, swept round in safety.
+
+Her horn screamed an instant warning to the trapped man. She could not
+see him, and for an instant her heart sank with the fear that they
+had killed him. But she saw then that they were still firing, and she
+continued her honking invitation as the car leaped forward into the zone
+of spitting bullets.
+
+By this time she was recovering control of the motor, and she dared
+not let her attention wander, but out of the corner of her eye she
+appreciated the situation. Temporarily, out of sheer amaze at this
+apparition from the blue, the guns ceased their sniping. She became
+aware that a light curly head, crouched low in the sage-brush, was
+moving rapidly to meet her at right angles, and in doing so was
+approaching directly the line of fire. She could see him dodging to and
+fro as he moved forward, for the rifles were again barking.
+
+She was within two hundred yards of him, still going rapidly, but not
+with the same headlong rush as before, when the curly head disappeared
+in the sage-brush. It was up again presently, but she could see that the
+man came limping, and so uncertainly that twice he pitched forward to
+the ground. Incautiously one of his assailants ran forward with a shout
+the second time his head went down. Crack! The unerring rifle rang out,
+and the impetuous one dropped in his tracks.
+
+As she approached, the young woman slowed without stopping, and as the
+car swept past Curly Head flung himself in headlong. He picked himself
+up from her feet, crept past her to the seat beyond, and almost
+instantly whipped his rifle to his shoulder in prompt defiance of the
+fire that was now converged on them.
+
+Yet in a few moments the sound died away, for a voice midway in the
+crescent had shouted an amazed discovery:
+
+"By God, it's a woman!"
+
+The car skimmed forward over the uneven ground toward the end of the
+semicircle, and passed within fifty yards of the second man from the
+end, the one she had picked out as the leader of the party. He was a
+black, swarthy fellow in plain leather chaps and blue shirt. As they
+passed he took a long, steady aim.
+
+"Duck!" shouted the man beside her, and dragged her down on the seat so
+that his body covered hers.
+
+A puff of wind fanned the girl's cheek.
+
+"Near thing," her companion said coolly. He looked back at the swarthy
+man and laughed softly. "Some day you'll mebbe wish you had sent your
+pills straighter, Mr. Judd Morgan."
+
+Yet a few wheel-turns and they had dipped forward out of range among
+the great land waves that seemed to stretch before them forever. The
+unexpected had happened, and she had achieved a rescue in the face of
+the impossible.
+
+"Hurt badly?" the girl inquired briefly, her dark-blue eyes meeting his
+as frankly as those of a boy.
+
+"No need for an undertaker. I reckon I'll survive, ma'am."
+
+"Where are you hit?"
+
+"I just got a telegram from my ankle saying there was a cargo of lead
+arrived there unexpected," he drawled easily.
+
+"Hurts a good deal, doesn't it?"
+
+"No more than is needful to keep my memory jogged up. It's a sort of a
+forget-me-not souvenir. For a good boy; compliments of Mr. Jim Henson,"
+he explained.
+
+Her dark glance swept him searchingly. She disapproved the assurance
+of his manner even while the youth in her applauded his reckless
+sufficiency. His gay courage held her unconsenting admiration even while
+she resented it. He was a trifle too much at his ease for one who had
+just been snatched from dire peril. Yet even in his insouciance there
+was something engaging; something almost of distinction.
+
+"What was the trouble?"
+
+Mirth bubbled in his gray eyes. "I gathered, ma'am, that they wanted to
+collect my scalp."
+
+"Do what?" she frowned.
+
+"Bump me off--send me across the divide."
+
+"Oh, I know that. But why?"
+
+He seemed to reproach himself. "Now how could I be so neglectful? I
+clean forgot to ask."
+
+"That's ridiculous," was her sharp verdict.
+
+"Yes, ma'am, plumb ridiculous. My only excuse is that they began
+scattering lead so sudden I didn't have time to ask many 'Whyfors.' I
+reckon we'll just have to call it a Wyoming difference of opinion," he
+concluded pleasantly.
+
+"Which means, I suppose, that you are not going to tell me."
+
+"I got so much else to tell y'u that's a heap more important," he
+laughed. "Y'u see, I'm enjoyin' my first automobile ride. It was
+certainly thoughtful of y'u to ask me to go riding with y'u, Miss
+Messiter."
+
+"So you know my name. May I ask how?" was her astonished question.
+
+He gave the low laugh that always seemed to suggest a private source of
+amusement of his own. "I suspicioned that might be your name when I say
+y'u come a-sailin' down from heaven to gather me up like Enoch."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Well, ma'am, I happened to drift in to Gimlet Butte two or three days
+ago, and while I was up at the depot looking for some freight a train
+sashaid in and side tracked a flat car. There was an automobile on that
+car addressed to Miss Helen Messiter. Now, automobiles are awful seldom
+in this country. I don't seem to remember having seen one before."
+
+"I see. You're quite a Sherlock Holmes. Do you know anything more about
+me?"
+
+"I know y'u have just fallen heir to the Lazy D. They say y'u are a
+schoolmarm, but I don't believe it."
+
+"Well, I am." Then, "Why don't you believe it?" she added.
+
+He surveyed her with his smile audacious, let his amused eyes wander
+down from the mobile face with the wild-rose bloom to the slim young
+figure so long and supple, then serenely met her frown.
+
+"Y'u don't look it."
+
+"No? Are you the owner of a composite photograph of the teachers of the
+country?"
+
+He enjoyed again his private mirth. "I should like right well to have
+the pictures of some of them."
+
+She glanced at him sharply, but he was gazing so innocently at the
+purple Shoshones in the distance that she could not give him the snub
+she thought he needed.
+
+"You are right. My name is Helen Messiter," she said, by way of
+stimulating a counter fund of information. For, though she was a young
+woman not much given to curiosity, she was aware of an interest in this
+spare, broad-shouldered youth who was such an incarnation of bronzed
+vigor.
+
+"Glad to meet y'u, Miss Messiter," he responded, and offered his firm
+brown hand in Western fashion.
+
+But she observed resentfully that he did not mention his own name. It
+was impossible to suppose that he knew no better, and she was driven
+to conclude that he was silent of set purpose. Very well! If he did not
+want to introduce himself she was not going to urge it upon him. In a
+businesslike manner she gave her attention to eating up the dusty miles.
+
+"Yes, ma'am. I reckon I never was more glad to death to meet a lady than
+I was to meet up with y'u," he continued, cheerily. "Y'u sure looked
+good to me as y'u come a-foggin' down the road. I fair had been yearnin'
+for company but was some discouraged for fear the invitation had
+miscarried." He broke off his sardonic raillery and let his level gaze
+possess her for a long moment. "Miss Messiter, I'm certainly under
+an obligation to y'u I can't repay. Y'u saved my life," he finished
+gravely.
+
+"Nonsense."
+
+"Fact."
+
+"It isn't a personal matter at all," she assured him, with a touch of
+impatient hauteur.
+
+"It 's a heap personal to me."
+
+In spite of her healthy young resentment she laughed at the way in which
+he drawled this out, and with a swift sweep her boyish eyes took in
+again his compelling devil-may-care charm. She was a tenderfoot, but
+intuition as well as experience taught her that he was unusual enough to
+be one of ten thousand. No young Greek god's head could have risen
+more superbly above the brick-tanned column of the neck than this
+close-cropped curly one. Gray eyes, deep and unwavering and masterful,
+looked out of a face as brown as Wyoming. He was got up with no thought
+of effect, but the tigerish litheness, the picturesque competency of
+him, spake louder than costuming.
+
+"Aren't you really hurt worse than you pretend? I'm sure your ankle
+ought to be attended to as soon as possible."
+
+"Don't tell me you're a lady doctor, ma'am," he burlesqued his alarm.
+
+"Can you tell me where the nearest ranch house is?" she asked, ignoring
+his diversion.
+
+"The Lazy D is the nearest, I reckon."
+
+"Which direction?"
+
+"North by east, ma'am."
+
+"Then I'll take the most direct road to it.
+
+"In that case I'll thank y'u for my ride and get out here."
+
+"But--why?"
+
+He waved a jaunty hand toward the recent battlefield. "The Lazy D lies
+right back of that hill. I expect, mebbe, those wolves might howl again
+if we went back."
+
+"Where, then, shall I take you?"
+
+"I hate to trouble y'u to go out of your way.
+
+"I dare say, but I'm going just the same," she told him, dryly.
+
+"If you're right determined--" He interrupted himself to point to the
+south. "Do y'u see that camel-back peak over there?"
+
+"The one with the sunshine on its lower edge?"
+
+"That's it, Miss Messiter. They call those two humps the Antelope Peaks.
+If y'u can drop me somewhere near there I think I'll manage all right."
+
+"I'm not going to leave you till we reach a house," she informed him
+promptly. "You're not fit to walk fifty yards."
+
+"That's right kind of y'u, but I could not think of asking so much. My
+friends will find me if y'u leave me where I can work a heliograph."
+
+"Or your enemies," she cut in.
+
+"I hope not. I'd not likely have the luck to get another invitation
+right then to go riding with a friendly young lady."
+
+She gave him direct, cool, black-blue eyes that met and searched his.
+"I'm not at all sure she is friendly. I shall want to find out the cause
+of the trouble you have just had before I make up my mind as to that."
+
+"I judge people by their actions. Y'u didn't wait to find out before
+bringing the ambulance into action," he laughed.
+
+"I see you do not mean to tell me."
+
+"You're quite a lawyer, ma'am," he evaded.
+
+"I find you a very slippery witness, then."
+
+"Ask anything y'u like and I'll tell you."
+
+"Very well. Who were those men, and why were they trying to kill you?"
+
+"They turned their wolf loose on me because I shot up one of them
+yesterday."
+
+"Dear me! Is it your business to go around shooting people? That's three
+I happen to know that you have shot. How many more?"
+
+"No more, ma'am--not recently."
+
+"Well, three is quite enough--recently," she mimicked. "You seem to me a
+good deal of a desperado."
+
+"Yes, ma'am."
+
+"Don't say 'Yes, ma'am,' like that, as if it didn't matter in the least
+whether you are or not," she ordered.
+
+"No, ma'am."
+
+"Oh!" She broke off with a gesture of impatience at his burlesque of
+obedience. "You know what I mean--that you ought to deny it; ought to be
+furious at me for suggesting it."
+
+"Ought I?"
+
+"Of course you ought."
+
+"There's a heap of ways I ain't up to specifications," he admitted,
+cheerfully.
+
+"And who are they--the men that were attacking you?"
+
+There was a gleam of irrepressible humor in the bold eyes. "Your
+cow-punchers, ma'am."
+
+"My cow-punchers?"
+
+"They ce'tainly belong to the Lazy D outfit."
+
+"And you say that you shot one of my men yesterday?" He could see her
+getting ready for a declaration of war.
+
+"Down by Willow Creek--Yes, ma'am," he answered, comfortably.
+
+"And why, may I ask?" she flamed
+
+"That's a long story, Miss Messiter. It wouldn't be square for me to get
+my version in before your boys. Y'u ask them." He permitted himself a
+genial smile, somewhat ironic. "I shouldn't wonder but what they'll give
+me a giltedged testimonial as an unhanged horse thief."
+
+"Isn't there such a thing as law in Wyoming?" the girl demanded.
+
+"Lots of it. Y'u can buy just as good law right here as in Kalamazoo."
+
+"I wish I knew where to find it."
+
+"Like to put me in the calaboose?"
+
+"In the penitentiary. Yes, sir!" A moment later the question that was in
+her thoughts leaped hotly from her lips. "Who are you, sir, that dare to
+commit murder and boast of it?"
+
+She had flicked him on the raw at last. Something that was near to pain
+rested for a second in his eyes. "Murder is a hard name, ma'am. And I
+didn't say he was daid, or any of the three," came his gentle answer.
+
+"You MEANT to kill them, anyhow."
+
+"Did I?" There was the ghost of a sad smile about his eyes.
+
+"The way you act, a person might think you one of Ned Bannister's men,"
+she told him, scornfully.
+
+"I expect you're right."
+
+She repented her a little at a charge so unjust. "If you are not ashamed
+of your name why are you so loath to part with it?"
+
+"Y'u didn't ask me my name," he said, a dark flush sweeping his face.
+
+"I ask it now."
+
+Like the light from a snuffed candle the boyish recklessness had gone
+out of his face. His jaws were set like a vise and he looked hard as
+hammered steel.
+
+"My name is Bannister," he said, coldly.
+
+"Ned Bannister, the outlaw," she let slip, and was aware of a strange
+sinking of the heart.
+
+It seemed to her that something sinister came to the surface in his
+handsome face. "I reckon we might as well let it go at that," he
+returned, with bitter briefness.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 2. THE KING OF THE BIG HORN COUNTRY
+
+Two months before this time Helen Messiter had been serenely teaching a
+second grade at Kalamazoo, Michigan, notwithstanding the earnest efforts
+of several youths of that city to induce her to retire to domesticity
+"What's the use of being a schoolmarm?" had been the burden of their
+plaint. "Any spinster can teach kids C-A-T, Cat, but only one in
+several thousand can be the prettiest bride in Kalamazoo." None of them,
+however, had been able to drive the point sufficiently home, and it
+is probable that she would have continued to devote herself to Young
+America if an uncle she had never seen had not died without a will and
+left her a ranch in Wyoming yclept the Lazy D.
+
+When her lawyer proposed to put the ranch on the market Miss Helen had a
+word to say.
+
+"I think not. I'll go out and see it first, anyhow," she said.
+
+"But really, my dear young lady, it isn't at all necessary. Fact is,
+I've already had an offer of a hundred thousand dollars for it. Now, I
+should judge that a fair price."
+
+"Very likely," his client interrupted, quietly. "But, you see, I don't
+care to sell."
+
+"Then what in the world are you going to do with it?"
+
+"Run it."
+
+"But, my dear Miss Messiter, it isn't an automobile or any other kind of
+toy. You must remember that it takes a business head and a great deal of
+experience to make such an investment pay. I really think--"
+
+"My school ends on the fourteenth of June. I'll get a substitute for the
+last two months. I shall start for Wyoming on the eighteenth of April."
+
+The man of law gasped, explained the difficulties again carefully as to
+a child, found that he was wasting his breath, and wisely gave it up.
+
+Miss Messiter had started on the eighteenth of April, as she had
+announced. When she reached Gimlet Butte, the nearest railroad point
+to the Lazy D, she found a group of curious, weatherbeaten individuals
+gathered round a machine foreign to their experience. It was on a flat
+car, and the general opinion ran the gamut from a newfangled sewing
+machine to a thresher. Into this guessing contest came its owner with
+so brisk and businesslike an energy that inside of two hours she was
+testing it up and down the wide street of Gimlet Butte, to the wonder
+and delight of an audience to which each one of the eleven saloons of
+the city had contributed its admiring quota.
+
+Meanwhile the young woman attended strictly to business. She had
+disappeared for half an hour with a suit case into the Elk House;
+and when she returned in a short-skirted corduroy suit, leggings and
+wide-brimmed gray Stetson hat, all Gimlet Butte took an absorbing
+interest in the details of this delightful adventure that had happened
+to the town. The population was out _en masse_ to watch her slip down
+the road on a trial trip.
+
+Presently "Soapy" Sothern, drifting in on his buckskin from the Hoodoo
+Peak country, where for private reasons of his own he had been for the
+past month a sojourner, reported that he had seen the prettiest sight
+in the State climbing under a gasoline bronc with a monkey-wrench in
+her hand. Where? Right over the hill on the edge of town. The immediate
+stampede for the cow ponies was averted by a warning chug-chug that
+sounded down the road, followed by the appearance of a flashing whir
+that made the ponies dance on their hind legs.
+
+"The gasoline bronc lady sure makes a hit with me," announced "Texas,"
+gravely. "I allow I'll rustle a job with the Lazy D outfit."
+
+"She ce'tainly rides herd on that machine like a champeen," admitted
+Soapy. "I reckon I'll drift over to the Lazy D with you to look after
+yore remains, Tex, when the lightning hits you."
+
+Miss Messiter swung the automobile round in a swift circle, came to an
+abrupt halt in front of the hotel, and alighted without delay. As she
+passed in through the half score of admirers she had won, her dark eyes
+swept smilingly over assembled Cattleland. She had already met most of
+them at the launching of the machine from the flat car, and had directed
+their perspiring energies as they labored to follow her orders. Now she
+nodded a recognition with a little ripple of gay laughter.
+
+"I'm delighted to be able to contribute to the entertainment of Gimlet
+Butte," she said, as she swept in. For this young woman was possessed
+of Western adaptation. It gave her no conscientious qualms to exchange
+conversation fraternal with these genial savages.
+
+The Elk House did not rejoice in a private dining room, and competition
+strenuous ensued as to who should have the pleasure of sitting beside
+the guest of honor. To avoid ill feeling, the matter was determined by
+a game of freeze-out, in which Texas and a mature gentleman named,
+from his complexion, "Beet" Collins, were the lucky victors. Texas
+immediately repaired to the general store, where he purchased a new
+scarlet bandanna for the occasion; also a cake of soap with which to
+rout the alkali dust that had filtered into every pore of his hands and
+face from a long ride across the desert.
+
+Came supper and Texas simultaneously, the cow-puncher's face scrubbed
+to an apple shine. At the last moment Collins defaulted, his nerve
+completely gone. Since, however, he was a thrifty soul, he sold his
+place to Soapy for ten dollars, and proceeded to invest the proceeds in
+an immediate drunk.
+
+During the first ten minutes of supper Miss Messiter did not appear, and
+the two guardians who flanked her chair solicitously were the object of
+much badinage.
+
+"She got one glimpse of that red haid of Tex and the pore lady's took to
+the sage," explained Yorky.
+
+"And him scrubbed so shiny fust time since Christmas before the big
+blizzard," sighed Doc Rogers.
+
+"Shucks! She ain't scared of no sawed-off, hammered-down runt like
+Texas, No, siree! Miss Messiter's on the absent list 'cause she's afraid
+she cayn't resist the blandishments of Soapy. Did yo' ever hear about
+Soapy and that Caspar hash slinger?"
+
+"Forget it, Slim," advised Soapy, promptly. He had been engaged in lofty
+and oblivious conversation with Texas, but he did not intend to allow
+reminiscences to get under way just now.
+
+At this opportune juncture arrived the mistress of the "gasoline bronc,"
+neatly clad in a simple white lawn with blue trimmings. She looked like
+a gleam of sunshine in her fresh, sweet youth; and not even in her own
+school room had she ever found herself the focus of a cleaner, more
+unstinted admiration. For the outdoors West takes off its hat reverently
+to women worthy of respect, especially when they are young and friendly.
+
+Helen Messiter had come to Wyoming because the call of adventure, the
+desire for experience outside of rutted convention, were stirring her
+warm-blooded youth. She had seen enough of life lived in a parlor, and
+when there came knocking at her door a chance to know the big, untamed
+outdoors at first hand she had at once embraced it like a lover. She
+was eager for her new life, and she set out skillfully to make these
+men tell her what she wanted to know. To them, of course, it was an old
+story, and whatever of romance it held was unconscious. But since she
+wanted to talk of the West they were more than ready to please her.
+
+So she listened, and drew them out with adroit questions when it was
+necessary. She made them talk of life on the open range, of rustlers and
+those who lived outside the law in the upper Shoshone country, of the
+deadly war waging between the cattle and sheep industries.
+
+"Are there any sheep near the Lazy D ranch?" she asked, intensely
+interested in Soapy's tale of how cattle and sheep could no more be got
+to mix than oil and water.
+
+For an instant nobody answered her question; then Soapy replied, with
+what seemed elaborate carelessness:
+
+"Ned Bannister runs a bunch of about twelve thousand not more'n fifteen
+or twenty miles from your place."
+
+"And you say they are spoiling the range?"
+
+"They're ce'tainly spoiling it for cows."
+
+"But can't something be done? If my cows were there first I don't see
+what right he has to bring his sheep there," the girl frowned.
+
+The assembled company attended strictly to supper. The girl, surprised
+at the stillness, looked round. "Well?"
+
+"Now you're shouting, ma'am! That's what we say," enthused Texas,
+spurring to the rescue.
+
+"It doesn't much matter what you say. What do you do?" asked Helen,
+impatiently. "Do you lie down and let Mr. Bannister and his kind drive
+their sheep over you?"
+
+"Do we, Soapy?" grinned Texas. Yet it seemed to her his smile was not
+quite carefree.
+
+"I'm not a cowman myself," explained Soapy to the girl. "Nor do I run
+sheep. I--"
+
+"Tell Miss Messiter what yore business is, Soapy," advised Yorky from
+the end of the table, with a mouthful of biscuit swelling his cheeks.
+
+Soapy crushed the irrepressible Yorky with a look, but that young man
+hit back smilingly.
+
+"Soapy, he sells soap, ma'am. He's a sorter city salesman, I reckon."
+
+"I should never have guessed it. Mr. Sothern does not LOOK like
+a salesman," said the girl, with a glance at his shrewd, hard,
+expressionless face.
+
+"Yes, ma'am, he's a first-class seller of soap, is Mr. Sothern,"
+chuckled the cow-puncher, kicking his friends gayly under the table.
+
+"You can see I never sold HIM any, Miss Messiter," came back Soapy,
+sorrowfully.
+
+All this was Greek to the young lady from Kalamazoo. How was she to know
+that Mr. Sothern had vended his soap in small cubes on street corners,
+and that he wrapped bank notes of various denominations in the bars,
+which same were retailed to eager customers for the small sum of fifty
+cents, after a guarantee that the soap was good? His customers rarely
+patronized him twice; and frequently they used bad language because
+the soap wrapping was not as valuable as they had expected. This was
+manifestly unfair, for Mr. Sothern, who made no claims to philanthropy,
+often warned them that the soap should be bought on its merits, and not
+with an eye single to the premium that might or might not accompany the
+package.
+
+"I started to tell you, ma'am, when that infant interrupted, that
+the cowmen don't aim to quit business yet a while. They've drawn a
+dead-line, Miss Messiter."
+
+"A dead-line?"
+
+"Yes, ma'am, beyond which no sheep herder is to run his bunch."
+
+"And if he does?" the girl asked, open eyed.
+
+"He don't do it twict, ma'am. Why don't you pass the fritters to Miss
+Messiter, Slim?"
+
+"And about this Bannister Who is he?"
+
+Her innocent question seemed to ring a bell for silence; seemed to carry
+with it some hidden portent that stopped idle conversation as a striking
+clock that marks the hour of an execution.
+
+The smile that had been gay grew grim, and men forgot the subject of
+their light, casual talk. It was Sothern that answered her, and
+she observed that his voice was grave, his face studiously without
+expression.
+
+"Mr. Bannister, ma'am, is a sheepman."
+
+"So I understood, but--" Her eyes traveled swiftly round the table, and
+appraised the sudden sense of responsibility that had fallen on these
+reckless, careless frontiersmen. "I am wondering what else he is.
+Really, he seems to be the bogey man of Gimlet Butte."
+
+There was another instant silence, and again it was Soapy that lifted
+it. "I expaict you'll like Wyoming, Miss Messiter; leastways I hope you
+will. There's a right smart of country here." His gaze went out of the
+open door to the vast sea of space that swam in the fine sunset light.
+"Yes, most folks that ain't plumb spoilt with city ways likes it."
+
+"Sure she'll like it. Y'u want to get a good, easy-riding hawss, Miss
+Messiter," advised Slim.
+
+"And a rifle," added Texas, promptly.
+
+It occurred to her that they were all working together to drift the
+conversation back to a safe topic. She followed the lead given her,
+but she made up her mind to know what it was about her neighbor,
+Mr. Bannister, the sheep herder, that needed to be handled with such
+wariness and circumspection of speech.
+
+Her chance came half an hour later, when she stood talking to the
+landlady on the hotel porch in the mellow twilight that seemed to rest
+on the land like a moonlit aura. For the moment they were alone.
+
+"What is it about this man Bannister that makes men afraid to speak of
+him?" she demanded, with swift impulse.
+
+Her landlady's startled eyes went alertly round to see that they were
+alone. "Hush, child! You mustn't speak of him like that," warned the
+older woman.
+
+"Why mustn't I? That's what I want to know."
+
+"Is isn't healthy."
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+Again that anxious look flashed round in the dusk. "The Bannister outfit
+is the worst in the land. Ned Bannister is king of the whole Big Horn
+country and beyond that to the Tetons."
+
+"And you mean to tell me that everybody is afraid of him--that men like
+Mr. Sothern dare not say their soul is their own?" the newcomer asked,
+contemptuously.
+
+"Not so loud, child. He has spies everywhere That's the trouble. You
+don't know who is in with him. He's got the whole region terrified."
+
+"Is he so bad?"
+
+"He is a devil. Last year he and his hell riders swept down on Topaz and
+killed two bartenders just to see them kick, Ned Bannister said. Folks
+allow they knew too much."
+
+"But the law--the Government? Haven't you a sheriff and officers?"
+
+"Bannister has. He elects the sheriff in this county."
+
+"Aren't there more honest people here than villains?"
+
+"Ten times as many, but the trouble is that the honest folks can't trust
+each other. You see, if one of them made a mistake and confided in the
+wrong man--well, some fine day he would go riding herd and would not
+turn up at night. Next week, or next month, maybe, one of his partners
+might find a pile of bones in an arroyo.
+
+"Have you ever seen this Bannister?"
+
+"You MUST speak lower when you talk of him, Miss Messiter," the woman
+insisted. "Yes, I saw him once; at least I think I did. Mighty few folks
+know for sure that they have seen him. He is a mystery, and he travels
+under many names and disguises."
+
+"When was it you think you saw him?"
+
+"Two years ago at Ayr. The bank was looted that night and robbed of
+thirty thousand dollars. They roused the cashier from his bed and made
+him give the combination. He didn't want to, and Ned Bannister"--her
+voice sank to a tremulous whisper--"put red-hot running-irons between
+his fingers till he weakened. It was a moonlight night--much such a
+night as this--and after it was done I peeped through the blind of my
+room and saw them ride away. He rode in front of them and sang like an
+angel--did it out of daredeviltry to mock the people of the town that
+hadn't nerve enough to shoot him. You see, he knew that nobody would
+dare hurt him 'count of the revenge of his men."
+
+"What was he like?" the mistress of the Lazy D asked, strangely awed at
+this recital of transcendent villainy.
+
+"'Course he was masked, and I didn't see his face. But I'd know him
+anywhere. He's a long, slim fellow, built like a mountain lion. You
+couldn't look at him and ever forget him. He's one of these graceful,
+easy men that go so fur with fool women; one of the kind that half shuts
+his dark, devil eyes and masters them without seeming to try."
+
+"So he's a woman killer, too, is he? Any more outstanding
+inconsistencies in this versatile Jesse James?"
+
+"He's plumb crazy about music, they say. Has a piano and plays Grigg and
+Chopping, and all that classical kind of music. He went clear down to
+Denver last year to hear Mrs. Shoeman sing."
+
+Helen smiled, guessing at Schumann-Heink as the singer in question, and
+Grieg and Chopin as the composers named. Her interest was incredibly
+aroused. She had expected the West and its products to exhilarate her,
+but she had not looked to find so finished a Mephisto among its vaunted
+"bad men." He was probably overrated; considered a wonder because his
+accomplishments outstepped those of the range. But Helen Messiter had
+quite determined on one thing. She was going to meet this redoubtable
+villain and make up her mind for herself. Already, before she had been
+in Wyoming six hours, this emancipated young woman had decided on that.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 3. AN INVITATION GIVEN AND ACCEPTED
+
+And already she had met him. Not only met him, but saved him from the
+just vengeance about to fall upon him. She had not yet seen her own
+ranch, had not spoken to a single one of her employees, for it had
+been a part of her plan to drop in unexpected and examine the situation
+before her foreman had a chance to put his best foot forward. So she
+had started alone from Gimlet Butte that morning in her machine, and had
+come almost in sight of the Lazy D ranch houses when the battle in the
+coulee invited her to take a hand.
+
+She had acted on generous impulse, and the unforeseen result had been to
+save this desperado from justice. But the worst of it was that she could
+not find it in her heart to regret it. Granted that he was a villain,
+double-dyed and beyond hope, yet he was the home of such courage, such
+virility, that her unconsenting admiration went out in spite of herself.
+He was, at any rate, a MAN, square-jawed, resolute, implacable. In the
+sinuous trail of his life might lie arson, robbery, murder, but he still
+held to that dynamic spark of self-respect that is akin to the divine.
+Nor was it possible to believe that those unblinking gray eyes, with
+the capability of a latent sadness of despair in them, expressed a soul
+entirely without nobility. He had a certain gallant ease, a certain
+attractive candor, that did not consist with villainy unadulterated.
+
+It was characteristic even of her impulsiveness that Helen Messiter
+curbed the swift condemnation that leaped to her lips when she knew
+that the man sitting beside her was the notorious bandit of the Shoshone
+fastnesses. She was not in the least afraid. A sure instinct told her he
+was not the kind of a man of whom a woman need have fear so long as
+her own anchor held fast. In good time she meant to let him have
+her unvarnished opinion of him, but she did not mean it to be an
+unconsidered one. Wherefore she drove the machine forward toward the
+camelbacked peak he had indicated, her eyes straight before her, a frown
+corrugating her forehead.
+
+For him, having made his dramatic announcement, he seemed content for
+the present with silence. He leaned back in the car and appreciated her
+with a coolness that just missed impudence. Certainly her appearance
+proclaimed her very much worth while. To dwell on the long lines of her
+supple young body, the exquisite throat and chin curve, was a pleasure
+with a thrill to it. As a physical creation, a mere innocent young
+animal, he thought her perfect; attuned to a fine harmony of grace
+and color. But it was the animating vitality of her, the lightness of
+motion, the fire and sparkle of expression that gave her the captivating
+charm she possessed.
+
+They were two miles nearer the camel-backed peak before he broke the
+silence.
+
+"Beats a bronco for getting over the ground. Think I'll have to get
+one," he mused aloud.
+
+"With the money you took from the Ayr bank?" she flashed.
+
+"I might drive off some of your cows and sell them," he countered,
+promptly. "About how much will they hold me up for a machine like this?"
+
+"This is only a runabout. You can get one for twelve or fourteen hundred
+dollars of anybody's money."
+
+"Of yours?" he laughed.
+
+"I haven't that much with me. If you'll come over and hold up the ranch
+perhaps we might raise it among us," she jeered.
+
+His mirth was genuine. "But right now I couldn't get more than how much
+off y'u?"
+
+"Sixty-three dollars is all I have with me, and I couldn't give you
+more--NOT EVEN IF YOU PUT RED HOT IRONS BETWEEN MY FINGERS." She gave it
+to him straight, her blue eyes fixed steadily on him.
+
+Yet she was not prepared for the effect of her words. The last thing she
+had expected was to see the blood wash out of his bronzed face, to see
+his sensitive nostrils twitch with pain. He made her feel as if she had
+insulted him, as if she had been needlessly cruel. And because of it she
+hardened her heart. Why should she spare him the mention of it? He had
+not hesitated at the shameless deed itself. Why should she shrink before
+that wounded look that leaped to his fine eyes in that flash of time
+before he hardened them to steel?
+
+"You did it--didn't you?" she demanded.
+
+"That's what they say." His gaze met her defiantly.
+
+"And it is true, isn't it?"
+
+"Oh, anything is true of a man that herds sheep," he returned, bitterly.
+
+"If that is true it would not be possible for you to understand how much
+I despise you."
+
+"Thank you," he retorted, ironically.
+
+"I don't understand at all. I don't see how you can be the man they
+say you are. Before I met you it was easy to understand. But somehow--I
+don't know--you don't LOOK like a villain." She found herself strangely
+voicing the deep hope of her heart. It was surely impossible to look at
+him and believe him guilty of the things of which, he was accused. And
+yet he offered no denial, suggested no defense.
+
+Her troubled eyes went over his thin, sunbaked face with its touch,
+of bitterness, and she did not find it possible to dismiss the subject
+without giving him a chance to set himself right.
+
+"You can't be as bad as they say. You are not, are you?" she asked,
+naively.
+
+"What do y'u think?" he responded, coolly.
+
+She flushed angrily at what she accepted as his insolence. "A man of any
+decency would have jumped at the chance to explain."
+
+"But if there is nothing to explain?"
+
+"You are then guilty."
+
+Their eyes met, and neither of them quailed.
+
+"If I pleaded not guilty would y'u believe me?"
+
+She hesitated. "I don't know. How could I when it is known by everybody?
+And yet--"
+
+He smiled. "Why should I trouble y'u, then, with explanations? I reckon
+we'll let it go at guilty."
+
+"Is that all you can say for yourself?"
+
+He seemed to hang in doubt an instant, then shook his head and refused
+the opening.
+
+"I expect if we changed the subject I could say a good deal for y'u," he
+drawled. "I never saw anything pluckier than the way y'u flew down from
+the mesa and conducted the cutting-out expedition. Y'u sure drilled
+through your punchers like a streak of lightning."
+
+"I didn't know who you were," she explained, proudly.
+
+"Would it have made any difference if y'u had?"
+
+Again the angry flush touched her cheeks. "Not a bit. I would have saved
+you in order to have you properly hanged later," she cut back promptly.
+
+He shook his head gayly. "I'm ce'tainly going to disappoint y'u some.
+Your enterprising punchers may collect me yet, but not alive, I reckon."
+
+"I'll give them strict orders to bring you in alive."
+
+"Did you ever want the moon when y'u was a little kid?" he asked.
+
+"We'll see, Mr. Outlaw Bannister."
+
+He laughed softly, in the quiet, indolent fashion that would have been
+pleasant if it had not been at her. "It's right kind of you to take so
+much interest in me. I'd most be willing to oblige by letting your boys
+rope me to renew this acquaintance, ma'am." Then, "I get out here Miss
+Messiter," he added.
+
+She stopped on the instant. Plainly she could not get rid of him too
+soon. "Haven't you forgot one thing?" she asked, ironically.
+
+"Yes, ma'am. To thank you proper for what y'u did for me." He limped
+gingerly down from the car and stood with his hand on one of the tires.
+"I have been trying to think how to say it right; but I guess I'll have
+to give it up. All is that if I ever get a chance to even the score--"
+
+She waved his thanks aside impatiently "I didn't mean that. You have
+forgotten to take my purse."
+
+His gravity was broken on the instant, and his laughter was certainly
+delightfully fresh. "I clean forgot, but I expect I'll drop over to the
+ranch for it some day."
+
+"We'll try to make to make you welcome, Mr. Bannister."
+
+"Don't put yourself out at all. I'll take pot-luck when I come."
+
+"How many of you may we expect?" she asked, defiantly.
+
+"Oh, I allow to come alone."
+
+"You'll very likely forget."
+
+"No, ma'am, I don't know so many ladies that I'm liable to such an
+oversight.
+
+"I have heard a different story. But if you do remember to come,
+and will let us know when you expect to honor the Lazy D, I'll have
+messengers sent to meet you."
+
+He perfectly understood her to mean leaden ones, and the humorous gleam
+in his eye sparkled in appreciation of her spirit. "I don't want all
+that fuss made over me. I reckon I'll drop in unexpected," he said.
+
+She nodded curtly. "Good-bye. Hope your ankle won't trouble you very
+much."
+
+"Thank y'u, ma'am. I reckon it won't. Good-bye, Miss Messiter."
+
+Out of the tail of her eye she saw him bowing like an Italian opera
+singer, as impudently insouciant, as gracefully graceless as any stage
+villain in her memory. Once again she saw him, when her machine swept
+round a curve and she could look back without seeming to do so, limping
+across through the sage brush toward a little hillock near the road. And
+as she looked the bare, curly head was inclined toward her in another
+low, mocking bow. He was certainly the gallantest vagabond unhanged.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 4. AT THE LAZY D RANCH
+
+Helen Messiter was a young woman very much alive, which implies that she
+was given to emotions; and as her machine skimmed over the ground to
+the Lazy D she had them to spare. For from the first this young man had
+taken her eye, and it had come upon her with a distinct shock that he
+was the notorious scoundrel who was terrorizing the countryside. She
+told herself almost passionately that she would never have believed it
+if he had not said so himself. She knew quite well that the coldness
+that had clutched her heart when he gave his name had had nothing to do
+with fear. There had been chagrin, disappointment, but nothing in the
+least like the terror she might have expected. The simple truth was that
+he had seemed so much a man that it had hurt her to find him also a wild
+beast.
+
+Deep in her heart she resented the conviction forced upon her. Reckless
+he undoubtedly was, at odds with the law surely, but it was hard to
+admit that attractive personality to be the mask of fiendish cruelty
+and sinister malice. And yet--the facts spoke for themselves. He had not
+even attempted a denial. Still there was a mystery about him, else how
+was it possible for two so distinct personalities to dwell together in
+the same body.
+
+She hated him with all her lusty young will; not only for what he was,
+but also for what she had been disappointed in not finding him after her
+first instinctive liking. Yet it was with an odd little thrill that
+she ran down again into the coulee where her prosaic life had found its
+first real adventure. He might be all they said, but nothing could wipe
+out the facts that she had offered her life to save his, and that he
+had lent her his body as a living shield for one exhilarating moment of
+danger.
+
+As she reached the hill summit beyond the coulee, Helen Messiter
+was aware that a rider in ungainly chaps of white wool was rapidly
+approaching. He dipped down into the next depression without seeing her;
+and when they came face to face at the top of the rise the result was
+instantaneous. His pony did an animated two-step not on the programme.
+It took one glance at the diabolical machine, and went up on its hind
+legs, preliminary to giving an elaborate exhibition of pitching. The
+rider indulged in vivid profanity and plied his quirt vigorously. But
+the bronco, with the fear of this unknown evil on its soul, varied its
+bucking so effectively that the puncher astride its hurricane deck was
+forced, in the language of his kind, to "take the dust."
+
+His red head sailed through the air and landed in the white sand at
+the girl's feet. For a moment he sat in the road and gazed with chagrin
+after the vanishing heels of his mount. Then his wrathful eyes came
+round to the owner of the machine that had caused the eruption. His
+mouth had opened to give adequate expression to his feelings, when he
+discovered anew the forgotten fact that he was dealing with a woman.
+His jaw hung open for an instant in amaze; and when he remembered the
+unedited vocabulary he had turned loose on the world a flood of purple
+swept his tanned face.
+
+She wanted to laugh, but wisely refrained. "I'm very sorry," was what
+she said.
+
+He stared in silence as he slowly picked himself from the ground. His
+red hair rose like the quills of a porcupine above a face that had the
+appearance of being unfinished. Neither nose nor mouth nor chin seemed
+to be quite definite enough.
+
+She choked down her gayety and offered renewed apologies.
+
+"I was going for a doc," he explained, by way of opening his share of
+the conversation.
+
+"Then perhaps you had better jump in with me and ride back to the Lazy
+D. I suppose that's where you came from?"
+
+He scratched his vivid head helplessly. "Yes, ma'am."
+
+"Then jump in."
+
+"I was going to Bear Creek, ma'am," he added dubiously.
+
+"How far is it?"
+
+"'Bout twenty-five miles, and then some."
+
+"You don't expect to walk, do you?"
+
+"No; I allowed--"
+
+"I'll take you back to the ranch, where you can get another horse."
+
+"I reckon, ma'am, I'd ruther walk."
+
+"Nonsense! Why?"
+
+"I ain't used to them gas wagons."
+
+"It's quite safe. There is nothing to be afraid of."
+
+Reluctantly he got in beside her, as happy as a calf in a branding pen.
+
+"Are you the lady that sashaid off with Ned Bannister?" he asked
+presently, after he had had time to smother successively some of his
+fear, wonder and delight at their smooth, swift progress.
+
+"Yes. Why?"
+
+"The boys allow you hadn't oughter have done it." Then, to place the
+responsibility properly on shoulders broader than his own, he added:
+"That's what Judd says."
+
+"And who is Judd?"
+
+"Judd, he's the foreman of the Lazy D."
+
+Below them appeared the corrals and houses of a ranch nestling in a
+little valley flanked by hills.
+
+"This yere's the Lazy D," announced the youth, with pride, and in the
+spirit of friendliness suggested a caution. "Judd, he's some peppery.
+You wanter smooth him down some, seeing as he's riled up to-day."
+
+A flicker of steel came into the blue eyes. "Indeed! Well, here we are."
+
+"If it ain't Reddy, AND the lady with the flying machine," murmured a
+freckled youth named McWilliams, emerging from the bunkhouse with a pan
+of water which had been used to bathe the wound of one of the punctured
+combatants.
+
+"What's that?" snapped a voice from within; and immediately its owner
+appeared in the doorway and bored with narrowed black eyes the young
+woman in the machine.
+
+"Who are you?" he demanded, brusquely.
+
+"Your target," she answered, quietly. "Would you like to take another
+shot at me?"
+
+The freckled lad broke out into a gurgle of laughter, at which the
+black, swarthy man beside him wheeled round in a rage. "What you
+cacklin' at, Mac?" he demanded, in a low voice.
+
+"Oh, the things I notice," returned that youth jauntily, meeting the
+other's anger without the flicker of an eyelid.
+
+"It ain't healthy to be so noticin'," insinuated the other.
+
+"Y'u don't say," came the prompt, sarcastic retort. "If you're such a
+darned good judge of health, y'u better be attending to some of your
+patients." He jerked a casual thumb over his shoulder toward the bunks
+on which lay the wounded men.
+
+"I shouldn't wonder but what there might be another patient for me to
+attend to," snarled the foreman.
+
+"That so? Well, turn your wolf loose when y'u get to feelin' real
+devilish," jeered the undismayed one, strolling forward to assist Miss
+Messiter to alight.
+
+The mistress of the Lazy D had been aware of the byplay, but she had
+caught neither the words nor their import. She took the offered brown
+hand smilingly, for here again she looked into the frank eyes of the
+West, unafraid and steady. She judged him not more than twenty-two,
+but the school where he had learned of life had held open and strenuous
+session every day since he could remember.
+
+"Glad to meet y'u, ma'am," he assured her, in the current phrase of the
+semi-arid lands.
+
+"I'm sure I am glad to meet YOU," she answered, heartily. "Can you tell
+me where is the foreman of the Lazy D?"
+
+He introduced with a smile the swarthy man in the doorway. "This is him
+ma'am--Mr. Judd Morgan."
+
+Now it happened that Mr. Judd Morgan was simmering with suppressed
+spleen.
+
+"All I've got to say is that you had no business mixing up in that
+shootin' affair back there. Perhaps you don't know that the man you
+saved is Ned Bannister, the outlaw," was his surly greeting.
+
+"Oh, yes, I know that."
+
+"Then what d'ye mean--Who are you, anyway?" His insolent eyes coasted
+malevolently over her.
+
+"Helen Messiter is my name."
+
+It was ludicrous to see the change that came over the man. He had been
+prepared to bully her; and with a word she had pricked the bubble of his
+arrogance. He swallowed his anger and got a mechanical smile in working
+order.
+
+"Glad to see you here, Miss Messiter," he said, his sinister gaze
+attempting to meet hers frankly "I been looking for you every day."
+
+"But y'u managed to surprise him, after all ma'am," chuckled Mac.
+
+"Where's yo' hawss, Reddy?" inquired a tall young man, who had appeared
+silently in the doorway of the bunkhouse.
+
+Reddy pinked violently. "I had an accident, Denver," he explained. "This
+lady yere she--"
+
+"Scooped y'u right off yore hawss. Y'u don't say," sympathized Mac so
+breathlessly that even Reddy joined in the chorus of laughter that went
+up at his expense.
+
+The young woman thought to make it easy for him, and suggested an
+explanation.
+
+"His horse isn't used to automobiles, and so when it met this one--"
+
+"I got off," interposed Reddy hastily, displaying a complexion like a
+boiled beet.
+
+"He got off," Mac explained gravely to the increasing audience.
+
+Denver nodded with an imperturbable face. "He got off."
+
+Mac introduced Miss Messiter to such of her employees as were on hand.
+"Shake hands with Miss Messiter, Missou," was the formula, the name
+alone varying to suit the embarrassed gentlemen in leathers. Each of
+them in turn presented a huge hand, in which her little one disappeared
+for the time, and was sawed up and down in the air like a pump-handle.
+Yet if she was amused she did not show it; and her pleasure at meeting
+the simple, elemental products of the plains outweighed a great deal her
+sense of the ludicrous.
+
+"How are your patients getting along?" she presently asked of her
+foreman.
+
+"I reckon all right. I sent Reddy for a doc, but--"
+
+"He got off," murmured Mac pensively.
+
+"I'll go rope another hawss," put in the man who had got off.
+
+"Get a jump on you, then. Miss Messiter, would you like to look over the
+place?"
+
+"Not now. I want to see the men that were hurt. Perhaps I can help them.
+Once I took a few weeks in nursing."
+
+"Bully for you, ma'am," whooped Mac. "I've a notion those boys are
+sufferin' for a woman to put the diamond-hitch on them bandages."
+
+"Bring that suit-case in," she commanded Denver, in the gentlest voice
+he had ever heard, after she had made a hasty inspection of the first
+wounded man.
+
+From the suit-case she took a little leather medicine-case, the kind
+that can be bought already prepared for use. It held among other things
+a roll of medicated cotton, some antiseptic tablets, and a little steel
+instrument for probing.
+
+"Some warm water, please; and have some boiling on the range," were her
+next commands.
+
+Mac flew to execute them.
+
+It was a pleasure to see her work, so deftly the skillful hands
+accomplished what her brain told them. In admiring awe the punchers
+stood awkwardly around while she washed and dressed the hurts. Two of
+the bullets had gone through the fleshy part of the arm and left clean
+wounds. In the case of the third man she had to probe for the lead, but
+fortunately found it with little difficulty. Meanwhile she soothed the
+victim with gentle womanly sympathy.
+
+"I know it hurts a good deal. Just a minute and I'll be through."
+
+His hands clutched tightly the edges of his bunk. "That's all right,
+doc. You attend to roping that pill and I'll endure the grief."
+
+A long sigh of relief went up from the assembled cowboys when she drew
+the bullet out.
+
+The sinewy hands fastened on the wooden bunk relaxed suddenly.
+
+"'Frisco's daid," gasped the cook, who bore the title of Wun Hop for
+no reason except that he was an Irishman in a place formerly held by a
+Chinese.
+
+"He has only fainted," she said quietly, and continued with the
+antiseptic dressing.
+
+When it was all over, the big, tanned men gathered at the entrance to
+the calf corral and expanded in admiration of their new boss.
+
+"She's a pure for fair. She grades up any old way yuh take her to
+the best corn-fed article on the market," pronounced Denver, with
+enthusiasm.
+
+"I got to ride the boundary," sighed Missou. "I kinder hate to go right
+now."
+
+"Here, too," acquiesced another. "I got a round-up on Wind Creek to cut
+out them two-year-olds. If 'twas my say-so, I'd order Mac on that job."
+
+"Right kind of y'u. Seems to me"--Mac's sarcastic eye trailed around to
+include all those who had been singing her praises--"the new queen of
+this hacienda won't have no trouble at all picking a prince consort when
+she gets round to it. Here's Wun Hop, not what y'u might call anxious,
+but ce'tainly willing. Then Denver's some in the turtle-dove business,
+according to that hash-slinger in Cheyenne. Missou might be induced to
+accept if it was offered him proper; and I allow Jim ain't turned the
+color of Redtop's hair jest for instance. I don't want to leave out
+'Frisco and the other boys carrying Bannister's pills--"
+
+"Nor McWilliams. I'd admire to include him," murmured Denver.
+
+That sunburned, nonchalant youth laughed musically. "Sure thing. I'd
+hate to be left out. The only difference is--"
+
+"Well?"
+
+His roving eye circled blandly round. "I stand about one show in a
+million. Y'u roughnecks are dead ones already."
+
+With which cold comfort he sauntered away to join Miss Messiter and
+the foreman, who now appeared together at the door of the ranchhouse,
+prepared to make a tour of the buildings and the immediate corrals.
+
+"Isn't there a woman on the place?" she was asking Morgan.
+
+"No'm, there ain't. Henderson's daughter would come and stay with y'u a
+while I reckon."
+
+"Please send for her at once, then, and ask her to come to-day."
+
+"All right. I'll send one of the boys right away."
+
+"How did y'u leave 'Frisco, ma'am?" asked Mac, by way of including
+himself easily.
+
+"He's resting quietly. Unless blood-poisoning sets in they ought all to
+do well."
+
+"It's right lucky for them y'u happened along. This is the hawss corral,
+ma'am," explained the young man just as Morgan opened his thin lips to
+tell her.
+
+Judd contrived to get rid of him promptly. "Slap on a saddle, Mac, and
+run up the remuda so Miss Messiter can see the hawsses for herself," he
+ordered.
+
+"Mebbe she'd rather ride down and look at the bunch," suggested the
+capable McWilliams.
+
+As it chanced, she did prefer to ride down the pasture and look over
+the place from on horseback. She was in love with her ranch already.
+Its spacious distances, the thousands of cattle and the horses, these
+picturesque retainers who served her even to the shedding of an enemy's
+blood; they all struck an answering echo in her gallant young heart
+that nothing in Kalamazoo had been able to stir. She bubbled over with
+enthusiasm, the while Morgan covertly sneered and McWilliams warmed to
+the untamed youth in her.
+
+"What about this man Bannister?" she flung out suddenly, after they had
+cantered back to the house when the remuda had been inspected.
+
+Her abrupt question brought again the short, tense silence she had
+become used to expect.
+
+"He runs sheep about twenty or thirty miles southwest of here,"
+explained McWilliams, in a carefully casual tone.
+
+"So everybody tells me, but it seems to me he spills a good deal of lead
+on my men," she answered impatiently. "What's the trouble?"
+
+"Last week he crossed the dead-line with a bunch of five thousand
+sheep."
+
+"Who draws this dead-line?"
+
+"The cattlemen got together and drew it. Your uncle was one of those
+that marked it off, ma'am."
+
+"And Bannister crossed it?"
+
+"Yes, ma'am. Yesterday 'Frisco come on him and one of his herders with
+a big bunch of them less than fifteen miles from here. He didn't know it
+was Bannister, and took a pot-shot at him. 'Course Bannister came back
+at him, and he got Frisco in the laig."
+
+"Didn't know it was Bannister? What difference WOULD that make?" she
+said impatiently.
+
+Mac laughed. "What difference would it make, Judd?"
+
+Morgan scowled, and the young man answered his own question. "We don't
+any of us go out of our way more'n a mile to cross Bannister's trail,"
+he drawled.
+
+"Do you wear this for an ornament? Are you upholstered with hardware to
+catch the eyes of some girl?" she asked, touching with the end of her
+whip the revolver in the holster strapped to his chaps.
+
+His serene, gay smile flashed at her. "Are y'u ordering me to go out and
+get Ned Bannister's scalp?"
+
+"No, I am not," she explained promptly. "What I am trying to discover is
+why you all seem to be afraid of one man. He is only a man, isn't he?"
+
+A veil of ice seemed to fall over the boyish face and leave it chiseled
+marble. His unspeaking eyes rested on the swarthy foreman as he
+answered:
+
+"I don't know what he is, ma'am. He may be one man, or he may be a
+hundred. What's more, I ain't particularly suffering to find out. Fact
+is, I haven't lost any Bannisters."
+
+The girl became aware that her foreman was looking at her with a wary
+silent vigilance sinister in its intensity.
+
+"In short, you're like the rest of the people in this section. You're
+afraid."
+
+"Now y'u're shoutin', Miss Messiter. I sure am when it comes to shootin'
+off my mouth about Bannister."
+
+"And you, Mr. Morgan?"
+
+It struck her that the young puncher waited with a curious interest for
+the answer of the foreman.
+
+"Did it look like I was afraid this mawnin', ma'am?" he asked, with
+narrowed eyes.
+
+"No, you all seemed brave enough then, when you had him eight to one."
+
+"I wasn't there," hastily put in McWilliams. "I don't go gunning for my
+man without giving him a show."
+
+"I do," retorted Morgan cruelly. "I'd go if we was fifty to one. We'd
+'a' got him, too, if it hadn't been for Miss Messiter. 'Twas a chance we
+ain't likely to get again for a year."
+
+"It wasn't your fault you didn't kill him, Mr. Morgan," she said,
+looking hard at him. "You may be interested to know that your last shot
+missed him only about six inches, and me about four."
+
+"I didn't know who you were," he sullenly defended.
+
+"I see. You only shoot at women when you don't know who they are." She
+turned her back on him pointedly and addressed herself to McWilliams.
+"You can tell the men working on this ranch that I won't have any more
+such attacks on this man Bannister. I don't care what or who he is. I
+don't propose to have him murdered by my employees. Let the law take him
+and hang him. Do you hear?"
+
+"I ce'tainly do, and the boys will get the word straight," he replied.
+
+"I take it since yuh are giving your orders through Mac, yuh don't need
+me any longer for your foreman," bullied Morgan.
+
+"You take it right, sir," came her crisp reply. "McWilliams will be my
+foreman from to-day."
+
+The man's face, malignant and wolfish, suddenly lost its mask. That she
+would so promptly call his bluff was the last thing he had expected.
+"That's all right. I reckon yuh think yuh know your own business, but
+I'll put it to yuh straight. Long as yuh live you'll be sorry for this."
+
+And with that he wheeled away.
+
+She turned to her new foreman and found him less radiant than she could
+have desired. "I'm right sorry y'u did that. I'm afraid y'u'll make
+trouble for yourself," he said quietly.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"I don't know myself just why." He hesitated before adding: "They say
+him and Bannister is thicker than they'd ought to be. It's a cinch that
+he's in cahoots somehow with that Shoshone bunch of bad men."
+
+"But--why, that's ridiculous. Only this morning he was trying to kill
+Bannister himself."
+
+"That's what I don't just savvy. There's a whole lot about that business
+I don't get next to. I guess Bannister is at the head of them.
+Everybody seems agreed about that. But the whole thing is a tangle of
+contradiction to me. I've milled it over a heap in my mind, too."
+
+"What are some of the contradictions?"
+
+"Well, here's one right off the bat, as we used to say back in the
+States. Bannister is a great musician, they claim; fine singer, and
+all that. Now I happen to know he can't sing any more than a bellowing
+yearling."
+
+"How do you know?" she asked, her eyes shining with interest.
+
+"Because I heard him try it. 'Twas one day last summer when I was out
+cutting trail of a bunch of strays down by Dead Cow Creek. The day was
+hot, and I lay down behind a cottonwood and dropped off to sleep. When
+I awakened it didn't take me longer'n an hour to discover what had woke
+me. Somebody on the other side of the creek was trying to sing. It was
+ce'tainly the limit. Pretty soon he come out of the brush and I seen it
+was Bannister."
+
+"You're sure it was Bannister?"
+
+"If seeing is believing, I'm sure."
+
+"And was his singing really so bad?"
+
+"I'd hate ever to hear worse."
+
+"Was he singing when you saw him?"
+
+"No, he'd just quit. He caught sight of my pony grazing, and hunted
+cover real prompt."
+
+"Then it might have been another man singing in the thicket."
+
+"It might, but it wasn't. Y'u see, I'd followed him through the bush by
+his song, and he showed up the moment I expected him."
+
+"Still there might have been another man there singing."
+
+"One chance in a million," he conceded.
+
+A sudden hope flamed up like tow in her heart. Perhaps, after all, Ned
+Bannister was not the leader of the outlaws. Perhaps somebody else was
+masquerading in his name, using Bannister's unpopularity as a shield to
+cover his iniquities. Still, this was an unlikely hypothesis, she had to
+admit. For why should he allow his good name to be dragged in the dust
+without any effort to save it? On a sudden impulse the girl confided her
+doubt to McWilliams.
+
+"You don't suppose there can be any mistake, do you? Somehow I can't
+think him as bad as they say. He looks awfully reckless, but one feels
+one could trust his face."
+
+"Same here," agreed the new foreman. "First off when I saw him my think
+was, 'I'd like to have that man backing my play when I'm sitting in the
+game with Old Man Hard Luck reaching out for my blue chips.'"
+
+"You don't think faces lie, do you?"
+
+"I've seen them that did, but, gen'rally speaking, tongues are a heap
+likelier to get tangled with the truth. But I reckon there ain't any
+doubt about Bannister. He's known over all this Western country."
+
+The young woman sighed. "I'm afraid you're right."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 5. THE DANCE AT FRASER'S
+
+"Heard tell yet of the dance over to Fraser's?"
+
+He was a young man of a brick red countenance and he wore loosely round
+his neck the best polka dot silk handkerchief that could be bought in
+Gimlet Butte, also such gala attire as was usually reserved only for
+events of importance. Sitting his horse carelessly in the plainsman's
+indolent fashion, he asked his question of McWilliams in front of the
+Lazy D bunkhouse.
+
+"Nope. When does the shindig come off?"
+
+"Friday night. Big thing. Y'u want to be there. All y'u lads."
+
+"Mebbe some of us will ride over."
+
+He of the polka dot kerchief did not appear quite satisfied. His glance
+wandered toward the house, as it had been doing occasionally since the
+moment of his arrival.
+
+"Y'u bet this dance is ace high, Mac. Fancy costumes and masks. Y'u can
+rent the costumes over to Slauson's for three per. Texas, he's going to
+call the dances. Music from Gimlet Butte. Y'u want to get it tucked away
+in your thinker that this dance ain't on the order of culls. No, sirree,
+it's cornfed."
+
+"Glad to hear of it. I'll cipher out somehow to be there, Slim."
+
+Slim's glance took in the ranchhouse again. He had ridden twenty-three
+miles out of his way to catch a glimpse of the newly arrived mistress of
+the Lazy D, the report of whose good looks and adventures had traveled
+hand in hand through many canons even to the heart of the Tetons. It had
+been on Skunk Creek that he had heard of her three days before, and now
+he had come to verify the tongue of rumor, to see her quite casually, of
+course, and do his own appraising. It began to look as if he were going
+to have to ride off without a glimpse of her.
+
+He nodded toward the house, turning a shade more purple than his native
+choleric hue. "Y'u want to bring your boss with y'u, Mac. We been
+hearing a right smart lot about her and the boys would admire to
+have her present. It's going to be strictly according to Hoyle--no
+rough-house plays go, y'understand."
+
+"I'll speak to her about it." Mac's deep amusement did not reach the
+surface. He was quite well aware that Slim was playing for time and that
+he was too bashful to plump out the desire that was in him. "Great the
+way cows are jumpin', ain't it?"
+
+"Sure. Well, I'll be movin' along to Slauson's. I just drapped in on my
+way. Thought mebbe y'u hadn't heard tell of the dance."
+
+"Much obliged. Was it for old man Slauson y'u dug up all them togs,
+Slim? He'll ce'tainly admire to see y'u in that silk tablecloth y'u got
+round your neck."
+
+Slim's purple deepened again. "Y'u go to grass, Mac. I don't aim to ask
+y'u to be my valley yet awhile."
+
+"C'rect. I was just wondering do all the Triangle Bar boys ride the
+range so handsome?"
+
+"Don't y'u worry about the Triangle Bar boys," advised the embarrassed
+Slim, gathering up his bridle reins.
+
+With one more reluctant glance in the direction of the house he rode
+away. When he reached the corral he looked back again. His gaze showed
+him the boyish foreman doubled up with laughter; also the sweep of a
+white skirt descending from the piazza.
+
+"Now, ain't that hoodooed luck?" the aggrieved rider of the Triangle Bar
+outfit demanded of himself, "I made my getaway about three shakes too
+soon, by gum!"
+
+Her foreman was in the throes of mirth when Helen Messiter reached him.
+
+"Include me in the joke," she suggested.
+
+"Oh, I was just thinkin'," he explained inadequately.
+
+"Does it always take you that way?"
+
+"About these boys that drop in so frequent on business these days. Funny
+how fond they're getting of the Lazy D. There was that stock detective
+happened in yesterday to show how anxious he was about your cows. Then
+the two Willow Creek riders that wanted a job punching for y'u, not to
+mention mention the Shoshone miner and the storekeeper from Gimlet Butte
+and Soapy Sothern and--"
+
+"Still I don't quite see the joke."
+
+"It ain't any joke with them. Serious business, ma'am."
+
+"What happened to start you on this line?"
+
+"The lad riding down the road on that piebald pinto. He come twenty
+miles out of his way, plumb dressed for a wedding, all to give me an
+invite to a dance at Fraser's. Y'u would call that real thoughtful of
+him, I expect."
+
+She gayly sparkled. "A real ranch dance--the kind you have been telling
+me about. Are Ida and I invited?"
+
+"Invited? Slim hinted at a lynching if I came without y'u."
+
+She laughed softly, merry eyes flashing swiftly at him. "How gallant you
+Westerners are, even though you do turn it into burlesque."
+
+His young laugh echoed hers. "Burlesque nothing. My life wouldn't be
+worth a thing if I went alone. Honest, I wouldn't dare."
+
+"Since the ranch can't afford to lose its foreman Ida and I will go
+along," she promised. "That is, if it is considered proper here."
+
+"Proper. Good gracious, ma'am! Every lady for thirty miles round will be
+there, from six months old to eighty odd years. It wouldn't be PROPER to
+stay at home."
+
+The foreman drove her to Fraser's in a surrey with Ida Henderson and one
+of the Lazy D punchers on the back seat. The drive was over twenty-five
+miles, but in that silent starry night every mile was a delight. Part of
+the way led through a beautiful canon, along the rocky mountain road of
+which the young man guided the rig with unerring skill. Beyond the gorge
+the country debouched into a grassy park that fell away from their feet
+for miles. It was in this basin that the Fraser ranch lay.
+
+The strains of the fiddle and the thumping of feet could be heard as
+they drove up. Already the rooms seemed to be pretty well filled, as
+Helen noticed when they entered. Three sets were on the floor for a
+quadrille and the house shook with the energy of the dancers. On benches
+against the walls were seated the spectators, and on one of them stood
+Texas calling the dance.
+
+"Alemane left. Right hand t'yer pardner and grand right and left.
+Ev-v-rybody swing," chanted the caller.
+
+A dozen rough young fellows were clustered near the front door,
+apparently afraid to venture farther lest their escape be cut off.
+Through these McWilliams pushed a way for his charges, the cowboys
+falling back respectfully at once when they discovered the presence of
+Miss Messiter.
+
+In the bedroom where she left her wraps the mistress of the Lazy D found
+a dozen or more infants and several of their mothers. In the kitchen
+were still other women and babies, some of the former very old and of
+the latter very young. A few of the babies were asleep, but most of them
+were still very much alive to this scene of unwonted hilarity in their
+young lives.
+
+As soon as she emerged into the general publicity of the dancing room
+her foreman pounced upon Helen and led her to a place in the head set
+that was making up. The floor was rough, the music jerky and uncertain,
+the quadrilling an exhibition of joyous and awkward abandon; but its
+picturesque lack of convention appealed to the girl from Michigan. It
+rather startled her to be swung so vigorously, but a glance about the
+room showed that these humorous-eyed Westerners were merely living up to
+the duty of the hour as they understood it.
+
+At the close of the quadrille Helen found herself being introduced
+to "Mr. Robins," alias Slim, who drew one of his feet back in an
+embarrassed bow.
+
+"I enjoy to meet y'u, ma'am," he assured her, and supplemented this with
+a request for the next dance, after which he fell into silence that was
+painful in its intensity.
+
+Nearly all the dances were squares, as few of those present understood
+the intricacies of the waltz and two-step. Hence it happened that the
+proficient McWilliams secured three round dances with his mistress.
+
+It was during the lunch of sandwiches, cake and coffee that Helen
+perceived an addition to the company. The affair had been advertised
+a costume ball, but most of those present had construed this very
+liberally. She herself, to be sure, had come as Mary Queen of Scots,
+Mac was arrayed in the scarlet tunic and tight-fitting breeches of the
+Northwest Mounted Police, and perhaps eight or ten others had made
+some attempt at representing some one other than they were. She now saw
+another, apparently a new arrival, standing in the doorway negligently.
+A glance told her that he was made up for a road agent and that his
+revolvers and mask were a part of the necessary costuming.
+
+Slowly his gaze circled the room and came round to her. His eyes were
+hard as diamonds and as flashing, so that the impact of their meeting
+looks seemed to shock her physically. He was a tall man, swarthy of
+hue, and he carried himself with a light ease that looked silken strong.
+Something in the bearing was familiar yet not quite familiar either. It
+seemed to suggest a resemblance to somebody she knew. And in the next
+thought she knew that the somebody was Ned Bannister.
+
+The man spoke to Fraser, just then passing with a cup of coffee, and
+Helen saw the two men approach. The stranger was coming to be formally
+introduced.
+
+"Shake hands with Mr. Holloway, Miss Messiter. He's from up in the hill
+country and he rode to our frolic. Y'u've got three guesses to figure
+out what he's made up as."
+
+"One will be quite enough, I think," she answered coldly.
+
+Fraser departed on his destination with the coffee and the newcomer sat
+down on the bench beside her.
+
+"One's enough, is it?" he drawled smilingly.
+
+"Quite, but I'm surprised so few came in costume. Why didn't you? But I
+suppose you had your reasons."
+
+"Didn't I? I'm supposed to be a bad man from the hills."
+
+She swept him casually with an indifferent glance. "And isn't that what
+you are in real life?"
+
+His sharp scrutiny chiseled into her. "What's that?"
+
+"You won't mind if I forget and call you Mr. Bannister instead of Mr.
+Holloway?"
+
+She thought his counterfeit astonishment perfect.
+
+"So I'm Ned Bannister, am I?"
+
+Their eyes clashed.
+
+"Aren't you?"
+
+She felt sure of it, and yet there was a lurking doubt. For there was
+in his manner something indescribably more sinister than she had felt
+in him on that occasion when she had saved his life. Then a debonair
+recklessness had been the outstanding note, but now there was something
+ribald and wicked in him.
+
+"Since y'u put it as a question, common politeness demands an answer.
+Ned Bannister is my name."
+
+"You are the terror of this country?"
+
+"I shan't be a terror to y'u, ma'am, if I can help it," he smiled.
+
+"But you are the man they call the king?"
+
+"I have that honor."
+
+"HONOR?"
+
+At the sharp scorn of her accent he laughed.
+
+"Do you mean that you are proud of your villainy?" she demanded.
+
+"Y'u've ce'tainly got the teacher habit of asking questions," he replied
+with a laugh that was a sneer.
+
+A shadow fell across them and a voice said quietly, "She didn't wait to
+ask any when she saved your life down in the coulee back of the Lazy D."
+
+The shadow was Jim McWilliams's, and its owner looked down at the man
+beside the girl with steady, hostile eyes.
+
+"Is this your put in, sir?" the other flashed back.
+
+"Yes, seh, it is. The boys don't quite like seeing your hardware so
+prominent at a social gathering. In this community guns don't come into
+the house at a ranch dance. I'm a committee to mention the subject and
+to collect your thirty-eights if y'u agree with us."
+
+"And if I don't agree with you?"
+
+"There's all outdoors ready to receive y'u, seh. It would be a pity to
+stay in the one spot where your welcome's wore thin."
+
+"Still I may choose to stay."
+
+"Ce'tainly, but if y'u decide that way y'u better step out on the porch
+and talk it over with us where there ain't ladies present."
+
+"Isn't this a costume dance? What's the matter with my guns? I'm an
+outlaw, ain't I?"
+
+"I don't know whether y'u are or not, seh. If y'u say y'u are we're
+ready to take your word. The guns have to be shucked if y'u stay here.
+They might go off accidental and scare the ladies."
+
+The man rose blackly. "I'll remember this. If y'u knew who y'u were
+getting so gay with--"
+
+"I can guess, Mr. Holloway, the kind of an outfit y'u freight with, and
+I expect I could put a handle to another name for you."
+
+"By God, if y'u dare to say--"
+
+"I don't dare, especially among so many ladies," came McWilliams's
+jaunty answer.
+
+The eyes of the two men gripped, after which Holloway swung on his heel
+and swaggered defiantly out of the house.
+
+Presently there came the sound of a pony's feet galloping down the
+road. It had not yet died away when Texas announced that the supper
+intermission was over.
+
+"Pardners for a quadrille. Ladies' choice."
+
+The dance was on again full swing. The fiddlers were tuning up and
+couples gathering for a quadrille. Denver came to claim Miss Messiter
+for a partner. Apparently even the existence of the vanished Holloway
+was forgotten. But Helen remembered it, and pondered over the affair
+long after daylight had come and brought with it an end to the
+festivities.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 6. A PARTY CALL
+
+The mistress of the Lazy D, just through with her morning visit to the
+hospital in the bunkhouse, stopped to read the gaudy poster tacked to
+the wall. It was embellished with the drawing of a placid rider astride
+the embodiment of fury incarnate, under which was the legend: "Stick to
+Your Saddle."
+
+BIG FOURTH OF JULY CELEBRATION AT GIMLET BUTTE. ROPING AND BRONCO
+BUSTING CONTESTS FOR THE CHAMPIONSHIP OF THE WORLD AND BIG PRIZES,
+Including $1,000 for the Best Rider and the Same for Best Roper. Cow
+Pony Races, Ladies' Races and Ladies' Riding Contest, Fireworks, AND
+FREE BARBECUE!!!! EVERYBODY COME AND TURN YOUR WOLF LOOSE.
+
+A sudden thud of pounding hoofs, a snatch of ragtime, and her foreman
+swept up in a cloud of white dust. His pony came from a gallop to an
+instant halt, and simultaneously Mac landed beside her, one hand holding
+the wide-brimmed hat he had snatched off in his descent, the other
+hitched by a casual thumb to the belt of his chaps.
+
+She laughed. "You really did it very well."
+
+Mac blushed. He was still young enough to take pride in his picturesque
+regalia, to prefer the dramatic way of doing a commonplace thing. But,
+though he liked this girl's trick of laughing at him with a perfectly
+grave face out of those dark, long-lashed eyes, he would have liked
+it better if sometimes they had given back the applause he thought his
+little tricks merited.
+
+"Sho! That's foolishness," he deprecated.
+
+"I suppose they got you to sit for this picture;" and she indicated the
+poster with a wave of her hand.
+
+"That ain't a real picture," he explained, and when she smiled added,
+"as of course y'u know. No hawss ever pitched that way--and the saddle
+ain't right. Fact is, it's all wrong."
+
+"How did it come here? It wasn't here last night."
+
+"I reckon Denver brought it from Slauson's. He was ridin' that country
+yesterday, and as the boys was out of smokin' he come home that way."
+
+"I suppose you'll all go?"
+
+"I reckon."
+
+"And you'll ride?"
+
+"I aim to sit in."
+
+"At the roping, too?"
+
+"No, m'm. I ain't so much with the rope. It takes a Mexican to snake a
+rope."
+
+"Then I'll be able to borrow only a thousand dollars from you to help
+buy that bunch of young cows we were speaking about," she mocked.
+
+"Only a thousand," he grinned. "And it ain't a cinch I'll win. There are
+three or four straightup riders on this range. A fellow come from the
+Hole-in-the-Wall and won out last year."
+
+"And where were you?"
+
+"Oh, I took second prize," he explained, with obvious indifference.
+
+"Well, you had better get first this year. We'll have to show them the
+Lazy D hasn't gone to sleep."
+
+"Sure thing," he agreed.
+
+"Has that buyer from Cheyenne turned up yet?" she asked, reverting to
+business.
+
+"Not yet. Do y'u want I should make the cut soon as he comes?"
+
+"Don't you think his price is a little low--twenty dollars from brand
+up?"
+
+"It's a scrub bunch. We want to get rid of them, anyway. But you're the
+doctor," he concluded slangily.
+
+She thought a moment. "We'll let him have them, but don't make the cut
+till I come back. I'm going to ride over to the Twin Buttes."
+
+His admiring eyes followed her as she went toward the pony that was
+waiting saddled with the rein thrown to the ground. She carried her
+slim, lithe figure with a grace, a lightness, that few women could have
+rivaled. When she had swung to the saddle, she half-turned in her seat
+to call an order to the foreman.
+
+"I think, Mac, you had better run up those horses from Eagle Creek. Have
+Denver and Missou look after them."
+
+"Sure, ma'am," he said aloud; and to himself: "She's ce'tainly a
+thoroughbred. Does everything well she tackles. I never saw anything
+like it. I'm a Chink if she doesn't run this ranch like she had been
+at it forty years. Same thing with her gasoline bronc. That pinto, too.
+He's got a bad eye for fair, but she makes him eat out of her hand. I
+reckon the pinto is like the rest of us--clean mashed." He put his arms
+on the corral fence and grew introspective. "Blamed if I know what it is
+about her. 'Course she's a winner on looks, but that ain't it alone. I
+guess it's on account of her being such a game little gentleman. When
+she turns that smile loose on a fellow--well, there's sure sunshine in
+the air. And game--why, Ned Bannister ain't gamer himself."
+
+McWilliams had climbed lazily to the top board of the fence. He was an
+energetic youth, but he liked to do his thinking at his ease. Now, as
+his gaze still followed its lodestar, he suddenly slipped from his seat
+and ran forward, pulling the revolver from its scabbard as he ran. Into
+his eyes had crept a tense alertness, the shining watchfulness of the
+tiger ready for its spring.
+
+The cause of the change in the foreman of the Lazy D was a simple one,
+and on its face innocent enough. It was merely that a stranger had swung
+in casually at the gate of the short stable lane, and was due to
+meet Miss Messiter in about ten seconds. So far good enough. A dozen
+travelers dropped in every day, but this particular one happened to be
+Ned Bannister.
+
+From the stable door a shot rang out. Bannister ducked and shouted
+genially: "Try again."
+
+But Helen Messiter whirled her pony as on a half-dollar, and charged
+down on the stable.
+
+"Who fired that shot?" she demanded, her eyes blazing.
+
+The horse-wrangler showed embarrassment. He had found time only to lean
+the rifle against the wall.
+
+"I reckon I did, ma'am. Y'u see--"
+
+"Did you get my orders about this feud?" she interrupted crisply.
+
+"Yes, ma'am, but--"
+
+"Then you may call for your time. When I give my men orders I expect
+them to obey."
+
+"I wouldn't 'a' shot if I'd knowed y'u was so near him. Y'u was behind
+that summer kitchen," he explained lamely.
+
+"You only expect to obey orders when I'm in sight. Is that it?" she
+asked hotly, and without waiting for an answer delivered her ultimatum.
+"Well, I won't have it. I run this ranch as long as I am its owner. Do
+you understand?"
+
+"Yes, ma'am. I hadn't ought to have did it, but when I seen Bannister it
+come over me I owed him a pill for the one he sent me last week down in
+the coulee. So I up and grabbed the rifle and let him have it."
+
+"Then you may up and grab your trunk for Medicine Hill. Shorty will
+drive you tomorrow."
+
+When she returned to her unexpected guest, Helen found him in
+conversation with McWilliams. The latter's gun had found again its
+holster, but his brown, graceful hand hovered close to its butt.
+
+"Seems like a long time since the Lazy D has been honored by a visit
+from Mr. Bannister," he was saying, with gentle irony.
+
+"That's right. So I have come to make up for lost time," came
+Bannister's quiet retort.
+
+Miss Messiter did not know much about Wyoming human nature in the raw,
+but she had learned enough to be sure that the soft courtesy of these
+two youths covered a stark courage that might leap to life any moment.
+Wherefore she interposed.
+
+"We'll be pleased to show you over the place, Mr. Bannister. As it
+happens, we are close to the hospital. Shall we begin there?"
+
+Her cool, silken defiance earned a smile from the visitor. "All your
+cases doing well, ma'am?"
+
+"It's very kind of you to ask. I suppose you take an interest because
+they are YOUR cases, too, in a way of speaking?"
+
+"Mine? Indeed!"
+
+"Yes. If it were not for you I'm afraid our hospital would be empty."
+
+"It must be right pleasant to be nursed by Miss Messiter. I reckon the
+boys are grateful to me for scattering my lead so promiscuous."
+
+"I heard one say he would like to lam your haid tenderly," murmured
+McWilliams.
+
+"With a two-by-four, I suppose," laughed Bannister.
+
+"Shouldn't wonder. But, looking y'u over casual, it occurs to me
+he might get sick of his job befo' he turned y'u loose," McWilliams
+admitted, with a glance of admiration at the clean power showing in the
+other's supple lines.
+
+Nor could either the foreman or his mistress deny the tribute of their
+respect to the bravado of this scamp who sat so jauntily his seat
+regardless of what the next moment might bring forth. Three wounded men
+were about the place, all presumably quite willing to get a clean
+shot at him in the open. One of them had taken his chance already, and
+missed. Their visitor had no warrant for knowing that a second might not
+any instant try his luck with better success. Yet he looked every inch
+the man on horseback, no whit disturbed, not the least conscious of
+any danger. Tall, spare, broad shouldered, this berry-brown young man,
+crowned with close-cropped curls, sat at the gates of the enemy very
+much at his insolent case.
+
+"I came over to pay my party call," he explained.
+
+"It really wasn't necessary. A run in the machine is not a formal
+function."
+
+"Maybe not in Kalamazoo."
+
+"I thought perhaps you had come to get my purse and the sixty-three
+dollars," she derided.
+
+"No, ma'am; nor yet to get that bunch of cows I was going to rustle from
+you to buy an auto. I came to ask you to go riding with me."
+
+The audacity of it took her breath. Of all the outrageous things she had
+ever heard, this was the cream. An acknowledged outlaw, engaged in feud
+with her retainers over that deadly question of the run of the range,
+he had sauntered over to the ranch where lived a dozen of his enemies,
+three of them still scarred with his bullets, merely to ask her to go
+riding with him. The magnificence of his bravado almost obliterated its
+impudence. Of course she would not think of going. The idea! But her
+eyes glowed with appreciation of his courage, not the less because the
+consciousness of it was so conspicuously absent from his manner.
+
+"I think not, Mr. Bannister" and her face almost imperceptibly
+stiffened. "I don't go riding with strangers, nor with men who shoot
+my boys. And I'll give you a piece of advice, sir. That is, to burn
+the wind back to your home. Otherwise I won't answer for your life. My
+punchers don't love you, and I don't know how long I can keep them from
+you. You're not wanted here any more than you were at the dance the
+other evening."
+
+McWilliams nodded. "That's right. Y'u better roll your trail, seh; and
+if y'u take my advice, you'll throw gravel lively. I seen two of the
+boys cutting acrost that pasture five minutes ago. They looked as if
+they might be haided to cut y'u off, and I allow it may be their night
+to howl. Miss Messiter don't want to be responsible for y'u getting lead
+poisoning."
+
+"Indeed!" Their visitor looked politely interested. "This solicitude for
+me is very touching. I observe that both of you are carefully blocking
+me from the bunkhouse in order to prevent another practice-shot. If I
+can't persuade you to join me in a ride, Miss Messiter, I reckon I'll
+go while I'm still unpunctured." He bowed, and gathered the reins for
+departure.
+
+"One moment! Mr. McWilliams and I are going with you," the girl
+announced.
+
+"Changed your mind? Think you'll take a little pasear, after all?"
+
+"I don't want to be responsible for your killing. We'll see you safe off
+the place," she answered curtly.
+
+The foreman fell in on one side of Bannister, his mistress on the other.
+They rode in close formation, to lessen the chance of an ambuscade.
+Bannister alone chatted at his debonair ease, ignoring the
+responsibility they felt for his safety.
+
+"I got my ride, after all," he presently chuckled. "To be sure, I wasn't
+expecting Mr. McWilliams to chaperon us. But that's an added pleasure."
+
+"Would it be an added pleasure to get bumped off to kingdom come?"
+drawled the foreman, giving a reluctant admiration to his aplomb.
+
+"Thinking of those willing boys of yours again, are you?" laughed
+Bannister. "They're ce'tainly a heap prevalent with their hardware, but
+their hunting don't seem to bring home any meat."
+
+"By the way, how IS your ankle, Mr. Bannister? I forgot to ask." This
+shot from the young woman.
+
+He enjoyed it with internal mirth. "They did happen on the target that
+time," he admitted. "Oh, it's getting along fine, but I aim to do most
+of my walking on horseback for a while."
+
+They swept past the first dangerous grove of cottonwoods in safety, and
+rounded the boundary fence corner.
+
+"They're in that bunch of pines over there," said the foreman, after a
+single sweep of his eyes in that direction.
+
+"Yes, I see they are. You oughtn't to let your boys wear red bandannas
+when they go gunning, Miss Messiter. It's an awful careless habit."
+
+Helen herself could see no sign of life in the group of pines, but she
+knew their keen, trained eyes had found what hers could not. Riding with
+one or another of her cowboys, she had often noticed how infallibly they
+could read the country for miles around. A scattered patch on a distant
+hillside, though it might be a half-hour's ride from them, told them a
+great deal more than seemed possible. To her the dark spots sifted on
+that slope meant scrub underbrush, if there was any meaning at all in
+them. But her riders could tell not only whether they were alive, but
+could differentiate between sheep and cattle. Indeed, McWilliams could
+nearly always tell whether they were HER cattle or not. He was unable to
+explain to her how he did it. By a sort of instinct, she supposed.
+
+The pines were negotiated in safety, and on the part of the men with a
+carelessness she could not understand. For after they had passed
+there was a spot between her shoulder-blades that seemed to tingle in
+expectation of a possible bullet boring its way through. But she would
+have died rather than let them know how she felt.
+
+Perhaps Bannister understood, however, for he remarked casually: "I
+wouldn't be ambling past so leisurely if I was riding alone. It makes
+a heap of difference who your company is, too. Those punchers wouldn't
+take a chance at me now for a million dollars."
+
+"No, they're some haidstrong, but they ain't plumb locoed," agreed Mac.
+
+Fifteen minutes later Helen drew up at the line corner. "We'll part
+company here, Mr. Bannister. I don't think there is any more danger from
+my men."
+
+"Before we part there is something I want to say. I hold that a man has
+as much right to run sheep on these hills as cows. It's government land,
+and neither one of us owns it. It's bound to be a case of the survival
+of the fittest. If sheep are hardier and more adapted to the country,
+then cows have got to vamos. That's nature, as it looks to me. The
+buffalo and the antelope have gone, and I guess cows have got to take
+their turn."
+
+Her scornful eyes burned him. "You came to tell me that, did you? Well,
+I don't believe a word of it. I'll not yield my rights without a fight.
+You may depend on that."
+
+"Here, too," nodded her foreman. "I'm with my boss clear down the line.
+And as soon as she lets me turn loose my six-gun, you'll hear it pop,
+seh."
+
+"I have not a doubt of it, Mr. McWilliams," returned the sheepman
+blithely. "In the meantime I was going to say that though most of my
+interests are in sheep instead of cattle--"
+
+"I thought most of your interests were in other people's property,"
+interrupted the young woman.
+
+"It goes into sheep ultimately," he smiled. "Now, what I am trying to
+get at is this: I'm in debt to you a heap, Miss Messiter, and since I'm
+not all yellow cur, I intend to play fair with you. I have ordered my
+sheep back across the deadline. You can have this range to yourself for
+your cattle. The fight's off so far as we personally are concerned."
+
+A hint of deeper color touched her cheeks. Her manner had been cavalier
+at best; for the most part frankly hostile; and all the time the man was
+on an errand of good-will. Certainly he had scored at her expense, and
+she was ashamed of herself.
+
+"Y'u mean that you're going to respect the deadline? asked Mac in
+surprise.
+
+"I didn't say quite that," explained the sheepman. "What I said was
+that I meant to keep on my side of it so far as the Lazy D cattle are
+concerned. I'll let your range alone."
+
+"But y'u mean to cross it down below where the Bar Double-E cows run?"
+
+Bannister's gay smile touched the sardonic face. "Do you invite the
+public to examine your hand when you sit into a game of poker, Mr.
+McWilliams?"
+
+"You're dead right. It's none of my business what y'u do so long as
+y'u keep off our range," admitted the foreman. "And next time the
+conversation happens on Mr. Bannister, I'll put in my little say-so that
+he ain't all black."
+
+"That's very good of you, sir," was the other's ironical retort.
+
+The girl's gauntleted hand offered itself impulsively. "We can't be
+friends under existing circumstances, Mr. Bannister. But that does not
+alter the fact that I owe you an apology. You came as a peace envoy, and
+one of my men shot at you. Of course, he did not understand the reason
+why you came, but that does not matter. I did not know your reason
+myself, and I know I have been very inhospitable."
+
+"Are you shaking hands with Ned Bannister the sheepman or Ned Bannister
+the outlaw?" asked the owner of that name, with a queer little smile
+that seemed to mock himself.
+
+"With Ned Bannister the gentleman. If there is another side to him I
+don't know it personally."
+
+He flushed underneath the tan, but very plainly with pleasure. "Your
+opinions are right contrary to Hoyle, ma'am. Aren't you aware that a
+sheepman is the lowest thing that walks? Ask Mr. McWilliams."
+
+"I have known stockmen of that opinion, but--"
+
+The foreman's sentence was never finished. From a clump of bushes
+a hundred yards away came the crack of a rifle. A bullet sang past,
+cutting a line that left on one side of it Bannister, on the other Miss
+Messiter and her foreman. Instantly the two men slid from their horses
+on the farther side, dragged down the young woman behind the cover
+of the broncos, and arranged the three ponies so as to give her the
+greatest protection available. Somehow the weapons that garnished them
+had leaped to their hands before their feet touched the ground.
+
+"That coyote isn't one of our men. I'll back that opinion high," said
+McWilliams promptly.
+
+"Who is he?" the girl whispered.
+
+"That's what we're going to find out pretty soon," returned Bannister
+grimly. "Chances are it's me he is trying to gather. Now, I'm going to
+make a break for that cottonwood. When I go, you better run up a white
+handkerchief and move back from the firing-line. Turn Buck loose when
+you leave. He'll stay around and come when I whistle."
+
+He made a run for it, zigzagging through the sage-brush so swiftly as to
+offer the least certain mark possible for a sharpshooter. Yet twice the
+rifle spoke before he reached the cottonwood.
+
+Meanwhile Mac had fastened the handkerchief of his mistress on the end
+of a switch he had picked up and was edging out of range. His tense,
+narrowed gaze never left the bush-clump from which the shots were being
+pumped, and he was careful during their retreat to remain on the danger
+side of the road, in order to cover Helen.
+
+"I guess Bannister's right. He don't want us, whoever he is."
+
+And even as he murmured it, the wind of a bullet lifted his hat from
+his head. He picked it up and examined it. The course of the bullet was
+marked by a hole in the wide brim, and two more in the side and crown.
+
+"He ce'tainly ventilated it proper. I reckon, ma'am, we'll make a run
+for it. Lie low on the pinto's neck, with your haid on the off side.
+That's right. Let him out."
+
+A mile and a half farther up the road Mac reined in, and made the
+Indian peace-sign. Two dejected figures came over the hill and resolved
+themselves into punchers of the Lazy D. Each of them trailed a rifle by
+his side.
+
+"You're a fine pair of ring-tailed snorters, ain't y'u?" jeered the
+foreman. "Got to get gay and go projectin' round on the shoot after y'u
+got your orders to stay hitched. Anything to say for yo'selves?"
+
+If they had it was said very silently.
+
+"Now, Miss Messiter is going to pass it up this time, but from now on
+y'u don't go off on any private massacrees while y'u punch at the Lazy
+D. Git that? This hyer is the last call for supper in the dining-cah. If
+y'u miss it, y'u'll feed at some other chuckhouse." Suddenly the drawl
+of his sarcasm vanished. His voice carried the ring of peremptory
+command. "Jim, y'u go back to the ranch with Miss Messiter, AND KEEP
+YOUR EYES OPEN. Missou, I need y'u. We're going back. I reckon y'u
+better hang on to the stirrup, for we got to travel some. Adios,
+senorita!"
+
+He was off at a slow lope on the road he had just come, the other man
+running beside the horse. Presently he stopped, as if the arrangement
+were not satisfactory; and the second man swung behind him on the pony.
+Later, when she turned in her saddle, she saw that they had left the
+road and were cutting across the plain, as if to take the sharpshooter
+in the rear.
+
+Her troubled thoughts stayed with her even after she had reached the
+ranch. She was nervously excited, keyed up to a high pitch; for she knew
+that out on the desert, within a mile or two of her, men were stalking
+each other with life or death in the balance as the price of vigilance,
+skill and an unflawed steel nerve. While she herself had been in danger,
+she had been mistress of her fear. But now she could do nothing but
+wait, after ordering out such reinforcements as she could recruit
+without delay; and the inaction told upon her swift, impulsive
+temperament. Once, twice, the wind brought to her a faint sound.
+
+She had been pacing the porch, but she stopped, white as a sheet. Behind
+those faint explosions might lie a sinister tragedy. Her mind projected
+itself into a score of imaginary possibilities. She listened, breathless
+in her tensity, but no further echo of that battlefield reached her. The
+sun still shone warmly on brown Wyoming. She looked down into a rolling
+plain that blurred in the distance from knobs and flat spaces into a
+single stretch that included a thousand rises and depressions. That roll
+of country teemed with life, but the steady, inexorable sun beat down
+on what seemed a shining, primeval waste of space. Yet somewhere in
+that space the tragedy was being determined--unless it had been already
+enacted.
+
+She wanted to scream. The very stillness mocked her. So, too, did the
+clicking windmill, with its monotonous regularity. Her pony still stood
+saddled in the yard. She knew that her place was at home, and she fought
+down a dozen times the tremendous impulse to mount and fly to the field
+of combat.
+
+She looked at her watch. How slowly the minutes dragged! It could not
+be only five minutes since she had looked last time. Again she fell to
+pacing the long west porch, and interrupted herself a dozen times to
+stop and listen.
+
+"I can bear it no longer," she told herself at last, and in another
+moment was in the saddle plying her pinto with the quirt.
+
+But before she reached the first cottonwoods she saw them coming. Her
+glasses swept the distant group, and with a shiver she made out the
+dreadful truth. They were coming slowly, carrying something between
+them. The girl did not need to be told that the object they were
+bringing home was their dead or wounded.
+
+A figure on horseback detached itself from the huddle of men and
+galloped towards her. He was coming to break the news. But who was the
+victim? Bannister or McWilliams she felt sure, by reason of the sinking
+heart in her; and then it came home that she would be hard hit if it
+were either.
+
+The approaching rider began to take distinct form through her glasses.
+As he pounded forward she recognized him. It was the man nicknamed
+Denver. The wind was blowing strongly from her to him, and while he was
+still a hundred yards away she hurled her question.
+
+His answer was lost in the wind sweep, but one word of it she caught.
+That word was "Mac."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 7. THE MAN FROM THE SHOSHONE FASTNESSES
+
+Though the sharpshooter's rifle cracked twice during his run for the
+cottonwood, the sheepman reached the tree in safety. He could dodge
+through the brush as elusively as any man in Wyoming. It was a trick he
+had learned on the whitewashed football gridiron. For in his buried past
+this man had been the noted half-back of a famous college, and one of
+his specialties had been running the ball back after a catch through a
+broken field of opponents. The lesson that experience had then thumped
+into him had since saved his life on more than one occasion.
+
+Having reached the tree, Bannister took immediate advantage of the lie
+of the ground to snake forward unobserved for another hundred feet.
+There was a dip from the foot of the tree, down which he rolled into the
+sage below. He wormed his way through the thick scrub brush to the edge
+of a dry creek, into the bed of which he slid. Then swiftly, his body
+bent beneath the level of the bank, he ran forward in the sand. He moved
+noiselessly, eyes and ears alert to aid him, and climbed the bank at a
+point where a live oak grew.
+
+Warily he peeped out from behind its trunk and swept the plain for his
+foe. Nothing was to be seen of him. Slowly and patiently his eyes again
+went over the semi-circle before him, for where death may lurk behind
+every foot of vegetation, every bump or hillock, the plainsman leaves
+as little as may be to chance. No faintest movement could escape the
+sheepman's eyes, no least stir fail to apprise his ears. Yet for many
+minutes he waited in vain, and the delay told him that he had to do with
+a trained hunter rather than a mere reckless cow-puncher. For somewhere
+in the rough country before him his enemy lay motionless, every faculty
+alive to the least hint of his presence.
+
+It was the whirring flight of a startled dove that told Bannister the
+whereabouts of his foe. Two hundred yards from him the bird rose,
+and the direction it took showed that the man must have been trailing
+forward from the opposite quarter. The sheepman slipped back into the
+dry creek bed, retraced his steps for about a stone-throw, and again
+crawled up the bank.
+
+For a long time he lay face down in the grass, his gaze riveted to the
+spot where he knew his opponent to be hidden. A faint rustle not born
+of the wind stirred the sage. Still Bannister waited. A less experienced
+plainsman would have blazed away and exposed his own position. But not
+this young man with the steel-wire nerves. Silent as the coming of
+dusk, no breaking twig or displaced brush betrayed his self-contained
+presence.
+
+Something in the clump he watched wriggled forward and showed
+indistinctly through an opening in the underscrub. He whipped his rifle
+into position and fired twice. The huddled brown mass lurched forward
+and disappeared.
+
+"Wonder if I got him? Seems to me I couldn't have missed clean," thought
+Bannister.
+
+Silence as before, vast and unbroken.
+
+A scramble of running feet tearing a path through the brush, a crouching
+body showing darkly for an eyeflash, and then the pounding of a horse's
+retreating feet.
+
+Bannister leaped up, ran lightly across the intervening space, and with
+his repeater took a potshot at the galloping horseman.
+
+"Missed!" he muttered, and at once gave a sharp whistle that brought his
+pony to him on the trot. He vaulted to the saddle and gave chase. It was
+rough going, but nothing in reason can stop a cow-pony. As sure footed
+as a mountain goat, as good a climber almost as a cat, Buck followed the
+flying horseman over perilous rock rims and across deep-cut creek beds.
+Pantherlike he climbed up the steep creek sides without hesitation, for
+the round-up had taught him never to falter at stiff going so long as
+his rider put him at it.
+
+It was while he was clambering out of the sheer sides of a wash that
+Bannister made a discovery. The man he pursued was wounded. Something in
+the manner of the fellow's riding had suggested this to him, but a drop
+of blood splashed on a stone that happened to meet his eye made the
+surmise a certainty.
+
+He was gaining now--not fast, almost imperceptibly, but none the less
+surely. He could see the man looking over his shoulder, once, twice, and
+then again, with that hurried, fearful glance that measures the approach
+of retribution. Barring accidents, the man was his.
+
+But the unforeseen happened. Buck stepped in the hole of a prairie
+dog and went down. Over his head flew the rider like a stone from a
+catapult.
+
+How long Ned Bannister lay unconscious he never knew. But when he came
+to himself it was none too soon. He sat up dizzily and passed his hand
+over his head. Something had happened.
+
+What was it? Oh, yes, he had been thrown from his horse. A wave
+of recollection passed over him, and his mind was clear once more.
+Presently he got to his feet and moved rather uncertainly toward Buck,
+for the horse was grazing quietly a few yards from him.
+
+But half way to the pony he stopped. Voices, approaching by way of the
+bed of Dry Creek, drifted to him.
+
+"He must 'a' turned and gone back. Mebbe he guessed we was there."
+
+And a voice that Bannister knew, one that had a strangely penetrant,
+cruel ring of power through the drawl, made answer: "Judd said before
+he fainted he was sure the man was Ned Bannister. I'd ce'tainly like to
+meet up with my beloved cousin right now and even up a few old scores.
+By God, I'd make him sick before I finished with him!"
+
+"I'll bet y'u would, Cap," returned the other, admiringly. "Think we'd
+better deploy here and beat up the scenery a few as we go?"
+
+There are times when the mind works like lightning, flashes its messages
+on the wings of an electric current. For Bannister this was one of them.
+The whole situation lighted for him plainly as if it had been explained
+for an hour.
+
+His cousin had been out with a band of his cut-throats on some errand,
+and while returning to the fastnesses of the Shoshone Mountains had
+stopped to noon at a cow spring three or four miles from the Lazy D.
+Judd Morgan, whom he knew to be a lieutenant of the notorious bandit,
+had ridden toward the ranch in the hope of getting an opportunity to
+vent his anger against its mistress or some of her men. While pursuing
+the renegade Bannister had stumbled into a hornet's nest, and was in
+imminent danger of being stung to death. Even now the last speaker was
+scrambling up the bank toward him.
+
+The sheepman had to choose between leaving his rifle and immediate
+flight. The latter was such a forlorn hope that he gave up Buck for the
+moment, and ran back to the place where his repeating Winchester had
+fallen. Without stopping he scooped the rifle up as he passed. In his
+day he had been a famous sprinter, and he scudded now for dear life.
+It was no longer a question of secrecy. The sound of men breaking their
+hurried way through the heavy brush of the creek bank came crisply to
+him. A voice behind shouted a warning, and from not a hundred yards in
+front of him came an answering shout. Hemmed in from the fore and the
+rear, he swung off at a right angle. An open stretch lay before him, but
+he had to take his desperate chance without cover. Anything was better
+than to be trapped like a wild beast driven by the beaters to the guns.
+
+Across the bare, brown mesa he plunged; and before he had taken a dozen
+steps the first rifle had located its prey and was sniping at him.
+He had perhaps a hundred yards to cover ere the mesa fell away into a
+hollow, where he might find temporary protection in the scrub pines.
+And now a second marksman joined himself to the first. But he was going
+fast, already had covered half the distance, and it is no easy thing to
+bring down a live, dodging target.
+
+Again the first gun spoke, and scored another miss, whereat a mocking,
+devilish laugh rang out in the sunshine.
+
+"Y'u boys splash a heap of useless lead around the horizon. I reckon
+Cousin Ned's my meat. Y'u see, I get him in the flapper without spoiling
+him complete." And at the word he flung the rifle to his shoulder and
+fired with no apparent aim.
+
+The running man doubled up like a cottontail, but found his feet again
+in an instant, though one arm hung limp by his side. He was within a
+dozen feet of the hilldrop and momentary safety.
+
+"Shall I take him, Cap?" cried one of the men.
+
+"No; he's mine." The rifle smoked once more and again the runner went
+down. But this time he plunged headlong down the slope and out of sight.
+
+The outlaw chief turned on his heel. "I reckon he'll not run any more
+to-day. Bring him into camp and we'll take him along with us," he said
+carelessly, and walked away to his horse in the creek bed.
+
+Two of the men started forward, but they stopped half way, as if rooted
+to the ground. For a galloping horseman suddenly drew up at the very
+point for which they were starting. He leaped to the ground and warned
+them back with his rifle. While he covered them a second man rode up and
+lifted Bannister to his saddle.
+
+"Ready, Mac," he gave the word, and both horses disappeared with
+their riders over the brow of the hill. When the surprised desperadoes
+recovered themselves and reached that point the rescuers had disappeared
+in the heavy brush.
+
+The alarm was at once given, and their captain, cursing them in a
+raucous bellow for their blunder, ordered immediate pursuit. It was some
+little time before the trail of the fugitives was picked up, but once
+discovered they were over hauled rapidly.
+
+"We're not going to get out without swapping lead," McWilliams admitted
+anxiously. "I wisht y'u wasn't hampered with that load, but I reckon
+I'll have to try to stand them off alone."
+
+"We bucked into a slice of luck when I opened on his bronc mavericking
+around alone. Hadn't been for that we could never have made it," said
+Missou, who never crossed a bridge until he came to it.
+
+"We haven't made it yet, old hoss, not by a long mile, and two more on
+top o' that. They're beginning to pump lead already. Huh! Got to drap
+your pills closer'n that 'fore y'u worry me."
+
+"I believe he's daid, anyway," said Missou presently, peering down into
+the white face of the unconscious man.
+
+"Got to hang onto the remains, anyhow, for Miss Helen. Those coyotes are
+too much of the wolf breed to leave him with them."
+
+"Looks like they're gittin' the aim some better," equably remarked the
+other a minute later, when a spurt of sand flew up in front of him.
+
+"They're ce'tainly crowding us. I expaict I better send them a
+'How-de-do?' so as to discourage them a few." He took as careful aim as
+he could on the galloping horse, but his bullet went wide.
+
+"They're gaining like sixty. It's my offhand opinion we better stop at
+that bunch of trees and argue some with them. No use buck-jumpin' along
+to burn the wind while they drill streaks of light through us."
+
+"All right. Take the trees. Y'u'll be able to get into the game some
+then."
+
+They debouched from the road to the little grove and slipped from their
+horses.
+
+"Deader'n hell," murmured Missou, as he lifted the limp body from his
+horse. "But I guess we'll pack what's left back to the little lady at
+the Lazy D."
+
+The leader of the pursuers halted his men just out of range and came
+forward alone, holding his right hand up in the usual signal of peace.
+In appearance he was not unlike Ned Bannister. There was the same long,
+slim, tiger build, with the flowing muscles rippling easily beneath the
+loose shirt; the same effect of power and dominance, the same clean,
+springy stride. The pose of the head, too, even the sweep of salient
+jaw, bore a marked resemblance. But similarity ceased at the expression.
+For instead of frankness there lurked here that hint of the devil of
+strong passion uncontrolled. He was the victim of his own moods, and in
+the space of an hour one might, perhaps, read in that face cold cunning,
+cruel malignity, leering ribaldry, as well as the hard-bitten virtues of
+unflinching courage and implacable purpose.
+
+"I reckon you're near enough," suggested Mac, when the man had
+approached to within a hundred feet of the tree clump.
+
+"Y'u're drawing the dead-line," the other acknowledged, indolently.
+"It won't take ten words to tell y'u what I want and mean to have. I'm
+giving y'u two minutes to hand me over the body of Ned Bannister. If
+y'u don't see it that way I'll come and make a lead mine of your whole
+outfit."
+
+"Y'u can't come too quick, seh. We're here a-shootin', and don't y'u
+forget it," was McWilliams's prompt answer.
+
+The sinister face of the man from the Shoshones darkened. "Y'u've signed
+your own death warrants," he let out through set teeth, and at the word
+swung on his heel.
+
+"The ball's about to open. Pardners for a waltz. Have a dust-cutter,
+Mac, before she grows warm."
+
+The puncher handed over his flask, and the other held it before his eye
+and appraised the contents in approved fashion. "Don't mind if I do.
+Here's how!"
+
+"How!" echoed Missou, in turn, and tipped up the bottle till the liquor
+gurgled down his baked throat.
+
+"He's fanning out his men so as to, get us both at the front and back
+door. Lucky there ain't but four of them."
+
+"I guess we better lie back to back," proposed Missou. "If our luck's
+good I reckon they're going to have a gay time rushing this fort."
+
+A few desultory shots had already been dropped among the cottonwoods,
+and returned by the defendants when Missou let out a yell of triumph.
+
+"Glory Hallelujah! Here comes the boys splittin' down the road
+hell-for-leather. That lopsided, ring-tailed snorter of a hawss-thief
+is gathering his wolves for a hike back to the tall timber. Feed me a
+cigareet, Mac. I plumb want to celebrate."
+
+It was as the cow-puncher had said. Down the road a cloud of dust
+was sweeping toward them, in the centre of which they made out three
+hardriding cowboys from the ranch. Farther back, in the distance, was
+another dust whirl. The outlaw chief's hard, vigilant gaze swept over
+the reinforcements! and decided instantly that the game had gone against
+him for the present. He whistled shrilly twice, and began a slow retreat
+toward the hills. The miscreants flung a few defiant shots at the
+advancing cowmen, and disappeared, swallowed up in the earth swells.
+
+The homeward march was a slow one, for Bannister had begun to show signs
+of consciousness and it was necessary to carry him with extreme care.
+While they were still a mile from the ranch house the pinto and its
+rider could be seen loping toward them.
+
+"Ride forward, Denver, and tell Miss Helen we're coming. Better have her
+get everything fixed to doctor him soon as we get there. Give him the
+best show in the world, and he'll still be sailing awful close to the
+divide. I'll bet a hundred plunks he'll cash in, anyway."
+
+"DONE!"
+
+The voice came faintly from the improvised litter. Mac turned with
+a start, for he had not known that Bannister was awake to his
+surroundings. The man appeared the picture of helplessness, all the
+lusty power and vigor stricken out of him; but his indomitable spirit
+still triumphed over the physical collapse, for as the foreman looked
+a faint smile touched the ashen lips. It seemed to say: "Still in the
+ring, old man."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 8. IN THE LAZY D HOSPITAL
+
+Helen's first swift glance showed that the wounded man was Bannister.
+She turned in crisp command to her foreman.
+
+"Have him taken to my room and put to bed there. We have no time to
+prepare another. And send one of the boys on your best horse for a
+doctor."
+
+They carried the limp figure in with rough tenderness and laid him in
+the bed. McWilliams unbuckled the belt and drew off the chaps; then,
+with the help of Denver, undressed the wounded man and covered him
+with quilts. So Helen found him when she came in to attend his wounds,
+bringing with her such things as she needed for her task. Mrs. Winslow,
+the housekeeper, assisted her, and the foreman stayed to help, but it
+was on the mistress of the ranch that the responsibility of saving him
+fell. Missou was already galloping to Bear Creek for a doctor, but the
+girl knew that the battle must be fought and the issue decided before he
+could arrive.
+
+He had fallen again into insensibility and she rinsed and dressed his
+wounds, working with the quiet impersonal certainty of touch that did
+not betray the inner turmoil of her soul. But McWilliams, his eyes
+following her every motion and alert to anticipate her needs, saw that
+the color had washed from her face and that she was controlling herself
+only to meet the demands of the occasion.
+
+As she was finishing, the sheepman opened his eyes and looked at her.
+
+"You are not to speak or ask questions. You have been wounded and we are
+going to take care of you," she ordered.
+
+"That's right good of y'u. I ce'tainly feet mighty trifling." His wide
+eyes traveled round till they fell on the foreman. "Y'u see I came
+back to help fill your hospital. Am I there now? Where am I?" His gaze
+returned to Helen with the sudden irritation of the irresponsible sick.
+
+"You are at the Lazy D, in my room. You are not to worry about anything.
+Everything's all right."
+
+He took her at her word and his eyes closed; but presently he began to
+mutter unconnected words and phrases. When his lids lifted again there
+was a wilder look in his eyes, and she knew that delirium was beginning.
+At intervals it lasted for long; indeed, until the doctor came next
+morning in the small hours. He talked of many things Helen Messiter did
+not understand, of incidents in his past life, some of them jerky with
+the excitement of a tense moment, others apparently snatches of talk
+with relatives. It was like the babbling of a child, irrelevant and yet
+often insistent. He would in one breath give orders connected with the
+lambing of his sheep, in the next break into football talk, calling out
+signals and imploring his men to hold them or to break through and get
+the ball. Once he broke into curses, but his very oaths seemed to come
+from a clean heart and missed the vulgarity they might have had. Again
+his talk rambled inconsequently over his youth, and he would urge
+himself or someone else of the same name to better life.
+
+"Ned, Ned, remember your mother," he would beseech. "She asked me to
+look after you. Don't go wrong." Or else it would be, "Don't disgrace
+the general, Ned. You'll break his heart if you blacken the old name."
+To this theme he recurred repeatedly, and she noticed that when he
+imagined himself in the East his language was correct and his intonation
+cultured, though still with a suggestion of a Southern softness.
+
+But when he spoke of her his speech lapsed into the familiar drawl of
+Cattleland. "I ain't such a sweep as y'u think, girl. Some day I'll sure
+tell y'u all about it, and how I have loved y'u ever since y'u scooped
+me up in your car. You're the gamest little lady! To see y'u come
+a-sailin' down after me, so steady and businesslike, not turning a hair
+when the bullets hummed--I sure do love y'u, Helen." And then he fell
+upon her first name and called her by it a hundred times softly to
+himself.
+
+This happened when she was alone with him, just before the doctor came.
+She heard it with starry eyes and with a heart that flushed for joy a
+warmer color into her cheeks. Brushing back the short curls, she kissed
+his damp forehead. It was in the thick of the battle, before he had
+weathered that point where the issues of life and death pressed closely,
+and even in the midst of her great fears it brought her comfort. She was
+to think often of it later, and always the memory was to be music in
+her heart. Even when she denied her love for him, assured herself it was
+impossible she could care for so shameful a villain, even then it was
+a sweet torture to allow herself the luxury of recalling his broken
+delirious phrases. At the very worst he could not be as bad as
+they said; some instinct told her this was impossible. His fearless
+devil-may-care smile, his jaunty, gallant bearing, these pleaded against
+the evidence for him. And yet was it conceivable that a man of spirit, a
+gentleman by training at least, would let himself lie under the odium
+of such a charge if he were not guilty? Her tangled thoughts fought this
+profitless conflict for days. Nor could she dismiss it from her mind.
+Even after he began to mend she was still on the rack. For in some
+snatch of good talk, when the fine quality of the man seemed to glow in
+his face, poignant remembrance would stab her with recollection of the
+difference between what he was and what he seemed to be.
+
+One of the things that had been a continual surprise to Helen was the
+short time required by these deep-cheated and clean-blooded Westerners
+to recover from apparently serious wounds. It was scarce more than two
+weeks since Bannister had filled the bunkhouse with wounded men, and
+already two of them were back at work and the third almost fit for
+service. For perhaps three days the sheepman's life hung in the balance,
+after which his splendid constitution and his outdoor life began to
+tell. The thermometer showed that the fever had slipped down a notch,
+and he was now sleeping wholesomely a good part of his time. Altogether,
+unless for some unseen contingency, the doctor prophesied that the
+sheepman was going to upset the probabilities and get well.
+
+"Which merely shows, ma'am, what is possible when you give a sound man
+twenty-four hours a day in our hills for a few years," he added. "Thanks
+to your nursing he's going to shave through by the narrowest margin
+possible. I told him to-day that he owed his life to you, Miss
+Messiter."
+
+"I don't think you need have told him that Doctor," returned that young
+woman, not a little vexed at him, "especially since you have just been
+telling me that he owes it to Wyoming air and his own soundness of
+constitution."
+
+When she returned to the sickroom to give her patient his medicine
+he wanted to tell her what the doctor had said, but she cut him off
+ruthlessly and told him not to talk.
+
+"Mayn't I even say 'Thank you?'" he wanted to know.
+
+"No; you talk far too much as it is."
+
+He smiled "All right. Y'u sit there in that chair, where I can see y'u
+doing that fancywork and I'll not say a word. It'll keep, all right,
+what I want to say."
+
+"I notice you keep talking," she told him, dryly.
+
+"Yes, ma'am. Y'u had better have let me say what I wanted to, but I'll
+be good now."
+
+He fell asleep watching her, and when he awoke she was still sitting
+there, though it was beginning to grow dark. He spoke before she knew he
+was awake.
+
+"I'm going to get well, the doctor thinks."
+
+"Yes, he told me," she answered.
+
+"Did he tell y'u it was your nursing saved me?"
+
+"Please don't think about that."
+
+"What am I to think about? I owe y'u a heap, and it keeps piling up. I
+reckon y'u do it all because it's your Christian duty?" he demanded.
+
+"It is my duty, isn't it?"
+
+"I didn't say it wasn't, though I expaict Bighorn County will forget to
+give y'u a unanimous vote of thanks for doing it. I asked if y'u did it
+because it was your duty?"
+
+"The reason doesn't matter so that I do it," she answered, steadily.
+
+"Reasons matter some, too, though they ain't as important as actions out
+in this country. Back in Boston they figure more, and since y'u used to
+go to school back there y'u hadn't ought to throw down your professor of
+ethics."
+
+"Don't you think you have talked enough for the present?" she smiled,
+and added: "If I make you talk whenever I sit beside you I shall have to
+stay away."
+
+"That's where y'u've ce'tainly got the drop on me, ma'am. I'm a clam
+till y'u give the word."
+
+Before a week he was able to sit up in a chair for an hour or two, and
+soon after could limp into the living room with the aid of a walking
+stick and his hostess. Under the tan he still wore an interesting
+pallor, but there could be no question that he was on the road to
+health.
+
+"A man doesn't know what he's missing until he gets shot up and is
+brought to the Lazy D hospital, so as to let Miss Messiter exercise her
+Christian duty on him," he drawled, cheerfully, observing the sudden
+glow on her cheek brought by the reference to his unanswered question.
+
+He made the lounge in the big sunny window his headquarters. From it
+he could look out on some of the ranch activities when she was not with
+him, could watch the line riders as they passed to and fro and command
+a view of one of the corrals. There was always, too, the turquoise sky,
+out of which poured a flood of light on the roll of hilltops. Sometimes
+he read to himself, but he was still easily tired, and preferred usually
+to rest. More often she read aloud to him while he lay back with his
+leveled eyes gravely on her till the gentle, cool abstraction she
+affected was disturbed and her perplexed lashes rose to reproach the
+intensity of his gaze.
+
+She was of those women who have the heavenborn faculty of making home
+of such fortuitous elements as are to their hands. Except her piano and
+such knickknacks as she had brought in a single trunk she had had to
+depend upon the resources of the establishment to which she had come,
+but it is wonderful how much can be done with some Navajo rugs, a
+bearskin, a few bits of Indian pottery and woven baskets and a judicious
+arrangement of scenic photographs. In a few days she would have her
+pictures from Kalamazoo, pending which her touch had transformed the big
+living room from a cheerless barn into a spot that was a comfort to
+the eye and heart. To the wounded man who lay there slowly renewing the
+blood he had lost the room was the apotheosis of home, less, perhaps, by
+reason of what it was in itself than because it was the setting for her
+presence--for her grave, sympathetic eyes, the sound of her clear voice,
+the light grace of her motion. He rejoiced in the delightful intimacy
+the circumstances made necessary. To hear snatches of joyous song and
+gay laughter even from a distance, to watch her as she came in and out
+on her daily tasks, to contest her opinions of books and life and see
+how eagerly she defended them; he wondered himself at the strength of
+the appeal these simple things made to him. Already he was dreading the
+day when he must mount his horse and ride back into the turbulent life
+from which she had for a time, snatched him.
+
+"I'll hate to go back to sheepherding," he told her one day at lunch,
+looking at her across a snow-white tablecloth upon which were a service
+of shining silver, fragile china teacups and plates stamped Limoges.
+
+He was at the moment buttering a delicious French roll and she was
+daintily pouring tea from an old family heirloom. The contrast between
+this and the dust and the grease of a midday meal at the end of a "chuck
+wagon" lent accent to his smiling lamentation.
+
+"A lot of sheepherding you do," she derided.
+
+"A shepherd has to look after his sheep, y'u know."
+
+"You herd sheep just about as much as I punch cows."
+
+"I have to herd my herders, anyhow, and that keeps me on the move."
+
+"I'm glad there isn't going to be any more trouble between you and the
+Lazy D. And that reminds me of another thing. I've often wonered who
+those men could have been that attacked you the day you were hurt."
+
+She had asked the question almost carelessly, without any thought that
+this might be something he wished to conceal, but she recognized her
+mistake by the wariness that filmed his eyes instantly.
+
+"Room there for a right interesting guessing contest," he replied.
+
+"You wouldn't need to guess," she charged, on swift impulse.
+
+"Meaning that I know?"
+
+"You do know. You can't deny that you now."
+
+"Well, say that I know?"
+
+"Aren't you going to tell?"
+
+He shook his head. "Not just yet. I've got private reasons for keeping
+it quiet a while."
+
+"I'm sure they are creditable to you," came her swift ironic retort.
+
+"Sure," he agreed, whimsically. "I must live up to the professional
+standard. Honor among thieves, y'u know."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 9. MISS DARLING ARRIVES
+
+Miss Messiter clung to civilization enough, at least, to prefer that her
+chambermaid should be a woman rather than a Chinese. It did not suit her
+preconceived idea of the proper thing that Lee Ming should sweep floors,
+dust bric-a-brac, and make the beds. To see him slosh-sloshing around
+in his felt slippers made her homesick for Kalamazoo. There were other
+reasons why the proprieties would be better served by having another
+woman about the place; reasons that had to do with the chaperone system
+that even in the uncombed West make its claims upon unmarried
+young women of respectability. She had with her for the present
+fourteen-year-old Ida Henderson, but this arrangement was merely
+temporary.
+
+Wherefore on the morning after her arrival Helen had sent two letters
+back to "the States." One of these had been to Mrs. Winslow, a widow of
+fifty-five, inviting her to come out on a business basis as housekeeper
+of the Lazy D. The buxom widow had loved Helen since she had been a
+toddling baby, and her reply was immediate and enthusiastic. Eight
+days later she had reported in person. The second letter bore the
+affectionate address of Nora Darling, Detroit, Michigan. This also in
+time bore fruit at the ranch in a manner worthy of special mention.
+
+It was the fourth day after Ned Bannister had been carried back to the
+Lazy D that Helen Messiter came out to the porch of the house with a
+letter in her hand. She found her foreman sitting on the steps waiting
+for her, but he got up as soon as he heard the fall of her light
+footsteps behind him.
+
+"You sent for me, ma'am?" he asked, hat in hand.
+
+"Yes; I want you to drive into Gimlet Butte and bring back a person whom
+you'll find at the Elk House waiting for you. I had rather you would go
+yourself, because I know you're reliable."
+
+"Thank you, ma'am. How will I know him?"
+
+"It's a woman--a spinster. She's coming to help Mrs. Winslow. Inquire
+for Miss Darling. She isn't used to jolting two days in a rig, but I
+know you will be careful of her."
+
+"I'll surely be as careful of the old lady as if she was my own mother."
+
+The mistress of the ranch smothered a desire to laugh.
+
+"I'm sure you will. At her age she may need a good deal of care. Be
+certain you take rug enough."
+
+"I'll take care of her the best I know how. Expect she's likely
+rheumatic, but I'll wrop her up till she looks like a Cheyenne squaw
+when tourist is trying to get a free shoot at her with camera."
+
+"Please do. I want her to get a good impression of Wyoming so that she
+will stay. I don' know about the rheumatism, but you might ask her."
+
+There were pinpoints of merriment behind the guileless innocence of her
+eyes, but they came to the surface only after the foreman had departed.
+
+McWilliams ordered a team of young horse hitched, and presently set out
+on his two day; journey to Gimlet Butte. He reached that town in good
+season, left the team at a corral and walked back to the Elk House.
+The white dust of the plains was heavy on him, from the bandanna
+that loosely embraced the brown throat above the flannel shirt to the
+encrusted boots but through it the good humor of his tanned face smiled
+fraternally on a young woman he passes at the entrance to the hotel. Her
+gay smile met his cordially, and she was still in his mind while he
+ran his eye down the register in search of the name he wanted. There
+it was--Miss Nora Darling, Detroit, Michigan--in the neatest of little
+round letters, under date of the previous day's arrivals.
+
+"Is Miss Darling in?" asked McWilliams of the half-grown son of the
+landlady who served in lieu of clerk and porter.
+
+"Nope! Went out a little while ago. Said to tell anybody to wait that
+asked for her."
+
+Mac nodded, relieved to find that duty had postponed itself long enough
+for him to pursue the friendly smile that had not been wasted on him
+a few seconds before. He strolled out to the porch and decided at once
+that he needed a cigar more than anything else on earth. He was helped
+to a realization of his need by seeing the owner of the smile disappear
+in an adjoining drug store.
+
+She was beginning on a nut sundae when the puncher drifted in. She
+continued to devote even her eyes to its consumption, while the foreman
+opened a casual conversation with the drug clerk and lit his cigar.
+
+"How are things coming in Gimlet Butte?" he asked, by way of prolonging
+his stay rather than out of desire for information.
+
+Yes, she certainly had the longest, softest lashes he had ever seen, and
+the ripest of cherry lips, behind the smiling depths of which sparkled
+two rows of tiny pearls. He wished she would look at HIM and smile
+again. There wasn't any use trying to melt a sundae with it, anyhow.
+
+"Sure, it's a good year on the range and the price of cows jumping," he
+heard his sub-conscious self make answer to the patronizing inquiries of
+him of the "boiled" shirt.
+
+"Funny how pretty hair of that color was especially when there was so
+much of it. You might call it a sort of coppery gold where the little
+curls escaped in tendrils and ran wild. A fellow--"
+
+"Yes, I reckon most of the boys will drop around to the Fourth of July
+celebration. Got to cut loose once in a while, y'u know."
+
+A shy glance shot him and set him a-tingle with a queer delight.
+Gracious, what pretty dark velvety lashes she had!
+
+She was rising already, and as she paid for the ice cream that innocent
+gaze smote him again with the brightest of Irish eyes conceivable. It
+lingered for just a ponderable sunlit moment or him. She had smiled once
+more.
+
+After a decent interval Mac pursued his petit charmer to the hotel.
+She was seated on the porch reading a magazine, and was absorbedly
+unconscious of him when he passed. For a few awkward moments he hung
+around the office, then returned to the porch and took the chair most
+distant from her. He had sat there a long ten minutes before she let
+her hands and the magazine fall into her lap and demurely gave him his
+chance.
+
+"Can you tell me how far it is to the Lazy D ranch?"
+
+"Seventy-two miles as the crow flies, ma'am."
+
+"Thank you."
+
+The conversation threatened to die before it was well born. Desperately
+McWilliams tried to think of something to say to keep it alive without
+being too bold.
+
+"If y'u were thinking of traveling out that way I could give y'u a lift.
+I just came in to get another lady--an old lady that has just come to
+this country."
+
+"Thank you, but I'm expecting a conveyance to meet me here. You didn't
+happen to pass one on the way, I suppose?"
+
+"No, I didn't. What ranch were y'u going to, ma'am?
+
+"Miss Messiter's--the Lazy D."
+
+A suspicion began to penetrate the foreman's brain. "Y'u ain't Miss
+Darling?"
+
+"What makes you so sure I'm not?" she asked, tilting her dimpled chin
+toward him aggressively.
+
+"Y'u're too young," he protested, helplessly.
+
+"I'm no younger than you are," came her quick, indignant retort.
+
+Thus boldly accused of his youth, the foreman blushed. "I didn't mean
+that. Miss Messiter said she was an old lady--"
+
+"You needn't tell fibs about it. She couldn't have said anything of the
+kind. Who are you, anyhow?" the girl demanded, with spirit.
+
+"I'm the foreman of the Lazy D, come to get Miss Darling. My name is
+McWilliams--Jim McWilliams."
+
+"I don't need your first name, Mr. McWilliams," she assured him,
+sweetly. "And will you please tell me why you have kept me waiting here
+more than thirty hours?"
+
+"Miss Messiter didn't get your letter in time. Y'u see, we don't get
+mail every day at the Lazy D," he explained, the while he hopefully
+wondered just when she was going to need his last name.
+
+"I don't see why you don't go after your mail every day at least,
+especially when Miss Messiter was expecting me. To leave me waiting
+here thirty hours--I'll not stand it. When does the next train leave for
+Detroit?" she asked, imperiously.
+
+The situation seemed to call for diplomacy, and Jim McWilliams moved to
+a nearer chair. "I'm right sorry it happened, ma'am, and I'll bet Miss
+Messiter is, too. Y'u see, we been awful busy one way and 'nother, and I
+plumb neglected to send one of the boys to the post-office."
+
+"Why didn't one of them walk over after supper?" she demanded, severely.
+
+He curbed the smile that was twitching at his facial muscles.
+
+"Well, o' course it ain't so far,--only forty-three miles--still--"
+
+"Forty-three miles to the post-office?"
+
+"Yes, ma'am, only forty-three. If you'll excuse me this time--"
+
+"Is it really forty-three?"
+
+He saw that her sudden smile had brought out the dimples in the oval
+face and that her petulance had been swept away by his astounding
+information.
+
+"Forty-three, sure as shootin', except twict a week when it comes to
+Slauson's, and that's only twenty miles," he assured her. "Used to be
+seventy-two, but the Government got busy with its rural free delivery,
+and now we get it right at our doors."
+
+"You must have big doors," she laughed.
+
+"All out o' doors," he punned. "Y'u see, our house is under our hat, and
+like as not that's twenty miles from the ranchhouse when night falls."
+
+"Dear me!" She swept his graceful figure sarcastically. "And, of course,
+twenty miles from a brush, too."
+
+He laughed with deep delight at her thrust, for the warm youth in him
+did not ask for pointed wit on the part of a young woman so attractive
+and with a manner so delightfully provoking.
+
+"I expaict I have gathered up some scenery on the journey. I'll go brush
+it off and get ready for supper. I'd admire to sit beside y'u and pass
+the butter and the hash if y'u don't object. Y'u see, I don't often meet
+up with ladies, and I'd ought to improve my table manners when I get
+a chanct with one so much older than I am and o' course so much more
+experienced."
+
+"I see you don't intend to pass any honey with the hash," she flashed,
+with a glimpse of the pearls.
+
+"DIDN'T y'u say y'u was older than me? I believe I've plumb forgot how
+old y'u said y'u was, Miss Darling."
+
+"Your memory's such a sieve it wouldn't be worth while telling you.
+After you've been to school a while longer maybe I'll try you again."
+
+"Some ladies like 'em young," he suggested, amiably.
+
+"But full grown," she amended.
+
+"Do y'u judge by my looks or my ways?" he inquired, anxiously.
+
+"By both."
+
+"That's right strange," he mused aloud. "For judging by some of your
+ways you're the spinster Miss Messiter was telling me about, but judging
+by your looks y'u're only the prettiest and sassiest twenty-year-old in
+Wyoming."
+
+And with this shot he fled, to see what transformation he could effect
+with the aid of a whiskbroom, a tin pan of alkali water and a roller
+towel.
+
+When she met him at the supper table her first question was, "Did Miss
+Messiter say I was an old maid?"
+
+"Sho! I wouldn't let that trouble me if I was y'u. A woman ain't any
+older than she looks. Your age don't show to speak of."
+
+"But did she?"
+
+"I reckon she laid a trap for me and I shoved my paw in. She wanted to
+give me a pleasant surprise."
+
+"Oh!"
+
+"Don't y'u grow anxious about being an old maid. There ain't any in
+Wyoming to speak of. If y'u like I'll tell the boys you're worried
+and some of them will be Johnnie-on-the-Spot. They're awful gallant,
+cowpunchers are."
+
+"Some of them may be," she differed. "If you want to know I'm just
+twenty-one."
+
+He sawed industriously at his steak. "Y'u don't say! Just old enough to
+vote--like this steer was before they massacreed him."
+
+She gave him one look, and thereafter punished him with silence.
+
+They left Gimlet Butte early next morning and reached the Lazy D shortly
+after noon on the succeeding day. McWilliams understood perfectly that
+strenuous competition would inevitably ensue as soon as the Lazy D
+beheld the attraction he had brought into their midst. Nor did he need
+a phrenologist to tell him that Nora was a born flirt and that her shy
+slant glances were meant to penetrate tough hides to tender hearts.
+But this did not discourage him, and he set about making his individual
+impression while he had her all to himself. He wasn't at all sure how
+deep this went, but he had the satisfaction of hearing his first name,
+the one she had told him she had no need of, fall tentatively from her
+pretty lips before the other boys caught a glimpse of her.
+
+Shortly after his arrival at the ranch Mac went to make his report to
+his mistress of some business matters connected with the trip.
+
+"I see you got back safely with the old lady," she laughed when she
+caught sight of him.
+
+His look reproached her. "Y'u said a spinster."
+
+"But it was you that insisted on the rheumatism. By the way, did you ask
+her about it?"
+
+"We didn't get that far," he parried.
+
+"Oh! How far did you get?" She perched herself on the porch railing and
+mocked him with her friendly eyes. Her heart was light within her and
+she was ready for anything in the way of fun, for the doctor had just
+pronounced her patient out of danger if he took proper care of himself.
+
+"About as fur as I got with y'u, ma'am," he audaciously retorted.
+
+"We might disagree as to how far that is," she flung back gayly with
+heightened color.
+
+"No, ma'am, I don't think we would."
+
+"But, gracious! You're not a Mormon. You don't want us both, do you?"
+she demanded, her eyes sparkling with the exhilaration of the tilt.
+
+"Could I get either one of y'u, do y'u reckon? That's what's worrying
+me."
+
+"I see, and so you intend to keep us both on the string."
+
+His joyous laughter echoed hers. "I expaict y'u would call that
+presumption or some other dictionary word, wouldn't y'u?"
+
+"In anybody else perhaps, but surely not in Mr. McWilliams."
+
+"I'm awful glad to be trotting in a class by myself."
+
+"And you'll let us know when you have made your mind up which of us it
+is to be?"
+
+"Well, mine ain't the only mind that has to be made up," he drawled.
+
+She took this up gleefully. "I can't answer for Nora, but I'll jump at
+the chance--if you decide to give it to me."
+
+He laughed delightedly into the hat he was momentarily expecting to put
+on. "I'll mill it over a spell and let y'u know, ma'am."
+
+"Yes, think it over from all points of view. Of course she is prettier,
+but then I'm not afflicted with rheumatism and probably wouldn't flirt
+as much afterward. I have a good temper, too, as a rule, but then so has
+Nora."
+
+"Oh, she's prettier, is she?" With boyish audacity he grinned at her.
+
+"What do you think?"
+
+He shook his head. "I'll have to go to the foot of the class on that,
+ma'am. Give me an easier one."
+
+"I'll have to choose another subject then. What did you do about that
+bunch of Circle 66 cows you looked at on your way in?"
+
+They discussed business for a few minutes, after which she went back to
+her patient and he to his work.
+
+"Ain't she a straight-up little gentleman for fair?" the foreman asked
+himself in rhetorical and exuberant question, slapping his hat against
+his leg as he strode toward the corral. "Think of her coming at me like
+she did, the blamed little thoroughbred. Y'u bet she knows me down to
+the ground and how sudden I got over any fool notions I might a-started
+to get in my cocoanut. But the way she came back at me, quick as
+lightning and then some, pretendin' all that foolishness and knowin' all
+the time I'd savez the game."
+
+Both McWilliams and his mistress had guessed right in their surmise as
+to Nora Darling's popularity in the cow country. She made an immediate
+and pronounced hit. It was astonishing how many errands the men found to
+take them to "the house," as they called the building where the mistress
+of the ranch dwelt. Bannister served for a time as an excellent
+excuse. Judging from the number of the inquiries which the men found
+it necessary to make as to his progress, Helen would have guessed
+him exceedingly popular with her riders. Having a sense of humor, she
+mentioned this to McWilliams one day.
+
+He laughed, and tried to turn it into a compliment to his mistress. But
+she would have none of it.
+
+"I know better, sir. They don't come here to see me. Nora is the
+attraction, and I have sense enough to know it. My nose is quite out of
+joint," she laughed.
+
+Mac looked with gay earnestness at the feature she had mentioned.
+"There's a heap of difference in noses," he murmured, apparently apropos
+of nothing.
+
+"That's another way of telling me that Nora's pug is the sweetest thing
+you ever saw," she charged.
+
+"I ain't half such a bad actor as some of the boys," he deprecated.
+
+"Meaning in what way?"
+
+"The Nora Darling way."
+
+He pronounced her name so much as if it were a caress that his mistress
+laughed, and he joined in it.
+
+"It's your fickleness that is breaking my heart, though I knew I was
+lost as soon as I saw your beatific look on the day you got back with
+Nora. The first week I came none of you could do enough for me. Now it's
+all Nora, darling." She mimicked gayly his intonation.
+
+"Well, ma'am, it's this way," explained the foreman with a grin.
+"Y'u're right pleasant and friendly, but the boys have got a savvy way
+down deep that y'u'd shuck that friendliness awful sudden if any of them
+dropped around with 'Object, Matrimony' in their manner. Consequence
+is, they're loaded down to the ground with admiration of their boss,
+but they ain't presumptuous enough to expaict any more. I had notions,
+mebbe, I'd cut more ice, me being not afflicted with bashfulness. My
+notions faded, ma'am, in about a week."
+
+"Then Nora came?" she laughed.
+
+"No, ma'am, they had gone glimmering long before she arrived. I was just
+convalescent enough to need being cheered up when she drapped in."
+
+"And are you cheered up yet?" his mistress asked.
+
+He took off his dusty hat and scratched his head. "I ain't right
+certain, yet, ma'am. Soon as I know I'm consoled, I'll be round with an
+invite to the wedding."
+
+"That is, if you are."
+
+"If I am--yes. Y'u can't most always tell when they have eyes like
+hers."
+
+"You're quite an authority on the sex considering your years."
+
+"Yes, ma'am." He looked aggrieved, thinking himself a man grown. "How
+did y'u say Mr. Bannister was?"
+
+"Wait, and I'll send Nora out to tell you," she flashed, and disappeared
+in the house.
+
+Conversation at the bunkhouse and the chucktent sometimes circled
+around the young women at the house, but its personality rarely grew
+pronounced. References to Helen Messiter and the housemaid were usually
+by way of repartee at each other. For a change had come over the spirit
+of the Lazy D men, and, though a cheerful profanity still flowed freely
+when they were alone together, vulgarity was largely banished.
+
+The morning after his conversation with Miss Messiter, McWilliams
+was washing in the foreman's room when the triangle beat the call for
+breakfast, and he heard the cook's raucous "Come and get it." There was
+the usual stampede for the tent, and a minute later Mac flung back the
+flap and entered. He took the seat at the head of the table, along the
+benches on both sides of which the punchers were plying busy knives and
+forks.
+
+"A stack of chips," ordered the foreman; and the cook's "Coming up" was
+scarcely more prompt than the plate of hot cakes he set before the young
+man.
+
+"Hen fruit, sunny side up," shouted Reddy, who was further advanced in
+his meal.
+
+"Tame that fog-horn, son," advised Wun Hop; but presently he slid three
+fried eggs from a frying-pan into the plate of the hungry one.
+
+"I want y'u boys to finish flankin' that bunch of hill calves to-day,"
+said the foreman, emptying half a jug of syrup over his cakes.
+
+"Redtop, he ain't got no appetite these days," grinned Denver, as the
+gentleman mentioned cleaned up a second loaded plate of ham, eggs and
+fried potatoes. "I see him studying a Wind River Bible* yesterday.
+Curious how in the spring a young man's fancy gits to wandering on house
+furnishing. Red, he was taking the catalogue alphabetically. Carpets was
+absorbin' his attention, chairs on deck, and chandeliers in the hole, as
+we used to say when we was baseball kids."
+
+ [* A Wind River Bible in the Northwest ranch country is a
+ catalogue of one of the big Chicago department stores that
+ does a large shipping business in the West.]
+
+"Ain't a word of truth in it," indignantly denied the assailed, his
+unfinished nose and chin giving him a pathetic, whipped puppy look.
+"Sho! I was just looking up saddles. Can't a fellow buy a new saddle
+without asking leave of Denver?"
+
+"Cyarpets used to begin with a C in my spelling-book, but saddles got
+off right foot fust with a S," suggested Mac amiably.
+
+"He was ce'tainly trying to tree his saddle among the C's. He was
+looking awful loving at a Turkish rug. Reckon he thought it was a
+saddle-blanket," derided Denver cheerfully.
+
+"Huh! Y'u're awful smart, Denver," retaliated Reddy, his complexion
+matching his hair. "Y'u talk a heap with your mouth. Nobody believes a
+word of what y'u say."
+
+Denver relaxed into a range song by way of repartee:
+
+"I want mighty bad to be married, To have a garden and a home; I
+ce'tainly aim to git married, And have a gyurl for my own."
+
+"Aw! Y'u fresh guys make me tired. Y'u don't devil me a bit, not a bit.
+Whyfor should I care what y'u say? I guess this outfit ain't got no
+surcingle on me." Nevertheless, he made a hurried end of his breakfast
+and flung out of the tent.
+
+"Y'u boys hadn't ought to wound Reddy's tender feelings, and him so bent
+on matrimony!" said Denver innocently. "Get a move on them fried spuds
+and sashay them down this way, if there's any left when y'u fill your
+plate, Missou."
+
+Nor was Reddy the only young man who had dreams those days at the Lazy
+D. Cupid must have had his hands full, for his darts punctured more than
+one honest plainsman's heart. The reputation of the young women at the
+Lazy D seemed to travel on the wings of the wind, and from far and near
+Cattleland sent devotees to this shrine of youth and beauty. So casually
+the victims drifted in, always with a good business excuse warranted to
+endure raillery and sarcasm, that it was impossible to say they had come
+of set purpose to sun themselves in feminine smiles.
+
+As for Nora, it is not too much to say that she was having the time of
+her life. Detroit, Michigan, could offer no such field for her expansive
+charms as the Bighorn country, Wyoming. Here she might have her pick
+of a hundred, and every one of them picturesquely begirt with flannel
+shirt, knotted scarf at neck, an arsenal that bristled, and a sun-tan
+that could be achieved only in the outdoors of the Rockies. Certainly
+these knights of the saddle radiated a romance with which even her
+floorwalker "gentleman friend" could not compete.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 10. A SHEPHERD OF THE DESERT
+
+It had been Helen Messiter's daily custom either to take a ride on her
+pony or a spin in her motor car, but since Bannister had been quartered
+at the Lazy D her time had been so fully occupied that she had given
+this up for the present. The arrival of Nora Darling, however, took so
+much work off her hands that she began to continue her rides and drives.
+
+Her patient was by this time so far recovered that he did not need her
+constant attendance and there were reasons why she decided it best to
+spend only a minimum of her time with him. These had to do with her
+increasing interest in the man and the need she felt to discourage it.
+It had come to a pretty pass, she told herself scornfully, when she
+found herself inventing excuses to take her into the room where this
+most picturesque of unhanged scamps was lying. Most good women are at
+heart puritans, and if Helen was too liberal to judge others narrowly
+she could be none the less rigid with herself. She might talk to him of
+her duty, but it was her habit to be frank in thought and she knew that
+something nearer than that abstraction had moved her efforts in his
+behalf. She had fought for his life because she loved him. She could
+deny it no longer. Nor was the shame with which she confessed it
+unmingled with pride. He was a man to compel love, one of the mood
+imperative, chain-armored in the outdoor virtues of strength and
+endurance and stark courage. Her abasement began only where his
+superlation ended. That a being so godlike in equipment should have been
+fashioned without a soul, and that she should have given her heart to
+him. This was the fount of her degradation.
+
+It was of these things she thought as she drove in the late afternoon
+toward those Antelope Peaks he had first pointed out to her. She swept
+past the scene of the battle and dipped down into the plains for a run
+to that western horizon behind the jagged mountain line of which the sun
+was radiantly setting in a splash of glorious colors. Lost in thought,
+space slipped under her wheels unnoticed. Not till her car refused the
+spur and slowed to a despondent halt did she observe that velvet night
+was falling over the land.
+
+She prowled round the machine after the fashion of the motorist,
+examining details that might be the cause of the trouble. She discovered
+soon enough with instant dismay that the gasolene tank was empty. Reddy,
+always unreliable, must have forgotten to fill it when she told him to.
+
+By the road she must be thirty miles from home if she were a step;
+across country as the crow flies, perhaps twenty. She was a young woman
+of resolution, and she wasted no time in tears or regrets. The XIX
+ranch, owned by a small "nester" named Henderson, could not be more than
+five or six miles to the southeast. If she struck across the hills she
+would be sure to run into one of the barblines. At the XIX she could
+get a horse and reach the Lazy D by midnight. Without any hesitation she
+struck out. It was unfortunate that she did not have on her heavy laced
+high boots, but she realized that she must take things as she
+found them. Things might have been a good deal worse, she reflected
+philosophically.
+
+And before long they were worse, for the increasing darkness blotted out
+the landmarks she was using as guides and she was lost among the hill
+waves that rolled one after another across the range. Still she did not
+give way, telling herself that it would be better after the moon was
+up. She could then tell north from south, and so have a line by which to
+travel. But when at length the stars came out, thousands upon thousands
+of them, and looked down on a land magically flooded with chill
+moonlight, the girl found that the transformation of Wyoming into this
+sense of silvery loveliness had toned the distant mountain line to an
+indefinite haze that made it impossible for her to distinguish one peak
+from another.
+
+She wandered for hours, hungry and tired and frightened, though this
+last she would not confess.
+
+"There's nothing to be afraid of," she told herself over and over. "Even
+if I have to stay out all night it will do me no harm. There's no need
+to be a baby about it."
+
+But try to evade it as she would, there was something in the loneliness
+of this limitless stretch of hilltop that got on her nerves. The
+very shadows cast by the moonshine seemed too fantastic for reality.
+Something eerie and unearthly hovered over it all, and before she knew
+it a sob choked up her throat.
+
+Vague fancies filtered through her mind, weird imaginings born of the
+night in a mind that had been swept from the moorings of reason. So
+that with no sensible surprise there came to her in that moonlit sea of
+desert the sound of a voice a clear sweet tenor swelling bravely in song
+with the very ecstacy of pathos.
+
+It was the prison song from "Il Trovatore," and the desolation of its
+lifted appeal went to the heart like water to the roots of flowers.
+
+ Ah! I have sigh'd to rest me.
+ Deep in the quiet grave.
+
+The girl's sob caught in her breast, stilled with the awe of that
+heavenly music. So for an instant she waited before it was borne in on
+her that the voice was a human one, and that the heaven from which it
+descended was the hilltop above her.
+
+A wild laugh, followed by an oath, cut the dying echoes of the song. She
+could hear the swish of a quirt falling again and again, and the sound
+of trampling hoofs thudding on the hard, sun-cracked ground. Startled,
+she sprang to her feet, and saw silhouetted against the skyline a horse
+and his rider fighting for mastery.
+
+The battle was superb while it lasted. The horse had been a famous
+outlaw, broken to the saddle by its owner out of the sheer passion
+for victory, but there were times when its savage strength rebelled at
+abject submission, and this was one of them. It swung itself skyward,
+and came down like a pile-driver, camel-backed, and without joints in
+the legs. Swiftly it rose again lunging forward and whirling in the air,
+then jarred down at an angle. The brute did its malevolent best, a fury
+incarnate. But the ride, was a match, and more than a match, for it. He
+sat the saddle like a Centaur, with the perfect: unconscious grace of a
+born master, swaying in his seat as need was, and spurring the horse to
+a blinder fury.
+
+Sudden as had been the start, no less sudden was the finish of the
+battle. The bronco pounded to a stiff-legged standstill, trembled for
+a long minute like an aspen, and sank to a tame surrender, despite the
+sharp spurs roweling its bloody sides.
+
+"Ah, my beauty. You've had enough, have you?" demanded the cruel,
+triumphant voice of the rider. "You would try that game, would you? I'll
+teach you."
+
+"Stop spurring that horse, you bully."
+
+The man stopped, in sheer amazement at this apparition which had leaped
+out of the ground almost at his feet. His wary glance circled the hills
+to make sure she was alone.
+
+"Ce'tainly, ma'am. We're sure delighted to meet up with you. Ain't we,
+Two-step?"
+
+For himself, he spoke the simple truth. He lived in his sensations,
+spurring himself to fresh ones as he had but just now been spurring
+his horse to sate the greed of conquest in him. And this high-spirited,
+gallant creature--he could feel her vital courage in the very ring
+of her voice--offered a rare fillip to his jaded appetite. The dusky,
+long-lashed eyes which always give a woman an effect of beauty, the
+splendid fling of head, and the piquant, finely cut features, with their
+unconscious tale of Brahmin caste, the long lines of the supple body,
+willowy and yet plump as a partridge--they went to his head like strong
+wine. Here was an adventure from the gods--a stubborn will to bend, the
+pride of a haughty young beauty to trail in the dust, her untamed heart
+to break if need be. The lust of the battle was on him already. She was
+a woman to dream about,
+
+ "Sweeter than the lids of Juno's eyes,
+ Or Cytherea's breath,"
+
+he told himself exultantly as he slid from his horse and stood bowing
+before her.
+
+And he, for his part, was a taking enough picture of devil-may-care
+gallantry gone to seed. The touch of jaunty impudence in his humility,
+not less than the daring admiration of his handsome eyes and the easy,
+sinuous grace of his flexed muscles, labeled him what he was--a man bold
+and capable to do what he willed, and a villain every inch of him.
+
+Said she, after that first clash of stormy eyes with bold, admiring
+ones:
+
+"I am lost--from the Lazy D ranch."
+
+"Why, no, you're found," he corrected, white teeth flashing in a smile.
+
+"My motor ran out of gasolene this afternoon. I've been"--there was a
+catch in her voice--"wandering ever since."
+
+"You're played out, of course, and y'u've had no supper," he said, his
+quiet close gaze on her.
+
+"Yes, I'm played out and my nerve's gone." She laughed a little
+hysterically. "I expect I'm hungry and thirsty, too, though I hadn't
+noticed it before."
+
+He whirled to his saddle, and had the canteen thongs unloosed in a
+moment. While she drank he rummaged from his saddle-bags some sandwiches
+of jerky and a flask of whiskey. She ate the sandwiches, he the while
+watching her with amused sympathy in his swarthy countenance.
+
+"You ain't half-bad at the chuck-wagon, Miss Messiter," he told her.
+
+She stopped, the sandwich part way to her mouth. "I don't remember your
+face. I've met so many people since I came to the Lazy D. Still, I think
+I should remember you."
+
+He immediately relieved of duty her quasi apology. "You haven't seen
+my face before," he laughed, and, though she puzzled over the double
+meaning that seemed to lurk behind his words and amuse him, she could
+not find the key to it.
+
+It was too dark to make out his features at all clearly, but she was
+sure she had seen him before or somebody that looked very much like him.
+
+"Life on the range ain't just what y'u can call exciting," he continued,
+"and when a young lady fresh from back East drops among us while sixguns
+are popping, breaks up a likely feud and mends right neatly all the
+ventilated feudists it's a corollary to her fun that's she is going to
+become famous."
+
+What he said was true enough. The unsolicited notoriety her exploit had
+brought upon her had been its chief penalty. Garbled versions of it had
+appeared with fake pictures in New York and Chicago Sunday supplements,
+and all Cattleland had heard and discussed it. No matter into what
+unfrequented canon she rode, some silent cowpuncher would look at her
+as they met with admiring eyes behind which she read a knowledge of the
+story. It was a lonely desolate country, full of the wide deep silences
+of utter emptiness, yet there could be no footfall but the whisper of it
+was bruited on the wings of the wind.
+
+"Do you know where the Lazy D ranch is from here?" she asked.
+
+He nodded.
+
+"Can you take me home?"
+
+"I surely can. But not to-night. You're more tired than y'u know. We'll
+camp here, and in the mo'ning we'll hit the trail bright and early."
+
+This did not suit her at all. "Is it far to the Lazy D?" she inquired
+anxiously.
+
+"Every inch of forty miles. There's a creek not more than two hundred
+yards from here. We'll stay there till morning," he made answer in a
+matter of course voice, leading the way to the place he had mentioned.
+
+She followed, protesting. Yet though it was not in accord with her
+civilized sense of fitness, she knew that what he proposed was the
+common sense solution. She was tired and worn out, and she could see
+that his broncho had traveled far.
+
+Having reached the bank of the creek, he unsaddled, watered his horse
+and picketed it, and started a fire. Uneasily she watched him.
+
+"I don't like to sleep out. Isn't there a ranchhouse near?"
+
+"Y'u wouldn't call it near by the time we had reached it. What's to
+hinder your sleeping here? Isn't this room airy enough? And don't y'u
+like the system of lighting? 'Twas patented I forget how many million
+years ago. Y'u ain't going to play parlor girl now after getting the
+reputation y'u've got for gameness, are y'u?"
+
+But he knew well enough that it was no silly schoolgirl fear she had,
+but some deep instinct in her that distrusted him and warned her to
+beware. So, lightly he took up the burden of the talk while he gathered
+cottonwood branches for the fire.
+
+"Now if I'd only thought to bring a load of lumber and some
+carpenters--and a chaperon," he chided himself in burlesque, his bold
+eyes closely on the girl's face to gloat on the color that flew to her
+cheeks at his suggestion.
+
+She hastened to disclaim lightly the feeling he had unmasked in her. "It
+is a pity, but it can't be helped now. I suppose I am cross and don't
+seem very grateful. I'm tired out and nervous, but I am sure that I'll
+enjoy sleeping out. If I don't I shall not be so ungenerous as to blame
+you."
+
+He soon had a cup of steaming coffee ready for her, and the heat of it
+made a new woman of her. She sat in the warm fire glow, and began
+to feel stealing over her a delightful reaction of languor. She told
+herself severely it was ridiculous to have been so foolishly prim about
+the inevitable.
+
+"Since you know my name, isn't it fair that I should know yours?" she
+smilingly asked, more amiably than she had yet spoken to him.
+
+"Well, since I have found the lamb that was lost, y'u may call me a
+shepherd of the desert."
+
+"Then, Mr. Shepherd, I'm very glad to meet you. I don't remember when
+I ever was more glad to meet a stranger." And she added with a little
+laugh: "It's a pity I'm too sleepy to do my duty by you in a social
+way."
+
+"We'll let that wait till to-morrow. Y'u'll entertain me plenty then.
+I'll make your bunk up right away."
+
+She was presently lying with her feet to the fire, snugly rolled in his
+saddle blankets. But though her eyes were heavy, her brain was still
+too active to permit her to sleep immediately. The excitement of her
+adventure was too near, the emotions of the day too poignantly vivid, to
+lose their hold on her at once. For the first time in her life she
+lay lapped in the illimitable velvet night, countless unwinking stars
+lighting the blue-black dream in which she floated. The enchantment of
+the night's loveliness swept through her sensitive pulses and thrilled
+her with the mystery of the great life of which she was an atom. Awe
+held her a willing captive.
+
+She thought of many things, of her past life and its incongruity with
+the present, of the man who lay wounded at the Lazy D, of this other
+wide-shouldered vagabond who was just now in the shadows beyond the
+firelight, pacing up and down with long, light even strides as he looked
+to his horse and fed the fire. She watched him make an end of the things
+he found to do and then take his place opposite her. Who and what was
+he, this fascinating scamp who one moment flooded the moonlit desert
+with inspired snatches from the opera sung in the voice of an angel, and
+the next lashed at his horse like a devil incarnate? How reconcile the
+outstanding inconsistencies in him? For his every inflection, every
+motion, proclaimed the strain of good blood gone wrong and trampled
+under foot of set, sardonic purpose, indicated him a man of culture in
+a hell of his own choosing. Lounging on his elbow in the flickering
+shadows, so carelessly insouciant in every picturesque inch of him, he
+seemed to radiate the melodrama of the untamed frontier, just as her
+guest of tarnished reputation now at the ranch seemed to breathe forth
+its romance.
+
+"Sleep well, little partner. Don't be afraid; nothing can harm you,"
+this man had told her.
+
+Promptly she had answered, "I'm not afraid, thank you, in the least";
+and after a moment had added, not to seem hostile, "Good night, big
+partner."
+
+But despite her calm assurance she knew she did not feel so entirely
+safe as if it had been one of her own ranch boys on the other side of
+the fire, or even that other vagabond who had made so direct an appeal
+to her heart. If she were not afraid, at least she knew some vague hint
+of anxiety.
+
+She was still thinking of him when she fell asleep, and when she
+awakened the first sound that fell on her ears was his tuneful whistle.
+Indeed she had an indistinct memory of him in the night, wrapping the
+blankets closer about her when the chill air had half stirred her from
+her slumber. The day was still very young, but the abundant desert light
+dismissed sleep summarily. She shook and brushed the wrinkles out of her
+clothes and went down to the creek to wash her face with the inadequate
+facilities at hand. After redressing her hair she returned to the fire,
+upon which a coffee pot was already simmering.
+
+She came up noiselessly behind him, but his trained senses were apprised
+of her approach.
+
+"Good mo'ning! How did y'u find your bedroom?" he asked, without turning
+from the bacon he was broiling on the end of a stick.
+
+"Quite up to the specifications. With all Wyoming for a floor and the
+sky for a ceiling, I never had a room I liked better. But have you eyes
+in the back of your head?"
+
+He laughed grimly. "I have to be all eyes and ears in my business."
+
+"Is your business of a nature so sensitive?"
+
+"As much so as stocks on Wall Street. And we haven't any ticker to warn
+us to get under cover. Do you take cream in your coffee, Miss Messiter?"
+
+She looked round in surprise. "Cream?"
+
+"We're in tin-can land, you know, and live on air-tights. I milk my cow
+with a can-opener. Let me recommend this quail on toast." He handed her
+a battered tin plate, and prepared to help her from the frying-pan.
+
+"I suppose that is another name for pork?"
+
+"No, really. I happened to bag a couple of hooters before you wakened."
+
+"You're a missionary of the good-foods movement. I shall name your
+mission St. Sherry's-in-the-Wilderness."
+
+"Ah, Sherry's! That's since my time. I don't suppose I should know my
+way about in little old New York now."
+
+She found him eager to pick up again the broken strands that had
+connected him with the big world from which he had once come. It had
+been long since she had enjoyed a talk more, for he expressed himself
+with wit and dexterity. But through her enjoyment ran a note of
+apprehension. He was for the moment a resurrected gentleman. But what
+would he be next? She had an insistent memory of a heavenly flood of
+music broken by a horrible discord of raucous oaths.
+
+It was he that lingered over their breakfast, loath to make the first
+move to bring him back into realities; and it was she that had to
+suggest the need of setting out. But once on his feet, he saddled and
+packed swiftly, with a deftness born of experience.
+
+"We'll have to ask Two-step to carry double to-day," he said, as he
+helped her to a place behind him.
+
+Two-step had evidently made an end of the bronco spree upon which he
+had been the evening before, for he submitted sedately to his unusual
+burden. The first hilltop they reached had its surprise to offer the
+girl. In a little valley below them, scarce a mile away, nestled a ranch
+with its corrals and buildings.
+
+"Look!" she exclaimed; and then swiftly, "Didn't you know it was there?"
+
+"Yes, that's the Hilke place," he answered with composure. "It hasn't
+been occupied for years."
+
+"Isn't that some one crossing to the corral now?"
+
+"No. A stray cow, I reckon."
+
+They dropped into a hollow between the hills and left the ranch on their
+left. She was not satisfied, and yet she had not grounds enough upon
+which to base a suspicion. For surely the figure she had seen had been
+that of a man.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 12. MISTRESS AND MAID
+
+Now that it was safely concluded, Helen thought the adventure almost
+worthwhile for the spontaneous expressions of good will it had drawn
+forth from her adherents. Mrs. Winslow and Nora had taken her to
+their arms and wept and laughed over her in turn, and in their silent
+undemonstrative way she had felt herself hedged in by unusual solicitude
+on the part of her riders. It was good--none but she knew how good--to
+be back among her own, to bask in a friendliness she could not doubt.
+It was best of all to sit opposite Ned Bannister again with no weight on
+her heart from the consciousness of his unworthiness.
+
+She could affect to disregard the gray eyes that followed her with
+such magnetized content about the living room, but beneath her cool
+self-containment she knew the joyous heart in her was strangely buoyant.
+He loved her, and she had a right to let herself love him. This was
+enough for the present.
+
+"They're so plumb glad to see y'u they can't let y'u alone," laughed
+Bannister at the sound of a knock on the door that was about the fifth
+in as many minutes.
+
+This time it proved to be Nora, come to find out what her mistress would
+like for supper. Helen turned to the invalid.
+
+"What would you like, Mr. Bannister?"
+
+"I should like a porterhouse with mushrooms," he announced promptly.
+
+"You can't have it. You know what the doctor said." Very peremptorily
+she smiled this at him.
+
+"He's an old granny, Miss Messiter."
+
+"You may have an egg on toast."
+
+"Make it two," he pleaded. "Excitement's just like caviar to the
+appetite, and seeing y'u safe--"
+
+"Very well--two," she conceded.
+
+They ate supper together in a renewal of the pleasant intimacy so
+delightful to both. He lay on the lounge, propped up with sofa cushions,
+the while he watched her deft fingers butter the toast and prepare his
+egg. It was surely worth while to be a convalescent, given so sweet a
+comrade for a nurse; and after he had moved over to the table he enjoyed
+immensely the gay firmness with which she denied him what was not good
+for him.
+
+"I'll bet y'u didn't have supper like this at Robbers' Roost." he told
+her, enthusiastically.
+
+"It wasn't so bad, considering everything." She was looking directly at
+him as she spoke. "Your cousin is rather a remarkable man in some ways.
+He manages to live on the best that can be got in tin-can land."
+
+"Did he tell y'u he was my cousin?" he asked, slowly.
+
+"Yes, and that his name was Ned Bannister, too?"
+
+"Did that explain anything to y'u?"
+
+"It explained a great deal, but it left some things not clear yet."
+
+"For instance?"
+
+"For one thing, the reason why you should bear the odium of his crimes.
+I suppose you don't care for him, though I can see how you might in a
+way."
+
+"I don't care for him in the least, though I used to when we were
+boys. As to letting myself be blamed for his crimes. I did it because
+I couldn't help myself. We look more or less alike, and he was cunning
+enough to manufacture evidence against me. We were never seen together,
+and so very few know that there are two Bannisters. At first I used to
+protest, but I gave it up. There wasn't the least use. I could only wait
+for him to be captured or killed. In the meantime it didn't make me any
+more popular to be a sheepman."
+
+"Weren't you taking a long chance of being killed first? Some one with a
+grudge against him might have shot you."
+
+"They haven't yet," he smiled.
+
+"You might at least have told me how it was," she reproached.
+
+"I started to tell y'u that first day, but it looked so much of a fairy
+tale to unload that I passed it up."
+
+"Then you ought not to blame me for thinking you what you were not."
+
+"I don't remember blaming y'u. The fact is I thought it awful white of
+y'u to do your Christian duty so thorough, me being such a miscreant,"
+he drawled.
+
+"You gave me no chance to think well of you."
+
+"But yet y'u did your duty from A to Z."
+
+"We're not talking about my duty," she flashed back. "My point is that
+you weren't fair to me. If I thought ill of you how could I help it?"
+
+"I expaict your Kalamazoo conscience is worryin' y'u because y'u
+misjudged me."
+
+"It isn't," she denied instantly.
+
+"I ain't of a revengeful disposition. I'll forgive y'u for doing your
+duty and saving my life twice," he said, with a smile of whimsical
+irony.
+
+"I don't want your forgiveness."
+
+"Well, then for thinking me a 'bad man.'"
+
+"You ought to beg my pardon. I was a friend, at least you say I acted
+like one--and you didn't care enough to right yourself with me."
+
+"Maybe I cared too much to risk trying it. I knew there would be proof
+some time, and I decided to lie under the suspicion until I could get
+it. I see now that wasn't kind or fair to you. I am sorry I didn't tell
+y'u all about it. May I tell y'u the story now?"
+
+"If you wish."
+
+It was a long story, but the main points can be told in a paragraph. The
+grandfather of the two cousins, General Edward Bannister, had worn the
+Confederate gray for four years, and had lost an arm in the service of
+the flag with the stars and bars. After the war he returned to his
+home in Virginia to find it in ruins, his slaves freed and his fields
+mortgaged. He had pulled himself together for another start, and
+had practiced law in the little town where his family had lived for
+generations. Of his two sons, one was a ne'er-do-well. He was one of
+those brilliant fellows of whom much is expected that never develops.
+He had a taste for low company, married beneath him, and, after a career
+that was a continual mortification and humiliation to his father, was
+killed in a drunken brawl under disgraceful circumstances, leaving
+behind a son named for the general. The second son of General Bannister
+also died young, but not before he had proved his devotion to his father
+by an exemplary life. He, too, was married and left an only son, also
+named for the old soldier. The boys were about of an age and were well
+matched in physical and mental equipment. But the general, who had taken
+them both to live with him, soon discovered that their characters were
+as dissimilar as the poles. One grandson was frank, generous, open as
+the light; the other was of a nature almost degenerate. In fact, each
+had inherited the qualities of his father. Tales began to come to the
+old general's ears that at first he refused to credit. But eventually
+it was made plain to him that one of the boys was a rake of the most
+objectionable type.
+
+There were many stormy scenes between the general and his grandson, but
+the boy continued to go from bad to worse. After a peculiarly flagrant
+case, involving the character of a respectable young girl, young Ned
+Bannister was forbidden his ancestral home. It had been by means of his
+cousin that this last iniquity of his had been unearthed, and the boy
+had taken it to his grandfather in hot indignation as the last hope of
+protecting the reputation of the injured girl. From that hour the evil
+hatred of his cousin, always dormant in the heart, flamed into active
+heat. The disowned youth swore to be revenged. A short time later the
+general died, leaving what little property he had entirely to the one
+grandson. This stirred again the bitter rage of the other. He set fire
+to the house that had been willed his cousin, and took a train that
+night for Wyoming. By a strange irony of fate they met again in the
+West years later, and the enmity between them was renewed, growing every
+month more bitter on the part of the one who called himself the King of
+the Bighorn Country.
+
+She broke the silence after his story with a gentle "Thank you. I can
+understand why you don't like to tell the story."
+
+"I am very glad of the chance to tell it to you," he answered.
+
+"When you were delirious you sometimes begged some one you called Ned
+not to break his mother's heart. I thought then you might be speaking to
+yourself as ill people do. Of course I see now it was your cousin that
+was on your mind."
+
+"When I was out of my head I must have talked a lot of nonsense,"
+he suggested, in the voice of a question. "I expect I had opinions I
+wouldn't have been scattering around so free if I'd known what I was
+saying."
+
+He was hardly prepared for the tide of color that swept her cheeks at
+his words nor for the momentary confusion that shuttered the shy eyes
+with long lashes cast down.
+
+"Sick folks do talk foolishness, they say," he added, his gaze trained
+on her suspiciously.
+
+"Do they?"
+
+"Mrs. Winslow says I did. But when I asked her what it was I said she
+only laughed and told me to ask y'u. Well, I'm askin' now."
+
+She became very busy over the teapot. "You talked about the work at your
+ranch--sheep dipping and such things."
+
+"Was that all?"
+
+"No, about lots of other things--football and your early life. I don't
+see what Mrs. Winslow meant. Will you have some more tea?"
+
+"No, thank y'u. I have finished. Yes, that ce'tainly seems harmless. I
+didn't know but I had been telling secrets." Still his unwavering eyes
+rested quietly on her.
+
+"Secrets?" She summoned her aplomb to let a question rest lightly in
+the face she turned toward him, though she was afraid she met his
+eyes hardly long enough for complete innocence "Why, yes, secrets." He
+measured looks with her deliberately before he changed the subject, and
+he knew again the delightful excitement of victory. "Are y'u going to
+read to me this evening?"
+
+She took his opening so eagerly that he smiled, at which her color
+mounted again.
+
+"If y'u like. What shall I read?"
+
+"Some more of Barrie's books, if y'u don't mind. When a fellow is weak
+as a kitten he sorter takes to things that are about kids."
+
+Nora came in and cleared away the supper things. She was just beginning
+to wash them when McWilliams and Denver dropped into the kitchen by
+different doors. Each seemed surprised and disappointed at the presence
+of the other. Nora gave each of them a smile and a dishcloth.
+
+"Reddy, he's shavin' and Frisco's struggling with a biled shirt--I mean
+with a necktie," Denver hastily amended. "They'll be along right soon, I
+shouldn't wonder."
+
+"Y'u better go tell the boys Miss Nora don't want her kitchen littered
+up with so many of them," suggested his rival.
+
+"Y'u're foreman here. I don't aim to butt into your business, Mac,"
+grinned back the other, polishing a tea plate with the towel.
+
+"I want to get some table linen over to Lee Ming to-night," said Nora,
+presently.
+
+"Denver, he'll be glad to take it for y'u, Miss Nora. He's real
+obliging," offered Mac, generously.
+
+"I've been in the house all day, so I need a walk. I thought perhaps one
+of you gentlemen--" Miss Nora looked from one to the other of them with
+deep innocence.
+
+"Sure, I'll go along and carry it. Just as Mac says, I'll be real
+pleased to go," said Denver, hastily.
+
+Mac felt he had been a trifle precipitate in his assumption that Nora
+did not intend to go herself. Lee Ming had established a laundry
+some half mile from the ranch, and the way thereto lay through most
+picturesque shadow and moonlight. The foreman had conscientious scruples
+against letting Denver escort her down such a veritable lovers' lane of
+romantic scenery.
+
+"I don't know as y'u ought to go out in the night air with that cold,
+Denver. I'd hate a heap to have y'u catch pneumony. It don't seem to me
+I'd be justified in allowin' y'u to," said the foreman, anxiously.
+
+"You're THAT thoughtful, Mac. But I expect mebbe a little saunter with
+Miss Nora will do my throat good. We'll walk real slow, so's not to wear
+out my strength."
+
+"Big, husky fellows like y'u are awful likely to drop off with pneumony.
+I been thinkin' I got some awful good medicine that would be the right
+stuff for y'u. It's in the drawer of my wash-stand. Help yourself
+liberal and it will surely do y'u good. Y'u'll find it in a bottle."
+
+"I'll bet it's good medicine, Mac. After we get home I'll drop around.
+In the washstand, y'u said?"
+
+"I hate to have y'u take such a risk," Mac tried again. "There ain't a
+bit of use in y'u exposing yourself so careless. Y'u take a hot footbath
+and some of that medicine, Denver, then go right straight to bed, and in
+the mo'ning y'u'll be good as new. Honest, y'u won't know yourself."
+
+"Y'u got the best heart, Mac." Nora giggled.
+
+"Since I'm foreman I got to be a mother to y'u boys, ain't I?"
+
+"Y'u're liable to be a grandmother to us if y'u keep on," came back the
+young giant.
+
+"Y'u plumb discourage me, Denver," sighed the foreman.
+
+"No, sir! The way I look at it, a fellow's got to take some risk. Now,
+y'u cayn't tell some things. I figure I ain't half so likely to catch
+pneumony as y'u would be to get heart trouble if y'u went walking with
+Miss Nora," returned Denver.
+
+A perfect gravity sat on both their faces during the progress of most of
+their repartee.
+
+"If your throat's so bad, Mr. Halliday, I'll put a kerosene rag round
+it for you when we get back," Nora said, with a sweet little glance of
+sympathy that the foreman did not enjoy.
+
+Denver, otherwise "Mr. Halliday," beamed. "Y'u're real kind, ma'am.
+I'll bet that will help it on the outside much as Mac's medicine will
+inside."
+
+"What'll y'u do for my heart, ma'am, if it gits bad the way Denver
+figures it will?"
+
+"Y'u might try a mustard plaster," she gurgled, with laughter.
+
+For once the debonair foreman's ready tongue had brought him to defeat.
+He was about to retire from the field temporarily when Nora herself
+offered first aid to the wounded.
+
+"We would like to have you come along with us, Mr. McWilliams. I want
+you to come if you can spare the time."
+
+The soft eyes telegraphed an invitation with such a subtle suggestion of
+a private understanding that Mac was instantly encouraged to accept.
+
+He knew, of course, that she was playing them against each other and
+sitting back to enjoy the result, but he was possessed of the hope
+common to youths in his case that he really was on a better footing with
+her than the other boys. This opinion, it may be added, was shared by
+Denver, Frisco and even Reddy as regards themselves. Which is merely
+another way of putting the regrettable fact that this very charming
+young woman was given to coquetting with the hearts of her admirers.
+
+"Any time y'u get oneasy about that cough y'u go right on home, Denver.
+Don't stay jest out of politeness. We'll never miss y'u, anyhow," the
+foreman assured him.
+
+"Thank y'u, Mac. But y'u see I got to stay to keep Miss Nora from
+getting bored."
+
+"Was it a phrenologist strung y'u with the notion y'u was a cure for
+lonesomeness?"
+
+"Shucks! I don't make no such claims. The only thing is it's a comfort
+when you're bored to have company. Miss Nora, she's so polite. But, y'u
+see, if I'm along I can take y'u for a walk when y'u get too bad."
+
+They reached the little trail that ran up to Lee Ming's place, and
+Denver suggested that Mac run in with the bundle so as to save Nora the
+climb.
+
+"I'd like to, honest I would. But since y'u thought of it first I won't
+steal the credit of doing Miss Nora a good turn. We'll wait right here
+for y'u till y'u come back."
+
+"We'll all go up together," decided Nora, and honors were easy.
+
+In the pleasant moonlight they sauntered back, two of them still engaged
+in lively badinage, while the third played chorus with appreciative
+little giggles and murmurs of "Oh, Mr. Halliday!" and "You know you're
+just flattering me, Mr. McWilliams."
+
+If they had not been so absorbed in their gay foolishness the two men
+might not have walked so innocently into the trap waiting for them
+at their journey's end. As it was, the first intimation they had of
+anything unusual was a stern command to surrender.
+
+"Throw up your hands. Quick, you blank fools!"
+
+A masked man covered them, in each hand a six-shooter, and at his
+summons the arms of the cow-punchers went instantly into the air.
+
+Nora gave an involuntary little scream of dismay.
+
+"Y'u don't need to be afraid, lady. Ain't nobody going to hurt you, I
+reckon," the masked man growled.
+
+"Sure they won't," Mac reassured her, adding ironically: "This
+gun-play business is just neighborly frolic. Liable to happen any day in
+Wyoming."
+
+A second masked man stepped up. He, too was garnished with an arsenal.
+
+"What's all this talking about?" he demanded sharply.
+
+"We just been having a little conversation seh?" returned McWilliams,
+gently, his vigilant eyes searching through the disguise of the other
+"Just been telling the lady that your call is in friendly spirit. No
+objections, I suppose?"
+
+The swarthy newcomer, who seemed to be in command, swore sourly.
+
+"Y'u put a knot in your tongue, Mr. Foreman."
+
+"Ce'tainly, if y'u prefer," returned the indomitable McWilliams.
+
+"Shut up or I'll pump lead into you!"
+
+"I'm padlocked, seh."
+
+Nora Darling interrupted the dialogue by quietly fainting. The foreman
+caught her as she fell.
+
+"See what y'u done, y'u blamed chump!" he snapped.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 13. THE TWO COUSINS
+
+The sheepman lay at his ease, the strong supple lines of him stretched
+lazily on the lounge. Helen was sitting beside him in an easy chair, and
+he watched the play of her face in the lamplight as she read from "The
+Little White Bird." She was very good to see, so vitally alive and full
+of a sweet charm that half revealed and half concealed her personality.
+The imagination with which she threw herself into a discussion of the
+child fancies portrayed by the Scotch writer captured his fancy. It
+delighted him to tempt her into discussions that told him by suggestion
+something of what she thought and was.
+
+They were in animated debate when the door opened to admit somebody
+else. He had stepped in so quietly that he stood there a little while
+without being observed, smiling down at them with triumphant malice
+behind the mask he wore. Perhaps it was the black visor that was
+responsible for the Mephisto effect, since it hid all the face but the
+leering eyes. These, narrowed to slits, swept the room and came back to
+its occupants. He was a tall man and well-knit, dressed incongruously in
+up-to-date riding breeches and boots, in combination with the usual gray
+shirt, knotted kerchief and wide-brimmed felt hat of the horseman of the
+plains. The dust of the desert lay thick on him, without in the least
+obscuring a certain ribald elegance, a distinction of wickedness
+that rested upon him as his due. To this result his debonair manner
+contributed, though it carried with it no suggestion of weakness. To the
+girl who looked up and found him there he looked indescribably sinister.
+
+She half rose to her feet, dilated eyes fixed on him.
+
+"Good evenin'. I came to make sure y'u got safe home, Miss Messiter," he
+said.
+
+The eyes of the two men clashed, the sheepman's stern and unyielding,
+his cousin's lit with the devil of triumph. But out of the faces of both
+men looked the inevitable conflict, the declaration of war that never
+ends till death.
+
+"I've been a heap anxious about y'u--couldn't sleep for worrying. So I
+saddled up and rode in to find out if y'u were all right and to inquire
+how Cousin Ned was getting along."
+
+The sheepman, not deigning to move an inch from his position, looked in
+silence his steady contempt.
+
+"This conversation sounds a whole lot like a monologue up to date," he
+continued. "Now, maybe y'u don't know y'u have the honor of entertaining
+the King of the Bighorn." The man's brown hand brushed the mask from his
+eyes and he bowed with mocking deference. "Miss Messiter, allow me to
+introduce myself again--Ned Bannister, train robber, rustler, kidnapper
+and general bad man. But I ain't told y'u the worst yet. I'm cousin to a
+sheepherder' and that's the lowest thing that walks."
+
+He limped forward a few steps and sat down. "Thank you, I believe I will
+stay a while since y'u both ask me so urgent. It isn't often I meet with
+a welcome so hearty and straight from the heart."
+
+It was not hard to see how the likeness between them contributed to
+the mistake that had been current concerning them. Side by side, no
+man could have mistaken one for the other. The color of their eyes,
+the shade of hair, even the cut of their features, were different. But
+beneath all distinctions in detail ran a family resemblance not to be
+denied. This man looked like his cousin, the sheepman, as the latter
+might have done if all his life he had given a free rein to evil
+passions.
+
+The height, the build, the elastic tread of each, made further
+contributions to this effect of similarity.
+
+"What are you doing here?" They were the first words spoken by the man
+on the lounge and they rang with a curt challenge.
+
+"Come to inquire after the health of my dear cousin," came the prompt
+silken answer.
+
+"You villain!"
+
+"My dear cousin, y'u speak with such conviction that y'u almost persuade
+me. But of course if I'm a villain I've got to live up to my reputation.
+Haven't I, Miss Messiter?"
+
+"Wouldn't it be better to live it down?" she asked with a quietness
+that belied her terror. For there had been in his manner a threat,
+not against her but against the man whom her heart acknowledged as her
+lover.
+
+He laughed. "Y'u're still hoping to make a Sunday school superintendent
+out of me, I see. Y'u haven't forgot all your schoolmarm ways yet, but
+I'll teach y'u to forget them."
+
+The other cousin watched him with a cool, quiet glance that never
+wavered. The outlaw was heavily armed, but his weapons were sheathed,
+and, though there was a wary glitter behind the vindictive exultation
+in his eyes, his capable hands betrayed no knowledge of the existence of
+his revolvers. It was, he knew, to be a moral victory, if one at all.
+
+"Hope I'm not disturbing any happy family circle," he remarked, and,
+taking two limping steps forward, he lifted the book from the girl's
+unresisting hands. "H'm! Barrie. I don't go much on him. He's too
+sissy for me. But I could have guessed the other Ned Bannister would
+be reading something like that," he concluded, a flicker of sneering
+contempt crossing his face.
+
+"Perhaps y'u'll learn some time to attend to your own business," said
+the man on the couch quietly.
+
+Hatred gleamed in the narrowed slits from which the soul of the other
+cousin looked down at him. "I'm a philanthropist, and my business is
+attending to other people's. They raise sheep, for instance, and I
+market them."
+
+The girl hastily interrupted. She had not feared for herself, but she
+knew fear for the indomitable man she had nursed back to life. "Won't
+you sit down, Mr. Bannister? Since you don't approve our literature,
+perhaps we can find some other diversion more to your taste." She smiled
+faintly.
+
+The man turned in smiling divination of her purpose, and sat down to
+play with her as a cat does with a mouse.
+
+"Thank y'u, Miss Messiter, I believe I will. I called to thank y'u for
+your kindness to my cousin as well as to inquire about you. The word
+goes that y'u pulled my dear cousin back when death was reaching mighty
+strong for him. Of course I feel grateful to y'u. How is he getting
+along now?"
+
+"He's doing very well, I think."
+
+"That's ce'tainly good hearing," was his ironical response. "How come he
+to get hurt, did y'u say?"
+
+His sleek smile was a thing hateful to see.
+
+"A hound bit me," explained the sheepman.
+
+"Y'u don't say! I reckon y'u oughtn't to have got in its way. Did y'u
+kill it?"
+
+"Not yet."
+
+"That was surely a mistake, for it's liable to bite again."
+
+The girl felt a sudden sickness at his honeyed cruelty, but immediately
+pulled herself together. For whatever fiendish intention might be in his
+mind she meant to frustrate it.
+
+"I hear you are of a musical turn, Mr. Bannister. Won't you play for
+us?"
+
+She had by chance found his weak spot. Instantly his eyes lit up. He
+stepped across to the piano and began to look over the music, though not
+so intently that he forgot to keep under his eye the man on the lounge.
+
+"H'm! Mozart, Grieg, Chopin, Raff, Beethoven. Y'u ce'tainly have the
+music here; I wonder if y'u have the musician." He looked her over with
+a bold, unscrupulous gaze. "It's an old trick to have classical music on
+the rack and ragtime in your soul. Can y'u play these?"
+
+"You will have to be the judge of that," she said.
+
+He selected two of Grieg's songs and invited her to the piano. He knew
+instantly that the Norwegian's delicate fancy and lyrical feeling had
+found in her no inadequate medium of expression. The peculiar emotional
+quality of the song "I Love Thee" seemed to fill the room as she played.
+When she swung round on the stool at its conclusion it was to meet a
+shining-eyed, musical enthusiast instead of the villain she had left
+five minutes earlier.
+
+"Y'u CAN play," was all he said, but the manner of it spoke volumes.
+
+For nearly an hour he kept her at the piano, and when at last he let her
+stop playing he seemed a man transformed.
+
+"You have given me a great pleasure, a very great pleasure, Miss
+Messiter," he thanked her warmly, his Western idiom sloughed with his
+villainy for the moment. "It has been a good many months since I have
+heard any decent music. With your permission I shall come again."
+
+Her hesitation was imperceptible. "Surely, if you wish." She felt it
+would be worse than idle to deny the permission she might not be able to
+refuse.
+
+With perfect grace he bowed, and as he wheeled away met with a little
+shock of remembrance the gaze of his cousin. For a long moment their
+eyes bored into each other. Neither yielded the beat of an eyelid, but
+it was the outlaw that spoke.
+
+"I had forgotten y'u. That's strange, too because it was for y'u I came.
+I'm going to take y'u home with me.
+
+"Alive or dead?" asked the other serenely.
+
+"Alive, dear Ned."
+
+"Same old traits cropping out again. There was always something feline
+about y'u. I remember when y'u were a boy y'u liked to torment wild
+animals y'u had trapped."
+
+"I play with larger game now--and find it more interesting."
+
+"Just so. Miss Messiter, I shall have to borrow a pony from y'u,
+unless--" He broke off and turned indifferently to the bandit.
+
+"Yes, I brought a hawss along with me for y'u," replied the other to the
+unvoiced question. "I thought maybe y'u might want to ride with us."
+
+"But he can't ride. He couldn't possibly. It would kill him," the girl
+broke out.
+
+"I reckon not." The man from the Shoshones glanced at his victim as he
+drew on his gauntlets. "He's a heap tougher than y'u think."
+
+"But it will. If he should ride now, why--It would be the same as
+murder," she gasped. "You wouldn't make him ride now?"
+
+"Didn't y'u hear him order his hawss, ma'am? He's keen on this ride.
+Of course he don't have to go unless he wants to." The man turned his
+villainous smile on his cousin, and the latter interpreted it to mean
+that if he preferred, the point of attack might be shifted to the girl.
+He might go or he might stay. But if he stayed the mistress of the Lazy
+D would have to pay for his decision.
+
+"No, I'll ride," he said at once.
+
+Helen Messiter had missed the meaning of that Marconied message that
+flashed between them. She set her jaw with decision. "Well, you'll not.
+It's perfectly ridiculous. I won't hear of such a thing."
+
+"Y'u seem right welcome. Hadn't y'u better stay, Ned?" murmured the
+outlaw, with smiling eyes that mocked.
+
+"Of course he had. He couldn't ride a mile--not half a mile. The idea is
+utterly preposterous."
+
+The sheepman got to his feet unsteadily. "I'll do famously."
+
+"I won't have it. Why are you so foolish about going? He said you didn't
+need to go. You can't ride any more than a baby could chop down that
+pine in the yard."
+
+"I'm a heap stronger than y'u think."
+
+"Yes, you are!" she derided. "It's nothing but obstinacy. Make him
+stay," she appealed to the outlaw.
+
+"Am I my cousin's keeper?" he drawled. "I can advise him to stay, but I
+can't make him."
+
+"Well, I can. I'm his nurse, and I say he sha'n't stir a foot out of
+this house--not a foot."
+
+The wounded man smiled quietly, admiring the splendid energy of her.
+"I'm right sorry to leave y'u so unceremoniously."
+
+"You're not going." She wheeled on the outlaw "I don't understand this
+at all. But if you want him you can find him here when you come again.
+Put him on parole and leave him here. I'll not be a party to murder by
+letting him go."
+
+"Y'u think I'm going to murder him?" he smiled.
+
+"I think he cannot stand the riding. It would kill him."
+
+"A haidstrong man is bound to have his way. He seems hell-bent on
+riding. All the docs say the outside of a hawss is good for the inside
+of a man. Mebbe it'll be the making of him."
+
+"I won't have it. I'll rouse the whole countryside against you. Why
+don't you parole him till he is better?"
+
+"All right. We'll leave it that way," announced the man. "I'd hate to
+hurt your tender feelings after such a pleasant evening. Let him give
+his parole to come to me whenever I send for him, no matter where he
+may be, to quit whatever he is doing right that instant, and come on the
+jump. If he wants to leave it that way, we'll call it a bargain."
+
+Again the rapier-thrust of their eyes crossed. The sheepman was
+satisfied with what he saw in the face of his foe.
+
+"All right. It's a deal," he agreed, and sank weakly back to the couch.
+
+There are men whose looks are a profanation to any good woman. Ned
+Bannister, of the Shoshones, was one of them. He looked at his cousin,
+and his ribald eyes coasted back to bold scrutiny of this young woman's
+charming, buoyant youth. There was Something in his face that sent a
+flush of shame coursing through her rich blood. No man had ever looked
+at her like that before.
+
+"Take awful good care of him," he sneered, with so plain an implication
+of evil that her clean blood boiled. "But I know y'u will, and don't let
+him go before he's real strong."
+
+"No," she murmured, hating herself for the flush that bathed her.
+
+He bowed like a Chesterfield, and went out with elastic heels, spurs
+clicking.
+
+Helen turned fiercely on her guest. "Why did you make me insist on
+your staying? As if I want you here, as if--" She stopped, choking with
+anger; presently flamed out, "I hate you," and ran from the room to hide
+herself alone with her tears and her shame.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 14. FOR THE WORLD'S CHAMPIONSHIP
+
+The scene on which Helen Messiter's eyes rested that mellow Fourth of
+July was vivid enough to have interested a far more jaded mind than
+hers. Nowhere outside of Cattleland could it have been duplicated.
+Wyoming is sparsely populated, but the riders of the plains think
+nothing of traveling a hundred miles in the saddle to be present at a
+"broncobusting" contest. Large delegations, too, had come in by railroad
+from Caspar, Billings, Sheridan, Cheyenne and a score of other points,
+so that the amphitheatre that looked down on the arena was filled to its
+capacity.
+
+All night the little town had rioted with its guests. Everything was
+wide open at Gimlet Butte. Saloons were doing a land-office business and
+gambling-houses coining money. Great piles of gold had passed to and fro
+during the night at the roulette wheel and the faro table. But with the
+coming of day interest had centered on the rough-riding contest for the
+world's championship. Saloons and dance halls were deserted, and the
+universal trend of travel had been toward the big grand stands, from
+which the sport could be best viewed.
+
+It was afternoon now. The preliminaries had been ridden, and half a
+dozen of the best riders had been chosen by the judges to ride again
+for the finals. Helen was wonderfully interested, because in the six who
+were to ride again were included the two Bannister cousins, her foreman,
+McWilliams, the young man "Texas," whom she had met the day of her
+arrival at Gimlet Butte, and Tom Sanford, who had last year won the
+championship.
+
+She looked down on the arena, and her heart throbbed with the pure
+joy of life. Already she loved her West and its picturesque, chap-clad
+population. Their jingling spurs and their colored kerchiefs knotted
+round sunburned necks, their frank, whole-hearted abandon to the
+interest of the moment, led her to regard these youths as schoolboys.
+Yet they were a hard-bitten lot, as one could see, burned to a brick-red
+by the untempered sun of the Rockies; with muscles knit like steel,
+and hearts toughened to endure any blizzard they might meet. Only the
+humorous wrinkles about the corners of their eyes gave them away for the
+cheerful sons of mirth that they were.
+
+"Bob Austin on Two-Step," announced the megaphone man, and a little stir
+eddied through the group gathered at the lane between the arena and the
+corral.
+
+A meek-looking buckskin was driven into the arena. The embodiment of
+listlessness, it apparently had not ambition enough to flick a fly from
+its flank with its tail. Suddenly the bronco's ears pricked, its sharp
+eyes dilated. A man was riding forward, the loop of a lariat circling
+about his head. The rope fell true, but the wily pony side-stepped, and
+the loop slithered to the ground. Again the rope shot forward, dropped
+over the pony's head and tightened. The roper's mustang braced its
+forefeet, and brought the buckskin up short. Another rope swept over its
+head. It stood trembling, unable to move without strangling itself.
+
+A picturesque youth in flannel shirt and chaps came forward, dragging
+blanket, saddle and bridle. At sight of him the horse gave a spasmodic
+fling, then trembled again violently. A blind was coaxed over its eyes
+and the bridle slipped on. Quickly and warily, with deft fingers, the
+young man saddled and cinched. He waved a hand jauntily to the ropers.
+The lariats were thrown off as the puncher swung to the saddle. For an
+instant the buckskin stood bewildered, motionless as a statue. There was
+a sudden leap forward high in air, and Bob Austin, alias "Texas," swung
+his sombrero with a joyous whoop.
+
+"Fan him! Fan him!" screamed the spectators, and the rider's quirt went
+up and down like a piston-rod.
+
+Round and round went Two-Step in a vicious circle, "swapping ends" with
+dizzying rapidity. Suddenly he went forward as from a catapult, and came
+to sudden halt in about five seconds. But Texas's knees still clung,
+viselike, to the sides of the pony. A series of quick bucks followed,
+the buckskin coming down with back humped, all four legs stiff as iron
+posts. The jar on the rider would have been like a pile-driver falling
+on his head had he not let himself grow limp. The buckskin plunged
+forward again in frenzied leaps, ending in an unexpected jump to one
+side. Alas for Texas! One moment he was jubilantly plying quirt and
+spurs, the next he found himself pitching sideways. To save himself he
+caught at the saddle-horn.
+
+"He's hunting leather," shouted a hundred voices.
+
+One of the judges rode out and waved a hand. Texas slipped to the ground
+disqualified, and made his dejected way back to his deriding comrades.
+Some of them had endured similar misfortunes earlier in the day.
+Therefore they found much pleasure in condoling with him.
+
+"If he'd only recollected to saw off the horn of his saddle, then
+he couldn't 'a' found it when he went to hunt leather," mournfully
+commented one puncher in a shirt of robin's egg blue.
+
+"'Twould have been most as good as to take the dust, wouldn't it?"
+retorted Texas gently, and the laugh was on the gentleman in blue,
+because he had been thrown earlier in the day.
+
+"A fellow's hands sure get in his way sometimes. I reckon if you'd tied
+your hands, Tex, you'd been riding that rocking-hawss yet," suggested
+Denver amiably.
+
+"Sometimes it's his foot he puts in it. There was onct a gent
+disqualified for riding on his spurs," said Texas reminiscently.
+
+At which hit Denver retired, for not three hours before he had been
+detected digging his spurs into the cinch to help him stick to the
+saddle.
+
+"Jim McWilliams will ride Dead Easy," came the announcement through the
+megaphone, and a burst of cheering passed along the grand stand, for the
+sunny smile of the foreman of the Lazy D made him a general favorite.
+Helen leaned forward and whispered something gaily to Nora, who sat in
+the seat in front of her. The Irish girl laughed and blushed, but when
+her mistress looked up it was her turn to feel the mounting color creep
+into her cheeks. For Ned Bannister, arrayed in all his riding finery,
+was making his way along the aisle to her.
+
+She had not seen him since he had ridden away from the Lazy D ten days
+before, quite sufficiently recovered from his wounds to take up the
+routine of life again. They had parted not the best of friends, for she
+had not yet forgiven him for his determination to leave with his cousin
+on the night that she had been forced to insist on his remaining. He had
+put her in a false position, and he had never explained to her why. Nor
+could she guess the reason--for he was not a man to harvest credit for
+himself by explaining his own chivalry.
+
+Since her heart told her how glad she was he had come to her box to see
+her, she greeted him with the coolest little nod in the world.
+
+"Good morning, Miss Messiter. May I sit beside y'u?" he asked.
+
+"Oh, certainly!" She swept her skirts aside carelessly and made room for
+him. "I thought you were going to ride soon."
+
+"No, I ride last except for Sanford, the champion. My cousin rides just
+before me. He's entered under the name of Jack Holloway."
+
+She was thinking that he had no business to be riding, that his wounds
+were still too fresh, but she did not intend again to show interest
+enough in his affairs to interfere even by suggestion. Her heart had
+been in her mouth every moment of the time this morning while he had
+been tossed hither and thither on the back of his mount. In his delirium
+he had said he loved her. If he did, why should he torture her so? It
+was well enough for sound men to risk their lives, but--
+
+A cheer swelled in the grand stand and died breathlessly away.
+McWilliams was setting a pace it would take a rare expert to equal. He
+was a trick rider, and all the spectacular feats that appealed to the
+onlooker were his. While his horse was wildly pitching, he drank a
+bottle of pop and tossed the bottle away. With the reins in his teeth
+he slipped off his coat and vest, and concluded a splendid exhibition of
+skill by riding with his feet out of the stirrups. He had been smoking a
+cigar when he mounted. Except while he had been drinking the pop it had
+been in his mouth from beginning to end, and, after he had vaulted from
+the pony's back, he deliberately puffed a long smoke-spiral into the
+air, to show that his cigar was still alight. No previous rider had
+earned so spontaneous a burst of applause. "He's ce'tainly a pure when
+it comes to riding," acknowledged Bannister. "I look to see him get
+either first or second."
+
+"Whom do you think is his most dangerous rival?" Helen asked.
+
+"My cousin is a straight-up rider, too. He's more graceful than Mac, I
+think, but not quite so good on tricks. It will be nip and tuck."
+
+"How about your cousin's cousin?" she asked, with bold irony.
+
+"He hopes he won't have to take the dust," was his laughing answer.
+
+The next rider suffered defeat irrevocably before he had been thirty
+seconds in the saddle. His mount was one of the most cunning of the
+outlaw ponies of the Northwest, and it brought him to grief by jamming
+his leg hard against the fence. He tried in vain to spur the bronco into
+the middle of the arena, but after it drove at a post for the third time
+and ground his limb against it, he gave up to the pain and slipped off.
+
+"That isn't fair, is it?" Helen asked of the young man sitting beside
+her.
+
+He shrugged his lean, broad shoulders. "He should have known how to keep
+the horse in the open. Mac would never have been caught that way."
+
+"Jack Holloway on Rocking Horse," the announcer shouted.
+
+It took four men and two lariats to subdue this horse to a condition
+sufficiently tame to permit of a saddle being slipped on. Even then this
+could not be accomplished without throwing the bronco first. The result
+was that all the spirit was taken out of the animal by the preliminary
+ordeal, so that when the man from the Shoshone country mounted, his
+steed was too jaded to attempt resistance.
+
+"Thumb him! Thumb him!" the audience cried, referring to the cowboy
+trick of running the thumbs along a certain place in the shoulder to
+stir the anger of the bucker.
+
+But the rider slipped off with disgust. "Give me another horse," he
+demanded, and after a minute's consultation among the judges a second
+pony was driven out from the corral. This one proved to be a Tartar. It
+went off in a frenzy of pitching the moment its rider dropped into the
+saddle.
+
+"Y'u'll go a long way before you see better ridin' than his and Mac's.
+Notice how he gives to its pitching," said Bannister, as he watched his
+cousin's perfect ease in the cyclone of which he was the center.
+
+"I expect it depends on the kind of a 'hawss,'" she mocked. "He's riding
+well, isn't he?"
+
+"I don't know any that ride better."
+
+The horse put up a superb fight, trying everything it knew to unseat
+this demon clamped to its back. It possessed in combination all the
+worst vices, was a weaver, a sunfisher and a fence-rower, and never
+had it tried so desperately to maintain its record of never having
+been ridden. But the outlaw in the saddle was too much for the outlaw
+underneath. He was master, just as he was first among the ruffians whom
+he led, because there was in him a red-hot devil of wickedness that
+would brook no rival.
+
+The furious bronco surrendered without an instant's warning, and its
+rider slipped at once to the ground. As he sauntered through the dust
+toward the grand stand, Helen could not fail to see how his vanity
+sunned itself in the applause that met his performance. His equipment
+was perfect to the least detail. The reflection from a lady's
+looking-glass was no brighter than the silver spurs he jingled on his
+sprightly heels. Strikingly handsome in a dark, sinister way, one would
+say at first sight, and later would chafe at the justice of a verdict
+not to be denied.
+
+Ned Bannister rose from his seat beside Helen. "Wish me luck," he said,
+with his gay smile.
+
+"I wish you all the luck you deserve," she answered.
+
+"Oh, wish me more than that if y'u want me to win."
+
+"I didn't say I wanted you to win. You take the most unaccountable
+things for granted."
+
+"I've a good mind to win, then, just to spite y'u," he laughed.
+
+"As if you could," she mocked; but her voice took a softer intonation as
+she called after him in a low murmur: "Be careful, please."
+
+His white teeth flashed a smile of reassurance at her. "I've never been
+killed yet."
+
+"Ned Bannister on Steamboat," sang out the megaphone man.
+
+"I'm ce'tainly in luck. Steamboat's the worst hawss on the range," he
+told himself, as he strode down the grand stand to enter the arena.
+
+The announcement of his name created for the second time that day a stir
+of unusual interest. Everybody in that large audience had heard of Ned
+Bannister; knew of his record as a "bad man" and his prowess as the king
+of the Shoshone country; suspected him of being a train and bank robber
+as well as a rustler. That he should have the boldness to enter the
+contest in his own name seemed to show how defiant he was of the public
+sentiment against him, and how secure he counted himself in flaunting
+this contempt. As for the sheepman, the notoriety that his cousin's
+odorous reputation had thrust upon him was extremely distasteful as well
+as dangerous, but he had done nothing to disgrace his name, and he meant
+to use it openly. He could almost catch the low whispers that passed
+from mouth to mouth about him.
+
+"Ain't it a shame that a fellow like that, leader of all the criminals
+that hide in the mountains, can show himself openly before ten thousand
+honest folks?" That he knew to be the purport of their whispering, and
+along with it went a recital of the crimes he had committed. How he
+was a noted "waddy," or cattle-rustler; how he and his gang had held
+up three trains in eighteen months; how he had killed Tom Mooney, Bob
+Carney and several others--these were the sorts of things that were
+being said about him, and from the bottom of his soul he resented his
+impotency to clear his name.
+
+There was something in Bannister's riding that caught Helen's fancy at
+once. It was the unconscious grace of the man, the ease with which he
+seemed to make himself a very part of the horse. He attempted no tricks,
+rode without any flourishes. But the perfect poise of his lithe body as
+it gave with the motions of the horse, proclaimed him a born rider; so
+finished, indeed, that his very ease seemed to discount the performance.
+Steamboat had a malevolent red eye that glared hatred at the oppressor
+man, and to-day it lived up to its reputation of being the most vicious
+and untamed animal on the frontier. But, though it did its best to
+unseat the rider and trample him underfoot, there was no moment when the
+issue seemed in doubt save once. The horse flung itself backward in a
+somersault, risking its own neck in order to break its master's. But
+he was equal to the occasion; and when Steamboat staggered again to its
+feet Bannister was still in the saddle. It was a daring and magnificent
+piece of horsemanship, and, though he was supposed to be a desperado
+and a ruffian, his achievement met with a breathless gasp, followed by
+thunderous applause.
+
+The battle between horse and man was on again, for the animal was as
+strong almost in courage as the rider. But Steamboat's confidence had
+been shaken as well as its strength. Its efforts grew less cyclonic.
+Foam covered its mouth and flecked its sides. The pitches were easy to
+foresee and meet. Presently they ceased altogether.
+
+Bannister slid from the saddle and swayed unsteadily across the arena.
+The emergency past, he had scarce an ounce of force left in him. Jim
+McWilliams ran out and slipped an arm around his shoulders, regardless
+of what his friends might think of him for it.
+
+"You're all in, old man. Y'u hadn't ought to have ridden, even though
+y'u did skin us all to a finish."
+
+"Nonsense, Mac. First place goes to y'u or--or Jack Holloway."
+
+"Not unless the judges are blind."
+
+But Bannister's prediction proved true. The champion, Sanford, had been
+traveling with a Wild West show, and was far too soft to compete with
+these lusty cowboys, who had kept hard from their daily life on the
+plains. Before he had ridden three minutes it was apparent that he stood
+no chance of retaining his title, so that the decision narrowed itself
+to an issue between the two Bannisters and McWilliams. First place was
+awarded to the latter, the second prize to Jack Holloway and the third
+to Ned Bannister.
+
+But nearly everybody in the grand stand knew that Bannister had been
+discriminated against because of his unpopularity. The judges were
+not local men, and had nothing to fear from the outlaw. Therefore they
+penalized him on account of his reputation. It would never do for
+the Associated Press dispatches to send word all over the East that a
+murderous desperado was permitted, unmolested, to walk away with the
+championship belt.
+
+"It ain't a square deal," declared McWilliams promptly.
+
+He was sitting beside Nora, and he turned round to express his opinion
+to the two sitting behind him in the box.
+
+"We'll not go behind the returns. Y'u won fairly. I congratulate
+y'u, Mr. Champion-of-the-world," replied the sheepman, shaking hands
+cordially.
+
+"I told you to bring that belt to the Lazy D," smiled his mistress, as
+she shook hands.
+
+But in her heart she was crying out that it was an outrage.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 15. JUDD MORGAN PASSES
+
+Gimlet Butte devoted the night of the Fourth to a high old time. The
+roping and the other sports were to be on the morrow, and meanwhile the
+night hours were filled with exuberance. The cowboy's spree comes
+only once in several months, but when it does come he enters into the
+occasion with such whole-hearted enthusiasm as to make up swiftly for
+lost time. A traveling midway had cast its tents in a vacant square in
+competition with the regular attractions of the town, and everywhere the
+hard-riding punchers were "night herding" in full regalia.
+
+There was a big masked ball in the street, and another in the Masonic
+Hall, while here and there flared the lights of the faker with something
+to sell. Among these last was "Soapy" Sothern, doing a thriving business
+in selling suckers and bars wrapped with greenbacks. Crowds tramped the
+streets blowing horns and throwing confetti, and everywhere was a large
+sprinkling of men in high-heeled boots, swinging along with the awkward,
+stiff-legged gait of the cowboy. Sometimes a girl was hanging on his
+arm, and again he was "whooping it up with the boys"; but in either case
+the range-rider's savings were burning a hole through his pockets with
+extreme rapidity.
+
+Jim McWilliams and the sheepman Bannister had that day sealed a
+friendship that was to be as enduring as life. The owner of the sheep
+ranch was already under heavy obligation to the foreman of the Lazy D,
+but debt alone is not enough on which to found soul brotherhood. There
+must be qualities of kinship in the primeval elements of character. Both
+men had suspected that this kinship existed, but to-day they had proved
+it in the way that one had lost and the other had won the coveted
+championship. They had made no vows and no professions. The subject had
+not even been touched in words; a meeting of the eyes, followed by the
+handshake with which Bannister had congratulated the winner. That had
+been all. But it was enough.
+
+With the casual democracy of the frontier they had together escorted
+Helen Messiter and Nora Darling through a riotous three hours of
+carnival, taking care to get them back to their hotel before the night
+really began "to howl."
+
+But after they had left the young women, neither of them cared to sleep
+yet. They were still in costume, Mac dressed as a monk, and his friend
+as a Stuart cavalier, and the spirit of frolic was yet strong in them.
+
+"I expaict, mebbe, we better hunt in couples if we're going to help
+paint the town," smiled Mac, and his friend had immediately agreed.
+
+It must have been well after midnight that they found themselves
+"bucking the tiger" in a combination saloon and gambling-house, whose
+patrons were decidedly cosmopolitan in character. Here white and red
+and yellow men played side by side, the Orient and the Occident and
+the aboriginal alike intent on the falling cards and the little rolling
+ball. A good many of them were still in their masks and dominos, though
+these, for the most part, removed their vizors before playing.
+
+Neither McWilliams nor his friend were betting high, and the luck had
+been so even that at the end of two hours' play neither of them had at
+any time either won or lost more than fifteen dollars. In point of fact,
+they were playing not so much to win as just to keep in touch with the
+gay, youthful humor of the night.
+
+They were getting tired of the game when two men jingled in for a drink.
+They were talking loudly together, and it was impossible to miss the
+subject of their conversation.
+
+McWilliams gave a little jerk of his head toward one of them. "Judd
+Morgan," his lips framed without making a sound.
+
+Bannister nodded.
+
+"Been tanking up all day," Mac added. "Otherwise his tongue would not be
+shooting off so reckless."
+
+A silence had fallen over the assembly save for the braggarts at the
+bar. Men looked at each other, and then furtively at Bannister. For
+Morgan, ignorant of who was sitting quietly with his back to him at the
+faro-table, was venting his hate of Bannister and McWilliams.
+
+"Both in the same boat. Did y'u see how Mac ran to help him to-day? Both
+waddies. Both rustlers. Both train robbers. Sho! I got through putting
+a padlock on me mouth. Man to man, I'm as good as either of them--damn
+sight better. I wisht they was here, one or both; I wisht they would
+step up here and fight it out. Bannister's a false alarm, and that
+foreman of the Lazy D--" His tongue stumbled over a blur of vilification
+that ended with a foul mention of Miss Messiter.
+
+Instantly two chairs crashed to the floor. Two pair of gray eyes met
+quietly.
+
+"My quarrel, Bann," said Jim, in a low, even voice.
+
+The other nodded. "I'll see y'u have a clear field."
+
+The man who was with Morgan suddenly whispered in his ear, and the
+latter slewed his head in startled fear. Almost instantly a bullet
+clipped past McWilliams's shoulder. Morgan had fired without waiting
+for the challenge he felt sure was at hand. Once--twice the foreman's
+revolver made answer. Morgan staggered, slipped down to the floor, a
+bullet crashing through the chandelier as he fell. For a moment his body
+jerked. Then he rolled over and lay still.
+
+The foreman's weapon covered him unwaveringly, but no more steadily than
+Bannister's gaze the man who had come in with him who lay lifeless on
+the floor. The man looked at the lifeless thing, shuddered, and backed
+out of the saloon.
+
+"I call y'u all to witness that my friend killed him in self-defense,"
+said Bannister evenly. "Y'u all saw him fire first. Mac did not even
+have his gun out."
+
+"That's right," agreed one, and another added: "He got what was coming
+to him."
+
+"He sure did," was the barkeeper's indorsement. "He came in hunting
+trouble, but I reckon he didn't want to be accommodated so prompt."
+
+"Y'u'll find us at the Gimlet Butte House if we're wanted for this,"
+said Bannister. "We'll be there till morning."
+
+But once out of the gambling-house McWilliams drew his friend to one
+side. "Do y'u know who that was I killed?"
+
+"Judd Morgan, foreman before y'u at the Lazy D."
+
+"Yes, but what else?"
+
+"What do y'u mean?"
+
+"I mean that next to your cousin Judd was leader of that Shoshone-Teton
+bunch."
+
+"How do y'u know?"
+
+"I suspected it a long time, but I knew for sure the day that your
+cousin held up the ranch. The man that was in charge of the crowd
+outside was Morgan. I could swear to it. I knew him soon as I clapped
+eyes to him, but I was awful careful to forget to tell him I recognized
+him."
+
+"That means we are in more serious trouble than I had supposed."
+
+"Y'u bet it does. We're in a hell of a hole, figure it out any way
+y'u like. Instead of having shot up a casual idiot, I've killed Ned
+Bannister's right-hand man. That will be the excuse--shooting Morgan.
+But the real trouble is that I won the championship belt from your
+cousin. He already hated y'u like poison, and he don't love me any too
+hard. He will have us arrested by his sheriff here. Catch the point.
+Y'U'RE NED BANNISTER, THE OUTLAW, AND I'M HIS RIGHT-BOWER. That's the
+play he's going to make, and he's going to make it right soon."
+
+"I don't care if he does. We'll fight him on his own ground. We'll prove
+that he's the miscreant and not us."
+
+"Prove nothing," snarled McWilliams. "Do y'u reckon he'll give us a
+chance to prove a thing? Not on your life. He'll have us jailed first
+thing; then he'll stir up a sentiment against us, and before morning
+there will be a lynchingbee, and y'u and I will wear the neckties. How
+do y'u like the looks of it?"
+
+"But y'u have a lot of friends. They won't stand for anything like
+that."
+
+"Not if they had time to stop it. Trouble is, fellow's friends think
+awful slow. They'll arrive in time to cut us down and be the mourners.
+No, sir! It's a hike for Jimmie Mac on the back of the first bronc he
+can slap a saddle on."
+
+Bannister frowned. "I don't like to run before the scurvy scoundrels."
+
+"Do y'u suppose I'm enjoying it? Not to any extent, I allow. But that
+sweet relative of yours holds every ace in the deck, and he'll play
+them, too. He owns the law in this man's town, and he owns the lawless.
+But the best card he holds is that he can get a thousand of the best
+people here to join him in hanging the 'king' of the Shoshone outlaws.
+Explanations nothing! Y'u rode under the name of Bannister, didn't y'u?
+He's Jack Holloway."
+
+"It does make a strong combination," admitted the sheepman.
+
+"Strong! It's invincible. I can see him playing it, laughing up his
+sleeve all the time at the honest fools he is working. No, sir! I draw
+out of a game like that. Y'u don't get a run for your money."
+
+"Of course he knows already what has happened," mused Bannister.
+
+"Sure he knows. That fellow with Morgan made a bee-line for him. Just
+about now he's routing the sheriff out of his bed. We got no time to
+lose. Thing is, to burn the wind out of this town while we have the
+chance."
+
+"I see. It won't help us any to be spilling lead into a sheriff's posse.
+That would ce'tainly put us in the wrong."
+
+"Now y'u're shouting. If we're honest men why don't we surrender
+peaceable? That's the play the 'king' is going to make in this town. Now
+if we should spoil a posse and bump off one or two of them, we couldn't
+pile up evidence enough to get a jury to acquit. No, sir! We can't
+surrender and we can't fight. Consequence is, we got to roll our tails
+immediate."
+
+"We have an appointment with Miss Messiter and Nora for to-morrow
+morning. We'll have to leave word we can't keep it."
+
+"Sure. Denver and Missou are playing the wheel down at the Silver
+Dollar. I reckon we better make those boys jump and run errands for us
+while we lie low. I'll drop in casual and give them the word. Meet y'u
+here in ten minutes. Whatever y'u do, keep that mask on your face."
+
+"Better meet farther from the scene of trouble. Suppose we say the north
+gate of the grand stand?"
+
+"Good enough. So-long."
+
+The first faint streaks of day were beginning to show on the horizon
+when Bannister reached the grand stand. He knew that inside of another
+half-hour the little frontier town would be blinking in the early
+morning sunlight that falls so brilliantly through the limpid
+atmosphere. If they were going to leave without fighting their way out
+there was no time to lose.
+
+Ten minutes slowly ticked away.
+
+He glanced at his watch. "Five minutes after four. I wish I had gone
+with Mac. He may have been recognized."
+
+But even as the thought flitted through his mind, the semi-darkness
+opened to let a figure out of it.
+
+"All quiet along the Potomac, seh?" asked the foreman's blithe voice.
+"Good. I found the boys and got them started." He flung down a Mexican
+vaquero's gaily trimmed costume.
+
+"Get into these, seh. Denver shucked them for me. That coyote must have
+noticed what we wore before he slid out. Y'u can bet the orders are to
+watch for us as we were dressed then."
+
+"What are y u going to do?"
+
+"Me? I'm scheduled to be Aaron Burr, seh. Missou swaps with me when he
+gets back here. They're going to rustle us some white men's clothes,
+too, but we cayn't wear them till we get out of town on account of
+showing our handsome faces."
+
+"What about horses?"
+
+"Denver is rustling some for us. Y'u better be scribbling your billy-doo
+to the girl y'u leave behind y'u, seh."
+
+"Haven't y'u got one to scribble?" Bannister retorted. "Seems to me y'u
+better get busy, too."
+
+So it happened that when Missou arrived a few minutes later he found
+this pair of gentlemen, who were about to flee for their lives, busily
+inditing what McWilliams had termed facetiously billets-doux. Each
+of them was trying to make his letter a little warmer than friendship
+allowed without committing himself to any chance of a rebuff. Mac got as
+far as Nora Darling, absentmindedly inserted a comma between the words,
+and there stuck hopelessly. He looked enviously across at Bannister,
+whose pencil was traveling rapidly down his note-book.
+
+"My, what a swift trail your pencil leaves on that paper. That's going
+some. Mine's bogged down before it got started. I wisht y'u would start
+me off."
+
+"Well, if you ain't up and started a business college already. I had
+ought to have brought a typewriter along with me," murmured Missou
+ironically.
+
+"How are things stacking? Our friends the enemy getting busy yet?" asked
+Bannister, folding and addressing his note.
+
+"That's what. Orders gone out to guard every road so as not to let you
+pass. What's the matter with me rustling up the boys and us holding down
+a corner of this town ourselves?"
+
+The sheepman shook his head. "We're not going to start a little private
+war of our own. We couldn't do that without spilling a lot of blood. No,
+we'll make a run for it."
+
+"That y'u, Denver?" the foreman called softly, as the sound of
+approaching horses reached him.
+
+"Bet your life. Got your own broncs, too. Sheriff Burns called up
+Daniels not to let any horses go out from his corral to anybody without
+his O.K. I happened to be cinching at the time the 'phone message
+came, so I concluded that order wasn't for me, and lit out kinder
+unceremonious."
+
+Hastily the fugitives donned the new costumes and dominos, turned their
+notes over to Denver, and swung to their saddles.
+
+"Good luck!" the punchers called after them, and Denver added an
+ironical promise that the foreman had no doubt he would keep. "I'll look
+out for Nora--Darling." There was a drawling pause between the first and
+second names. "I'll ce'tainly see that she don't have any time to worry
+about y'u, Mac."
+
+"Y'u go to Halifax," returned Mac genially over his shoulder as he loped
+away.
+
+"I doubt if we can get out by the roads. Soon as we reach the end of the
+street we better cut across that hayfield," suggested Ned.
+
+"That's whatever. Then we'll slip past the sentries without being seen.
+I'd hate to spoil any of them if we can help it. We're liable to get
+ourselves disliked if our guns spatter too much."
+
+They rode through the main street, still noisy with the shouts of late
+revelers returning to their quarters. Masked men were yet in evidence
+occasionally, so that their habits caused neither remark nor suspicion.
+A good many of the punchers, unable to stay longer, were slipping out
+of town after having made a night of it. In the general exodus the two
+friends hoped to escape unobserved.
+
+They dropped into a side street, galloped down it for two hundred yards,
+and dismounted at a barb-wire fence which ran parallel with the road.
+The foreman's wire-clippers severed the strands one by one, and they led
+their horses through the gap. They crossed an alfalfa-field, jumped an
+irrigation ditch, used the clippers again, and found themselves in a
+large pasture. It was getting lighter every moment, and while they
+were still in the pasture a voice hailed them from the road in an
+unmistakable command to halt.
+
+They bent low over the backs of their ponies and gave them the spur. The
+shot they had expected rang out, passing harmlessly over them. Another
+followed, and still another.
+
+"That's right. Shoot up the scenery. Y'u don't hurt us none," the
+foreman said, apostrophizing the man behind the gun.
+
+The next clipped fence brought them to the open country. For half an
+hour they rode swiftly without halt. Then McWilliams drew up.
+
+"Where are we making for?"
+
+"How about the Wind River country?"
+
+"Won't do. First off, they'll strike right down that way after us.
+What's the matter with running up Sweetwater Creek and lying out in the
+bad lands around the Roubideaux?"
+
+"Good. I have a sheep-camp up that way. I can arrange to have grub sent
+there for us by a man I can trust."
+
+"All right. The Roubideaux goes."
+
+While they were nooning at a cow-spring, Bannister, lying on his back,
+with his face to the turquoise sky, became aware that a vagrant impulse
+had crystallized to a fixed determination. He broached it at once to his
+companion.
+
+"One thing is a cinch, Mac. Neither y'u nor I will be safe in this
+country now until we have broken up the gang of desperadoes that is
+terrorizing this country. If we don't get them they will get us. There
+isn't any doubt about that. I'm not willing to lie down before these
+miscreants. What do y'u say?"
+
+"I'm with y'u, old man. But put a name to it. What are y'u proposing?"
+
+"I'm proposing that y'u and I make it our business not to have any other
+business until we clean out this nest of wolves. Let's go right after
+them, and see if we can't wipe out the Shoshone-Teton outfit."
+
+"How? They own the law, don't they?"
+
+"They don't own the United States Government. When they held up a
+mail-train they did a fool thing, for they bucked up against Uncle
+Sam. What I propose is that we get hold of one of the gang and make him
+weaken. Then, after we have got hold of some evidence that will convict,
+we'll go out and run down my namesake Ned Bannister. If people once get
+the idea that his hold isn't so strong there's a hundred people that
+will testify against him. We'll have him in a Government prison inside
+of six months."
+
+"Or else he'll have us in a hole in the ground," added the foreman,
+dryly.
+
+"One or the other," admitted Bannister. "Are y'u in on this thing?"
+
+"I surely am. Y'u're the best man I've met up with in a month of
+Sundays, seh. Y'u ain't got but one fault; and that is y'u don't smoke
+cigareets. Feed yourself about a dozen a day and y'u won't have a blamed
+trouble left. Match, seh?" The foreman of the Lazy D, already following
+his own advice, rolled deftly his smoke, moistened it and proceeded to
+blow away his troubles.
+
+Bannister looked at his debonair insouciance and laughed. "Water off a
+duck's back," he quoted. "I know some folks that would be sweating fear
+right now. It's ce'tainly an aggravating situation, that of being an
+honest man hunted as a villain by a villain. But I expaict my cousin's
+enjoying it."
+
+"He ain't enjoying it so much as he would if his plans had worked out a
+little smoother. He's holding the sack right now and cussing right smaht
+over it being empty, I reckon."
+
+"He did lock the stable door a little too late," chuckled the sheepman.
+But even as he spoke a shadow fell over his face. "My God! I had
+forgotten. Y'u don't suppose he would take it out of Miss Messiter."
+
+"Not unless he's tired of living," returned her foreman, darkly. "One
+thing, this country won't stand for is that. He's got to keep his hands
+off women or he loses out. He dassent lay a hand on them if they don't
+want him to. That's the law of the plains, isn't it?"
+
+"That's the unwritten law for the bad man, but I notice it doesn't seem
+to satisfy y'u, my friend. Y'u and I know that my cousin, Ned Bannister,
+doesn't acknowledge any law, written or unwritten. He's a devil and he
+has no fear. Didn't he kidnap her before?"
+
+"He surely would never dare touch those young ladies. But--I don't know.
+Bann, I guess we better roll along toward the Lazy D country, after
+all."
+
+"I think so." Ned looked at his friend with smiling drollery. "I thought
+y'u smoked your troubles away, Jim. This one seems to worry y'u."
+
+McWilliams grinned sheepishly. "There's one trouble won't be smoked
+away. It kinder dwells." Then, apparently apropos of nothing, he added,
+irrelevantly: "Wonder what Denver's doing right now?"
+
+"Probably keeping that appointment y'u ran away from," bantered his
+friend.
+
+"I'll bet he is. Funny how some men have all the luck," murmured the
+despondent foreman.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 16. HUNTING BIG GAME
+
+In point of fact, Denver's occupation at that moment was precisely what
+they had guessed it to be. He was sitting beside Nora Darling in the
+grand stand, explaining to her the fine points of "roping." Mr. Bob
+Austin, commonly known as "Texas," was meanwhile trying to make himself
+agreeable to Helen Messiter. Truth to tell, both young women listened
+with divided interest to their admirers. Both of them had heard the
+story of the night, and each of them had tucked away in her corsage a
+scribbled note she wanted to get back to her room and read again. That
+the pursuit was still on everybody knew, and those on the inside were
+aware that the "King," masquerading under the name of Jack Holloway, was
+the active power behind the sheriff stimulating the chase.
+
+It was after the roping had begun, and Austin had been called away to
+take his turn, that the outlaw chief sauntered along the aisle of the
+grand stand to the box in which was seated the mistress of the Lazy D.
+
+"Beautiful mo'ning, isn't it? Delightfully crisp and clear," he said by
+way of introduction, stopping at her box.
+
+She understood the subtle jeer in his manner, and her fine courage rose
+to meet it. There was a daring light in her eye, a buoyant challenge in
+her voice as she answered:
+
+"It is a splendid morning. I'm not surprised you are enjoying it."
+
+"Did I say I was enjoying it?" He laughed as he lifted the bar, came
+into her box and took a seat.
+
+"Of course not. How careless of me! I had forgotten you were in mourning
+for a deceased friend."
+
+His dark eyes flashed. "I'll not mourn for him long. He was a mighty
+trifling fellow, anyhow. Soon as I catch and hang his murderers I'll
+quit wearing black."
+
+"You may wear out several suits before then," she hit back.
+
+"Don't y'u believe it; when I want a thing I don't quit till it's done."
+
+She met his gaze, and the impact of eyes seemed to shock her physically.
+The wickedness in him threatened, gloated, dominated. She shivered in
+the warm sunlight, and would not have had him know it for worlds.
+
+"Dear me! How confident you talk. Aren't you sometimes disappointed?"
+
+"Temporarily. But when I want a thing I take it in the end."
+
+She knew he was serving notice on her that he meant to win her; and
+again the little spinal shiver raced over her. She could not look at his
+sardonic, evil face without fear, and she could not look away without
+being aware of his eyes possessing her. What was the use of courage
+against such a creature as this?
+
+"Yes, I understand you take a good deal that isn't yours," she retorted
+carelessly, her eyes on the arena.
+
+"I make it mine when I take it," he answered coolly, admiring the
+gameness which she wore as a suit of chain armor against his thrusts.
+
+"Isn't it a little dangerous sometimes?" her even voice countered. "When
+you take what belongs to others you run a risk, don't you?"
+
+"That's part of the rules. Except for that I shouldn't like it so well.
+I hunt big game, and the bigger the game the more risk. That's why y'u
+guessed right when y'u said I was enjoying the mo'ning."
+
+"Meaning--your cousin?"
+
+"Well, no. I wasn't thinking of him, though he's some sizable. But I'm
+hunting bigger game than he is, and I expect to bag it."
+
+She let her scornful eyes drift slowly over him. "I might pretend to
+misunderstand you. But I won't. You may have your answer now. I am not
+afraid of you, for since you are a bully you must be a coward. I saw a
+rattlesnake last week in the hills. It reminded me of some one I have
+seen. I'll leave you to guess who."
+
+Her answer drew blood. The black tide raced under the swarthy tan of his
+face. He leaned forward till his beady eyes were close to her defiant
+ones. "Y'u have forgotten one thing, Miss Messiter. A rattlesnake can
+sting. I ask nothing of you. Can't I break your heart without your
+loving me? You're only a woman--and not the first I have broken, by
+God--"
+
+His slim, lithe body was leaning forward so that it cut off others, and
+left them to all intents alone. At a touch of her fingers the handbag in
+her lap flew open and a little ivory-hilted revolver lay in her hand.
+
+"You may break me, but you'll never bend me an inch."
+
+He looked at the little gun and laughed ironically. "Sho! If y'u should
+hit me with that and I should find it out I might get mad at y'u."
+
+"Did I say it was for you?" she said coldly; and again the shock of
+joined eyes ended in drawn battle.
+
+"Have y'u the nerve?" He looked her over, so dainty and so resolute, so
+silken strong; and he knew he had his answer.
+
+His smoldering eyes burned with desire to snatch her to him and ride
+away into the hills. For he was a man who lived in his sensations. He
+had won many women to their hurt, but it was the joy of conflict that
+made the pursuit worth while to him; and this young woman, who could so
+delightfully bubble with little laughs ready to spill over and was yet
+possessed of a spirit so finely superior to the tenderness of her soft,
+round, maidenly curves, allured him mightily to the attack.
+
+She dropped the revolver back into the bag and shut the clasp with a
+click, "And now I think, Mr. Bannister, that I'll not detain you any
+longer. We understand each other sufficiently."
+
+He rose with a laugh that mocked. "I expaict to spend quite a bit of
+time understanding y'u one of these days. In the meantime this is to our
+better acquaintance."
+
+Deliberately, without the least haste, he stooped and kissed her before
+she could rally from the staggering surprise of the intention she read
+in his eyes too late to elude. Then, with the coolest bravado in the
+world, he turned on his heel and strolled away.
+
+Angry sapphires gleamed at him from under the long, brown lashes. She
+was furious, aghast, daunted. By the merest chance she was sitting in a
+corner of the box, so screened from observation that none could see. But
+the insolence of him, the reckless defiance of all standards of society,
+shook her even while it enraged her. He had put forth his claim like
+a braggart, but he had made good with an audacity superb in its
+effrontery. How she hated him! How she feared him! The thoughts were
+woven inseparably in her mind. Mephisto himself could not have impressed
+himself more imperatively than this strutting, heartless master artist
+in vice.
+
+She saw him again presently down in the arena, for it was his turn to
+show his skill at roping. Texas had done well; very well, indeed. He had
+made the throw and tie in thirty-seven seconds, which was two seconds
+faster than the record of the previous year. But she knew instinctively,
+as her fascinated eyes watched the outlaw preparing for the feat, that
+he was going to win. He would use his success as a weapon against
+her; as a means of showing her that he always succeeded in whatever he
+undertook. So she interpreted he look he flung her as he waited at the
+chute for the wild hill steer to be driven into the arena. It takes a
+good man physically to make a successful roper. He must be possessed
+of nerve, skill and endurance far out of the ordinary. He must be
+quick-eyed, strong-handed, nimble of foot, expert of hand and built like
+a wildcat. So Denver explained to the two young women in the box, and
+the one behind him admitted reluctantly that she long, lean, supple
+Centaur waiting impassively at the gateway fitted the specifications.
+
+Out flashed the rough-coated hill steer, wild and fleet as a hare,
+thin and leggy, with muscles of whipcord. Down went the flag, and the
+stopwatches began to tick off the seconds. Like an arrow the outlaw's
+pony shot forward, a lariat circling round and round the rider's head.
+At every leap the cow pony lessened the gap as it pounded forward on the
+heels of the flying steer.
+
+The loop swept forward and dropped over the horns of the animal. The
+pony, with the perfect craft of long practice, swerved to one side with
+a rush. The dragging rope swung up against the running steer's legs,
+grew suddenly taut. Down went the steer's head, and next moment its feet
+were swept from under it as it went heavily to the ground. Man and horse
+were perfect in their team work. As the supple rider slid from the back
+of the pony it ran to the end of the rope and braced itself to keep the
+animal from rising. Bannister leaped on the steer, tie-rope in hand.
+Swiftly his deft hands passed to and fro, making the necessary loops and
+knots. Then his hands went into the air. The steer was hog-tied.
+
+For a few seconds the judges consulted together. "Twenty-nine seconds,"
+announced their spokesman, and at the words a great cheer went up.
+Bannister had made his tie in record time.
+
+Impudently the scoundrel sauntered up to the grand stand, bowed
+elaborately to Miss Messiter, and perched himself on the fence, where he
+might be the observed of all observers. It was curious, she thought,
+how his vanity walked hand in hand with so much power and force. He was
+really extraordinarily strong, but no debutante's self-sufficiency could
+have excelled his. He was so frankly an egotist that it ceased to be a
+weakness.
+
+Back in her room at the hotel an hour later Helen paced up and down
+under a nervous strain foreign to her temperament. She was afraid; for
+the first time in her life definitely afraid. This man pitted against
+her had deliberately divorced his life from morality. In him lay no
+appeal to any conscience court of last resort. But the terror of this
+was not for herself principally, but for her flying lover. With his
+indubitable power, backed by the unpopularity of the sheepman in this
+cattle country, the King of the Bighorn could destroy his cousin if
+he set himself to do so. Of this she was convinced, and her conviction
+carried a certainty that he had the will as well as the means. If he
+had lacked anything in motive she herself had supplied one. For she was
+afraid that this villain had read her heart.
+
+And as her hand went fluttering to her heart she found small comfort
+in the paper lying next it that only a few hours before had brought her
+joy. For at any moment a messenger might come in to tell her that the
+writer of it had been captured and was to be dealt with summarily in
+frontier fashion. At best her lover and her friend were but fugitives
+from justice. Against them were arrayed not only the ruffian followers
+of their enemy, but also the lawfully constituted authorities of the
+county. Even if they should escape to-day the net would tighten on them,
+and they would eventually be captured.
+
+For the third time since coming to Wyoming Helen found refuge in tears.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 17. RUN TO EARTH
+
+When word came to Denver and the other punchers of the Lazy D that Reddy
+had been pressed into service as a guide for the posse that was pursuing
+the fugitives they gave vent to their feelings in choice profanity.
+
+"Now, ain't that like him? Had to run around like a locoed calf telling
+all he knowed and more till Burns ropes him in," commented the disgusted
+Missou.
+
+"Trouble with Reddy is he sets his mouth to working and then goes away
+and leaves it," mourned Jim Henson.
+
+"I'd hate to feel as sore as Reddy will when the boys get through
+playing with him after he gets back to the ranch," Denver contributed,
+when he had exhausted his vocabulary.
+
+Meanwhile Reddy, unaware of being a cause of offense, was cheerfully
+happy in the unexpected honor that had been thrust upon him. His will
+was of putty, molded into the opinion of whomever he happened at the
+moment to be with. Just now, with the ironic eye of Sheriff Burns upon
+him, he was strong for law enforcement.
+
+"A feller hadn't ought to be so promiscuous with his hardware. This
+here thing of shooting up citizens don't do Wyoming no good these days.
+Capital ain't a-going to come in when such goings-on occur," he sagely
+opined, unconsciously parroting the sentiment Burns had just been
+instilling into him.
+
+"That's right, sir. If that ain't horse sense I don't know any. You got
+a head on you, all right," answered the admiring sheriff.
+
+The flattered Reddy pleaded guilty to being wiser than most men. "Jest
+because I punch cows ain't any reason why I'm anybody's fool. I'll show
+them smart boys at the Lazy D I don't have to take the dust of any of
+the bunch when it comes to using my think tank."
+
+"I would," sympathized Burns. "You bet they'll all be almighty jealous
+when they learn how you was chosen out of the whole outfit on this job."
+
+All day they rode, and that night camped a few miles from the Lazy D.
+Early next morning they hailed a solitary rider as he passed. The man
+turned out to be a cowman, with a small ranch not far from the one owned
+by Miss Messiter.
+
+"Hello, Henderson! y'u seen anything of Jim McWilliams and another
+fellow riding acrost this way?" asked Reddy.
+
+"Nope," answered the cowman promptly. But immediately he modified his
+statement to add that he had seen two men riding toward Dry Creek a
+couple of hours ago. "They was going kinder slow. Looked to me sorter
+like one of them was hurt and the other was helping him out," he
+volunteered.
+
+The sheriff looked significantly at one of his men and nodded.
+
+"You didn't recognize the horses, I reckon?"
+
+"Come to think of it, one of the ponies did look like Jim's roan. What's
+up, boys? Anything doing?"
+
+"Nothing particular. We want to see Jim, that's all. So long."
+
+What Henderson had guessed was the truth. The continuous hard riding had
+been too much for Bannister and his wound had opened anew. They were at
+the time only a few miles from a shack on Dry Creek, where the Lazy D
+punchers sometimes put up. McWilliams had attended the wound as best
+he could, and after a few hours' rest had headed for the cabin in the
+hills. They were compelled to travel very slowly, since the motion kept
+the sheepman's wound continually bleeding. But about noon they reached
+the refuge they had been seeking and Bannister lay down on the bunk
+with their saddle blankets under him. He soon fell asleep, and Mac took
+advantage of this to set out on a foraging expedition to a ranch not
+far distant. Here he got some bread, bacon, milk and eggs from a man he
+could trust and returned to his friend.
+
+It was dark by the time he reached the cabin. He dismounted, and with
+his arms full of provisions pushed into the hut.
+
+"Awake, Bann?" he asked in a low voice.
+
+The answer was unexpected. Something heavy struck his chest and flung
+him back against the wall. Before he could recover his balance he was
+pinioned fast. Four men had hurled themselves upon him.
+
+"We've got you, Jim. Not a mite o' use resisting," counseled the
+sheriff.
+
+"Think I don't savez that? I can take a hint when a whole Methodist
+church falls on me. Who are y'u, anyhow?"
+
+"Somebody light a lantern," ordered Burns.
+
+By the dim light it cast Mac made them out, and saw Ned Bannister gagged
+and handcuffed on the bed. He knew a moment of surprise when his eyes
+fell on Reddy.
+
+"So it was y'u brought them here, Red?" he said quietly.
+
+Contrary to his own expectations, the gentleman named was embarrassed
+"The sheriff, he summoned me to serve," was his lame defense.
+
+"And so y'u threw down your friends. Good boy!"
+
+"A man's got to back the law up, ain't he?"
+
+Mac turned his shoulder on him rather pointedly. "There isn't any need
+of keeping that gag in my friend's mouth any longer," he suggested to
+Burns.
+
+"That's right, too. Take it out, boys. I got to do my duty, but I don't
+aim to make any gentleman more uncomfortable than I can help. I want
+everything to be pleasant all round."
+
+"I'm right glad to hear that, Burns, because my friend isn't fit to
+travel. Y'u can take me back and leave him out here with a guard," the
+foreman replied quickly.
+
+"Sorry I can't accommodate you, Jim, but I got to take y'u both with
+me."
+
+"Those are the orders of the King, are they?"
+
+Burns flushed darkly. "It ain't going to do you any good to talk that
+way. You know mighty well this here man with you is Bannister. I ain't
+going to take no chances on losing him now I've got my hand on him."
+
+"Y'u ce'tainly deserve a re-election, and I'll bet y'u get it all right.
+Any man so given over to duty, so plumb loaded down to the hocks with
+conscience as y'u, will surely come back with a big majority next
+November."
+
+"I ain't askin' for YOUR vote, Mac."
+
+"Oh, y'u don't need votes. Just get the King to O. K. your nomination
+and y'u'll win in a walk."
+
+"My friend, y'u better mind your own business. Far as I can make out y'u
+got troubles enough of your own," retorted the nettled sheriff.
+
+"Y'u don't need to tell me that, Tom Burns' Y'u ain't a man--nothing but
+a stuffed skin worked by a string. When that miscreant Bannister pulls
+the string y'u jump. He's jerked it now, so y'u're taking us back to
+him. I can prove that coyote Morgan shot at me first, but that doesn't
+cut any ice with you."
+
+"What made you light out so sudden, then?" demanded the aggrieved Burns
+triumphantly.
+
+"Because I knew you. That's a plenty good reason. I'm not asking
+anything for myself. All I say is that my friend isn't fit to travel
+yet. Let him stay here under a guard till he is."
+
+"He was fit enough to get here. By thunder, he's fit to go back!"
+
+"Y'u've said enough, Mac," broke in Bannister. "It's awfully good of y'u
+to speak for me, but I would rather see it out with you to a finish. I
+don't want any favors from this yellow dog of my cousin."
+
+The "yellow dog" set his teeth and swore vindictively behind them. He
+was already imagining an hour when these insolent prisoners of his would
+sing another tune.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 18. PLAYING FOR TIME
+
+"They've got 'em. Caught them on Dry Creek, just below Green Forks."
+
+Helen Messiter, just finishing her breakfast at the hotel preparatory to
+leaving in her machine for the ranch, laid down her knife and fork and
+looked with dilated eyes at Denver, who had broken in with the news.
+
+"Are you sure?" The color had washed from her face and left her very
+white, but she fronted the situation quietly without hysterics or fuss
+of any kind.
+
+"Yes, ma'am. They're bringing them in now to jail. Watch out and y'u'll
+see them pass here in a few minutes. Seems that Bannister's wound opened
+up on him and he couldn't go any farther. Course Mac wouldn't leave
+him. Sheriff Burns and his posse dropped in on them and had them covered
+before Mac could chirp."
+
+"You are sure this man--this desperado Bannister--will do nothing till
+night?"
+
+"Not the way I figure it. He'll have the jail watched all day. But he's
+got to work the town up to a lynching. I expect the bars will be free
+for all to-day. By night the worst part of this town will be ready for
+anything. The rest of the citizens are going to sit down and do nothing
+just because it is Bannister."
+
+"But it isn't Bannister--not the Bannister they think it is."
+
+He shook his head. "No use, ma'am. I've talked till my throat aches, but
+it don't do a mite of good. Nobody believes a word of what I say. Y'u
+see, we ain't got any proof."
+
+"Proof! We have enough, God knows! didn't this villain--this outlaw that
+calls himself Jack Holloway--attack and try to murder him?"
+
+"That's what we believe, but the report out is that one of us punchers
+shot him up for crossing the dead-line."
+
+"Didn't this fellow hold up the ranch and try to take Ned Bannister away
+with him?"
+
+"Yes, ma'am. But that doesn't look good to most people. They say he had
+his friends come to take him away so y'u wouldn't hold him and let us
+boys get him. This cousin business is a fairy tale the way they size it
+up. How come this cousin to let him go if he held up the ranch to put
+the sick man out of business? No, miss. This country has made up its
+mind that your friend is the original Ned Bannister. My opinion is that
+nothing on earth can save him."
+
+"I don't want your opinion. I'm going to save him, I tell you; and you
+are going to help. Are his friends nothing but a bunch of quitters?" she
+cried, with sparkling eyes.
+
+"I didn't know I was such a great friend of his," answered the cowboy
+sulkily.
+
+"You're a friend of Jim McWilliams, aren't you? Are you going to sneak
+away and let these curs hang him?"
+
+Denver flushed. "Y'u're dead right, Miss Helen. I guess I'll see it out
+with you. What's the orders?"
+
+"I want you to help me organize a defense. Get all Mac's friends stirred
+up to make a fight for him. Bring as many of them in to see me during
+the day as you can. If you see any of the rest of the Lazy D boys send
+them in to me for instructions. Report yourself every hour to me. And
+make sure that at least three of your friends that you can trust are
+hanging round the jail all day so as to be ready in case any attempt is
+made to storm it before dark."
+
+"I'll see to it." Denver hung on his heel a moment before leaving. "It's
+only square to tell y'u, Miss Helen, that this means war here tonight.
+These streets are going to run with blood if we try to save them."
+
+"I'm taking that responsibility," she told him curtly; but a moment
+later she added gently: "I have a plan, my friend, that may stop this
+outrage yet. But you must do your best for me." She smiled sadly at him.
+"You're my foreman, to-day, you know."
+
+"I'm going to do my level best, y'u may tie to that," he told her
+earnestly.
+
+"I know you will." And their fingers touched for an instant.
+
+Through a window the girl could see a crowd pouring down the street
+toward the hotel. She flew up the stairs and out upon the second-story
+piazza that looked down upon the road.
+
+From her point of vantage she easily picked them out--the two unarmed
+men riding with their hands tied behind their backs, encircled by a
+dozen riders armed to the teeth. Bannister's hat had apparently fallen
+off farther down the street, for the man beside him was dusting it. The
+wounded prisoner looked about him without fear, but it was plain he was
+near the limit of endurance. He was pale as a sheet, and his fair curls
+clung moistly to his damp forehead.
+
+McWilliams caught sight of her first, and she could see him turn and
+say a word to his comrade. Bannister looked up, caught sight of her, and
+smiled. That smile, so pale and wan, went to her heart like a knife. But
+the message of her eyes was hope. They told the prisoners silently to be
+of good cheer, that at least they were not deserted to their fate.
+
+"What is it about--the crowd?" Nora asked of her mistress as the latter
+was returning to the head of the stairs.
+
+In as few words as she could Helen told her, repressing sharply the
+tears the girl began to shed. "This is not the time to weep--not yet.
+We must save them. You can do your part. Mr. Bannister is wounded. Get
+a doctor over the telephone and see that he attends him at the prison.
+Don't leave the 'phone until you have got one to promise to go
+immediately."
+
+"Yes, miss. Is there anything else?"
+
+"Ask the doctor to call you up from the prison and tell you how Mr.
+Bannister is. Make it plain to him that he is to give up his other
+practice, if necessary, and is to keep us informed through the day about
+his patient's condition. I will be responsible for his bill."
+
+Helen herself hurried to the telegraph office at the depot. She wrote
+out a long dispatch and handed it to the operator. "Send this at once
+please."
+
+He was one of those supercilious young idiots that make the most of such
+small power as ever drifts down to them. Taking the message, he tossed
+it on the table. "I'll send it when I get time."
+
+"You'll send it now."
+
+"What--what's that?"
+
+Her steady eyes caught and held his shifting ones. "I say you are going
+to send it now--this very minute."
+
+"I guess not. The line's busy," he bluffed.
+
+"If you don't begin sending that message this minute I'll make it my
+business to see that you lose your position," she told him calmly.
+
+He snatched up the paper from the place where he had tossed it. "Oh,
+well, if it's so darned important," he-conceded ungraciously.
+
+She stood quietly above him while he sent the telegram, even though he
+contrived to make every moment of her stay an unvoiced insult. Her
+wire was to the wife of the Governor of the State. They had been close
+friends at school, and the latter had been urging Helen to pay a visit
+to Cheyenne. The message she sent was as follows:
+
+Battle imminent between outlaws and cattlemen here. Bloodshed certain
+to-night. My foreman last night killed in self-defense a desperado.
+Bannister's gang, in league with town authorities, mean to lynch him
+and one of my other friends after dark this evening. Sheriff will do
+nothing. Can your husband send soldiers immediately? Wire answer.
+
+The operator looked up sullenly after his fingers had finished the last
+tap. "Well?"
+
+"Just one thing more," Helen told him. "You understand the rules of the
+company about secrecy. Nobody you knows I am sending this message. If by
+any chance it should leak out, I shall know through whom. If you want to
+hold your position, you will keep quiet."
+
+"I know my business," he growled. Nevertheless, she had spoken in
+season, for he had had it in his mind to give a tip where he knew
+it would be understood to hasten the jail delivery and accompanying
+lynching.
+
+When she returned to the hotel? Helen found Missou waiting for her.
+She immediately sent him back to the office, and told him to wait there
+until the answer was received. "I'll send one of the boys up to relieve
+you so that you may come with the telegram as soon as it arrives. I
+want the operator watched all day. Oh, here's Jim Henson! Denver has
+explained the situation to you, I presume. I want you to go up to the
+telegraph office and stay there all day. Go to lunch with the operator
+when he goes. Don't let him talk privately to anybody, not even for a
+few seconds. I don't want you to seem to have him under guard before
+outsiders, but let him know it very plainly. He is not to mention a wire
+I sent or the answer to it--not to anybody, Jim. Is that plain?"
+
+"Y'u bet! He's a clam, all right, till the order is countermanded." And
+the young man departed with a cheerful grin that assured Helen she had
+nothing to fear from official leaks.
+
+Nora, from answering a telephone call, came to report to the general
+in charge. "The doctor says that he has looked after Mr. Bannister, and
+there is no immediate danger. If he keeps quiet for a few days he ought
+to do well. Mr. McWilliams sent a message by him to say that we aren't
+to worry about him. He said he would--would--rope a heap of cows on the
+Lazy D yet."
+
+Nora, bursting into tears, flung herself into Helen's arms. "They are
+going to kill him. I know they are, and--and 'twas only yesterday,
+ma'am, I told him not to--to get gay, the poor boy. When he tried
+to--to--" She broke down and sobbed.
+
+Her mistress smiled in spite of herself, though she was bitterly aware
+that even Nora's grief was only superficially ludicrous.
+
+"We're going to save him, Nora, if we can. There's hope while there's
+life. You see, Mac himself is full of courage. HE hasn't given up. We
+must keep up our courage, too."
+
+"Yes, ma'am, but this is the first gentleman friend I ever had hanged,
+and--" She broke off, sobbing, leaving the rest as a guess.
+
+Helen filled it out aloud. "And you were going to say that you care more
+for him than any of the others. Well, you must stop coquetting and tell
+him so when we have saved him."
+
+"Yes, ma'am," agreed Nora, very repentant for the moment of the fact
+that it was her nature to play with the hearts of those of the
+male persuasion. Immediately she added: "He was THAT kind, ma'am,
+tender-hearted."
+
+Helen, whose own heart was breaking, continued to soothe her. "Don't say
+WAS, child. You are to be brave, and not think of him that way."
+
+"Yes, ma'am. He told me he was going to buy cows with the thousand
+dollars he won yesterday. I knew he meant--"
+
+"Yes, of course. It's a cowboy's way of saying that he means to start
+housekeeping. Have you the telegram, Missou?" For that young man was
+standing in the doorway.
+
+He handed her the yellow slip. She ripped open the envelope and read:
+Company B en route. Railroad connections uncertain Postpone crisis long
+as possible. May reach Gimlet Butte by ten-thirty.
+
+Her first thought was of unspeakable relief. The militia was going to
+take a hand. The boys in khaki would come marching down the street, and
+everything would be all right. But hard on the heels of her instinctive
+gladness trod the sober second thought. Ten-thirty at best, and perhaps
+later! Would they wait that long, or would they do their cowardly work
+as soon as night fell She must contrive to delay them till the train
+drew in. She must play for those two lives with all her woman's wit;
+must match the outlaw's sinister cunning and fool him into delay. She
+knew he would come if she sent for him. But how long could she keep
+him? As long as he was amused at her agony, as long as his pleasure in
+tormenting her was greater than his impatience to be at his ruffianly
+work. Oh, if she ever needed all her power it would be to-night.
+
+Throughout the day she continued to receive hourly reports from Denver,
+who always brought with him four or five honest cowpunchers from
+up-country to listen to the strange tale she unfolded to them. It was,
+of course, in part, the spell of her sweet personality, of that shy
+appeal she made to the manhood in them; but of those who came, nearly
+all believed, for the time at least, and aligned themselves on her side
+in the struggle that was impending. Some of these were swayed from their
+allegiance in the course of the day, but a few she knew would remain
+true.
+
+Meanwhile, all through the day, the enemy was busily at work. As Denver
+had predicted, free liquor was served to all who would drink. The
+town and its guests were started on a grand debauch that was to end in
+violence that might shock their sober intelligence. Everywhere poisoned
+whispers were being flung broadcast against the two men waiting in the
+jail for what the night would bring forth.
+
+Dusk fell on a town crazed by bad whiskey and evil report. The deeds of
+Bannister were hashed and rehashed at every bar, and nobody related them
+with more ironic gusto than the man who called himself Jack Holloway.
+There were people in town who knew his real name and character, but of
+these the majority were either in alliance with him or dared not voice
+their knowledge. Only Miss Messiter and her punchers told the truth, and
+their words were blown away like chaff.
+
+From the first moment of darkness Helen had the outlaw leader dogged by
+two of her men. Since neither of these were her own riders this was
+done without suspicion. At intervals of every quarter of an hour they
+reported to her in turn. Bannister was beginning to drink heavily, and
+she did not want to cut short his dissipation by a single minute. Yet
+she had to make sure of getting his attention before he went too far.
+
+It was close to nine when she sent him a note, not daring to delay a
+minute longer. For the reports of her men were all to the same effect,
+that the crisis would not now be long postponed. Bannister, or Holloway,
+as he chose to call himself, was at the bar with his lieutenants in evil
+when the note reached him. He read it with a satisfaction he could not
+conceal. So! He had brought her already to her knees. Before he was
+through with her she should grovel in the dust before him.
+
+"I'll be back in a few minutes. Do nothing till I return," he ordered,
+and went jingling away to the Elk House.
+
+The young woman's anxiety was pitiable, but she repressed it sternly
+when she went to meet the man she feared; and never had it been more in
+evidence than in this hour of her greatest torture. Blithely she came
+forward to meet him, eye challenging eye gayly. No hint of her anguish
+escaped into her manner. He read there only coquetry, the eternal sex
+conflict, the winsome defiance of a woman hitherto the virgin mistress
+of all assaults upon her heart's citadel. It was the last thing he had
+expected to see, but it was infinitely more piquant, more intoxicating,
+than desperation. She seemed to give the lie to his impression of her
+love for his cousin; and that, too, delighted his pride.
+
+"You will sit down?"
+
+Carelessly, almost indolently, she put the question, her raised eyebrows
+indicating a chair with perfunctory hospitality. He had not meant to
+sit, had expected only to gloat a few minutes over her despair; but
+this situation called for more deliberation. He had yet to establish the
+mastery his vanity demanded. Therefore he took a chair.
+
+"This is ce'tainly an unexpected honor. Did y'u send for me to explain
+some more about that sufficient understanding between us?" he sneered.
+
+It was a great relief to her to see that, though he had been drinking,
+as she had heard, he was entirely master of himself. Her efforts might
+still be directed to Philip sober.
+
+"I sent for you to congratulate you," she answered, with a smile. "You
+are a bigger man than I thought. You have done what you said you would
+do, and I presume you can very shortly go out of mourning."
+
+He radiated vanity, seemed to visibly expand "Do y'u go in when I go
+out?" he asked brutally.
+
+She laughed lightly. "Hardly. But it does seem as if I'm unlucky in my
+foremen. They all seem to have engagements across the divide."
+
+"I'll get y u another."
+
+"Thank you. I was going to ask as much of you. Can you suggest one now?"
+
+"I'm a right good cattle man myself."
+
+"And--can you stay with me a reasonable time?"
+
+He laughed. "I have no engagements across the Styx, ma'am."
+
+"My other foremen thought they were permanent fixtures here, too."
+
+"We're all liable to mistakes."
+
+"Even you, I suppose."
+
+"I'll sign a lease to give y'u possession of my skill for as long as y'u
+like."
+
+She settled herself comfortably back in an easy chair, as alluring a
+picture of buoyant, radiant youth as he had seen in many a day. "But the
+terms. I am afraid I can't offer you as much as you make at your present
+occupation."
+
+"I could keep that up as a side-line."
+
+"So you could. But if you use my time for your own profit, you ought to
+pay me a royalty on your intake."
+
+His eyes lit with laughter. "I reckon that can be arranged. Any
+percentage you think fair It will all be in the family, anyway."
+
+"I think that is one of the things about which we don't agree," she made
+answer softly, flashing him the proper look of inviting disdain from
+under her silken lashes.
+
+He leaned forward, elbow on the chair-arm and chin in hand. "We'll agree
+about it one of these days."
+
+"Think so?" she returned airily.
+
+"I don't think. I know."
+
+Just an eyebeat her gaze met his, with that hint of shy questioning, of
+puzzled doubt that showed a growing interest. "I wonder," she murmured,
+and recovered herself little laugh.
+
+How she hated her task, and him! She was a singularly honest woman, but
+she must play the siren; must allure this scoundrel to forgetfulness,
+with a hurried and yet elude the very familiarity her manner invited.
+She knew her part, the heartless enticing coquette, compounded half
+of passion and half of selfishness. It was a hateful thing to do, this
+sacrifice of her personal reticence, of the individual abstraction in
+which she wrapped herself as a cloak, in order to hint at a possibility
+of some intimacy of feeling between them. She shrank from it with a
+repugnance hardly to be overcome, but she held herself with an iron will
+and consummate art to the role she had undertaken. Two lives hung on
+her success. She must not forget that. She would not let herself forget
+that--and one of them that of the man she loved.
+
+So, bravely she played her part, repelling always with a hint of
+invitation, denying with the promise in her fascinated eyes of ultimate
+surrender to his ardor. In the zest of the pursuit the minutes slipped
+away unnoticed. Never had a woman seemed to him more subtly elusive, and
+never had he felt more sure of himself. Her charm grew on him, stirred
+his pulses to a faster beat. For it was his favorite sport, and this
+warm, supple young creature, who was to be the victim of his bow and
+arrow, showed herself worthy of his mettle.
+
+The clock downstairs struck the half-hour, and Bannister, reminded of
+what lay before him outside, made a move to go. Her alert eyes had been
+expecting it, and she forestalled him by a change of tactics. Moved
+apparently by impulse, she seated herself on the piano-stool, swept the
+keys for an instant with her fingers, and plunged into the brilliant
+"Carmen" overture. Susceptible as this man was to the influence of
+music, he could not fail to be arrested by so perfect an interpretation
+of his mood. He stood rooted, was carried back again in imagination to
+a great artiste's rendering of that story of fierce passion and aching
+desire so brilliantly enacted under the white sunbeat of a country
+of cloudless skies. Imperceptibly she drifted into other parts of the
+opera. Was it the wild, gypsy seductiveness of _Carmen_ that he felt,
+or, rather, this American girl's allurement? From "Love will like a
+birdling fly" she slipped into the exquisitely graceful snatches of song
+with which _Carmen_ answers the officer's questions. Their rare buoyancy
+marched with his mood, and from them she carried him into the song
+"Over the hill," that is so perfect and romantic an expression of the
+_wanderlust._
+
+How long she could have held him she will never know, for at that
+inopportune time came blundering one of his men into the room with a
+call for his presence to take charge of the situation outside.
+
+"What do y'u want, Bostwick?" he demanded, with curt peremptoriness.
+
+The man whispered in his ear.
+
+"Can't wait any longer, can't they?" snapped his chief. "Y'u tell them
+they'll wait till I give the word. Understand?"
+
+He almost flung the man out of the room, but Helen noticed that she had
+lost him. His interest was perfunctory, and, though he remained a little
+time longer, it was to establish his authority with the men rather than
+to listen to her. Twice he looked at his watch within five minutes.
+
+He rose to go. "There is a little piece of business I have to put
+through. So I'll have to ask y'u to excuse me. I have had a delightful
+hour, and I hate to go." He smiled, and quoted with mock sentimentality:
+
+"The hours I spent with thee, dear heart, Are as a string of pearls to
+me; I count them over, every one apart, My rosary! My rosary!"
+
+"Dear me! One certainly lives and learns. How could I have guessed that,
+with your reputation, you could afford to indulge in a rosary?" she
+mocked.
+
+"Good night." He offered his hand.
+
+"Don't go yet," she coaxed.
+
+He shook his head. "Duty, y'u know."
+
+"Stay only a little longer. Just ten minutes more."
+
+His vanity purred, so softly she stroked it. "Can't. Wish I could. Y'u
+hear how noisy things are getting. I've got to take charge. So-long."
+
+She stood close, looking up at him with a face of seductive appeal.
+
+"Don't go yet. Please!"
+
+The triumph of victory mounted to his head. "I'll come back when I've
+done what I've got to do."
+
+"No, no. Stay a little longer just a little."
+
+"Not a minute, sweetheart."
+
+He bent to kiss her, and a little clenched fist struck his face.
+
+"Don't you dare!" she cried.
+
+The outraged woman in her, curbed all evening with an iron bit, escaped
+from control. Delightedly he laughed. The hot spirit in her pleased him
+mightily. He took her little hands and held them in one of his while he
+smiled down at her. "I guess that kiss will keep, my girl, till I come
+back."
+
+"My God! Are you going to kill your own cousin?"
+
+All her terror, all her detestation and hatred of him, looked haggardly
+out of her unmasked face. His narrowed eyes searched her heart, and his
+countenance grew every second more sinister,
+
+"Y'u have been fooling me all evening, then?"
+
+"Yes, and hating you every minute of the time."
+
+"Y'u dared?" His face was black with rage.
+
+"You would like to kill me. Why don't you?"
+
+"Because I know a better revenge. I'm going out to take it now. After
+your lover is dead, I'll come back and make love to y'u again," he
+sneered.
+
+"Never!" She stood before him like a queen in her lissom, brave, defiant
+youth. "And as for your cousin, you may kill him, but you can't destroy
+his contempt for you. He will die despising you for a coward and a
+scoundrel."
+
+It was true, and he knew it. In his heart he cursed her, while he vainly
+sought some weapon that would strike home through her impervious armor.
+
+"Y'u love him. I'll remember that when I see him kick," he taunted.
+
+"I make you a present of the information. I love him, and I despise you.
+Nothing can change those facts," she retorted whitely.
+
+"Mebbe, but some day y'u'll crawl on your knees to beg my pardon for
+having told me so."
+
+"There is your overweening vanity again," she commented.
+
+"I'm going to break y'u, my beauty, so that y'u'll come running when I
+snap my fingers."
+
+"We'll see."
+
+"And in the meantime I'll go hang your lover." He bowed ironically,
+swung on his jingling heel, and strode out of the room.
+
+She stood there listening to his dying footfalls, then covered her
+face with her hands, as if to press back the dreadful vision her mind
+conjured.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 19. WEST POINT TO THE RESCUE
+
+It was understood that the sheriff should make a perfunctory defense
+against the mob in order to "square" him with the voters at the election
+soon to be held. But the word had been quietly passed that the bullets
+of the prison guards would be fired over the heads of the attackers.
+This assurance lent an added braggadocio to the Dutch courage of the
+lynchers. Many of them who would otherwise have hung back distinguished
+themselves by the enthusiasm which they displayed.
+
+Bannister himself generaled the affair, detailing squads to batter down
+the outer door, to guard every side of the prison, and to overpower the
+sheriff's guard. That official, according to programme, appeared at a
+window and made a little speech, declaring his intention of performing
+his duty at whatever cost. He was hooted down with jeers and laughter,
+and immediately the attack commenced.
+
+The yells of the attackers mingled with the sound of the axe-blows and
+the report of revolvers from inside the building. Among those nearest
+to the door being battered down were Denver and the few men he had with
+him. His plan offered merely a forlorn hope. It was that in the first
+scramble to get in after the way was opened he and his friends might
+push up the stairs in the van, and hold the corridor for as long as they
+could against the furious mob.
+
+It took less than a quarter of an hour to batter down the door, and
+among the first of those who sprang across the threshold were Denver,
+Missou, Frisco and their allies. While others stopped to overpower
+the struggling deputies according to the arranged farce, they hurried
+upstairs and discovered the cell in which their friends were fastened.
+
+Frisco passed a revolver through the grating to McWilliams, and another
+to Bannister. "Haven't got the keys, so I can't let y'u out, old hoss,"
+he told the foreman. "But mebbe y'u won't feel so lonesome with these
+little toys to play with."
+
+Meanwhile Denver, a young giant of seventy-six inches, held the head of
+the stairs, with four stalwart plainsmen back of him. The rush of many
+feet came up pell-mell, and he flung the leaders back on those behind.
+
+"Hold on there. This isn't a free-lunch counter. Don't you see we're
+crowded up here already?"
+
+"What's eating you? Whyfor, can't we come?" growled one of the foremost
+nursing an injured nose.
+
+"I've just explained to you, son, that it's crowded. Folks are prevalent
+enough up here right now. Send up that bunch of keys and we'll bring
+your meat to you fast enough."
+
+"What's that? What's that?" The outlaw chief pushed his way through the
+dense mob at the door and reached the stairway.
+
+"He won't let us up," growled one of them.
+
+"Who won't?" demanded Bannister sharply, and at once came leaping up the
+stairs.
+
+"Nothing doing," drawled Frisco, and tossed him over the railing on to
+the heads of his followers below.
+
+They carried Bannister into the open air, for his head had struck the
+newel-post in his descent. This gave the defense a few minutes respite.
+
+"They're going to come a-shooting next time," remarked Denver. "Just as
+soon as he comes back from bye-low land you'll see things hum."
+
+"Y'u bet," agreed Missou. "We'll last about three minutes when the
+stampede begins."
+
+The scream of an engine pierced the night.
+
+Denver's face lit. "Make it five minutes, Missou, and Mac is safe. At
+least, I'm hoping so awful hard. Miss Helen wired for the militia from
+Sheridan this nothing. Chances are they're on that train. I couldn't
+tell you earlier because she made me promise not to. She was afraid it
+might leak out and get things started sooner."
+
+Weak but furious, the miscreant from the Shoshones returned to the
+attack. "Break in the back door and sneak up behind on those fellows.
+We'll have the men we want inside of fifteen minutes," he promised the
+mob.
+
+"We'll rush them from both sides, and show those guys on the landing
+whether they can stop us," added Bostwick.
+
+Suddenly some one raised the cry, "The soldiers!" Bannister looked up
+the street and swore a vicious oath. Swinging down the road at double
+time came a company of militia in khaki. He was mad with baffled fury,
+but he made good his retreat at once and disappeared promptly into the
+nearest dark alley.
+
+The mob scattered by universal impulse; disintegrated so promptly that
+within five minutes the soldiers held the ground alone, save for the
+officials of the prison and Denver's little band.
+
+A boyish lieutenant lately out of the Point, and just come in to
+a lieutenancy in the militia, was in command. "In time?" he asked
+anxiously, for this was his first independent expedition.
+
+"Y'u bet," chuckled Denver. "We're right glad to see you, and I'll
+bet those boys in the cage ain't regretting your arrival any. Fifteen
+minutes later and you would have been in time to hold the funeral
+services, I reckon."
+
+"Where is Miss Messiter?" asked the young officer.
+
+"She's at the Elk House, colonel. I expect some of us better drift over
+there and tell her it's all right. She's the gamest little woman that
+ever crossed the Wyoming line. Hadn't been for her these boys would have
+been across the divide hours ago. She's a plumb thoroughbred. Wouldn't
+give up an inch. All day she has generaled this thing; played a mighty
+weak hand for a heap more than it was worth. Sand? Seh: she's grit clear
+through, if anybody asks you." And Denver told the story of the
+day, making much of her unflinching courage and nothing of her men's
+readiness to back whatever steps she decided upon.
+
+It was ten minutes past eleven when a smooth young, apple-cheeked lad in
+khaki presented himself before Helen Messiter with a bow never invented
+outside of West Point.
+
+"I am Lieutenant Beecher. Governor Raleigh presents his compliments by
+me, Miss Messiter, and is very glad to be able to put at your service
+such forces as are needed to quiet the town."
+
+"You were in time?" she breathed.
+
+"With about five minutes to spare. I am having the prisoners brought
+here for the night if you do not object. In the morning I shall
+investigate the affair, and take such steps as are necessary. In
+the meantime you may rest assured that there will be no further
+disturbance."
+
+"Thank you I am sure that with you in command everything will now be all
+right, and I am quite of your opinion that the prisoners had better stay
+here for the night. One of them is wounded, and ought to be given the
+best attention. But, of course, you will see to that, lieutenant."
+
+The young man blushed. This was the right kind of appreciation. He
+wished his old classmates at the Point could hear how implicitly this
+sweet girl relied on him.
+
+"Certainly. And now, Miss Messiter, if there is nothing you wish, I
+shall retire for the night. You may sleep with perfect confidence."
+
+"I am sure I may, lieutenant." She gave him a broadside of trusting eyes
+full of admiration. "But perhaps you would like me to see my foreman
+first, just to relieve my mind. And, as you were about to say, his
+friend might be brought in, too, since they are together."
+
+The young man promptly assented, though he had not been aware that he
+was about to say anything of the kind.
+
+They came in together, Bannister supported by McWilliams's arm. The eyes
+of both mistress and maid brimmed over with tears when they saw them.
+Helen dragged forward a chair for the sheepman, and he sank into it.
+From its depths he looked up with his rare, sweet smile.
+
+"I've heard about it," he told her, in a low voice. "I've heard how
+y'u fought for my life all day. There's nothing I can say. I owed y'u
+everything already twice, and now I owe it all over again. Give me a
+lifetime and I couldn't get even."
+
+Helen's swift glance swept over Nora and the foreman. They were in a
+dark alcove, oblivious of anybody else. Also they were in each other's
+arms frankly. For some reason wine flowed into the cream of Helen's
+cheeks.
+
+"Do you have to 'get even'? Among friends is that necessary?" she asked
+shyly.
+
+"I hope not. If it is, I'm sure bankrupt Even my thanks seem to stay at
+home. If y'u hadn't done so much for me, perhaps I could tell y'u how
+much y'u had done But I have no words to say it."
+
+"Then don't," she advised.
+
+"Y'u're the best friend a man ever had. That's all I can say."
+
+"It's enough, since you mean it, even though it isn't true," she
+answered gently.
+
+Their eyes met, fastened for an instant, and by common consent looked
+away.
+
+As it chanced they were close to the window, their shadows reflected on
+the blind. A man, slipping past in the street on horseback, stopped
+at sight of that lighted window, with the moving shadows, in an
+uncontrollable white fury. He slid from the saddle, threw the reins
+over the horse's head to the ground, and slipped his revolver from its
+holster and back to make sure that he could draw it easily. Then he
+passed springily across the road to the hotel and up the stairs. He trod
+lightly, stealthily, and by his very wariness defeated his purpose
+of eluding observation. For a pair of keen eyes from the hotel office
+glimpsed the figure stealing past so noiselessly, and promptly followed
+up the stairway.
+
+"Hope I don't intrude at this happy family gathering."
+
+Helen, who had been pouring a glass of cordial for the spent and wounded
+sheepman, put the glass down on the table and turned at sound of the
+silken, sinister voice. After one glance at the vindictive face, from
+the cold eyes of which hate seemed to smolder, she took an instinctive
+step toward her lover. The cold wave that drenched her heart accompanied
+an assurance that the man in the doorway meant trouble.
+
+His sleek smile arrested her. He was standing with his feet apart, his
+hands clasped lightly behind his back, as natty and as well groomed as
+was his wont.
+
+"Ah, make the most of what ye yet may spend, Before ye, too, into the
+Dust descend; Dust into Dust, and under Dust to lie, Sans Wine, sans
+Song, sans Singer, and--sans End!"
+
+he misquoted, with a sneer; and immediately interrupted his irony to
+give way to one of his sudden blind rages.
+
+With incredible swiftness his right hand moved forward and up, catching
+revolver from scabbard as it rose. But by a fraction of a second his
+purpose had been anticipated. A closed fist shot forward to the salient
+jaw in time to fling the bullets into the ceiling. An arm encircled the
+outlaw's neck, and flung him backward down the stairs. The railing broke
+his fall, and on it his body slid downward, the weapon falling from his
+hand. He pulled himself together at the foot of the stairs, crouched for
+an upward rush, but changed his mind instantly. The young officer who
+had flung him down had him covered with his own six-shooter. He could
+hear footsteps running toward him, and he knew that in a few seconds he
+would be in the hands of the soldiers. Plunging out of the doorway, the
+desperado vaulted to the saddle and drove his spurs home. For a minute
+hoofs pounded on the hard, white road. Then the night swallowed him and
+the echo of his disappearance.
+
+"That was Bannister of the Shoshones and the Tetons," the girl's white
+lips pronounced to Lieutenant Beecher.
+
+"And I let him get away from me," the disappointed lad groaned. "Why, I
+had him right in my hands. I could have throttled him as easy. But how
+was I to know he would have nerve enough to come rushing into a hotel
+full of soldiers hunting him?"
+
+"Y'u have a very persistent cousin, Mr. Bannister," said McWilliams,
+coming forward from the alcove with shining eyes. "And I must say he's
+game. Did y'u ever hear the like? Come butting in here as cool as if he
+hadn't a thing to do but sing out orders like he was in his own home. He
+was that easy."
+
+"It seems to me that a little of the praise is due Lieutenant Beecher.
+If he hadn't dealt so competently with the situation murder would have
+been done. Did you learn your boxing at the Academy, Lieutenant?" Helen
+asked, trying to treat the situation lightly in spite of her hammering
+heart.
+
+"I was the champion middleweight of our class," Beecher could not help
+saying boyishly, with another of his blushes.
+
+"I can easily believe it," returned Helen.
+
+"I wish y'u would teach me how to double up a man so prompt and
+immediate," said the admiring foreman.
+
+"I expect I'm under particular obligations to that straight right to
+the chin, Lieutenant," chimed in the sheepman. "The fact is that I don't
+seem to be able to get out anything except thanks these days. I ought
+to send my cousin a letter thanking him for giving me a chance to owe so
+much kindness to so many people."
+
+"Your cousin?" repeated the uncomprehending officer.
+
+"This desperado, Bannister, is my cousin," answered the sheepman
+gravely.
+
+"But if he was your cousin, why should he want--to kill you?"
+
+"That's a long story, Lieutenant. Will y'u hear it now?"
+
+"If you feel strong enough to tell it."
+
+"Oh, I'm strong enough." He glanced at Helen. "Perhaps we had better not
+tire Miss Messiter with it. If y'u'll come to my room--"
+
+"I should like, above all things, to hear it again," interrupted that
+young woman promptly.
+
+For the man she loved had just come back to her from the brink of the
+grave and she was still reluctant to let him out of her sight.
+
+So Ned Bannister told his story once more, and out of the alcove came
+the happy foreman and Nora to listen to the tale. While he told it his
+sweetheart's contented eyes were on him. The excitement of the night
+burnt pleasantly in her veins, for out of the nettle danger she had
+plucked safety for her sheepman.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 20. TWO CASES OF DISCIPLINE
+
+The Fourth of July celebration at Gimlet Butte had been a thing of the
+past for four days and the Lazy D had fallen back into the routine of
+ranch life. The riders were discussing supper and the continued absence
+of Reddy when that young man drew back the flap and joined them.
+
+He stood near the doorway and grinned with embarrassed guilt at the
+assembled company.
+
+"I reckon I got too much Fourth of July at Gimlet Butte, boys. That's
+how come I to be onpunctual getting back."
+
+There was a long silence, during which those at the table looked at him
+with an expressionless gravity that did not seem to veil an unduly warm
+welcome.
+
+"Hello, Mac! Hello, boys! I just got back," he further contributed.
+
+Without comment the Lazy D resumed supper. Apparently it had not
+missed Reddy or noticed his return. Casual conversation was picked up
+cheerfully. The return of the prodigal was quite ignored.
+
+"Then that blamed cow gits its back up and makes a bee-line for Rogers.
+The old man hikes for his pony and--"
+
+"Seems good to git my legs under the old table again," interrupted Reddy
+with cheerful unease.
+
+"--loses by about half a second," continued Missou. "If Doc hadn't roped
+its hind laig--"
+
+"Have some cigars, boys. I brought a box back with me." Reddy tossed a
+handful on the table, where they continued to lie unnoticed.
+
+"--there's no telling what would have happened. As 'twas the old man got
+off with a--"
+
+"Y'u bet, they're good cigars all right," broke in the propitiatory
+Reddy.
+
+The interrupted anecdote went on to a finish and the men trooped out and
+left the prodigal alone with his hash. When that young man reached the
+bunkhouse Frisco was indulging in a reminiscence. Reddy got only the
+last of it, but that did not contribute to his serenity.
+
+"Yep! When I was working on the Silver Dollar. Must a-been three years
+ago, I reckon, when Jerry Miller got that chapping."
+
+"Threw down the outfit in a row they had with the Lafferty crowd, didn't
+he?" asked Denver.
+
+Frisco nodded.
+
+Mac got up, glanced round, and reached for his hat. "I reckon I'll have
+to be going," he said, and forthright departed.
+
+Reddy reached for HIS hat and rose. "I got to go and have a talk with
+Mac," he explained.
+
+Denver got to the door first and his big frame filled it.
+
+"Don't hurry, Reddy. It ain't polite to rush away right after dinner.
+Besides, Mac will be here all day. He ain't starting for New York."
+
+"Y'u're gittin' blamed particular. Mac he went right out."
+
+"But Mac didn't have a most particular engagement with the boys. There's
+a difference."
+
+"Why, I ain't got--" Reddy paused and looked around helplessly.
+
+"Gents, I move y'u that it be the horse sense of the Lazy D that our
+friend Mr. Reddy Reeves be given gratis one chapping immediately if not
+sooner. The reason for which same being that he played a lowdown trick
+on the outfit whose bread he was eating."
+
+"Oh, quit your foolin', boys," besought the victim anxiously.
+
+"And that Denver, being some able-bodied and having a good reach, be
+requested to deliver same to the gent needing it," concluded Missou.
+
+Reddy backed in alarm to the wall. "Y'u boys don't want to get gay with
+me. Y'u can't monkey with--"
+
+Motion carried unanimously.
+
+Just as Reddy whipped out his revolver Denver's long leg shot out
+and his foot caught the wrist behind the weapon. When Reddy next took
+cognizance of his surroundings he was serving as a mattress for the
+anatomy of three stalwart riders. He was gently deposited face down on
+his bunk with a one-hundred-eighty-pound live peg at the end of each arm
+and leg.
+
+"All ready, Denver," announced Frisco from the end of the left foot.
+
+Denver selected a pair of plain leather chaps with care and proceeded to
+business. What he had to do he did with energy. It is safe to say
+that at least one of those present can still vividly remember this and
+testify to his thoroughness.
+
+Mac drifted in after the disciplining. As foreman it was fitting that
+he should be discreetly ignorant of what had occurred, but he could not
+help saying:
+
+"That y'u I heard singing, Reddy? Seems to me y'u had ought to take
+that voice into grand opera. The way y'u straddle them high notes is
+a caution for fair. What was it y'u was singing? Sounded like 'Would I
+were far from here, love.'"
+
+"Y'u go to hell," choked Reddy, rushing past him from the bunkhouse.
+
+McWilliams looked round innocently. "I judge some of y'u boys must
+a-been teasing Reddy from his manner. Seemed like he didn't want to sit
+down and talk."
+
+"I shouldn't wonder but he'll hold his conversations standing for a day
+or two," returned Missou gravely.
+
+At the end of the laugh that greeted this Mac replied:
+
+"Well, y'u boys want to be gentle with him." "He's so plumb tender now
+that I reckon he'll get along without any more treatment in that line
+from us," drawled Frisco.
+
+Mac departed laughing. He had an engagement that recurred daily in the
+dusk of the evening, and he was always careful to be on time. The other
+party to the engagement met him at the kitchen door and fell with him
+into the trail that led to Lee Ming's laundry.
+
+"What made you late?" she asked.
+
+"I'm not late, honey. I seem late because you're so anxious," he
+explained.
+
+"I'm not," protested Nora indignantly. "If you think you're the only man
+on the place, Jim McWilliams."
+
+"Sho! Hold your hawsses a minute, Nora, darling. A spinster like y'u--"
+
+"You think you're awful funny--writing in my autograph album that a
+spinster's best friend is her powder box. I like Mr. Halliday's ways
+better. He's a perfect gentleman."
+
+"I ain't got a word to say against Denver, even if he did write in your
+book,
+
+ "'Sugar is sweet,
+ The sky is blue,
+ Grass is green
+ And so are you.'
+
+I reckon, being a perfect gentleman, he meant--"
+
+"You know very well you wrote that in yourself and pretended it was Mr.
+Halliday, signing his name and everything. It wasn't a bit nice of you."
+
+"Now do I look like a forger?" he wanted to know with innocence on his
+cherubic face.
+
+"Anyway you know it was mean. Mr. Halliday wouldn't do such a thing. You
+take your arm down and keep it where it belongs, Mr. McWilliams."
+
+"That ain't my name, Nora, darling, and I'd like to know where my arm
+belongs if it isn't round the prettiest girl in Wyoming. What's the use
+of being engaged if--"
+
+"I'm not sure I'm going to stay engaged to you," announced the young
+woman coolly, walking at the opposite edge of the path from him.
+
+"Now that ain't any way to talk."
+
+"You needn't lecture me. I'm not your wife and I don't think I'm going
+to be," cut in Nora, whose temper was ruffled on account of having had
+to wait for him as well as for other reasons.
+
+"Y'u surely wouldn't make me sue y'u for breach of promise, would y'u?"
+he demanded, with a burlesque of anxiety that was the final straw.
+
+Nora turned on her heel and headed for the house.
+
+"Now don't y'u get mad at me, honey. I was only joking," he explained as
+he pursued her.
+
+"You think you can laugh at me all you please. I'll show you that you
+can't," she informed him icily.
+
+"Sho! I wasn't laughing at y'u. What tickled me--"
+
+"I'm not interested in your amusement, Mr. McWilliams."
+
+"What's the use of flying out about a little thing like that? Honest,
+I don't even know what you're mad at me for," the perplexed foreman
+averred.
+
+"I'm not mad at you, as you call it. I'm simply disgusted."
+
+And with a final "Good night" flung haughtily over her shoulder Miss
+Nora Darling disappeared into the house.
+
+Mac took off his hat and gazed at the door that had been closed in his
+face. He scratched his puzzled poll in vain.
+
+"I ce'tainly got mine good and straight just like Reddy got his. But
+what in time was it all about? And me thinkin' I was a graduate in the
+study of the ladies. I reckon I never did get jarred up so. It's plumb
+discouraging."
+
+If he could have caught a glimpse of Nora at that moment, lying on her
+bed and crying as if her heart would break, Mac might have found the
+situation less hopeless.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 21. THE SIGNAL LIGHTS
+
+In a little hill-rift about a mile back of the Lazy D Ranch was a
+deserted miner's cabin.
+
+The hut sat on the edge of a bluff that commanded a view of the
+buildings below, while at the same time the pines that surrounded it
+screened the shack from any casual observation. A thin curl of smoke was
+rising from the mud chimney, and inside the cabin two men lounged before
+the open fire.
+
+"It's his move, and he is going to make it soon. Every night I look
+for him to drop down on the ranch. His hate's kind of volcanic, Mr. Ned
+Bannister's is, and it's bound to bubble over mighty sudden one of these
+days," said the younger of the two, rising and stretching himself.
+
+"It did bubble over some when he drove two thousand of my sheep over the
+bluff and killed the whole outfit," suggested the namesake of the man
+mentioned.
+
+"Yes, I reckon that's some irritating," agreed McWilliams. "But if I
+know him, he isn't going to be content with sheep so long as he can take
+it out of a real live man."
+
+"Or woman," suggested the sheepman.
+
+"Or woman," agreed the other. "Especially when he thinks he can cut y'u
+deeper by striking at her. If he doesn't raid the Lazy D one of these
+nights, I'm a blamed poor prophet."
+
+Bannister nodded agreement. "He's near the end of his rope. He could
+see that if he were blind. When we captured Bostwick and they got a
+confession out of him, that started the landslide against him. It began
+to be noised abroad that the government was going to wipe him out. Folks
+began to lose their terror of him, and after that his whole outfit began
+to want to turn State's evidence. He isn't sure of one of them now;
+can't tell when he will be shot in the back by one of his own scoundrels
+for that two thousand dollars reward."
+
+The foreman strolled negligently to the door. His eyes drifted
+indolently down into the valley, and immediately sparkled with
+excitement.
+
+"The signal's out, Bann," he exclaimed. "It's in your window."
+
+The sheepman leaped to his feet and strode to the door. Down in the
+valley a light was gleaming in a window. Even while he looked another
+light appeared in a second window.
+
+"She wants us both," cried the foreman, running to the little corral
+back of the house.
+
+He presently reappeared with two horses, both saddled, and they took the
+downward trail at once.
+
+"If Miss Helen can keep him in play till we arrive," murmured Mac
+anxiously.
+
+"She can if he gives her a chance, and I think he will. There's a kind
+of cat instinct in him to play with his prey."
+
+"Yes, but he missed his kill last time by letting her fool him. That's
+what I'm afraid of' that he won't wait."
+
+They had reached lower ground now, and could put their ponies at a
+pounding gallop that ate up the trail fast. As they approached the
+houses, both men drew rein and looked carefully to their weapons. Then
+they slid from the saddles and slipped noiselessly forward.
+
+What the foreman had said was exactly true. Helen Messiter did want them
+both, and she wanted them very much indeed.
+
+After supper she had been dreamily playing over to herself one of
+Chopin's waltzes, when she became aware, by some instinct, that she was
+not alone in the room. There had been no least sound, no slightest stir
+to betray an alien presence. Yet that some one was in the room she knew,
+and by some subtle sixth sense could even put a name to the intruder.
+
+Without turning she called over her shoulder: "Shall I finish the
+waltz?" No faintest tremor in the clear, sweet voice betrayed the racing
+heart.
+
+"Y'u're a cool hand, my friend," came his ready answer. "But I think
+we'll dispense with the music. I had enough last time to serve me for
+twice."
+
+She laughed as she swung on the stool, with that musical scorn which
+both allured and maddened. "I did rather do you that time," she allowed.
+
+"This is the return match. You won then. I win now," he told her, with a
+look that chilled.
+
+"Indeed! But isn't that rather discounting the future?"
+
+"Only the immediate future. Y'u're mine, my beauty, and I mean to take
+y'u with me."
+
+Just a disdainful sweep of her eyes she gave him as she rose from the
+piano-stool and rearranged the lamps. "You mean so much that never comes
+to pass, Mr. Bannister. The road to the nether regions is paved with
+good intentions, we are given to understand. Not that yours can by any
+stretch of imagination be called 'good intentions.'"
+
+"Contrariwise, then, perhaps the road to heaven may be paved with evil
+intentions. Since y'u travel the road with me, wherever it may lead, it
+were but gallant to hope so."
+
+He took three sharp steps toward her and stood looking down in her face,
+her sweet slenderness so close to him that the perfume mounted to his
+brain. Surely no maiden had ever been more desirable than this one, who
+held him in such contemptuous estimation that only her steady eyes
+moved at his approach. These held to his and defied him, while she stood
+leaning motionless against the table with such strong and supple grace.
+She knew what he meant to do, hated him for it, and would not give him
+the satisfaction of flying an inch from him or struggling with him.
+
+"Your eyes are pools of splendor. That's right. Make them flash fire.
+I love to see such spirit, since it offers a more enticing pleasure
+in breaking," he told her, with an admiration half ironic but wholly
+genuine. "Pools of splendor, my beauty! Therefore I salute them."
+
+At the touch of his lips upon her eyelids a shiver ran through her, but
+still she made no movement, was cold to him as marble. "You coward!" she
+said softly, with an infinite contempt.
+
+"Your lips," he continued to catalogue, "are ripe as fresh flesh of
+Southern fruit. No cupid ever possessed so adorable a mouth. A worshiper
+of Eros I, as now I prove."
+
+This time it was the mouth he kissed, the while her unconquered spirit
+looked out of the brave eyes, and fain would have murdered him. In turn
+he kissed her cold cheeks, the tip of one of her little ears, the small,
+clenched fist with which she longed to strike him.
+
+"Are you quite through?"
+
+"For the present, and now, having put the seal of my ownership on her
+more obvious charms, I'll take my bride home."
+
+"I would die first."
+
+"Nay, you'll die later, Madam Bannister, but not for many years, I
+hope," he told her, with a theatrical bow.
+
+"Do you think me so weak a thing as your words imply?"
+
+"Rather so strong that the glory of overcoming y'u fills me with joy.
+Believe me, madam, though your master I am not less your slave," he
+mocked.
+
+"You are neither my master nor my slave, but a thing I detest," she
+said, in a low voice that carried extraordinary intensity.
+
+"And obey," he added, suavely. "Come, madam, to horse, for our
+honeymoon."
+
+"I tell you I shall not go."
+
+"Then, in faith, we'll re-enact a modern edition of 'The Taming of the
+Shrew.' Y'u'll find me, sweet, as apt at the part as old Petruchio." He
+paced complacently up the room and back, and quoted glibly:
+
+"And thus I'll curb her mad and headstrong humor. He that knows better
+how to tame a shrew, Now let him, speak; 'tis charity to show."
+
+"Would you take me against my will?"
+
+"Y'u have said it. What's your will to me? What I want I take. And I
+sure want my beautiful shrew." His half-shuttered eyes gloated on her as
+he rattled off a couple more lines from the play he had mentioned.
+
+"Kate, like the hazel-twig, Is straight and slender, and as brown in hue
+As hazel-nuts, and sweeter than the kernels."
+
+She let a swift glance travel anxiously to the door. "You are in a very
+poetical mood to-day."
+
+"As befits a bridegroom, my own." He stepped lightly to the window and
+tapped twice on the pane. "A signal to bring the horses round. If y'u
+have any preparations to make, any trousseau to prepare, y'u better set
+that girl of yours to work."
+
+"I have no preparations to make."
+
+"Coming to me simply as y'u are? Good! We'll lead the simple life."
+
+Nora, as it chanced, knocked and entered at his moment. The sight of
+her vivid good looks truck him for the first time. At sight of him
+she stopped, gazing with parted lips, a double row of pearls shining
+through.
+
+He turned swiftly to the mistress. "Y'u ought not to be alone there
+among so many men. It wouldn't be proper. We'll take the girl along with
+us."
+
+"Where?" Nora's parted lips emitted.
+
+"To Arden, my dear." He interrupted himself to look at his watch. "I
+wonder why that fellow doesn't come with the horses. They should pass
+this window."
+
+Bannister, standing jauntily with his feet astride as he looked out
+of the window, heard someone enter the room. "Did y'u bring round the
+horses?" he snapped, without looking round.
+
+"NO, WE ALLOWED THEY WOULDN'T BE NEEDED."
+
+At sound of the slow drawl the outlaw wheeled like a flash, his hand
+traveling to the hilt of the revolver that hung on his hip. But he was
+too late. Already two revolvers covered him, and he knew that both his
+cousin and McWilliams were dead shots. He flashed one venomous look at
+the mistress of the ranch.
+
+"Y'u fooled me again. That lamp business was a signal, and I was too
+thick-haided to see it. My compliments to y'u, Miss Messiter."
+
+"Y'u are under arrest," announced his cousin.
+
+"Y'u don't say." His voice was full of sarcastic admiration. "And you
+done it with your little gun! My, what a wonder y'u are!"
+
+"Take your hand from the butt of that gun. Y'u better relieve him of
+it, Mac. He's got such a restless disposition he might commit suicide by
+reaching for it."
+
+"What do y'u think you're going to do with me now y'u have got me,
+Cousin Ned?"
+
+"We're going to turn y'u over to the United States Government."
+
+"Guess again. I have a thing, or two to say to that."
+
+"You're going to Gimlet Butte with us, alive or dead."
+
+The outlaw intentionally misunderstood. "If I've got to take y'u, then
+we'll say y'u go dead rather than alive."
+
+"He was going to take Nora and me with him," Helen explained to her
+friends.
+
+Instantly the man swung round on her. "But now I've changed my mind,
+ma'am. I'm going to take my cousin with me instead of y'u ladies."
+
+Helen caught his meaning first, and flashed it whitely to her lover. It
+dawned on him more slowly.
+
+"I see y'u remember, Miss Messiter," he continued, with a cruel, silken
+laugh. "He gave me his parole to go with me whenever I said the word.
+I'm saying it now." He sat down astride a chair, put his chin on the
+back cross-bar, and grinned malevolently from one to another.
+
+"What's come over this happy family? It don't look so joyous all of a
+sudden. Y'u don't need to worry, ma'am, I'll send him back to y'u all
+right--alive or dead. With his shield or on it, y'u know. Ha! ha!"
+
+"You will not go with him?" It was wrung from Helen as a low cry, and
+struck her lover's heart.
+
+"I must," he answered. "I gave him my word, y'u remember."
+
+"But why keep it? You know what he is, how absolutely devoid of honor."
+
+"That is not quite the question, is it?" he smiled.
+
+"Would he keep his word to you?"
+
+"Not if a lie would do as well. But that isn't the point, either."
+
+"It's quixotic--foolish--worse than that--ridiculous," she implored.
+
+"Perhaps, but the fact remains that I am pledged."
+
+ "'I could not love thee, dear, so much
+ Loved I not honor more,'"
+
+murmured the villain in the chair, apparently to the ceiling. "Dear Ned,
+he always was the soul of honor. I'll have those lines carved on his
+tombstone."
+
+"You see! He is already bragging that he means to kill you," said the
+girl.
+
+"I shall go armed," the sheepman answered.
+
+"Yes, but he will take you into the mountain fastnesses, where the men
+that serve him will do his bidding. What is one man among so many?"
+
+"Two men, ma'am," corrected the foreman.
+
+"What's that?" The outlaw broke off the snatch of opera he was singing
+to slew his head round at McWilliams.
+
+"I said two. Any objections, seh?"
+
+"Yes. That wasn't in the contract."
+
+"We're giving y'u surplusage, that's all. Y'u wanted one of us, and y'u
+get two. We don't charge anything for the extra weight," grinned Mac.
+
+"Oh, Mac, will you go with him?" cried Helen, with shining eyes.
+
+"Those are my present intentions, Miss Helen," laughed her foreman.
+
+Whereat Nora emerged from the background and flung herself on him. "Y'u
+can't go, Jim! I won't have you go!" she cried.
+
+The young man blushed a beautiful pink, and accepted gladly this overt
+evidence of a reconciliation. "It's all right, honey. Don't y'u think
+two big, grown-up men are good to handle that scalawag? Sho! Don't y'u
+worry."
+
+"Miss Nora can come, too, if she likes," suggested he of the Shoshones.
+"Looks like we would have quite a party. Won't y'u join us, too,
+Miss Messiter, according to the original plan?" he said, extending an
+ironical invitation.
+
+"I think we had better cut it down to me alone. We'll not burden your
+hospitality, sir," said the sheepman.
+
+"No, sir, I'm in on this. Whyfor can't I go?" demanded Jim.
+
+Bannister, the outlaw, eyed him unpleasantly. "Y'u certainly can so far
+as I am concerned. I owe y'u one, too, Mr. McWilliams. Only if y'u come
+of your own free will, as y'u are surely welcome to do, don't holler if
+y'u're not so welcome to leave whenever y'u take a notion."
+
+"I'll try and look out for that. It's settled, then, that we ride
+together. When do y'u want to start?"
+
+"We can't go any sooner than right now. I hate to take these young
+men from y'u, lady, but, as I said, I'll send them back in good shape.
+Adios, senorita. Don't forget to whom y'u belong." He swaggered to the
+door and turned, leaning against the jamb with one hand again it. "I
+expect y'u can say those lovey-dov good-byes without my help. I'm going
+into the yard. If y'u want to y'u can plug me in the back through the
+window," he suggested, with a sneer.
+
+"As y'u would us under similar circumstances," retorted his cousin.
+
+"Be with y'u in five minutes," said the foreman.
+
+"Don't hurry. It's a long good-bye y'u're saying," returned his enemy
+placidly.
+
+Nora and the young man who belonged to her followed him from the room,
+leaving Bannister and his hostess alone.
+
+"Shall I ever see you again?" Helen murmured.
+
+"I think so," the sheepman answered. "The truth is that this opportunity
+falls pat. Jim and have been wanting to meet those men who are under my
+cousin's influence and have a talk with them. There is no question
+but that the gang is disintegrating, and I believe that if we offer to
+mediate between its members and the Government something might be done
+to stop the outrages that have been terrorizing this country. My cousin
+can't be reached, but I believe the rest of them, or, at least a part,
+can be induced either to surrender or to flee the country. Anyhow, we
+want to try it."
+
+"But the danger?" she breathed.
+
+"Is less than y'u think. Their leader has not anywhere nearly the
+absolute power he had a few months ago. They would hardly dare do
+violence to a peace envoy."
+
+"Your cousin would. I don't believe he has any scruples."
+
+"We shall keep an eye on him. Both of us will not sleep at the same
+time. Y'u may depend on me to bring your foreman safely back to y'u," he
+smiled.
+
+"Oh, my foreman!"
+
+"And your foreman's friend," he added. "I have the best of reasons for
+wanting to return alive. I think y'u know them. They have to do with
+y'u, Miss Helen."
+
+It had come at last, but, womanlike, she evaded the issue her heart had
+sought. "Yes, I know. You think it would not be fair to throw away your
+life in this foolish manner after I have saved it for you--how many
+times was it you said?" The blue eyes lifted with deceptive frankness to
+the gray ones.
+
+"No, that isn't my reason. I have a better one than that. I love y'u,
+girl, more than anything in this world."
+
+"And so you try to prove it to me by running into a trap set for you to
+take your life. That's a selfish kind of love, isn't it? Or it would be
+if I loved you."
+
+"Do y'u love me, Helen?"
+
+"Why should I tell you, since you don't love me enough to give up this
+quixotic madness?"
+
+"Don't y'u see, dear, I can't give it up?"
+
+"I see you won't. You care more for your pride than for me."
+
+"No, it isn't that. I've got to go. It isn't that I want to leave y'u,
+God knows. But I've given my word, and I must keep it. Do y'u want me
+to be a quitter, and y'u so game yourself? Do y'u want it to go all over
+this cattle country that I gave my word and took it back because I lost
+my nerve?"
+
+"The boy that takes a dare isn't a hero, is he! There's a higher courage
+that refuses to be drawn into such foolishness, that doesn't give way to
+the jeers of the empty headed."
+
+"I don't think that is a parallel case. I'm sorry, we can't see this
+alike, but I've got to go ahead the way that seems to me right."
+
+
+"You're going to leave me, then, to go with that man?"
+
+"Yes, if that's the way y'u have to put it." He looked at her
+sorrowfully, and added gently: "I thought you would see it. I thought
+sure you would."
+
+But she could not bear that he should leave her so, and she cried out
+after him. "Oh, I see it. I know you must go; but I can't bear it." Her
+head buried itself in his coat. "It isn't right--it isn't a--a square
+deal that you should go away now, the very minute you belong to me."
+
+A happy smile shone in his eyes. "I belong to you, do I? That's good
+hearing, girl o' mine." His arm went round her and he stroked the black
+head softly. "I'll not be gone long, dear. Don't y'u worry about me.
+I'll be back with y'u soon; just as soon as I have finished this piece
+of work I have to do."
+
+"But if you should get--if anything should happen to you?"
+
+"Nothing is going to happen to me. There is a special providence looks
+after lovers, y'u know."
+
+"Be careful, Ned, of yourself. For my sake, dear."
+
+"I'll dry my socks every time I get my feet wet for fear of taking
+cold," he laughed.
+
+"But you will, won't you?"
+
+"I'll be very careful, Helen," he promised more gravely.
+
+Even then she could hardly let him go, clinging to him with a reluctance
+to separate that was a new experience to her independent, vigorous
+youth. In the end he unloosened her arm, kissed her once, and hurried
+out of the room. In the hallway he met McWilliams, also hurryin out from
+a tearful farewell on the part of Nora.
+
+Bannister, the outlaw, already mounted, was waiting for them. "Y'u did
+get through at last," he drawled insolently. "Well, if y'u'll kindly give
+orders to your seven-foot dwarf to point the Winchester another way I'll
+collect my men an we'll be moving."
+
+For, though the outlaw had left his men in command of the ranch when he
+went into the house, he found the situation reversed on his return.
+With the arrival of reinforcements, in the persons of McWilliams and his
+friend, it had been the turn of the raiders to turn over their weapons.
+
+"All right, Denver," nodded the foreman.
+
+The outlaw chief whistled for his men, and with their guests they rode
+into the silent, desert night.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 22. EXIT THE "KING"
+
+They bedded that night under the great vault-roof where twinkle a
+million stars.
+
+There were three of the outlaw's men with him, and both Mcwilliams and
+his friend noticed that they slept a little apart from their chief.
+There were other indications among the rustlers of a camp divided
+against itself. Bannister's orders to them he contrived to make an
+insult, and their obedience was as surly as possible compatible with
+safety. For all of the men knew that he would not hesitate to shoot them
+down in one of his violent rages should they anger him sufficiently.
+
+Throughout the night there was no time that at least two men were not
+awake in the camp. The foreman and the sheepman took turns keeping
+vigil; and on the other side of the fire sat one of the rustlers in
+silent watchfulness. To the man opposite him each of the sentinels were
+outposts of the enemy, but they fraternized after the manner of army
+sentries, exchanging tobacco and occasional casual conversation.
+
+The foreman took the first turn, and opposite him sat a one-eyed old
+scoundrel who had rustle calves from big outfits ever since Wyoming was
+a territory and long before. Chalkeye Dave, he was called, and sometimes
+merely Chalkeye. What his real name was no man knew. Nor was his past a
+subject for conversation in his presence. It was known that he had been
+in the Nevada penitentiary, and that he had killed a man in Arizona, but
+these details of an active life were rarely resurrected. For Chalkeye
+was deadly on the shoot, and was ready for it at the drop of the
+hat, though he had his good points too. One of these was a remarkable
+fondness for another member of the party, a mere lad, called by his
+companions Hughie. Generally surly and morose, to such a degree that
+even his chief was careful to humor him as a rule, when with Hughie all
+the softer elements of his character came to the surface. In his rough
+way he was ever humorous and genial.
+
+Jim McWilliams found him neither, however. He declined to engage in
+conversation, accepted a proffer of tobacco with a silent, hostile grunt
+and relapsed into a long silence that lasted till his shift was ended.
+
+"Hate to have y'u leave, old man. Y'u're so darned good company I'll
+ce'tainly pine for you," the foreman suggested, with sarcasm, when
+the old man rolled up in his blankets preparatory to falling asleep
+immediately.
+
+Chalkeye's successor was a blatant youth much impressed with his own
+importance. He was both foul-mouthed and foul-minded, so that Jim
+was constrained to interrupt his evil boastings by pretending to fall
+asleep.
+
+It was nearly two o'clock when the foreman aroused his friend to take
+his turn. Shortly after this the lad Hughie relieved the bragging,
+would-be bad man.
+
+Hughie was a flaxen-haired, rather good-looking boy of nineteen. In his
+small, wistful face was not a line of wickedness, though it was plain
+that he was weak. He seemed so unfit for the life he was leading that
+the sheepman's interest was aroused. For on the frontier it takes a
+strong, competent miscreant to be a bad man and survive. Ineffectives
+and weaklings are quickly weeded out to their graves or the
+penitentiaries.
+
+The boy was manifestly under great fear of his chief, but the curly
+haired young Hermes who kept watch with him had a very winning smile and
+a charming manner when he cared to exert it. Almost in spite of himself
+the youngster was led to talk. It seemed that he had but lately joined
+the Teton-Shoshones outfit of desperadoes, and between the lines
+Bannister easily read that his cousin's masterful compulsion had coerced
+the young fellow. All he wanted was an opportunity to withdraw in
+safety, but he knew he could never do this so long as the "King" was
+alive and at liberty.
+
+Under the star-roof in the chill, breaking day Ned Bannister talked to
+him long and gently. It was easy to bring the boy to tears, but it was
+harder thing to stiffen a will that was of putty and to hearten a soul
+in mortal fear. But he set himself with all the power in him to combat
+the influence of his cousin over this boy; and before the camp stirred
+to life again he knew that he had measurably succeeded.
+
+They ate breakfast in the gray dawn under the stars, and after they had
+finished their coffee and bacon horses were saddled and the trail
+taken up again. It led in and out among the foot-hills slopping
+upward gradually toward the first long blue line of the Shoshones that
+stretched before them in the distance. Their nooning was at running
+stream called Smith's Creek, and by nightfall the party was well up in
+the higher foot hills.
+
+In the course of the day and the second night both the sheepman and
+his friend made attempt to establish a more cordial relationship with
+Chalkeye, but so far as any apparent results went their efforts were
+vain. He refused grimly to meet their overtures half way, even though it
+was plain from his manner that a break between him and his chief could
+not long be avoided.
+
+All day by crooked trails they pushed forward, and as the party advanced
+into the mountains the gloom of the mournful pines and frowning peaks
+invaded its spirits. Suspicion and distrust went with it, camped at
+night by the rushing mountain stream, lay down to sleep in the shadows
+at every man's shoulder. For each man looked with an ominous eye on his
+neighbor, watchful of every sudden move, of every careless word that
+might convey a sudden meaning.
+
+Along a narrow rock-rim trail far above a steep canon, whose walls shot
+precipitously down, they were riding in single file, when the outlaw
+chief pushed his horse forward between the road wall and his cousin's
+bronco. The sheepman immediately fell back.
+
+"I reckon this trail isn't wide enough for two--unless y'u take the
+outside," he explained quietly.
+
+The outlaw, who had been drinking steadily ever since leaving the Lazy
+D, laughed his low, sinister cackle. "Afraid of me, are y'u? Afraid I'll
+push y'u off?"
+
+"Not when I'm inside and you don't have chance."
+
+"'Twas a place about like this I drove for thousand of your sheep over
+last week. With sheep worth what they are I'm afraid it must have
+cost y'u quite a bit. Not that y'u'll miss it where you are going," he
+hastened to add.
+
+"It was very like you to revenge yourself on dumb animals."
+
+"Think so?" The "King's" black gaze rested on him. "Y'u'll sing a
+different song soon Mr. Bannister. It's humans I'll drive next time and
+don't y'u forget it."
+
+"If you get the chance," amended his cousin gently.
+
+"I'll get the chance. I'm not worrying about that. And about those
+sheep--any man that hasn't got more sense than to run sheep in a cow
+country ought to lose them for his pig-headedness.
+
+"Those sheep were on the right side of the dead-line. You had to cross
+it to reach them." Their owner's steady eyes challenged a denial.
+
+"Is that so? Now how do y'u know that? We didn't leave the herder alive
+to explain that to y'u, did we?"
+
+"You admit murdering him?"
+
+"To y'u, dear cousin. Y'u see, I have a hunch that maybe y'u'll go join
+your herder right soon. Y'u'll not do much talking."
+
+The sheepman fell back. "I think I'll ride alone."
+
+Rage flared in the other's eye. "Too good for me, are y'u, my
+mealy-mouthed cousin? Y'u always thought yourself better than me. When
+y'u were a boy you used to go sneaking to that old hypocrite, your
+grandfather--"
+
+"You have said enough," interrupted the other sternly. "I'll not hear
+another word. Keep your foul tongue off him."
+
+Their eyes silently measured strength.
+
+"Y'u'll not hear a word!" sneered the chief of the rustlers. "What will
+y'u do, dear cousin?
+
+"Stand up and fight like a man and settle this thing once for all."
+
+Still their steely eyes crossed as with the thrust of rapiers. The
+challenged man crouched tensely with a mighty longing for the test,
+but he had planned a more elaborate revenge and a surer one than this.
+Reluctantly he shook his head.
+
+"Why should I? Y'u're mine. We're four to two, and soon we'll be a dozen
+to two. I'd like a heap to oblige y'u, but I reckon I can't afford to
+just now. Y'u will have to wait a little for that bumping off that's
+coming to y'u."
+
+"In that event I'll trouble you not to inflict your society on me any
+more than is necessary."
+
+"That's all right, too. If y'u think I enjoy your conversation y'u have
+got another guess coming."
+
+So by mutual consent the sheepman fell in behind the blatant youth who
+had wearied McWilliams so and rode in silence.
+
+It was again getting close to nightfall. The slant sun was throwing its
+rays on less and less of the trail. They could see the shadows grow and
+the coolness of night sift into the air. They were pushing on to pass
+the rim of a great valley basin that lay like a saucer in the mountains
+in order that they might camp in the valley by a stream all of them
+knew. Dusk was beginning to fall when they at last reached the saucer
+edge and only the opposite peaks were still tipped with the sun rays.
+This, too, disappeared before they had descended far, and the gloom of
+the great mountains that girt the valley was on all their spirits, even
+McWilliams being affected by it.
+
+They were tired with travel, and the long night watches did not improve
+tempers already overstrained with the expectation of a crisis too long
+dragged out. Rain fell during the night, and continued gently in a misty
+drizzle after day broke. It was a situation and an atmosphere ripe for
+tragedy, and it fell on them like a clap of thunder out of a sodden sky.
+
+Hughie was cook for the day, and he came chill and stiff-fingered to his
+task. Summer as it was, there lay a thin coating of ice round the edges
+of the stream, for they had camped in an altitude of about nine thousand
+feet. The "King" had wakened in a vile humor. He had a splitting
+headache, as was natural under the circumstances and he had not left in
+his bottle a single drink to tide him over it. He came cursing to the
+struggling fire, which was making only fitful headway against the rain
+which beat down upon it.
+
+"Why didn't y'u build your fire on the side of the tree?" he growled at
+Hughie.
+
+Now, Hughie was a tenderfoot, and in his knowledge of outdoor life he
+was still an infant. "I didn't know--" he was beginning, when his master
+cut him short with a furious tongue lashing out of all proportion to the
+offense.
+
+The lad's face blanched with fear, and his terror was so manifest that
+the bully, who was threatening him with all manner of evils, began to
+enjoy himself. Chalkeye, returning from watering the horses, got back
+in time to hear the intemperate fag-end of the scolding. He glanced at
+Hughie, whose hands were trembling in spite of him, and then darkly at
+the brute who was attacking him. But he said not a word.
+
+The meal proceeded in silence except for jeers and taunts of the "King."
+For nobody cared to venture conversation which might prove a match to
+a powder magazine. Whatever thoughts might be each man kept them to
+himself.
+
+"Coffee," snapped the single talker, toward end of breakfast.
+
+Hughie jumped up, filled the cup that was handed him and set the coffee
+pot back on fire. As he handed the tin cup with the coffee to the outlaw
+the lad's foot slipped on a piece wet wood, and the hot liquid splashed
+over his chief's leg. The man jumped to his feet in a rage and struck
+the boy across the face with his whip once, and then again.
+
+"By God, that'll do for you!" cried Chalkeye from the other side of the
+fire, springing revolver in hand. "Draw, you coyote! I come a-shooting."
+
+The "King" wheeled, finding his weapon he turned. Two shots rang out
+almost simultaneously, and Chalkeye pitched forward. The outlaw chief
+sank to his knees, and, with one hand resting on the ground to steady
+himself fired two more shots into the twitching body on the other side
+of the fire. Then he, too, lurched forward and rolled over.
+
+It had come to climax so swiftly that not one of them had moved except
+the combatants. Bannister rose and walked over to the place where the
+body of his cousin lay. He knelt down and examined him. When he rose it
+was with a very grave face.
+
+"He is dead," he said quietly.
+
+McWilliams, who had been bending over Chalkeye, looked up. "Here, too.
+Any one of the shots would have finished him."
+
+Bannister nodded. "Yes. That first exchange killed them both." He looked
+down at the limp body of his cousin, but a minute before so full of
+supple, virile life. "But his hate had to reach out and make sure, even
+though he was as good as dead himself. He was game." Then sharply to the
+young braggart, who had risen and was edging away with a face of
+chalk: "Sit down, y'u! What do y'u take us for? Think this is to be a
+massacre?"
+
+The man came back with palpable hesitancy. "I was aiming to go and get
+the boys to bury them. My God, did you ever see anything so quick? They
+drilled through each other like lightning."
+
+Mac looked him over with dry contempt. "My friend, y'u're too tender for
+a genuwine A1 bad man. If I was handing y'u a bunch of advice it would
+be to get back to the prosaic paths of peace right prompt. And while
+we're on the subject I'll borrow your guns. Y'u're scared stiff and it
+might get into your fool coconut to plug one of us and light out. I'd
+hate to see y'u commit suicide right before us, so I'll just natcherally
+unload y'u."
+
+He was talking to lift the strain, and it was for the same purpose that
+Bannister moved over to Hughie, who sat with his face in his hands,
+trying to shut out the horror of what he had seen.
+
+The sheepman dropped a hand on his shoulder gently. "Brace up, boy!
+Don't you see that the very best thing that could have happened is this.
+It's best for y'u, best for the rest of the gang and best for the whole
+cattle country. We'll have peace here at last. Now he's gone, honest men
+are going to breathe easy. I'll take y'u in hand and set y'u at work on
+one of my stations, if y'u like. Anyhow, you'll have a chance to begin
+life again in a better way."
+
+"That's right," agreed the blatant youth. "I'm sick of rustling the
+mails and other folks' calves. I'm glad he got what was coming to him,"
+he concluded vindictively, with a glance at his dead chief and a sudden
+raucous oath.
+
+McWilliams's cold blue eye transfixed him "Hadn't you better be a little
+careful how your mouth goes off? For one thing, he's daid now; and for
+another, he happens to be Mr. Bannister's cousin."
+
+"But--weren't they enemies?"
+
+"That's how I understand it. But this man's passed over the range. A MAN
+doesn't unload his hatred on dead folks--and I expect if y'u'll study
+him, even y'u will be able to figure out that my friend measures up to
+the size of a real man."
+
+"I don't see why if--"
+
+"No, I don't suppose y'u do," interrupted the foreman, turning on his
+heel. Then to Bannister, who was looking down at his cousin with a stony
+face: "I reckon, Bann, we better make arrangements to have the bodies
+buried right here in the valley," he said gently.
+
+Bannister was thinking of early days, of the time when this miscreant,
+whose light had just been put out so instantaneously, had played with
+him day in and day out. They had attended their first school together,
+had played marbles and prisoners' base a hundred times against each
+other. He could remember how they used to get up early in the morning to
+go fishing with each other. And later, when each began, unconsciously,
+to choose the path he would follow in already beginning to settle into
+an established fact. He could see now, by looking back on trifles of
+their childhood, that his cousin had been badly handicapped in his
+fight with himself against the evil in him. He had inherited depraved
+instincts and tastes, and with them somewhere in him a strand of
+weakness that prevented him from slaying the giants he had to oppose in
+the making of a good character. From bad to worse he had gone, and here
+he lay with the drizzling rain on his white face, a warning and a lesson
+to wayward youths just setting their feet in the wrong direction. Surely
+it was kismet.
+
+Ned Bannister untied the handkerchief from his neck and laid it across
+the face of his kinsman. A moment longer he looked down, then passed
+his hands across his eyes and seemed to brush away the memories that
+thronged him. He stepped forward to the fire and warmed his hands.
+
+"We'll go on, Mac, to the rendezvous he had appointed with his outfit.
+We ought to reach there by noon, and the boys can send a wagon back to
+get the bodies."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 23. JOURNEYS END IN LOVERS' MEETING
+
+It had been six days since the two Ned Bannisters had ridden away
+together into the mountains, and every waking hour since that time had
+been for Helen one of harassing anxiety. No word had yet reached her of
+the issue of that dubious undertaking, and she both longed and dreaded
+to hear. He had promised to send a messenger as soon as he had anything
+definite to tell, but she knew it would be like his cousin, too, to
+send her some triumphant word should he prove the victor in the struggle
+between them. So that every stranger she glimpsed brought to her a
+sudden beating of the heart.
+
+But it was not the nature of Helen Messiter to sit down and give herself
+up a prey to foreboding. Her active nature cried out for work to occupy
+her and distract her attention. Fortunately this was to be had in
+abundance just now. For the autumn round-up was on, and since her
+foreman was away the mistress of the Lazy D found plenty of work ready
+to her hand.
+
+The meeting place for the round-up riders was at Boom Creek, five miles
+from the ranch, and Helen rode out there to take charge of her own
+interests in person. With her were six riders, and for the use of each
+of them in addition to his present mount three extra ponies were brought
+in the remuda. For the riding is so hard during the round-up that a
+horse can stand only one day in four of it. At the appointed rendezvous
+a score of other cowboys and owners met them. Without any delay they
+proceeded to business. Mr. Bob Austin, better known as "Texas," was
+elected boss of the round-up, and he immediately assigned the men to
+their places and announced that they would work Squaw Creek. They moved
+camp at once, Helen returning to the ranch.
+
+It was three o'clock in the morning when the men were roused by the
+cook's triangle calling them to the "chuck wagon" for breakfast. It was
+still cold and dark as the boys crawled from under their blankets and
+squatted round the fire to eat jerky, biscuits and gravy, and to drink
+cupfuls of hot, black coffee. Before sun rose every man was at his post
+far up on the Squaw Creek ridges ready to begin the drive.
+
+Later in the day Helen rode to the parade grounds, toward which a
+stream of cattle was pouring down the canyon of the creek. Every gulch
+tributary to the creek contributed its quota of wild cows and calves.
+These came romping down the canyon mouth, where four picked men, with a
+bunch of tame cows in front of them, stopped the rush of flying cattle.
+Lunch was omitted, and branding began at once. Every calf belonging to
+a Lazy D cow, after being roped and tied, was flanked with the great D
+which indicated its ownership by Miss Messiter, and on account of the
+recumbent position of which letter the ranch had its name.
+
+It was during the branding that a boyish young fellow rode up and handed
+Helen a note. Her heart pumped rapidly with relief, for one glance told
+her that it was in the handwriting of the Ned Bannister she loved. She
+tore it open and glanced swiftly through it.
+
+DEAR FRIEND: Two hours ago my cousin was killed by one of his own men.
+I am sending back to you a boy who had been led astray by him, and it
+would be a great service to me if you would give him something to do
+till I return. His name is Hugh Rogers. I think if you trust him he will
+prove worthy of it.
+
+Jim and I are going to stay here a few days longer to finish the
+work that is begun. We hope to meet and talk with as many of the men
+implicated in my cousin's lawlessness as is possible. What the result
+will be I cannot say. We do not consider ourselves in any danger
+whatever, though we are not taking chances. If all goes well we shall be
+back within a few days.
+
+I hope you are not missing Jim too much at the roundup. Sincerely,
+
+NED BANNISTER
+
+She liked the letter because there was not a hint of the relationship
+between them to be read in it. He had guarded her against the chance of
+its falling into the wrong hands and creating talk about them.
+
+She turned to Hughie. "Can you ride?"
+
+"In a way, ma'am. I can't ride like these men." His glance indicated a
+cow-puncher pounding past after a wild steer that had broken through the
+cordon of riders and was trying to get away.
+
+"Do you want to learn?"
+
+"I'd like to if I had a chance," he answered wistfully.
+
+"All right. You have your chance. I'll see that Mr. Austin finds
+something for you to do. From to-day you are in my employ."
+
+She rode back to the ranch in the late afternoon, while the sun was
+setting in a great splash of crimson. The round-up boss had hinted that
+if she were nervous about riding alone he could find it convenient to
+accompany her. But the girl wanted to be alone with her own thoughts,
+and she had slipped away while he was busy cutting out calves from
+the herd. It had been a wonderful relief to her to find that HER Ned
+Bannister was the one that had survived in the conflict, and her heart
+sang a paean of joy as she rode into the golden glow of the westering
+sun. He was alive--to love and be loved. The unlived years of her future
+seemed to unroll before her as a vision. She glowed with a resurgent
+happiness that was almost an ecstasy. The words of a bit of verse she
+had once seen--a mere scrap from a magazine that had stuck in an obscure
+corner of her memory--sang again and again in her heart:
+
+Life and love And a bright sky o'er us, And--God take care Of the way
+before us!
+
+Ah, the way before them, before her and her romance-radiating hero!
+It might be rough and hilly, but if they trod it together--Her tangled
+thoughts were off again in another glad leap of imagination.
+
+The days passed somehow. She busied herself with the affairs of the
+ranch, rode out often to the scenes of the cattle drives and watched the
+round-up, and every twenty-four hours brought her one day nearer to
+his return, she told herself. Nora, too, was on the lookout under her
+longlashed, roguish eyelids; and the two young women discussed the
+subject of their lovers' return in that elusive, elliptical way common
+to their sex.
+
+No doubt each of these young women had conjectured as to the manner of
+that homecoming and the meeting that would accompany it; but it is safe
+to say that neither of them guessed in her day-dreams how it actually
+was to occur.
+
+Nora had been eager to see something of the round-up, and as she was no
+horsewoman her mistress took her out one day in her motor. The drive
+had been that day on Bronco Mesa, and had finished in the natural corral
+made by Bear Canon, fenced with a cordon of riders at the end opening
+to the plains below. After watching for two hours the busy scenes of
+cutting out, roping and branding, Helen wheeled her car and started down
+the canyon on their return.
+
+Now, a herd of wild cattle is uncertain as an April day's behavior.
+Under the influence of the tame valley cattle among which they are
+driven, after a little milling around, the whole bunch may gentle almost
+immediately, or, on the other hand, it may break through and go crashing
+away on a wild stampede at a moment's notice. Every experienced cowman
+knows enough to expect the unexpected.
+
+At Bronco Mesa the round-up had proceeded with unusual facility. Scores
+of wiry, long-legged steers had drifted down the ridges or gulches that
+led to the canon; and many a cow, followed by its calf, had stumbled
+forward to the herd and apparently accepted the inevitable. But before
+Helen Messiter had well started out of the canyon's mouth the situation
+changed absolutely.
+
+A big hill steer, which had not seen a man for a year, broke through
+the human corral with a bellow near a point where Reddy kept guard. The
+puncher wheeled and gave chase, Before the other men could close the
+opening a couple of two-year-olds seized the opportunity and followed
+its lead. A second rider gave chase, and at once, as if some imp of
+mischief had stirred them, fifty tails went up in wild flight. Another
+minute and the whole herd was in stampede.
+
+Down the gulch the five hundred cattle thundered toward the motor car,
+which lay directly in their path. Helen turned, appreciated the danger,
+and put the machine at its full speed. The road branched for a space
+of about fifty yards, and in her excitement she made the mistake of
+choosing the lower, more level, one. Into a deep sand bed they plowed,
+the wheels sinking at every turn. Slower and slower went the car;
+finally came to a full stop.
+
+Nora glanced back in affright at the two hundred and fifty tons of beef
+that was charging wildly toward them. "What shall we do?" she gasped,
+and clambered to the ground.
+
+"Run!" cried Helen, following her example and scudding for the sides
+of the canyon, which here sloped down less precipitately than at other
+points. But before they had run a dozen steps each of them was aware
+that they could not reach safety in time to escape the hoofs rushing
+toward them so heavily that the ground quaked.
+
+"Look out!" A resonant cry rang out above the dull thud of the
+stampeding cattle that were almost upon them. Down the steep sides of
+the gorge two riders were galloping recklessly. It was a race for life
+between them and the first of the herd, and they won by scarce more than
+a length. Across the sand the horses plowed, and as they swept past
+the two trembling young women each rider bent from the saddle without
+slackening speed, and snatched one almost from under the very hoofs of
+the leaders.
+
+The danger was not past. As the horses swerved and went forward with the
+rush Helen knew that a stumble would fling not only her and the man who
+had saved her, but also the horse down to death. They must contrive
+to hold their own in that deadly rush until a way could be found of
+escaping from the path of the living cyclone that trod at their heels,
+galloped beside them, in front, behind.
+
+For it came to her that the horse was tiring in that rush through the
+sand with double weight upon its back.
+
+"Courage!" cried the man behind her as her fearful eyes met his.
+
+As he spoke they reached the end of the canyon and firm ground
+simultaneously. Helen saw that her rescuer had now a revolver in his
+hand, and that he was firing in such a way as to deflect the leaders
+to the left. At first the change in course was hardly perceptible, but
+presently she noticed that they were getting closer to the outskirts of
+the herd, working gradually to the extreme right, edging inch by inch,
+ever so warily, toward safety. Going parallel to their course,
+running neck and neck with the cow pony, lumbered a great dun steer.
+Unconsciously it blocked every effort of the horseman to escape. He had
+one shot left in his revolver, and this time he did not fire into the
+air. It was a mighty risk, for the animal in falling might stagger
+against the horse and hunt them all down to death. But the man took it
+without apparent hesitation. Into the ear of the bullock he sent the
+lead crashing. The brute stumbled and went down head over heels. Its
+flying hoofs struck the flanks of the pony, but the bronco stuck to its
+feet, and next moment staggered out from among the herd stragglers and
+came to halt.
+
+The man slid from its back and lifted down the half-fainting girl. She
+clung to him, white a trembling. "Oh, it was horrible, Ned!" She could
+still look down in imagination upon the sea of dun backs that swayed and
+surged about them like storm-tossed waves.
+
+"It was a near thing, but we made it, girl. So did Jim. He got out
+before we did. It's all past now. You can remember it as the most
+exciting experience of your life."
+
+She shuddered. "I don't want to remember it at all." And so shaken was
+she that she did not realize that his arm was about her the while she
+sobbed on his shoulder.
+
+"A cattle stampede is a nasty thing to get in front of. Never mind. It's
+done with now and everybody's safe."
+
+She drew a long breath. "Yes, everybody's safe and you are back home.
+Why didn't you come after your cousin was killed?"
+
+"I had to finish my work."
+
+"And DID you finish it?"
+
+"I think we did. There will be no more Shoshone gang. It's members have
+scatted in all directions."
+
+"I'm glad you stayed, then. We can live at peace now." And presently she
+added: "I knew you would not come back until you had done what you set
+out to do. You're very obstinate, sir. Do you know that?"
+
+"Perseverance, I call it," he smiled, glad to see that she was
+recovering her lightness of tone.
+
+"You don't always insist on putting your actions in the most favorable
+light. Do you remember the first day I ever saw you?"
+
+"Am I likely ever to forget it?" he smiled fondly.
+
+"I didn't mean THAT. What I was getting at was that you let me go away
+from you thinking you were 'the king.' I haven't forgiven you entirely
+for that."
+
+"I expect y'u'll always have to be forgiving me things."
+
+"If you valued my good opinion I don't see how you could let me go
+without telling me. Was it fair or kind?"
+
+"If y'u come to that, was it so fair and kind to convict me so promptly
+on suspicion?" he retaliated with a smile.
+
+"No, it wasn't. But--" She flushed with a divine shyness. "But I loved
+you all the time, even when they said you were a villain."
+
+"Even while y'u believed me one?"
+
+"I didn't. I never would believe you one--not deep in my heart. I
+wouldn't let myself. I made excuses for you--explained everything to
+myself."
+
+"Yet your reason told y'u I was guilty."
+
+"Yes, I think my mind hated you and my heart loved you."
+
+He adored her for the frank simplicity of her confession, that out of
+the greatness of her love she dared to make no secret of it to him.
+Direct as a boy, she was yet as wholly sweet as the most retiring girl
+could be.
+
+"Y'u always swamp my vocabulary, sweetheart. I can't ever tell y'u--life
+wouldn't be long enough--how much I care for you."
+
+"I'm glad," she said simply.
+
+They stood looking at each other, palms pressed to palms in meeting
+hands, supremely happy in this miracle of love that had befallen them.
+They were alone--for Nora and Jim had gone into temporary eclipse behind
+a hill and seemed in no hurry to emerge--alone in the sunshine with this
+wonder that flowed from one to another by shining eyes, by finger touch,
+and then by meeting lips. He held her close, knew the sweet delight of
+contact with the supple, surrendered figure, then released her as she
+drew away in maidenly reserve.
+
+"When shall we be married, Helen? Is the early part of next week too
+late?" he asked.
+
+Still blushing, she straightened her hat. "That's ridiculous, sir. I
+haven't got used to the thought of you yet."
+
+"Plenty of time for that afterward. Then we'll say next week if that
+suits y'u."
+
+"But it doesn't. Don't you know that it is the lady's privilege to name
+the day? Besides, I want time to change my mind if I should decide to."
+
+"That's what I'm afraid of," he laughed joyfully. "So I have to insist
+on an early marriage."
+
+"Insist?" she demurred.
+
+"I've been told on the best of authority that I'm very obstinate," he
+gayly answered.
+
+"I have a mind of my own myself. If I ever marry you be sure I shall
+name the day, sir."
+
+"Will y'u marry me the day Nora does Jim?"
+
+"We'll see." The eyes slanted at him under the curved lashes, teased him
+delightfully. "Did Nora tell you she was going to marry Jim?"
+
+Bannister looked mildly hurt. "My common sense has been telling it to me
+a month."
+
+"How long has your common sense been telling you about us?"
+
+"I didn't use it when I fell in love with y'u," he boldly laughed.
+
+"Of all things to say!"
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Wyoming, a Story of the Outdoor West, by
+William MacLeod Raine
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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of Wyoming, by William MacLeod Raine
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+Wyoming, a Story of the Outdoor West
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+
+WYOMING
+
+A STORY OF THE OUTDOOR WEST
+
+by William MacLeod Raine
+
+
+
+
+TABLE OF CONTENTS
+
+1. A DESERT MEETING
+2. THE KING OF THE BIG HORN COUNTRY
+3. AN INVITATION GIVEN AND ACCEPTED
+4. AT THE LAZY D RANCH
+5. THE DANCE AT FRASER'S
+6. A PARTY CALL
+7. THE MAN FROM THE SHOSHONE FASTNESSES
+8. IN THE LAZY D HOSPITAL
+9. A RESCUE
+12. MISTRESS AND MAID
+13. THE TWO COUSINS
+14. FOR THE WORLD'S CHAMPIONSHIP
+15. JUDD MORGAN PASSES
+16. HUNTING BIG GAME
+17. RUN TO EARTH
+18. PLAYING FOR TIME
+19. WEST POINT TO THE RESCUE
+20. TWO CASES OF DISCIPLINE
+21. THE SIGNAL LIGHTS
+22. EXIT THE KING
+23. JOURNEYS END IN LOVERS' MEETING.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 1. A DESERT MEETING
+
+An automobile shot out from a gash in the hills and slipped
+swiftly down to the butte. Here it came to a halt on the white,
+dusty road, while its occupant gazed with eager, unsated eyes on
+the great panorama that stretched before her. The earth rolled in
+waves like a mighty sea to the distant horizon line. From a
+wonderful blue sky poured down upon the land a bath of sunbeat.
+The air was like wine, pure and strong, and above the desert swam
+the rare, untempered light of Wyoming. Surely here was a peace
+primeval, a silence unbroken since the birth of creation.
+
+It was all new to her, and wonderfully exhilarating. The infinite
+roll of plain, the distant shining mountains, the multitudinous
+voices of the desert drowned in a sunlit sea of space--they were
+all details of the situation that ministered to a large serenity.
+
+And while she breathed deeply the satisfaction of it, an
+exploding rifle echo shattered the stillness. With excited
+sputtering came the prompt answer of a fusillade. She was new to
+the West; but some instinct stronger than reason told the girl
+that here was no playful puncher shooting up the scenery to
+ventilate his exuberance. Her imagination conceived something
+more deadly; a sinister picture of men pumping lead in a grim,
+close-lipped silence; a lusty plainsman, with murder in his
+heart, crumpling into a lifeless heap, while the thin
+smoke-spiral curled from his hot rifle.
+
+So the girl imagined the scene as she ran swiftly forward through
+the pines to the edge of the butte bluff whence she might look
+down upon the coulee that nestled against it. Nor had she greatly
+erred, for her first sweeping glance showed her the thing she had
+dreaded.
+
+In a semicircle, well back from the foot of the butte, half a
+dozen men crouched in the cover of the sage-brush and a scattered
+group of cottonwoods. They were perhaps fifty yards apart, and
+the attention of all of them was focused on a spot directly
+beneath her. Even as she looked, in that first swift moment of
+apprehension, a spurt of smoke came from one of the rifles and
+was flung back from the forked pine at the bottom of the mesa.
+She saw him then, kneeling behind his insufficient shelter, a
+trapped man making his last stand.
+
+>From where she stood the girl distinguished him very clearly,
+and under the field-glasses that she turned on him the details
+leaped to life. Tall, strong, slender, with the lean, clean build
+of a greyhound, he seemed as wary and alert as a panther. The
+broad, soft hat, the scarlet handkerchief loosely knotted about
+his throat, the gray shirt, spurs and overalls, proclaimed him a
+stockman, just as his dead horse at the entrance to the coulee
+told of an accidental meeting in the desert and a hurried run for
+cover.
+
+That he had no chance was quite plain, but no plainer than the
+cool vigilance with which he proposed to make them pay. Even in
+the matter of defense he was worse off than they were, but he
+knew how to make the most of what he had; knew how to avail
+himself of every inch of sagebrush that helped to render him
+indistinct to their eyes.
+
+One of the attackers, eager for a clearer shot, exposed himself a
+trifle too far in taking aim. Without any loss of time in
+sighting, swift as a lightning-flash, the rifle behind the forked
+pine spoke. That the bullet reached its mark she saw with a gasp
+of dismay. For the man suddenly huddled down and rolled over on
+his side.
+
+His comrades appeared to take warning by this example. The men at
+both ends of the crescent fell back, and for a minute the girl's
+heart leaped with the hope that they were about to abandon the
+siege. Apparently the man in the scarlet kerchief had no such
+expectation. He deserted his position behind the pine and ran
+back, crouching low in the brush, to another little clump of
+trees closer to the bluff. The reason for this was at first not
+apparent to her, but she understood presently when the men who
+had fallen back behind the rolling hillocks appeared again well
+in to the edge of the bluff. Only by his timely retreat had the
+man saved himself from being outflanked.
+
+It was very plain that the attackers meant to take their time to
+finish him in perfect safety. He was surrounded on every side by
+a cordon of rifles, except where the bare face of the butte hung
+down behind him. To attempt to scale it would have been to expose
+himself as a mark for every gun to certain death.
+
+It was now that she heard the man who seemed to be directing the
+attack call out to another on his right. She was too far to make
+out the words, but their effect was clear to her. He pointed to
+the brow of the butte above, and a puncher in white woolen chaps
+dropped back out of range and swung to the saddle upon one of the
+ponies bunched in the rear. He cantered round in a wide circle
+and made for the butte. His purpose was obviously to catch their
+victim in the unprotected rear, and fire down upon him from
+above.
+
+The young woman shouted a warning, but her voice failed to carry.
+For a moment she stood with her hands pressed together in
+despair, then turned and swiftly scudded to her machine. She
+sprang in, swept forward, reached the rim of the mesa, and
+plunged down. Never before had she attempted so precarious a
+descent in such wild haste. The car fairly leaped into space, and
+after it struck swayed dizzily as it shot down. The girl hung on,
+her face white and set, the pulse in her temple beating wildly.
+She could do nothing, as the machine rocked down, but hope
+against many chances that instant destruction might be averted.
+
+Utterly beyond her control, the motor-car thundered down, reached
+the foot of the butte, and swept over a little hill in its wild
+flight. She rushed by a mounted horseman in the thousandth part
+of a second. She was still speeding at a tremendous velocity, but
+a second hill reduced this somewhat. She had not yet recovered
+control of the machine, but, though her eyes instinctively
+followed the white road that flashed past, she again had
+photographed on her brain the scene of the turbid tragedy in
+which she was intervening.
+
+At the foot of the butte the road circled and dipped into the
+coulee. She braced herself for the shock, but, though the wheels
+skidded till her heart was in her throat, the automobile, hanging
+on the balance of disaster, swept round in safety.
+
+Her horn screamed an instant warning to the trapped man. She
+could not see him, and for an instant her heart sank with the
+fear that they had killed him. But she saw then that they were
+still firing, and she continued her honking invitation as the car
+leaped forward into the zone of spitting bullets.
+
+By this time she was recovering control of the motor, and she
+dared not let her attention wander, but out of the corner of her
+eye she appreciated the situation. Temporarily, out of sheer
+amaze at this apparition from the blue, the guns ceased their
+sniping. She became aware that a light curly head, crouched low
+in the sage-brush, was moving rapidly to meet her at right
+angles, and in doing so was approaching directly the line of
+fire. She could see him dodging to and fro as he moved forward,
+for the rifles were again barking.
+
+She was within two hundred yards of him, still going rapidly, but
+not with the same headlong rush as before, when the curly head
+disappeared in the sage-brush. It was up again presently, but she
+could see that the man came limping, and so uncertainly that
+twice he pitched forward to the ground. Incautionsly one of his
+assailants ran forward with a shout the second time his head went
+down. Crack! The unerring rifle rang out, and the impetuous one
+dropped in his tracks.
+
+As she approached, the young woman slowed without stopping, and
+as the car swept past Curly Head flung himself in headlong. He
+picked himself up from her feet, crept past her to the seat
+beyond, and almost instantly whipped his rifle to his shoulder in
+prompt defiance of the fire that was now converged on them.
+
+Yet in a few moments the sound died away, for a voice midway in
+the crescent had shouted an amazed discovery:
+
+"By God, it's a woman!"
+
+The car skimmed forward over the uneven ground toward the end of
+the semicircle, and passed within fifty yards of the second man
+from the end, the one she had picked out as the leader of the
+party. He was a black, swarthy fellow in plain leather chaps and
+blue shirt. As they passed he took a long, steady aim.
+
+"Duck!" shouted the man beside her, and dragged her down on the
+seat so that his body covered hers.
+
+A puff of wind fanned the girl's cheek.
+
+"Near thing," her companion said coolly. He looked back at the
+swarthy man and laughed softly. "Some day you'll mebbe wish you
+had sent your pills straighter, Mr. Judd Morgan."
+
+Yet a few wheel-turns and they had dipped forward out of range
+among the great land waves that seemed to stretch before them
+forever. The unexpected had happened, and she had achieved a
+rescue in the face of the impossible.
+
+"Hurt badly?" the girl inquired briefly, her dark-blue eyes
+meeting his as frankly as those of a boy.
+
+"No need for an undertaker. I reckon I'll survive, ma'am,"
+
+"Where are you hit?"
+
+"I just got a telegram from my ankle saying there was a cargo of
+lead arrived there unexpected," he drawled easily.
+
+"Hurts a good deal, doesn't it?"
+
+"No more than is needful to keep my memory jogged up. It's a sort
+of a forget-me-not souvenir. For a good boy; compliments of Mr.
+Jim Henson," he explained.
+
+Her dark glance swept him searchingly. She disapproved the
+assurance of his manner even while the youth in her applauded his
+reckless sufficiency. His gay courage held her unconsenting
+admiration even while she resented it. He was a trifle too much
+at his ease for one who had just been snatched from dire peril.
+Yet even in his insouciance there was something engaging;
+something almost of distinction.
+
+"What was the trouble?"
+
+Mirth bubbled in his gray eyes. "I gathered, ma'am, that they
+wanted to collect my scalp."
+
+"Do what?" she frowned.
+
+"Bump me off--send me across the divide."
+
+"Oh, I know that. But why?"
+
+He seemed to reproach himself. "Now how could I be so neglectful?
+I clean forgot to ask."
+
+"That's ridiculous," was her sharp verdict.
+
+"Yes, ma'am, plumb ridiculous. My only excuse is that they began
+scattering lead so sudden I didn't have time to ask many
+'Whyfors.' I reckon we'll just have to call it a Wyoming
+difference of opinion," he concluded pleasantly.
+
+"Which means, I suppose, that you are not going to tell me."
+
+"I got so much else to tell y'u that's a heap more important," he
+laughed. "Y'u see, I'm enjoyin' my first automobile ride. It was
+certainly thoughful of y'u to ask me to go riding with y'u, Miss
+Messiter."
+
+"So you know my name. May I ask how?" was her astonished
+question.
+
+He gave the low laugh that always seemed to suggest a private
+source of amusement of his own. "I suspicioned that might be your
+name when I say y'u come a-sailin' down from heaven to gather me
+up like Enoch."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Well, ma'am, I happened to drift in to Gimlet Butte two or three
+days ago, and while I was up at the depot looking for some
+freight a train sashaid in and side tracked a flat car. There was
+an automobile on that car addressed to Miss Helen Messiter. Now,
+automobiles are awful seldom in this country. I don't seem to
+remember having seen one before."
+
+"I see. You're quite a Sherlock Holmes. Do you know anything more
+about me?"
+
+"I know y'u have just fallen heir to the Lazy D. They say y'u are
+a schoolmarm, but I don't believe it."
+
+"Well, I am." Then, "Why don't you believe it?" she added.
+
+He surveyed her with his smile audacious, let his amused eyes
+wander down from the mobile face with the wild-rose bloom to the
+slim young figure so long and supple, then serenely met her
+frown.
+
+" Y'u don't look it."
+
+" No? Are you the owner of a composite photograph of the teachers
+of the country?"
+
+He enjoyed again his private mirth. "I should like right well to
+have the pictures of some of them."
+
+She glanced at him sharply, but he was gazing so innocently at
+the purple Shoshones in the distance that she could not give him
+the snub she thought he needed.
+
+"You are right. My name is Helen Messiter," she said, by way of
+stimulating a counter fund of information. For, though she was a
+young woman not much given to curiosity, she was aware of an
+interest in this spare, broad-shouldered youth who was such an
+incarnation of bronzed vigor.
+
+"Glad to meet y'u, Miss Messiter," he responded, and offered his
+firm brown hand in Western fashion.
+
+But she observed resentfully that he did not mention his own
+name. It was impossible to suppose that he knew no better, and
+she was driven to conclude that he was silent of set purpose.
+Very well! If he did not want to introduce himself she was not
+going to urge it upon him. In a businesslike manner she gave her
+attention to eating up the dusty miles.
+
+"Yes, ma'am. I reckon I never was more glad to death to meet a
+lady than I was to meet up with y'u," he continued, cheerily.
+"Y'u sure looked good to me as y'u come a-foggin' down the road.
+I fair had been yearnin' for company but was some discouraged for
+fear the invitation had miscarried." He broke off his sardonic
+raillery and let his level gaze possess her for a long moment.
+"Miss Messiter, I'm certainly under an obligation to y'u I can't
+repay. Y'u saved my life," he finished gravely.
+
+"Nonsense."
+
+"Fact."
+
+"It isn't a personal matter at all," she assured him, with a
+touch of impatient hauteur.
+
+"It s a heap personal to me."
+
+In spite of her healthy young resentment she laughed at the way
+in which he drawled this out, and with a swift sweep her boyish
+eyes took in again his compelling devil-may-care charm. She was a
+tenderfoot, but intuition as well as experience taught her that
+he was unusual enough to be one of ten thousand. No young Greek
+god's head could have risen more superbly above the brick-tanned
+column of the neck than this close-cropped curly one. Gray eyes,
+deep and unwavering and masterful, looked out of a face as brown
+as Wyoming. He was got up with no thought of effect, but the
+tigerish litheness, the picturesque competency of him, spake
+louder than costuming.
+
+"Aren't you really hurt worse than you pretend? I'm sure your
+ankle ought to be attended to as soon as possible."
+
+"Don't tell me you're a lady doctor, ma'am," he burlesqued his
+alarm.
+
+"Can you tell me where the nearest ranch house is?" she asked,
+ignoring his diversion.
+
+"The Lazy D is the nearest, I reckon."
+
+"Which direction?"
+
+"North by east, ma'am."
+
+"Then I'll take the most direct road to it.
+
+"In that case I'll thank y'u for my ride and get out here."
+
+"But--why?"
+
+He waved a jaunty hand toward the recent battlefield. "The Lazy D
+lies right back of that hill. I expect, mebbe, those wolves might
+howl again if we went back."
+
+"Where, then, shall I take you?"
+
+"I hate to trouble y'u to go out of your way.
+
+"I dare say, but I'm going just the same," she told him, dryly.
+
+"If you're right determined " He interrupted himself to point to
+the south. "Do y'u see that camel-back peak over there?"
+
+"The one with the sunshine on its lower edge?"
+
+"That's it, Miss Messiter. They call those two humps the Antelope
+Peaks. If y'u can drop me somewhere near there I think I'll
+manage all right."
+
+"I'm not going to leave you till we reach a house," she informed
+him promptly. "You're not fit to walk fifty yards."
+
+"That's right kind of y'u, but I could not think of asking so
+much. My friends will find me if y'u leave me where I can work a
+heliograph."
+
+"Or your enemies," she cut in.
+
+"I hope not. I'd not likely have the luck to get another
+invitation right then to go riding with a friendly young lady."
+
+She gave him direct, cool, black-blue eyes that met and searched
+his. "I'm not at all sure she is friendly. I shall want to find
+out the cause of the trouble you have just had before I make up
+my mind as to that."
+
+"I judge people by their actions. Y'u didn't wait to find out
+before bringing the ambulance into action," he laughed.
+
+"I see you do not mean to tell me."
+
+"You're quite a lawyer, ma'am," he evaded.
+
+"I find you a very slippery witness, then."
+
+"Ask anything y'u like and I'll tell you."
+
+"Very well. Who were those men, and why were they trying to kill
+you?"
+
+"They turned their wolf loose on me because I shot up one of them
+yesterday."
+
+"Dear me! Is it your business to go around shooting people?
+That's three I happen to know that you have shot. How many more?"
+
+"No more, ma'am--not recently."
+
+"Well, three is quite enough--recently," she mimicked. "You seem
+to me a good deal of a desperado."
+
+"Yes, ma'am."
+
+"Don't say 'Yes, ma'am,' like that, as if it didn't matter in the
+least whether you are or not," she ordered.
+
+"No, ma'am."
+
+"Oh!" She broke off with a gesture of impatience at his burlesque
+of obedience. "You know what I mean--that you ought to deny it;
+ought to be furious at me for suggesting it."
+
+"Ought I?"
+
+"Of course you ought."
+
+"There's a heap of ways I ain't up to specifications," he
+admitted, cheerfully.
+
+"And who are they--the men that were attacking you?"
+
+There was a gleam of irrepressible humor in the bold eyes. "Your
+cow-punchers, ma'am."
+
+"My cow-punchers?"
+
+"They ce'tainly belong to the Lazy D outfit."
+
+"And you say that you shot one of my men yesterday?" He could see
+her getting ready for a declaration of war.
+
+"Down by Willow Creek-- Yes, ma'am," he answered, comfortably.
+
+"And why, may I ask?" she flamed
+
+"That's a long story, Miss Messiter. It wouldn't be square for me
+to get my version in before your boys. Y'u ask them." He
+permitted himself a genial smile, somewhat ironic. "I shouldn't
+wonder but what they'll give me a giltedged testimonial as an
+unhanged horse thief."
+
+"Isn't there such a thing as law in Wyoming?" the girl demanded.
+
+"Lots of it. Y'u can buy just as good law right here as in
+Kalamazoo."
+
+"I wish I knew where to find it."
+
+"Like to put me in the calaboose?"
+
+"In the penitentiary. Yes, sir!" A moment later the question that
+was in her thoughts leaped hotly from her lips. "Who are you,
+sir, that dare to commit murder and boast of it?"
+
+She had flicked him on the raw at last. Something that was near
+to pain rested for a second in his eyes. "Murder is a hard name,
+ma'am. And I didn't say he was daid, or any of the three," came
+his gentle answer.
+
+"You MEANT to kill them, anyhow."
+
+"Did I?" There was the ghost of a sad smile about his eyes.
+
+"The way you act, a person might think you one of Ned Bannister's
+men," she told him, scornfully.
+
+"I expect you're right."
+
+She repented her a little at a charge so unjust. "If you are not
+ashamed of your name why are you so loath to part with it?"
+
+"Y'u didn't ask me my name," he said, a dark flush sweeping his
+face.
+
+"I ask it now."
+
+Like the light from a snuffed candle the boyish recklessness had
+gone out of his face. His jaws were set like a vise and he looked
+hard as hammered steel.
+
+"My name is Bannister," he said, coldly.
+
+"Ned Bannister, the outlaw," she let slip, and was aware of a
+strange sinking of the heart.
+
+It seemed to her that something sinister came to the surface in
+his handsome face. "I reckon we might as well let it go at that,"
+he returned, with bitter briefness.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 2. THE KING OF THE BIG HORN COUNTRY
+
+Two months before this time Helen Messiter had been serenely
+teaching a second grade at Kalamazoo, Michigan, notwithstanding
+the earnest efforts of several youths of that city to induce her
+to retire to domesticity "What's the use of being a schoolmarm?"
+had been the burden of their plaint. "Any spinster can teach kids
+C-A-T, Cat, but only one in several thousand can be the prettiest
+bride in Kalamazoo." None of them, however, had been able to
+drive the point sufficiently home, and it is probable that she
+would have continued to devote herself to Young America if an
+uncle she had never seen had not died without a will and left her
+a ranch in Wyoming yclept the Lazy D.
+
+When her lawyer proposed to put the ranch on the market Miss
+Helen had a word to say.
+
+"I think not. I'll go out and see it first, anyhow," she said.
+
+"But really, my dear young lady, it isn't at all necessary. Fact
+is, I've already had an offer of a hundred thousand dollars for
+it. Now, I should judge that a fair price "
+
+"Very likely," his client interrupted, quietly. "But, you see, I
+don't care to sell."
+
+"Then what in the world are you going to do with it?"
+
+"Run it."
+
+"But, my dear Miss Messiter, it isn't an automobile or any other
+kind of toy. You must remember that it takes a business head and
+a great deal of experience to make such an investment pay. I
+really think--"
+
+"My school ends on the fourteenth of June. I'll get a substitute
+for the last two months. I shall start for Wyoming on the
+eighteenth of April."
+
+The man of law gasped, explained the difficulties again carefully
+as to a child, found that he was wasting his breath, and wisely
+gave it up.
+
+Miss Messiter had started on the eighteenth of April, as she had
+announced. When she reached Gimlet Butte, the nearest railroad
+point to the Lazy D, she found a group of curious, weatherbeaten
+individuals gathered round a machine foreign to their experience.
+It was on a flat car, and the general opinion ran the gamut from
+a newfangled sewing machine to a thresher. Into this guessing
+contest came its owner with so brisk and businesslike an energy
+that inside of two hours she was testing it up and down the wide
+street of Gimlet Butte, to the wonder and delight of an audience
+to which each one of the eleven saloons of the city had
+contributed its admiring quota.
+
+Meanwhile the young woman attended strictly to business. She had
+disappeared for half an hour with a suit case into the Elk House;
+and when she returned in a short-skirted corduroy suit, leggings
+and wide-brimmed gray Stetson hat, all Gimlet Butte took an
+absorbing interest in the details of this delightful adventure
+that had happened to the town. The population was out _en masse_
+to watch her slip down the road on a trial trip.
+
+Presently "Soapy" Sothern, drifting in on his buckskin from the
+Hoodoo Peak country, where for private reasons of his own he had
+been for the past month a sojourner, reported that he had seen
+the prettiest sight in the State climbing under a gasoline bronc
+with a monkey-wrench in her hand. Where? Right over the hill on
+the edge of town. The immediate stampede for the cow ponies was
+averted by a warning chug-chug that sounded down the road,
+followed by the appearance of a flashing whir that made the
+ponies dance on their hind legs.
+
+"The gasoline bronc lady sure makes a hit with me," announced
+"Texas," gravely. "I allow I'll rustle a job with the Lazy D
+outfit."
+
+"She ce'tainly rides herd on that machine like a champeen,"
+admitted Soapy. "I reckon I'll drift over to the Lazy D with you
+to look after yore remains, Tex, when the lightning hits you."
+
+Miss Messiter swung the automobile round in a swift circle, came
+to an abrupt halt in front of the hotel, and alighted without
+delay. As she passed in through the half score of admirers she
+had won, her dark eyes swept smilingly over assembled Cattleland.
+She had already met most of them at the launching of the machine
+from the flat car, and had directed their perspiring energies as
+they labored to follow her orders. Now she nodded a recognition
+with a little ripple of gay laughter.
+
+"I'm delighted to be able to contribute to the entertainment of
+Gimlet Butte," she said, as she swept in. For this young woman
+was possessed of Western adaptation. It gave her no conscientious
+qualms to exchange conversation fraternal with these genial
+savages.
+
+The Elk House did not rejoice in a private dining room, and
+competition strenuous ensued as to who should have the pleasure
+of sitting beside the guest of honor. To avoid ill feeling, the
+matter was determined by a game of freeze-out, in which Texas and
+a mature gentleman named, from his complexion, "Beet" Collins,
+were the lucky victors. Texas immediately repaired to the general
+store, where he purchased a new scarlet bandanna for the
+occasion; also a cake of soap with which to rout the alkali dust
+that had filtered into every pore of his hands and face from a
+long ride across the desert.
+
+Came supper and Texas simultaneously, the cow-puncher's face
+scrubbed to an apple shine. At the last moment Collins defaulted,
+his nerve completely gone. Since, however, he was a thrifty soul,
+he sold his place to Soapy for ten dollars, and proceeded to
+invest the proceeds in an immediate drunk.
+
+During the first ten minutes of supper Miss Messiter did not
+appear, and the two guardians who flanked her chair solicitously
+were the object of much badinage.
+
+"She got one glimpse of that red haid of Tex and the pore lady's
+took to the sage," explained Yorky.
+
+"And him scrubbed so shiny fust time since Christmas before the
+big blizzard," sighed Doc Rogers.
+
+"Shucks! She ain't scared of no sawed-off, hammered-down runt
+like Texas, No, siree! Miss Messiter's on the absent list 'cause
+she's afraid she cayn't resist the blandishments of Soapy. Did
+yo' ever hear about Soapy and that Caspar hash slinger?"
+
+"Forget it, Slim," advised Soapy, promptly. He had been engaged
+in lofty and oblivious conversation with Texas, but he did not
+intend to allow reminiscences to get under way just now.
+
+At this opportune juncture arrived the mistress of the "gasoline
+bronc," neatly clad in a simple white lawn with blue trimmings.
+She looked like a gleam of sunshine in her fresh, sweet youth;
+and not even in her own school room had she ever found herself
+the focus of a cleaner, more unstinted admiration. For the
+outdoors West takes off its hat reverently to women worthy of
+respect, especially when they are young and friendly.
+
+Helen Messiter had come to Wyoming because the call of adventure,
+the desire for experience outside of rutted convention, were
+stirring her warm-blooded youth. She had seen enough of life
+lived in a parlor, and when there came knocking at her door a
+chance to know the big, untamed outdoors at first hand she had at
+once embraced it like a lover. She was eager for her new life,
+and she set out skillfully to make these men tell her what she
+wanted to know. To them, of course, it was an old story, and
+whatever of romance it held was unconscious. But since she wanted
+to talk of the West they were more than ready to please her.
+
+So she listened, and drew them out with adroit questions when it
+was necessary. She made them talk of life on the open range, of
+rustlers and those who lived outside the law in the upper
+Shoshone country, of the deadly war waging between the cattle and
+sheep industries.
+
+"Are there any sheep near the Lazy D ranch?" she asked, intensely
+interested in Soapy's tale of how cattle and sheep could no more
+be got to mix than oil and water.
+
+For an instant nobody answered her question; then Soapy replied,
+with what seemed elaborate carelessness:
+
+"Ned Bannister runs a bunch of about twelve thousand not more'n
+fifteen or twenty miles from your place."
+
+"And you say they are spoiling the range?"
+
+"They're ce'tainly spoiling it for cows."
+
+"But can't something be done? If my cows were there first I don't
+see what right he has to bring his sheep there," the girl
+frowned.
+
+The assembled company attended strictly to supper. The girl,
+surprised at the stillness, looked round. "Well?"
+
+"Now you're shouting, ma'am! That's what we say," enthused Texas,
+spurring to the rescue.
+
+"It doesn't much matter what you say. What do you do?" asked
+Helen, impatiently. "Do you lie down and let Mr. Bannister and
+his kind drive their sheep over you?"
+
+"Do we, Soapy?" grinned Texas. Yet it seemed to her his smile was
+not quite carefree.
+
+"I'm not a cowman myself," explained Soapy to the girl. "Nor do I
+run sheep. I--"
+
+"Tell Miss Messiter what yore business is, Soapy," advised Yorky
+from the end of the table, with a mouthful of biscuit swelling
+his cheeks.
+
+Soapy crushed the irrepressible Yorky with a look, but that young
+man hit back smilingly.
+
+"Soapy, he sells soap, ma'am. He's a sorter city salesman, I
+reckon."
+
+"I should never have guessed it. Mr. Sothern does not LOOK like a
+salesman," said the girl, with a glance at his shrewd, hard,
+expressionless face.
+
+"Yes, ma'am, he's a first-class seller of soap, is Mr. Sothern,"
+chuckled the cow-puncher, kicking his friends gayly under the
+table.
+
+"You can see I never sold HIM any, Miss Messiter," came back
+Soapy, sorrowfully.
+
+All this was Greek to the young lady from Kalamazoo. How was she
+to know that Mr. Sothern had vended his soap in small cubes on
+street corners, and that he wrapped bank notes of various
+denominations in the bars, which same were retailed to eager
+customers for the small sum of fifty cents, after a guarantee
+that the soap was good? His customers rarely patronized him
+twice; and frequently they used bad language because the soap
+wrapping was not as valuable as they had expected. This was
+manifestly unfair, for Mr. Sothern, who made no claims to
+philanthropy, often warned them that the soap should be bought on
+its merits, and not with an eye single to the premium that might
+or might not accompany the package.
+
+"I started to tell you, ma'am, when that infant interrupted, that
+the cowmen don't aim to quit business yet a while. They've drawn
+a dead-line, Miss Messiter,"
+
+"A dead-line?"
+
+"Yes, ma'am, beyond which no sheep herder is to run his bunch."
+
+"And if he does?" the girl asked, open eyed.
+
+" He don't do it twict, ma'am. Why don't you pass the fritters to
+Miss Messiter, Slim?"
+
+"And about this Bannister Who is he?"
+
+Her innocent question seemed to ring a bell for silence; seemed
+to carry with it some hidden portent that stopped idle
+conversation as a striking clock that marks the hour of an
+execution.
+
+The smile that had been gay grew grim, and men forgot the subject
+of their light, casual talk. It was Sothern that answered her,
+and she observed that his voice was grave, his face studiously
+without expression.
+
+"Mr. Bannister, ma'am, is a sheepman."
+
+"So I understood, but " Her eyes traveled swiftly round the
+table, and appraised the sudden sense of responsibility that had
+fallen on these reckless, careless frontiersmen. "I am wondering
+what else he is. Really, he seems to be the bogey man of Gimlet
+Butte."
+
+There was another instant silence, and again it was Soapy that
+lifted it. "I expaict you'll like Wyoming, Miss Messiter;
+leastways I hope you will. There's a right smart of country
+here." His gaze went out of the open door to the vast sea of
+space that swam in the fine sunset light. "Yes, most folks that
+ain't plumb spoilt with city ways likes it."
+
+"Sure she'll like it. Y'u want to get a good, easy-riding hawss,
+Miss Messiter," advised Slim.
+
+"And a rifle," added Texas, promptly.
+
+It occurred to her that they were all working together to drift
+the conversation back to a safe topic. She followed the lead
+given her, but she made up her mind to know what it was about her
+neighbor, Mr. Bannister, the sheep herder, that needed to be
+handled with such wariness and circumspection of speech.
+
+Her chance came half an hour later, when she stood talking to the
+landlady on the hotel porch in the mellow twilight that seemed to
+rest on the land like a moonlit aura. For the moment they were
+alone.
+
+"What is it about this man Bannister that makes men afraid to
+speak of him?" she demanded, with swift impulse.
+
+Her landlady's startled eyes went alertly round to see that they
+were alone. "Hush, child! You mustn't speak of him like that,"
+warned the older woman.
+
+"Why mustn't I? That's what I want to know."
+
+"Is isn't healthy."
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+Again that anxious look flashed round in the dusk. "The Bannister
+outfit is the worst in the land. Ned Bannister is king of the
+whole Big Horn country and beyond that to the Tetons."
+
+"And you mean to tell me that everybody is afraid of him--that
+men like Mr. Sothern dare not say their soul is their own?" the
+newcomer asked, contemptuously.
+
+"Not so loud, child. He has spies everywhere That's the trouble.
+You don't know who is in with him. He's got the whole region
+terrified."
+
+"Is he so bad?"
+
+"He is a devil. Last year he and his hell riders swept down on
+Topaz and killed two bartenders just to see them kick, Ned
+Bannister said. Folks allow they knew too much."
+
+"But the law--the Government? Haven't you a sheriff and
+officers?"
+
+"Bannister has. He elects the sheriff in this county."
+
+"Aren't there more honest people here than villains?"
+
+"Ten times as many, but the trouble is that the honest folks
+can't trust each other. You see, if one of them made a mistake
+and confided in the wrong man--well, some fine day he would go
+riding herd and would not turn up at night. Next week, or next
+month, maybe, one of his partners might find a pile of bones in
+an arroyo.
+
+"Have you ever seen this Bannister?"
+
+"You MUST speak lower when you talk of him, Miss Messiter," the
+woman insisted. "Yes, I saw him once; at least I think I did.
+Mighty few folks know for sure that they have seen him. He is a
+mystery, and he travels under many names and disguises."
+
+"When was it you think you saw him?"
+
+"Two years ago at Ayr. The bank was looted that night and robbed
+of thirty thousand dollars. They roused the cashier from his bed
+and made him give the combination. He didn't want to, and Ned
+Bannister"--her voice sank to a tremulous whisper--"put red-hot
+running-irons between his fingers till he weakened. It was a
+moonlight night--much such a night as this--and after it was done
+I peeped through the blind of my room and saw them ride away. He
+rode in front of them and sang like an angel--did it out of
+daredeviltry to mock the people of the town that hadn't nerve
+enough to shoot him. You see, he knew that nobody would dare hurt
+him 'count of the revenge of his men."
+
+"What was he like?" the mistress of the Lazy D asked, strangely
+awed at this recital of transcendent villainy."
+
+"'Course he was masked, and I didn't see his face. But I'd know
+him anywhere. He's a long, slim fellow, built like a mountain
+lion. You couldn't look at him and ever forget him. He's one of
+these graceful, easy men that go so fur with fool women; one of
+the kind that half shuts his dark, devil eyes and masters them
+without seeming to try."
+
+"So he's a woman killer, too, is he? Any more outstanding
+inconsistencies in this versatile Jesse James?"
+
+"He's plumb crazy about music, they say. Has a piano and plays
+Grigg and Chopping, and all that classical kind of music. He went
+clear down to Denver last year to hear Mrs. Shoeman sing."
+
+Helen smiled, guessing at Schumann-Heink as the singer in
+question, and Grieg and Chopin as the composers named. Her
+interest was incredibly aroused. She had expected the West and
+its products to exhilarate her, but she had not looked to find so
+finished a Mephisto among its vaunted "bad men." He was probably
+overrated; considered a wonder because his accomplishments
+outstepped those of the range. But Helen Messiter had quite
+determined on one thing. She was going to meet this redoubtable
+villain and make up her mind for herself. Already, before she had
+been in Wyoming six hours, this emancipated young woman had
+decided on that.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 3. AN INVITATION GIVEN AND ACCEPTED
+
+And already she had met him. Not only met him, but saved him from
+the just vengeance about to fall upon him. She had not yet seen
+her own ranch, had not spoken to a single one of her employees,
+for it had been a part of her plan to drop in unexpected and
+examine the situation before her foreman had a chance to put his
+best foot forward. So she had started alone from Gimlet Butte
+that morning in her machine, and had come almost in sight of the
+Lazy D ranch houses when the battle in the coulee invited her to
+take a hand.
+
+She had acted on generous impulse, and the unforeseen result had
+been to save this desperado from justice. But the worst of it was
+that she could not find it in her heart to regret it. Granted
+that he was a villain, double-dyed and beyond hope, yet he was
+the home of such courage, such virility, that her unconsenting
+admiration went out in spite of herself. He was, at any rate, a
+MAN, square-jawed, resolute, implacable. In the sinuous trail of
+his life might lie arson, robbery, murder, but he still held to
+that dynamic spark of self-respect that is akin to the divine.
+Nor was it possible to believe that those unblinking gray eyes,
+with the capability of a latent sadness of despair in them,
+expressed a soul entirely without nobility. He had a certain
+gallant ease, a certain attractive candor, that did not consist
+with villainy unadulterated.
+
+It was characteristic even of her impulsiveness that Helen
+Messiter curbed the swift condemnation that leaped to her lips
+when she knew that the man sitting beside her was the notorious
+bandit of the Shoshone fastnesses. She was not in the least
+afraid. A sure instinct told her he was not the kind of a man of
+whom a woman need have fear so long as her own anchor held fast.
+In good time she meant to let him have her unvarnished opinion of
+him, but she did not mean it to be an unconsidered one. Wherefore
+she drove the machine forward toward the camelbacked peak he had
+indicated, her eyes straight before her, a frown corrugating her
+forehead.
+
+For him, having made his dramatic announcement, he seemed content
+for the present with silence. He leaned back in the car and
+appreciated her with a coolness that just missed impudence.
+Certainly her appearance proclaimed her very much worth while. To
+dwell on the long lines of her supple young body, the exquisite
+throat and chin curve, was a pleasure with a thrill to it. As a
+physical creation, a mere innocent young animal, he thought her
+perfect; attuned to a fine harmony of grace and color. But it was
+the animating vitality of her, the lightness of motion, the fire
+and sparkle of expression that gave her the captivating charm she
+possessed.
+
+They were two miles nearer the camel-backed peak before he broke
+the silence.
+
+"Beats a bronco for getting over the ground. Think I'll have to
+get one," he mused aloud.
+
+"With the money you took from the Ayr bank?" she flashed.
+
+"I might drive off some of your cows and sell them," he
+countered, promptly. "About how much will they hold me up for a
+machine like this?"
+
+"This is only a runabout. You can get one for twelve or fourteen
+hundred dollars of anybody's money."
+
+"Of yours?" he laughed.
+
+"I haven't that much with me. If you'll come over and hold up the
+ranch perhaps we might raise it among us," she jeered.
+
+His mirth was genuine. "But right now I couldn't get more than
+how much off y'u?"
+
+"Sixty-three dollars is all I have with me, and I couldn't give
+you more--NOT EVEN IF YOU PUT RED HOT IRONS BETWEEN MY FINGERS."
+She gave it to him straight, her blue eyes fixed steadily on him.
+
+Yet she was not prepared for the effect of her words. The last
+thing she had expected was to see the blood wash out of his
+bronzed face, to see his sensitive nostrils twitch with pain. He
+made her feel as if she had insulted him, as if she had been
+needlessly cruel. And because of it she hardened her heart. Why
+should she spare him the mention of it? He had not hesitated at
+the shameless deed itself. Why should she shrink before that
+wounded look that leaped to his fine eyes in that flash of time
+before he hardened them to steel?
+
+"You did it--didn't you?" she demanded.
+
+"That's what they say." His gaze met her defiantly.
+
+"And it is true, isn't it?"
+
+"Oh, anything is true of a man that herds sheep," he returned,
+bitterly.
+
+"If that is true it would not be possible for you to understand
+how much I despise you."
+
+"Thank you," he retorted, ironically.
+
+"I don't understand at all. I don't see how you can be the man
+they say you are. Before I met you it was easy to understand. But
+somehow--I don't know--you don't LOOK like a villain." She found
+herself strangely voicing the deep hope of her heart. It was
+surely impossible to look at him and believe him guilty of the
+things of which, he was accused. And yet he offered no denial,
+suggested no defense.
+
+Her troubled eyes went over his thin, sunbaked face with its
+touch, of bitterness, and she did not find it possible to dismiss
+the subject without giving him a chance to set himself right.
+
+"You can't be as bad as they say. You are not, are you?" she
+asked, naively.
+
+"What do y'u think?" he responded, coolly.
+
+She flushed angrily at what she accepted as his insolence. "A man
+of any decency would have jumped at the chance to explain."
+
+"But if there is nothing to explain?"
+
+"You are then guilty."
+
+Their eyes met, and neither of them quailed.
+
+"If I pleaded not guilty would y'u believe me?"
+
+She hesitated. "I don't know. How could I when it is known by
+everybody? And yet--"
+
+He smiled. "Why should I trouble y'u, then, with explanations? I
+reckon we'll let it go at guilty."
+
+"Is that all you can say for yourself?"
+
+He seemed to hang in doubt an instant, then shook his head and
+refused the opening.
+
+"I expect if we changed the subject I could say a good deal for
+y'u," he drawled. "I never saw anything pluckier than the way y'u
+flew down from the mesa and conducted the cutting-out expedition.
+Y'u sure drilled through your punchers like a streak of
+lightning."
+
+"I didn't know who you were," she explained, proudly.
+
+"Would it have made any difference if y'u had?"
+
+Again the angry flush touched her cheeks. "Not a bit. I would
+have saved you in order to have you properly hanged later," she
+cut back promptly.
+
+He shook his head gayly. "I'm ce'tainly going to disappoint y'u
+some. Your enterprising punchers may collect me yet, but not
+alive, I reckon."
+
+"I'll give them strict orders to bring you in alive."
+
+"Did you ever want the moon when y'u was a little kid?" he asked.
+
+"We'll see, Mr. Outlaw Bannister."
+
+He laughed softly, in the quiet, indolent fashion that would have
+been pleasant if it had not been at her. "It's right kind of you
+to take so much interest in me. I'd most be willing to oblige by
+letting your boys rope me to renew this acquaintance, ma'am."
+Then, "I get out here Miss Messiter, he added.
+
+She stopped on the instant. Plainly she could not get rid of him
+too soon. "Haven't you forgot one thing?" she asked, ironically.
+
+"Yes, ma'am. To thank you proper for what y'u did for me." He
+limped gingerly down from the car and stood with his hand on one
+of the tires. "I have been trying to think how to say it right;
+but I guess I'll have to give it up. All is that if I ever get a
+chance to even the score--"
+
+She waved his thanks aside impatiently "I didn't mean that. You
+have forgotten to take my purse.
+
+His gravity was broken on the instant, and his laughter was
+certainly delightfully fresh. "I clean forgot, but I expect I'll
+drop over to the ranch for it some day."
+
+"We'll try to make to make you welcome, Mr. Bannister."
+
+"Don't put yourself out at all. I'll take pot-luck when I come."
+
+"How many of you may we expect?" she asked, defiantly.
+
+"Oh, I allow to come alone."
+
+"You'll very likely forget."
+
+"No, ma'am, I don't know so many ladies that I'm liable to such
+an oversight.
+
+"I have heard a different story. But if you do remember to come,
+and will let us know when you expect to honor the Lazy D, I'll
+have messengers sent to meet you."
+
+He perfectly understood her to mean leaden ones, and the humorous
+gleam in his eye sparkled in appreciation of her spirit. "I don't
+want all that fuss made over me. I reckon I'll drop in
+unexpected," he said.
+
+She nodded curtly. "Good-bye. Hope your ankle won't trouble you
+very much."
+
+"Thank y'u, ma'am. I reckon it won't. Good-bye, Miss Messiter."
+
+Out of the tail of her eye she saw him bowing like an Italian
+opera singer, as impudently insouciant, as gracefully graceless
+as any stage villain in her memory. Once again she saw him, when
+her machine swept round a curve and she could look back without
+seeming to do so, limping across through the sage brush toward a
+little hillock near the road. And as she looked the bare, curly
+head was inclined toward her in another low, mocking bow. He was
+certainly the gallantest vagabond unhanged.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 4. AT THE LAZY D RANCH
+
+Helen Messiter was a young woman very much alive, which implies
+that she was given to emotions; and as her machine skimmed over
+the ground to the Lazy D she had them to spare. For from the
+first this young man had taken her eye, and it had come upon her
+with a distinct shock that he was the notorious scoundrel who was
+terrorizing the countryside. She told herself almost passionately
+that she would never have believed it if he had not said so
+himself. She knew quite well that the coldness that had clutched
+her heart when he gave his name had had nothing to do with fear.
+There had been chagrin, disappointment, but nothing in the least
+like the terror she might have expected. The simple truth was
+that he had seemed so much a man that it had hurt her to find him
+also a wild beast.
+
+Deep in her heart she resented the conviction forced upon her.
+Reckless he undoubtedly was, at odds with the law surely, but it
+was hard to admit that attractive personality to be the mask of
+fiendish cruelty and sinister malice. And yet--the facts spoke
+for themselves. He had not even attempted a denial. Still there
+was a mystery about him, else how was it possible for two so
+distinct personalities to dwell together in the same body.
+
+She hated him with all her lusty young will; not only for what he
+was, but also for what she had been disappointed in not finding
+him after her first instinctive liking. Yet it was with an odd
+little thrill that she ran down again into the coulee where her
+prosaic life had found its first real adventure. He might be all
+they said, but nothing could wipe out the facts that she had
+offered her life to save his, and that he had lent her his body
+as a living shield for one exhilarating moment of danger.
+
+As she reached the hill summit beyond the coulee, Helen Messiter
+was aware that a rider in ungainly chaps of white wool was
+rapidly approaching. He dipped down into the next depression
+without seeing her; and when they came face to face at the top of
+the rise the result was instantaneous. His pony did an animated
+two-step not on the programme. It took one glance at the
+diabolical machine, and went up on its hind legs, preliminary to
+giving an elaborate exhibition of pitching. The rider indulged in
+vivid profanity and plied his quirt vigorously. But the bronco,
+with the fear of this unknown evil on its soul, varied its
+bucking so effectively that the puncher astride its hurricane
+deck was forced, in the language of his kind, to "take the dust."
+
+His red head sailed through the air and landed in the white sand
+at the girl's feet. For a moment he sat in the road and gazed
+with chagrin after the vanishing heels of his mount. Then his
+wrathful eyes came round to the owner of the machine that had
+caused the eruption. His mouth had opened to give adequate
+expression to his feelings, when he discovered anew the forgotten
+fact that he was dealing with a woman. His jaw hung open for an
+instant in amaze; and when he remembered the unedited vocabulary
+he had turned loose on the world a flood of purple swept his
+tanned face.
+
+She wanted to laugh, but wisely refrained. "I'm very sorry," was
+what she said.
+
+He stared in silence as he slowly picked himself from the ground.
+His red hair rose like the quills of a porcupine above a face
+that had the appearance of being unfinished. Neither nose nor
+mouth nor chin seemed to be quite definite enough.
+
+She choked down her gayety and offered renewed apologies.
+
+"I was going for a doc," he explained, by way of opening his
+share of the conversation.
+
+"Then perhaps you had better jump in with me and ride back to the
+Lazy D. I suppose that's where you came from?"
+
+He scratched his vivid head helplessly. "Yes, ma'am."
+
+"Then jump in."
+
+"I was going to Bear Creek, ma'am," he added dubiously.
+
+"How far is it?"
+
+"'Bout twenty-five miles, and then some."
+
+"You don't expect to walk, do you?"
+
+"No; I allowed--"
+
+"I'll take you back to the ranch, where you can get another
+horse."
+
+"I reckon, ma'am, I'd ruther walk."
+
+"Nonsense! Why?"
+
+"I ain't used to them gas wagons."
+
+"It's quite safe. There is nothing to be afraid of."
+
+Reluctantly he got in beside her, as happy as a calf in a
+branding pen.
+
+"Are you the lady that sashaid off with Ned Bannister?" he asked
+presently, after he had had time to smother successively some of
+his fear, wonder and delight at their smooth, swift progress.
+
+"Yes. Why?"
+
+"The boys allow you hadn't oughter have done it." Then, to place
+the responsibility properly on shoulders broader than his own, he
+added: "That's what Judd says."
+
+"And who is Judd?"
+
+"Judd, he's the foreman of the Lazy D."
+
+Below them appeared the corrals and houses of a ranch nestling in
+a little valley flanked by hills.
+
+"This yere's the Lazy D," announced the youth, with pride, and in
+the spirit of friendliness suggested a caution. "Judd, he's some
+peppery. You wanter smooth him down some, seeing as he's riled up
+to-day."
+
+A flicker of steel came into the blue eyes. "Indeed! Well, here
+we are."
+
+"If it ain't Reddy, AND the lady with the flying machine,"
+murmured a freckled youth named McWilliams, emerging from the
+bunkhouse with a pan of water which had been used to bathe the
+wound of one of the punctured combatants.
+
+"What's that?" snapped a voice from within; and immediately its
+owner appeared in the doorway and bored with narrowed black eyes
+the young woman in the machine.
+
+"Who are you?" he demanded, brusquely.
+
+"Your target," she answered, quietly. "Would you like to take
+another shot at me?"
+
+The freckled lad broke out into a gurgle of laughter, at which
+the black, swarthy man beside him wheeled round in a rage. "What
+you cacklin' at, Mac?" he demanded, in a low voice.
+
+"Oh, the things I notice," returned that youth jauntily, meeting
+the other's anger without the flicker of an eyelid.
+
+"It ain't healthy to be so noticin'," insinuated the other.
+
+"Y'u don't say," came the prompt, sarcastic retort. "If you're
+such a darned good judge of health, y'u better be attending to
+some of your patients." He jerked a casual thumb over his
+shoulder toward the bunks on which lay the wounded men.
+
+"I shouldn't wonder but what there might be another patient for
+me to attend to," snarled the foreman.
+
+"That so? Well, turn your wolf loose when y'u get to feelin' real
+devilish," jeered the undismayed one, strolling forward to assist
+Miss Messiter to alight.
+
+The mistress of the Lazy D had been aware of the byplay, but she
+had caught neither the words nor their import. She took the
+offered brown hand smilingly, for here again she looked into the
+frank eyes of the West, unafraid and steady. She judged him not
+more than twenty-two, but the school where he had learned of life
+had held open and strenuous session every day since he could
+remember.
+
+"Glad to meet y'u, ma'am," he assured her, in the current phrase
+of the semi-arid lands.
+
+"I'm sure I am glad to meet YOU," she answered, heartily. "Can
+you tell me where is the foreman of the Lazy D?"
+
+He introduced with a smile the swarthy man in the doorway. "This
+is him ma'am--Mr. Judd Morgan."
+
+Now it happened that Mr. Judd Morgan was simmering with
+suppressed spleen.
+
+"All I've got to say is that you had no business mixing up in
+that shootin' affair back there. Perhaps you don't know that the
+man you saved is Ned Bannister, the outlaw," was his surly
+greeting.
+
+"Oh, yes, I know that."
+
+"Then what d'ye mean--Who are you, anyway?" His insolent eyes
+coasted malevolently over her.
+
+"Helen Messiter is my name."
+
+It was ludicrous to see the change that came over the man. He had
+been prepared to bully her; and with a word she had pricked the
+bubble of his arrogance. He swallowed his anger and got a
+mechanical smile in working order.
+
+"Glad to see you here, Miss Messiter," he said, his sinister gaze
+attempting to meet hers frankly "I been looking for you every
+day."
+
+"But y'u managed to surprise him, after all ma'am," chuckled Mac.
+
+"Where's yo' hawss, Reddy?" inquired a tall young man, who had
+appeared silently in the doorway of the bunkhouse.
+
+Reddy pinked violently. "I had an accident, Denver," he
+explained. "This lady yere she--"
+
+"Scooped y'u right off yore hawss. Y'u don't say," sympathized
+Mac so breathlessly that even Reddy joined in the chorus of
+laughter that went up at his expense.
+
+The young woman thought to make it easy for him, and suggested an
+explanation.
+
+"His horse isn't used to automobiles, and so when it met this
+one--"
+
+"I got off," interposed Reddy hastily, displaying a complexion
+like a boiled beet.
+
+"He got off," Mac explained gravely to the increasing audience.
+
+Denver nodded with an imperturbable face. "He got off."
+
+Mac introduced Miss Messiter to such of her employees as were on
+hand. " Shake hands with Miss Messiter, Missou," was the formula,
+the name alone varying to suit the embarrassed gentlemen in
+leathers. Each of them in turn presented a huge hand, in which
+her little one disappeared for the time, and was sawed up and
+down in the air like a pump-handle. Yet if she was amused she did
+not show it; and her pleasure at meeting the simple, elemental
+products of the plains outweighed a great deal her sense of the
+ludicrous.
+
+"How are your patients getting along?" she presently asked of her
+foreman.
+
+"I reckon all right. I sent Reddy for a doc, but--"
+
+"He got off," murmured Mac pensively.
+
+"I'll go rope another hawss," put in the man who had got off.
+
+"Get a jump on you, then. Miss Messiter, would you like to look
+over the place?"
+
+"Not now. I want to see the men that were hurt. Perhaps I can
+help them. Once I took a few weeks in nursing."
+
+"Bully for you, ma'am," whooped Mac. "I've a notion those boys
+are sufferin' for a woman to put the diamond-hitch on them
+bandages."
+
+"Bring that suit-case in," she commanded Denver, in the gentlest
+voice he had ever heard, after she had made a hasty inspection of
+the first wounded man.
+
+From the suit-case she took a little leather medicine-case, the
+kind that can be bought already prepared for use. It held among
+other things a roll of medicated cotton, some antiseptic tablets,
+and a little steel instrument for probing.
+
+"Some warm water, please; and have some boiling on the range,"
+were her next commands.
+
+Mac flew to execute them.
+
+It was a pleasure to see her work, so deftly the skillful hands
+accomplished what her brain told them. In admiring awe the
+punchers stood awkwardly around while she washed and dressed the
+hurts. Two of the bullets had gone through the fleshy part of the
+arm and left clean wounds. In the case of the third man she had
+to probe for the lead, but fortunately found it with little
+difficulty. Meanwhile she soothed the victim with gentle womanly
+sympathy.
+
+"I know it hurts a good deal. Just a minute and I'll be through."
+
+His hands clutched tightly the edges of his bunk. "That's all
+right, doc. You attend to roping that pill and I'll endure the
+grief."
+
+A long sigh of relief went up from the assembled cowboys when she
+drew the bullet out.
+
+The sinewy hands fastened on the wooden bunk relaxed suddenly.
+
+"'Frisco's daid," gasped the cook, who bore the title of Wun Hop
+for no reason except that he was an Irishman in a place formerly
+held by a Chinese.
+
+"He has only fainted," she said quietly, and continued with the
+antiseptic dressing.
+
+When it was all over, the big, tanned men gathered at the
+entrance to the calf corral and expanded in admiration of their
+new boss.
+
+"She's a pure for fair. She grades up any old way yuh take her to
+the best corn-fed article on the market," pronounced Denver, with
+enthusiasm.
+
+"I got to ride the boundary," sighed Missou. "I kinder hate to go
+right now."
+
+"Here, too," acquiesced another. "I got a round-up on Wind Creek
+to cut out them two-year-olds. If 'twas my say-so, I'd order Mac
+on that job."
+
+"Right kind of y'u. Seems to me"--Mac's sarcastic eye trailed
+around to include all those who had been singing her
+praises--"the new queen of this hacienda won't have no trouble at
+all picking a prince consort when she gets round to it. Here's
+Wun Hop, not what y'u might call anxious, but ce'tainly willing.
+Then Denver's some in the turtle-dove business, according to that
+hash-slinger in Cheyenne. Missou might be induced to accept if it
+was offered him proper; and I allow Jim ain't turned the color of
+Redtop's hair jest for instance. I don't want to leave out
+'Frisco and the other boys carrying Bannister's pills--"
+
+"Nor McWilliams. I'd admire to include him," murmured Denver.
+
+That sunburned, nonchalant youth laughed musically. "Sure thing.
+I'd hate to be left out. The only difference is--"
+
+"Well?"
+
+His roving eye circled blandly round. "I stand about one show in
+a million. Y'u roughnecks are dead ones already."
+
+With which cold comfort he sauntered away to join Miss Messiter
+and the foreman, who now appeared together at the door of the
+ranchhouse, prepared to make a tour of the buildings and the
+immediate corrals.
+
+"Isn't there a woman on the place?" she was asking Morgan.
+
+"No'm, there ain't. Henderson's daughter would come and stay with
+y'u a while I reckon."
+
+"Please send for her at once, then, and ask her to come to-day."
+
+"All right. I'll send one of the boys right away."
+
+"How did y'u leave 'Frisco, ma'am?" asked Mac, by way of
+including himself easily.
+
+"He's resting quietly. Unless blood-poisoning sets in they ought
+all to do well."
+
+"It's right lucky for them y'u happened along. This is the hawss
+corral, ma'am," explained the young man just as Morgan opened his
+thin lips to tell her.
+
+Judd contrived to get rid of him promptly. "Slap on a saddle,
+Mac, and run up the remuda so Miss Messiter can see the hawsses
+for herself," he ordered.
+
+"Mebbe she'd rather ride down and look at the bunch," suggested
+the capable McWilliams.
+
+As it chanced, she did prefer to ride down the pasture and look
+over the place from on horseback. She was in love with her ranch
+already. Its spacious distances, the thousands of cattle and the
+horses, these picturesque retainers who served her even to the
+shedding of an enemy's blood; they all struck an answering echo
+in her gallant young heart that nothing in Kalamazoo had been
+able to stir. She bubbled over with enthusiasm, the while Morgan
+covertly sneered and McWilliams warmed to the untamed youth in
+her.
+
+"What about this man Bannister?" she flung out suddenly, after
+they had cantered back to the house when the remuda had been
+inspected.
+
+Her abrupt question brought again the short, tense silence she
+had become used to expect.
+
+"He runs sheep about twenty or thirty miles southwest of here,"
+explained McWilliams, in a carefully casual tone.
+
+"So everybody tells me, but it seems to me he spills a good deal
+of lead on my men," she answered impatiently. "What's the
+trouble?"
+
+"Last week he crossed the dead-line with a bunch of five thousand
+sheep."
+
+"Who draws this dead-line?"
+
+"The cattlemen got together and drew it. Your uncle was one of
+those that marked it off, ma'am."
+
+"And Bannister crossed it?"
+
+"Yes, ma'am. Yesterday 'Frisco come on him and one of his herders
+with a big bunch of them less than fifteen miles from here. He
+didn't know it was Bannister, and took a pot-shot at him. 'Course
+Bannister came back at him, and he got Frisco in the laig."
+
+"Didn't know it was Bannister? What difference WOULD that make?"
+she said impatiently.
+
+Mac laughed. "What difference would it make, Judd?"
+
+Morgan scowled, and the young man answered his own question. "We
+don't any of us go out of our way more'n a mile to cross
+Bannister's trail," he drawled.
+
+"Do you wear this for an ornament? Are you upholstered with
+hardware to catch the eyes of some girl?" she asked, touching
+with the end of her whip the revolver in the holster strapped to
+his chaps.
+
+His serene, gay smile flashed at her. "Are y'u ordering me to go
+out and get Ned Bannister's scalp?"
+
+"No, I am not," she explained promptly. "What I am trying to
+discover is why you all seem to be afraid of one man. He is only
+a man, isn't he?"
+
+A veil of ice seemed to fall over the boyish face and leave it
+chiseled marble. His unspeaking eyes rested on the swarthy
+foreman as he answered:
+
+"I don't know what he is, ma'am. He may be one man, or he may be
+a hundred. What's more, I ain't particularly suffering to find
+out. Fact is, I haven't lost any Bannisters."
+
+The girl became aware that her foreman was looking at her with a
+wary silent vigilance sinister in its intensity.
+
+"In short, you're like the rest of the people in this section.
+You're afraid."
+
+"Now y'u're shoutin', Miss Messiter. I sure am when it comes to
+shootin' off my mouth about Bannister."
+
+"And you, Mr. Morgan?"
+
+It struck her that the young puncher waited with a curious
+interest for the answer of the foreman.
+
+"Did it look like I was afraid this mawnin', ma'am?" he asked,
+with narrowed eyes.
+
+"No, you all seemed brave enough then, when you had him eight to
+one."
+
+"I wasn't there," hastily put in McWilliams. "I don't go gunning
+for my man without giving him a show."
+
+"I do," retorted Morgan cruelly. "I'd go if we was fifty to one.
+We'd 'a' got him, too, if it hadn't been for Miss Messiter. 'Twas
+a chance we ain't likely to get again for a year."
+
+"It wasn't your fault you didn't kill him, Mr. Morgan," she said,
+looking hard at him. "You may be interested to know that your
+last shot missed him only about six inches, and me about four."
+
+"I didn't know who you were," he sullenly defended.
+
+"I see. You only shoot at women when you don't know who they
+are." She turned her back on him pointedly and addressed herself
+to McWilliams. "You can tell the men working on this ranch that I
+won't have any more such attacks on this man Bannister. I don't
+care what or who he is. I don't propose to have him murdered by
+my employees. Let the law take him and hang him. Do you hear?"
+
+"I ce'tainly do, and the boys will get the word straight," he
+replied.
+
+"I take it since yuh are giving your orders through Mac, yuh
+don't need me any longer for your foreman," bullied Morgan.
+
+"You take it right, sir," came her crisp reply. "McWilliams will
+be my foreman from to-day."
+
+The man's face, malignant and wolfish, suddenly lost its mask.
+That she would so promptly call his bluff was the last thing he
+had expected. "That's all right. I reckon yuh think yuh know your
+own business, but I'll put it to yuh straight. Long as yuh live
+you'll be sorry for this."
+
+And with that he wheeled away.
+
+She turned to her new foreman and found him less radiant than she
+could have desired. "I'm right sorry y'u did that. I'm afraid
+y'u'll make trouble for yourself," he said quietly.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"I don't know myself just why." He hesitated before adding: "They
+say him and Bannister is thicker than they'd ought to be. It's a
+cinch that he's in cahoots somehow with that Shoshone bunch of
+bad men."
+
+"But--why, that's ridiculous. Only this morning he was trying to
+kill Bannister himself."
+
+"That's what I don't just savvy. There's a whole lot about that
+business I don't get next to. I guess Bannister is at the head of
+them. Everybody seems agreed about that. But the whole thing is a
+tangle of contradiction to me. I've milled it over a heap in my
+mind, too."
+
+"What are some of the contradictions?"
+
+"Well, here's one right off the bat, as we used to say back in
+the States. Bannister is a great musician, they claim; fine
+singer, and all that. Now I happen to know he can't sing any more
+than a bellowing yearling."
+
+"How do you know?" she asked, her eyes shining with interest.
+
+"Because I heard him try it. 'Twas one day last summer when I was
+out cutting trail of a bunch of strays down by Dead Cow Creek.
+The day was hot, and I lay down behind a cottonwood and dropped
+off to sleep. When I awakened it didn't take me longer'n an hour
+to discover what had woke me. Somebody on the other side of the
+creek was trying to sing. It was ce'tainly the limit. Pretty soon
+he come out of the brush and I seen it was Bannister."
+
+"You're sure it was Bannister?"
+
+"If seeing is believing, I'm sure."
+
+"And was his singing really so bad?"
+
+"I'd hate ever to hear worse."
+
+"Was he singing when you saw him?"
+
+"No, he'd just quit. He caught sight of my pony grazing, and
+hunted cover real prompt."
+
+"Then it might have been another man singing in the thicket."
+
+"It might, but it wasn't. Y'u see, I'd followed him through the
+bush by his song, and he showed up the moment I expected him."
+
+"Still there might have been another man there singing."
+
+"One chance in a million," he conceded.
+
+A sudden hope flamed up like tow in her heart. Perhaps, after
+all, Ned Bannister was not the leader of the outlaws. Perhaps
+somebody else was masquerading in his name, using Bannister's
+unpopularity as a shield to cover his iniquities. Still, this was
+an unlikely hypothesis, she had to admit. For why should he allow
+his good name to be dragged in the dust without any effort to
+save it? On a sudden impulse the girl confided her doubt to
+McWilliams.
+
+"You don't suppose there can be any mistake, do you? Somehow I
+can't think him as bad as they say. He looks awfully reckless,
+but one feels one could trust his face."
+
+"Same here," agreed the new foreman. "First off when I saw him my
+think was, 'I'd like to have that man backing my play when I'm
+sitting in the game with Old Man Hard Luck reaching out for my
+blue chips.'"
+
+"You don't think faces lie, do you?"
+
+"I've seen them that did, but, gen'rally speaking, tongues are a
+heap likelier to get tangled with the truth. But I reckon there
+ain't any doubt about Bannister. He's known over all this Western
+country."
+
+The young woman sighed. "I'm afraid you're right."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 5. THE DANCE AT FRASER'S
+
+"Heard tell yet of the dance over to Fraser's?"
+
+He was a young man of a brick red countenance and he wore loosely
+round his neck the best polka dot silk handkerchief that could be
+bought in Gimlet Butte, also such gala attire as was usually
+reserved only for events of importance. Sitting his horse
+carelessly in the plainsman's indolent fashion, he asked his
+question of McWilliams in front of the Lazy D bunkhouse.
+
+"Nope. When does the shindig come off?"
+
+"Friday night. Big thing. Y'u want to be there. All y'u lads."
+
+"Mebbe some of us will ride over."
+
+He of the polka dot kerchief did not appear quite satisfied. His
+glance wandered toward the house, as it had been doing
+occasionally since the moment of his arrival.
+
+"Y'u bet this dance is ace high, Mac. Fancy costumes and masks.
+Y'u can rent the costumes over to Slauson's for three per. Texas,
+he's going to call the dances. Music from Gimlet Butte. Y'u want
+to get it tucked away in your thinker that this dance ain't on
+the order of culls. No, sirree, it's cornfed."
+
+"Glad to hear of it. I'll cipher out somehow to be there, Slim."
+
+Slim's glance took in the ranchhouse again. He had ridden
+twenty-three miles out of his way to catch a glimpse of the newly
+arrived mistress of the Lazy D, the report of whose good looks
+and adventures had traveled hand in hand through many canons even
+to the heart of the Tetons. It had been on Skunk Creek that he
+had heard of her three days before, and now he had come to verify
+the tongue of rumor, to see her quite casually, of course, and do
+his own appraising. It began to look as if he were going to have
+to ride off without a glimpse of her.
+
+He nodded toward the house, turning a shade more purple than his
+native choleric hue. "Y'u want to bring your boss with y'u, Mac.
+We been hearing a right smart lot about her and the boys would
+admire to have her present. It's going to be strictly according
+to Hoyle--no rough-house plays go, y'understand."
+
+"I'll speak to her about it." Mac's deep amusement did not reach
+the surface. He was quite well aware that Slim was playing for
+time and that he was too bashful to plump out the desire that was
+in him. "Great the way cows are jumpin', ain't it?"
+
+"Sure. Well, I'll be movin' along to Slauson's. I just drapped in
+on my way. Thought mebbe y'u hadn't heard tell of the dance."
+
+"Much obliged. Was it for old man Slauson y'u dug up all them
+togs, Slim? He'll ce'tainly admire to see y'u in that silk
+tablecloth y'u got round your neck."
+
+Slim's purple deepened again. "Y'u go to grass, Mac. I don't aim
+to ask y'u to be my valley yet awhile."
+
+"C'rect. I was just wondering do all the Triangle Bar boys ride
+the range so handsome?"
+
+"Don't y'u worry about the Triangle Bar boys," advised the
+embarrassed Slim, gathering up his bridle reins.
+
+With one more reluctant glance in the direction of the house he
+rode away. When he reached the corral he looked back again. His
+gaze showed him the boyish foreman doubled up with laughter; also
+the sweep of a white skirt descending from the piazza.
+
+"Now, ain't that hoodooed luck?" the aggrieved rider of the
+Triangle Bar outfit demanded of himself, "I made my getaway about
+three shakes too soon, by gum!"
+
+Her foreman was in the throes of mirth when Helen Messiter
+reached him.
+
+"Include me in the joke," she suggested.
+
+"Oh, I was just thinkin'," he explained inadequately.
+
+"Does it always take you that way?"
+
+"About these boys that drop in so frequent on business these
+days. Funny how fond they're getting of the Lazy D. There was
+that stock detective happened in yesterday to show how anxious he
+was about your cows. Then the two Willow Creek riders that wanted
+a job punching for y'u, not to mention mention the Shoshone miner
+and the storekeeper from Gimlet Butte and Soapy Sothern and--"
+
+"Still I don't quite see the joke."
+
+"It ain't any joke with them. Serious business, ma'am."
+
+"What happened to start you on this line?"
+
+"The lad riding down the road on that piebald pinto. He come
+twenty miles out of his way, plumb dressed for a wedding, all to
+give me an invite to a dance at Fraser's. Y'u would call that
+real thoughtful of him, I expect."
+
+She gayly sparkled. "A real ranch dance--the kind you have been
+telling me about. Are Ida and I invited?"
+
+"Invited? Slim hinted at a lynching if I came without y'u."
+
+She laughed softly, merry eyes flashing swiftly at him. "How
+gallant you Westerners are, even though you do turn it into
+burlesque."
+
+His young laugh echoed hers. "Burlesque nothing. My life wouldn't
+be worth a thing if I went alone. Honest, I wouldn't dare."
+
+"Since the ranch can't afford to lose its foreman Ida and I will
+go along," she promised. "That is, if it is considered proper
+here."
+
+"Proper. Good gracious, ma'am! Every lady for thirty miles round
+will be there, from six months old to eighty odd years. It
+wouldn't be PROPER to stay at home."
+
+The foreman drove her to Fraser's in a surrey with Ida Henderson
+and one of the Lazy D punchers on the back seat. The drive was
+over twenty-five miles, but in that silent starry night every
+mile was a delight. Part of the way led through a beautiful
+canon, along the rocky mountain road of which the young man
+guided the rig with unerring skill. Beyond the gorge the country
+debouched into a grassy park that fell away from their feet for
+miles. It was in this basin that the Fraser ranch lay.
+
+The strains of the fiddle and the thumping of feet could be heard
+as they drove up. Already the rooms seemed to be pretty well
+filled, as Helen noticed when they entered. Three sets were on
+the floor for a quadrille and the house shook with the energy of
+the dancers. On benches against the walls were seated the
+spectators, and on one of them stood Texas calling the dance.
+
+"Alemane left. Right hand t'yer pardner and grand right and left.
+Ev-v-rybody swing," chanted the caller.
+
+A dozen rough young fellows were clustered near the front door,
+apparently afraid to venture farther lest their escape be cut
+off. Through these McWilliams pushed a way for his charges, the
+cowboys falling back respectfully at once when they discovered
+the presence of Miss Messiter.
+
+In the bedroom where she left her wraps the mistress of the Lazy
+D found a dozen or more infants and several of their mothers. In
+the kitchen were still other women and babies, some of the former
+very old and of the latter very young. A few of the babies were
+asleep, but most of them were still very much alive to this scene
+of unwonted hilarity in their young lives.
+
+As soon as she emerged into the general publicity of the dancing
+room her foreman pounced upon Helen and led her to a place in the
+head set that was making up. The floor was rough, the music jerky
+and uncertain, the quadrilling an exhibition of joyous and
+awkward abandon; but its picturesque lack of convention appealed
+to the girl from Michigan. It rather startled her to be swung so
+vigorously, but a glance about the room showed that these
+humorous-eyed Westerners were merely living up to the duty of the
+hour as they understood it.
+
+At the close of the quadrille Helen found herself being
+introduced to "Mr. Robins," alias Slim, who drew one of his feet
+back in an embarrassed bow.
+
+"I enjoy to meet y'u, ma'am," he assured her, and supplemented
+this with a request for the next dance, after which he fell into
+silence that was painful in its intensity.
+
+Nearly all the dances were squares, as few of those present
+understood the intricacies of the waltz and two-step. Hence it
+happened that the proficient McWilliams secured three round
+dances with his mistress.
+
+It was during the lunch of sandwiches, cake and coffee that Helen
+perceived an addition to the company. The affair had been
+advertised a costume ball, but most of those present had
+construed this very liberally. She herself, to be sure, had come
+as Mary Queen of Scots, Mac was arrayed in the scarlet tunic and
+tight-fitting breeches of the Northwest Mounted Police, and
+perhaps eight or ten others had made some attempt at representing
+some one other than they were. She now saw another, apparently a
+new arrival, standing in the doorway negligently. A glance told
+her that he was made up for a road agent and that his revolvers
+and mask were a part of the necessary costuming.
+
+Slowly his gaze circled the room and came round to her. His eyes
+were hard as diamonds and as flashing, so that the impact of
+their meeting looks seemed to shock her physically. He was a tall
+man, swarthy of hue, and he carried himself with a light ease
+that looked silken strong. Something in the bearing was familiar
+yet not quite familiar either. It seemed to suggest a resemblance
+to somebody she knew. And in the next thought she knew that the
+somebody was Ned Bannister.
+
+The man spoke to Fraser, just then passing with a cup of coffee,
+and Helen saw the two men approach. The stranger was coming to be
+formally introduced.
+
+"Shake hands with Mr. Holloway, Miss Messiter. He's from up in
+the hill country and he rode to our frolic. Y'u've got three
+guesses to figure out what he's made up as."
+
+"One will be quite enough, I think," she answered coldly.
+
+Fraser departed on his destination with the coffee and the
+newcomer sat down on the bench beside her.
+
+"One's enough, is it?" he drawled smilingly.
+
+"Quite, but I'm surprised so few came in costume. Why didn't you?
+But I suppose you had your reasons."
+
+"Didn't I? I'm supposed to be a bad man from the hills."
+
+She swept him casually with an indifferent glance. "And isn't
+that what you are in real life?"
+
+His sharp scrutiny chiseled into her. "What's that?"
+
+"You won't mind if I forget and call you Mr. Bannister instead of
+Mr. Holloway?"
+
+She thought his counterfeit astonishment perfect.
+
+"So I'm Ned Bannister, am I?"
+
+Their eyes clashed.
+
+"Aren't you?"
+
+She felt sure of it, and yet there was a lurking doubt. For there
+was in his manner something indescribably more sinister than she
+had felt in him on that occasion when she had saved his life.
+Then a debonair recklessness had been the outstanding note, but
+now there was something ribald and wicked in him.
+
+"Since y'u put it as a question, common politeness demands an
+answer. Ned Bannister is my name."
+
+"You are the terror of this country?"
+
+"I shan't be a terror to y'u, ma'am, if I can help it," he
+smiled.
+
+"But you are the man they call the king?"
+
+"I have that honor."
+
+"HONOR?"
+
+At the sharp scorn of her accent he laughed.
+
+"Do you mean that you are proud of your villainy?" she demanded.
+
+"Y'u've ce'tainly got the teacher habit of asking questions," he
+replied with a laugh that was a sneer.
+
+A shadow fell across them and a voice said quietly, "She didn't
+wait to ask any when she saved your life down in the coulee back
+of the Lazy D."
+
+The shadow was Jim McWilliams's, and its owner looked down at the
+man beside the girl with steady, hostile eyes.
+
+"Is this your put in, sir?" the other flashed back.
+
+"Yes, seh, it is. The boys don't quite like seeing your hardware
+so prominent at a social gathering. In this community guns don't
+come into the house at a ranch dance. I'm a committee to mention
+the subject and to collect your thirty-eights if y'u agree with
+us."
+
+"And if I don't agree with you?"
+
+"There's all outdoors ready to receive y'u, seh. It would be a
+pity to stay in the one spot where your welcome's wore thin."
+
+"Still I may choose to stay."
+
+"Ce'tainly, but if y'u decide that way y'u better step out on the
+porch and talk it over with us where there ain't ladies present."
+
+"Isn't this a costume dance? What's the matter with my guns? I'm
+an outlaw, ain't I?"
+
+"I don't know whether y'u are or not, seh. If y'u say y'u are
+we're ready to take your word. The guns have to be shucked if y'u
+stay here. They might go off accidental and scare the ladies. "
+
+The man rose blackly. "I'll remember this. If y'u knew who y'u
+were getting so gay with--"
+
+"I can guess, Mr. Holloway, the kind of an outfit y'u freight
+with, and I expect I could put a handle to another name for you."
+
+"By God, if y'u dare to say--"
+
+"I don't dare. especially among so many ladies," came
+McWilliams's jaunty answer.
+
+The eyes of the two men gripped, after which Holloway swung on
+his heel and swaggered defiantly out of the house.
+
+Presently there came the sound of a pony's feet galloping down
+the road. It had not yet died away when Texas announced that the
+supper intermission was over.
+
+"Pardners for a quadrille. Ladies' choice."
+
+The dance was on again full swing. The fiddlers were tuning up
+and couples gathering for a quadrille. Denver came to claim Miss
+Messiter for a partner. Apparently even the existence of the
+vanished Holloway was forgotten. But Helen remembered it, and
+pondered over the affair long after daylight had come and brought
+with it an end to the festivities.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 6. A PARTY CALL
+
+The mistress of the Lazy D, just through with her morning visit
+to the hospital in the bunkhouse, stopped to read the gaudy
+poster tacked to the wall. It was embellished with the drawing of
+a placid rider astride the embodiment of fury incarnate, under
+which was the legend: "Stick to Your Saddle."
+
+BIG FOURTH OF JULY CELEBRATION AT GIMLET BUTTE. ROPING AND BRONCO
+BUSTING CONTESTS FOR THE CHAMPIONSHIP OF THE WORLD AND BIG
+PRIZES,
+Including $1,000 for the Best Rider and the Same for Best Roper.
+Cow Pony Races, Ladies' Races and Ladies' Riding Contest,
+Fireworks,
+AND FREE BARBECUE! ! ! ! EVERYBODY COME AND TURN YOUR WOLF LOOSE.
+
+A sudden thud of pounding hoofs, a snatch of ragtime, and her
+foreman swept up in a cloud of white dust. His pony came from a
+gallop to an instant halt, and simultaneously Mac landed beside
+her, one hand holding the wide-brimmed hat he had snatched off in
+his descent, the other hitched by a casual thumb to the belt of
+his chaps.
+
+She laughed. "You really did it very well."
+
+Mac blushed. He was still young enough to take pride in his
+picturesque regalia, to prefer the dramatic way of doing a
+commonplace thing. But, though he liked this girl's trick of
+laughing at him with a perfectly grave face out of those dark,
+long-lashed eyes, he would have liked it better if sometimes they
+had given back the applause he thought his little tricks merited.
+
+"Sho! That's foolishness," he deprecated.
+
+"I suppose they got you to sit for this picture;" and she
+indicated the poster with a wave of her hand.
+
+"That ain't a real picture," he explained, and when she smiled
+added, "as of course y'u know. No hawss ever pitched that
+way--and the saddle ain't right. Fact is, it's all wrong."
+
+"How did it come here? It wasn't here last night."
+
+"I reckon Denver brought it from Slauson's. He was ridin' that
+country yesterday, and as the boys was out of smokin' he come
+home that way."
+
+"I suppose you'll all go?"
+
+"I reckon."
+
+"And you'll ride?"
+
+"I aim to sit in."
+
+"At the roping, too?"
+
+"No, m'm. I ain't so much with the rope. It takes a Mexican to
+snake a rope."
+
+"Then I'll be able to borrow only a thousand dollars from you to
+help buy that bunch of young cows we were speaking about," she
+mocked.
+
+"Only a thousand," he grinned. "And it ain't a cinch I'll win.
+There are three or four straightup riders on this range. A fellow
+come from the Hole-in-the-Wall and won out last year."
+
+"And where were you?"
+
+"Oh, I took second prize," he explained, with obvious
+indifference.
+
+"Well, you had better get first this year. We'll have to show
+them the Lazy D hasn't gone to sleep."
+
+"Sure thing," he agreed.
+
+"Has that buyer from Cheyenne turned up yet?" she asked,
+reverting to business.
+
+"Not yet. Do y'u want I should make the cut soon as he comes?"
+
+"Don't you think his price is a little low--twenty dollars from
+brand up?"
+
+"It's a scrub bunch. We want to get rid of them, anyway. But
+you're the doctor," he concluded slangily.
+
+She thought a moment. "We'll let him have them, but don't make
+the cut till I come back. I'm going to ride over to the Twin
+Buttes."
+
+His admiring eyes followed her as she went toward the pony that
+was waiting saddled with the rein thrown to the ground. She
+carried her slim, lithe figure with a grace, a lightness, that
+few women could have rivaled. When she had swung to the saddle,
+she half-turned in her seat to call an order to the foreman.
+
+"I think, Mac, you had better run up those horses from Eagle
+Creek. Have Denver and Missou look after them."
+
+"Sure, ma'am," he said aloud; and to himself: "She's ce'tainly a
+thoroughbred. Does everything well she tackles. I never saw
+anything like it. I'm a Chink if she doesn't run this ranch like
+she had been at it forty years. Same thing with her gasoline
+bronc. That pinto, too. He's got a bad eye for fair, but she
+makes him eat out of her hand. I reckon the pinto is like the
+rest of us--clean mashed." He put his arms on the corral fence
+and grew introspective. "Blamed if I know what it is about her.
+'Course she's a winner on looks, but that ain't it alone. I guess
+it's on account of her being such a game little gentleman. When
+she turns that smile loose on a fellow--well, there's sure
+sunshine in the air. And game--why, Ned Bannister ain't gamer
+himself."
+
+McWilliams had climbed lazily to the top board of the fence. He
+was an energetic youth, but he liked to do his thinking at his
+ease. Now, as his gaze still followed its lodestar, he suddenly
+slipped from his seat and ran forward, pulling the revolver from
+its scabbard as he ran. Into his eyes had crept a tense
+alertness, the shining watchfulness of the tiger ready for its
+spring.
+
+The cause of the change in the foreman of the Lazy D was a simple
+one, and on its face innocent enough. It was merely that a
+stranger had swung in casually at the gate of the short stable
+lane, and was due to meet Miss Messiter in about ten seconds. So
+far good enough. A dozen travelers dropped in every day, but this
+particular one happened to be Ned Bannister.
+
+From the stable door a shot rang out. Bannister ducked and
+shouted genially: "Try again."
+
+But Helen Messiter whirled her pony as on a half-dollar, and
+charged down on the stable.
+
+"Who fired that shot?" she demanded, her eyes blazing.
+
+The horse-wrangler showed embarrassment. He had found time only
+to lean the rifle against the wall.
+
+"I reckon I did, ma'am. Y'u see--"
+
+"Did you get my orders about this feud?" she interrupted crisply.
+
+"Yes, ma'am, but--"
+
+"Then you may call for your time. When I give my men orders I
+expect them to obey."
+
+"I wouldn't 'a' shot if I'd knowed y'u was so near him. Y'u was
+behind that summer kitchen," he explained lamely.
+
+"You only expect to obey orders when I'm in sight. Is that it?"
+she asked hotly, and without waiting for an answer delivered her
+ultimatum. "Well, I won't have it. I run this ranch as long as I
+am its owner. Do you understand?"
+
+"Yes, ma'am. I hadn't ought to have did it, but when I seen
+Bannister it come over me I owed him a pill for the one he sent
+me last week down in the coulee. So I up and grabbed the rifle
+and let him have it."
+
+"Then you may up and grab your trunk for Medicine Hill. Shorty
+will drive you tomorrow."
+
+When she returned to her unexpected guest, Helen found him in
+conversation with McWilliams. The latter's gun had found again
+its holster, but his brown, graceful hand hovered close to its
+butt.
+
+"Seems like a long time since the Lazy D has been honored by a
+visit from Mr. Bannister," he was saying, with gentle irony.
+
+"That's right. So I have come to make up for lost time," came
+Bannister's quiet retort.
+
+Miss Messiter did not know much about Wyoming human nature in the
+raw, but she had learned enough to be sure that the soft courtesy
+of these two youths covered a stark courage that might leap to
+life any moment. Wherefore she interposed.
+
+"We'll be pleased to show you over the place, Mr. Bannister. As
+it happens, we are close to the hospital. Shall we begin there?"
+
+Her cool, silken defiance earned a smile from the visitor. "All
+your cases doing well, ma'am?"
+
+"It's very kind of you to ask. I suppose you take an interest
+because they are YOUR cases, too, in a way of speaking?"
+
+"Mine? Indeed!"
+
+"Yes. If it were not for you I'm afraid our hospital would be
+empty."
+
+"It must be right pleasant to be nursed by Miss Messiter. I
+reckon the boys are grateful to me for scattering my lead so
+promiscuous."
+
+"I heard one say he would like to lam your haid tenderly,"
+murmured McWilliams.
+
+"With a two-by-four, I suppose," laughed Bannister.
+
+"Shouldn't wonder. But, looking y'u over casual, it occurs to me
+he might get sick of his job befo' he turned y'u loose,"
+McWilliams admitted, with a glance of admiration at the clean
+power showing in the other's supple lines.
+
+Nor could either the foreman or his mistress deny the tribute of
+their respect to the bravado of this scamp who sat so jauntily
+his seat regardless of what the next moment might bring forth.
+Three wounded men were about the place, all presumably quite
+willing to get a clean shot at him in the open. One of them had
+taken his chance already, and missed. Their visitor had no
+warrant for knowing that a second might not any instant try his
+luck with better success. Yet he looked every inch the man on
+horseback, no whit disturbed, not the least conscious of any
+danger. Tall, spare, broad shouldered, this berry-brown young
+man, crowned with close-cropped curls, sat at the gates of the
+enemy very much at his insolent case.
+
+"I came over to pay my party call," he explained.
+
+"It really wasn't necessary. A run in the machine is not a formal
+function."
+
+"Maybe not in Kalamazoo."
+
+"I thought perhaps you had come to get my purse and the
+sixty-three dollars," she derided.
+
+"No, ma'am; nor yet to get that bunch of cows I was going to
+rustle from you to buy an auto. I came to ask you to go riding
+with me."
+
+The audacity of it took her breath. Of all the outrageous things
+she had ever heard, this was the cream. An acknowledged outlaw,
+engaged in feud with her retainers over that deadly question of
+the run of the range, he had sauntered over to the ranch where
+lived a dozen of his enemies, three of them still scarred with
+his bullets, merely to ask her to go riding with him. The
+magnificence of his bravado almost obliterated its impudence. Of
+course she would not think of going. The idea! But her eyes
+glowed with appreciation of his courage, not the less because the
+consciousness of it was so conspicuously absent from his manner.
+
+"I think not, Mr. Bannister" and her face almost imperceptibly
+stiffened. "I don't go riding with strangers, nor with men who
+shoot my boys. And I'll give you a piece of advice, sir. That is,
+to burn the wind back to your home. Otherwise I won't answer for
+your life. My punchers don't love you, and I don't know how long
+I can keep them from you. You're not wanted here any more than
+you were at the dance the other evening."
+
+McWilliams nodded. "That's right. Y'u better roll your trail,
+seh; and if y'u take my advice, you'll throw gravel lively. I
+seen two of the boys cutting acrost that pasture five minutes
+ago. They looked as if they might be haided to cut y'u off, and I
+allow it may be their night to howl. Miss Messiter don't want to
+be responsible for y'u getting lead poisoning."
+
+"Indeed!" Their visitor looked politely interested. "This
+solicitude for me is very touching. I observe that both of you
+are carefully blocking me from the bunkhouse in order to prevent
+another practice-shot. If I can't persuade you to join me in a
+ride, Miss Messiter, I reckon I'll go while I'm still
+unpunctured." He bowed, and gathered the reins for departure.
+
+"One moment! Mr. McWilliams and I are going with you," the girl
+announced.
+
+"Changed your mind? Think you'll take a little pasear, after
+all?"
+
+"I don't want to be responsible for your killing. We'll see you
+safe off the place," she answered curtly.
+
+The foreman fell in on one side of Bannister, his mistress on the
+other. They rode in close formation, to lessen the chance of an
+ambuscade. Bannister alone chatted at his debonair ease, ignoring
+the responsibility they felt for his safety.
+
+"I got my ride, after all," he presently chuckled. "To be sure, I
+wasn't expecting Mr. McWilliams to chaperon us. But that's an
+added pleasure."
+
+"Would it be an added pleasure to get bumped off to kingdom
+come?" drawled the foreman, giving a reluctant admiration to his
+aplomb.
+
+"Thinking of those willing boys of yours again, are you?" laughed
+Bannister. "They're ce'tainly a heap prevalent with their
+hardware, but their hunting don't seem to bring home any meat."
+
+"By the way, how IS your ankle, Mr. Bannister? I forgot to ask."
+This shot from the young woman.
+
+He enjoyed it with internal mirth. "They did happen on the target
+that time," he admitted. "Oh, it's getting along fine, but I aim
+to do most of my walking on horseback for a while."
+
+They swept past the first dangerous grove of cottonwoods in
+safety, and rounded the boundary fence corner.
+
+"They're in that bunch of pines over there," said the foreman,
+after a single sweep of his eyes in that direction.
+
+"Yes, I see they are. You oughtn't to let your boys wear red
+bandannas when they go gunning, Miss Messiter. It's an awful
+careless habit."
+
+Helen herself could see no sign of life in the group of pines,
+but she knew their keen, trained eyes had found what hers could
+not. Riding with one or another of her cowboys, she had often
+noticed how infallibly they could read the country for miles
+around. A scattered patch on a distant hillside, though it might
+be a half-hour's ride from them, told them a great deal more than
+seemed possible. To her the dark spots sifted on that slope meant
+scrub underbrush, if there was any meaning at all in them. But
+her riders could tell not only whether they were alive, but could
+differentiate between sheep and cattle. Indeed, McWilliams could
+nearly always tell whether they were HER cattle or not. He was
+unable to explain to her how he did it. By a sort of instinct,
+she supposed.
+
+The pines were negotiated in safety, and on the part of the men
+with a carelessness she could not understand. For after they had
+passed there was a spot between her shoulder-blades that seemed
+to tingle in expectation of a possible bullet boring its way
+through. But she would have died rather than let them know how
+she felt.
+
+Perhaps Bannister understood, however, for he remarked casually:
+"I wouldn't be ambling past so leisurely if I was riding alone.
+It makes a heap of difference who your company is, too. Those
+punchers wouldn't take a chance at me now for a million dollars."
+
+"No, they're some haidstrong, but they ain't plumb locoed,"
+agreed Mac.
+
+Fifteen minutes later Helen drew up at the line corner. "We'll
+part company here, Mr. Bannister. I don't think there is any more
+danger from my men."
+
+"Before we part there is something I want to say. I hold that a
+man has as much right to run sheep on these hills as cows. It's
+government land, and neither one of us owns it. It's bound to be
+a case of the survival of the fittest. If sheep are hardier and
+more adapted to the country, then cows have got to vamos. That's
+nature, as it looks to me. The buffalo and the antelope have
+gone, and I guess cows have got to take their turn."
+
+Her scornful eyes burned him. "You came to tell me that, did you?
+Well, I don't believe a word of it. I'll not yield my rights
+without a fight. You may depend on that."
+
+"Here, too," nodded her foreman. "I'm with my boss clear down the
+line. And as soon as she lets me turn loose my six-gun, you'll
+hear it pop, seh."
+
+"I have not a doubt of it, Mr. McWilliams," returned the sheepman
+blithely. "In the meantime I was going to say that though most of
+my interests are in sheep instead of cattle--"
+
+"I thought most of your interests were in other people's
+property," interrupted the young woman.
+
+"It goes into sheep ultimately," he smiled. "Now, what I am
+trying to get at is this: I'm in debt to you a heap, Miss
+Messiter, and since I'm not all yellow cur, I intend to play fair
+with you. I have ordered my sheep back across the deadline. You
+can have this range to yourself for your cattle. The fight's off
+so far as we personally are concerned."
+
+A hint of deeper color touched her cheeks. Her manner had been
+cavalier at best; for the most part frankly hostile; and all the
+time the man was on an errand of good-will. Certainly he had
+scored at her expense, and she was ashamed of herself.
+
+"Y'u mean that you're going to respect the deadline? asked Mac in
+surprise.
+
+"I didn't say quite that," explained the sheepman. "What I said
+was that I meant to keep on my side of it so far as the Lazy D
+cattle are concerned. I'll let your range alone."
+
+"But y'u mean to cross it down below where the Bar Double-E cows
+run?"
+
+Bannister's gay smile touched the sardonic face. "Do you invite
+the public to examine your hand when you sit into a game of
+poker, Mr. McWilliams?"
+
+"You're dead right. It's none of my business what y'u do so long
+as y'u keep off our range," admitted the foreman. "And next time
+the conversation happens on Mr. Bannister, I'll put in my little
+say-so that he ain't all black."
+
+"That's very good of you, sir," was the other's ironical retort.
+
+The girl's gauntleted hand offered itself impulsively. "We can't
+be friends under existing circumstances, Mr. Bannister. But that
+does not alter the fact that I owe you an apology. You came as a
+peace envoy, and one of my men shot at you. Of course, he did not
+understand the reason why you came, but that does not matter. I
+did not know your reason myself, and I know I have been very
+inhospitable."
+
+"Are you shaking hands with Ned Bannister the sheepman or Ned
+Bannister the outlaw?" asked the owner of that name, with a queer
+little smile that seemed to mock himself.
+
+"With Ned Bannister the gentleman. If there is another side to
+him I don't know it personally."
+
+He flushed underneath the tan, but very plainly with pleasure.
+"Your opinions are right contrary to Hoyle, ma'am. Aren't you
+aware that a sheepman is the lowest thing that walks? Ask Mr.
+McWilliams."
+
+"I have known stockmen of that opinion, but--"
+
+The foreman's sentence was never finished. From a clump of bushes
+a hundred yards away came the crack of a rifle. A bullet sang
+past, cutting a line that left on one side of it Bannister, on
+the other Miss Messiter and her foreman. Instantly the two men
+slid from their horses on the farther side, dragged down the
+young woman behind the cover of the broncos, and arranged the
+three ponies so as to give her the greatest protection available.
+Somehow the weapons that garnished them had leaped to their hands
+before their feet touched the ground.
+
+"That coyote isn't one of our men. I'll back that opinion high,"
+said McWilliams promptly.
+
+"Who is he?" the girl whispered.
+
+"That's what we're going to find out pretty soon," returned
+Bannister grimly. "Chances are it's me he is trying to gather.
+Now, I'm going to make a break for that cottonwood. When I go,
+you better run up a white handkerchief and move back from the
+firing-line. Turn Buck loose when you leave. He'll stay around
+and come when I whistle."
+
+He made a run for it, zigzagging through the sage-brush so
+swiftly as to offer the least certain mark possible for a
+sharpshooter. Yet twice the rifle spoke before he reached the
+cottonwood.
+
+Meanwhile Mac had fastened the handkerchief of his mistress on
+the end of a switch he had picked up and was edging out of range.
+His tense, narrowed gaze never left the bush-clump from which the
+shots were being pumped, and he was careful during their retreat
+to remain on the danger side of the road, in order to cover
+Helen.
+
+"I guess Bannister's right. He don't want us, whoever he is."
+
+And even as he murmured it, the wind of a bullet lifted his hat
+from his head. He picked it up and examined it. The course of the
+bullet was marked by a hole in the wide brim, and two more in the
+side and crown.
+
+"He ce'tainly ventilated it proper. I reckon, ma'am, we'll make a
+run for it. Lie low on the pinto's neck, with your haid on the
+off side. That's right. Let him out."
+
+A mile and a half farther up the road Mac reined in, and made the
+Indian peace-sign. Two dejected figures came over the hill and
+resolved themselves into punchers of the Lazy D. Each of them
+trailed a rifle by his side.
+
+"You're a fine pair of ring-tailed snorters, ain't y'u?" jeered
+the foreman. "Got to get gay and go projectin' round on the shoot
+after y'u got your orders to stay hitched. Anything to say for
+yo'selves?"
+
+If they had it was said very silently.
+
+"Now, Miss Messiter is going to pass it up this time, but from
+now on y'u don't go off on any private massacrees while y'u punch
+at the Lazy D. Git that? This hyer is the last call for supper in
+the dining-cah. If y'u miss it, y'u'll feed at some other
+chuckhouse." Suddenly the drawl of his sarcasm vanished. His
+voice carried the ring of peremptory command. "Jim, y'u go back
+to the ranch with Miss Messiter, AND KEEP YOUR EYES OPEN. Missou,
+I need y'u. We're going back. I reckon y'u better hang on to the
+stirrup, for we got to travel some. Adios, senorita!"
+
+He was off at a slow lope on the road he had just come, the other
+man running beside the horse. Presently he stopped, as if the
+arrangement were not satisfactory; and the second man swung
+behind him on the pony. Later, when she turned in her saddle, she
+saw that they had left the road and were cutting across the
+plain, as if to take the sharpshooter in the rear.
+
+Her troubled thoughts stayed with her even after she had reached
+the ranch. She was nervously excited, keyed up to a high pitch;
+for she knew that out on the desert, within a mile or two of her,
+men were stalking each other with life or death in the balance as
+the price of vigilance, skill and an unflawed steel nerve. While
+she herself had been in danger, she had been mistress of her
+fear. But now she could do nothing but wait, after ordering out
+such reinforcements as she could recruit without delay; and the
+inaction told upon her swift, impulsive temperament. Once, twice,
+the wind brought to her a faint sound.
+
+She had been pacing the porch, but she stopped, white as a sheet.
+Behind those faint explosions might lie a sinister tragedy. Her
+mind projected itself into a score of imaginary possibilities.
+She listened, breathless in her tensity, but no further echo of
+that battlefield reached her. The sun still shone warmly on brown
+Wyoming. She looked down into a rolling plain that blurred in the
+distance from knobs and flat spaces into a single stretch that
+included a thousand rises and depressions. That roll of country
+teemed with life, but the steady, inexorable sun beat down on
+what seemed a shining, primeval waste of space. Yet somewhere in
+that space the tragedy was being determined--unless it had been
+already enacted.
+
+She wanted to scream. The very stillness mocked her. So, too, did
+the clicking windmill, with its monotonous regularity. Her pony
+still stood saddled in the yard. She knew that her place was at
+home, and she fought down a dozen times the tremendous impulse to
+mount and fly to the field of combat.
+
+She looked at her watch. How slowly the minutes dragged! It could
+not be only five minutes since she had looked last time. Again
+she fell to pacing the long west porch, and interrupted herself a
+dozen times to stop and listen.
+
+"I can bear it no longer," she told herself at last, and in
+another moment was in the saddle plying her pinto with the quirt.
+
+But before she reached the first cottonwoods she saw them coming.
+Her glasses swept the distant group, and with a shiver she made
+out the dreadful truth. They were coming slowly, carrying
+something between them. The girl did not need to be told that the
+object they were bringing home was their dead or wounded.
+
+A figure on horseback detached itself from the huddle of men and
+galloped towards her. He was coming to break the news. But who
+was the victim? Bannister or McWilliams she felt sure, by reason
+of the sinking heart in her; and then it came home that she would
+be hard hit if it were either.
+
+The approaching rider began to take distinct form through her
+glasses. As he pounded forward she recognized him. It was the man
+nicknamed Denver. The wind was blowing strongly from her to him,
+and while he was still a hundred yards away she hurled her
+question.
+
+His answer was lost in the wind sweep, but one word of it she
+caught. That word was "Mac."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 7. THE MAN FROM THE SHOSHONE FASTNESSES
+
+Though the sharpshooter's rifle cracked twice during his run for
+the cottonwood, the sheepman reached the tree in safety. He could
+dodge through the brush as elusively as any man in Wyoming. It
+was a trick he had learned on the whitewashed football gridiron.
+For in his buried past this man had been the noted half-back of a
+famous college, and one of his specialties had been running the
+ball back after a catch through a broken field of opponents. The
+lesson that experience had then thumped into him had since saved
+his life on more than one occasion.
+
+Having reached the tree, Bannister took immediate advantage of
+the lie of the ground to snake forward unobserved for another
+hundred feet. There was a dip from the foot of the tree, down
+which he rolled into the sage below. He wormed his way through
+the thick scrub brush to the edge of a dry creek, into the bed of
+which he slid. Then swiftly, his body bent beneath the level of
+the bank, he ran forward in the sand. He moved noiselessly, eyes
+and ears alert to aid him, and climbed the bank at a point where
+a live oak grew.
+
+Warily he peeped out from behind its trunk and swept the plain
+for his foe. Nothing was to be seen of him. Slowly and patiently
+his eyes again went over the semi-circle before him, for where
+death may lurk behind every foot of vegetation, every bump or
+hillock, the plainsman leaves as little as may be to chance. No
+faintest movement could escape the sheepman's eyes, no least stir
+fail to apprise his ears. Yet for many minutes he waited in vain,
+and the delay told him that he had to do with a trained hunter
+rather than a mere reckless cow-puncher. For somewhere in the
+rough country before him his enemy lay motionless, every faculty
+alive to the least hint of his presence.
+
+It was the whirring flight of a startled dove that told Bannister
+the whereabouts of his foe. Two hundred yards from him the bird
+rose, and the direction it took showed that the man must have
+been trailing forward from the opposite quarter. The sheepman
+slipped back into the dry creek bed, retraced his steps for about
+a stone-throw, and again crawled up the bank.
+
+For a long time he lay face down in the grass, his gaze riveted
+to the spot where he knew his opponent to be hidden. A faint
+rustle not born of the wind stirred the sage. Still Bannister
+waited. A less experienced plainsman would have blazed away and
+exposed his own position. But not this young man with the
+steel-wire nerves. Silent as the coming of dusk, no breaking twig
+or displaced brush betrayed his self-contained presence.
+
+Something in the clump he watched wriggled forward and showed
+indistinctly through an opening in the underscrub. He whipped his
+rifle into position and fired twice. The huddled brown mass
+lurched forward and disappeared.
+
+"Wonder if I got him? Seems to me I couldn't have missed clean,"
+thought Bannister.
+
+Silence as before, vast and unbroken.
+
+A scramble of running feet tearing a path through the brush, a
+crouching body showing darkly for an eyeflash, and then the
+pounding of a horse's retreating feet.
+
+Bannister leaped up, ran lightly across the intervening space,
+and with his repeater took a potshot at the galloping horseman.
+
+"Missed!" he muttered, and at once gave a sharp whistle that
+brought his pony to him on the trot. He vaulted to the saddle and
+gave chase. It was rough going, but nothing in reason can stop a
+cow-pony. As sure footed as a mountain goat, as good a climber
+almost as a cat, Buck followed the flying horseman over perilous
+rock rims and across deep-cut creek beds. Pantherlike he climbed
+up the steep creek sides without hesitation, for the round-up had
+taught him never to falter at stiff going so long as his rider
+put him at it.
+
+It was while he was clambering out of the sheer sides of a wash
+that Bannister made a discovery. The man he pursued was wounded.
+Something in the manner of the fellow's riding had suggested this
+to him, but a drop of blood splashed on a stone that happened to
+meet his eye made the surmise a certainty.
+
+He was gaining now--not fast, almost imperceptibly, but none the
+less surely. He could see the man looking over his shoulder,
+once, twice, and then again, with that hurried, fearful glance
+that measures the approach of retribution. Barring accidents, the
+man was his.
+
+But the unforeseen happened. Buck stepped in the hole of a
+prairie dog and went down. Over his head flew the rider like a
+stone from a catapult.
+
+How long Ned Bannister lay unconscious he never knew. But when he
+came to himself it was none too soon. He sat up dizzily and
+passed his hand over his head. Something had happened.
+
+What was it? Oh, yes, he had been thrown from his horse. A wave
+of recollection passed over him, and his mind was clear once
+more. Presently he got to his feet and moved rather uncertainly
+toward Buck, for the horse was grazing quietly a few yards from
+him.
+
+But half way to the pony he stopped. Voices, approaching by way
+of the bed of Dry Creek, drifted to him.
+
+"He must 'a' turned and gone back. Mebbe he guessed we was
+there."
+
+And a voice that Bannister knew, one that had a strangely
+penetrant, cruel ring of power through the drawl, made answer:
+"Judd said before he fainted he was sure the man was Ned
+Bannister. I'd ce'tainly like to meet up with my beloved cousin
+right now and even up a few old scores. By God, I'd make him sick
+before I finished with him!"
+
+"I'll bet y'u would, Cap," returned the other, admiringly. "Think
+we'd better deploy here and beat up the scenery a few as we go?"
+
+There are times when the mind works like lightning, flashes its
+messages on the wings of an electric current. For Bannister this
+was one of them. The whole situation lighted for him plainly as
+if it had been explained for an hour.
+
+His cousin had been out with a band of his cut-throats on some
+errand, and while returning to the fastnesses of the Shoshone
+Mountains had stopped to noon at a cow spring three or four miles
+from the Lazy D. Judd Morgan, whom he knew to be a lieutenant of
+the notorious bandit, had ridden toward the ranch in the hope of
+getting an opportunity to vent his anger against its mistress or
+some of her men. While pursuing the renegade Bannister had
+stumbled into a hornet's nest, and was in imminent danger of
+being stung to death. Even now the last speaker was scrambling up
+the bank toward him.
+
+The sheepman had to choose between leaving his rifle and
+immediate flight. The latter was such a forlorn hope that he gave
+up Buck for the moment, and ran back to the place where his
+repeating Winchester had fallen. Without stopping he scooped the
+rifle up as he passed. In his day he had been a famous sprinter,
+and he scudded now for dear life. It was no longer a question of
+secrecy. The sound of men breaking their hurried way through the
+heavy brush of the creek bank came crisply to him. A voice behind
+shouted a warning, and from not a hundred yards in front of him
+came an answering shout. Hemmed in from the fore and the rear, he
+swung off at a right angle. An open stretch lay before him, but
+he had to take his desperate chance without cover. Anything was
+better than to be trapped like a wild beast driven by the beaters
+to the guns.
+
+Across the bare, brown mesa he plunged; and before he had taken a
+dozen steps the first rifle had located its prey and was sniping
+at him. He had perhaps a hundred yards to cover ere the mesa fell
+away into a hollow, where he might find temporary protection in
+the scrub pines. And now a second marksman joined himself to the
+first. But he was going fast, already had covered half the
+distance, and it is no easy thing to bring down a live, dodging
+target.
+
+Again the first gun spoke, and scored another miss, whereat a
+mocking, devilish laugh rang out in the sunshine.
+
+"Y'u boys splash a heap of useless lead around the horizon. I
+reckon Cousin Ned's my meat. Y'u see, I get him in the flapper
+without spoiling him complete." And at the word he flung the
+rifle to his shoulder and fired with no apparent aim.
+
+The running man doubled up like a cottontail, but found his feet
+again in an instant, though one arm hung limp by his side. He was
+within a dozen feet of the hilldrop and momentary safety.
+
+"Shall I take him, Cap?" cried one of the men.
+
+"No; he's mine." The rifle smoked once more and again the runner
+went down. But this time he plunged headlong down the slope and
+out of sight.
+
+The outlaw chief turned on his heel. "I reckon he'll not run any
+more to-day. Bring him into camp and we'll take him along with
+us," he said carelessly, and walked away to his horse in the
+creek bed.
+
+Two of the men started forward, but they stopped half way, as if
+rooted to the ground. For a galloping horseman suddenly drew up
+at the very point for which they were starting. He leaped to the
+ground and warned them back with his rifle. While he covered them
+a second man rode up and lifted Bannister to his saddle.
+
+"Ready, Mac," he gave the word, and both horses disappeared with
+their riders over the brow of the hill. When the surprised
+desperadoes recovered themselves and reached that point the
+rescuers had disappeared in the heavy brush.
+
+The alarm was at once given, and their captain, cursing them in a
+raucous bellow for their blunder, ordered immediate pursuit. It
+was some little time before the trail of the fugitives was picked
+up, but once discovered they were over hauled rapidly.
+
+"We're not going to get out without swapping lead," McWilliams
+admitted anxiously. "I wisht y'u wasn't hampered with that load,
+but I reckon I'll have to try to stand them off alone."
+
+"We bucked into a slice of luck when I opened on his bronc
+mavericking around alone. Hadn't been for that we could never
+have made it," said Missou, who never crossed a bridge until he
+came to it.
+
+"We haven't made it yet, old hoss, not by a long mile, and two
+more on top o' that. They're beginning to pump lead already. Huh!
+Got to drap your pills closer'n that 'fore y'u worry me."
+
+"I believe he's daid, anyway," said Missou presently, peering
+down into the white face of the unconscious man.
+
+"Got to hang onto the remains, anyhow, for Miss Helen. Those
+coyotes are too much of the wolf breed to leave him with them."
+
+"Looks like they're gittin' the aim some better," equably
+remarked the other a minute later, when a spurt of sand flew up
+in front of him.
+
+"They're ce'tainly crowding us. I expaict I better send them a
+'How-de-do?' so as to discourage them a few." He took as careful
+aim as he could on the galloping horse, but his bullet went wide.
+
+"They're gaining like sixty. It's my offhand opinion we better
+stop at that bunch of trees and argue some with them. No use
+buck-jumpin' along to burn the wind while they drill streaks of
+light through us."
+
+"All right. Take the trees. Y'u'll be able to get into the game
+some then."
+
+They debouched from the road to the little grove and slipped from
+their horses.
+
+"Deader'n hell," murmured Missou, as he lifted the limp body from
+his horse. " But I guess we'll pack what's left back to the
+little lady at the Lazy D."
+
+The leader of the pursuers halted his men just out of range and
+came forward alone, holding his right hand up in the usual signal
+of peace. In appearance he was not unlike Ned Bannister. There
+was the same long, slim, tiger build, with the flowing muscles
+rippling easily beneath the loose shirt; the same effect of power
+and dominance, the same clean, springy stride. The pose of the
+head, too, even the sweep of salient jaw, bore a marked
+resemblance. But similarity ceased at the expression. For instead
+of frankness there lurked here that hint of the devil of strong
+passion uncontrolled. He was the victim of his own moods, and in
+the space of an hour one might, perhaps, read in that face cold
+cunning, cruel malignity, leering ribaldry, as well as the
+hard-bitten virtues of unflinching courage and implacable
+purpose.
+
+"I reckon you're near enough," suggested Mac, when the man had
+approached to within a hundred feet of the tree clump.
+
+"Y'u're drawing the dead-line," the other acknowledged,
+indolently. "It won't take ten words to tell y'u what I want and
+mean to have. I'm giving y'u two minutes to hand me over the body
+of Ned Bannister. If y'u don't see it that way I'll come and make
+a lead mine of your whole outfit."
+
+"Y'u can't come too quick, seh. We're here a-shootin', and don't
+y'u forget it," was McWilliams's prompt answer.
+
+The sinister face of the man from the Shoshones darkened. "Y'u've
+signed your own death warrants," he let out through set teeth,
+and at the word swung on his heel.
+
+"The ball's about to open. Pardners for a waltz. Have a
+dust-cutter, Mac, before she grows warm."
+
+The puncher handed over his flask, and the other held it before
+his eye and appraised the contents in approved fashion. " Don't
+mind if I do. Here's how!"
+
+"How!" echoed Missou, in turn, and tipped up the bottle till the
+liquor gurgled down his baked throat.
+
+"He's fanning out his men so as to, get us both at the front and
+back door. Lucky there ain't but four of them."
+
+"I guess we better lie back to back," proposed Missou. "If our
+luck's good I reckon they're going to have a gay time rushing
+this fort."
+
+A few desultory shots had already been dropped among the
+cottonwoods, and returned by the defendants when Missou let out a
+yell of triumph.
+
+"Glory Hallelujah! Here comes the boys splittin' down the road
+hell-for-leather. That lopsided, ring-tailed snorter of a
+hawss-thief is gathering his wolves for a hike back to the tall
+timber. Feed me a cigareet, Mac. I plumb want to celebrate."
+
+It was as the cow-puncher had said. Down the road a cloud of dust
+was sweeping toward them, in the centre of which they made out
+three hardriding cowboys from the ranch. Farther back, in the
+distance, was another dust whirl. The outlaw chief's hard,
+vigilant gaze swept over the reinforcements! and decided
+instantly that the game had gone against him for the present. He
+whistled shrilly twice, and began a slow retreat toward the
+hills. The miscreants flung a few defiant shots at the advancing
+cowmen, and disappeared, swallowed up in the earth swells.
+
+The homeward march was a slow one, for Bannister had begun to
+show signs of consciousness and it was necessary to carry him
+with extreme care. While they were still a mile from the ranch
+house the pinto and its rider could be seen loping toward them.
+
+"Ride forward, Denver, and tell Miss Helen we're coming. Better
+have her get everything fixed to doctor him soon as we get there.
+Give him the best show in the world, and he'll still be sailing
+awful close to the divide. I'll bet a hundred plunks he'll cash
+in, anyway."
+
+"DONE!"
+
+The voice came faintly from the improvised litter. Mac turned
+with a start, for he had not known that Bannister was awake to
+his surroundings. The man appeared the picture of helplessness,
+all the lusty power and vigor stricken out of him; but his
+indomitable spirit still triumphed over the physical collapse,
+for as the foreman looked a faint smile touched the ashen lips.
+It seemed to say: "Still in the ring, old man."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 8. IN THE LAZY D HOSPITAL
+
+Helen's first swift glance showed that the wounded man was
+Bannister. She turned in crisp command to her foreman.
+
+"Have him taken to my room and put to bed there. We have no time
+to prepare another. And send one of the boys on your best horse
+for a doctor."
+
+They carried the limp figure in with rough tenderness and laid
+him in the bed. McWilliams unbuckled the belt and drew off the
+chaps; then, with the help of Denver, undressed the wounded man
+and covered him with quilts. So Helen found him when she came in
+to attend his wounds, bringing with her such things as she needed
+for her task. Mrs. Winslow, the housekeeper, assisted her, and
+the foreman stayed to help, but it was on the mistress of the
+ranch that the responsibility of saving him fell. Missou was
+already galloping to Bear Creek for a doctor, but the girl knew
+that the battle must be fought and the issue decided before he
+could arrive.
+
+He had fallen again into insensibility and she rinsed and dressed
+his wounds, working with the quiet impersonal certainty of touch
+that did not betray the inner turmoil of her soul. But
+McWilliams, his eyes following her every motion and alert to
+anticipate her needs, saw that the color had washed from her face
+and that she was controlling herself only to meet the demands of
+the occasion.
+
+As she was finishing, the sheepman opened his eyes and looked at
+her.
+
+"You are not to speak or ask questions. You have been wounded and
+we are going to take care of you," she ordered.
+
+"That's right good of y'u. I ce'tainly feet mighty trifling." His
+wide eyes traveled round till they fell on the foreman. "Y'u see
+I came back to help fill your hospital. Am I there now? Where am
+I?" His gaze returned to Helen with the sudden irritation of the
+irresponsible sick.
+
+"You are at the Lazy D, in my room. You are not to worry about
+anything. Everything's all right."
+
+He took her at her word and his eyes closed; but presently he
+began to mutter unconnected words and phrases. When his lids
+lifted again there was a wilder look in his eyes, and she knew
+that delirium was beginning. At intervals it lasted for long;
+indeed, until the doctor came next morning in the small hours. He
+talked of many things Helen Messiter did not understand, of
+incidents in his past life, some of them jerky with the
+excitement of a tense moment, others apparently snatches of talk
+with relatives. It was like the babbling of a child, irrelevant
+and yet often insistent. He would in one breath give orders
+connected with the lambing of his sheep, in the next break into
+football talk, calling out signals and imploring his men to hold
+them or to break through and get the ball. Once he broke into
+curses, but his very oaths seemed to come from a clean heart and
+missed the vulgarity they might have had. Again his talk rambled
+inconsequently over his youth, and he would urge himself or
+someone else of the same name to better life.
+
+"Ned, Ned, remember your mother," he would beseech. "She asked me
+to look after you. Don't go wrong." Or else it would be, "Don't
+disgrace the general, Ned. You'll break his heart if you blacken
+the old name." To this theme he recurred repeatedly, and she
+noticed that when he imagined himself in the East his language
+was correct and his intonation cultured, though still with a
+suggestion of a Southern softness.
+
+But when he spoke of her his speech lapsed into the familiar
+drawl of Cattleland. "I ain't such a sweep as y'u think, girl.
+Some day I'll sure tell y'u all about it, and how I have loved
+y'u ever since y'u scooped me up in your car. You're the gamest
+little lady! To see y'u come a-sailin' down after me, so steady
+and businesslike, not turning a hair when the bullets hummed--I
+sure do love y'u, Helen." And then he fell upon her first name
+and called her by it a hundred times softly to himself.
+
+This happened when she was alone with him, just before the doctor
+came. She heard it with starry eyes and with a heart that flushed
+for joy a warmer color into her cheeks. Brushing back the short
+curls, she kissed his damp forehead. It was in the thick of the
+battle, before he had weathered that point where the issues of
+life and death pressed closely, and even in the midst of her
+great fears it brought her comfort. She was to think often of it
+later, and always the memory was to be music in her heart. Even
+when she denied her love for him, assured herself it was
+impossible she could care for so shameful a villain, even then it
+was a sweet torture to allow herself the luxury of recalling his
+broken delirious phrases. At the very worst he could not be as
+bad as they said; some instinct told her this was impossible. His
+fearless devil-may-care smile, his jaunty, gallant bearing, these
+pleaded against the evidence for him. And yet was it conceivable
+that a man of spirit, a gentleman by training at least, would let
+himself lie under the odium of such a charge if he were not
+guilty? Her tangled thoughts fought this profitless conflict for
+days. Nor could she dismiss it from her mind. Even after he began
+to mend she was still on the rack. For in some snatch of good
+talk, when the fine quality of the man seemed to glow in his
+face, poignant remembrance would stab her with recollection of
+the difference between what he was and what he seemed to be.
+
+One of the things that had been a continual surprise to Helen was
+the short time required by these deep-cheated and clean-blooded
+Westerners to recover from apparently serious wounds. It was
+scarce more than two weeks since Bannister had filled the
+bunkhouse with wounded men, and already two of them were back at
+work and the third almost fit for service. For perhaps three days
+the sheepman's life hung in the balance, after which his splendid
+constitution and his outdoor life began to tell. The thermometer
+showed that the fever had slipped down a notch, and he was now
+sleeping wholesomely a good part of his time. Altogether, unless
+for some unseen contingency, the doctor prophesied that the
+sheepman was going to upset the probabilities and get well.
+
+"Which merely shows, ma'am, what is possible when you give a
+sound man twenty-four hours a day in our hills for a few years,"
+he added. "Thanks to your nursing he's going to shave through by
+the narrowest margin possible. I told him to-day that he owed his
+life to you, Miss Messiter."
+
+"I don't think you need have told him that Doctor," returned that
+young woman, not a little vexed at him, "especially since you
+have just been telling me that he owes it to Wyoming air and his
+own soundness of constitution."
+
+When she returned to the sickroom to give her patient his
+medicine he wanted to tell her what the doctor had said, but she
+cut him off ruthlessly and told him not to talk.
+
+"Mayn't I even say 'Thank you?'" he wanted to know.
+
+"No; you talk far too much as it is."
+
+He smiled "All right. Y'u sit there in that chair, where I can
+see y'u doing that fancywork and I'll not say a word. It'll keep,
+all right, what I want to say."
+
+"I notice you keep talking," she told him, dryly.
+
+"Yes, ma'am. Y'u had better have let me say what I wanted to, but
+I'll be good now."
+
+He fell asleep watching her, and when he awoke she was still
+sitting there, though it was beginning to grow dark. He spoke
+before she knew he was awake.
+
+"I'm going to get well, the doctor thinks."
+
+"Yes, he told me," she answered.
+
+"Did he tell y'u it was your nursing saved me?"
+
+"Please don't think about that."
+
+"What am I to think about? I owe y'u a heap, and it keeps piling
+up. I reckon y'u do it all because it's your Christian duty?" he
+demanded.
+
+"It is my duty, isn't it?"
+
+"I didn't say it wasn't, though I expaict Bighorn County will
+forget to give y'u a unanimous vote of thanks for doing it. I
+asked if y'u did it because it was your duty?"
+
+"The reason doesn't matter so that I do it," she answered,
+steadily.
+
+"Reasons matter some, too, though they ain't as important as
+actions out in this country. Back in Boston they figure more, and
+since y'u used to go to school back there y'u hadn't ought to
+throw down your professor of ethics."
+
+"Don't you think you have talked enough for the present?" she
+smiled, and added: "If I make you talk whenever I sit beside you
+I shall have to stay away."
+
+"That's where y'u've ce'tainly got the drop on me, ma'am. I'm a
+clam till y'u give the word."
+
+Before a week he was able to sit up in a chair for an hour or
+two, and soon after could limp into the living room with the aid
+of a walking stick and his hostess. Under the tan he still wore
+an interesting pallor, but there could be no question that he was
+on the road to health.
+
+"A man doesn't know what he's missing until he gets shot up and
+is brought to the Lazy D hospital, so as to let Miss Messiter
+exercise her Christian duty on him," he drawled, cheerfully,
+observing the sudden glow on her cheek brought by the reference
+to his unanswered question.
+
+He made the lounge in the big sunny window his headquarters. From
+it he could look out on some of the ranch activities when she was
+not with him, could watch the line riders as they passed to and
+fro and command a view of one of the corrals. There was always,
+too, the turquoise sky, out of which poured a flood of light on
+the roll of hilltops. Sometimes he read to himself, but he was
+still easily tired, and preferred usually to rest. More often she
+read aloud to him while he lay back with his leveled eyes gravely
+on her till the gentle, cool abstraction she affected was
+disturbed and her perplexed lashes rose to reproach the intensity
+of his gaze.
+
+She was of those women who have the heavenborn faculty of making
+home of such fortuitous elements as are to their hands. Except
+her piano and such knickknacks as she had brought in a single
+trunk she had had to depend upon the resources of the
+establishment to which she had come, but it is wonderful how much
+can be done with some Navajo rugs, a bearskin, a few bits of
+Indian pottery and woven baskets and a judicious arrangement of
+scenic photographs. In a few days she would have her pictures
+from Kalamazoo, pending which her touch had transformed the big
+living room from a cheerless barn into a spot that was a comfort
+to the eye and heart. To the wounded man who lay there slowly
+renewing the blood he had lost the room was the apotheosis of
+home, less, perhaps, by reason of what it was in itself than
+because it was the setting for her presence--for her grave,
+sympathetic eyes, the sound of her clear voice, the light grace
+of her motion. He rejoiced in the delightful intimacy the
+circumstances made necessary. To hear snatches of joyous song and
+gay laughter even from a distance, to watch her as she came in
+and out on her daily tasks, to contest her opinions of books and
+life and see how eagerly she defended them; he wondered himself
+at the strength of the appeal these simple things made to him.
+Already he was dreading the day when he must mount his horse and
+ride back into the turbulent life from which she had for a time,
+snatched him.
+
+"I'll hate to go back to sheepherding," he told her one day at
+lunch, looking at her across a snow-white tablecloth upon which
+were a service of shining silver, fragile china teacups and
+plates stamped Limoges.
+
+He was at the moment buttering a delicious French roll and she
+was daintily pouring tea from an old family heirloom. The
+contrast between this and the dust and the grease of a midday
+meal at the end of a "chuck wagon" lent accent to his smiling
+lamentation.
+
+"A lot of sheepherding you do," she derided.
+
+"A shepherd has to look after his sheep, y'u know."
+
+"You herd sheep just about as much as I punch cows."
+
+"I have to herd my herders, anyhow, and that keeps me on the
+move."
+
+"I'm glad there isn't going to be any more trouble between you
+and the Lazy D. And that reminds me of another thing. I've often
+wonered who those men could have been that attacked you the day
+you were hurt."
+
+She had asked the question almost carelessly, without any thought
+that this might be something he wished to conceal, but she
+recognized her mistake by the wariness that filmed his eyes
+instantly.
+
+"Room there for a right interesting guessing contest," he
+replied.
+
+"You wouldn't need to guess," she charged, on swift impulse.
+
+"Meaning that I know?"
+
+"You do know. You can't deny that you now."
+
+"Well, say that I know?"
+
+"Aren't you going to tell?"
+
+He shook his head. "Not just yet. I've got private reasons for
+keeping it quiet a while."
+
+"I'm sure they are creditable to you," came her swift ironic
+retort.
+
+"Sure," he agreed, whimsically. "I must live up to the
+professional standard. Honor among thieves, y'u know."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 9. MISS DARLING ARRIVES
+
+Miss Messiter clung to civilization enough, at least, to prefer
+that her chambermaid should be a woman rather than a Chinese. It
+did not suit her preconceived idea of the proper thing that Lee
+Ming should sweep floors, dust bric-a-brac, and make the beds. To
+see him slosh-sloshing around in his felt slippers made her
+homesick for Kalamazoo. There were other reasons why the
+proprieties would be better served by having another woman about
+the place; reasons that had to do with the chaperone system that
+even in the uncombed West make its claims upon unmarried young
+women of respectability. She had with her for the present
+fourteen-year-old Ida Henderson, but this arrangement was merely
+temporary.
+
+Wherefore on the morning after her arrival Helen had sent two
+letters back to "the States." One of these had been to Mrs.
+Winslow, a widow of fifty-five, inviting her to come out on a
+business basis as housekeeper of thc Lazy D. The buxom widow had
+loved Helen since she had been a toddling baby, and her reply was
+immediate and enthusiastic. Eight days later she had reported in
+person. The second letter bore the affectionate address of Nora
+Darling, Detroit, Michigan. This also in time bore fruit at the
+ranch in a manner worthy of special mention.
+
+It was the fourth day after Ned Bannister had been carried back
+to the Lazy D that Helen Messiter came out to the porch of the
+house with a letter in her hand. She found her foreman sitting on
+the steps waiting for her, but he got up as soon as he heard the
+fall of her light footsteps behind him.
+
+"You sent for me, ma'am?" he asked, hat in hand.
+
+"Yes; I want you to drive into Gimlet Butte and bring back a
+person whom you'll find at the Elk House waiting for you. I had
+rather you would go yourself, because I know you're reliable."
+
+"Thank you, ma'am. How will I know him?"
+
+"It's a woman--a spinster. She's coming to help Mrs. Winslow.
+Inquire for Miss Darling. She isn't used to jolting two days in a
+rig, but I know you will be careful of her."
+
+"I'll surely be as careful of the old lady as if she was my own
+mother."
+
+The mistress of the ranch smothered a desire to laugh.
+
+"I'm sure you will. At her age she may need a good deal of care.
+Be certain you take rug enough."
+
+"I'll take care of her the best I know how. expect she's likely
+rheumatic, but I'll wrop her up till she looks like a Cheyenne
+squaw when tourist is trying to get a free shoot at her with
+camera."
+
+"Please do. I want her to get a good impression of Wyoming so
+that she will stay. I don' know about the rheumatism, but you
+might ask her."
+
+There were pinpoints of merriment behind th guileless innocence
+of her eyes, but they came to the surface only after the foreman
+had departed.
+
+McWilliams ordered a team of young horse hitched, and presently
+set out on his two day; journey to Gimlet Butte. He reached that
+town in good season, left the team at a corral and walked back to
+the Elk House. The white dust of the plains was heavy on him,
+from the bandanna that loosely embraced the brown throat above
+the flannel shirt to the encrusted boots but through it the good
+humor of his tanned face smiled fraternally on a young woman he
+passes at the entrance to the hotel. Her gay smile met his
+cordially, and she was still in his mind while he ran his eye
+down the register in search of the name he wanted. There it
+was--Miss Nora Darling, Detroit, Michigan--in the neatest of
+little round letters, under date of the previous day's arrivals.
+
+"Is Miss Darling in?" asked McWilliams of the half-grown son of
+the landlady who served in lieu of clerk and porter.
+
+"Nope! Went out a little while ago. Said to tell anybody to wait
+that asked for her."
+
+Mac nodded, relieved to find that duty had postponed itself long
+enough for him to pursue the friendly smile that had not been
+wasted on him a few seconds before. He strolled out to the porch
+and decided at once that he needed a cigar more than anything
+else on earth. He was helped to a realization of his need by
+seeing the owner of the smile disappear in an adjoining drug
+store.
+
+She was beginning on a nut sundae when the puncher drifted in.
+She continued to devote even her eyes to its consumption, while
+the foreman opened a casual conversation with the drug clerk and
+lit his cigar.
+
+"How are things coming in Gimlet Butte?" he asked, by way of
+prolonging his stay rather than out of desire for information.
+
+Yes, she certainly had the longest, softest lashes he had ever
+seen, and the ripest of cherry lips, behind the smiling depths of
+which sparkled two rows of tiny pearls. He wished she would look
+at HIM and smile again. There wasn't any use trying to melt a
+sundae with it, anyhow.
+
+"Sure, it's a good year on the range and the price of cows
+jumping," he heard his sub-conscious self make answer to the
+patronizing inquiries of him of the "boiled" shirt.
+
+Funny how pretty hair of that color was especially when there was
+so much of it. You might call it a sort of coppery gold where the
+little curls escaped in tendrils and ran wild. A fellow--"
+
+"Yes, I reckon most of the boys will drop around to the Fourth of
+July celebration. Got to cut loose once in a while, y'u know."
+
+A shy glance shot him and set him a-tingle with a queer delight.
+Gracious, what pretty dark velvety lashes she had!
+
+She was rising already, and as she paid for the ice cream that
+innocent gaze smote him again with the brightest of Irish eyes
+conceivable. It lingered for just a ponderable sunlit moment or
+him. She had smiled once more.
+
+After a decent interval Mac pursued his petit charmer to the
+hotel. She was seated on the porch reading a magazine, and was
+absorbedly unconscious of him when he passed. For a few awkward
+moments he hung around the office, then returned to the porch and
+took the chair most distant from her. He had sat there a long ten
+minutes before she let her hands and the magazine fall into her
+lap and demurely gave him his chance.
+
+"Can you tell me how far it is to the Lazy D ranch?"
+
+"Seventy-two miles as the crow flies, ma'am."
+
+"Thank you."
+
+The conversation threatened to die before it was well born.
+Desperately McWilliams tried to think of something to say to keep
+it alive without being too bold.
+
+"If y'u were thinking of traveling out that way I could give y'u
+a lift. I just came in to get another lady--an old lady that has
+just come to this country."
+
+"Thank you, but I'm expecting a conveyance to meet me here. You
+didn't happen to pass one on the way, I suppose?"
+
+"No, I didn't. What ranch were y'u going to, ma'am?
+
+"Miss Messiter's--the Lazy D."
+
+A suspicion began to peretrate the foreman's brain. "Y'u ain't
+Miss Darling?"
+
+"What makes you so sure I'm not?" she asked, tilting her dimpled
+chin toward him aggressively.
+
+"Y'u're too young," he protested, helplessly.
+
+"I'm no younger than you are," came her quick, indignant retort.
+
+Thus boldly accused of his youth, the foreman blushed. "I didn't
+mean that. Miss Messiter said she was an old lady--"
+
+"You needn't tell fibs about it. She couldn't have said anything
+of the kind. Who are you, anyhow?" the girl demanded, with
+spirit.
+
+"I'm the foreman of the Lazy D, come to get Miss Darling. My name
+is McWilliams--Jim McWilliams."
+
+"I don't need your first name, Mr. McWilliams," she assured him,
+sweetly. "And will you please tell me why you have kept me
+waiting here more than thirty hours?"
+
+"Miss Messiter didn't get your letter in time. Y'u see, we don't
+get mail every day at the Lazy D," he explained, the while he
+hopefully wondered just when she was going to need his last name.
+
+"I don't see why you don't go after your mail every day at least,
+especially when Miss Messiter was expecting me. To leave me
+waiting here thirty hours--I'll not stand it. When does the next
+train leave for Detroit?" she asked, imperiously.
+
+The situation seemed to call for diplomacy, and Jim McWilliams
+moved to a nearer chair. "I'm right sorry it happened, ma'am, and
+I'll bet Miss Messiter is, too. Y'u see, we been awful busy one
+way and 'nother, and I plumb neglected to send one of the boys to
+the post-office."
+
+"Why didn't one of them walk over after supper?" she demanded,
+geverely.
+
+He curbed the smile that was twitching at his facial muscles.
+
+"Well, o' course it ain't so far,--only forty-three
+miles--still--"
+
+"Forty-three miles to the post-office?"
+
+"Yes, ma'am, only forty-three. If you'll excuse me this time--"
+
+"Is it really forty-three?"
+
+He saw that her sudden smile had brought out the dimples in the
+oval face and that her petulance had been swept away by his
+astounding information.
+
+"Forty-three, sure as shootin', except twict a week when it comes
+to Slauson's, and that's only twenty miles," he assured her.
+"Used to be seventy-two, but the Government got busy with its
+rural free delivery, and now we get it right at our doors."
+
+"You must have big doors," she laughed.
+
+"All out o' doors," he punned. "Y'u see, our house is under our
+hat, and like as not that's twenty miles from the ranchhouse when
+night falls."
+
+"Dear me!" She swept his graceful figure sarcastically. "And, of
+course, twenty miles from a brush, too."
+
+He laughed with deep delight at her thrust, for the warm youth in
+him did not ask for pointed wit on the part of a young woman so
+attractive and with a manner so delightfully provoking.
+
+"I expaict I have gathered up some scenery on the journey. I'll
+go brush it off and get ready for supper. I'd admire to sit
+beside y'u and pass the butter and the hash if y'u don't object.
+Y'u see, I don't often meet up with ladies, and I'd ought to
+improve my table manners when I get a chanct with one so much
+older than I am and o' course so much more experienced."
+
+"I see you don't intend to pass any honey with the hash," she
+flashed, with a glimpse of the pearls.
+
+"DIDN'T y'u say y'u was older than me? I believe I've plumb
+forgot how old y'u said y'u was, Miss Darling."
+
+"Your memory's such a sieve it wouldn't be worth while telling
+you. After you've been to school a while longer maybe I'll try
+you again."
+
+"Some ladies like 'em young," he suggested, amiably.
+
+"But full grown," she amended.
+
+"Do y'u judge by my looks or my ways?" he inquired, anxiously.
+
+"By both."
+
+"That's right strange," he mused aloud. "For judging by some of
+your ways you're the spinster Miss Messiter was telling me about,
+but judging by your looks y'u're only the prettiest and sassiest
+twenty-year-old in Wyoming."
+
+And with this shot he fled, to see what transformation he could
+effect with the aid of a whiskbroom, a tin pan of alkali water
+and a roller towel.
+
+When she met him at the supper table her first question was, "Did
+Miss Messiter say I was an old maid?"
+
+"Sho! I wouldn't let that trouble me if I was y'u. A woman ain't
+any older than she looks. Your age don't show to speak of."
+
+"But did she?"
+
+"I reckon she laid a trap for me and I shoved my paw in. She
+wanted to give me a pleasant surprise."
+
+"Oh!"
+
+"Don't y'u grow anxious about being an old maid. There ain't any
+in Wyoming to speak of. If y'u like I'll tell the boys you're
+worried and some of them will be Johnnie-on-the-Spot. They're
+awful gallant, cowpunchers are."
+
+"Some of them may be," she differed. "If you want to know I'm
+just twenty-one."
+
+He sawed industriously at his steak. "Y'u don't say! Just old
+enough to vote--like this steer was before they massacreed him."
+
+She gave him one look, and thereafter punished him with silence.
+
+They left Gimlet Butte early next morning and reached the Lazy D
+shortly after noon on the succeeding day. McWilliams understood
+perfectly that strenuous competition would inevitably ensue as
+soon as the Lazy D beheld the attraction he had brought into
+their midst. Nor did he need a phrenologist to tell him that Nora
+was a born flirt and that her shy slant glances were meant to
+penetrate tough hides to tender hearts. But this did not
+discourage him, and he set about making his individual impression
+while he had her all to himself. He wasn't at all sure how deep
+this went, but he had the satisfaction of hearing his first name,
+the one she had told him she had no need of, fall tentatively
+from her pretty lips before the other boys caught a glimpse of
+her.
+
+Shortly after his arrival at the ranch Mac went to make his
+report to his mistress of some business matters connected with
+the trip.
+
+"I see you got back safely with the old lady," she laughed when
+she caught sight of him.
+
+His look reproached her. "Y'u said a spinster."
+
+"But it was you that insisted on the rheumatism. By the way, did
+you ask her about it?"
+
+"We didn't get that far," he parried.
+
+"Oh! How far did you get?" She perched herself on the porch
+railing and mocked him with her friendly eyes. Her heart was
+light within her and she was ready for anything in the way of
+fun, for the doctor had just pronounced her patient out of danger
+if he took proper care of himself.
+
+"About as fur as I got with y'u, ma'am," he audaciously retorted.
+
+"We might disagree as to how far that is," she flung back gayly
+with heightened color.
+
+"No, ma'am, I don't think we would."
+
+"But, gracious! You're not a Mormon. You don't want us both, do
+you?" she demanded, her eyes sparkling with the exhilaration of
+the tilt.
+
+"Could I get either one of y'u, do y'u reckon? That's what's
+worrying me."
+
+"I see, and so you intend to keep us both on the string."
+
+His joyous laughter echoed hers. "I expaict y'u would call that
+presumption or some other dictionary word, wouldn't y'u?"
+
+"In anybody else perhaps, but surely not in Mr. McWilliams."
+
+"I'm awful glad to be trotting in a class by myself."
+
+"And you'll let us know when you have made your mind up which of
+us it is to be?"
+
+"Well, mine ain't the only mind that has to be made up," he
+drawled.
+
+She took this up gleefully. "I can't answer for Nora, but I'll
+jump at the chance-- if you decide to give it to me."
+
+He laughed delightedly into the hat he was momentarily expecting
+to put on. "I'll mill it over a spell and let y'u know, ma'am."
+
+"Yes, think it over from all points of view. Of course she is
+prettier, but then I'm not afflicted with rheumatism and probably
+wouldn't flirt as much afterward. I have a good temper, too, as a
+rule, but then so has Nora."
+
+"Oh, she's prettier, is she?" With boyish audacity he grinned at
+her.
+
+"What do you think?"
+
+He shook his head. "I'll have to go to the foot of the class on
+that, ma'am. Give me an easier one."
+
+"I'll have to choose another subject then. What did you do about
+that bunch of Circle 66 cows you looked at on your way in?"
+
+They discussed business for a few minutes, after which she went
+back to her patient and he to his work.
+
+"Ain't she a straight-up little gentleman for fair?" the foreman
+asked himself in rhetorical and exuberant question, slapping his
+hat against his leg as he strode toward the corral. "Think of her
+coming at me like she did, the blamed little thoroughbred. Y'u
+bet she knows me down to the ground and how sudden I got over any
+fool notions I might a-started to get in my cocoanut. But the way
+she came back at me, quick as lightning and then some, pretendin'
+all that foolishness and knowin' all the time I'd savez the
+game."
+
+Both McWilliams and his mistress had guessed right in their
+surmise as to Nora Darling's popularity in the cow country. She
+made an immediate and pronounced hit. It was astonishing how many
+errands the men found to take them to "the house," as they called
+the building where the mistress of the ranch dwelt. Bannister
+served for a time as an excellent excuse. Judging from the number
+of the inquiries which the men found it necessary to make as to
+his progress, Helen would have guessed him exceedingly popular
+with her riders. Having a sense of humor, she mentioned this to
+McWilliams one day.
+
+He laughed, and tried to turn it into a compliment to his
+mistress. But she would have none of it.
+
+"I know better, sir. They don't come here to see me. Nora is the
+attraction, and I have sense enough to know it. My nose is quite
+out of joint," she laughed.
+
+Mac looked with gay earnestness at the feature she had mentioned.
+"There's a heap of difference in noses," he murmured, apparently
+apropos of nothing.
+
+"That's another way of telling me that Nora's pug is the sweetest
+thing you ever saw," she charged.
+
+"I ain't half such a bad actor as some of the boys," he
+deprecated.
+
+"Meaning in what way?"
+
+"The Nora Darling way."
+
+He pronounced her name so much as if it were a caress that his
+mistress laughed, and he joined in it.
+
+"It's your fickleness that is breaking my heart, though I knew I
+was lost as soon as I saw your beatific look on the day you got
+back with Nora. The first week I came none of you could do enough
+for me. Now it's all Nora, darling." She mimicked gayly his
+intonation.
+
+"Well, ma'am, it's this way," explained the foreman with a grin.
+" Y'u're right pleasant and friendly, but the boys have got a
+savvy way down deep that y'u'd shuck that friendliness awful
+sudden if any of them dropped around with 'Object, Matrimony' in
+their manner. Consequence is, they're loaded down to the ground
+with admiration of their boss, but they ain't presumptuous enough
+to expaict any more. I had notions, mebbe, I'd cut more ice, me
+being not afflicted with bashfulness. My notions faded, ma'am, in
+about a week."
+
+"Then Nora came?" she laughed.
+
+"No, ma'am, they had gone glimmering long before she arrived. I
+was just convalescent enough to need being cheered up when she
+drapped in."
+
+"And are you cheered up yet?" his mistress asked.
+
+He took off his dusty hat and scratched his head. "I ain't right
+certain, yet, ma'am. Soon as I know I'm consoled, I'll be round
+with an invite to the wedding."
+
+"That is, if you are."
+
+"If I am--yes. Y'u can't most always tell when they have eyes
+like hers."
+
+"You're quite an authority on the sex considering your years."
+
+"Yes, ma'am." He looked aggrieved, thinking himself a man grown.
+"How did y'u say Mr. Bannister was?"
+
+"Wait, and I'll send Nora out to tell you," she flashed, and
+disappeared in the house.
+
+Conversation at the bunkhouse and the chucktent sometimes circled
+around the young women at the house, but its personality rarely
+grew pronounced. References to Helen Messiter and the housemaid
+were usually by way of repartee at each other. For a change had
+come over the spirit of the Lazy D men, and, though a cheerful
+profanity still flowed freely when they were alone together,
+vulgarity was largely banished.
+
+The morning after his conversation with Miss Messiter, McWilliams
+was washing in the foreman's room when the triangle beat the call
+for breakfast, and he heard the cook's raucous "Come and get it."
+There was the usual stampede for the tent, and a minute later Mac
+flung back the flap and entered. He took the seat at the head of
+the table, along the benches on both sides of which the punchers
+were plying busy knives and forks.
+
+"A stack of chips," ordered the foreman; and the cook's "Coming
+up" was scarcely more prompt than the plate of hot cakes he set
+before the young man.
+
+"Hen fruit, sunny side up," shouted Reddy, who was further
+advanced in his meal.
+
+"Tame that fog-horn, son," advised Wun Hop; but presently he slid
+three fried eggs from a frying-pan into the plate of the hungry
+one.
+
+"I want y'u boys to finish flankin' that bunch of hill calves
+to-day," said the foreman, emptying half a jug of syrup over his
+cakes.
+
+"Redtop, he ain't got no appetite these days," grinned Denver, as
+the gentleman mentioned cleaned up a second loaded plate of ham,
+eggs and fried potatoes. "I see him studying a Wind River Bible*
+yesterday. Curious how in the spring a young man's fancy gits to
+wandering on house furnishing. Red, he was taking the catalogue
+alphabetically. Carpets was absorbin' his attention, chairs on
+deck, and chandeliers in the hole, as we used to say when we was
+baseball kids."
+
+[*A Wind River Bible in the Northwest ranch country is a
+catalogue of one of the big Chicago department stores that does a
+large shipping business in the West.]
+
+
+"Ain't a word of truth in it," indignantly denied the assailed,
+his unfinished nose and chin giving him a pathetic, whipped puppy
+look. "Sho! I was just looking up saddles. Can't a fellow buy a
+new saddle without asking leave of Denver?"
+
+"Cyarpets used to begin with a C in my spelling-book, but saddles
+got off right foot fust with a S," suggested Mac amiably.
+
+"He was ce'tainly trying to tree his saddle among the C's. He was
+looking awful loving at a Turkish rug. Reckon he thought it was a
+saddle-blanket," derided Denver cheerfully.
+
+"Huh! Y'u're awful smart, Denver," retaliated Reddy, his
+complexion matching his hair. "Y'u talk a heap with your mouth.
+Nobody believes a word of what y'u say."
+
+Denver relaxed into a range song by way of repartee:
+
+"I want mighty bad to be married, To have a garden and a home; I
+ce'tainly aim to git married, And have a gyurl for my own."
+
+"Aw! Y'u fresh guys make me tired. Y'u don't devil me a bit, not
+a bit. Whyfor should I care what y'u say? I guess this outfit
+ain't got no surcingle on me." Nevertheless, he made a hurried
+end of his breakfast and flung out of the tent.
+
+"Y'u boys hadn't ought to wound Reddy's tender feelings, and him
+so bent on matrimony!" said Denver innocently. "Get a move on
+them fried spuds and sashay them down this way, if there's any
+left when y'u fill your plate, Missou."
+
+Nor was Reddy the only young man who had dreams those days at the
+Lazy D. Cupid must have had his hands full, for his darts
+punctured more than one honest plainsman's heart. The reputation
+of the young women at the Lazy D seemed to travel on the wings of
+the wind, and from far and near Cattleland sent devotees to this
+shrine of youth and beauty. So casually the victims drifted in,
+always with a good business excuse warranted to endure raillery
+and sarcasm, that it was impossible to say they had come of set
+purpose to sun themselves in feminine smiles.
+
+As for Nora, it is not too much to say that she was having the
+time of her life. Detroit, Michigan, could offer no such field
+for her expansive charms as the Bighorn country, Wyoming. Here
+she might have her pick of a hundred, and every one of them
+picturesquely begirt with flannel shirt, knotted scarf at neck,
+an arsenal that bristled, and a sun-tan that could be achieved
+only in the outdoors of the Rockies. Certainly these knights of
+the saddle radiated a romance with which even her floorwalker
+"gentleman friend " could not compete.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 10. A SHEPHERD OF THE DESERT
+
+It had been Helen Messiter's daily custom either to take a ride
+on her pony or a spin in her motor car, but since Bannister had
+been quartered at the Lazy D her time had been so fully occupied
+that she had given this up for the present. The arrival of Nora
+Darling, however, took so much work off her hands that she began
+to continue her rides and drives.
+
+Her patient was by this time so far recovered that he did not
+need her constant attendance and there were reasons why she
+decided it best to spend only a minimum of her time with him.
+These had to do with her increasing interest in the man and the
+need she felt to discourage it. It had come to a pretty pass, she
+told herself scornfully, when she found herself inventing excuses
+to take her into the room where this most picturesque of unhanged
+scamps was lying. Most good women are at heart puritans, and if
+Helen was too liberal to judge others narrowly she could be none
+the less rigid with herself. She might talk to him of her duty,
+but it was her habit to be frank in thought and she knew that
+something nearer than that abstraction had moved her efforts in
+his behalf. She had fought for his life because she loved him.
+She could deny it no longer. Nor was the shame with which she
+confessed it unmingled with pride. He was a man to compel love,
+one of the mood imperative, chain-armored in the outdoor virtues
+of strength and endurance and stark courage. Her abasement began
+only where his superlation ended. That a being so godlike in
+equipment should have been fashioned without a soul, and that she
+should have given her heart to him. This was the fount of her
+degradation.
+
+It was of these things she thought as she drove in the late
+afternoon toward those Antelope Peaks he had first pointed out to
+her. She swept past the scene of the battle and dipped down into
+the plains for a run to that western horizon behind the jagged
+mountain line of which the sun was radiantly setting in a splash
+of glorious colors. Lost in thought, space slipped under her
+wheels unnoticed. Not till her car refused the spur and slowed to
+a despondent halt did she observe that velvet night was falling
+over the land.
+
+She prowled round the machine after the fashion of the motorist,
+examining details that might be the cause of the trouble. She
+discovered soon enough with instant dismay that the gasolene tank
+was empty. Reddy, always unreliable, must have forgotten to fill
+it when she told him to.
+
+By the road she must be thirty miles from home if she were a
+step; across country as the crow flies, perhaps twenty. She was a
+young woman of resolution, and she wasted no time in tears or
+regrets. The XIX ranch, owned by a small "nester" named
+Henderson, could not be more than five or six miles to the
+southeast. If she struck across the hills she would be sure to
+run into one of the barblines. At the XIX she could get a horse
+and reach the Lazy D by midnight. Without any hesitation she
+struck out. It was unfortunate that she did not have on her heavy
+laced high boots, but she realized that she must take things as
+she found them. Things might have been a good deal worse, she
+reflected philosophically.
+
+And before long they were worse, for the increasing darkness
+blotted out the landmarks she was using as guides and she was
+lost among the hill waves that rolled one after another across
+the range. Still she did not give way, telling herself that it
+would be better after the moon was up. She could then tell north
+from south, and so have a line by which to travel. But when at
+length the stars came out, thousands upon thousands of them, and
+looked down on a land magically flooded with chill moonlight, the
+girl found that the transformation of Wyoming into this scence of
+silvery loveliness had toned the distant mountain line to an
+indefinite haze that made it impossible for her to distinguish
+one peak from another.
+
+She wandered for hours, hungry and tired and frightened, though
+this last she would not confess.
+
+"There's nothing to be afraid of," she told herself over and
+over. "Even if I have to stay out all night it will do me no
+harm. There's no need to be a baby about it."
+
+But try to evade it as she would, there was something in the
+loneliness of this limitless stretch of hilltop that got on her
+nerves. The very shadows cast by the moonshine seemed too
+fantastic for reality. Something eerie and unearthly hovered over
+it all, and before she knew it a sob choked up her throat.
+
+Vague fancies filtered through her mind, weird imaginings born of
+the night in a mind that had been swept from the moorings of
+reason. So that with no sensible surprise there came to her in
+that moonlit sea of desert the sound of a voice a clear sweet
+tenor swelling bravely in song with the very ecstacy of pathos.
+
+It was the prison song from "Il Trovatore," and the desolation of
+its lifted appeal went to the heart like water to the roots of
+flowers.
+
+ Ah! I have sigh'd to rest me.
+ Deep in the quiet grave.
+
+The girl's sob caught in her breast, stilled with the awe of that
+heavenly music. So for an instant she waited before it was borne
+in on her that the voice was a human one, and that the heaven
+from which it descended was the hilltop above her.
+
+A wild laugh, followed by an oath, cut the dying echoes of the
+song. She could hear the swish of a quirt falling again and
+again, and the sound of trampling hoofs thudding on the hard,
+sun-cracked ground. Startled, she sprang to her feet, and saw
+silhouetted against the skyline a horse and his rider fighting
+for mastery.
+
+The battle was superb while it lasted. The horse had been a
+famous outlaw, broken to the saddle by its owner out of the sheer
+passion for victory, but there were times when its savage
+strength rebelled at abject submission, and this was one of them.
+It swung itself skyward, and came down like a pile-driver,
+camel-backed, and without joints in the legs. Swiftly it rose
+again lunging forward and whirling in the air, then jarred down
+at an angle. The brute did its malevolent best, a fury incarnate.
+But the ride, was a match, and more than a match, for it. He sat
+the saddle like a Centaur, with the perfect: unconscious grace of
+a born master, swaying in his seat as need was, and spurring the
+horse to a blinder fury.
+
+Sudden as had been the start, no less sudden was the finish of
+the battle. The bronco pounded to a stiff-legged standstill,
+trembled for a long minute like an aspen, and sank to a tame
+surrender, despite the sharp spurs roweling its bloody sides.
+
+"Ah, my beauty. You've had enough, have you?" demanded the cruel,
+triumphant voice of the rider. "You would try that game, would
+you? I'll teach you."
+
+"Stop spurring that horse, you bully."
+
+The man stopped, in sheer amazement at this apparition which had
+leaped out of the ground almost at his feet. His wary glance
+circled the hills to make sure she was alone.
+
+"Ce'tainly, ma'am. We're sure delighted to meet up with you.
+Ain't we, Two-step?"
+
+For himself, he spoke the simple truth. He lived in his
+sensations, spurring himself to fresh ones as he had but just now
+been spurring his horse to sate the greed of conquest in him. And
+this high-spirited, gallant creature--he could feel her vital
+courage in the very ring of her voice--offered a rare fillip to
+his jaded appetite. The dusky, long-lashed eyes which always give
+a woman an effect of beauty, the splendid fling of head, and the
+piquant, finely cut features, with their unconscious tale of
+Brahmin caste, the long lines of the supple body, willowy and yet
+plump as a partridge--they went to his head like strong wine.
+Here was an adventure from the gods--a stubborn will to bend, the
+pride of a haughty young beauty to trail in the dust, her untamed
+heart to break if need be. The lust of the battle was on him
+already. She was a woman to dream about,
+
+ "Sweeter than the lids of Juno's eyes,
+ Or Cytherea's breath,"
+
+he told himself exultantly as he slid from his horse and stood
+bowing before her.
+
+And he, for his part, was a taking enough picture of
+devil-may-care gallantry gone to seed. The touch of jaunty
+impudence in his humility, not less than the daring admiration of
+his handsome eyes and the easy, sinuous grace of his flexed
+muscles, labeled him what he was--a man bold and capable to do
+what he willed, and a villain every inch of him.
+
+Said she, after that first clash of stormy eyes with bold,
+admiring ones:
+
+"I am lost--from the Lazy D ranch."
+
+"Why, no, you're found," he corrected, white teeth flashing in a
+smile.
+
+"My motor ran out of gasolene this afternoon. I've been"--there
+was a catch in her voice--"wandering ever since."
+
+"You're played out, of course, and y'u've had no supper," he
+said, his quiet close gaze on her.
+
+"Yes, I'm played out and my nerve's gone." She laughed a little
+hysterically. "I expect I'm hungry and thirsty, too, though I
+hadn't noticed it before."
+
+He whirled to his saddle, and had the canteen thongs unloosed in
+a moment. While she drank he rummaged from his saddle-bags some
+sandwiches of jerky and a flask of whiskey. She ate the
+sandwiches, he the while watching her with amused sympathy in his
+swarthy countenance.
+
+"You ain't half-bad at the chuck-wagon, Miss Messiter," he told
+her.
+
+She stopped, the sandwich part way to her mouth. "I don't
+remember your face. I've met so many people since I came to the
+Lazy D. Still, I think I should remember you."
+
+He immediately relieved of duty her quasi apology. "You haven't
+seen my face before," he laughed, and, though she puzzled over
+the double meaning that seemed to lurk behind his words and amuse
+him, she could not find the key to it.
+
+It was too dark to make out his features at all clearly, but she
+was sure she had seen him before or somebody that looked very
+much like him.
+
+"Life on the range ain't just what y'u can call exciting," he
+continued, "and when a young lady fresh from back East drops
+among us while sixguns are popping, breaks up a likely feud and
+mends right neatly all the ventilated feudists it's a corollary
+to her fun that's she is going to become famous."
+
+What he said was true enough. The unsolicited notoriety her
+exploit had brought upon her had been its chief penalty. Garbled
+versions of it had appeared with fake pictures in New York and
+Chicago Sunday supplements, and all Cattleland had heard and
+discussed it. No matter into what unfrequented canon she rode,
+some silent cowpuncher would look at her as they met with
+admiring eyes behind which she read a knowledge of the story. It
+was a lonely desolate country, full of the wide deep silences of
+utter emptiness, yet there could be no footfall but the whisper
+of it was bruited on the wings of the wind.
+
+"Do you know where the Lazy D ranch is from here?" she asked.
+
+He nodded.
+
+"Can you take me home?"
+
+"I surely can. But not to-night. You're more tired than y'u know.
+We'll camp here, and in the mo'ning we'll hit the trail bright
+and early."
+
+This did not suit her at all. "Is it far to the Lazy D?" she
+inquired anxiously.
+
+"Every inch of forty miles. There's a creek not more than two
+hundred yards from here. We'll stay there till morning," he made
+answer in a matter of course voice, leading the way to the place
+he had mentioned.
+
+She followed, protesting. Yet though it was not in accord with
+her civilized sense of fitness, she knew that what he proposed
+was the common sense solution. She was tired and worn out, and
+she could see that his broncho had traveled far.
+
+Having reached the bank of the creek, he unsaddled, watered his
+horse and picketed it, and started a fire. Uneasily she watched
+him.
+
+"I don't like to sleep out. Isn't there a ranchhouse near?"
+
+"Y'u wouldn't call it near by the time we had reached it. What's
+to hinder your sleeping here? Isn't this room airy enough? And
+don't y'u like the system of lighting? 'Twas patented I forget
+how many million years ago. Y'u ain't going to play parlor girl
+now after getting the reputation y'u've got for gameness, are
+y'u?"
+
+But he knew well enough that it was no silly schoolgirl fear she
+had, but some deep instinct in her that distrusted him and warned
+her to beware. So, lightly he took up the burden of the talk
+while he gathered cottonwood branches for the fire.
+
+"Now if I'd only thought to bring a load of lumber and some
+carpenters--and a chaperon," he chided himself in burlesque, his
+bold eyes closely on the girl's face to gloat on the color that
+flew to her cheeks at his suggestion.
+
+She hastened to disclaim lightly the feeling he had unmasked in
+her. "It is a pity, but it can't be helped now. I suppose I am
+cross and don't seem very grateful. I'm tired out and nervous,
+but I am sure that I'll enjoy sleeping out. If I don't I shall
+not be so ungenerous as to blame you."
+
+He soon had a cup of steaming coffee ready for her, and the heat
+of it made a new woman of her. She sat in the warm fire glow, and
+began to feel stealing over her a delightful reaction of languor.
+She told herself severely it was ridiculous to have been so
+foolishly prim about the inevitable.
+
+"Since you know my name, isn't it fair that I should know yours?"
+she smilingly asked, more amiably than she had yet spoken to him.
+
+"Well, since I have found the lamb that was lost, y'u may call me
+a shepherd of the desert."
+
+"Then, Mr. Shepherd, I'm very glad to meet you. I don't remember
+when I ever was more glad to meet a stranger." And she added with
+a little laugh: "It's a pity I'm too sleepy to do my duty by you
+in a social way."
+
+"We'll let that wait till to-morrow. Y'u'll entertain me plenty
+then. I'll make your bunk up right away."
+
+She was presently lying with her feet to the fire, snugly rolled
+in his saddle blankets. But though her eyes were heavy, her brain
+was still too active to permit her to sleep immediately. The
+excitement of her adventure was too near, the emotions of the day
+too poignantly vivid, to lose their hold on her at once. For the
+first time in her life she lay lapped in the illimitable velvet
+night, countless unwinking stars lighting the blue-black dream in
+which she floated. The enchantment of the night's loveliness
+swept through her sensitive pulses and thrilled her with the
+mystery of the great life of which she was an atom. Awe held her
+a willing captive.
+
+She thought of many things, of her past life and its incongruity
+with the present, of the man who lay wounded at the Lazy D, of
+this other wide-shouldered vagabond who was just now in the
+shadows beyond the firelight, pacing up and down with long, light
+even strides as he looked to his horse and fed the fire. She
+watched him make an end of the things he found to do and then
+take his place opposite her. Who and what was he, this
+fascinating scamp who one moment flooded the moonlit desert with
+inspired snatches from the opera sung in the voice of an angel,
+and the next lashed at his horse like a devil incarnate? How
+reconcile the outstanding inconsistencies in him? For his every
+inflection, every motion, proclaimed the strain of good blood
+gone wrong and trampled under foot of set, sardonic purpose,
+indicated him a man of culture in a hell of his own choosing.
+Lounging on his elbow in the flickering shadows, so carelessly
+insouciant in every picturesque inch of him, he seemed to radiate
+the melodrama of the untamed frontier, just as her guest of
+tarnished reputation now at the ranch seemed to breathe forth its
+romance.
+
+"Sleep well, little partner. Don't be afraid; nothing can harm
+you," this man had told her.
+
+Promptly she had answered, "I'm not afraid, thank you, in the
+least"; and after a mornent had added, not to seem hostile, "Good
+night, big partner."
+
+But despite her calm assurance she knew she did not feel so
+entirely safe as if it had been one of her own ranch boys on the
+other side of the fire, or even that other vagabond who had made
+so direct an appeal to her heart. If she were not afraid, at
+least she knew some vague hint of anxiety.
+
+She was still thinking of him when she fell asleep, and when she
+awakened the first sound that fell on her ears was his tuneful
+whistle. Indeed she had an indistinct memory of him in the night,
+wrapping the blankets closer about her when the chill air had
+half stirred her from her slumber. The day was still very young,
+but the abundant desert light dismissed sleep summarily. She
+shook and brushed the wrinkles out of her clothes and went down
+to the creek to wash her face with the inadequate facilities at
+hand. After redressing her hair she returned to the fire, upon
+which a coffee pot was already simmering.
+
+She came up noiselessly behind him, but his trained senses were
+apprised of her approach.
+
+"Good mo'ning! How did y'u find your bedroom?" he asked, without
+turning from the bacon he was broiling on the end of a stick.
+
+"Quite up to the specifications. With all Wyoming for a floor and
+the sky for a ceiling, I never had a room I liked better. But
+have you eyes in the back of your head?"
+
+He laughed grimly. "I have to be all eyes and ears in my
+business."
+
+"Is your business of a nature so sensitive?"
+
+"As much so as stocks on Wall Street. And we haven't any ticker
+to warn us to get under cover. Do you take cream in your coffee,
+Miss Messiter?"
+
+She looked round in surprise. "Cream?"
+
+"We're in tin-can land, you know, and live on air-tights. I milk
+my cow with a can-opener. Let me recommend this quail on toast."
+He handed her a battered tin plate, and prepared to help her from
+the frying-pan.
+
+"I suppose that is another name for pork?"
+
+"No, really. I happened to bag a couple of hooters before you
+wakened."
+
+"You're a missionary of the good-foods movement. I shall name
+your mission St. Sherry's-in-the-Wilderness."
+
+"Ah, Sherry's! That's since my time. I don't suppose I should
+know my way about in little old New York now."
+
+She found him eager to pick up again the broken strands that had
+connected him with the big world from which he had once come. It
+had been long since she had enjoyed a talk more, for he expressed
+himself with wit and dexterity. But through her enjoyment ran a
+note of apprehension. He was for the moment a resurrected
+gentleman. But what would he be next? She had an insistent memory
+of a heavenly flood of music broken by a horrible discord of
+raucous oaths.
+
+It was he that lingered over their breakfast, loath to make the
+first move to bring him back into realities; and it was she that
+had to suggest the need of setting out. But once on his feet, he
+saddled and packed swiftly, with a deftness born of experience.
+
+"We'll have to ask Two-step to carry double to-day," he said, as
+he helped her to a place behind him.
+
+Two-step had evidently made an end of the bronco spree upon which
+he had been the evening before, for he submitted sedately to his
+unusual burden. The first hilltop they reached had its surprise
+to offer the girl. In a little valley below them, scarce a mile
+away, nestled a ranch with its corrals and buildings.
+
+"Look!" she exclaimed; and then swiftly, "Didn't you know it was
+there?"
+
+"Yes, that's the Hilke place," he answered with composure. "It
+hasn't been occupied for years."
+
+"Isn't that some one crossing to the corral now?"
+
+"No. A stray cow, I reckon."
+
+They dropped into a hollow between the hills and left the ranch
+on their left. She was not satisfied, and yet she had not grounds
+enough upon which to base a suspicion. For surely the figure she
+had seen had been that of a man.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 12. MISTRESS AND MAID
+
+Now that it was safely concluded, Helen thought the adventure
+almost worthwhile for the spontaneous expressions of good will it
+had drawn forth from her adherents. Mrs. Winslow and Nora had
+taken her to their arms and wept and laughed over her in turn,
+and in their silent undemonstrative way she had felt herself
+hedged in by unusual solicitude on the part of her riders. It was
+good--none but she knew how good--to be back among her own, to
+bask in a friendliness she could not doubt. It was best of all to
+sit opposite Ned Bannister again with no weight on her heart from
+the consciousness of his unworthiness.
+
+She could affect to disregard the gray eyes that followed her
+with such magnetized content about the living room, but beneath
+her cool self-containment she knew the joyous heart in her was
+strangely buoyant. He loved her, and she had a right to let
+herself love him. This was enough for the present.
+
+"They're so plumb glad to see y'u they can't let y'u alone,"
+laughed Bannister at the sound of a knock on the door that was
+about the fifth in as many minutes.
+
+This time it proved to be Nora, come to find out what her
+mistress would like for supper. Helen turned to the invalid.
+
+"What would you like, Mr. Bannister?"
+
+"I should like a porterhouse with mushrooms," he announced
+promptly.
+
+"You can't have it. You know what the doctor said." Very
+peremptorily she smiled this at him.
+
+"He's an old granny, Miss Messiter."
+
+"You may have an egg on toast."
+
+"Make it two," he pleaded. "Excitement's just like caviar to the
+appetite, and seeing y'u safe--"
+
+"Very well--two," she conceded.
+
+They ate supper together in a renewal of the pleasant intimacy so
+delightful to both. He lay on the lounge, propped up with sofa
+cushions, the while he watched her deft fingers butter the toast
+and prepare his egg. It was surely worth while to be a
+convalescent, given so sweet a comrade for a nurse; and after he
+had moved over to the table he enjoyed immensely the gay firmness
+with which she denied him what was not good for him.
+
+"I'll bet y'u didn't have supper like this at Robbers' Roost." he
+told her, enthusiastically.
+
+"It wasn't so bad, considering everything." She was looking
+directly at him as she spoke. "Your cousin is rather a remarkable
+man in some ways. He manages to live on the best that can be got
+in tin-can land."
+
+"Did he tell y'u he was my cousin?" he asked, slowly.
+
+"Yes, and that his name was Ned Bannister, too?"
+
+"Did that explain anything to y'u?"
+
+"It explained a great deal, but it left some things not clear
+yet."
+
+"For instance?"
+
+"For one thing, the reason why you should bear the odium of his
+crimes. I suppose you don't care for him, though I can see how
+you might in a way."
+
+"I don't care for him in the least, though I used to when we were
+boys. As to letting myself be blamed for his crimes. I did it
+because I couldn't help myself. We look more or less alike, and
+he was cunning enough to manufacture evidence against me. We were
+never seen together, and so very few know that there are two
+Bannisters. At first I used to protest, but I gave it up. There
+wasn't the least use. I could only wait for him to be captured or
+killed. In the meantime it didn't make me any more popular to be
+a sheepman."
+
+"Weren't you taking a long chance of being killed first? Some one
+with a grudge against him might have shot you."
+
+"They haven't yet," he smiled.
+
+"You might at least have told me how it was," she reproached.
+
+"I started to tell y'u that first day, but it looked so much of a
+fairy tale to unload that I passed it up."
+
+"Then you ought not to blame me for thinking you what you were
+not."
+
+"I don't remember blaming y'u. The fact is I thought it awful
+white of y'u to do your Christian duty so thorough, me being such
+a miscreant," he drawled.
+
+"You gave me no chance to think well of you."
+
+"But yet y'u did your duty from A to Z."
+
+"We're not talking about my duty," she flashed back. "My point is
+that you weren't fair to me. If I thought ill of you how could I
+help it?"
+
+"I expaict your Kalamazoo conscience is worryin' y'u because y'u
+misjudged me."
+
+"It isn't," she denied instantly.
+
+"I ain't of a revengeful disposition. I'll forgive y'u for doing
+your duty and saving my life twice," he said, with a smile of
+whimsical irony.
+
+"I don't want your forgiveness."
+
+"Well, then for thinking me a 'bad man.'"
+
+"You ought to beg my pardon. I was a friend, at least you say I
+acted like one--and you didn't care enough to right yourself with
+me."
+
+"Maybe I cared too much to risk trying it. I knew there would be
+proof some time, and I decided to lie under the suspicion until I
+could get it. I see now that wasn't kind or fair to you. I am
+sorry I didn't tell y'u all about it. May I tell y'u the story
+now?"
+
+"If you wish."
+
+It was a long story, but the main points can be told in a
+paragraph. The grandfather of the two cousins, General Edward
+Bannister, had worn the Confederate gray for four years, and had
+lost an arm in the service of the flag with the stars and bars.
+After the war he returned to his home in Virginia to find it in
+ruins, his slaves freed and his fields mortgaged. He had pulled
+himself together for another start, and had practiced law in the
+little town where his family had lived for generations. Of his
+two sons, one was a ne'er-do-well. He was one of those brilliant
+fellows of whom much is expected that never develops. He had a
+taste for low company, married beneath him, and, after a career
+that was a continual mortification and humiliation to his father,
+was killed in a drunken brawl under disgraceful circumstances,
+leaving behind a son named for the general. The second son of
+General Bannister also died young, but not before he had proved
+his devotion to his father by an exemplary life. He, too, was
+married and left an only son, also named for the old soldier. The
+boys were about of an age and were well matched in physical and
+mental equipment. But the general, who had taken them both to
+live with him, soon discovered that their characters were as
+dissimilar as the poles. One grandson was frank, generous, open
+as the light; the other was of a nature almost degenerate. In
+fact, each had inherited the qualities of his father. Tales began
+to come to the old general's ears that at first he refused to
+credit. But eventually it was made plain to him that one of the
+boys was a rake of the most objectionable type.
+
+There were many stormy scenes between the general and his
+grandson, but the boy continued to go from bad to worse. After a
+peculiarly flagrant case, involving the character of a
+respectable young girl, young Ned Bannister was forbidden his
+ancestral home. It had been by means of his cousin that this last
+iniquity of his had been unearthed, and the boy had taken it to
+his grandfather in hot indignation as the last hope of protecting
+the reputation of the injured girl. From that hour the evil
+hatred of his cousin, always dormant in the heart, flamed into
+active heat. The disowned youth swore to be revenged. A short
+time later the general died, leaving what little property he had
+entirely to the one grandson. This stirred again the bitter rage
+of the other. He set fire to the house that had been willed his
+cousin, and took a train that night for Wyoming. By a strange
+irony of fate they met again in the West years later, and the
+enmity between them was renewed, growing every month more bitter
+on the part of the one who called himself the King of the Bighorn
+Country.
+
+She broke the silence after his story with a gentle "Thank you. I
+can understand why you don't like to tell the story."
+
+"I am very glad of the chance to tell it to you," he answered.
+
+"When you were delirious you sometimes begged some one you called
+Ned not to break his mother's heart. I thought then you might be
+speaking to yourself as ill people do. Of course I see now it was
+your cousin that was on your mind."
+
+"When I was out of my head I must have talked a lot of nonsense,"
+he suggested, in the voice of a question. "I expect I had
+opinions I wouldn't have been scattering around so free if I'd
+known what I was saying."
+
+He was hardly prepared for the tide of color that swept her
+cheeks at his words nor for the momentary confusion that
+shuttered the shy eyes with long lashes cast down.
+
+"Sick folks do talk foolishness, they say," he added, his gaze
+trained on her suspiciously.
+
+"Do they?"
+
+"Mrs. Winslow says I did. But when I asked her what it was I said
+she only laughed and told me to ask y'u. Well, I'm askin' now."
+
+She became very busy over the teapot. "You talked about the work
+at your ranch--sheep dipping and such things."
+
+"Was that all?"
+
+"No, about lots of other things--football and your early life. I
+don't see what Mrs. Winslow meant. Will you have some more tea?"
+
+"No, thank y'u. I have finished. Yes, that ce'tainly seems
+harmless. I didn't know but I had been telling secrets." Still
+his unwavering eyes rested quietly on her.
+
+"Secrets?" She summoned her aplomb to let a question rest lightly
+in the face she turned toward him, though she was afraid she met
+his eyes hardly long enough for complete innocence "Why, yes,
+secrets." He measured looks with her deliberately before he
+changed the subject, and he knew again the delightful excitement
+of victory. "Are y'u going to read to me this evening?"
+
+She took his opening so eagerly that he smiled, at which her
+color mounted again.
+
+"If y'u like. What shall I read?"
+
+"Some more of Barrie's books, if y'u don't mind. When a fellow is
+weak as a kitten he sorter takes to things that are about kids."
+
+Nora came in and cleared away the supper things. She was just
+beginning to wash them when McWilliams and Denver dropped into
+the kitchen by different doors. Each seemed surprised and
+disappointed at the presence of the other. Nora gave each of them
+a smile and a dishcloth.
+
+"Reddy, he's shavin' and Frisco's struggling with a biled
+shirt--I mean with a necktie," Denver hastily amended. "They'll
+be along right soon, I shouldn't wonder."
+
+"Y'u better go tell the boys Miss Nora don't want her kitchen
+littered up with so many of them," suggested his rival.
+
+"Y'u're foreman here. I don't aim to butt into your business,
+Mac," grinned back the other, polishing a tea plate with the
+towel.
+
+"I want to get some table linen over to Lee Ming to-night," said
+Nora, presently.
+
+"Denver, he'll be glad to take it for y'u, Miss Nora. He's real
+obliging," offered Mac, generously.
+
+"I've been in the house all day, so I need a walk. I thought
+perhaps one of you gentlemen--" Miss Nora looked from one to the
+other of them with deep innocence.
+
+"Sure, I'll go along and carry it. Just as Mac says, I'll be real
+pleased to go," said Denver, hastily.
+
+Mac felt he had been a trifle precipitate in his assumption that
+Nora did not intend to go herself. Lee Ming had established a
+laundry some half mile from the ranch, and the way thereto lay
+through most picturesque shadow and moonlight. The foreman had
+conscientious scruples against letting Denver escort her down
+such a veritable lovers' lane of romantic scenery.
+
+"I don't know as y'u ought to go out in the night air with that
+cold, Denver. I'd hate a heap to have y'u catch pneumony. It
+don't seem to me I'd be justified in allowin' y'u to," said the
+foreman, anxiously.
+
+"You're THAT thoughtful, Mac. But I expect mebbe a little saunter
+with Miss Nora will do my throat good. We'll walk real slow, so's
+not to wear out my strength."
+
+"Big, husky fellows like y'u are awful likely to drop off with
+pneumony. I been thinkin' I got some awful good medicine that
+would be the right stuff for y'u. It's in the drawer of my
+wash-stand. Help yourself liberal and it will surely do y'u good.
+Y'u'll find it in a bottle."
+
+"I'll bet it's good medicine, Mac. After we get home I'll drop
+around. In the washstand, y'u said?"
+
+"I hate to have y'u take such a risk," Mac tried again. "There
+ain't a bit of use in y'u exposing yourself so careless. Y'u take
+a hot footbath and some of that medicine, Denver, then go right
+straight to bed, and in the mo'ning y'u'll be good as new.
+Honest, y'u won't know yourself."
+
+"Y'u got the best heart, Mac." Nora giggled.
+
+"Since I'm foreman I got to be a mother to y'u boys, ain't I?"
+
+"Y'u're liable to be a grandmother to us if y'u keep on," came
+back the young giant.
+
+"Y'u plumb discourage me, Denver," sighed the foreman.
+
+"No, sir! The way I look at it, a fellow's got to take some risk.
+Now, y'u cayn't tell some things. I figure I ain't half so likely
+to catch pneumony as y'u would be to get heart trouble if y'u
+went walking with Miss Nora," returned Denver.
+
+A perfect gravity sat on both their faces during the progress of
+most of their repartee.
+
+"If your throat's so bad, Mr. Halliday, I'll put a kerosene rag
+round it for you when we get back," Nora said, with a sweet
+little glance of sympathy that the foreman did not enjoy.
+
+Denver, otherwise "Mr. Halliday," beamed. "Y'u're real kind,
+ma'am. I'll bet that will help it on the outside much as Mac's
+medicine will inside."
+
+"What'll y'u do for my heart, ma'am, if it gits bad the way
+Denver figures it will?"
+
+"Y'u might try a mustard plaster," she gurgled, with laughter.
+
+For once the debonair foreman's ready tongue had brought him to
+defeat. He was about to retire from the field temporarily when
+Nora herself offered first aid to the wounded.
+
+"We would like to have you come along with us, Mr. McWilliams. I
+want you to come if you can spare the time."
+
+The soft eyes telegraphed an invitation with such a subtle
+suggestion of a private understanding that Mac was instantly
+encouraged to accept.
+
+He knew, of course, that she was playing them against each other
+and sitting back to enjoy the result, but he was possessed of the
+hope common to youths in his case that he really was on a better
+footing with her than the other boys. This opinion, it may be
+added, was shared by Denver, Frisco and even Reddy as regards
+themselves. Which is merely another way of putting the
+regrettable fact that this very charming young woman was given to
+coquetting with the hearts of her admirers.
+
+"Any time y'u get oneasy about that cough y'u go right on home,
+Denver. Don't stay jest out of politeness. We'll never miss y'u,
+anyhow," the foreman assured him.
+
+"Thank y'u, Mac. But y'u see I got to stay to keep Miss Nora from
+getting bored."
+
+"Was it a phrenologist strung y'u with the notion y'u was a cure
+for lonesomeness?"
+
+"Shucks! I don't make no such claims. The only thing is it's a
+comfort when you're bored to have company. Miss Nora, she's so
+polite. But, y'u see, if I'm along I can take y'u for a walk when
+y'u get too bad."
+
+They reached the little trail that ran up to Lee Ming's place,
+and Denver suggested that Mac run in with the bundle so as to
+save Nora the climb.
+
+"I'd like to, honest I would. But since y'u thought of it first I
+won't steal the credit of doing Miss Nora a good turn. We'll wait
+right here for y'u till y'u come back."
+
+"We'll all go up together," decided Nora, and honors were easy.
+
+In the pleasant moonlight they sauntered back, two of them still
+engaged in lively badinage. while the third played chorus with
+appreciative little giggles and murmurs of "Oh, Mr. Halliday!"
+and "You know you're just flattering me, Mr. McWilliams."
+
+If they had not been so absorbed in their gay foolishness the two
+men might not have walked so innocently into the trap waiting for
+them at their journey's end. As it was, the first intimation they
+had of anything unusual was a stern command to surrender.
+
+"Throw up your hands. Quick, you blank fools!"
+
+A masked man covered them, in each hand a six-shooter, and at his
+summons the arms of the cow-punchers went instantly into the air.
+
+Nora gave an involuntary little scream of dismay.
+
+"Y'u don't need to be afraid, lady. Ain't nobody going to hurt
+you, I reckon," the masked man growled.
+
+" Sure they won't," Mac reassured her, adding ironically: "This
+gun-play business is just neighborly frolic. Liable to happen any
+day in Wyoming."
+
+A second masked man stepped up. He, too was garnished with an
+arsenal.
+
+"What's all this talking about?" he demanded sharply.
+
+"We just been having a little conversation seh?" returned
+McWilliams, gently, his vigilant eyes searching through the
+disguise of the other " Just been telling the lady that your call
+is in friendly spirit. No objections, I suppose?"
+
+The swarthy newcomer, who seemed to be in command, swore sourly.
+
+"Y'u put a knot in your tongue, Mr. Foreman."
+
+"Ce'tainly, if y'u prefer," returned the indomitable McWilliams.
+
+"Shut up or I'll pump lead into you!"
+
+"I'm padlocked, seh."
+
+Nora Darling interrupted the dialogue by quietly fainting. The
+foreman caught her as she fell.
+
+"See what y'u done, y'u blamed chump!" he snapped.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 13. THE TWO COUSINS
+
+The sheepman lay at his ease, the strong supple lines of him
+stretched lazily on the lounge. Helen was sitting beside him in
+an easy chair, and he watched the play of her face in the
+lamplight as she read from "The Little White Bird." She was very
+good to see, so vitally alive and full of a sweet charm that half
+revealed and half concealed her personality. The imagination with
+which she threw herself into a discussion of the child fancies
+portrayed by the Scotch writer captured his fancy. It delighted
+him to tempt her into discussions that told him by suggestion
+something of what she thought and was.
+
+They were in animated debate when the door opened to admit
+somebody else. He had stepped in so quietly that he stood there a
+little while without being observed, smiling down at them with
+triumphant malice behind the mask he wore. Perhaps it was the
+black visor that was responsible for the Mephisto effect, since
+it hid all the face but the leering eyes. These, narrowed to
+slits, swept the room and came back to its occupants. He was a
+tall man and well-knit, dressed incongruously in up-to-date
+riding breeches and boots, in combination with the usual gray
+shirt, knotted kerchief and wide-brimmed felt hat of the horseman
+of the plains. The dust of the desert lay thick on him, without
+in the least obscuring a certain ribald elegance, a distinction
+of wickedness that rested upon him as his due. To this result his
+debonair manner contributed, though it carried with it no
+suggestion of weakness. To the girl who looked up and found him
+there he looked indescribably sinister.
+
+She half rose to her feet, dilated eyes fixed on him.
+
+"Good evenin'. I came to make sure y'u got safe home, Miss
+Messiter," he said.
+
+The eyes of the two men clashed, the sheepman's stern and
+unyielding, his cousin's lit with the devil of triumph. But out
+of the faces of both men looked the inevitable conflict, the
+declaration of war that never ends till death.
+
+"I've been a heap anxious about y'u--couldn't sleep for worrying.
+So I saddled up and rode in to find out if y'u were all right and
+to inquire how Cousin Ned was getting along."
+
+The sheepman, not deigning to move an inch from his position,
+looked in silence his steady contempt.
+
+"This conversation sounds a whole lot like a monologue up to
+date," he continued. "Now, maybe y'u don't know y'u have the
+honor of entertaining the King of the Bighorn." The man's brown
+hand brushed the mask from his eyes and he bowed with mocking
+deference. "Miss Messiter, allow me to introduce myself
+again--Ned Bannister, train robber, rustler, kidnapper and
+general bad man. But I ain't told y'u the worst yet. I'm cousin
+to a sheepherder' and that's the lowest thing that walks."
+
+He limped forward a few steps and sat down. "Thank you, I believe
+I will stay a while since y'u both ask me so urgent. It isn't
+often I meet with a welcome so hearty and straight from the
+heart."
+
+It was not hard to see how the likeness between them contributed
+to the mistake that had been current concerning them. Side by
+side, no man could have mistaken one for the other. The color of
+their eyes, the shade of hair, even the cut of their features,
+were different. But beneath all distinctions in detail ran a
+family resemblance not to be denied. This man looked like his
+cousin, the sheepman, as the latter might have done if all his
+life he had given a free rein to evil passions.
+
+The height, the build, the elastic tread of each, made further
+contributions to this effect of similarity.
+
+"What are you doing here?" They were the first words spoken by
+the man on the lounge and they rang with a curt challenge.
+
+"Come to inquire after the health of my dear cousin," came the
+prompt silken answer.
+
+"You villain!"
+
+"My dear cousin, y'u speak with such conviction that y'u almost
+persuade me. But of course if I'm a villain I've got to live up
+to my reputation. Haven't I, Miss Messiter?"
+
+"Wouldn't it be better to live it down?" she asked with a
+quietness that belied her terror. For there had been in his
+manner a threat, not against her but against the man whom her
+heart acknowledged as her lover.
+
+He laughed. "Y'u're still hoping to make a Sunday school
+superintendent out of me, I see. Y'u haven't forgot all your
+schoolmarm ways yet, but I'll teach y'u to forget them."
+
+The other cousin watched him with a cool, quiet glance that never
+wavered. The outlaw was heavily armed, but his weapons were
+sheathed, and, though there was a wary glitter behind the
+vindictive exultation in his eyes, his capable hands betrayed no
+knowledge of the existence of his revolvers. It was, he knew, to
+be a moral victory, if one at all.
+
+"Hope I'm not disturbing any happy family circle," he remarked,
+and, taking two limping steps forward, he lifted the book from
+the girl's unresisting hands. "H'm! Barrie. I don't go much on
+him. He's too sissy for me. But I could have guessed the other
+Ned Bannister would be reading something like that," he
+concluded, a flicker of sneering contempt crossing his face.
+
+"Perhaps y'u'll learn some time to attend to your own business,"
+said the man on the couch quietly.
+
+Hatred gleamed in the narrowed slits from which the soul of the
+other cousin looked down at him. "I'm a philanthropist, and my
+business is attending to other people's. They raise sheep, for
+instance, and I market them."
+
+The girl hastily interrupted. She had not feared for herself, but
+she knew fear for the indomitable man she had nursed back to
+life. "Won't you sit down, Mr. Bannister? Since you don't approve
+our literature, perhaps we can find some other diversion more to
+your taste." She smiled faintly.
+
+The man turned in smiling divination of her purpose, and sat down
+to play with her as a cat does with a mouse.
+
+"Thank y'u, Miss Messiter, I believe I will. I called to thank
+y'u for your kindness to my cousin as well as to inquire about
+you. The word goes that y'u pulled my dear cousin back when death
+was reaching mighty strong for him. Of course I feel grateful to
+y'u. How is he getting along now?"
+
+"He's doing very well, I think."
+
+"That's ce'tainly good hearing," was his ironical response. "How
+come he to get hurt, did y'u say?"
+
+His sleek smile was a thing hateful to see.
+
+"A hound bit me," explained the sheepman.
+
+"Y'u don't say! I reckon y'u oughtn't to have got in its way. Did
+y'u kill it?"
+
+"Not yet."
+
+"That was surely a mistake, for it's liable to bite again."
+
+The girl felt a sudden sickness at his honeyed cruelty, but
+immediately pulled herself together. For whatever fiendish
+intention might be in his mind she meant to frustrate it.
+
+"I hear you are of a musical turn, Mr. Bannister. Won't you play
+for us?"
+
+She had by chance found his weak spot. Instantly his eyes lit up.
+He stepped across to the piano and began to look over the music,
+though not so intently that he forgot to keep under his eye the
+man on the lounge.
+
+"H'm! Mozart, Grieg, Chopin, Raff, Beethoven. Y'u ce'tainly have
+the music here; I wonder if y'u have the musician." He looked her
+over with a bold, unscrupulous gaze. "It's an old trick to have
+classical music on the rack and ragtime in your soul. Can y'u
+play these?"
+
+"You will have to be the judge of that," she said.
+
+He selected two of Grieg's songs and invited her to the piano. He
+knew instantly that the Norwegian's delicate fancy and lyrical
+feeling had found in her no inadequate medium of expression. The
+peculiar emotional quality of the song "I Love Thee" seemed to
+fill the room as she played. When she swung round on the stool at
+its conclusion it was to meet a shining-eyed, musical enthusiast
+instead of the villain she had left five minutes earlier.
+
+"Y'u CAN play," was all he said, but the manner of it spoke
+volumes.
+
+For nearly an hour he kept her at the piano, and when at last he
+let her stop playing he seemed a man transformed.
+
+"You have given me a great pleasure, a very great pleasure, Miss
+Messiter," he thanked her warmly, his Western idiom sloughed with
+his villainy for the moment. "It has been a good many months
+since I have heard any decent music. With your permission I shall
+come again."
+
+Her hesitation was imperceptible. "Surely, if you wish." She felt
+it would be worse than idle to deny the permission she might not
+be able to refuse.
+
+With perfect grace he bowed, and as he wheeled away met with a
+little shock of remembrance the gaze of his cousin. For a long
+moment their eyes bored into each other. Neither yielded the beat
+of an eyelid, but it was the outlaw that spoke.
+
+"I had forgotten y'u. That's strange, too because it was for y'u
+I came. I'm going to take y'u home with me.
+
+"Alive or dead?" asked the other serenely.
+
+"Alive, dear Ned."
+
+"Same old traits cropping out again. There was always something
+feline about y'u. I remember when y'u were a boy y'u liked to
+torment wild animals y'u had trapped."
+
+"I play with larger game now--and find it more interesting."
+
+"Just so. Miss Messiter, I shall have to borrow a pony from y'u,
+unless--" He broke off and turned indifferently to the bandit.
+
+"Yes, I brought a hawss along with me for y'u," replied the other
+to the unvoiced question. "I thought maybe y'u might want to ride
+with us."
+
+"But he can't ride. He couldn't possibly. It would kill him," the
+girl broke out.
+
+"I reckon not." The man from the Shoshones glanced at his victim
+as he drew on his gauntlets. "He's a heap tougher than y'u
+think."
+
+"But it will. If he should ride now, why--It would be the same as
+murder," she gasped. "You wouldn't make him ride now?"
+
+"Didn't y'u hear him order his hawss, ma'am? He's keen on this
+ride. Of course he don't have to go unless he wants to." The man
+turned his villainous smile on his cousin, and the latter
+interpreted it to mean that if he preferred, the point of attack
+might be shifted to the girl. He might go or he might stay. But
+if he stayed the mistress of the Lazy D would have to pay for his
+decision.
+
+"No, I'll ride," he said at once.
+
+Helen Messiter had missed the meaning of that Marconied message
+that flashed between them. She set her jaw with decision. "Well,
+you'll not. It's perfectly ridiculous. I won't hear of such a
+thing."
+
+"Y'u seem right welcome. Hadn't y'u better stay, Ned?" murmured
+the outlaw, with smiling eyes that mocked.
+
+"Of course he had. He couldn't ride a mile-- not half a mile. The
+idea is utterly preposterous."
+
+The sheepman got to his feet unsteadily. " I'll do famously."
+
+"I won't have it. Why are you so foolish about going? He said you
+didn't need to go. You can't ride any more than a baby could chop
+down that pine in the yard."
+
+"I'm a heap stronger than y'u think."
+
+"Yes, you are!" she derided. "It's nothing but obstinacy. Make
+him stay," she appealed to the outlaw.
+
+"Am I my cousin's keeper?" he drawled. "I can advise him to stay,
+but I can't make him."
+
+"Well, I can. I'm his nurse, and I say he sha'n't stir a foot out
+of this house--not a foot."
+
+The wounded man smiled quietly, admiring the splendid energy of
+her. "I'm right sorry to leave y'u so unceremoniously."
+
+"You're not going." She wheeled on the outlaw "I don't understand
+this at all. But if you want him you can find him here when you
+come again. Put him on parole and leave him here. I'll not be a
+party to murder by letting him go."
+
+"Y'u think I'm going to murder him?" he smiled.
+
+"I think he cannot stand the riding. It would kill him."
+
+"A haidstrong man is bound to have his way. He seems hell-bent on
+riding. All the docs say the outside of a hawss is good for the
+inside of a man. Mebbe it'll be the making of him."
+
+"I won't have it. I'll rouse the whole countryside against you.
+Why don't you parole him till he is better?"
+
+"All right. We'll leave it that way," announced the man. "I'd
+hate to hurt your tender feelings after such a pleasant evening.
+Let him give his parole to come to me whenever I send for him, no
+matter where he may be, to quit whatever he is doing right that
+instant, and come on the jump. If he wants to leave it that way,
+we'll call it a bargain."
+
+Again the rapier-thrust of their eyes crossed. The sheepman was
+satisfied with what he saw in the face of his foe.
+
+"All right. It's a deal," he agreed, and sank weakly back to the
+couch.
+
+There are men whose looks are a profanation to any good woman.
+Ned Bannister, of the Shoshones, was one of them. He looked at
+his cousin, and his ribald eyes coasted back to bold scrutiny of
+this young woman's charming, buoyant youth. There was Something
+in his face that sent a flush of shame coursing through her rich
+blood. No man had ever looked at her like that before.
+
+"Take awful good care of him," he sneered, with so plain an
+implication of evil that her clean blood boiled. "But I know y'u
+will, and don't let him go before he's real strong."
+
+"No," she murmured, hating herself for the flush that bathed her.
+
+He bowed like a Chesterfield, and went out with elastic heels,
+spurs clicking.
+
+Helen turned fiercely on her guest. "Why did you make me insist
+on your staying? As if I want you here, as if--" She stopped,
+choking with anger; presently flamed out, "I hate you," and ran
+from the room to hide herself alone with her tears and her shame.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 14. FOR THE WORLD'S CHAMPIONSHIP
+
+The scene on which Helen Messiter's eyes rested that mellow
+Fourth of July was vivid enough to have interested a far more
+jaded mind than hers. Nowhere outside of Cattleland could it have
+been duplicated. Wyoming is sparsely populated, but the riders of
+the plains think nothing of traveling a hundred miles in the
+saddle to be present at a "broncobusting" contest. Large
+delegations, too, had come in by railroad from Caspar, Billings,
+Sheridan, Cheyenne and a score of other points, so that the
+amphitheatre that looked down on the arena was filled to its
+capacity.
+
+All night the little town had rioted with its guests. Everything
+was wide open at Gimlet Butte. Saloons were doing a land-office
+business and gambling-houses coining money. Great piles of gold
+had passed to and fro during the night at the roulette wheel and
+the faro table. But with the coming of day interest had centered
+on the rough-riding contest for the world's championship. Saloons
+and dance halls were deserted, and the universal trend of travel
+had been toward the big grand stands, from which the sport could
+be best viewed.
+
+It was afternoon now. The preliminaries had been ridden, and half
+a dozen of the best riders had been chosen by the judges to ride
+again for the finals. Helen was wonderfully interested, because
+in the six who were to ride again were included the two Bannister
+cousins, her foreman, McWilliams, the young man "Texas," whom she
+had met the day of her arrival at Gimlet Butte, and Tom Sanford,
+who had last year won the championship.
+
+She looked down on the arena, and her heart throbbed with the
+pure joy of life. Already she loved her West and its picturesque,
+chap-clad population. Their jingling spurs and their colored
+kerchiefs knotted round sunburned necks, their frank,
+whole-hearted abandon to the interest of the moment, led her to
+regard these youths as schoolboys. Yet they were a hard-bitten
+lot, as one could see, burned to a brick-red by the untempered
+sun of the Rockies; with muscles knit like steel, and hearts
+toughened to endure any blizzard they might meet. Only the
+humorous wrinkles about the corners of their eyes gave them away
+for the cheerful sons of mirth that they were.
+
+"Bob Austin on Two-Step," announced the megaphone man, and a
+little stir eddied through the group gathered at the lane between
+the arena and the corral.
+
+A meek-looking buckskin was driven into the arena. The embodiment
+of listlessness, it apparently had not ambition enough to flick a
+fly from its flank with its tail. Suddenly the bronco's ears
+pricked, its sharp eyes dilated. A man was riding forward, the
+loop of a lariat circling about his head. The rope fell true, but
+the wily pony side-stepped, and the loop slithered to the ground.
+Again the rope shot forward, dropped over the pony's head and
+tightened. The roper's mustang braced its forefeet, and brought
+the buckskin up short. Another rope swept over its head. It stood
+trembling, unable to move without strangling itself.
+
+A picturesque youth in flannel shirt and chaps came forward,
+dragging blanket, saddle and bridle. At sight of him the horse
+gave a spasmodic fling, then trembled again violently. A blind
+was coaxed over its eyes and the bridle slipped on. Quickly and
+warily, with deft fingers, the young man saddled and cinched. He
+waved a hand jauntily to the ropers. The lariats were thrown off
+as the puncher swung to the saddle. For an instant the buckskin
+stood bewildered, motionless as a statue. There was a sudden leap
+forward high in air, and Bob Austin, alias "Texas," swung his
+sombrero with a joyous whoop.
+
+"Fan him! Fan him!" screamed the spectators, and the rider's
+quirt went up and down like a piston-rod.
+
+Round and round went Two-Step in a vicious circle, "swapping
+ends" with dizzying rapidity. Suddenly he went forward as from a
+catapult, and came to sudden halt in about five seconds. But
+Texas's knees still clung, viselike, to the sides of the pony. A
+series of quick bucks followed, the buckskin coming down with
+back humped, all four legs stiff as iron posts. The jar on the
+rider would have been like a pile-driver falling on his head had
+he not let himself grow limp. The buckskin plunged forward again
+in frenzied leaps, ending in an unexpected jump to one side. Alas
+for Texas! One moment he was jubilantly plying quirt and spurs,
+the next he found himself pitching sideways. To save himself he
+caught at the saddle-horn.
+
+"He's hunting leather," shouted a hundred voices.
+
+One of the judges rode out and waved a hand. Texas slipped to the
+ground disqualified, and made his dejected way back to his
+deriding comrades. Some of them had endured similar misfortunes
+earlier in the day. Therefore they found much pleasure in
+condoling with him.
+
+"If he'd only recollected to saw off the horn of his saddle, then
+he couldn't 'a' found it when he went to hunt leather,"
+mournfully commented one puncher in a shirt of robin's egg blue.
+
+"'Twould have been most as good as to take the dust, wouldn't
+it?" retorted Texas gently, and the laugh was on the gentleman in
+blue, because he had been thrown earlier in the day.
+
+"A fellow's hands sure get in his way sometimes. I reckon if
+you'd tied your hands, Tex, you'd been riding that rocking-hawss
+yet," suggested Denver amiably.
+
+"Sometimes it's his foot he puts in it. There was onct a gent
+disqualified for riding on his spurs," said Texas reminiscently.
+
+At which hit Denver retired, for not three hours before he had
+been detected digging his spurs into the cinch to help him stick
+to the saddle.
+
+"Jim McWilliams will ride Dead Easy," came the announcement
+through the megaphone, and a burst of cheering passed along the
+grand stand, for the sunny smile of the foreman of the Lazy D
+made him a general favorite. Helen leaned forward and whispered
+something gaily to Nora, who sat in the seat in front of her. The
+Irish girl laughed and blushed, but when her mistress looked up
+it was her turn to feel the mounting color creep into her cheeks.
+For Ned Bannister, arrayed in all his riding finery, was making
+his way along the aisle to her.
+
+She had not seen him since he had ridden away from the Lazy D ten
+days before, quite sufficiently recovered from his wounds to take
+up the routine of life again. They had parted not the best of
+friends, for she had not yet forgiven him for his determination
+to leave with his cousin on the night that she had been forced to
+insist on his remaining. He had put her in a false position, and
+he had never explained to her why. Nor could she guess the
+reason--for he was not a man to harvest credit for himself by
+explaining his own chivalry.
+
+Since her heart told her how glad she was he had come to her box
+to see her, she greeted him with the coolest little nod in the
+world.
+
+"Good morning, Miss Messiter. May I sit beside y'u?" he asked.
+
+"Oh, certainly!" She swept her skirts aside carelessly and made
+room for him. "I thought you were going to ride soon."
+
+"No, I ride last except for Sanford, the champion. My cousin
+rides just before me. He's entered under the name of Jack
+Holloway."
+
+She was thinking that he had no business to be riding, that his
+wounds were still too fresh, but she did not intend again to show
+interest enough in his affairs to interfere even by suggestion.
+Her heart had been in her mouth every moment of the time this
+morning while he had been tossed hither and thither on the back
+of his mount. In his delirium he had said he loved her. If he
+did, why should he torture her so? It was well enough for sound
+men to risk their lives, but--
+
+A cheer swelled in the grand stand and died breathlessly away.
+McWilliams was setting a pace it would take a rare expert to
+equal. He was a trick rider, and all the spectacular feats that
+appealed to the onlooker were his. While his horse was wildly
+pitching, he drank a bottle of pop and tossed the bottle away.
+With the reins in his teeth he slipped off his coat and vest, and
+concluded a splendid exhibition of skill by riding with his feet
+out of the stirrups. He had been smoking a cigar when he mounted.
+Except while he had been drinking the pop it had been in his
+mouth from beginning to end, and, after he had vaulted from the
+pony's back, he deliberately puffed a long smoke-spiral into the
+air, to show that his cigar was still alight. No previous rider
+had earned so spontaneous a burst of applause. "He's ce'tainly a
+pure when it comes to riding," acknowledged Bannister. "I look to
+see him get either first or second."
+
+"Whom do you think is his most dangerous rival?" Helen asked.
+
+"My cousin is a straight-up rider, too. He's more graceful than
+Mac, I think, but not quite so good on tricks. It will be nip and
+tuck."
+
+"How about your cousin's cousin?" she asked, with bold irony.
+
+"He hopes he won't have to take the dust," was his laughing
+answer.
+
+The next rider suffered defeat irrevocably before he had been
+thirty seconds in the saddle. His mount was one of the most
+cunning of the outlaw ponies of the Northwest, and it brought him
+to grief by jamming his leg hard against the fence. He tried in
+vain to spur the bronco into the middle of the arena, but after
+it drove at a post for the third time and ground his limb against
+it, he gave up to the pain and slipped off.
+
+"That isn't fair, is it?" Helen asked of the young man sitting
+beside her.
+
+He shrugged his lean, broad shoulders. "He should have known how
+to keep the horse in the open. Mac would never have been caught
+that way."
+
+"Jack Holloway on Rocking Horse," the announcer shouted.
+
+It took four men and two lariats to subdue this horse to a
+condition sufficiently tame to permit of a saddle being slipped
+on. Even then this could not be accomplished without throwing the
+bronco first. The result was that all the spirit was taken out of
+the animal by the preliminary ordeal, so that when the man from
+the Shoshone country mounted, his steed was too jaded to attempt
+resistance.
+
+"Thumb him! Thumb him!" the audience cried, referring to the
+cowboy trick of running the thumbs along a certain place in the
+shoulder to stir the anger of the bucker.
+
+But the rider slipped off with disgust. "Give me another horse,"
+he demanded, and after a minute's consultation among the judges a
+second pony was driven out from the corral. This one proved to be
+a Tartar. It went off in a frenzy of pitching the moment its
+rider dropped into the saddle.
+
+"Y'u'll go a long way before you see better ridin' than his and
+Mac's. Notice how he gives to its pitching," said Bannister, as
+he watched his cousin's perfect ease in the cyclone of which he
+was the center.
+
+"I expect it depends on the kind of a 'hawss,'" she mocked. "He's
+riding well, isn't he?"
+
+"I don't know any that ride better."
+
+The horse put up a superb fight, trying everything it knew to
+unseat this demon clamped to its back. It possessed in
+combination all the worst vices, was a weaver, a sunfisher and a
+fence-rower, and never had it tried so desperately to maintain
+its record of never having been ridden. But the outlaw in the
+saddle was too much for the outlaw underneath. He was master,
+just as he was first among the ruffians whom he led, because
+there was in him a red-hot devil of wickedness that would brook
+no rival.
+
+The furious bronco surrendered without an instant's warning, and
+its rider slipped at once to the ground. As he sauntered through
+the dust toward the grand stand, Helen could not fail to see how
+his vanity sunned itself in the applause that met his
+performance. His equipment was perfect to the least detail. The
+reflection from a lady's looking-glass was no brighter than the
+silver spurs he jingled on his sprightly heels. Strikingly
+handsome in a dark, sinister way, one would say at first sight,
+and later would chafe at the justice of a verdict not to be
+denied.
+
+Ned Bannister rose from his seat beside Helen. "Wish me luck," he
+said, with his gay smile.
+
+"I wish you all the luck you deserve," she answered.
+
+"Oh, wish me more than that if y'u want me to win."
+
+"I didn't say I wanted you to win. You take the most
+unaccountable things for granted."
+
+"I've a good mind to win, then, just to spite y'u," he laughed.
+
+"As if you could," she mocked; but her voice took a softer
+intonation as she called after him in a low murmur: "Be careful,
+please."
+
+His white teeth flashed a smile of reassurance at her. "I've
+never been killed yet."
+
+"Ned Bannister on Steamboat," sang out the megaphone man.
+
+"I'm ce'tainly in luck. Steamboat's the worst hawss on the
+range," he told himself, as he strode down the grand stand to
+enter the arena.
+
+The announcement of his name created for the second time that day
+a stir of unusual interest. Everybody in that large audience had
+heard of Ned Bannister; knew of his record as a "bad man" and his
+prowess as the king of the Shoshone country; suspected him of
+being a train and bank robber as well as a rustler. That he
+should have the boldness to enter the contest in his own name
+seemed to show how defiant he was of the public sentiment against
+him, and how secure he counted himself in flaunting this
+contempt. As for the sheepman, the notoriety that his cousin's
+odorous reputation had thrust upon him was extremely distasteful
+as well as dangerous, but he had done nothing to disgrace his
+name, and he meant to use it openly. He could almost catch the
+low whispers that passed from mouth to mouth about him.
+
+"Ain't it a shame that a fellow like that, leader of all the
+criminals that hide in the mountains, can show himself openly
+before ten thousand honest folks?" That he knew to be the purport
+of their whispering, and along with it went a recital of the
+crimes he had committed. How he was a noted "waddy," or
+cattle-rustler; how he and his gang had held up three trains in
+eighteen months; how he had killed Tom Mooney, Bob Carney and
+several others--these were the sorts of things that were being
+said about him, and from the bottom of his soul he resented his
+impotency to clear his name.
+
+There was something in Bannister's riding that caught Helen's
+fancy at once. It was the unconscious grace of the man, the ease
+with which he seemed to make himself a very part of the horse. He
+attempted no tricks, rode without any flourishes. But the perfect
+poise of his lithe body as it gave with the motions of the horse,
+proclaimed him a born rider; so finished, indeed, that his very
+ease seemed to discount the performance. Steamboat had a
+malevolent red eye that glared hatred at the oppressor man, and
+to-day it lived up to its reputation of being the most vicious
+and untamed animal on the frontier. But, though it did its best
+to unseat the rider and trample him underfoot, there was no
+moment when the issue seemed in doubt save once. The horse flung
+itself backward in a somersault, risking its own neck in order to
+break its master's. But he was equal to the occasion; and when
+Steamboat staggered again to its feet Bannister was still in the
+saddle. It was a daring and magnificent piece of horsemanship,
+and, though he was supposed to be a desperado and a ruffian, his
+achievement met with a breathless gasp, followed by thunderous
+applause.
+
+The battle between horse and man was on again, for the animal was
+as strong almost in courage as the rider. But Steamboat's
+confidence had been shaken as well as its strength. Its efforts
+grew less cyclonic. Foam covered its mouth and flecked its sides.
+The pitches were easy to foresee and meet. Presently they ceased
+altogether.
+
+Bannister slid from the saddle and swayed unsteadily across the
+arena. The emergency past, he had scarce an ounce of force left
+in him. Jim McWilliams ran out and slipped an arm around his
+shoulders, regardless of what his friends might think of him for
+it.
+
+"You're all in, old man. Y'u hadn't ought to have ridden, even
+though y'u did skin us all to a finish."
+
+"Nonsense, Mac. First place goes to y'u or--or Jack Holloway."
+
+"Not unless the judges are blind."
+
+But Bannister's prediction proved true. The champion, Sanford,
+had been traveling with a Wild West show, and was far too soft to
+compete with these lusty cowboys, who had kept hard from their
+daily life on the plains. Before he had ridden three minutes it
+was apparent that he stood no chance of retaining his title, so
+that the decision narrowed itself to an issue between the two
+Bannisters and McWilliams. First place was awarded to the latter,
+the second prize to Jack Holloway and the third to Ned Bannister.
+
+But nearly everybody in the grand stand knew that Bannister had
+been discriminated against because of his unpopularity. The
+judges were not local men, and had nothing to fear from the
+outlaw. Therefore they penalized him on account of his
+reputation. It would never do for the Associated Press dispatches
+to send word all over the East that a murderous desperado was
+permitted, unmolested, to walk away with the championship belt.
+
+"It ain't a square deal," declared McWilliams promptly.
+
+He was sitting beside Nora, and he turned round to express his
+opinion to the two sitting behind him in the box.
+
+"We'll not go behind the returns. Y'u won fairly. I congratulate
+y'u, Mr. Champion-of-the-world," replied the sheepman, shaking
+hands cordially.
+
+"I told you to bring that belt to the Lazy D," smiled his
+mistress, as she shook hands.
+
+But in her heart she was crying out that it was an outrage.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 15. JUDD MORGAN PASSES
+
+Gimlet Butte devoted the night of the Fourth to a high old time.
+The roping and the other sports were to be on the morrow, and
+meanwhile the night hours were filled with exuberance. The
+cowboy's spree comes only once in several months, but when it
+does come he enters into the occasion with such whole-hearted
+enthusiasm as to make up swiftly for lost time. A traveling
+midway had cast its tents in a vacant square in competition with
+the regular attractions of the town, and everywhere the
+hard-riding punchers were "night herding" in full regalia.
+
+There was a big masked ball in the street, and another in the
+Masonic Hall, while here and there flared the lights of the faker
+with something to sell. Among these last was "Soapy" Sothern,
+doing a thriving business in selling suckers and bars wrapped
+with greenbacks. Crowds tramped the streets blowing horns and
+throwing confetti, and everywhere was a large sprinkling of men
+in high-heeled boots, swinging along with the awkward,
+stiff-legged gait of the cowboy. Sometimes a girl was hanging on
+his arm, and again he was "whooping it up with the boys"; but in
+either case the range-rider's savings were burning a hole through
+his pockets with extreme rapidity.
+
+Jim McWilliams and the sheepman Bannister had that day sealed a
+friendship that was to be as enduring as life. The owner of the
+sheep ranch was already under heavy obligation to the foreman of
+the Lazy D, but debt alone is not enough on which to found soul
+brotherhood. There must be qualities of kinship in the primeval
+elements of character. Both men had suspected that this kinship
+existed, but to-day they had proved it in the way that one had
+lost and the other had won the coveted championship. They had
+made no vows and no professions. The subject had not even been
+touched in words; a meeting of the eyes, followed by the
+handshake with which Bannister had congratulated the winner. That
+had been all. But it was enough.
+
+With the casual democracy of the frontier they had together
+escorted Helen Messiter and Nora Darling through a riotous three
+hours of carnival, taking care to get them back to their hotel
+before the night really began "to howl."
+
+But after they had left the young women, neither of them cared to
+sleep yet. They were still in costume, Mac dressed as a monk, and
+his friend as a Stuart cavalier, and the spirit of frolic was yet
+strong in them.
+
+"I expaict, mebbe, we better hunt in couples if we're going to
+help paint the town," smiled Mac, and his friend had immediately
+agreed.
+
+It must have been well after midnight that they found themselves
+"bucking the tiger" in a combination saloon and gambling-house,
+whose patrons were decidedly cosmopolitan in character. Here
+white and red and yellow men played side by side, the Orient and
+the Occident and the aboriginal alike intent on the falling cards
+and the little rolling ball. A good many of them were still in
+their masks and dominos, though these, for the most part, removed
+their vizors before playing.
+
+Neither McWilliams nor his friend were betting high, and the luck
+had been so even that at the end of two hours' play neither of
+them had at any time either won or lost more than fifteen
+dollars. In point of fact, they were playing not so much to win
+as just to keep in touch with the gay, youthful humor of the
+night.
+
+They were getting tired of the game when two men jingled in for a
+drink. They were talking loudly together, and it was impossible
+to miss the subject of their conversation.
+
+McWilliams gave a little jerk of his head toward one of them.
+"Judd Morgan," his lips framed without making a sound.
+
+Bannister nodded.
+
+"Been tanking up all day," Mac added. "Otherwise his tongue would
+not be shooting off so reckless."
+
+A silence had fallen over the assembly save for the braggarts at
+the bar. Men looked at each other, and then furtively at
+Bannister. For Morgan, ignorant of who was sitting quietly with
+his back to him at the faro-table, was venting his hate of
+Bannister and McWilliams.
+
+"Both in the same boat. Did y'u see how Mac ran to help him
+to-day? Both waddies. Both rustlers. Both train robbers. Sho! I
+got through putting a padlock on me mouth. Man to man, I'm as
+good as either of them--damn sight better. I wisht they was here,
+one or both; I wisht they would step up here and fight it out.
+Bannister's a false alarm, and that foreman of the Lazy D--" His
+tongue stumbled over a blur of vilification that ended with a
+foul mention of Miss Messiter.
+
+Instantly two chairs crashed to the floor. Two pair of gray eyes
+met quietly.
+
+"My quarrel, Bann," said Jim, in a low, even voice.
+
+The other nodded. "I'll see y'u have a clear field."
+
+The man who was with Morgan suddenly whispered in his ear, and
+the latter slewed his head in startled fear. Almost instantly a
+bullet clipped past McWilliams's shoulder. Morgan had fired
+without waiting for the challenge he felt sure was at hand.
+Once--twice the foreman's revolver made answer. Morgan staggered,
+slipped down to the floor, a bullet crashing through the
+chandelier as he fell. For a moment his body jerked. Then he
+rolled over and lay still.
+
+The foreman's weapon covered him unwaveringly, but no more
+steadily than Bannister's gaze the man who had come in with him
+who lay lifeless on the floor. The man looked at the lifeless
+thing, shuddered, and backed out of the saloon.
+
+"I call y'u all to witness that my friend killed him in
+self-defense," said Bannister evenly. "Y'u all saw him fire
+first. Mac did not even have his gun out."
+
+"That's right," agreed one, and another added: "He got what was
+coming to him."
+
+"He sure did," was the barkeeper's indorsement. "He came in
+hunting trouble, but I reckon he didn't want to be accommodated
+so prompt."
+
+"Y'u'll find us at the Gimlet Butte House if we're wanted for
+this," said Bannister. "We'll be there till morning."
+
+But once out of the gambling-house McWilliams drew his friend to
+one side. "Do y'u know who that was I killed?"
+
+"Judd Morgan, foreman before y'u at the Lazy D."
+
+"Yes, but what else?"
+
+"What do y'u mean?"
+
+"I mean that next to your cousin Judd was leader of that
+Shoshone-Teton bunch."
+
+"How do y'u know?"
+
+"I suspected it a long time, but I knew for sure the day that
+your cousin held up the ranch. The man that was in charge of the
+crowd outside was Morgan. I could swear to it. I knew him soon as
+I clapped eyes to him, but I was awful careful to forget to tell
+him I recognized him."
+
+"That means we are in more serious trouble than I had supposed."
+
+"Y'u bet it does. We're in a hell of a hole, figure it out any
+way y'u like. Instead of having shot up a casual idiot, I've
+killed Ned Bannister's right-hand man. That will be the
+excuse--shooting Morgan. But the real trouble is that I won the
+championship belt from your cousin. He already hated y'u like
+poison, and he don't love me any too hard. He will have us
+arrested by his sheriff here. Catch the point. Y'U'RE NED
+BANNISTER, THE OUTLAW, AND I'M HIS RIGHT-BOWER. That's the play
+he's going to make, and he's going to make it right soon."
+
+"I don't care if he does. We'll fight him on his own ground.
+We'll prove that he's the miscreant and not us."
+
+"Prove nothing," snarled McWilliams. "Do y'u reckon he'll give us
+a chance to prove a thing? Not on your life. He'll have us jailed
+first thing; then he'll stir up a sentiment against us, and
+before morning there will be a lynchingbee, and y'u and I will
+wear the neckties. How do y'u like the looks of it?"
+
+"But y'u have a lot of friends. They won't stand for anything
+like that."
+
+"Not if they had time to stop it. Trouble is, fellow's friends
+think awful slow. They'll arrive in time to cut us down and be
+the mourners. No, sir! It's a hike for Jimmie Mac on the back of
+the first bronc he can slap a saddle on."
+
+Bannister frowned. "I don't like to run before the scurvy
+scoundrels."
+
+"Do y'u suppose I'm enjoying it? Not to any extent, I allow. But
+that sweet relative of yours holds every ace in the deck, and
+he'll play them, too. He owns the law in this man's town, and he
+owns the lawless. But the best card he holds is that he can get a
+thousand of the best people here to join him in hanging the
+'king' of the Shoshone outlaws. Explanations nothing! Y'u rode
+under the name of Bannister, didn't y'u? He's Jack Holloway."
+
+"It does make a strong combination," admitted the sheepman.
+
+"Strong! It's invincible. I can see him playing it, laughing up
+his sleeve all the time at the honest fools he is working. No,
+sir! I draw out of a game like that. Y'u don't get a run for your
+money."
+
+"Of course he knows already what has happened," mused Bannister.
+
+"Sure he knows. That fellow with Morgan made a bee-line for him.
+Just about now he's routing the sheriff out of his bed. We got no
+time to lose. Thing is, to burn the wind out of this town while
+we have the chance."
+
+"I see. It won't help us any to be spilling lead into a sheriff's
+posse. That would ce'tainly put us in the wrong."
+
+"Now y'u're shouting. If we're honest men why don't we surrender
+peaceable? That's the play the 'king' is going to make in this
+town. Now if we should spoil a posse and bump off one or two of
+them, we couldn't pile up evidence enough to get a jury to
+acquit. No, sir! We can't surrender and we can't fight.
+Consequence is, we got to roll our tails immediate."
+
+"We have an appointment with Miss Messiter and Nora for to-morrow
+morning. We'll have to leave word we can't keep it."
+
+"Sure. Denver and Missou are playing the wheel down at the Silver
+Dollar. I reckon we better make those boys jump and run errands
+for us while we lie low. I'll drop in casual and give them the
+word. Meet y'u here in ten minutes. Whatever y'u do, keep that
+mask on your face."
+
+"Better meet farther from the scene of trouble. Suppose we say
+the north gate of the grand stand?"
+
+"Good enough. So-long."
+
+The first faint streaks of day were beginning to show on the
+horizon when Bannister reached the grand stand. He knew that
+inside of another half-hour the little frontier town would be
+blinking in the early morning sunlight that falls so brilliantly
+through the limpid atmosphere. If they were going to leave
+without fighting their way out there was no time to lose.
+
+Ten minutes slowly ticked away.
+
+He glanced at his watch. "Five minutes after four. I wish I had
+gone with Mac. He may have been recognized."
+
+But even as the thought flitted through his mind, the
+semi-darkness opened to let a figure out of it.
+
+"All quiet along the Potomac, seh?" asked the foreman's blithe
+voice. "Good. I found the boys and got them started." He flung
+down a Mexican vaquero's gaily trimmed costume.
+
+"Get into these, seh. Denver shucked them for me. That coyote
+must have noticed what we wore before he slid out. Y'u can bet
+the orders are to watch for us as we were dressed then."
+
+"What are y u going to do?"
+
+"Me? I'm scheduled to be Aaron Burr, seh. Missou swaps with me
+when he gets back here. They're going to rustle us some white
+men's clothes, too, but we cayn't wear them till we get out of
+town on account of showing our handsome faces."
+
+"What about horses?"
+
+"Denver is rustling some for us. Y'u better be scribbling your
+billy-doo to the girl y'u leave behind y'u, seh."
+
+"Haven't y'u got one to scribble?" Bannister retorted. "Seems to
+me y'u better get busy, too."
+
+So it happened that when Missou arrived a few minutes later he
+found this pair of gentlemen, who were about to flee for their
+lives, busily inditing what McWilliams had termed facetiously
+billets-doux. Each of them was trying to make his letter a little
+warmer than friendship allowed without committing himself to any
+chance of a rebuff. Mac got as far as Nora Darling,
+absentmindedly inserted a comma between the words, and there
+stuck hopelessly. He looked enviously across at Bannister, whose
+pencil was traveling rapidly down his note-book.
+
+"My, what a swift trail your pencil leaves on that paper. That's
+going some. Mine's bogged down before it got started. I wisht y'u
+would start me off."
+
+"Well, if you ain't up and started a business college already. I
+had ought to have brought a typewriter along with me," murmured
+Missou ironically.
+
+"How are things stacking? Our friends the enemy getting busy
+yet?" asked Bannister, folding and addressing his note.
+
+"That's what. Orders gone out to guard every road so as not to
+let you pass. What's the matter with me rustling up the boys and
+us holding down a corner of this town ourselves?"
+
+The sheepman shook his head. "We're not going to start a little
+private war of our own. We couldn't do that without spilling a
+lot of blood. No, we'll make a run for it."
+
+"That y'u, Denver?" the foreman called softly, as the sound of
+approaching horses reached him.
+
+"Bet your life. Got your own broncs, too. Sheriff Burns called up
+Daniels not to let any horses go out from his corral to anybody
+without his O.K. I happened to be cinching at the time the 'phone
+message came, so I concluded that order wasn't for me, and lit
+out kinder unceremonious."
+
+Hastily the fugitives donned the new costumes and dominos, turned
+their notes over to Denver, and swung to their saddles.
+
+"Good luck!" the punchers called after them, and Denver added an
+ironical promise that the foreman had no doubt he would keep.
+"I'll look out for Nora--Darling." There was a drawling pause
+between the first and second names. "I'll ce'tainly see that she
+don't have any time to worry about y'u, Mac."
+
+"Y'u go to Halifax," returned Mac genially over his shoulder as
+he loped away.
+
+"I doubt if we can get out by the roads. Soon as we reach the end
+of the street we better cut across that hayfield," suggested Ned.
+
+"That's whatever. Then we'll slip past the sentries without being
+seen. I'd hate to spoil any of them if we can help it. We're
+liable to get ourselves disliked if our guns spatter too much."
+
+They rode through the main street, still noisy with the shouts of
+late revelers returning to their quarters. Masked men were yet in
+evidence occasionally, so that their habits caused neither remark
+nor suspicion. A good many of the punchers, unable to stay
+longer, were slipping out of town after having made a night of
+it. In the general exodus the two friends hoped to escape
+unobserved.
+
+They dropped into a side street, galloped down it for two hundred
+yards, and dismounted at a barb-wire fence which ran parallel
+with the road. The foreman's wire-clippers severed the strands
+one by one, and they led their horses through the gap. They
+crossed an alfalfa-field, jumped an irrigation ditch, used the
+clippers again, and found themselves in a large pasture. It was
+getting lighter every moment, and while they were still in the
+pasture a voice hailed them from the road in an unmistakable
+command to halt.
+
+They bent low over the backs of their ponies and gave them the
+spur. The shot they had expected rang out, passing harmlessly
+over them. Another followed, and still another.
+
+"That's right. Shoot up the scenery. Y'u don't hurt us none," the
+foreman said, apostrophizing the man behind the gun.
+
+The next clipped fence brought them to the open country. For half
+an hour they rode swiftly without halt. Then McWilliams drew up.
+
+"Where are we making for?"
+
+"How about the Wind River country?"
+
+"Won't do. First off, they'll strike right down that way after
+us. What's the matter with running up Sweetwater Creek and lying
+out in the bad lands around the Roubideaux?"
+
+"Good. I have a sheep-camp up that way. I can arrange to have
+grub sent there for us by a man I can trust."
+
+"All right. The Roubideaux goes."
+
+While they were nooning at a cow-spring, Bannister, lying on his
+back, with his face to the turquoise sky, became aware that a
+vagrant impulse had crystallized to a fixed determination. He
+broached it at once to his companion.
+
+"One thing is a cinch, Mac. Neither y'u nor I will be safe in
+this country now until we have broken up the gang of desperadoes
+that is terrorizing this country. If we don't get them they will
+get us. There isn't any doubt about that. I'm not willing to lie
+down before these miscreants. What do y'u say?"
+
+"I'm with y'u, old man. But put a name to it. What are y'u
+proposing?"
+
+"I'm proposing that y'u and I make it our business not to have
+any other business until we clean out this nest of wolves. Let's
+go right after them, and see if we can't wipe out the
+Shoshone-Teton outfit."
+
+"How? They own the law, don't they?"
+
+"They don't own the United States Government. When they held up a
+mail-train they did a fool thing, for they bucked up against
+Uncle Sam. What I propose is that we get hold of one of the gang
+and make him weaken. Then, after we have got hold of some
+evidence that will convict, we'll go out and run down my namesake
+Ned Bannister. If people once get the idea that his hold isn't so
+strong there's a hundred people that will testify against him.
+We'll have him in a Government prison inside of six months."
+
+"Or else he'll have us in a hole in the ground," added the
+foreman, dryly.
+
+"One or the other," admitted Bannister. "Are y'u in on this
+thing?"
+
+"I surely am. Y'u're the best man I've met up with in a month of
+Sundays, seh. Y'u ain't got but one fault; and that is y'u don't
+smoke cigareets. Feed yourself about a dozen a day and y'u won't
+have a blamed trouble left. Match, seh?" The foreman of the Lazy
+D, already following his own advice, rolled deftly his smoke,
+moistened it and proceeded to blow away his troubles.
+
+Bannister looked at his debonair insouciance and laughed. "Water
+off a duck's back," he quoted. "I know some folks that would be
+sweating fear right now. It's ce'tainly an aggravating situation,
+that of being an honest man hunted as a villain by a villain. But
+I expaict my cousin's enjoying it."
+
+"He ain't enjoying it so much as he would if his plans had worked
+out a little smoother. He's holding the sack right now and
+cussing right smaht over it being empty, I reckon."
+
+"He did lock the stable door a little too late," chuckled the
+sheepman. But even as he spoke a shadow fell over his face. "My
+God! I had forgotten. Y'u don't suppose he would take it out of
+Miss Messiter."
+
+"Not unless he's tired of living," returned her foreman, darkly.
+"One thing, this country won't stand for is that. He's got to
+keep his hands off women or he loses out. He dassent lay a hand
+on them if they don't want him to. That's the law of the plains,
+isn't it?"
+
+"That's the unwritten law for the bad man, but I notice it
+doesn't seem to satisfy y'u, my friend. Y'u and I know that my
+cousin, Ned Bannister, doesn't acknowledge any law, written or
+unwritten. He's a devil and he has no fear. Didn't he kidnap her
+before?"
+
+"He surely would never dare touch those young ladies. But--I
+don't know. Bann, I guess we better roll along toward the Lazy D
+country, after all."
+
+"I think so." Ned looked at his friend with smiling drollery. "I
+thought y'u smoked your troubles away, Jim. This one seems to
+worry y'u."
+
+McWilliams grinned sheepishly. "There's one trouble won't be
+smoked away. It kinder dwells. "Then, apparently apropos of
+nothing, he added, irrelevantly: "Wonder what Denver's doing
+right now?"
+
+"Probably keeping that appointment y'u ran away from," bantered
+his friend.
+
+"I'll bet he is. Funny how some men have all the luck," murmured
+the despondent foreman.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 16. HUNTING BIG GAME
+
+In point of fact, Denver's occupation at that moment was
+precisely what they had guessed it to be. He was sitting beside
+Nora Darling in the grand stand, explaining to her the fine
+points of "roping." Mr. Bob Austin, commonly known as "Texas,"
+was meanwhile trying to make himself agreeable to Helen Messiter.
+Truth to tell, both young women listened with divided interest to
+their admirers. Both of them had heard the story of the night,
+and each of them had tucked away in her corsage a scribbled note
+she wanted to get back to her room and read again. That the
+pursuit was still on everybody knew, and those on the inside were
+aware that the "King," masquerading under the name of Jack
+Holloway, was the active power behind the sheriff stimulating the
+chase.
+
+It was after the roping had begun, and Austin had been called
+away to take his turn, that the outlaw chief sauntered along the
+aisle of the grand stand to the box in which was seated the
+mistress of the Lazy D.
+
+"Beautiful mo'ning, isn't it? Delightfully crisp and clear," he
+said by way of introduction, stopping at her box.
+
+She understood the subtle jeer in his manner, and her fine
+courage rose to meet it. There was a daring light in her eye, a
+buoyant challenge in her voice as she answered:
+
+"It is a splendid morning. I'm not surprised you are enjoying
+it."
+
+"Did I say I was enjoying it?" He laughed as he lifted the bar,
+came into her box and took a seat.
+
+"Of course not. How careless of me! I had forgotten you were in
+mourning for a deceased friend."
+
+His dark eyes flashed. "I'll not mourn for him long. He was a
+mighty trifling fellow, anyhow. Soon as I catch and hang his
+murderers I'll quit wearing black."
+
+"You may wear out several suits before then," she hit back.
+
+"Don't y'u believe it; when I want a thing I don't quit till it's
+done."
+
+She met his gaze, and the impact of eyes seemed to shock her
+physically. The wickedness in him threatened, gloated, dominated.
+She shivered in the warm sunlight, and would not have had him
+know it for worlds.
+
+"Dear me! How confident you talk. Aren't you sometimes
+disappointed?"
+
+"Temporarily. But when I want a thing I take it in the end."
+
+She knew he was serving notice on her that he meant to win her;
+and again the little spinal shiver raced over her. She could not
+look at his sardonic, evil face without fear, and she could not
+look away without being aware of his eyes possessing her. What
+was the use of courage against such a creature as this?
+
+"Yes, I understand you take a good deal that isn't yours," she
+retorted carelessly, her eyes on the arena.
+
+"I make it mine when I take it," he answered coolly, admiring the
+gameness which she wore as a suit of chain armor against his
+thrusts.
+
+"Isn't it a little dangerous sometimes?" her even voice
+countered. "When you take what belongs to others you run a risk,
+don't you?"
+
+"That's part of the rules. Except for that I shouldn't like it so
+well. I hunt big game, and the bigger the game the more risk.
+That's why y'u guessed right when y'u said I was enjoying the
+mo'ning."
+
+"Meaning--your cousin?"
+
+"Well, no. I wasn't thinking of him, though he's some sizable.
+But I'm hunting bigger game than he is, and I expect to bag it."
+
+She let her scornful eyes drift slowly over him. "I might pretend
+to misunderstand you. But I won't. You may have your answer now.
+I am not afraid of you, for since you are a bully you must be a
+coward. I saw a rattlesnake last week in the hills. It reminded
+me of some one I have seen. I'll leave you to guess who."
+
+Her answer drew blood. The black tide raced under the swarthy tan
+of his face. He leaned forward till his beady eyes were close to
+her defiant ones. "Y'u have forgotten one thing, Miss Messiter. A
+rattlesnake can sting. I ask nothing of you. Can't I break your
+heart without your loving me? You're only a woman--and not the
+first I have broken, by God--"
+
+His slim, lithe body was leaning forward so that it cut off
+others, and left them to all intents alone. At a touch of her
+fingers the handbag in her lap flew open and a little
+ivory-hilted revolver lay in her hand.
+
+"You may break me, but you'll never bend me an inch."
+
+He looked at the little gun and laughed ironically. "Sho! If y'u
+should hit me with that and I should find it out I might get mad
+at y'u."
+
+"Did I say it was for you?" she said coldly; and again the shock
+of joined eyes ended in drawn battle.
+
+"Have y'u the nerve?" He looked her over, so dainty and so
+resolute, so silken strong; and he knew he had his answer.
+
+His smoldering eyes burned with desire to snatch her to him and
+ride away into the hills. For he was a man who lived in his
+sensations. He had won many women to their hurt, but it was the
+joy of conflict that made the pursuit worth while to him; and
+this young woman, who could so delightfully bubble with little
+laughs ready to spill over and was yet possessed of a spirit so
+finely superior to the tenderness of her soft, round, maidenly
+curves, allured him mightily to the attack.
+
+She dropped the revolver back into the bag and shut the clasp
+with a click, "And now I think, Mr. Bannister, that I'll not
+detain you any longer. We understand each other sufficiently."
+
+He rose with a laugh that mocked. "I expaict to spend quite a bit
+of time understanding y'u one of these days. In the meantime this
+is to our better acquaintance."
+
+Deliberately, without the least haste, he stooped and kissed her
+before she could rally from the staggering surprise of the
+intention she read in his eyes too late to elude. Then, with the
+coolest bravado in the world, he turned on his heel and strolled away.
+
+Angry sapphires gleamed at him from under the long, brown lashes.
+She was furious, aghast, daunted. By the merest chance she was
+sitting in a corner of the box, so screened from observation that
+none could see. But the insolence of him, the reckless defiance
+of all standards of society, shook her even while it enraged her.
+He had put forth his claim like a braggart, but he had made good
+with an audacity superb in its effrontery. How she hated him! How
+she feared him! The thoughts were woven inseparably in her mind.
+Mephisto himself could not have impressed himself more
+imperatively than this strutting, heartless master artist in
+vice.
+
+She saw him again presently down in the arena, for it was his
+turn to show his skill at roping. Texas had done well; very well,
+indeed. He had made the throw and tie in thirty-seven seconds,
+which was two seconds faster than the record of the previous
+year. But she knew instinctively, as her fascinated eyes watched
+the outlaw preparing for the feat, that he was going to win. He
+would use his success as a weapon against her; as a means of
+showing her that he always succeeded in whatever he undertook. So
+she interpreted he look he flung her as he waited at the chute
+for the wild hill steer to be driven into the arena. It takes a
+good man physically to make a successful roper. He must be
+possessed of nerve, skill and endurance far out of the ordinary.
+He must be quick-eyed, strong-handed, nimble of foot, expert of
+hand and built like a wildcat. So Denver explained to the two
+young women in the box, and the one behind him admitted
+reluctantly that she long, lean, supple Centaur waiting
+impassively at the gateway fitted the specifications.
+
+Out flashed the rough-coated hill steer, wild and fleet as a
+hare, thin and leggy, with muscles of whipcord. Down went the
+flag, and the stopwatches began to tick off the seconds. Like an
+arrow the outlaw's pony shot forward, a lariat circling round and
+round the rider's head. At every leap the cow pony lessened the
+gap as it pounded forward on the heels of the flying steer.
+
+The loop swept forward and dropped over the horns of the animal.
+The pony, with the perfect craft of long practice, swerved to one
+side with a rush. The dragging rope swung up against the running
+steer's legs, grew suddenly taut. Down went the steer's head, and
+next moment its feet were swept from under it as it went heavily
+to the ground. Man and horse were perfect in their team work. As
+the supple rider slid from the back of the pony it ran to the end
+of the rope and braced itself to keep the animal from rising.
+Bannister leaped on the steer, tie-rope in hand. Swiftly his deft
+hands passed to and fro, making the necessary loops and knots.
+Then his hands went into the air. The steer was hog-tied.
+
+For a few seconds the judges consulted together. "Twenty-nine
+seconds," announced their spokesman, and at the words a great
+cheer went up. Bannister had made his tie in record time.
+
+Impudently the scoundrel sauntered up to the grand stand, bowed
+elaborately to Miss Messiter, and perched himself on the fence,
+where he might be the observed of all observers. It was curious,
+she thought, how his vanity walked hand in hand with so much
+power and force. He was really extraordinarily strong, but no
+debutante's self-sufficiency could have excelled his. He was so
+frankly an egotist that it ceased to be a weakness.
+
+Back in her room at the hotel an hour later Helen paced up and
+down under a nervous strain foreign to her temperament. She was
+afraid; for the first time in her life definitely afraid. This
+man pitted against her had deliberately divorced his life from
+morality. In him lay no appeal to any conscience court of last
+resort. But the terror of this was not for herself principally,
+but for her flying lover. With his indubitable power, backed by
+the unpopularity of the sheepman in this cattle country, the King
+of the Bighorn could destroy his cousin if he set himself to do
+so. Of this she was convinced, and her conviction carried a
+certainty that he had the will as well as the means. If he had
+lacked anything in motive she herself had supplied one. For she
+was afraid that this villain had read her heart.
+
+And as her hand went fluttering to her heart she found small
+comfort in the paper lying next it that only a few hours before
+had brought her joy. For at any moment a messenger might come in
+to tell her that the writer of it had been captured and was to be
+dealt with summarily in frontier fashion. At best her lover and
+her friend were but fugitives from justice. Against them were
+arrayed not only the ruffian followers of their enemy, but also
+the lawfully constituted authorities of the county. Even if they
+should escape to-day the net would tighten on them, and they
+would eventually be captured.
+
+For the third time since coming to Wyoming Helen found refuge in
+tears.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 17. RUN TO EARTH
+
+When word came to Denver and the other punchers of the Lazy D
+that Reddy had been pressed into service as a guide for the posse
+that was pursuing the fugitives they gave vent to their feelings
+in choice profanity.
+
+"Now, ain't that like him? Had to run around like a locoed calf
+telling all he knowed and more till Burns ropes him in,"
+commented the disgusted Missou.
+
+"Trouble with Reddy is he sets his mouth to working and then goes
+away and leaves it," mourned Jim Henson.
+
+"I'd hate to feel as sore as Reddy will when the boys get through
+playing with him after he gets back to the ranch," Denver
+contributed, when he had exhausted his vocabulary.
+
+Meanwhile Reddy, unaware of being a cause of offense, was
+cheerfully happy in the unexpected honor that had been thrust
+upon him. His will was of putty, molded into the opinion of
+whomever he happened at the moment to be with. Just now, with the
+ironic eye of Sheriff Burns upon him, he was strong for law
+enforcement.
+
+"A feller hadn't ought to be so promiscuous with his hardware.
+This here thing of shooting up citizens don't do Wyoming no good
+these days. Capital ain't a-going to come in when such goings-on
+occur," he sagely opined, unconsciously parroting the sentiment
+Burns had just been instilling into him.
+
+"That's right, sir. If that ain't horse sense I don't know any.
+You got a head on you, all right," answered the admiring sheriff.
+
+The flattered Reddy pleaded guilty to being wiser than most men.
+"Jest because I punch cows ain't any reason why I'm anybody's
+fool. I'll show them smart boys at the Lazy D I don't have to
+take the dust of any of the bunch when it comes to using my think
+tank."
+
+"I would," sympathized Burns. You bet they'll all be almighty
+jealous when they learn how you was chosen out of the whole
+outfit on this job."
+
+All day they rode, and that night camped a few miles from the
+Lazy D. Early next morning they hailed a solitary rider as he
+passed. The man turned out to be a cowman, with a small ranch not
+far from the one owned by Miss Messiter.
+
+"Hello, Henderson! y'u seen anything of Jim McWilliams and
+another fellow riding acrost this way?" asked Reddy.
+
+"Nope," answered the cowman promptly. But immediately he modified
+his statement to add that he had seen two men riding toward Dry
+Creek a couple of hours ago. "They was going kinder slow. Looked
+to me sorter like one of them was hurt and the other was helping
+him out," he volunteered.
+
+The sheriff looked significantly at one of his men and nodded.
+
+"You didn't recognize the horses, I reckon?"
+
+"Come to think of it, one of the ponies did look like Jim's roan.
+What's up, boys? Anything doing?"
+
+"Nothing particular. We want to see Jim, that's all. So long."
+
+What Henderson had guessed was the truth. The continuous hard
+riding had been too much for Bannister and his wound had opened
+anew. They were at the time only a few miles from a shack on Dry
+Creek, where the Lazy D punchers sometimes put up. McWilliams had
+attended the wound as best he could, and after a few hours' rest
+had headed for the cabin in the hills. They were compelled to
+travel very slowly, since the motion kept the sheepman's wound
+continually bleeding. But about noon they reached the refuge they
+had been seeking and Bannister lay down on the bunk with their
+saddle blankets under him. He soon fell asleep, and Mac took
+advantage of this to set out on a foraging expedition to a ranch
+not far distant. Here he got some bread, bacon, milk and eggs
+from a man he could trust and returned to his friend.
+
+It was dark by the time he reached the cabin. He dismounted, and
+with his arms full of provisions pushed into the hut.
+
+"Awake, Bann?" he asked in a low voice.
+
+The answer was unexpected. Something heavy struck his chest and
+flung him back against the wall. Before he could recover his
+balance he was pinioned fast. Four men had hurled themselves upon
+him.
+
+"We've got you, Jim. Not a mite o' use resisting," counseled the
+sheriff.
+
+"Think I don't savez that? I can take a hint when a whole
+Methodist church falls on me. Who are y'u, anyhow?"
+
+"Somebody light a lantern," ordered Burns.
+
+By the dim light it cast Mac made them out, and saw Ned Bannister
+gagged and handcuffed on the bed. He knew a moment of surprise
+when his eyes fell on Reddy.
+
+"So it was y'u brought them here, Red?" he said quietly.
+
+Contrary to his own expectations, the gentleman named was
+embarrassed "The sheriff, he summoned me to serve," was his lame
+defense.
+
+"And so y'u threw down your friends. Good boy!"
+
+"A man's got to back the law up, ain't he?"
+
+Mac turned his shoulder on him rather pointedly. "There isn't any
+need of keeping that gag in my friend's mouth any longer," he
+suggested to Burns.
+
+"That's right, too. Take it out, boys. I got to do my duty, but I
+don't aim to make any gentleman more uncomfortable than I can
+help. I want everything to be pleasant all round."
+
+"I'm right glad to hear that, Burns, because my friend isn't fit
+to travel. Y'u can take me back and leave him out here with a
+guard," the foreman replied quickly.
+
+"Sorry I can't accommodate you, Jim, but I got to take y'u both
+with me."
+
+"Those are the orders of the King, are they?"
+
+Burns flushed darkly. "It ain't going to do you any good to talk
+that way. You know mighty well this here man with you is
+Bannister. I ain't going to take no chances on losing him now
+I've got my hand on him."
+
+"Y'u ce'tainly deserve a re-election, and I'll bet y'u get it all
+right. Any man so given over to duty, so plumb loaded down to the
+hocks with conscience as y'u, will surely come back with a big
+majority next November."
+
+"I ain't askin' for YOUR vote, Mac."
+
+"Oh, y'u don't need votes. Just get the King to O. K. your
+nomination and y'u'll win in a walk."
+
+"My friend, y'u better mind your own business. Far as I can make
+out y'u got troubles enough of your own," retorted the nettled
+sheriff.
+
+"Y'u don't need to tell me that, Tom Burns' Y'u ain't a
+man--nothing but a stuffed skin worked by a string. When that
+miscreant Bannister pulls the string y'u jump. He's jerked it
+now, so y'u're taking us back to him. I can prove that coyote
+Morgan shot at me first, but that doesn't cut any ice with you."
+
+"What made you light out so sudden, then?" demanded the aggrieved
+Burns triumphantly.
+
+"Because I knew you. That's a plenty good reason. I'm not asking
+anything for myself. All I say is that my friend isn't fit to
+travel yet. Let him stay here under a guard till he is."
+
+"He was fit enough to get here. By thunder, he's fit to go back!"
+
+"Y'u've said enough, Mac," broke in Bannister. "It's awfully good
+of y'u to speak for me, but I would rather see it out with you to
+a finish. I don't want any favors from this yellow dog of my
+cousin."
+
+The "yellow dog" set his teeth and swore vindictively behind
+them. He was already imagining an hour when these insolent
+prisoners of his would sing another tune.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 18. PLAYING FOR TIME
+
+"They've got 'em. Caught them on Dry Creek, just below Green
+Forks."
+
+Helen Messiter, just finishing her breakfast at the hotel
+preparatory to leaving in her machine for the ranch, laid down
+her knife and fork and looked with dilated eyes at Denver, who
+had broken in with the news.
+
+"Are you sure?" The color had washed from her face and left her
+very white, but she fronted the situation quietly without
+hysterics or fuss of any kind.
+
+"Yes, ma'am. They're bringing them in now to jail. Watch out and
+y'u'll see them pass here in a few minutes. Seems that
+Bannister's wound opened up on him and he couldn't go any
+farther. Course Mac wouldn't leave him. Sheriff Burns and his
+posse dropped in on them and had them covered before Mac could
+chirp."
+
+"You are sure this man--this desperado Bannister--will do nothing
+till night?"
+
+"Not the way I figure it. He'll have the jail watched all day.
+But he's got to work the town up to a lynching. I expect the bars
+will be free for all to-day. By night the worst part of this town
+will be ready for anything. The rest of the citizens are going to
+sit down and do nothing just because it is Bannister."
+
+"But it isn't Bannister--not the Bannister they think it is."
+
+He shook his head. "No use, ma'am. I've talked till my throat
+aches, but it don't do a mite of good. Nobody believes a word of
+what I say. Y'u see, we ain't got any proof."
+
+"Proof! We have enough, God knows! didn't this villain--this
+outlaw that calls himself Jack Holloway--attack and try to murder
+him?"
+
+"That's what we believe, but the report out is that one of us
+punchers shot him up for crossing the dead-line."
+
+"Didn't this fellow hold up the ranch and try to take Ned
+Bannister away with him?"
+
+"Yes, ma'am. But that doesn't look good to most people. They say
+he had his friends come to take him away so y'u wouldn't hold him
+and let us boys get him. This cousin business is a fairy tale the
+way they size it up. How come this cousin to let him go if he
+held up the ranch to put the sick man out of business? No, miss.
+This country has made up its mind that your friend is the
+original Ned Bannister. My opinion is that nothing on earth can
+save him."
+
+"I don't want your opinion. I'm going to save him, I tell you;
+and you are going to help. Are his friends nothing but a bunch of
+quitters?" she cried, with sparkling eyes.
+
+"I didn't know I was such a great friend of his," answered the
+cowboy sulkily.
+
+"You're a friend of Jim McWilliams, aren't you? Are you going to
+sneak away and let these curs hang him?"
+
+Denver flushed. "Y'u're dead right, Miss Helen. I guess I'll see
+it out with you. What's the orders?"
+
+"I want you to help me organize a defense. Get all Mac's friends
+stirred up to make a fight for him. Bring as many of them in to
+see me during the day as you can. If you see any of the rest of
+the Lazy D boys send them in to me for instructions. Report
+yourself every hour to me. And make sure that at least three of
+your friends that you can trust are hanging round the jail all
+day so as to be ready in case any attempt is made to storm it
+before dark."
+
+"I'll see to it." Denver hung on his heel a moment before
+leaving. "It's only square to tell y'u, Miss Helen, that this
+means war here tonight. These streets are going to run with blood
+if we try to save them."
+
+"I'm taking that responsibility," she told him curtly; but a
+moment later she added gently: "I have a plan, my friend, that
+may stop this outrage yet. But you must do your best for me." She
+smiled sadly at him. "You're my foreman, to-day, you know."
+
+"I'm going to do my level best, y'u may tie to that," he told her
+earnestly.
+
+"I know you will." And their fingers touched for an instant.
+
+Through a window the girl could see a crowd pouring down the
+street toward the hotel. She flew up the stairs and out upon the
+second-story piazza that looked down upon the road.
+
+From her point of vantage she easily picked them out--the two
+unarmed men riding with their hands tied behind their backs,
+encircled by a dozen riders armed to the teeth. Bannister's hat
+had apparently fallen off farther down the street, for the man
+beside him was dusting it. The wounded prisoner looked about him
+without fear, but it was plain he was near the limit of
+endurance. He was pale as a sheet, and his fair curls clung
+moistly to his damp forehead.
+
+McWilliams caught sight of her first, and she could see him turn
+and say a word to his comrade. Bannister looked up, caught sight
+of her, and smiled. That smile, so pale and wan, went to her
+heart like a knife. But the message of her eyes was hope. They
+told the prisoners silently to be of good cheer, that at least
+they were not deserted to their fate.
+
+"What is it about--the crowd?" Nora asked of her mistress as the
+latter was returning to the head of the stairs.
+
+In as few words as she could Helen told her, repressing sharply
+the tears the girl began to shed. "This is not the time to
+weep--not yet. We must save them. You can do your part. Mr.
+Bannister is wounded. Get a doctor over the telephone and see
+that he attends him at the. Don't leave the 'phone until you have
+got one to promise to go immediately."
+
+"Yes, miss. Is there anything else?"
+
+"Ask the doctor to call you up from the prison and tell you how
+Mr. Bannister is. Make it plain to him that he is to give up his
+other practice, if necessary, and is to keep us informed through
+the day about his patient's condition. I will be responsible for
+his bill."
+
+Helen herself hurried to the telegraph office at the depot. She
+wrote out a long dispatch and handed it to the operator. "Send
+this at once please."
+
+He was one of those supercilious young idiots that make the most
+of such small power as ever drifts down to them. Taking the
+message, he tossed it on the table. "I'll send it when I get
+time."
+
+"You'll send it now."
+
+"What--what's that?"
+
+Her steady eyes caught and held his shifting ones. "I say you are
+going to send it now--this very minute."
+
+"I guess not. The line's busy," he bluffed.
+
+"If you don't begin sending that message this minute I'll make it
+my business to see that you lose your position," she told him
+calmly.
+
+He snatched up the paper from the place where he had tossed it.
+"Oh, well, if it's so darned important," he-conceded
+ungraciously.
+
+She stood quietly above him while he sent the telegram, even
+though he contrived to make every moment of her stay an unvoiced
+insult. Her wire was to the wife of the Governor of the State.
+They had been close friends at school, and the latter had been
+urging Helen to pay a visit to Cheyenne. The message she sent was
+as follows:
+
+Battle imminent between outlaws and cattlemen here. Bloodshed
+certain to-night. My foreman last night killed in self-defense a
+desperado. Bannister's gang, in league with town authorities,
+mean to lynch him and one of my other friends after dark this
+evening. Sheriff will do nothing. Can your husband send soldiers
+immediately? Wire answer.
+
+The operator looked up sullenly after his fingers had finished
+the last tap. "Well?"
+
+"Just one thing more," Helen told him. "You understand the rules
+of the company about secrecy. Nobody you knows I am sending this
+message. If by any chance it should leak out, I shall know
+through whom. If you want to hold your position, you will keep
+quiet."
+
+"I know my business," he growled. Nevertheless, she had spoken in
+season, for he had had it in his mind to give a tip where he knew
+it would be understood to hasten the jail delivery and
+accompanying lynching.
+
+When she returned to the hotel? Helen found Missou waiting for
+her. She immediately sent him back to the office, and told him to
+wait there until the answer was received. "I'll send one of the
+boys up to relieve you so that you may come with the telegram as
+soon as it arrives. I want the operator watched all day. Oh,
+here's Jim Henson! Denver has explained the situation to you, I
+presume. I want you to go up to the telegraph office and stay
+there all day. Go to lunch with the operator when he goes.
+Don't let him talk privately to anybody, not even for a few
+seconds. I don't want you to seem to have him under guard before
+outsiders, but let him know it very plainly. He is not to mention
+a wire I sent or the answer to it--not to anybody, Jim. Is that
+plain?"
+
+"Y'u bet! He's a clam, all right, till the order is
+countermanded." And the young man departed with a cheerful grin
+that assured Helen she had nothing to fear from official leaks.
+
+Nora, from answering a telephone call, came to report to the
+general in charge. "The doctor says that he has looked after Mr.
+Bannister, and there is no immediate danger. If he keeps quiet
+for a few days he ought to do well. Mr. McWilliams sent a message
+by him to say that we aren't to worry about him. He said he
+would--would--rope a heap of cows on the Lazy D yet."
+
+Nora, bursting into tears, flung herself into Helen's arms. "They
+are going to kill him. I know they are, and--and 'twas only
+yesterday, ma'am, I told him not to--to get gay, the poor boy.
+When he tried to--to--" She broke down and sobbed.
+
+Her mistress smiled in spite of herself, though she was bitterly
+aware that even Nora's grief was only superficially ludicrous.
+
+"We're going to save him, Nora, if we can. There's hope while
+there's life. You see, Mac himself is full of courage. HE hasn't
+given up. We must keep up our courage, too."
+
+"Yes, ma'am, but this is the first gentleman friend I ever had
+hanged, and--" She broke off, sobbing, leaving the rest as a
+guess.
+
+Helen filled it out aloud. "And you were going to say that you
+care more for him than any of the others. Well, you must stop
+coquetting and tell him so when we have saved him."
+
+"Yes, ma'am," agreed Nora, very repentant for the moment of the
+fact that it was her nature to play with the hearts of those of
+the male persuasion. Immediately she added: "He was THAT kind,
+ma'am, tender-hearted."
+
+Helen, whose own heart was breaking, continued to soothe her.
+"Don't say WAS, child. You are to be brave, and not think of him
+that way."
+
+"Yes, ma'am. He told me he was going to buy cows with the
+thousand dollars he won yesterday. I knew he meant--"
+
+"Yes, of course. It's a cowboy's way of saying that he means to
+start housekeeping. Have you the telegram, Missou?" For that
+young man was standing in the doorway.
+
+He handed her the yellow slip. She ripped open the envelope and
+read: Company B en route. Railroad connections uncertain Postpone
+crisis long as possible. May reach Gimlet Butte by ten-thirty.
+
+Her first thought was of unspeakable relief. The militia was
+going to take a hand. The boys in khaki would come marching down
+the street, and everything would be all right. But hard on the
+heels of her instinctive gladness trod the sober second thought.
+Ten-thirty at best, and perhaps later! Would they wait that long,
+or would they do their cowardly work as soon as night fell She
+must contrive to delay them till the train drew in. She must play
+for those two lives with all her woman's wit; must match the
+outlaw's sinister cunning and fool him into delay. She knew he
+would come if she sent for him. But how long could she keep him?
+As long as he was amused at her agony, as long as his pleasure in
+tormenting her was greater than his impatience to be at his
+ruffianly work. Oh, if she ever needed all her power it would be
+to-night.
+
+Throughout the day she continued to receive hourly reports from
+Denver, who always brought with him four or five honest
+cowpunchers from up-country to listen to the strange tale she
+unfolded to them. It was, of course, in part, the spell of her
+sweet personality, of that shy appeal she made to the manhood in
+them; but of those who came, nearly all believed, for the time at
+least, and aligned themselves on her side in the struggle that
+was impending. Some of these were swayed from their allegiance in
+the course of the day, but a few she knew would remain true.
+
+Meanwhile, all through the day, the enemy was busily at work. As
+Denver had predicted, free liquor was served to all who would
+drink. The town and its guests were started on a grand debauch
+that was to end in violence that might shock their sober
+intelligence. Everywhere poisoned whispers were being flung
+broadcast against the two men waiting in the jail for what the
+night would bring forth.
+
+Dusk fell on a town crazed by bad whiskey and evil report. The
+deeds of Bannister were hashed and rehashed at every bar, and
+nobody related them with more ironic gusto than the man who
+called himself Jack Holloway. There were people in town who knew
+his real name and character, but of these the majority were
+either in alliance with him or dared not voice their knowledge.
+Only Miss Messiter and her punchers told the truth, and their
+words were blown away like chaff.
+
+From the first moment of darkness Helen had the outlaw leader
+dogged by two of her men. Since neither of these were her own
+riders this was done without suspicion. At intervals of every
+quarter of an hour they reported to her in turn. Bannister was
+beginning to drink heavily, and she did not want to cut short his
+dissipation by a single minute. Yet she had to make sure of
+getting his attention before he went too far.
+
+It was close to nine when she sent him a note, not daring to
+delay a minute longer. For the reports of her men were all to the
+same effect, that the crisis would not now be long postponed.
+Bannister, or Holloway, as he chose to call himself, was at the
+bar with his lieutenants in evil when the note reached him. He
+read it with a satisfaction he could not conceal. So! He had
+brought her already to her knees. Before he was through with her
+she should grovel in the dust before him.
+
+"I'll be back in a few minutes. Do nothing till I return," he
+ordered, and went jingling away to the Elk House.
+
+The young woman's anxiety was pitiable, but she repressed it
+sternly when she went to meet the man she feared; and never had
+it been more in evidence than in this hour of her greatest
+torture. Blithely she came forward to meet him, eye challenging
+eye gayly. No hint of her anguish escaped into her manner. He
+read there only coquetry, the eternal sex conflict, the winsome
+defiance of a woman hitherto the virgin mistress of all assaults
+upon her heart's citadel. It was the last thing he had expected
+to see, but it was infinitely more piquant, more intoxicating,
+than desperation. She seemed to give the lie to his impression of
+her love for his cousin; and that, too, delighted his pride.
+
+"You will sit down?"
+
+Carelessly, almost indolently, she put the question, her raised
+eyebrows indicating a chair with perfunctory hospitality. He had
+not meant to sit, had expected only to gloat a few minutes over
+her despair; but this situation called for more deliberation. He
+had yet to establish the mastery his vanity demanded. Therefore
+he took a chair.
+
+"This is ce'tainly an unexpected honor. Did y'u send for me to
+explain some more about that sufficient understanding between
+us?" he sneered.
+
+It was a great relief to her to see that, though he had been
+drinking, as she had heard, he was entirely master of himself.
+Her efforts might still be directed to Philip sober.
+
+"I sent for you to congratulate you," she answered, with a smile.
+"You are a bigger man than I thought. You have done what you said
+you would do, and I presume you can very shortly go out of
+mourning."
+
+He radiated vanity, seemed to visibly expand "Do y'u go in when I
+go out?" he asked brutally.
+
+She laughed lightly. "Hardly. But it does seem as if I'm unlucky
+in my foremen. They all seem to have engagements across the
+divide."
+
+"I'll get y u another."
+
+"Thank you. I was going to ask as much of you. Can you suggest
+one now?"
+
+"I'm a right good cattle man myself."
+
+"And--can you stay with me a reasonable time?"
+
+He laughed. "I have no engagements across the Styx, ma'am."
+
+"My other foremen thought they were permanent fixtures here,
+too."
+
+"We're all liable to mistakes."
+
+"Even you, I suppose."
+
+"I'll sign a lease to give y'u possession of my skill for as long
+as y'u like."
+
+She settled herself comfortably back in an easy chair, as
+alluring a picture of buoyant, radiant youth as he had seen in
+many a day. "But the terms. I am afraid I can't offer you as much
+as you make at your present occupation."
+
+"I could keep that up as a side-line."
+
+"So you could. But if you use my time for your own profit, you
+ought to pay me a royalty on your intake."
+
+His eyes lit with laughter. "I reckon that can be arranged. Any
+percentage you think fair It will all be in the family, anyway."
+
+"I think that is one of the things about which we don't agree,"
+she made answer softly, flashing him the proper look of inviting
+disdain from under her silken lashes.
+
+He leaned forward, elbow on the chair-arm and chin in hand.
+"We'll agree about it one of these days."
+
+"Think so?" she returned airily.
+
+"I don't think. I know."
+
+Just an eyebeat her gaze met his, with that hint of shy
+questioning, of puzzled doubt that showed a growing interest. "I
+wonder," she murmured, and recovered herself little laugh.
+
+How she hated her task, and him! She was a singularly honest
+woman, but she must play the siren; must allure this scoundrel to
+forgetfulness, with a hurried and yet elude the very familiarity
+her manner invited. She knew her part, the heartless enticing
+coquette, compounded half of passion and half of selfishness. It
+was a hateful thing to do, this sacrifice of her personal
+reticence, of the individual abstraction in which she wrapped
+herself as a cloak, in order to hint at a possibility of some
+intimacy of feeling between them. She shrank from it with a
+repugnance hardly to be overcome, but she held herself with an
+iron will and consummate art to the role she had undertaken. Two
+lives hung on her success. She must not forget that. She would
+not let herself forget that--and one of them that of the man she
+loved.
+
+So, bravely she played her part, repelling always with a hint of
+invitation, denying with the promise in her fascinated eyes of
+ultimate surrender to his ardor. In the zest of the pursuit the
+minutes slipped away unnoticed. Never had a woman seemed to him
+more subtly elusive, and never had he felt more sure of himself.
+Her charm grew on him, stirred his pulses to a faster beat. For
+it was his favorite sport, and this warm, supple young creature,
+who was to be the victim of his bow and arrow, showed herself
+worthy of his mettle.
+
+The clock downstairs struck the half-hour, and Bannister,
+reminded of what lay before him outside, made a move to go. Her
+alert eyes had been expecting it, and she forestalled him by a
+change of tactics. Moved apparently by impulse, she seated
+herself on the piano-stool, swept the keys for an instant with
+her fingers, and plunged into the brilliant "Carmen" overture.
+Susceptible as this man was to the influence of music, he could
+not fail to be arrested by so perfect an interpretation of his
+mood. He stood rooted, was carried back again in imagination to a
+great artiste's rendering of that story of fierce passion and
+aching desire so brilliantly enacted under the white sunbeat of a
+country of cloudless skies. Imperceptibly she drifted into other
+parts of the opera. Was it the wild, gypsy seductiveness of
+_Carmen_ that he felt, or, rather, this American girl's
+allurement? From "Love will like a birdling fly" she slipped into
+the exquisitely graceful snatches of song with which _Carmen_
+answers the officer's questions. Their rare buoyancy marched with
+his mood, and from them she carried him into the song "Over the
+hill," that is so perfect and romantic an expression of the
+_wanderlust._
+
+How long she could have held him she will never know, for at that
+inopportune time came blundering one of his men into the room
+with a call for his presence to take charge of the situation
+outside.
+
+"What do y'u want, Bostwick?" he demanded, with curt
+peremptoriness.
+
+The man whispered in his ear.
+
+"Can't wait any longer, can't they?" snapped his chief. "Y'u tell
+them they'll wait till I give the word. Understand?"
+
+He almost flung the man out of the room, but Helen noticed that
+she had lost him. His interest was perfunctory, and, though he
+remained a little time longer, it was to establish his authority
+with the men rather than to listen to her. Twice he looked at his
+watch within five minutes.
+
+He rose to go. "There is a little piece of business I have to put
+through. So I'll have to ask y'u to excuse me. I have had a
+delightful hour, and I hate to go." He smiled, and quoted with
+mock sentimentality:
+
+"The hours I spent with thee, dear heart, Are as a string of
+pearls to me; I count them over, every one apart, My rosary! My
+rosary!"
+
+"Dear me! One certainly lives and learns. How could I have
+guessed that, with your reputation, you could afford to indulge
+in a rosary?" she mocked.
+
+"Good night." He offered his hand.
+
+"Don't go yet," she coaxed.
+
+He shook his head. "Duty, y'u know."
+
+"Stay only a little longer. Just ten minutes more."
+
+His vanity purred, so softly she stroked it. "Can't. Wish I
+could. Y'u hear how noisy things are getting. I've got to take
+charge. So-long."
+
+She stood close, looking up at him with a face of seductive
+appeal.
+
+"Don't go yet. Please!"
+
+The triumph of victory mounted to his head. "I'll come back when
+I've done what I've got to do."
+
+"No, no. Stay a little longer just a little."
+
+"Not a minute, sweetheart."
+
+He bent to kiss her, and a little clenched fist struck his face.
+
+"Don't you dare!" she cried.
+
+The outraged woman in her, curbed all evening with an iron bit,
+escaped from control. Delightedly he laughed. The hot spirit in
+her pleased him mightily. He took her little hands and held them
+in one of his while he smiled down at her. "I guess that kiss
+will keep, my girl, till I come back."
+
+"My God! Are you going to kill your own cousin?"
+
+All her terror, all her detestation and hatred of him, looked
+haggardly out of her unmasked face. His narrowed eyes searched
+her heart, and his countenance grew every second more sinister,
+
+"Y'u have been fooling me all evening, then?"
+
+"Yes, and hating you every minute of the time."
+
+"Y'u dared?" His face was black with rage.
+
+"You would like to kill me. Why don't you?"
+
+"Because I know a better revenge. I'm going out to take it now.
+After your lover is dead, I'll come back and make love to y'u
+again," he sneered.
+
+"Never!" She stood before him like a queen in her lissom, brave,
+defiant youth. "And as for your cousin, you may kill him, but you
+can't destroy his contempt for you. He will die despising you for
+a coward and a scoundrel."
+
+It was true, and he knew it. In his heart he cursed her, while he
+vainly sought some weapon that would strike home through her
+impervious armor.
+
+"Y'u love him. I'll remember that when I see him kick," he
+taunted.
+
+"I make you a present of the information. I love him, and I
+despise you. Nothing can change those facts," she retorted
+whitely.
+
+"Mebbe, but some day y'u'll crawl on your knees to beg my pardon
+for having told me so."
+
+"There is your overweening vanity again," she commented.
+
+"I'm going to break y'u, my beauty, so that y'u'll come running
+when I snap my fingers."
+
+"We'll see."
+
+"And in the meantime I'll go hang your lover." He bowed
+ironically, swung on his jingling heel, and strode out of the
+room.
+
+She stood there listening to his dying footfalls, then covered
+her face with her hands, as if to press back the dreadful vision
+her mind conjured.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 19. WEST POINT TO THE RESCUE
+
+It was understood that the sheriff should make a perfunctory
+defense against the mob in order to "square" him with the voters
+at the election soon to be held. But the word had been quietly
+passed that the bullets of the prison guards would be fired over
+the heads of the attackers. This assurance lent an added
+braggadocio to the Dutch courage of the lynchers. Many of them
+who would otherwise have hung back distinguished themselves by
+the enthusiasm which they displayed.
+
+Bannister himself generaled the affair, detailing squads to
+batter down the outer door, to guard every side of the prison,
+and to overpower the sheriff's guard. That official, according to
+programme, appeared at a window and made a little speech,
+declaring his intention of performing his duty at whatever cost.
+He was hooted down with jeers and laughter, and immediately the
+attack commenced.
+
+The yells of the attackers mingled with the sound of the
+axe-blows and the report of revolvers from inside the building.
+Among those nearest to the door being battered down were Denver
+and the few men he had with him. His plan offered merely a
+forlorn hope. It was that in the first scramble to get in after
+the way was opened he and his friends might push up the stairs in
+the van, and hold the corridor for as long as they could against
+the furious mob.
+
+It took less than a quarter of an hour to batter down the door,
+and among the first of those who sprang across the threshold were
+Denver, Missou, Frisco and their allies. While others stopped to
+overpower the struggling deputies according to the arranged
+farce, they hurried upstairs and discovered the cell in which
+their friends were fastened.
+
+Frisco passed a revolver through the grating to McWilliams, and
+another to Bannister. "Haven't got the keys, so I can't let y'u
+out, old hoss," he told the foreman. "But mebbe y'u won't feel so
+lonesome with these little toys to play with."
+
+Meanwhile Denver, a young giant of seventy-six inches, held the
+head of the stairs, with four stalwart plainsmen back of him. The
+rush of many feet came up pell-mell, and he flung the leaders
+back on those behind.
+
+"Hold on there. This isn't a free-lunch counter. Don't you see
+we're crowded up here already?"
+
+"What's eating you ? Whyfor, can't we come?" growled one of the
+foremost nursing an injured nose.
+
+"I've just explained to you, son, that it's crowded. Folks are
+prevalent enough up here right now. Send up that bunch of keys
+and we'll bring your meat to you fast enough."
+
+"What's that? What's that?" The outlaw chief pushed his way
+through the dense mob at the door and reached the stairway.
+
+"He won't let us up," growled one of them.
+
+"Who won't?" demanded Bannister sharply, and at once came leaping
+up the stairs.
+
+"Nothing doing," drawled Frisco, and tossed him over the railing
+on to the heads of his followers below.
+
+They carried Bannister into the open air, for his head had struck
+the newel-post in his descent. This gave the defense a few
+minutes respite.
+
+"They're going to come a-shooting next time," remarked Denver.
+"Just as soon as he comes back from bye-low land you'll see
+things hum."
+
+"Y'u bet," agreed Missou. We'll last about three minutes when the
+stampede begins."
+
+The scream of an engine pierced the night.
+
+Denver's face lit. "Make it five minutes, Missou, and Mac is
+safe. At least, I'm hoping so awful hard. Miss Helen wired for
+the militia from Sheridan this nothing. Chances are they're on
+that train. I couldn't tell you earlier because she made me
+promise not to. She was afraid it might leak out and get things
+started sooner. "
+
+Weak but furious, the miscreant from the Shoshones returned to
+the attack. "Break in the back door and sneak up behind on those
+fellows. We'll have the men we want inside of fifteen minutes,"
+he promised the mob.
+
+"We'll rush them from both sides, and show those guys on the
+landing whether they can stop us," added Bostwick.
+
+Suddenly some one raised the cry, "The soldiers!" Bannister
+looked up the street and swore a vicious oath. Swinging down the
+road at double time came a company of militia in khaki. He was
+mad with baffled fury, but he made good his retreat at once and
+disappeared promptly into the nearest dark alley.
+
+The mob scattered by universal impulse; disintegrated so promptly
+that within five minutes the soldiers held the ground alone, save
+for the officials of the prison and Denver's little band.
+
+A boyish lieutenant lately out of the Point, and just come in to
+a lieutenancy in the militia, was in command. "In time?" he asked
+anxiously, for this was his first independent expedition.
+
+"Y'u bet," chuckled Denver. "We're right glad to see you, and
+I'll bet those boys in the cage ain't regretting your arrival
+any. Fifteen minutes later and you would have been in time to
+hold the funeral services, I reckon."
+
+"Where is Miss Messiter?" asked the young officer.
+
+"She's at the Elk House, colonel. I expect some of us better
+drift over there and tell her it's all right. She's the gamest
+little woman that ever crossed the Wyoming line. Hadn't been for
+her these boys would have been across the divide hours ago. She's
+a plumb thoroughbred. Wouldn't give up an inch. All day she has
+generaled this thing; played a mighty weak hand for a heap more
+than it was worth. Sand? Seh: she's grit clear through, if
+anybody asks you." And Denver told the story of the day, making
+much of her unflinching courage and nothing of her men's
+readiness to back whatever steps she decided upon.
+
+It was ten minutes past eleven when a smooth young, apple-cheeked
+lad in khaki presented himself before Helen Messiter with a bow
+never invented outside of West Point.
+
+"I am Lieutenant Beecher. Governor Raleigh presents his
+compliments by me, Miss Messiter, and is very glad to be able to
+put at your service such forces as are needed to quiet the town."
+
+"You were in time?" she breathed.
+
+"With about five minutes to spare. I am having the prisoners
+brought here for the night if you do not object. In the morning I
+shall investigate the affair, and take such steps as are
+necessary. In the meantime you may rest assured that there will
+be no further disturbance."
+
+"Thank you I am sure that with you in command everything will now
+be all right, and I am quite of your opinion that the prisoners
+had better stay here for the night. One of them is wounded, and
+ought to be given the best attention. But, of course, you will
+see to that, lieutenant."
+
+The young man blushed. This was the right kind of appreciation.
+He wished his old classmates at the Point could hear how
+implicitly this sweet girl relied on him.
+
+"Certainly. And now, Miss Messiter, if there is nothing you wish,
+I shall retire for the night. You may sleep with perfect
+confidence."
+
+"I am sure I may, lieutenant." She gave him a broadside of
+trusting eyes full of admiration. "But perhaps you would like me
+to see my foreman first, just to relieve my mind. And, as you
+were about to say, his friend might be brought in, too, since
+they are together."
+
+The young man promptly assented, though he had not been aware
+that he was about to say anything of the kind.
+
+They came in together, Bannister supported by McWilliams's arm.
+The eyes of both mistress and maid brimmed over with tears when
+they saw them. Helen dragged forward a chair for the sheepman,
+and he sank into it. From its depths he looked up with his rare,
+sweet smile.
+
+"I've heard about it," he told her, in a low voice. "I've heard
+how y'u fought for my life all day. There's nothing I can say. I
+owed y'u everything already twice, and now I owe it all over
+again. Give me a lifetime and I couldn't get even."
+
+Helen's swift glance swept over Nora and the foreman. They were
+in a dark alcove, oblivious of anybody else. Also they were in
+each other's arms frankly. For some reason wine flowed into the
+cream of Helen's cheeks.
+
+"Do you have to 'get even'? Among friends is that necessary?" she
+asked shyly.
+
+"I hope not. If it is, I'm sure bankrupt Even my thanks seem to
+stay at home. If y'u hadn't done so much for me, perhaps I could
+tell y'u how much y'u had done But I have no words to say it."
+
+"Then don't," she advised.
+
+"Y'u're the best friend a man ever had. That's all I can say."
+
+"It's enough, since you mean it, even though it isn't true," she
+answered gently.
+
+Their eyes met, fastened for an instant, and by common consent
+looked away.
+
+As it chanced they were close to the window, their shadows
+reflected on the blind. A man, slipping past in the street on
+horseback, stopped at sight of that lighted window, with the
+moving shadows, in an uncontrollable white fury. He slid from the
+saddle, threw the reins over the horse's head to the ground, and
+slipped his revolver from its holster and back to make sure that
+he could draw it easily. Then he passed springily across the road
+to the hotel and up the stairs. He trod lightly, stealthily, and
+by his very wariness defeated his purpose of eluding observation.
+For a pair of keen eyes from the hotel office glimpsed the figure
+stealing past so noiselessly, and promptly followed up the
+stairway.
+
+"Hope I don't intrude at this happy family gathering."
+
+Helen, who had been pouring a glass of cordial for the spent and
+wounded sheepman, put the glass down on the table and turned at
+sound of the silken, sinister voice. After one glance at the
+vindictive face, from the cold eyes of which hate seemed to
+smolder, she took an instinctive step toward her lover. The cold
+wave that drenched her heart accompanied an assurance that the
+man in the doorway meant trouble.
+
+His sleek smile arrested her. He was standing with his feet
+apart, his hands clasped lightly behind his back, as natty and as
+well groomed as was his wont.
+
+"Ah, make the most of what ye yet may spend,
+Before ye, too, into the Dust descend;
+Dust into Dust, and under Dust to lie,
+Sans Wine, sans Song, sans Singer, and--sans
+End!"
+
+he misquoted, with a sneer; and immediately interrupted his irony
+to give way to one of his sudden blind rages.
+
+With incredible swiftness his right hand moved forward and up,
+catching revolver from scabbard as it rose. But by a fraction of
+a second his purpose had been anticipated. A closed fist shot
+forward to the salient jaw in time to fling the bullets into the
+ceiling. An arm encircled the outlaw's neck, and flung him
+backward down the stairs. The railing broke his fall, and on it
+his body slid downward, the weapon falling from his hand. He
+pulled himself together at the foot of the stairs, crouched for
+an upward rush, but changed his mind instantly. The young officer
+who had flung him down had him covered with his own six-shooter.
+He could hear footsteps running toward him, and he knew that in a
+few seconds he would be in the hands of the soldiers. Plunging
+out of the doorway, the desperado vaulted to the saddle and drove
+his spurs home. For a minute hoofs pounded on the hard, white
+road. Then the night swallowed him and the echo of his
+disappearance.
+
+"That was Bannister of the Shoshones and the Tetons," the girl's
+white lips pronounced to Lieutenant Beecher.
+
+"And I let him get away from me," the disappointed lad groaned.
+"Why, I had him right in my hands. I could have throttled him as
+easy. But how was I to know he would have nerve enough to come
+rushing into a hotel full of soldiers hunting him?"
+
+"Y'u have a very persistent cousin, Mr. Bannister," said
+McWilliams, coming forward from the alcove with shining eyes.
+"And I must say he's game. Did y'u ever hear the like? Come
+butting in here as cool as if he hadn't a thing to do but sing
+out orders like he was in his own home. He was that easy."
+
+"It seems to me that a little of the praise is due Lieutenant
+Beecher. If he hadn't dealt so competently with the situation
+murder would have been done. Did you learn your boxing at the
+Academy, Lieutenant?" Helen asked, trying to treat the situation
+lightly in spite of her hammering heart.
+
+"I was the champion middleweight of our class," Beecher could not
+help saying boyishly, with another of his blushes.
+
+"I can easily believe it," returned Helen.
+
+"I wish y'u would teach me how to double up a man so prompt and
+immediate," said the admiring foreman.
+
+"I expect I'm under particular obligations to that straight right
+to the chin, Lieutenant," chimed in the sheepman. "The fact is
+that I don't seem to be able to get out anything except thanks
+these days. I ought to send my cousin a letter thanking him for
+giving me a chance to owe so much kindness to so many people."
+
+"Your cousin?" repeated the uncomprehending officer.
+
+"This desperado, Bannister, is my cousin," answered the sheepman
+gravely.
+
+"But if he was your cousin, why should he want--to kill you?"
+
+"That's a long story, Lieutenant. Will y'u hear it now?"
+
+"If you feel strong enough to tell it."
+
+"Oh, I'm strong enough." He glanced at Helen. "Perhaps we had
+better not tire Miss Messiter with it. If y'u'll come to my
+room--"
+
+"I should like, above all things, to hear it again," interrupted
+that young woman promptly.
+
+For the man she loved had just come back to her from the brink of
+the grave and she was still reluctant to let him out of her
+sight.
+
+So Ned Bannister told his story once more, and out of the alcove
+came the happy foreman and Nora to listen to the tale. While he
+told it his sweetheart's contented eyes were on him. The
+excitement of the night burnt pleasantly in her veins, for out of
+the nettle danger she had plucked safety for her sheepman.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 20. TWO CASES OF DISCIPLINE
+
+The Fourth of July celebration at Gimlet Butte had been a thing
+of the past for four days and the Lazy D had fallen back into the
+routine of ranch life. The riders were discussing supper and the
+continued absence of Reddy when that young man drew back the flap
+and joined them.
+
+He stood near the doorway and grinned with embarrassed guilt at
+the assembled company.
+
+"I reckon I got too much Fourth of July at Gimlet Butte, boys.
+That's how come I to be onpunctual getting back."
+
+There was a long silence, during which those at the table looked
+at him with an expressionless gravity that did not seem to veil
+an unduly warm welcome.
+
+"Hello, Mac! Hello, boys! I just got back," he further
+contributed.
+
+Without comment the Lazy D resumed supper. Apparently it had not
+missed Reddy or noticed his return. Casual conversation was
+picked up cheerfully. The return of the prodigal was quite
+ignored.
+
+"Then that blamed cow gits its back up and makes a bee-line for
+Rogers. The old man hikes for his pony and--"
+
+"Seems good to git my legs under the old table again,"
+interrupted Reddy with cheerful unease.
+
+"--loses by about half a second," continued Missou. "If Doc
+hadn't roped its hind laig--"
+
+"Have some cigars, boys. I brought a box back with me." Reddy
+tossed a handful on the table, where they continued to lie
+unnoticed.
+
+"--there's no telling what would have happened. As 'twas the old
+man got off with a--"
+
+"Y'u bet, they're good cigars all right," broke in the
+propitiatory Reddy.
+
+The interrupted anecdote went on to a finish and the men trooped
+out and left the prodigal alone with his hash. When that young
+man reached the bunkhouse Frisco was indulging in a reminiscence.
+Reddy got only the last of it, but that did not contribute to his
+serenity.
+
+"Yep! When I was working on the Silver Dollar. Must a-been three
+years ago, I reckon, when Jerry Miller got that chapping."
+
+"Threw down the outfit in a row they had with the Lafferty crowd,
+didn't he?" asked Denver.
+
+Frisco nodded.
+
+Mac got up, glanced round, and reached for his hat. "I reckon
+I'll have to be going," he said, and forthright departed.
+
+Reddy reached for HIS hat and rose. "I got to go and have a talk
+with Mac," he explained.
+
+Denver got to the door first and his big frame filled it.
+
+"Don't hurry, Reddy. It ain't polite to rush away right after
+dinner. Besides, Mac will be here all day. He ain't starting for
+New York."
+
+"Y'u're gittin' blamed particular. Mac he went right out."
+
+"But Mac didn't have a most particular engagement with the boys.
+There's a difference."
+
+"Why, I ain't got--" Reddy paused and looked around helplessly.
+
+"Gents, I move y'u that it be the horse sense of the Lazy D that
+our friend Mr. Reddy Reeves be given gratis one chapping
+immediately if not sooner. The reason for which same being that
+he played a lowdown trick on the outfit whose bread he was
+eating."
+
+"Oh, quit your foolin', boys," besought the victim anxiously.
+
+"And that Denver, being some able-bodied and having a good reach,
+be requested to deliver same to the gent needing it," concluded
+Missou.
+
+Reddy backed in alarm to the wall. "Y'u boys don't want to get
+gay with me. Y'u can't monkey with--"
+
+Motion carried unanimously.
+
+Just as Reddy whipped out his revolver Denver's long leg shot out
+and his foot caught the wrist behind the weapon. When Reddy next
+took cognizance of his surroundings he was serving as a mattress
+for the anatomy of three stalwart riders. He was gently deposited
+face down on his bunk with a one-hundred-eighty-pound live peg at
+the end of each arm and leg.
+
+"All ready, Denver," announced Frisco from the end of the left
+foot.
+
+Denver selected a pair of plain leather chaps with care and
+proceeded to business. What he had to do he did with energy. It
+is safe to say that at least one of those present can still
+vividly remember this and testify to his thoroughness.
+
+Mac drifted in after the disciplining. As foreman it was fitting
+that he should be discreetly ignorant of what had occurred, but
+he could not help saying:
+
+"That y'u I heard singing, Reddy? Seems to me y'u had ought to
+take that voice into grand opera. The way y'u straddle them high
+notes is a caution for fair. What was it y'u was singing? Sounded
+like 'Would I were far from here, love.'"
+
+"Y'u go to hell," choked Reddy, rushing past him from the
+bunkhouse.
+
+McWilliams looked round innocently. "I judge some of y'u boys
+must a-been teasing Reddy from his manner. Seemed like he didn't
+want to sit down and talk."
+
+"I shouldn't wonder but he'll hold his conversations standing for
+a day or two," returned Missou gravely.
+
+At the end of the laugh that greeted this Mac replied:
+
+Well, y'u boys want to be gentle with him." "He's so plumb tender
+now that I reckon he'll get along without any more treatment in
+that line from us," drawled Frisco.
+
+Mac departed laughing. He had an engagement that recurred daily
+in the dusk of the evening, and he was always careful to be on
+time. The other party to the engagement met him at the kitchen
+door and fell with him into the trail that led to Lee Ming's
+laundry.
+
+"What made you late?" she asked.
+
+"I'm not late, honey. I seem late because you're so anxious," he
+explained.
+
+"I'm not," protested Nora indignantly. "If you think you're the
+only man on the place, Jim McWilliams "
+
+"Sho! Hold your hawsses a minute, Nora, darling. A spinster like
+y'u--"
+
+"You think you're awful funny--writing in my autograph album that
+a spinster's best friend is her powder box. I like Mr. Halliday's
+ways better. He's a perfect gentleman."
+
+"I ain't got a word to say against Denver, even if he did write
+in your book,
+
+"'Sugar is sweet, The sky is blue, Grass is green And so are
+you.'
+
+I reckon, being a perfect gentleman, he meant--"
+
+"You know very well you wrote that in yourself and pretended it
+was Mr. Halliday, signing his name and everything. It wasn't a
+bit nice of you."
+
+"Now do I look like a forger?" he wanted to know with innocence
+on his cherubic face.
+
+"Anyway you know it was mean. Mr. Halliday wouldn't do such a
+thing. You take your arm down and keep it where it belongs, Mr.
+McWilliams."
+
+"That ain't my name, Nora, darling, and I'd like to know where my
+arm belongs if it isn't round the prettiest girl in Wyoming.
+What's the use of being engaged if--"
+
+"I'm not sure I'm going to stay engaged to you," announced the
+young woman coolly, walking at the opposite edge of the path from
+him.
+
+"Now that ain't any way to talk "
+
+"You needn't lecture me. I'm not your wife and I don't think I'm
+going to be," cut in Nora, whose temper was ruffled on account of
+having had to wait for him as well as for other reasons.
+
+"Y'u surely wouldn't make me sue y'u for breach of promise, would
+y'u?" he demanded, with a burlesque of anxiety that was the final
+straw.
+
+Nora turned on her heel and headed for the house.
+
+"Now don't y'u get mad at me, honey. I was only joking," he
+explained as he pursued her.
+
+"You think you can laugh at me all you please. I'll show you that
+you can't," she informed him icily.
+
+"Sho! I wasn't laughing at y'u. What tickled me--"
+
+"I'm not interested in your amusement, Mr. McWilliams."
+
+"What's the use of flying out about a little thing like that?
+Honest, I don't even know what you're mad at me for," the
+perplexed foreman averred.
+
+"I'm not mad at you, as you call it. I'm simply disgusted."
+
+And with a final "Good night" flung haughtily over her shoulder
+Miss Nora Darling disappeared into the house.
+
+Mac took off his hat and gazed at the door that had been closed
+in his face. He scratched his puzzled poll in vain.
+
+"I ce'tainly got mine good and straight just like Reddy got his.
+But what in time was it all about? And me thinkin' I was a
+graduate in the study of the ladies. I reckon I never did get
+jarred up so. It's plumb discouraging."
+
+If he could have caught a glimpse of Nora at that moment, lying
+on her bed and crying as if her heart would break, Mac might have
+found the situation less hopeless.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 21. THE SIGNAL LIGHTS
+
+In a little hill-rift about a mile back of the Lazy D Ranch was a
+deserted miner's cabin.
+
+The hut sat on the edge of a bluff that commanded a view of the
+buildings below, while at the same time the pines that surrounded
+it screened the shack from any casual observation. A thin curl of
+smoke was rising from the mud chimney, and inside the cabin two
+men lounged before the open fire.
+
+"It's his move, and he is going to make it soon. Every night I
+look for him to drop down on the ranch. His hate's kind of
+volcanic, Mr. Ned Bannister's is, and it's bound to bubble over
+mighty sudden one of these days," said the younger of the two,
+rising and stretching himself.
+
+"It did bubble over some when he drove two thousand of my sheep
+over the bluff and killed the whole outfit," suggested the
+namesake of the man mentioned.
+
+"Yes, I reckon that's some irritating," agreed McWilliams. "But
+if I know him, he isn't going to be content with sheep so long as
+he can take it out of a real live man."
+
+"Or woman," suggested the sheepman.
+
+"Or woman," agreed the other. "Especially when he thinks he can
+cut y'u deeper by striking at her. If he doesn't raid the Lazy D
+one of these nights, I'm a blamed poor prophet."
+
+Bannister nodded agreement. "He's near the end of his rope. He
+could see that if he were blind. When we captured Bostwick and
+they got a confession out of him, that started the landslide
+against him. It began to be noised abroad that the government was
+going to wipe him out. Folks began to lose their terror of him,
+and after that his whole outfit began to want to turn State's
+evidence. He isn't sure of one of them now; can't tell when he
+will be shot in the back by one of his own scoundrels for that
+two thousand dollars reward."
+
+The foreman strolled negligently to the door. His eyes drifted
+indolently down into the valley, and immediately sparkled with
+excitement.
+
+"The signal's out, Bann," he exclaimed. "It's in your window."
+
+The sheepman leaped to his feet and strode to the door. Down in
+the valley a light was gleaming in a window. Even while he looked
+another light appeared in a second window.
+
+"She wants us both," cried the foreman, running to the little
+corral back of the house.
+
+He presently reappeared with two horses, both saddled, and they
+took the downward trail at once.
+
+"If Miss Helen can keep him in play till we arrive," murmured Mac
+anxiously.
+
+"She can if he gives her a chance, and I think he will. There's a
+kind of cat instinct in him to play with his prey."
+
+"Yes, but he missed his kill last time by letting her fool him.
+That's what I'm afraid of' that he won't wait."
+
+They had reached lower ground now, and could put their ponies at
+a pounding gallop that ate up the trail fast. As they approached
+the houses, both men drew rein and looked carefully to their
+weapons. Then they slid from the saddles and slipped noiselessly
+forward.
+
+What the foreman had said was exactly true. Helen Messiter did
+want them both, and she wanted them very much indeed.
+
+After supper she had been dreamily playing over to herself one of
+Chopin's waltzes, when she became aware, by some instinct, that
+she was not alone in the room. There had been no least sound, no
+slightest stir to betray an alien presence. Yet that some one was
+in the room she knew, and by some subtle sixth sense could even
+put a name to the intruder.
+
+Without turning she called over her shoulder: "Shall I finish the
+waltz?" No faintest tremor in the clear, sweet voice betrayed the
+racing heart.
+
+"Y'u're a cool hand, my friend," came his ready answer. "But I
+think we'll dispense with the music. I had enough last time to
+serve me for twice."
+
+She laughed as she swung on the stool, with that musical scorn
+which both allured and maddened. "I did rather do you that time,"
+she allowed.
+
+"This is the return match. You won then. I win now," he told her,
+with a look that chilled.
+
+"Indeed! But isn't that rather discounting the future?"
+
+"Only the immediate future. Y'u're mine, my beauty, and I mean to
+take y'u with me."
+
+Just a disdainful sweep of her eyes she gave him as she rose from
+the piano-stool and rearranged the lamps. "You mean so much that
+never comes to pass, Mr. Bannister. The road to the nether
+regions is paved with good intentions, we are given to
+understand. Not that yours can by any stretch of imagination be
+called 'good intentions.'"
+
+"Contrariwise, then, perhaps the road to heaven may be paved with
+evil intentions. Since y'u travel the road with me, wherever it
+may lead, it were but gallant to hope so."
+
+He took three sharp steps toward her and stood looking down in
+her face, her sweet slenderness so close to him that the perfume
+mounted to his brain. Surely no maiden had ever been more
+desirable than this one, who held him in such contemptuous
+estimation that only her steady eyes moved at his approach. These
+held to his and defied him, while she stood leaning motionless
+against the table with such strong and supple grace. She knew
+what he meant to do, hated him for it, and would not give him the
+satisfaction of flying an inch from him or struggling with him.
+
+"Your eyes are pools of splendor. That's right. Make them flash
+fire. I love to see such spirit, since it offers a more enticing
+pleasure in breaking," he told her, with an admiration half
+ironic but wholly genuine. "Pools of splendor, my beauty!
+Therefore I salute them."
+
+At the touch of his lips upon her eyelids a shiver ran through
+her, but still she made no movement, was cold to him as marble.
+"You coward!" she said softly, with an infinite contempt.
+
+"Your lips," he continued to catalogue, "are ripe as fresh flesh
+of Southern fruit. No cupid ever possessed so adorable a mouth. A
+worshiper of Eros I, as now I prove."
+
+This time it was the mouth he kissed, the while her unconquered
+spirit looked out of the brave eyes, and fain would have murdered
+him. In turn he kissed her cold cheeks, the tip of one of her
+little ears, the small, clenched fist with which she longed to
+strike him.
+
+"Are you quite through?"
+
+"For the present, and now, having put the seal of my ownership on
+her more obvious charms, I'll take my bride home."
+
+"I would die first."
+
+"Nay, you'll die later, Madam Bannister, but not for many years,
+I hope," he told her, with a theatrical bow.
+
+"Do you think me so weak a thing as your words imply?"
+
+"Rather so strong that the glory of overcoming y'u fills me with
+joy. Believe me, madam, though your master I am not less your
+slave," he mocked.
+
+"You are neither my master nor my slave, but a thing I detest,"
+she said, in a low voice that carried extraordinary intensity.
+
+"And obey," he added, suavely. "Come, madam, to horse, for our
+honeymoon."
+
+"I tell you I shall not go."
+
+"Then, in faith, we'll re-enact a modern edition of 'The Taming
+of the Shrew.' Y'u'll find me, sweet, as apt at the part as old
+Petruchio." He paced complacently up the room and back, and
+quoted glibly:
+
+"And thus I'll curb her mad and headstrong humor.
+He that knows better how to tame a shrew,
+Now let him, speak; 'tis charity to show."
+
+"Would you take me against my will?"
+
+"Y'u have said it. What's your will to me? What I want I take.
+And I sure want my beautiful shrew." His half-shuttered eyes
+gloated on her as he rattled off a couple more lines from the
+play he had mentioned.
+
+"Kate, like the hazel-twig,
+Is straight and slender, and as brown in hue
+As hazel-nuts, and sweeter than the kernels."
+
+She let a swift glance travel anxiously to the door. "You are in
+a very poetical mood to-day."
+
+"As befits a bridegroom, my own." He stepped lightly to the
+window and tapped twice on the pane. "A signal to bring the
+horses round. If y'u have any preparations to make, any trousseau
+to prepare, y'u better set that girl of yours to work."
+
+"I have no preparations to make."
+
+"Coming to me simply as y'u are? Good! We'll lead the simple
+life."
+
+Nora, as it chanced, knocked and entered at his moment. The sight
+of her vivid good looks truck him for the first time. At sight of
+him she stopped, gazing with parted lips, a double row of pearls
+shining through.
+
+He turned swiftly to the mistress. "Y'u ought not to be alone
+there among so many men. It wouldn't be proper. We'll take the
+girl along with us."
+
+"Where?" Nora's parted lips emitted.
+
+"To Arden, my dear." He interrupted himself to look at his watch.
+"I wonder why that fellow doesn't come with the horses. They
+should pass this window.
+
+Bannister, standing jauntily with his feet astride as he looked
+out of the window, heard someone enter the room. "Did y'u bring
+round the horses?" he snapped, without looking round.
+
+"NO, WE ALLOWED THEY WOULDN'T BE NEEDED."
+
+At sound of the slow drawl the outlaw wheeled like a flash, his
+hand traveling to the hilt of the revolver that hung on his hip.
+But he was too late. Already two revolvers covered him, and he
+knew that both his cousin and McWilliams were dead shots. He
+flashed one venomous look at the mistress of the ranch.
+
+"Y'u fooled me again. That lamp business was a signal, and I was
+too thick-haided to see it. My compliments to y'u, Miss Messiter."
+
+"Y'u are under arrest," announced his cousin.
+
+"Y'u don't say." His voice was full of sarcastic admiration. "And
+you done it with your little gun! My, what a wonder y'u are!"
+
+"Take your hand from the butt of that gun. Y'u better relieve him
+of it, Mac. He's got such a restless disposition he might commit
+suicide by reaching for it."
+
+"What do y'u think you're going to do with me now y'u have got
+me, Cousin Ned?"
+
+"We're going to turn y'u over to the United States Government."
+
+"Guess again. I have a thing, or two to say to that."
+
+"You're going to Gimlet Butte with us, alive or dead."
+
+The outlaw intentionally misunderstood. "If I've got to take y'u,
+then we'll say y'u go dead rather than alive."
+
+"He was going to take Nora and me with him," Helen explained to
+her friends.
+
+Instantly the man swung round on her. "But now I've changed my
+mind, ma'am. I'm going to take my cousin with me instead of y'u
+ladies."
+
+Helen caught his meaning first, and flashed it whitely to her
+lover. It dawned on him more slowly.
+
+"I see y'u remember, Miss Messiter," he continued, with a cruel,
+silken laugh. "He gave me his parole to go with me whenever I
+said the word. I'm saying it now." He sat down astride a chair,
+put his chin on the back cross-bar, and grinned malevolently from
+one to another.
+
+"What's come over this happy family? It don't look so joyous all
+of a sudden. Y'u don't need to worry, ma'am, I'll send him back
+to y'u all right--alive or dead. With his shield or on it, y'u
+know. Ha! ha!"
+
+"You will not go with him?" It was wrung from Helen as a low cry,
+and struck her lover's heart.
+
+"I must," he answered. "I gave him my word, y'u remember."
+
+"But why keep it? You know what he is, how absolutely devoid of
+honor."
+
+"That is not quite the question, is it?" he smiled.
+
+"Would he keep his word to you?"
+
+"Not if a lie would do as well. But that isn't the point,
+either."
+
+"It's quixotic--foolish--worse than that--ridiculous," she
+implored.
+
+"Perhaps, but the fact remains that I am pledged."
+
+"'I could not love thee, dear, so much
+Loved I not honor more,'"
+
+murmured the villain in the chair, apparently to the ceiling.
+"Dear Ned, he always was the soul of honor. I'll have those lines
+carved on his tombstone."
+
+"You see! He is already bragging that he means to kill you," said
+the girl.
+
+"I shall go armed," the sheepman answered.
+
+"Yes, but he will take you into the mountain fastnesses, where
+the men that serve him will do his bidding. What is one man among
+so many?"
+
+"Two men, ma'am," corrected the foreman.
+
+"What's that?" The outlaw broke off the snatch of opera he was
+singing to slew his head round at McWilliams.
+
+"I said two. Any objections, seh?"
+
+"Yes. That wasn't in the contract."
+
+"We're giving y'u surplusage, that's all. Y'u wanted one of us,
+and y'u get two. We don't charge anything for the extra weight,"
+grinned Mac.
+
+"Oh, Mac, will you go with him?" cried Helen, with shining eyes.
+
+"Those are my present intentions, Miss Helen," laughed her
+foreman.
+
+Whereat Nora emerged from the background and flung herself on
+him. "Y'u can't go, Jim! I won't have you go!" she cried.
+
+The young man blushed a beautiful pink, and accepted gladly this
+overt evidence of a reconciliation. "It's all right, honey. Don't
+y'u think two big, grown-up men are good to handle that scalawag?
+Sho! Don't y'u worry."
+
+"Miss Nora can come, too, if she likes," suggested he of the
+Shoshones. "Looks like we would have quite a party. Won't y'u
+join us, too, Miss Messiter, according to the original plan?" he
+said, extending an ironical invitation.
+
+"I think we had better cut it down to me alone. We'll not burden
+your hospitality, sir," said the sheepman.
+
+"No, sir, I'm in on this. Whyfor can't I go?" demanded Jim.
+
+Bannister, the outlaw, eyed him unpleasantly. "Y'u certainly can
+so far as I am concerned. I owe y'u one, too, Mr. McWilliams.
+Only if y'u come of your own free will, as y'u are surely welcome
+to do, don't holler if y'u're not so welcome to leave whenever
+y'u take a notion."
+
+"I'll try and look out for that. It's settled, then, that we ride
+together. When do y'u want to start?"
+
+"We can't go any sooner than right now. I hate to take these
+young men from y'u, lady. but, as I said, I'll send them back in
+good shape. Adios, senorita. Don't forget to whom y'u belong." He
+swaggered to the door and turned, leaning against the jamb with
+one hand again it. "I expect y'u can say those lovey-dov
+good-byes without my help. I'm going into the yard. If y'u want
+to y'u can plug me in the back through the window," he suggested,
+with a sneer.
+
+"As y'u would us under similar circumstances," retorted his
+cousin.
+
+"Be with y'u in five minutes," said the foreman.
+
+"Don't hurry. It's a long good-bye y'u're saying," returned his
+enemy placidly.
+
+Nora and the young man who belonged to her followed him from the
+room, leaving Bannister and his hostess alone.
+
+"Shall I ever see you again?" Helen murmured.
+
+"I think so," the sheepman answered. "The truth is that this
+opportunity falls pat. Jim and have been wanting to meet those
+men who are under my cousin's influence and have a talk with
+them. There is no question but that the gang is disintegrating,
+and I believe that if we offer to mediate between its members and
+the Government something might be done to stop the outrages that
+have been terrorizing this country. My cousin can't be reached,
+but I believe the rest of them, or, at least a part, can be
+induced either to surrender or to flee the country. Anyhow, we
+want to try it."
+
+"But the danger?" she breathed.
+
+"Is less than y'u think. Their leader has not anywhere nearly the
+absolute power he had a few months ago. They would hardly dare do
+violence to a peace envoy."
+
+"Your cousin would. I don't believe he has any scruples."
+
+"We shall keep an eye on him. Both of us will not sleep at the
+same time. Y'u may depend on me to bring your foreman safely back
+to y'u," he smiled.
+
+"Oh, my foreman!"
+
+"And your foreman's friend," he added. "I have the best of
+reasons for wanting to return alive. I think y'u know them. They
+have to do with y'u, Miss Helen."
+
+It had come at last, but, womanlike, she evaded the issue her
+heart had sought. "Yes, I know. You think it would not be fair to
+throw away your life in this foolish manner after I have saved it
+for you--how many times was it you said?" The blue eyes lifted
+with deceptive frankness to the gray ones.
+
+"No, that isn't my reason. I have a better one than that. I love
+y'u, girl, more than anything in this world."
+
+"And so you try to prove it to me by running into a trap set for
+you to take your life. That's a selfish kind of love, isn't it?
+Or it would be if I loved you."
+
+"Do y'u love me, Helen?"
+
+"Why should I tell you, since you don't love me enough to give up
+this quixotic madness?"
+
+"Don't y'u see, dear, I can't give it up?"
+
+"I see you won't. You care more for your pride than for me."
+
+"No, it isn't that. I've got to go. It isn't that I want to leave
+y'u, God knows. But I've given my word, and I must keep it. Do
+y'u want me to be a quitter, and y'u so game yourself? Do y'u
+want it to go all over this cattle country that I gave my word
+and took it back because I lost my nerve?"
+
+"The boy that takes a dare isn't a hero, is he! There's a higher
+courage that refuses to be drawn into such foolishness, that
+doesn't give way to the jeers of the empty headed."
+
+"I don't think that is a parallel case. I'm sorry, we can't see
+this alike, but I've got to go ahead the way that seems to me
+right."
+
+
+"You're going to leave me, then, to go with that man?"
+
+"Yes, if that's the way y'u have to put it." He looked at her
+sorrowfully, and added gently: "I thought you would see it. I
+thought sure you would."
+
+But she could not bear that he should leave her so, and she cried
+out after him. "Oh, I see it. I know you must go; but I can't
+bear it." Her head buried itself in his coat. "It isn't right--it
+isn't a--a square deal that you should go away now, the very
+minute you belong to me."
+
+A happy smile shone in his eyes. "I belong to you, do I? That's
+good hearing, girl o' mine." His arm went round her and he
+stroked the black head softly. "I'll not be gone long, dear.
+Don't y'u worry about me. I'll be back with y'u soon; just as
+soon as I have finished this piece of work I have to do."
+
+"But if you should get--if anything should happen to you?"
+
+"Nothing is going to happen to me. There is a special providence
+looks after lovers, y'u know."
+
+"Be careful, Ned, of yourself. For my sake, dear."
+
+"I'll dry my socks every time I get my feet wet for fear of
+taking cold," he laughed.
+
+"But you will, won't you?"
+
+"I'll be very careful, Helen," he promised more gravely.
+
+Even then she could hardly let him go, clinging to him with a
+reluctance to separate that was a new experience to her
+independent, vigorous youth. In the end he unloosened her arm,
+kissed her once, and hurried out of the room. In the hallway he
+met McWilliams, also hurryin out from a tearful farewell on the
+part of Nora.
+
+Bannister, the outlaw, already mounted, was waiting for them.
+"Y'u did get through at last, he drawled insolently. "Well, if
+y'u'll kindly give orders to your seven-foot dwarf to point the
+Winchester another way I'll collect my men an we'll be moving."
+
+For, though the outlaw had left his men in command of the ranch
+when he went into the house, he found the situation reversed on
+his return. With the arrival of reinforcements, in the persons of
+McWilliams and his friend, it had been the turn of the raiders to
+turn over their weapons.
+
+"All right, Denver," nodded the foreman.
+
+The outlaw chief whistled for his men, and with their guests they
+rode into the silent, desert night.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 22. EXIT THE "KING"
+
+They bedded that night under the great vault-roof where twinkle a
+million stars.
+
+There were three of the outlaw's men with him, and both
+Mcwilliams and his friend noticed that they slept a little apart
+from their chief. There were other indications among the rustlers
+of a camp divided against itself. Bannister's orders to them he
+contrived to make an insult, and their obedience was as surly as
+possible compatible with safety. For all of the men knew that he
+would not hesitate to shoot them down in one of his violent rages
+should they anger him sufficiently.
+
+Throughout the night there was no time that at least two men were
+not awake in the camp. The foreman and the sheepman took turns
+keeping vigil; and on the other side of the fire sat one of the
+rustlers in silent watchfulness. To the man opposite him each of
+the sentinels were outposts of the enemy, but they fraternized
+after the manner of army sentries, exchanging tobacco and
+occasional casual conversation.
+
+The foreman took the first turn, and opposite him sat a one-eyed
+old scoundrel who had rustle calves from big outfits ever since
+Wyoming was a territory and long before. Chalkeye Dave, he was
+called, and sometimes merely Chalkeye. What his real name was no
+man knew. Nor was his past a subject for conversation in his
+presence. It was known that he had been in the Nevada
+penitentiary, and that he had killed a man in Arizona, but these
+details of an active life were rarely resurrected. For Chalkeye
+was deadly on the shoot, and was ready for it at the drop of the
+hat, though he had his good points too. One of these was a
+remarkable fondness for another member of the party, a mere lad,
+called by his companions Hughie. Generally surly and morose, to
+such a degree that even his chief was careful to humor him as a
+rule, when with Hughie all the softer elements of his character
+came to the surface. In his rough way he was ever humorous and
+genial.
+
+Jim McWilliams found him neither, however. He declined to engage
+in conversation, accepted a proffer of tobacco with a silent,
+hostile grunt and relapsed into a long silence that lasted till
+his shift was ended.
+
+"Hate to have y'u leave, old man. Y'u're so darned good company
+I'll ce'tainly pine for you," the foreman suggested, with
+sarcasm, when the old man rolled up in his blankets preparatory
+to falling asleep immediately.
+
+Chalkeye's successor was a blatant youth much impressed with his
+own importance. He was both foul-mouthed and foul-minded, so that
+Jim was constrained to interrupt his evil boastings by pretending
+to fall asleep.
+
+It was nearly two o'clock when the foreman aroused his friend to
+take his turn. Shortly after this the lad Hughie relieved the
+bragging, would-be bad man.
+
+Hughie was a flaxen-haired, rather good-looking boy of nineteen.
+In his small, wistful face was not a line of wickedness, though
+it was plain that he was weak. He seemed so unfit for the life he
+was leading that the sheepman's interest was aroused. For on the
+frontier it takes a strong, competent miscreant to be a bad man
+and survive. Ineffectives and weaklings are quickly weeded out to
+their graves or the penitentiaries.
+
+The boy was manifestly under great fear of his chief, but the
+curly haired young Hermes who kept watch with him had a very
+winning smile and a charming manner when he cared to exert it.
+Almost in spite of himself the youngster was led to talk. It
+seemed that he had but lately joined the Teton-Shoshones outfit
+of desperadoes, and between the lines Bannister easily read that
+his cousin's masterful compulsion had coerced the young fellow.
+All he wanted was an opportunity to withdraw in safety, but he
+knew he could never do this so long as the "King" was alive and
+at liberty.
+
+Under the star-roof in the chill, breaking day Ned Bannister
+talked to him long and gently. It was easy to bring the boy to
+tears, but it was harder thing to stiffen a will that was of
+putty and to hearten a soul in mortal fear. But he set himself
+with all the power in him to combat the influence of his cousin
+over this boy; and before the camp stirred to life again he knew
+that he had measurably succeeded.
+
+They ate breakfast in the gray dawn under the stars, and after
+they had finished their coffee and bacon horses were saddled and
+the trail taken up again. It led in and out among the foot-hills
+slopping upward gradually toward the first long blue line of the
+Shoshones that stretched before them in the distance. Their
+nooning was at running stream called Smith's Creek, and by
+nightfall the party was well up in the higher foot hills.
+
+In the course of the day and the second night both the sheepman
+and his friend made attempt to establish a more cordial
+relationship with Chalkeye, but so far as any apparent results
+went their efforts were vain. He refused grimly to meet their
+overtures half way, even though it was plain from his manner that
+a break between him and his chief could not long be avoided.
+
+All day by crooked trails they pushed forward, and as the party
+advanced into the mountains the gloom of the mournful pines and
+frowning peaks invaded its spirits. Suspicion and distrust went
+with it, camped at night by the rushing mountain stream, lay down
+to sleep in the shadows at every man's shoulder. For each man
+looked with an ominous eye on his neighbor, watchful of every
+sudden move, of every careless word that might convey a sudden
+meaning.
+
+Along a narrow rock-rim trail far above a steep canon, whose
+walls shot precipitously down, they were riding in single file,
+when the outlaw chief pushed his horse forward between the road
+wall and his cousin's bronco. The sheepman immediately fell back.
+
+"I reckon this trail isn't wide enough for two--unless y'u take
+the outside," he explained quietly.
+
+The outlaw, who had been drinking steadily ever since leaving the
+Lazy D, laughed his low, sinister cackle. "Afraid of me, are y'u?
+Afraid I'll push y'u off?"
+
+"Not when I'm inside and you don't have chance."
+
+"'Twas a place about like this I drove for thousand of your sheep
+over last week. With sheep worth what they are I'm afraid it must
+have cost y'u quite a bit. Not that y'u'll miss it where you are
+going," he hastened to add.
+
+"It was very like you to revenge yourself on dumb animals."
+
+"Think so?" The "King's" black gaze rested on him. "Y'u'll sing a
+different song soon Mr. Bannister. It's humans I'll drive next
+time and don't y'u forget it."
+
+"If you get the chance," amended his cousin gently.
+
+"I'll get the chance. I'm not worrying about that. And about
+those sheep--any man that hasn't got more sense than to run sheep
+in a cow country ought to lose them for his pig-headedness.
+
+"Those sheep were on the right side of the dead-line. You had to
+cross it to reach them." Their owner's steady eyes challenged a
+denial.
+
+"Is that so? Now how do y'u know that? We didn't leave the herder
+alive to explain that to y'u, did we?"
+
+"You admit murdering him?" "To y'u, dear cousin. Y'u see, I have
+a hunch that maybe y'u'll go join your herder right soon. Y'u'll
+not do much talking."
+
+The sheepman fell back. "I think I'll ride alone."
+
+Rage flared in the other's eye. "Too good for me, are y'u, my
+mealy-mouthed cousin? Y'u always thought yourself better than me.
+When y'u were a boy you used to go sneaking to that old
+hypocrite, your grandfather--"
+
+"You have said enough," interrupted the other sternly. "I'll not
+hear another word. Keep your foul tongue off him."
+
+Their eyes silently measured strength.
+
+"Y'u'll not hear a word!" sneered the chief of the rustlers.
+"What will y'u do, dear cousin?
+
+"Stand up and fight like a man and settle this thing once for
+all."
+
+Still their steely eyes crossed as with the thrust of rapiers.
+The challenged man crouched tensely with a mighty longing for the
+test, but he had planned a more elaborate revenge and a surer one
+than this. Reluctantly he shook his head.
+
+"Why should I? Y'u're mine. We're four to two, and soon we'll be
+a dozen to two. I'd like a heap to oblige y'u, but I reckon I
+can't afford to just now. Y'u will have to wait a little for that
+bumping off that's coming to y'u."
+
+"In that event I'll trouble you not to inflict your society on me
+any more than is necessary
+
+"That's all right, too. If y'u think I enjoy your conversation
+y'u have got another guess coming."
+
+So by mutual consent the sheepman fell in behind the blatant
+youth who had wearied McWilliams so and rode in silence.
+
+It was again getting close to nightfall. The slant sun was
+throwing its rays on less and less of the trail. They could see
+the shadows grow and the coolness of night sift into the air.
+They were pushing on to pass the rim of a great valley basin that
+lay like a saucer in the mountains in order that they might camp
+in the valley by a stream all of them knew. Dusk was beginning to
+fall when they at last reached the saucer edge and only the
+opposite peaks were still tipped with the sun rays. This, too,
+disappeared before they had descended far, and the gloom of the
+great mountains that girt the valley was on all their spirits,
+even McWilliams being affected by it.
+
+They were tired with travel, and the long night watches did not
+improve tempers already overstrained with the expectation of a
+crisis too long dragged out. Rain fell during the night, and
+continued gently in a misty drizzle after day broke. It was a
+situation and an atmosphere ripe for tragedy, and it fell on them
+like a clap of thunder out of a sodden sky.
+
+Hughie was cook for the day, and he came chill and stiff-fingered
+to his task. Summer as it was, there lay a thin coating of ice
+round the edges of the stream, for they had camped in an altitude
+of about nine thousand feet. The "King" had wakened in a vile
+humor. He had a splitting headache, as was natural under the
+circumstances and he had not left in his bottle a single drink to
+tide him over it. He came cursing to the struggling fire, which
+was making only fitful headway against the rain which beat down
+upon it.
+
+"Why didn't y'u build your fire on the side of the tree?" he
+growled at Hughie.
+
+Now, Hughie was a tenderfoot, and in his knowledge of outdoor
+life he was still an infant. "I didn't know--" he was beginning,
+when his master cut him short with a furious tongue lashing out
+of all proportion to the offense.
+
+The lad's face blanched with fear, and his terror was so manifest
+that the bully, who was threatening him with all manner of evils,
+began to enjoy himself. Chalkeye, returning from watering the
+horses, got back in time to hear the intemperate fag-end of the
+scolding. He glanced at Hughie, whose hands were trembling in
+spite of him, and then darkly at the brute who was attacking him.
+But he said not a word.
+
+The meal proceeded in silence except for jeers and taunts of the
+"King." For nobody cared to venture conversation which might
+prove a match to a powder magazine. Whatever thoughts might be
+each man kept them to himself.
+
+"Coffee," snapped the single talker, toward end of breakfast.
+
+Hughie jumped up, filled the cup that was handed him and set the
+coffee pot back on fire. As he handed the tin cup with the coffee
+to the outlaw the lad's foot slipped on a piece wet wood, and the
+hot liquid splashed over his chief's leg. The man jumped to his
+feet in a rage and struck the boy across the face with his whip
+once, and then again.
+
+"By God, that'll do for you!" cried Chalkeye from the other side
+of the fire, springing revolver in hand. "Draw, you coyote! I
+come a-shooting."
+
+The "King" wheeled, finding his weapon he turned. Two shots rang
+out almost simultaneously, and Chalkeye pitched forward. The
+outlaw chief sank to his knees, and, with one hand resting on the
+ground to steady himself fired two more shots into the twitching
+body on the other side of the fire. Then he, too, lurched forward
+and rolled over.
+
+It had come to climax so swiftly that not one of them had moved
+except the combatants. Bannister rose and walked over to the
+place where the body of his cousin lay. He knelt down and
+examined him. When he rose it was with a very grave face.
+
+"He is dead," he said quietly.
+
+McWilliams, who had been bending over Chalkeye, looked up. "Here,
+too. Any one of the shots would have finished him."
+
+Bannister nodded. "Yes. That first exchange killed them both." He
+looked down at the limp body of his cousin, but a minute before
+so full of supple, virile life. "But his hate had to reach out
+and make sure, even though he was as good as dead himself. He was
+game." Then sharply to the young braggart, who had risen and was
+edging away with a face of chalk: "Sit down, y'u! What do y'u
+take us for? Think this is to be a massacre?"
+
+The man came back with palpable hesitancy. "I was aiming to go
+and get the boys to bury them. My God, did you ever see anything
+so quick? They drilled through each other like lightning."
+
+Mac looked him over with dry contempt. "My friend, y'u're too
+tender for a genuwine A1 bad man. If I was handing y'u a bunch of
+advice it would be to get back to the prosaic paths of peace
+right prompt. And while we're on the subject I'll borrow your
+guns. Y'u're scared stiff and it might get into your fool coconut
+to plug one of us and light out. I'd hate to see y'u commit
+suicide right before us, so I'll just natcherally unload y'u."
+
+He was talking to lift the strain, and it was for the same
+purpose that Bannister moved over to Hughie, who sat with his
+face in his hands, trying to shut out the horror of what he had
+seen.
+
+The sheepman dropped a hand on his shoulder gently. "Brace up,
+boy! Don't you see that the very best thing that could have
+happened is this. It's best for y'u, best for the rest of the
+gang and best for the whole cattle country. We'll have peace here
+at last. Now he's gone, honest men are going to breathe easy.
+I'll take y'u in hand and set y'u at work on one of my stations,
+if y'u like. Anyhow, you'll have a chance to begin life again in
+a better way."
+
+"That's right," agreed the blatant youth. "I'm sick of rustling
+the mails and other folks' calves. I'm glad he got what was
+coming to him," he concluded vindictively, with a glance at his
+dead chief and a sudden raucous oath.
+
+McWilliams's cold blue eye transfixed him "Hadn't you better be a
+little careful how your mouth goes off? For one thing, he's daid
+now; and for another, he happens to be Mr. Bannister's cousin."
+
+"But--weren't they enemies?"
+
+"That's how I understand it. But this man's passed over the
+range. A MAN doesn't unload his hatred on dead folks--and I
+expect if y'u'll study him, even y'u will be able to figure out
+that my friend measures up to the size of a real man."
+
+"I don't see why if--"
+
+"No, I don't suppose y'u do," interrupted the foreman, turning on
+his heel. Then to Bannister, who was looking down at his cousin
+with a stony face: "I reckon, Bann, we better make arrangements
+to have the bodies buried right here in the valley," he said
+gently.
+
+Bannister was thinking of early days, of the time when this
+miscreant, whose light had just been put out so instantaneously,
+had played with him day in and day out. They had attended their
+first school together, had played marbles and prisoners' base a
+hundred times against each other. He could remember how they used
+to get up early in the morning to go fishing with each other. And
+later, when each began, unconsciously, to choose the path he
+would follow in already beginning to settle into an established
+fact. He could see now, by looking back on trifles of their
+childhood, that his cousin had been badly handicapped in his
+fight with himself against the evil in him. He had inherited
+depraved instincts and tastes, and with them somewhere in him a
+strand of weakness that prevented him from slaying the giants he
+had to oppose in the making of a good character. From bad to
+worse he had gone, and here he lay with the drizzling rain on his
+white face, a warning and a lesson to wayward youths just setting
+their feet in the wrong direction. Surely it was kismet.
+
+Ned Bannister untied the handkerchief from his neck and laid it
+across the face of his kinsman. A moment longer he looked down,
+then passed his hands across his eyes and seemed to brush away
+the memories that thronged him. He stepped forward to the fire
+and warmed his hands.
+
+"We'll go on, Mac, to the rendezvous he had appointed with his
+outfit. We ought to reach there by noon, and the boys can send a
+wagon back to get the bodies."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER 23. JOURNEYS END IN LOVERS' MEETING
+
+It had been six days since the two Ned Bannisters had ridden away
+together into the mountains, and every waking hour since that
+time had been for Helen one of harassing anxiety. No word had yet
+reached her of the issue of that dubious undertaking, and she
+both longed and dreaded to hear. He had promised to send a
+messenger as soon as he had anything definite to tell, but she
+knew it would be like his cousin, too, to send her some
+triumphant word should he prove the victor in the struggle
+between them. So that every stranger she glimpsed brought to her
+a sudden beating of the heart.
+
+But it was not the nature of Helen Messiter to sit down and give
+herself up a prey to foreboding. Her active nature cried out for
+work to occupy her and distract her attention. Fortunately this
+was to be had in abundance just now. For the autumn round-up was
+on, and since her foreman was away the mistress of the Lazy D
+found plenty of work ready to her hand.
+
+The meeting place for the round-up riders was at Boom Creek, five
+miles from the ranch, and Helen rode out there to take charge of
+her own interests in person. With her were six riders, and for
+the use of each of them in addition to his present mount three
+extra ponies were brought in the remuda. For the riding is so
+hard during the round-up that a horse can stand only one day in
+four of it. At the appointed rendezvous a score of other cowboys
+and owners met them. Without any delay they proceeded to
+business. Mr. Bob Austin, better known as "Texas," was elected
+boss of the round-up, and he immediately assigned the men to
+their places and announced that they would work Squaw Creek. They
+moved camp at once, Helen returning to the ranch.
+
+It was three o'clock in the morning when the men were roused by
+the cook's triangle calling them to the "chuck wagon" for
+breakfast. It was still cold and dark as the boys crawled from
+under their blankets and squatted round the fire to eat jerky,
+biscuits and gravy, and to drink cupfuls of hot, black coffee.
+Before sun rose every man was at his post far up on the Squaw
+Creek ridges ready to begin the drive.
+
+Later in the day Helen rode to the parade grounds, toward which a
+stream of cattle was pouring down the canyon of the creek. Every
+gulch tributary to the creek contributed its quota of wild cows
+and calves. These came romping down the canyon mouth, where four
+picked men, with a bunch of tame cows in front of them, stopped
+the rush of flying cattle. Lunch was omitted, and branding began
+at once. Every calf belonging to a Lazy D cow, after being roped
+and tied, was flanked with the great D which indicated its
+ownership by Miss Messiter, and on account of the recumbent
+position of which letter the ranch had its name.
+
+It was during the branding that a boyish young fellow rode up and
+handed Helen a note. Her heart pumped rapidly with relief, for
+one glance told her that it was in the handwriting of the Ned
+Bannister she loved. She tore it open and glanced swiftly through
+it.
+
+DEAR FRIEND: Two hours ago my cousin was killed by one of his own
+men. I am sending back to you a boy who had been led astray by
+him, and it would be a great service to me if you would give him
+something to do till I return. His name is Hugh Rogers. I think
+if you trust him he will prove worthy of it.
+
+Jim and I are going to stay here a few days longer to finish the
+work that is begun. We hope to meet and talk with as many of the
+men implicated in my cousin's lawlessness as is possible. What
+the result will be I cannot say. We do not consider ourselves in
+any danger whatever, though we are not taking chances. If all
+goes well we shall be back within a few days.
+
+I hope you are not missing Jim too much at the roundup.
+Sincerely,
+
+NED BANNISTER
+
+She liked the letter because there was not a hint of the
+relationship between them to be read in it. He had guarded her
+against the chance of its falling into the wrong hands and
+creating talk about them.
+
+She turned to Hughie. "Can you ride?"
+
+"In a way, ma'am. I can't ride like these men." His glance
+indicated a cow-puncher pounding past after a wild steer that had
+broken through the cordon of riders and was trying to get away.
+
+"Do you want to learn?"
+
+"I'd like to if I had a chance," he answered wistfully.
+
+"All right. You have your chance. I'll see that Mr. Austin finds
+something for you to do. From to-day you are in my employ."
+
+She rode back to the ranch in the late afternoon, while the sun
+was setting in a great splash of crimson. The round-up boss had
+hinted that if she were nervous about riding alone he could find
+it convenient to accompany her. But the girl wanted to be alone
+with her own thoughts, and she had slipped away while he was busy
+cutting out calves from the herd. It had been a wonderful relief
+to her to find that HER Ned Bannister was the one that had
+survived in the conflict, and her heart sang a paean of joy as
+she rode into the golden glow of the westering sun. He was
+alive--to love and be loved. The unlived years of her future
+seemed to unroll before her as a vision. She glowed with a
+resurgent happiness that was almost an ecstasy. The words of a
+bit of verse she had once seen--a mere scrap from a magazine that
+had stuck in an obscure corner of her memory--sang again and
+again in her heart:
+
+Life and love And a bright sky o'er us,
+And--God take care Of the way before us!
+
+Ah, the way before them, before her and her romance-radiating
+hero! It might he rough and hilly, but if they trod it together--
+Her tangled thoughts were off again in another glad leap of
+imagination.
+
+The days passed somehow. She busied herself with the affairs of
+the ranch, rode out often to the scenes of the cattle drives and
+watched the round-up, and every twenty-four hours brought her one
+day nearer to his return, she told herself. Nora, too, was on the
+lookout under her longlashed, roguish eyelids; and the two young
+women discussed the subject of their lovers' return in that
+elusive, elliptical way common to their sex.
+
+No doubt each of these young women had conjectured as to the
+manner of that homecoming and the meeting that would accompany
+it; but it is safe to say that neither of them guessed in her
+day-dreams how it actually was to occur.
+
+Nora had been eager to see something of the round-up, and as she
+was no horsewoman her mistress took her out one day in her motor.
+The drive had been that day on Bronco Mesa, and had finished in
+the natural corral made by Bear Canon, fenced with a cordon of
+riders at the end opening to the plains below. After watching for
+two hours the busy scenes of cutting out, roping and branding,
+Helen wheeled her car and started down the canyon on their
+return.
+
+Now, a herd of wild cattle is uncertain as an April day's
+behavior. Under the influence of the tame valley cattle among
+which they are driven, after a little milling around, the whole
+bunch may gentle almost immediately, or, on the other hand, it
+may break through and go crashing away on a wild stampede at a
+moment's notice. Every experienced cowman knows enough to expect
+the unexpected.
+
+At Bronco Mesa the round-up had proceeded with unusual facility.
+Scores of wiry, long-legged steers had drifted down the ridges or
+gulches that led to the canon; and many a cow, followed by its
+calf, had stumbled forward to the herd and apparently accepted
+the inevitable. But before Helen Messiter had well started out of
+the canyon's mouth the situation changed absolutely.
+
+A big hill steer, which had not seen a man for a year, broke
+through the human corral with a bellow near a point where Reddy
+kept guard. The puncher wheeled and gave chase, Before the other
+men could close the opening a couple of two-year-olds seized the
+opportunity and followed its lead. A second rider gave chase, and
+at once, as if some imp of mischief had stirred them, fifty tails
+went up in wild flight. Another minute and the whole herd was in
+stampede.
+
+Down the gulch the five hundred cattle thundered toward the motor
+car, which lay directly in their path. Helen turned, appreciated
+the danger, and put the machine at its full speed. The road
+branched for a space of about fifty yards, and in her excitement
+she made the mistake of choosing the lower, more level, one. Into
+a deep sand bed they plowed, the wheels sinking at every turn.
+Slower and slower went the car; finally came to a full stop.
+
+Nora glanced back in affright at the two hundred and fifty tons
+of beef that was charging wildly toward them. "What shall we do?"
+she gasped, and clambered to the ground.
+
+"Run!" cried Helen, following her example and scudding for the
+sides of the canyon, which here sloped down less precipitately
+than at other points. But before they had run a dozen steps each
+of them was aware that they could not reach safety in time to
+escape the hoofs rushing toward them so heavily that the ground quaked.
+
+"Look out!" A resonant cry rang out above the dull thud of the
+stampeding cattle that were almost upon them. Down the steep
+sides of the gorge two riders were galloping recklessly. It was a
+race for life between them and the first of the herd, and they
+won by scarce more than a length. Across the sand the horses
+plowed, and as they swept past the two trembling young women each
+rider bent from the saddle without slackening speed, and snatched
+one almost from under the very hoofs of the leaders.
+
+The danger was not past. As the horses swerved and went forward
+with the rush Helen knew that a stumble would fling not only her
+and the man who had saved her, but also the horse down to death.
+They must contrive to hold their own in that deadly rush until a
+way could be found of escaping from the path of the living
+cyclone that trod at their heels, galloped beside them, in front,
+behind.
+
+For it came to her that the horse was tiring in that rush through
+the sand with double weight upon its back.
+
+"Courage!" cried the man behind her as her fearful eyes met his.
+
+As he spoke they reached the end of the canyon and firm ground
+simultaneously. Helen saw that her rescuer had now a revolver in
+his hand, and that he was firing in such a way as to deflect the
+leaders to the left. At first the change in course was hardly
+perceptible, but presently she noticed that they were getting
+closer to the outskirts of the herd, working gradually to the
+extreme right, edging inch by inch, ever so warily, toward
+safety. Going parallel to their course, running neck and neck
+with the cow pony, lumbered a great dun steer. Unconsciously it
+blocked every effort of the horseman to escape. He had one shot
+left in his revolver, and this time he did not fire into the air.
+It was a mighty risk, for the animal in falling might stagger
+against the horse and hunt them all down to death. But the man
+took it without apparent hesitation. Into the ear of the bullock
+he sent the lead crashing. The brute stumbled and went down head
+over heels. Its flying hoofs struck the flanks of the pony, but
+the bronco stuck to its feet, and next moment staggered out from
+among the herd stragglers and came to halt.
+
+The man slid from its back and lifted down the half-fainting
+girl. She clung to him, white a trembling. "Oh, it was horrible,
+Ned!" She could still look down in imagination upon the sea of
+dun backs that swayed and surged about them like storm-tossed
+waves.
+
+"It was a near thing, but we made it, girl. So did Jim. He got
+out before we did. It's all past now. You can remember it as the
+most exciting experience of your life."
+
+She shuddered. "I don't want to remember it at all." And so
+shaken was she that she did not realize that his arm was about
+her the while she sobbed on his shoulder.
+
+"A cattle stampede is a nasty thing to get in front of. Never
+mind. It's done with now and everybody's safe."
+
+She drew a long breath. "Yes, everybody's safe and you are back
+home. Why didn't you come after your cousin was killed?"
+
+"I had to finish my work."
+
+"And DID you finish it?"
+
+"I think we did. There will be no more Shoshone gang. It's
+members have scatted in all directions."
+
+"I'm glad you stayed, then. We can live at peace now." And
+presently she added: "I knew you would not come back until you
+had done what you set out to do. You're very obstinate, sir. Do
+you know that?"
+
+"Perseverance, I call it," he smiled, glad to see that she was
+recovering her lightness of tone.
+
+"You don't always insist on putting your actions in the most
+favorable light. Do you remember the first day I ever saw you?"
+
+"Am I likely ever to forget it?" he smiled fondly.
+
+"I didn't mean THAT. What I was getting at was that you let me go
+away from you thinking you were 'the king.' I haven't forgiven
+you entirely for that."
+
+"I expect y'u'll always have to be forgiving me things."
+
+"If you valued my good opinion I don't see how you could let me
+go without telling me. Was it fair or kind?"
+
+"If y'u come to that, was it so fair and kind to convict me so
+promptly on suspicion?" he retaliated with a smile.
+
+"No, it wasn't. But--" She flushed with a divine shyness. "But I
+loved you all the time, even when they said you were a villain."
+
+"Even while y'u believed me one?"
+
+"I didn't. I never would believe you one--not deep in my heart. I
+wouldn't let myself. I made excuses for you--explained everything
+to myself."
+
+"Yet your reason told y'u I was guilty "
+
+"Yes, I think my mind hated you and my heart loved you."
+
+He adored her for the frank simplicity of her confession, that
+out of the greatness of her love she dared to make no secret of
+it to him. Direct as a boy, she was yet as wholly sweet as the
+most retiring girl could be.
+
+"Y'u always swamp my vocabulary, sweetheart. I can't ever tell
+y'u--life wouldn't be long enough--how much I care for you."
+
+"I'm glad," she said simply.
+
+They stood looking at each other, palms pressed to palms in
+meeting hands, supremely happy in this miracle of love that had
+befallen them. They were alone--for Nora and Jim had gone into
+temporary eclipse behind a hill and seemed in no hurry to
+emerge--alone in the sunshine with this wonder that flowed from
+one to another by shining eyes, by finger touch, and then by
+meeting lips. He held her close, knew the sweet delight of
+contact with the supple, surrendered figure, then released her as
+she drew away in maidenly reserve.
+
+"When shall we be married, Helen? Is the early part of next week
+too late?" he asked.
+
+Still blushing, she straightened her hat. "That's ridiculous,
+sir. I haven't got used to the thought of you yet."
+
+"Plenty of time for that afterward. Then we'll say next week if
+that suits y'u."
+
+"But it doesn't. Don't you know that it is the lady's privilege
+to name the day? Besides, I want time to change my mind if I
+should decide to."
+
+"That's what I'm afraid of," he laughed joyfully. "So I have to
+insist on an early marriage."
+
+"Insist?" she demurred.
+
+"I've been told on the best of authority that I'm very
+obstinate," he gayly answered.
+
+"I have a mind of my own myself. If I ever marry you be sure I
+shall name the day, sir."
+
+"Will y'u marry me the day Nora does Jim?"
+
+"We'll see." The eyes slanted at him under the curved lashes,
+teased him delightfully. "Did Nora tell you she was going to
+marry Jim?"
+
+Bannister looked mildly hurt. "My common sense has been telling
+it to me a month."
+
+"How long has your common sense been telling you about us?"
+
+"I didn't use it when I fell in love with y'u," he boldly
+laughed.
+
+"Of all things to say!"
+
+
+
+
+
+End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of Wyoming, by William MacLeod Raine
+
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